The ARPANET Dialogues Vol.III
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The third installment of the ongoing online archive project The ARPANET 
Dialogues is now online. This is installment is the transcription for an 
ARPANET conversation that took place in March 1976 between between four 
figures from the 1970s-era art community: German artist, educator and 
activist, Joseph Beuys; Chilean-born multimedia artist and filmmaker, 
Juan Downey; Rosalind Krauss, art critic and co-founder of the new 
journal October; and the world-renown British sculptor, Henry Moore.

Read it here: http://www.arpanetdialogues.net/vol-iii/

About the ARPANET Dialogues:

In the period between 1975 and 1979, the Agency convened a rare series 
of conversations between an eccentric cast of characters representing a 
wide range of perspectives within the contemporary social, political and 
cultural milieu. The ARPANET Dialogues is a serial document which 
archives these conversations. Even more unusual perhaps was the specific 
circumstances of the conversation: taking advantage of recent 
developments in telecommunications technology, the conversation was 
conducted via an instant messaging application networked by computers 
plugged into ARPANET, the United States Department of Defense’s 
experimental computer network. All participants in the conversation were 
given special access to terminals connected to ARPANET, many of them 
located in US military installations or DOD-sponsored research 
institutions around the world. Excerpts from each session will be 
published as they become available. The ARPANET Dialogues is an ongoing 
research project by Bassam El Baroni, Jeremy Beaudry and Nav Haq.

www.arpanetdialogues.net


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