Dear All, 
Please consider submitting something to the ISEA2013 - Sydney - Conference.
There are many ways too contribute, and there has been a conscious effort to 
open up the formats and varieties of conference engagement available, and it 
would be really wonderful to have many many NZ voices here!
Su. 


ISEA2013 – 19th International Symposium on Electronic Art
Sydney, Australia - 7th - 16th June 2013
presented by ANAT

Conference Program – Call for Participation

IMPORTANT DATES
Proposals Due (300 word abstract)
Friday, 14th November 2012
Acceptance Notification
Friday, 21st December 2012


The 19th International Symposium on Electronic Art will comprise engaging 
presentations and thought-provoking speakers and discussions.  Join us for 
informed dialogues, dynamic debates, enlightening keynotes and experimental 
incursions into the extensive and diverse practice of electronic media arts.

We are keen to connect and intertwine the conference sessions with the wider 
artistic program, and we are looking for a variety of formats and engagement 
for presenters and participants to ensure a high quality of thought, 
deliberation and discussion.  Our vision for the conference is to provide 
sessions with genuine engagement. We ask that our delegates think differently 
about how they envisage the format of their presentation. To aid this, we have 
outlined a number of formats for you to choose from:

1.        Provocations
This format is ideal for presenting provocative ideas, projects, or works in 
progress that lend themselves to visual displays or presentations 
(5-10minutes). In these sessions, a number of presenters have the opportunity 
to present their work and to engage in informal discussion with other delegates 
throughout the session. Presentations will be grouped by the committee 
according to topic, and generous time will be provided after all of the 
presentations for group discussion.

2.        Creator Sessions
This format provides the opportunity to present in a unique location or 
environment.  These are more informal sessions that allow presenters to create 
their own format and to provide delegates the opportunity to be immersed in a 
presentation staged away from a typical conference setting. We are particularly 
looking for engagement with artworks and practices outside of the usual 
conference venues.  The committee will work with you to create an engaging 
session.

3.        Roundtables
These sessions are about the cross-pollination of ideas and philosophies.  They 
are designed to activate collaborations, offer opportunities to build networks 
and to open up new connections.  We will accept ideas for full sessions of 
60-90 minutes, and the committee will conceive and design sessions according to 
topic or perspective. We will work closely with presenters to create original 
and engaging sessions.

4.        Workshops
These sessions are best suited for teaching or demonstrating particular 
procedures, skills, or techniques. Appropriate considerations for this session 
format may include: hands-on demonstrations, presentations of a technology or 
technique, or an extended dialogue with participants. These sessions can take 
place over an entire day, half day, or scheduled for 60-90 minutes. Workshops 
will be structured to provide ample time for interaction, participation, and 
involvement.  Workshop conveners should submit a formal description of the 
proposed workshop.

5.        Panels
We will accept proposals for full panels or the committee will group registered 
participants, whose presentations are based on a shared theme or topic (for 
example, a Chair and four or five presenters) for inclusion in these sessions. 
Panel sessions are scheduled for 60-90 minutes. Panels may present 
complementary aspects of a specific body of work, or contrasting perspectives 
on a specified topic. The audiences for these sessions will be encouraged to 
read the abstracts and any associated readings before attending in order to 
ensure optimal audience engagement and participation. The presenters (along 
with an ISEA2013 committee member if required) will conceive and design the 
session to allow time for short individual provocations (approximately 10 
minutes each) and 40-60 minutes of audience discussion or Q&A.

6.        Papers
This type of session is best suited for scholarly work and reports on current 
or completed research. Authors present summaries or overviews of their work, 
describing the essential features (related to purpose, procedures, outcomes or 
product). This presentation should be engaging and dynamic and can take on any 
form. Presentations will be grouped according to topic or perspective into 
these themed sessions, with time provided after all of the presentations for 
Q&A and group discussion. Presenters are welcome to include any visual support 
to assist delivery of their oral presentation.

7.        Online Collaborations
We are looking to extend the reach of the Symposium by way of online 
collaborative environments, and are especially interested in proposals that 
connect distant artists, writers and collaborators to the physical venue of 
ISEA2013 Sydney. These collaborations may involve projects that lead-up to and 
lead-out of the event, and are aimed at establishing relationships and 
connections with other artists who are not able to physically attend the 
symposium. The technical systems and platforms used to conduct these sessions 
need to be widely available and robust enough to be able to function within a 
university, gallery or museum-style venue and can be live (real-time) or 
asynchronous.

Submission Information
We are calling for an initial 300 word abstract.  On submission of your 
abstract, you will be asked which format(s) you would like to present in, the 
committee will take this into consideration when programming the sessions.  You 
will be notified which session format your proposal has been allocated into 
when notifications are sent.
The abstracts will be available to registered delegates online before the 
Symposium and an electronic copy will be presented to delegates at the 
Symposium.  Please note, only authors who have registered to attend the 
Symposium will be published.  On completion of the Symposium, those presenters 
who would like to be included in the full proceedings will be asked to submit a 
3,000 word document which will be peer reviewed and published.

Please submit your proposal via OpenConf: www.isea2013.org/submit


We ask that you consider the ISEA2013 theme and sub-themes outlined below. You 
will be required to allocate your proposal to one of these six sub-themes on 
submission:

Theme – ‘Resistance is Futile’
The cutting edge of digital art has moved from the margins to become part of 
the fabric of everyday life.  At once ubiquitous and unnoticed, resistance to 
electronic art has proven futile — it now lies embedded in the heart of our 
contemporary cultures.  The symposium events will infuse the city’s social, 
digital and physical infrastructure. ISEA2013 aims to create a fluid body of 
thought, culture, community, industry, science and technology.
Artists play an important role in this “cutting edge.” By creatively 
investigating the possibilities and pushing the limits of new technologies, 
artists help us imaginatively experience and critically reflect on their 
implications for life in the 21st century. Digital electronic art is our source 
of innovation, the new norm in everything from publishing to TV, to radio, 
games, film, fashion, music, architecture, design, applications and gadgets. 
Ubiquitous and pervasive, digital media permeates almost all creative endeavors 
in everyday life and the city. The urban spaces of Sydney will provide the 
scene for thinking through the consequences of digital life, creative 
industries, and contemporary electronic art practice.

Sub-themes/Threads
1. Resistance is Fertile
Resistance is Futile … Resistance is Fertile… Resistance is Necessary. ISEA2013 
explores the ways art and new technologies are used in the service of power, 
politics, protest and resistance.
2. Converging and diverging realities
The virtual bleeds into the real and increasingly our environments are 
mediated, augmented and transformed through technology. Mixed and augmented 
realities, obligatory social media, and locative technologies increasingly 
insert different realities into the physical world while communication 
simultaneously seduces us away from our immediate surroundings. As the 
“internet of things” becomes a reality, do we need to resist the ubiquitous 
society of participation, search, and the culture of always-on 
surveillance/sousveillance?
3. Life …  but not as we know it
Technologies are being used to extend human capabilities and to create new life 
forms. ISEA2013 explores how life is increasingly becoming a technology that is 
created, extended, and curated by the influence of artists working with 
technology. A chance to explore and critique the world of cyborgs, robots, 
alien life forms and the emergence of unnatural biologies.
4. Histories and Futures of Electronic Art
Where once electronic media technologies were on the margins they now permeate 
almost all of art, commerce and creativity. Digital cultures, media art 
histories, and media archeologies permeate contemporary art and design, and 
inform ways of seeing and understanding the world. ISEA2013 offers a platform 
to explore where electronic art has come from, where it is going and what it 
might become.
5. Ecologies and Technologies
The interrelationship of nature, culture and technology lies at the 
centre-stage of contemporary life. ISEA2013 explores technology as both the 
problem and solution, celebrating the role of the artist as innovator and 
provocateur. ISEA2013 engages questions of urban ecologies, consumption, food, 
climate, and sustainability.
6. Creation, Collaboration and Consumption
Digital technologies and social media are transforming social and cultural 
interaction on both global and local scales. Everyone is connected, everyone is 
a creator. But not everybody likes what they see or wants to participate in the 
prescribed forms of contemporary social media. ISEA2013 encourages debate, 
provocations and engagement in the global nets of participation.


ENQUIRIES
For information on the ISEA2013 Academic Committee and selection process, or 
for general
information about ISEA2013, please visit our website www.isea2013.org or 
contact our
Project Coordinator, Kristen Bowen ([email protected]).



________________/\_______________________________/\___________
Dr. Su Ballard | Senior Lecturer | Art History, Visual and Media Arts
Faculty of Creative Arts | University of Wollongong
Bld 25, Northfields Ave | NSW 2522, AUSTRALIA

office: 25-135
p:      +61 2 4239 2545
cell:   +61 448 937 464
e:      [email protected]
web:    http://www.suballard.net.nz
consultation hours: 
        Tuesday 9.30-11.30am and Friday 2.30-4.30

____/\______________/\___/\____________________________________

________________/\_______________________________/\___________
Dr. Su Ballard | Senior Lecturer | Art History, Visual and Media Arts
Faculty of Creative Arts | University of Wollongong
Bld 25, Northfields Ave | NSW 2522, AUSTRALIA

office: 25-135
p:      +61 2 4239 2545
cell:   +61 448 937 464
e:      [email protected]
web:    http://www.suballard.net.nz
consultation hours: 
        Tuesday 9.30-11.30am and Friday 2.30-4.30

____/\______________/\___/\____________________________________

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