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Welcome to Week 1 of our discussion on Fake News in a Global Climate.  Tim 
Murray and I will be hosting this week on -empyre.  We are pleased to welcome 
Lindsay Kelley whose week was featured in this year’s topic in February during 
our discussion on Bio-Art. Anna Munster has been a long-time friend and guest 
on -empyre-.  We are thrilled that they will be joining us for a few days this 
week and then again during Week 4.  Both Anna and Lindsay are collaborating at 
the University of New South Wales to host a day-long event this Friday the 9th 
of June, Fake News  from the Art and Politics Bureau: A One Day Event.  We are 
looking forward to both of them framing their event. 

http://www.niea.unsw.edu.au/events/fake-news-art-and-politics-bureau-one-day-event
 

In the meantime we hope that all of our subscribers will join us in 
conversation. 
Best, 
Renate

Moderator’s Biography:
Renate Ferro’s (US) creative work resides within the areas of emerging 
technology, new media and culture. Her artistic work has been featured at the 
Nanyang Technological University (Singapore), The Freud Museum (London), The 
Dorksy Gallery (NY), The Hemispheric Institute and FOMMA (Mexico), and The 
Janus Pannonius Muzeum (Hungary). Ferro is a Visiting Associate Professor of 
Art at Cornell University.  She has been on the moderating team of -empyre- 
soft-skinned space since 2007 and is currently the managing moderator.
 

Timothy Murray (US) is the Director of the Society for the Humanities at 
Cornell University and a Professor of Comparative Literature and English.  
Additionally he is the  Curator of the Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art. 
He is the Cornell Principal Investigator of the Central Humanities Corridor, 
generously supported by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and he 
sits on the International Advisory Board of the Consortium of the Humanities 
Centers and Institutes (CHCI) and the Executive Board of the Humanities, Arts, 
Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory (HASTAC). He is Co-Moderator of 
the -empyre- new media listserv and the author of Digital Baroque: New Media 
Art and Cinematic Folds (Minnesota 2008); Zonas de Contacto: el arte en CD-ROM 
(Centro de la imagen, 1999); Drama Trauma: Specters of Race and Sexuality in 
Performance, Video, Art (Routledge, 1997); Like a Film:Ideological Fantasy on 
Screen, Camera, and Canvas (Routledge, 1993); Theatrical Legitimation: 
Allegories of Genius in XVIIth-Century England and France (Oxford, 1987). He is 
editor of Mimesis, Masochism & Mime: The Politics of
Theatricality in Contemporary French Thought (Michigan, 1997) and, with Alan 
Smith, Repossessions: Psychoanalysis and the Phantasms of Early-Modern Culture 
(Minnesota, 1997). His curatorial projects include CTHEORY MULTIMEDIA and 
Contact Zones: The Art of the CD-Rom.

Week 1 Guests: 


Lindsay Kelley (AU) Working in the kitchen, Lindsay Kelley’s art practice and 
scholarship explore how the experience of eating changes when technologies are 
being eaten. Her first book is Bioart Kitchen: Art, Feminism and Technoscience 
(London: IB Tauris, 2016). Bioart Kitchen emerges from her work at the 
University of California Santa Cruz (Ph.D in the History of Consciousness and 
MFA in Digital Art and New Media). Kelley is a Co-Investigator with the KIAS 
funded Research­-Creation and Social Justice CoLABoratory: Arts and the 
Anthropocene (University of Alberta, Canada).


 Anna Munster (AU) has been at UNSW Art and Design since 2001 on a full-time 
tenured basis. She is an active researcher with two sole published books: An 
Aesthesia of Networks (MIT Press, 2013), and  Materializing New Media  
(Dartmouth College Press 2006). Her current research interests are: networked 
experience, media arts and theory, data and radical empiricism, nonhuman and 
perception, new pragmatist approaches to media and art.

Anna regularly collaborates artistically with Michele Barker in the School of 
Media Arts, COFA. Barker and Munster are working on a large-scale multi-channel 
interactive work, HocusPocus, which explores the relations between perception, 
magic and the brain. They have been awarded a New Work Grant, 2010, from the 
Australia Council for the Arts to realise this work. Recent collaborative 
projects include: Duchenne’s smile (2-channel DV installation, 2009), The Love 
Machine II (photomedia installation, 2008–1¬0), Struck (3-channel DV 
installation, 2007).

She is a partner in a large international project, Immediations 
<http://senselab.ca/wp2/immediations/>, hosted by Concordia University, 
Montreal and funded by the Social Science and
Humanities Research Council, Canada. She has held two ARC Discovery research 
grants in new media and art: ‘The Body-Machine Interface in New Media Art from 
1984 to the Present, 2003–5’ and ‘Dynamic Media: Innovative social and artistic 
uses of dynamic media in Australia, Britain, Canada and Scandinavia since 
1990’.  She is also an investigator on an ARC Linkage project,
Australian Media Arts Database’, which will utilise innovative user-lead and 
open source databases to create a history of Australian media arts in an 
international context.

She is a founding member of the online peer-reviewed journal The Fibreculture 
Journal <http://fibreculturejournal.org/> and has co-edited two special issues 
on Distributed Aesthetics  http://seven.fibreculturejournal.org/>and Web 2.0 
and on the editorial advisory board of LeonardoBooks (MIT Press), Inflexions, 
CTheory, Convergence, and Scan


Renate Ferro
Visiting Associate Professor
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Department of Art
Tjaden Hall 306
rfe...@cornell.edu



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