STUNTS: Distributed, Playful and Disruptive.

http://www.disruptionlab.org/stunts

The 6th event of the Disruption Network Lab at Kunstquartier Bethanien,
Studio 1, Mariannenplatz 2, 10997 Berlin. Directed by Tatiana Bazzichelli.

Event funded by Hauptstadtkulturfonds Berlin.
In cooperation with Kunstraum Kreuzberg /Bethanien. With the support of the
Free Chelsea Manning Initiative Berlin. In collaboration with SPEKTRUM and
Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art.

After Conference at SPEKTRUM, Bürknerstraße 12, Berlin-Kreuzberg.

Entrance 5€

Artists, hackers, mythmakers and disrupters present and discuss political
stunts, interventions, pranks and viralities.

STUNTS concludes the series of conference events of the Disruption Network
Lab in 2015. Political stunts as an artistic and activist practice generate
criticism by creating distributed, playful and disruptive interventions.
Artists, hackers, mythmakers, hoaxers, critical thinkers and disrupters
present practices of mixing the codes, creating disturbance, subliminal
interventions, giving raise to paradoxes, fakes and pranks. Subversion,
disruption and disorder have been performed as a critique of the status quo
by many underground projects in the course of the past decades. How can
subversive actions happen today, in the context of increasingly invasive
corporations and government agencies, after the NSA scandal?
Programme · Saturday December 12 · 2015
16:30-18:00 · KEYNOTE

John Law (original member, The Suicide Club, Cacophony Society; co-founder,
Billboard Liberation Front and Burning Man Festival, USA). Moderated by
Marie Lechner (journalist and researcher, FR).
18:30-20:30 · PANEL

Mustafa Al-Bassam (alias Tflow, former core member, LulzSec, UK), Jean
Peters (co-founder, Peng! collective, DE), M. C. McGrath (founder,
Transparency Toolkit, USA/DE), Andrea Natella (former Luther Blissett
conspirator and creative director of guerrigliamarketing.it and KOOK
Artgency, IT). Moderated by Ruth Catlow (co-founder, Furtherfield, UK).
20:30-20:45 · CLOSING STATEMENT

Tatiana Bazzichelli (Artistic Director of Disruption Network Lab, IT/DE).
>From 22:00: After Conference at SPEKTRUM

SPEKTRUM, Bürknerstraße 12, Berlin-Kreuzberg (U Schönleinstraße)
STUNTS: Distributed, Playful & Disruptive

A stunt is an unconventional act requiring particular skills, often
performed by people in extreme or difficult situations. The idea of
political stunts as an artistic and activist practice means to generate
criticism by "perfoming the machine" which we want to fight - a strategy
adopted by many hackers and artists in the past decades of network
development. Today, in the era of big data and in the context of
increasingly surveillance of corporations and government agencies,
asymmetries in society become even more evident. How to respond in a
proactive and constructive way to the threat of being tracked during our
online (and offline) moves? And most of all, which kind or artistic
responses can we imagine, if we want to maintain a playful and disruptive
approach? Artists, hackers, hoaxers, mythmakers, storytellers and
disrupters meet to discuss how to challenge powerful systems from within,
turning around the idea of “opposition” into the one of creating
distributed, playful and disruptive interventions.

In the artistic and activist contexts, the concept of “political stunts”
goes along with the act of exposing control mechanisms that can affect
institutions and media corporations. To reveal social injustices or
misconducts by corporations and governments from within becomes an artistic
strategy. This event proposes both to expose and to dissipate this tension
through a network of multiple, distributed, playful and disruptive tactics
to intrude into the inaccessible world of corporations and government
agencies. The goal is to make people aware of such mechanisms, opening up a
critical perspective and a common debate by generating unpredictable
feedback and unexpected reactions.

With the support of the Free Chelsea Manning Initiative Berlin.
16:30-18:00: December 12, 2015
KEYNOTE: FIND OUT WHAT YOU ARE ‘SUPPOSED TO DO’ - THEN DO SOMETHING ELSE.

John Law (original member of the Suicide Club and the Cacophony Society;
co-founder of the Billboard Liberation Front and of the Burning Man
Festival, USA). Moderated by Marie Lechner (journalist and researcher, FR).

How everything started in San Francisco.

Rumors of pie wielding assassins and a cryptic invitation to explore the
miasmal underbelly of the urban landscape seen in a hippy free university
calendar in 1977, was enough to enflame the curiosity of seventeen-year old
John Law. A subsequent initiation into the secretive Suicide Club propelled
Law into a thirty-eight year “career” amidst the hidden world of pranks,
urban exploration, counter culture, ‘Culture Jamming’ and creative mayhem.

Fight Club, Burning Man, SantaCon, media hacking, urban exploration, street
art, flash mobs and more - these are some of the cultural phenomena that
were initiated or somehow influenced by the Suicide Club, and the
subsequent sub-cultures that Law was fortunate to have fallen into as a
teenaged juvenile delinquent. This presentation reveals some of the genesis
& history of these groups including a brief survey of their precedents and
influences on through the present day iterations, spin offs and ‘fellow
travellers’. The idea we hope you take away from this presentation is
simply this: this strange, obscure world is available to anyone who can
appreciate the concept that “you may already be a member”.

18:30-20:30: December 12, 2015
PANEL: STUNTS & DUMPS - THE MAKING OF A VIRAL CAUSE

Mustafa Al-Bassam (alias Tflow, former core member of LulzSec, UK), Jean
Peters (co-founder Peng! collective, DE), M. C. McGrath (founder of
Transparency Toolkit, USA/DE), Andrea Natella (former Luther Blissett
conspirator, creative director of guerrigliamarketing.it and KOOK Artgency,
IT). Moderated by Ruth Catlow (co-founder of Furtherfield, UK).

Following the thread of creating unexpected consequences in economical,
social and political systems, this panel reflects on the practice of
political stunts and data dumps by provoking intelligence disruptions,
virality interventions and corporate hijacking. The panel brings together
Tflow, former core member of LulzSec (Lulz Security), the computer hacker
group responsible for several high profile attacks in early 2011 to
corporations and governments (i.e. CIA and Sony Pictures); Jean Peters,
co-founder of Peng!, the German collective known for intruding into
business conferences, producing corporate fakes and pranks, as well as for
their recent campaign “Intelexit” , an initiative that helps people leave
the secret service; M. C. McGrath, founder of Transparency Toolkit, a
project that uses open data to map the intelligence community and uncover
secret surveillance programs as well as investigates human rights abuses
and find perpetrators; and, last but not least, Andrea Natella, former
mythmaker of the Italian Luther Blissett Project, founder of
Guerrigliamarketing.it, and creative director of KOOK Artgency, an
unconventional agency specialised in designing and manufacturing viral,
street and digital marketing. The panel is moderated by Ruth Catlow,
co-founder of Furtherfield, an online community and distributed network
active since the 1990s in UK and on the net, focused on digital arts,
experimental poetry, critical texts, and anarchic creativity.


20:30-20:45: December 12, 2015
CLOSING STATEMENT

Tatiana Bazzichelli (Artistic Director of Disruption Network Lab, IT/DE).
A year of events and research on art, hacktivism and disruption at
Kunstquartier Bethanien. The sharing of a process of networking as
curatorial practice and some (open) conclusions.


>From 22:00: After Conference at SPEKTRUM art | science | community.

Bürknerstraße 12, Berlin-Kreuzberg.
Celebrate with us a year of disruption!
Participants

John Law (original member, The Suicide Club, Cacophony Society; co-founder,
Billboard Liberation Front and Burning Man Festival, USA)

John Law was an original member of the Suicide Club and the Cacophony
Society, co-founder of the Billboard Liberation Front and co-founder and
first operations manager of the Burning Man Festival. John Law was raised
in the Midwest and dreamed about bridges from a very young age. He attended
the first Suicide Club initiation a year after his arrival in San Francisco
in 1976 and through his apprenticeship in that saturnalian cabal came to
know many of the world’s greatest bridge spans. He is affiliated with
singular organizations such as Survival Research Labs, Dark Passage, The
Cacophony Society, PeopleHater, Seemen, Circus Redickuless, S.F. Cyclecide,
and The Madagascar Institute to name a few. John Law joined Laughing Squid
as a partner in 1999. Past projects include: co-founding the Burning Man
Festival an event he parted ways with in 1996, and co-founding in 1977 and
directing (for 35 years) The Billboard Liberation Front. He currently lives
in the San Francisco Bay Area and spends a lot of time in Detroit, MI.
johnlaw.com

Marie Lechner (journalist and researcher, FR)
Marie Lechner is a French journalist, writing about digital culture and art
(Liberation, Arte Creative, among others). She is also a researcher on
media archaeology at the PAMAL [Preservation & Art – Media Archaeology Lab]
at the Ecole supérieure d'art in Avignon and collaborated to several shows
(Evil Clowns at HMKV, Welcome to the Future at Imal, Streaming Egos by
Goethe Institut) and organised several conferences about Web Folklore at La
Gaîté Lyrique in Paris.

Mustafa Al-Bassam (alias Tflow, former core member, LulzSec, UK)
Mustafa is an undergraduate at King's College London in Computer Science.
He gained notoriety in 2011 for being a part of LulzSec, a computer hacking
group responsible a number of high profile attacks. As a result, he was
legally banned from the Internet for almost two years as a condition of his
bail. Mustafa has worked with Privacy International to analyse the
destruction of computer equipment ordered by GCHQ, that held top secret
material leaked from the NSA and GCHQ. He was portrayed as one of the main
characters in "Teh Internet is Serious Business", a play by the Royal Court
Theatre telling a story about Internet culture. Concerned about mass and
corporate surveillance, he has advised human rights defenders around the
world on protecting their data and communicating securely online. During
the Jasmine Revolution he created a tool for Tunisian dissidents to defend
themselves against government malware.
musalbas.com

Jean Peters (co-founder of Peng! collective, DE)
Paul von Ribbeck, Luther Blissett, Jean Peters – is co-founder of the Peng
Collective, a group of activists, artists and media hackers. In their last
campaign, they created an exit association for secret services to help them
to stop war crimes and mass surveillance but build up a civil life.
pen.gg

Andrea Natella (former Luther Blissett conspirator and creative director of
guerrigliamarketing.it and KOOK Artgency, IT)
In 1995 he was known as Luther Blissett. In 1999 he create “Men In Red”,
first marxist-ufology group. In 2003 he founded guerrigliamarketing.it, a
fake advertising agency that designed subversive hoaxes and created weird
art projects exploring pornography, politics and advertising. In 2009 he
founded Kook Artgency a real advertising agency that runs 00KK a street
disturbing team active in Rome. He created ThisMan.org, a website about the
story of a face everybody dreaming.
andreanatella.it

M. C. McGrath (founder, Transparency Toolkit, USA/DE)
M. C. is the founder of Transparency Toolkit, a non-profit that uses open
data and makes free software to better understand surveillance and human
rights abuses. He is also a Thiel Fellow and an Echoing Green Fellow.
Previously, M. C. graduated from Boston University with a degree in civic
technology and did research at the MIT Media Lab.
transparencytoolkit.org

Ruth Catlow (co-founder, Furtherfield, UK)
Catlow is an artist, and co-founder and co-director, with Marc Garrett, of
Furtherfield. Furtherfield is the UK's leading organisation for art, labs,
& debates around critical questions in art and technology since 1997.
Catlow co-curates programmes developed to make network cultures more
feelable and accessible to more diverse people. Exhibitions and labs tour
nationally and internationally, strengthening the expressive and
emancipatory potential of digital technology.
furtherfield.org
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