hello & gruezi wohl!

we know y'all are all about the w'leaks at the moment, and so be it - free mr. 
manning, way to go ++ snd some €$ 2 th leakers // 
http://www.wikileaks.ch/support.html !

but we also got some of our stuff to share - it's all new content and it is 
even hosted on an u.s. of a server and we censored it a bit so it would not get 
taken down & stuff, you know what i mean....we just wanna share before we take 
off for another production trip to africa (i.e. more as always to come)

so, without further ado - here it comes, 2 new chunks of UBERMORGEN.COM work..

one on display at your disposal at the Centre Pompidou (scroll way down for 
more)
&&
one commissioned by the Whitney Museum of American Art:
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.
:
CLICKISTAN
:
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.
http://www.whitney.org/clickistan/

Clickistan resides between the 7th and 8th bit of every byte
it is ruled by generosity and playful curiosity 
its inhabitants are honest and filled with life
they had been living poorly in an analog diaspora for many years
they took some of their remains with them back home to CLICKISTAN.

and now..
let's share a few notes from the curator Christiane Paul (thank u mrs. paul!):

<cite>
CLICKISTAN by the artist team UBERMORGEN.COM (lizvlx and Hans Bernhard) is a 
work of game art and an homage to the net art of the mid-90s: it invents its 
own territory—ruled by the click—and celebrates the pixel in imaginative 
variations. UBERMORGEN.COM are the new masters of Minimalist pixel painting.  
Transparent pixels are blown out of proportion in order to create graphic 
shapes and abstractions, while copied-and-pasted scripts are resampled and 
recombined in order to—in UBERMORGEN.COM’s words—use as many pre-existing 
pixels and produce as few originals as possible. This latter strategy is a nod 
to early net art, in which recycling and reproduction of existing information 
were the artistic method of choice. Likewise, in the spirit of early net 
art—such as the Form Art Competition organized by Russian net art pioneer 
Alexei Shulgin in 1997—CLICKISTAN plays with the formal elements of the Web, 
enticing its players to click away on canvases of radio buttons and flying 
scroll bars. Players also encounter elements of net culture, such as a 
reference to the famous 2000-2002 Internet meme “All your base are belong to 
us,” a broken-English phrase originating from the opening scene of the video 
game Zero Wing, poorly translated from Japanese. CLICKISTAN’s visual style and 
playful typography—such as the mixing of upper and lower case—allude to the 
“dirt style” design of net art before the dot com gold rush—the degraded 
aesthetic of the hobbyist, amateur, and geek. The work’s title references both 
early net art’s exploration of the Web territory—in its resistance to 
traditional notions of ownership, authority, and the nation state—and the 
arrival of the click as the main paradigm of interaction, overruling previously 
established norms of dragging and dropping.

CLICKISTAN is also indebted to early computer games, particularly the 
coin-operated arcade games of the late 1970s and early 1980s, such as Space 
Invaders (1978), Pac-Man (1980), and Donkey Kong (1981), whose pixellated 
characters were created with great economy of means. The new musical form 
inspired by early computer games—known as 8-bit or chiptune music and 
consisting of sound textures synthesized by the computer or video game 
console’s sound chip—is referenced in CLICKISTAN’s soundtrack supplied by the 
8-bit music website micromusic.net.

As with other game art projects, CLICKISTAN does not simply create an 
environment for play that follows established conventions, but instead engages, 
questions, and undermines them. UBERMORGEN.COM takes a decisively 
“userunfriendly” approach to many gaming routines: players’ actions do not 
yield the expected results; some choices are impossible to make, some actions 
redundant, but, as in “real life,” they all lead to the next level or sometimes 
even have the same consequences; scores do not necessarily relate to the 
performed actions in any rational way. Players become aware of their 
expectations and are challenged to ask who or what created them in the first 
place.

UBERMORGEN.COM’s mode of operation has always been playfully subversive, and 
many of their projects have addressed the intersections of Internet culture, 
money, and branding. Their Ekmrz Trilogy (2005-2009) took critical approaches 
to Google and Amazon. Their Generatorseries included tools such as the 
Injunction Generator (2001), which allowed users to automatically generate a 
standard court order—in .pdf or .rtf format—claiming that a website of their 
choice was operating on an illegal basis. CLICKISTAN’s use of visuals, text, 
and language reflects the overall tone of Ubermorgen’s work, referencing their 
website’s home pages (from 2000-2005) as well as the generators. CLICKISTAN is 
a territory that lies somewhere at the core of Ubermorgen’s work: a game that 
plays with art and commerce, celebrates the early days of net art and computer 
games, has an anarchic sense of humor, and only delivers the expected when it 
is time to pay.

http://www.whitney.org/clickistan/


IMAGE: http://ubermorgen.com/UM.Wire/images/CLICKISTAN_UBERMORGEN.jpg


</cite>






and here comes the other half of the letter of interest to you!
(btw the 123th replier/retweeter to this email will win a trip to the nigerian 
ministery of finance!)... ;;
.
:
:
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:
Centre Georges Pompidou "RE:MADE"
Black n White

http://www.ubermorgen.com/BlacknWhite/

"Notre intention est de travailler exclusivement avec le pixel comme idée et 
comme matériel brut. Le pixel est notre peinture, notre bois ou notre pierre, 
le langage html notre pinceau ou notre tournevis et le navigateur à la fois la 
toile et le musée. Nous puisons dans les objets artistiques conceptuels bien 
connus de Judd, Lewitt, Graham, Haacke, IRWIN, etc. pour en extraire des 
remakes numériques qui nous servent de règles visuelles." 

L'exposition "RE:MADE" présente neuf installations – vidéo, multimédia, net art 
– autour des notions de relecture et de réinterprétation. Neuf réponses 
distinctes et autonomes laissant apparaitre une géographie des médias et leur 
capillarité profonde avec notre quotidien. Les oeuvres choisies déplacent, 
détournent et réinterprètent un matériaux visuel et numérique pré-existant pour 
mettre en réflexion notre culture visuelle contemporaine et nos 
représentations. Le Centre Pompidou et Le Palais de Tokyo, avant de migrer 
ensuite pour Madrid en avril 2011 et Berlin en juillet 2011. Les artistes 
exposés sont : Christophe Bruno (France), Tony Cokes (USA), Ryoji Ikeda 
(Japon), Jodi (Pays-bas), Joan Leandre (Espagne), UBERMORGEN.COM 
(Suisse/Autriche/USA), Manuel Saiz (Espagne), Alexander Schellow (Allemagne) et 
Antoine Schmitt (France).


IMAGE: http://ubermorgen.com/UM.Wire/images/UM_BlacknWhite.jpg












http://ubermorgen.com/UM.Wire










UBERMORGEN.COM
offi...@ubermorgen.com
Studio +4312361985
http://www.ubermorgen.com


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http://ubermorgen.com/DEEPHORIZON
http://www.asylabwehramt.at
http://woppow.net
http://ugi-heal.me






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