Press Release           October 9, 2011

Launch Open 21 at Immigrant Movement International, New York City, October 9, 
2011, 2 PM 

Lectures by Brian Holmes and Eric Kluitenberg and presentation Open 21 on 
(Im)Mobility

Programme October 9, 2011

2:00 PM         Introduction by Jorinde Seijdel
                Open 21 (Im)mobility. Exploring the Limits of Hypermobility

2:30 PM         Lecture Brian Holmes
                What Sustains a Public Sphere? Solidarity in the Post-Liberal 
Societies

3:15 PM         Lecture Eric Kluitenberg
                The Global Im/Mobility Privilege

4 PM End

Further info:
www.skor.nl/eng/site/item/launch-open-21-at-immigrant-movement-international-new-york-city

About:

Brian Holmes is a cultural critic living at present in Chicago. He works on 
crisis theory and technopolitics. All his texts are obtainable free of charge 
here: http://brianholmes.wordpress.com
For decades, the critique of neoliberalism has been a paying proposition for 
left-leaning artists and intellectuals. Amidst the Internet and real-estate 
booms, a fragile mix of enlightenment and entrepreneurial values preserved some 
space for theories of radical democracy. Today, financial turmoil and its 
hard-right political consequences have laid that ambiguity to rest. In this 
lecture, Brian Holmes reopens the debate about the practical basis for an 
aesthetics of equality. The first step toward new institutions of solidarity, 
he argues, is to understand one's own position on the margins.

Eric Kluitenberg is a writer and curator who focuses on culture, media and 
technology, living in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Recent publications include 
Book of Imaginary Media (2006) and Delusive Spaces (essays, 2008).
The right to freedom of movement is enshrined in international systems of law 
and power that offer little space for individual influence or control. Our 
examination of the global regimes of im/mobility revealed how deeply the 
transnational is rooted in specific local constellations, which offer the 
optimal point of intervention.

Jorinde Seijdel is editor in chief of Open. Cahier on Art and the Public Domain.

Immigrant Movement International (IM International) is a five-year project 
initiated by artist Tania Bruguera. Its mission is to help define the immigrant 
as a unique, new global citizen in a post-national world and to test the 
concept of arte útil or 'useful art', in which artists actively implement the 
merger of art into society’s urgent social, political and scientific issues. 
Year one of Immigrant Movement International is supported by The Queens Museum 
of Art, located in Queens’ historic Flushing Meadows Corona Park, and 
CreativeTime, a public art organization that sponsors art and artists all over 
New York City.
Location 
Immigrant Movement International
108-59 Roosevelt Avenue
Queens, NY 11368
United States

Further info: 
http://immigrant-movement.us/?page_id=173

-----

Open 21: (Im)Mobility. Exploring the Limits of Hypermobility

Advanced communications technologies seem to be paving the way for an increase 
in physical and motorized mobility. At the same time, these accelerating flows 
of data and commodities stand in sharp contrast to the elbow room afforded to 
the biological body, which in fact is forced to a standstill. And while data, 
goods and capital have been freed of their territorial restrictions, the 
opposite is true for a growing proportion of the world’s population: border 
regimes, surveillance and identity control are being intensified at a rapid 
pace. In short, we are seeing both an uncurbed and uncontrolled increase of 
mobility and segregating filtrations. This issue of Open explores the internal 
contradictions of prevailing mobility regimes and their effects on social and 
physical space. With, amongst others, an interview with David Harvey.

Open investigates the contemporary conditions of public space and changing 
notions of publicness in a structural manner in relation to cultural 
production. This implies an experimental and interdisciplinary exposition of 
the reality, possibilities and limitations of the current public domain, in 
particular from sociological, philosophical, political and artistic 
perspectives. Within the framework of this ‘project in progress’, themes such 
as safety, memory, visibility, cultural freedom, tolerance hybrid space, the 
rise of informal media, art as a public affair, manipulative, precarity and 
privacy have been examined.

Open is edited by Jorinde Seijdel (editor in chief) and Liesbeth Melis (final 
editing) and appears twice a year in a Dutch-language and an English-language 
edition. The graphic design is by Thomas Buxò and Klaartje van Eijk. Open is an 
initiative of SKOR | Foundation for Art and Public Domain (Amsterdam, The 
Netherlands, www.skor.nl) and is published by NAi Publishers 
(www.naipublishers.nl).

For information, ordering and subscriptions see SKOR, NAi Publishers or send 
and e-mail to i...@naipublishers.nl.
www.skor.nl/eng/publications?f=22504
www.naipublishers.nl/open_e/subscribe_e.html

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