Dear Spectrites!

This project update on the Tactical Media Connections research, publication, 
and event trajectory, which started in the summer of 2014, comes slightly 
belated to Spectre list. Apologies for that.

If you are interested to become involved in these meetings or the project 
described below please contact the projectors initiators David Garcia and Eric 
Kluitenberg.

The online version is at:
http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net/?p=435 
<http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net/?p=435>

best wishes,
Eric

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Tactical Media Connections update: May 1, 2015
A public research trajectory tracing the legacies of Tactical Media and its 
connections to the present.

Tactical Media Connections is an extended trajectory of collaborative research 
tracing the legacies of Tactical Media and mapping the relationships between 
its precursors and its progeny. The program is realised through a series of 
meetings and exhibitions, culminating in the publication of a Tactical Media 
Anthology with contributions and dialogues ranging across generations and 
territories.

Taken as a whole the project seeks to engage the many threads and practices 
that have emerged out of and relate back to the classical moment in the middle 
of the 1990s when Tactical Media was identified - not least through the 
renowned Next 5 Minutes festival series, when it came to be understood as a 
constellation of different yet connected cultures of contestation, operating at 
the specific intersection of art, media, technological experimentation and 
social/political activism. Central to the idea of Tactical Media was a nomadic 
movement between mainstream media channels, alternative cultures and dissident 
lifestyles by those groups who felt somehow aggrieved, misrepresented or 
otherwise marginalised in the wider public domain.  

Unlike the “social turn” and other manifestations of community arts and 
post-studio practice, that emerged in the 1990s, Tactical Media has not become 
another an art-world genre. Its scope and significance has gone far beyond the 
accepted confines of the art scene. This lack of rootedness in a single 
discourse means it has largely escaped institutional capture. It has however 
paid a high price for avoiding any kind of strategic grounding with a bad case 
of historical amnesia. This widespread amnesia has meant that the scope and 
achievements of this movement are frequently forgotten or overlooked, rendering 
important lessons unavailable to subsequent generations of practitioners and 
activists.

In developing Tactical Media Connections, we have avoided fixed definitions, we 
are instead treating the moment when Tactical Media was initially named and 
described as a key reference point or rather a “point of lost origin”, a 
temporal vector enabling us to move in two directions at once: On the one hand 
we can reflect on the precursors, without getting lost in history. On the other 
hand we can look towards Tactical Media’s progeny and legacies, and their 
possible futures from an extended and more deeply informed perspective. As a 
framework it is designed to manage the extreme complexity we are unleashing. 
Exploiting this temporal vector we need no longer use the term Tactical Media 
to cover every practice that appears relevant. Rather this “point of lost 
origin” can be seen as one important moment of convergence in these evolving 
cycles of contestation and engagement, at a moment in time when anyone can 
‘become the media’ at the touch of a screen.


Trajectory

The Tactical Media Connections public research project got underway with an 
international research meeting at Tolhuistuin, Amsterdam’s new cultural centre, 
in July 2014. The meeting was  combined with a public debate on “Art and 
Political Conflict”, organised in collaboration with Framer Framed, the gallery 
and exhibition agency at the Tolhuistuin. Since then activity has shifted to 
‘behind the scene’ activities. In the past months we have been developing the 
different ‘components’ of our trajectory; the publication - a comprehensive 
anthology of Tactical Media; the first stage of a thorough upgrade of the 
Tactical Media Files online documentation resource; and preparations for a  
series of public events and exhibitions to be organised in the Fall of  2016 
and Spring 2017 in The Netherlands and the UK.


MIT Press confirmed as publisher for the Tactical Media Anthology

We are delighted that the MIT Press has agreed to publish the Tactical Media 
Anthology, which is scheduled to launch in the second half of 2016. The book as 
a whole will be ± 450 pages, as a full-colour edition, edited by Eric 
Kluitenberg and David Garcia in close consultation with Brian Holmes. Our 
ambition is to do justice to the full scope and significance of Tactical Media 
activity over the past three decades: connecting debates, controversies and 
experiences of various generations of artists, activists, media makers and 
theorists across different periods and territories, and relate these to the 
current situation, which might be described as the Post-Occupy / Post-Prism 
era. We see a particular urgency to revisit these debates and link experiences 
of different generations at this critical juncture.

The publication will include among others contributions by Michael Dieter, 
Brian Holmes, DeeDee Halleck, Tatiana Bazzichelli, Marcell Mars, Critical Art 
Ensemble, Mathew Fuller, David Garcia, Paulo Gerbaudo, Lev Manovich, Özge 
Celikaslan, Graham Harwood, Rodrigo Nunes, Saskia Sassen, Clement Apprich, 
Oliver Lerone Schultz, Caroline Nevejan, Daoud Kuttab, Konrad Becker, Brandon 
Jourdan, Seda Gürses, Cornelia Sollfrank, Geert Lovink, Marianne Maeckelbergh, 
Ned Rossiter, Eric Kluitenberg, Simona Lodi, Heath Bunting, Nat Muller, Felix 
Stalder, Ted Byfield, Julian Oliver, Danja Vasiliev, Mike Stubbs, McKenzie 
Wark, Tobias Revell, and others to be confirmed.


Tactical Media Files website relaunched with reconstituted video archive

The online documentation resource Tactical Media Files, originally launched in 
the Fall of 2008, has been rebuilt from the ground up. While design changes 
have so far been minimal, important work has been done to ensure the longer 
term sustainability of the resource. The site is an entry point to the 
extensive collection of materials around the practices of Tactical Media in 
many different places and aims to make them accessible for current and future 
generations of artists, activists, researchers and the general audience. An 
important part of the resource are the materials sourced from contributions 
made over the years by visitors to each edition of the Next 5 Minutes festivals 
and held by the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, where 
the physical materials remain accessible in their original formats.

The most significant  aspect of this renewal process is that the extensive 
video archive of the Tactical Media Files has been restored and can now be 
freely accessed across different viewing devices. In the next phase of 
development the emphasis will shift towards an overhaul of the visual design of 
the website and a further extension of the functionality of the video archive. 
We are also keen on exploring more experimental approaches to the materials 
contained in the resource and aim to work together with curators, artists, 
technical developers and theorists on this as part of our on-going research 
trajectory. More about that in future updates.
www.tacticalmediafiles.net <http://www.tacticalmediafiles.net/> 


Public event-series and exhibitions 2016 - 2017

Agreements are in place with a variety of partner organisations for a series of 
public events and exhibitions to be organised in the Fall of 2016 and early 
2017, in The Netherlands and the UK. These events will include conferences and 
public debates, a larger screening event and public debate around the Global 
Uprisings documentary project, and two substantial exhibitions curated by Nat 
Muller and David Garcia in close consultation with Josien Peterse and Cas Bool, 
co-directors of Framer Framed in Amsterdam, and Mike Stubbs, director of FACT 
in Liverpool. The aim is to commission a number of new works which will  travel 
from The Netherlands to the UK and possibly beyond and will include screening 
events and workshops.

In the run up to the final series of events we aim to organise a number of 
local development meetings or Tactical Media Labs, in the UK and in NL. These 
will act as local connection points for researchers, artists and activists who 
want to engage more actively in this project. If you are interested to become 
involved in these meetings or the project please contact the projectors 
initiators Eric Kluitenberg and David Garcia.  


Partner organisations

Partner organisations with whom initial agreements have been made so far 
include Cultural Center Tolhuistuin, Framer Framed, EYE Film Institute, the 
Institute of Network Cultures, The Showroom in London, FACT - Foundation for 
Art and Creative Technology, Cool Mediators Foundation, and Bournemouth 
University’s COLAB. 


Preliminary Research Questions:

To guide this exploration we have formulated the following research questions 
during our initial meeting at the Tolhuistuin in Amsterdam:

How can we evaluate the remarkable developments in what we indicate as the 
post-occupy / post prism era? How do they relate to longer term questions of 
engagement in public culture and the formation of new politics giving voice to 
the voiceless, in pursuit of a more open and equitable future?

How resilient and comprehensive do the definitions of Tactical Media proposed 
in the 1990s appear in retrospect today? Were some aspects missed or distorted 
by the classic definitions? And how do they speak to the present and present 
generations of activists, artists, thinkers, theorists, researchers, media 
tacticians, out in the streets and the networks?

Does the extensive occupation of popular social media platforms in the 2011 
uprisings (or ‘movement(s) of the squares’) signal an end of the “cyber 
separatism” of the Indymedia generation ? And does their extensive use of these 
platforms signal a new pragmatic populism for this generation’s media 
activists? Have projects with great public impact, such as WikiLeaks, 
neutralised the critique of media intervention as being trapped in networks of 
insularity and semiotic corruption?

What role can the idea of Tactical Media and its progeny play during the 
inevitable periods of latency in the cycles of protest ?  In this and other 
contexts can Tactical Media research help to identify new networks of 
resistance and change in the control society?

To take stock, discuss and debate, and begin a more collective appreciation of 
these questions is what this public research trajectory is meant for.

Support
The Tactical Media Connections project and the preparation for the Tactical 
Media Anthology  are financially supported by the Creative Industries Fund NL 
and the Mondriaan Fund. 

Project updates are published a.o. on our blogs:

http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net <http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net/>

http://new-tactical-research.co.uk <http://new-tactical-research.co.uk/>

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