Dear Spectres,

I just wanted to let you know that I've posted up the notes from a recent talk I gave about the use of drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles, in tactical media art: http://is.gd/aerialecologies

It is absolutely not intended as an exhaustive survey (that might come later), but does include some details about some canonical tactical media pieces from the late 1990s, that some of you might find interesting, including work by Marko Peljhan and the Bureau of Inverse Technology.

The intention with the talk, and with the write-up, was to place the work Lighthouse is presenting at this year's Brighton Festival - 'Under the Shadow of the Drone' by James Bridle, and 'The Air Itself is one Vast Library' by Mariele Neudecker (http://is.gd/BF2013) in a wider art historical context, and to acknowledge some of the significant interventions that artists working in our field have made over the past 10-15 years.

As many of us know, today many other artists - Jordan Crandall, Alex Rivera, Matthew Battles, Ricardo Dominguez, Adam Harvey, to name but a few - are making work about the impact of drones on our lives. But I feel it's useful and interesting to look back at some of the 'prior art', so to speak.

It's a talk, not an essay, so forgive the conversational language.

Let me know what you think.

Best,

Honor Harger
Artistic Director, Lighthouse, Brighton, UK

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Unmanned Aerial Ecologies: proto-drones, airspace and canaries in the mine
Notes from a talk by Honor Harger, 16 April, 2013
http://is.gd/aerialecologies

This write-up aims to show how media artists have, for the past 15 years, created projects which presciently framed and contextualsied the issues and technologies which have collided to enable today's drone-wars. During this period, the work of a selected group of media artists expressed an understanding, and an unease, with the expanding technological capacity of commercial and military organisations. As their ability to carry out acts of pervasive surveillance and aggression, using technologies such as UAVs, grew, so did the concern of a generation of artists using the tools and strategies of tactical media. Artists such as Marko Peljhan, Bureau of Inverse Technology and Trevor Paglen created canonical works between 1998 and 2008 that both revealed the growing capabilities of drone technologies, but also used these very capabilities to turn our attention towards the manufacturers and users of these devices. These were classic acts of tactical media, a form of activist art practice, that goes beyond mere revelation, and actively intervenes within a system deemed to be morally, politically or ethically problematic.

Today, a new generation of practitioners his emerged who are monitoring and critiquing the use of drones not only for military purposes, but also for civilian activities. Their hallmark is a playful curiosity, about how these technologies may be integrated into our daily lives. Working in parallel to the growing movement of UAVers, the ham radio operators of the drone world, these artists and makers, are hacking freely available UAV technology to create unusual aerial antics. But whilst these blithe, inquiring actions are needed and valid, in the meantime, the drone-war continues, with hundreds of civilians killed each year, its remit ever expanding. It would seem that now more than ever, robust, critical, tactical media interventions, are urgently required.

The illustrated notes are here: http://is.gd/aerialecologies

I must acknowledge the generous help of Marko Peljhan, Kate Rich, Natalie Jeremijenko, and Usman Haque who helped situate this research. And thank you to all the artists and technologists cited, including Trevor Paglen, Timo Arnall, James Bridle, Mariele Neudecker and Liam Young. There's full credits and references here: http://is.gd/uavtalk




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Honor Harger
Email: honorhar...@gmail.com
Phone: +44 7765834272
http://about.me/honor

Work
Director, Lighthouse, Brighton, UK
http://www.lighthouse.org.uk

Talks
TED Talk: http://is.gd/harger
Lift: http://is.gd/lifttalk
Shift Happens: http://is.gd/shifttalk

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