Hacking the Body/Cyberfeminismus

Panel: 'Hacking the Body'- 6. Februar, Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien, Berlin, Deutschland
[Panels Fotos]

Das Panel 'Hacking the Body' fragt nach der Bedeutung des Konzepts des Cyberfeminismus heute, etwa 10 Jahre nach seinem ersten Auftauchen. Es werden künstlerische und aktivistische Praktiken betrachtet, die sich mit den Begriffen Körper, Identität und Sexualität beschäftigen.
1991 schrieb eine Gruppe australischer Frauen, das “Cyberfeministische Manifest für das 21. Jahrhundert”, welches, inspiriert von Donna Haraway, das Konzept Cyberfeminismus fast spielerisch entwickelte. Die neuen Formen einer Utopie von Gender und Identität gingen mit dem radikalen und kollektiven Gebrauch neuer Technologien einher. Der cyberfeministische Virus verbreitete sich über Australien, Europa und Amerika. Er vereinte eine radikale Idee vom Körper mit dem Enthusiasmus für neue technologische Utopien und der Hoffnung auf eine Subversion des Patriarchats, indem neue hybride Identitäten sowie ironischer und politischer Aktivismus geschaffen wurden.
Wo steht Cyberfeminismus heute, nachdem 10 Jahre der individuellen und kollektiven Praxis vergangen sind? Sind Konzepte wie Identität, Körper und Sexualität hackbar?
Es scheint eine neue Welle radikalen Körperausdrucks in der unabhängigen Pornoproduktion zu geben, die die Dichotomie von Geschlechterzuschreibungen in männlich/weiblich oder straight/schwul untergraben will. Ist der neue Körper mit dem cyberfeministischen Virus infiziert?

Hacking the Body – 6.Februar 16.00 UHR
Erster Teil (16.00-17.30 Uhr)
- Cornelia Sollfrank, Künstlerin und Cyberfeministin, Old Boys Network (Hamburg, D)
- Agnese Trocchi, Candida TV (Rom IT)
Anschließend Diskussion
Videoscreening (17.30-18.00 Uhr):
- Bio Doll's Baby von Franca Formenti, Bio Dolls (Varese, IT), Einführung von Dahlia Schweitzer www.thisisdahlia.com (New York, USA/Berlin, D) mit Interaktion von synusi@ virus von Casaluce - Geiger (Wien, Ö/IT)
Zweiter Teil (18.00-19.30 Uhr)
- Diana McCarty, Bootlab (Berlin, D)
- Betty, Sexyshock (Bologna, IT)
Anschließend Diskussion
- Moderation: Tatiana Bazzichelli, AHA: Activism-Hacking-Artivism (Rome, IT/Berlin, D)

[Panels Fotos]

Cornelia Sollfrank – Old Boys Network (Hamburg, D)
She is an artist, lives in Hamburg, is lecturing at the University of Oldenburg. Central to her conceptual and performative works are the changing notions of art, the advent of a new image of the artist in the information age, gender-specific handling of technology, new forms of disseminating art, and communication and networking as art. She initiated the cyberfemininist organisation “Old Boys Network”. Her project Female Extension (1997) was a hack of the first net.art competition initiated by a museum, in which she flooded the museum's network with submissions by 300 virtual female net artists. Her net.art generator automatically produces art on demand. She published the readers “First Cyberfeminist International” (1998), “Next Cyberfeminist International” (1999) and “Very Cyberfeminist International” (2001). Sollfrank is currently producing work on the subject of female hackers.
www.obn.org - www.artwarez.org

Agnese Trocchi - Candida TV (Rome, Italy)
Agnese Trocchi was born as 'macchina', a digital entity, in AVaNA BBS (Bullettin Board System), and settled in Rome. She grew-up in techno organized disorder and she created a Web site focused on the illegal rave scene in Italy. She has developed counter-networks in Rome including www.thething.it. She is a co-editor of Torazine Magazine: Pills of Pop Counterculture. She is also co-founder of Candida TV, a video project for the infestation of mainstream television channels. Since 1999, she has been collaborating with Diane Ludin and Francesca Da Rimini in the net project Identity_Runners.
www.candidatv.tv - www.idrunners.net - ordanomade.kyuzz.org

Dahlia Schweitzer
Originally from New York, Dahlia Schweitzer has become Berlin's fastest rising ex-pat multi-talent, managing to both maintain her public profile as an extroverted, electro-punk diva and keeping up her other, more introverted passions of writing and photography. ExBerliner magazine wrote that she is "as driven as the snow, if not as pure," and one thing this girl doesn't do is take it slow. With shows from London to Berlin, New York to Rome, Dahlia Schweitzer is an artist, performer, and personality constantly serving up what's next in the worlds of music, editorial, photography, and nightlife. Dahlia's subjects, in all her various media, have consciously run from high and refined to down and dirty, exploring themes from sexuality to identity, fantasy and gender.
www.thisisdahlia.com

Franca Formenti
In the beginning Franca Formenti was active in trash and fibre art. In the last few years she has been dealing with issues about human cloning and the relationship between human beings and computers, with particular attention to the activities on the web and to the interaction between human beings and machines. After creating an installation called “Bio Bambino”, she creates “Bio Doll”, a sort of cloned android, at the will of the public's disposal, actually a “sex slave”. Bio Doll doesn’t have neither a navel nor uterus because they are by now considered useless. But a wish of conception stands still in her memory...
www.francaformenti3.org

Diana McCarty - Bootlab (Berlin, D)
Diana McCarty lives and works in Berlin. She is a co-founder of bootlab and co-initiated reboot.fm, an open source radio project. Together with Valie Djordjevic, Kathy Rae Huffman and Ushi Reiter, she runs the Faces mailing list for women in media. As part of the International Women's University sever development team, she worked with Seda Guerses, Barbara Schelkle, Prof. Heidi Schelhowe, and Heiki Pisch - and also worked to develop feminist pedagogical approaches to computing. In the mid-ninties, McCarty co-founded the Nettime Mailing list and as part of the Media Research Foundation, she co-organized the Metaforum Conference Series in Budapest. Her main interests are exploiting social and technological systems for cultural use; ie. piracy and open source software development for real life.
www.bootlab.org - www.faces-l.net - www.mrf.hu

Betty – Sexyshock (Bologna, Italy)
This is the first Italian independent sexshop managed by women. Sexyshock gives voice to the concept of sexuality and to technology through a feminine point of view. Sexyshock is not a commercial place, but a space of cultural and political action and play with bodies, far away from strict categories, roles and fixed identities. Betty is the name of the sexyshock collective.
www.ecn.org/sexyshock

Moderation: Tatiana Bazzichelli – AHA (Rome, Italy/Berlin D)
Independent art curator, communication sociologist and organizer of exhibition/events on hacktivism and net.art, she is the founder of the networking project AHA: Activism-Hacking-Artivism and owner of the mailing list on artistic activism aha@ecn.org hosted by Isole nella Rete Italian collective. She curated several exhibitions in Italy and was involved in different activist events in Berlin, where she lives since 2003. She writes on net.art and hacktivism for several Italian magazines ("Next Exit", "Neural", "Cluster", "Digicult", "Avatar", etc). www.ecn.org/aha - www.strano.net/bazzichelli

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