This is an old revision of the document!


NOTE: this is a partially [un]formatted and edited version of blog_dump_20130509 to copypaste into the various parts of the blog archive

TODO

  • chekc broken img tags esp. flickr
  • author links
  • list formatting
  • random html chunks

2012-10-04 11:27:11 by Monique Alvarez

7155241122

7155241122_c88584a49d.jpg

7155244382

7155244382_c663d920c2.jpg

Learning how to use the SINUNI - sensor system, sharing with the local community, developing a system for use in the Time's Up garden to trace the state of various plant beds.

72157629628367162 See images of the workshop on the Time's Up Flickr page

Blog Archive


2012-10-04 11:33:35 by Monique Alvarez

Living Spaces between desire and experiment

6245344591

6245344591_d94cf592de.jpg

The exhibition “In the Garden - Living spaces between desire and experiment” run by the Linz-based museum Nordico took a look at Linz specific urban garden sceneries as well as it examines contemporary, international relevant gardening-architectures and current practices like Community or Guerilla Gardening.

72157627772267615

See images of the exhibition

Find out more

Blog Archive


kanal-labs-triangulated

<a title=“006 von _foam bei Flickr” href=“http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/5054690080/”>{{http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4152/5054690080_e2fd1ca4ee.jpg" alt="006" width="500" height="375" /></a> 2012-10-04 12:00:44 by Monique Alvarez As a part of "Kanal Labs triangulated"; FoAM and Urbanibalism served a range of detoxifying bites, especially crafted to eliminate toxins and pollutants from the human bodily ecology. **[[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157625101386930/" target="_newtab">See images of this event **<a href="http://fo.am/kanal_labs/" target="_newtab">Find out more [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Splinterfields: Mathematickal Arts ==== 2012-10-04 12:13:30 by Monique Alvarez Impressions from the Mathematickal Arts workshop at FoAM in Brussels, 23-25 July [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/5984212077/]] The workshop explored the question whether combining mathematics and textile design can make both 'crafts' more resilient, and help us understand the basics behind contemporary programming. [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157627176738397/]] See images of this event</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Mathematickal Arts Workshop ==== 2012-10-04 12:17:05 by Monique Alvarez [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/5984767364/]] Mathematician and machine artist Tim Boykett (Time's Up, AT) and textile designer and educator Carole Collet (Central Saint Martins College, UK) will lead a three-day workshop bringing together the arts of mathematics, textiles and computer programming. The Mathematickal Arts workshop investigates the tangible, abstract and conceptual threads binding materials and machines in a series of practical and theoretical experiments. Participants will use knots, weaving, sorting algorithms, notation and geometry to explore unfamiliar territories of mathematics or crafts using familiar practices of artistic and technological experimentation. "To me the simple act of tying a knot is an adventure in unlimited space. A bit of string affords the dimensional latitude that is unique among the entities... another dimension is added which provides an opportunity that is limited only by the scope of our own imagery and the length of a ropemakers coil." - Clifford W. Ashley, <em>The Book of Knots</em> **[[:mathematickal_arts_2011|Notes from the workshop]]** [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== The Guild and the Garret: A Resilients Salon ==== guild-and-garret-resilients-salon A Resilients Salon with <a href="http://dougald.co.uk/" rel="nofollow">Dougald Hine</a> and <a href="http://benvickers.tumblr.com/" rel="nofollow">Ben Vickers</a> <a title="spr ingc afe von _foam bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/7029010379/">{{http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6110/7029010379_f1eae75377.jpg" alt="spr ingc afe" width="500" height="329" /></a> 2012-10-04 12:23:39 by Monique Alvarez Writer and collapsonomist Dougald Hine hosts a conversation about how we make a living and support each other in times of precariousness and disruption. As artist-in-transience with The Resilients Project, he is exploring the possibilities of guild-like structures of mutual aid as a strategy for resilience. Dougald will be joined by his regular co-conspirator, Ben Vickers, who has been part of the Temporary School of Thought, the Really Free School and The University Project, and is currently developing a Professional (Reality) Development Programme for arts students at Brighton University. Resilients Salons are conversations about cultural resilience in its many forms. Every salon hosts a guest who engages participants in a discussion about a resilience-related topic, such as long-term thinking, augmented gardening or disaster drills. The atmosphere is casual to inspire participation of everyone involved, accompanied with thematic food and drinks. The salons are a part of the pan-European <a href="http://fo.am/resilients" rel="nofollow">Resilients Project</a> where six organisations speculate on and experiment with possible futures. This Resilients Salon is a part of <a href="http://www.timelab.org/en/springcamp2012" rel="nofollow">Springcamp 2012</a> - System Error: in times of crisis, artists take a stand. Springcamp is organised and hosted by Timelab, in collaboration with Argos, Vooruit, Beursschouwburg and FoAM. **[[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157629335720956/with/7029019697/]] See images of this event [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== TryAdd and Resilients Salon ==== tryadd-and-resilients-salon On Leadership and Crisis: Complexity, Emergence and Relationship Mapping <a title="120209-174118 von _foam bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/6839848204/">{{http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7176/6839848204_25cd8ec260.jpg" alt="120209-174118" width="500" height="333" /></a> 2012-10-04 12:46:58 by Monique Alvarez Julian Still leads us into the heart of complex systems, illustrating his voyages as systemic practitioner and his continuing mission to explore and help strange new worlds evolve. Julian will join us for an inspiring discussion on leading and coaching organisations through crisis. Emergence, relationship mapping and constellations will be investigated and explored both theoretically and tangibly. Julian Still is COO when the impossible is required, green entrepreneur and systemics visionary. An expert in leadership and crisis, he leads, coaches and teaches organisations and individuals facing the most difficult situations. Just before the Salon, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Vali Lalioti facilitates a <a class="internal" href="http://fo.am/tryadd-vali-lalioti/" rel="nofollow">TryAdd</a> with business coaches. The event is organised in collaboration with <a href="http://valilalioti.com/" rel="nofollow">Vali Lalioti</a> and FoAM as part of the <a href="http://fo.am/resilients/" rel="nofollow">Resilients</a> initiative. **[[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157629229905166/]] See images of this event [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Buratinas ==== buratinas <a title="Buratinas (second coming) von _foam bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/7295542198/">{{http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7236/7295542198_3b6cd602d4.jpg" alt="Buratinas (second coming)" width="500" height="310" /></a> 2012-10-04 13:04:22 by Monique Alvarez Buratinas is a project and a boat run by individuals from two Brussels organizations, **FoAM** and **Nadine**. Looking at the well-known mobility crisis in Brussels and the obvious availability of one major transportation route straight through the city, Buratinas proposes an alternative means of transportation by bringing a solar-powered taxi service to Festival Kanaal. The Buratinas Taxi Service offers people the possibility of transportation through Brussels in an ever-so-slow duck's-eye-view sightseeing experience. Taking its time to show rather than move people around, It serves as a romantic, idiosyncratic glue between the various locations of the Festival. During these trips an old seafarer's habit will be revived where true, imagined, old, recent and downright outrageous stories will be offered and accepted as currency for the service. **[[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157629953350548/]] See images of this event [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Rocket Boat Day #1 ==== rocket-boat-day-1 Rocketboat Day promised a blend of backyard naval architecture and rocket science. <a title="L1008467 von _foam bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/5915138960/">{{http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5240/5915138960_b79f1031da.jpg" alt="L1008467" width="500" height="333" /></a> 2012-10-04 13:18:04 by Monique Alvarez Rocketboat Day 1 is a participatory event where people build little boats, power them with rocket engines and race them to see which one gets the furthest. The inaugural event took place on a nice, calm bit of water somewhere on the Brussels to Charleroi kanal. Let's find out what happens when a C6 model rocket engine is attached to a boat made out of anything you can get your hands on. The cool breeze off the water will blow the sweet acrid smoke across your face like a lovers caress. <a href="http://fo.am/rbd" rel="nofollow">fo.am/rbd</a> Rocketboat Day is an evolution of the established tradition of Rocketcar Day. See the last one at <a href="http://rcd12.rocketcarday.com" rel="nofollow">rcd12.rocketcarday.com</a> **[[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157627144769728/]] See images of this event [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Subak in Brussels ==== 2012-10-04 13:24:06 by Monique Alvarez [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/7165664515/]] {{http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7227/7165664515_43a3974eb6.jpg}} CoC Boat "Subak" arrives in Brussels! [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157630016977713/with/7165681969/]] images of this event [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Resilients Salon at Burning Ice ==== resilients-salon-burning-ice FoAM hosts a conversation about human-plant interactions in gardens, labs and kitchens, with the <a href="http://www.genomicgastronomy.com/" rel="nofollow">Center for Genomic Gastronomy</a>, <a href="http://angelovermeulen.net" rel="nofollow">Angelo Vermeulen</a>, <a href="http://timesup.org" rel="nofollow">Time's Up</a>, <a href="http://nadine.be" rel="nofollow">nadine</a> on the closing evening of the <a href="http://www.kaaitheater.be/festival.jsp?festival=43&amp;lang=en" rel="nofollow">Burning Ice Festival</a> in Brussels. <a title="4 von _foam bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/7371570816/">{{http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7082/7371570816_dbee206c51.jpg" alt="4" width="500" height="336" /></a> 2012-10-04 13:31:17 by Monique Alvarez "I propose that we should adopt the plant as the organizational model for life in the twenty-first century, just as the computer seems to be the dominant mental/social model of the late twentieth century, and the steam engine was the guiding image of the nineteenth century. This means reaching back in time to models that were successful fifteen thousand to twenty thousand years ago. When this is done it becomes possible to see plants as food, shelter, clothing, and sources of education and religion." -Terrence McKenna At the epicentre of culture, gardening and technology we might be able to glimpse how plants can become organisational principles for human society in the turbulent times of the 21st century. Although we have to scavenge the fringes of contemporary society, we can observe many healing effects that humans can have on their surroundings through a symbiotic collaboration with plants. However, on a holistic level, we still don't know how to overhaul wasteful human behaviours en masse. How do we encourage a more resilient culture, so that humans and non-humans can continue living, preferably together? How do we stimulate a fertile entanglement of culture, gardening and technology that can give the rise to diverse communities of practice? Communities capable of forging symbiotic relationships between post-industrial human societies and the rest of the earth. Composting bitterness to grow beauty. To explore possible answers to such questions, FoAM hosts a Resilients Salon on Vegetal Culture, in conversation with <a href="http://www.genomicgastronomy.com/" rel="nofollow">Center for Genomic Gastronomy</a>, <a href="http://angelovermeulen.net" rel="nofollow">Angelo Vermeulen</a>, <a href="http://timesup.org" rel="nofollow">Time's Up</a>, <a href="http://nadine.be" rel="nofollow">nadine</a> and other participants of Burning Ice. The atmosphere is casual to inspire participation of everyone involved, accompanied with thematic food and drinks. Inspired by the title of the festival - We The Gardeners - FoAM invites all guests to bring one or more tomatoes from their garden, windowsill, or a neighbourhood green-grocer, as an entrance-fee. During the salon the tomatoes will be cooked into a soup and shared with everyone, as a closing feast of Burning Ice 2012. [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/sets/72157630072052991/]] See images of this event [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== NonGreenGardening Harvest ==== nongreengardening-harvest <a title="NGG Progress Inside Object02_1206_10_012 von Times Up Linz bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409501032/">{{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8163/7409501032_15a6ba166d.jpg" alt="NGG Progress Inside Object02_1206_10_012" width="500" height="335" /></a> 2012-10-18 14:38:59 by Monique Alvarez **NonGreenGardening results and anecdotes** In 2011 we made an open call for finding interesting concepts for our Augmented Urban Garden. It was Natalia Borissova's Non-Green-Gardening project which was the most appealing one. Within the last months she was regularly onsite - developing and improving her concept of a Non-Green Garden at the Time's Up Labs. Together with Natalia and Dismas Leonard we are still maintaining a hybrid - green / nongreen-garden. Pros- and Cons of such a project in urban areas will be discussed during this event between 2 and 5 PM <a title="Non Green Gardening - Progress von Times Up Linz bei Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035447890/">{{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8317/8035447890_1fd401cd7b.jpg" alt="Non Green Gardening - Progress" width="500" height="333" /></a> There will be a presentation of the Augmented Urban garden and its background of the Resilients project, some anecdotes regarding our battles with slugs and other less welcome guests in our garden. We will be serving some delicious dishes from the last harvest of our garden fruit and then send the beds off to their winter dormancy. http://timesup.org/NonGreenGardening http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/sets/72157629601830295/ [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Resilients Naikan ==== resilients-naikan 2012-11-22 14:03:13 by Maja Kuzmanovic "Naikan is a method of intensive self-reflection that can lead to more inner freedom and joy. A week of Naikan allows you to examine your view on life by observing your inner world, calmly, in a completely safe space. The silence and withdrawal enable a deep, meditative and emotionally intense experience, by which self-perception can be re-calibrated and a fresh view on our life story can take place." - From Christina Stadlbauer's page: http://shiatsubrussel.be/index.php?/english/naikan---looking-inside/ We will use Naikan at FoAM in the Future Preparedness case study of the Resilients project. Our hypothesis is that individual introspection, when done as part of a collective in their common workspace, could greatly improve the group's collaboration and communication processes, making them more resilient overall. We work with Helga Hartl as the guide during the retreat, and Alkan Chipperfield will provide some anthropological contextualisation post-retreat. Ten Naikan participants come from FoAM Brussels and Amsterdam, as well as our wider network of collaborators. [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== FoAM interview in MCD #65 ==== foam-interview-mcd-65 2012-11-22 14:12:10 by Monique Alvarez An interview with Maja and Nik is featured in the recent issue of MCD - "L'INTERNET VOIT VERT / THE CULTURE OF GREEN TECH" - in which they discuss groworld, resilience and facing uncertainty. <a href="http://www.digitalmcd.com/2011/12/05/mcd65-linternet-voit-vert-the-culture-of-green-tech" target="_blank">http://www.digitalmcd.com/2011/12/05/mcd65-linternet-voit-vert-the-culture-of-green-tech</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== The Guild and the Garret ==== guild-and-garret 2012-11-22 14:24:37 by Nik Gaffney The recording of the inspiring conversation between Dougald Hine and Ben Vickers, <a href="http://fo.am/guild-garret/">"The Guild and the Garret"</a> at Timelab last weekend is now available from the internet archive. <a href="http://archive.org/details/TheGuildAndTheGarret" target="_blank">http://archive.org/details/TheGuildAndTheGarret</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Notes from the Sensing Resilience workshop ==== notes-sensing-resilience-workshop 2012-11-22 14:55:20 by Monique Alvarez Notes from the workshop can be found here: <a href="http://libarynth.org/resilients/sinuni_workshop#workshop_noteslive" target="_blank">http://libarynth.org/resilients/sinuni_workshop#workshop_noteslive</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Augumented urban gardening - a snap shot ==== augumented-urban-gardening-snap-shot-dismas-sekibaha <span lang="SW">One thing I knew for sure was the challenges of writing about the experiences of **<a href="http://www.libarynth.org/resilients/non-green-gardening" target="_blank">breeding mushrooms</a>** alongside green edible plants in the augmented urban gardening structure. I knew it from the beginning it wont be easy to write about it but it was great that I didn't have to worry about **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409498284/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">breeding them</a>**, <span> neither taking the chance of **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035445041/in/set-72157629601830295" target="_blank">caring for them</a>**. It was the likes of **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/5050644881/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">tomatoes</a>**, salads, **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111956491/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">potatoes</a>**, **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035443420/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">paprikas</a>**, beans, cucumbers, pumpkins, oregano, rosemary, thyme, mints and so many other **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111982784/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">aperitive plants</a>** that kept me working on those hanging beds since i knew at the end of the day they are all going to be eaten, and of course I will be part of the **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111969740/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">feasting activities</a>**. 2012-11-22 15:31:31 by Monique Alvarez <div><span lang="SW">One thing I knew for sure was the challenges of writing about the experiences of **<a href="http://www.libarynth.org/resilients/non-green-gardening" target="_blank">breeding mushrooms</a>** alongside green edible plants in the augmented urban gardening structure. I knew it from the beginning it wont be easy to write about it but it was great that I didn't have to worry about **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409498284/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">breeding them</a>**, <span> neither taking the chance of **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035445041/in/set-72157629601830295" target="_blank">caring for them</a>**. It was the likes of **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/5050644881/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">tomatoes</a>**, salads, **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111956491/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">potatoes</a>**, **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035443420/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">paprikas</a>**, beans, cucumbers, pumpkins, oregano, rosemary, thyme, mints and so many other **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111982784/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">aperitive plants</a>** that kept me working on those hanging beds since i knew at the end of the day they are all going to be eaten, and of course I will be part of the **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111969740/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">feasting activities</a>**. </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">Apparently<span> I also did not forget this African proverb (don't forget that Africa is a country) ''hauling a basket of delicious food is not laborious, neither boring'' </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">It was like; come on, if it is colorless to write about it, why not take photos before planting, harvesting and eating all **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/4817397821/in/set-72157623806473763" target="_blank">green family</a>** and of course **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409494490/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">breeding</a>**, **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409492362/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">harvesting</a>** and **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409501032/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">eating</a>** the other non-green family (**<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7409494258/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">elms oyster</a>, <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035445152/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">pink oyster</a>** and **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035446012/in/set-72157629540753105/" target="_blank">stropharias</a>****)?** <span lang="SW">. Or what about making photos after eating all the greens and the mushrooms and see how delighted people were to have the resilience augmented non-green and green gardening fulfill their desire to **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111973927/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank">good food</a>**. </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">The idea of documenting the process through **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/sets/72157629601830295/with/8111966806/" target="_blank">photos</a>** worked better than the academic style of writing papers that nobody is interested in on reading especially right here, right now where preparation of uncertain future through **<a href="http://www.timesup.org/resilients" target="_blank">resilience philosophy</a>** needs people to act and **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/7003152368/in/set-72157629601830295" target="_blank">experimenting</a>** the actual living models, and not only reading about it. </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">So many things came along to challenge the whole process but the desire to good product and basically delicious food kept me working hard until the enjoyment part of the whole work were achieved. Yes, there were these **<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Slug_in_VanDusen_Botanical_Garden.jpg" target="_blank">monsters aka <span style="font-family: 'Arial','sans-serif'; font-size: 10pt;" lang="EN">slugs </a>** who were very smart to find different ways to snick around and be the first to taste the mushrooms. <span> </div> <div> </div> <h2 style="background: white; margin: 0.83em 0cm; text-align: left;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif';" lang="SW"><span style="font-size: small;">Yap, they did quite a destruction, **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035447890/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank"><span style="font-size: medium;">(I liked to say 'they <span lang="EN-US">assassinated big number of mushrooms') </a>**<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-size: medium;">. . Everytime the mushrooms needed to get some fresh air outside, the only enemy to think about was slugs. The last option was to kill them (to some point it was very brutal)<span> but that was the only way left since the used coffee grounds did not helped much as well as the **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035447785/in/set-72157629540753105" target="_blank"><span style="font-size: small;">aluminium bars </a>**<span style="font-size: small;">. </h2> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">Although the cat was doing a good job but turning the onions bed to be its pooing spot was to some point, a pain, but what could you do about it. He was the best in catching all the mice around but ironically it was always running away from big rats who were more destructive. </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">This dude <span> turned our onions bed to be his pooing place-hahahaa. </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">It didn't matter anyway. At the end of the day, the autumn came so quick and **<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8111956491/in/set-72157629601830295/" target="_blank">everything has to stop</a>** and gives way to the skiing season. </div> <div> </div> <div><span lang="SW">It was a great experience and hopefully next season the Time's Uppers will challenge the cat, slugs and all odds to have best food supply around the corner. </div> <div> </div> <span lang="SW">**<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/times_up/8035444679/in/set-72157623806473763" target="_blank">cheers</a>** [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Unmanned Resillience team in Kilpisjärvi ==== unmanned-resillience-team-arctic <a title="SINUNISuomi 001 by projekt atol, on Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/projekt_atol/8212392390/">{{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8488/8212392390_d7e6a34e55_z.jpg" alt="SINUNISuomi 001" width="640" height="427" /></a> 2012-11-23 23:04:04 by Uros Veber <a title="SINUNISuomi 001 by projekt atol, on Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/projekt_atol/8212392390/">{{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8488/8212392390_d7e6a34e55_z.jpg" alt="SINUNISuomi 001" width="640" height="427" /></a> A part of the Unmanned Resilence Team (Marko, Matthew, Kenny and Hafiz) are continuing to develop SINUNI sensor network and flying the Bramor UAS on orto-photo missions. This time they are way up north in the Arctic Circle, occupying the Kilpisj&auml;rvi Biological Station, situated in the mountain birch forest zone near the 70th parallel of northern latitude (69&deg;03&prime;N; 20&deg;50&prime;E) in the northwesterenmost part of Finland until the end of November. Apparently <em>aurora borealis</em> has already been detected. <a title="aurora_20112012_mountain by projekt atol, on Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/projekt_atol/8211304359/">{{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8480/8211304359_1c209dd44a_z.jpg" alt="aurora_20112012_mountain" width="640" height="427" /></a> For more notes and blogs entries posted by our API / Resilients team in residency in Kilpisjaervi, FI, check out this <a href="http://www.kilpiscope.net/residency/?author=19">link</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== picking season ==== picking-season {{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8206/8231126579_c5760f0467_o.jpg}} <pre>: I was almost sure that the NGG picking season is over and i was about to take a winter break from mushrooms for a while</pre> <pre> </pre> 2012-11-30 10:01:26 by <pre> </pre> {{http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8481/8243840827_3022b2ddae_o.jpg" alt="" /> I was sure that the NGG picking season is over and thought of taking a winter break from mushrooms. It has been raining quite a bit since last days here in B and now the mushrooms are up again, in fact in my post box. At the first look - an innocent little parcel colorfully packed with the familiar to me return address of TU-Land. Hm, did i forget something they do not want to keep around or do they want to poison me with some kind of newly appeared mushroom? "Both guesses are wrong;) surprise. xtn". Well-well, at last one of my guesses was close to the surprise's content: Of course it's about mushrooms! Both poisonous and non. 32 types in total. Painted by A. Shpilenko. Printed out on coated paper. As a postcards. Moscow. 1976. The original price: 1 Ruble, 20 Kopeek. Sold out for 3,- Euro. Bought by TU. At the auction/Foam. Signed by 1,2,3,4... resilients --Bwhoo, just like a fairy tale with a happy end..!! (Thank you guys. Ah, of course i like..................................................................You;) 29.11.12 &ntilde; [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== NonGreenGardening Series ==== nongreengardening-series "NON GREEN GARDENING (NGG) - The ongoing series of living-lab experiments with mushrooms through contemplation and magic. It means to observe and learn from fungal dynamic behavior to continuously explore, adapt to the environment, recycle pathways and always invent on principles that can not be found/fit in any conceptual framework." 2012-12-04 13:48:42 by Monique Alvarez "NON GREEN GARDENING (NGG) - The ongoing series of living-lab experiments with mushrooms through contemplation and magic. It means to observe and learn from fungal dynamic behavior to continuously explore, adapt to the environment, recycle pathways and always invent on principles that can not be found/fit in any conceptual framework." Text by Natalia Borissova **<a href="http://aa-vv.org/node/146" target="_blank">http://aa-vv.org/node/146</a>** **<a href="http://aa-vv.org/node/145" target="_blank">http://aa-vv.org/node/145</a>** [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Resilients: The Flotilla ==== resilients-flotilla 2012-12-05 13:46:36 by Monique Alvarez The prehearsal of the Resilients, starting at 12:12:12 on the 12-12-12, the Anti-Apocalypse Day. It is an exercise for the members of the Resilients Guild, to pre-enact a possible future scenario named "The Flotilla" "In this possible future, The Resilients guild with members and cells around the world decides to lift its anchor. There is no security of funding or the status of artists as independent operators. The arts have become radically bureaucratised, reaching Kafka-esque proportions. The cost of living is prohibitively expensive. Individual artistic careers are impossible to attain, except for the select few artists who serve the tastes of the rich and famous. Universities have become machines for producing papers, but education and research happen elsewhere - in alternative, ad-hoc spaces, in collectives of people eager to learn. Technologists are either brainwashed into serving the capitalist machinery, or drop out and become sought after hackers, feeding technological resistance movements. Environmentalists are disillusioned by the global apathy and are either growing more radical, or attempt to infiltrate the political and economic systems, just to be slowly swallowed and transformed by them. Small groups of people retreat into a bucolic mirage of intentional communities and village life, where permaculture and new age intermingle into a somewhat escapist mixture. The members of the Resilients became tired of fighting the windmills and see that the only way forward is to fully commit themselves to the collective vision they've been cultivating over the years and begin growing their own world: The flotilla, a distributed, semi-nomadic troupe sharing a collective vision of the world and their place in it." A 24 hour period in the Flotilla will be experienced by those participating, enacting the working life in this possible future. A debriefing session attempts to unravel the responses to this lifestyle, to look at the ways that the experiences gathered there can echo into the present to inform our ongoing activities. **<a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/the_flotilla" rel="nofollow">http://lib.fo.am/resilients/the_flotilla</a>** [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Dougald Hine, Journeyman: transiency and cultural resilience ==== dougald-hine-journeyman-interview-transiency-and-cultural-resilience <span style="font-family: brevia-1, brevia-2, sans-serif; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; line-height: 17.981481552124023px; background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.8);">Dougald started a transiency at foam in July 2012, exploring the role of the Journeyman and what this could mean to the Resilients Guild. His travels took him to interesting places and conversations across Europe, reflecting on cultural resilience, travelling and the absurdity of foresight. This interview was taken while reflecting in Rab, Croatia in July 2012 in the middle of his transiency. 2013-01-04 14:48:50 by shelbatra jashari <p style="margin-bottom: 12px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; background-color: transparent; color: #636466; font-family: brevia-1, brevia-2, sans-serif; line-height: 21px;">"I set off from Stockholm on the evening of 8 July, 2012. For the first two weeks, I travelled fast: visiting people and projects that had been on my mind, recording the traces of the journey and the chance encounters to which it led. After that, I slowed down, spending time with groups of friends and collaborators, first in Croatia and later in Denmark. All of these journeys were made by rail and by ferry. Over the later part of the summer, I began to write up some of the longer reflections from the journey, picking up further threads of conversation along the way. As of October, I am gradually completing the map of my travels with notes from the journey." <p style="margin-bottom: 12px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; background-color: transparent; color: #636466; font-family: brevia-1, brevia-2, sans-serif; line-height: 21px;">- Dougald Hine <p style="margin-bottom: 12px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; background-color: transparent; color: #636466; font-family: brevia-1, brevia-2, sans-serif; line-height: 21px;"><span style="background-color: transparent; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; color: #636466; line-height: 21px;">More information: <a style="background-color: transparent; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; line-height: 21px; margin: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; color: #000000; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: #fcd700;" href="http://rhapsodi.se/resilients/?page_id=41" target="_blank">http://rhapsodi.se/resilients/?page_id=41</a> <p style="margin-bottom: 12px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; background-color: transparent; color: #636466; font-family: brevia-1, brevia-2, sans-serif; line-height: 21px;"><span style="background-color: transparent; color: #636466; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; line-height: 21px;">Interview with Dougald about the different aspects of his work and more particularly his view on cultural resilience and the role of "Journeyman" in our times. <p style="margin-bottom: 12px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; background-color: transparent; color: #636466; line-height: 21px;"><iframe style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border-width: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline;" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fapi.soundcloud.com%2Ftracks%2F70675391" frameborder="no" scrolling="no" width="100%" height="166"></iframe> <p style="margin-bottom: 12px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; background-color: transparent; color: #636466; line-height: 21px;">The transcript of the interview with Dougold can be found here: h<a style="margin: 0px; font-size: 12.222222328186035px; vertical-align: baseline; color: #000000; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: #fcd700;" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/dougald_hine_interview" target="_blank">ttp://lib.fo.am/resilients/dougald_hine_interview </a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Boucalais: a mobile studio ==== 2013-01-04 17:56:22 by shelbatra jashari **Boucalais is a mobile studio: **Boucalais is a walking trail from Boulogne-sur-Mer to Dunkirk via Calais which Various Artists has travelled several times a year for seven years. The trail is a studio where a number of VA revise their work or where new work is created. <span style="color: #222222; line-height: 20.266666412353516px;">The creations are poetic expressions on the road, as it were, and which - given the mobile context - are necessarily on a small scale or &lsquo;light'. <span style="color: #222222; line-height: 20.266666412353516px;">The Boucalais project pays homage to the artist-collector who, in the course of his journey, assembles a collection of objects and observations, which will - sometimes literally - be dragged back to his studio as so many installations and &lsquo;objets trouv&eacute;s'. At the same time, the work is often intangible and only lives on in documentary form. Since, in the case of VA, the journey is largely equivalent to the studio, this collection of objects, routines and documentation is used as raw material/ oxygen/ basic component for (artistic) creation &lsquo;en route'. **Boucalais is a format or work method: **<span style="color: #222222; line-height: 20.266666412353516px;">Boucalais started in 2005 as a fixed walking trail, and grew over the years to a format, a state of mind inviting the VA to develop, revise and/or renew their work methods and preconceptions. The walking format challenges the artist's production mechanisms, and makes room for another interpretation of what constitutes artistic work. At times, the work is no more than a distinctive mark or a trace on the trail. The VA are thus continuously led to adapt their idea of creation and constantly develop different work methods. **Boucalais is a performance on the road: **<span style="color: #222222; line-height: 20.266666412353516px;">Boucalais can also be seen as a real-time performance, a performed creative process out of which work emerges that is shown either en route or at predefined locations along the trail: interventions on the roadside and routines in hotel rooms are subtle installations and markings executed by VA, but without an audience consciously looking on. These are but small interventions in the landscape, fragments of songs by a singer-songwriter, anonymous witnesses who return every day for this temporary artist-walker. For more information: * http://boucalais.tumblr.com/ * http://n0dine.squarespace.com/boucalais * http://nadine.be/project/resilients/being-boucalais [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Questioning Resilience ==== 2013-02-17 02:50:47 by Nik Gaffney In <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:words_which_matter_to_people" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/words_which_matter_to_people">Words which Matter to People</a>, Dougald Hine questions the concept of "resilience" itself - not through academic debate, but by talking to people on the streets of Helsinki about the Finnish word <em>sisu.</em> Comparing their visceral and culturally grounded use of this concept with the distant, etiolated notion of "resilience" as it is deployed in political, environmental and scientific discourse, he finds that the meaning we make or find in the world - embodied in such notions as <em>sisu</em> - is deeply bound up with our capacity to endure in turbulent times. Read more about Dougald's travels as journeyman and artist in transience in his wide-ranging <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:dougald_hine_interview" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/dougald_hine_interview">conversation with Shelbatra Jashari</a> for the Resilients project. Read more at <a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilients_in_review">Resilients in Review</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Boating, Control of the Commons and Aristology ==== 2013-02-17 02:54:59 by Nik Gaffney Tim Boykett, Pippa Buchannan and a motley crew of enthusiastic DIY sailors embarked on an exploration of water rights and "luminous green" sailing in <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:coc_overview" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/coc_overview">Control of the Commons</a>. In <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:resilient_boating" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilient_boating">Resilient Boating</a>, Tim writes of sustainability, graceful decay, and the balance of effort versus utility in the realm of boat building and sailing, while Pippa recounts how a confessed food lover embraces the challenge of improvised gourmet cooking for several people on a tiny boat in <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:the_resilient_aristologist" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/the_resilient_aristologist">The Resilient Aristologist</a>. Each of their boating adventures is narrated in the <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:murray_river_journey" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/murray_river_journey">Murray River Journey</a>, the <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:danube_journey" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/danube_journey">Danube Journey</a>, and the <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:belgian_canals" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/belgian_canals">Belgian Canals</a> - as are the details of how they went about constructing the two vessels they sailed, the <em><a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:subak_construction_notes" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/subak_construction_notes">Subak1</a></em> and <em><a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:subak2_construction_notes" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/subak2_construction_notes">Subak2</a>.</em> Also check out some notes towards a <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:snippets" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/snippets">manifesto of a DIY pirate</a>. Read more at <a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilients_in_review">Resilients in Review</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Mushrooms and urban gardening ==== 2013-02-17 02:55:56 by Nik Gaffney Natalia Borissova explored augmented urban gardening through a series of living lab experiments with "non-green" mushrooms, finding in fungi an infinite source of inspiration for recycling and adaptation to changing environmental conditions. Her practical explorations in mushroom growing are documented in <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:non_green_revolution" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/non_green_revolution">The Non Green (R)evolution</a>, while <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:go_ask_a_mushroom" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/go_ask_a_mushroom">Go Ask a Mushroom: musings on Afterculture</a> advocates fungi and their mycelial roots as a source of continued inspiration for a resilient "life after culture." At the same time, Dismas Leonard Sekibaha narrates his experiences at Time's Up as "gardener in residence" - of both the green and non-green variety - in <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:my_summer_in_an_urban_garden" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/my_summer_in_an_urban_garden">My Summer in an Urban Garden</a>. Read more at <a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilients_in_review">Resilients in Review</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Leaks, Alchemy and the silient side of things ==== 2013-02-17 02:56:48 by Nik Gaffney <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:edible_alchemy" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/edible_alchemy">Edible Alchemy</a> by Carole Collet and Bartaku discusses resilience and adaptation in relation to the properties of two intriguing plants - flax and Aronia - and how these were used in Temporary photoElectric Digestopians (TpED), a series of co-creation worklabs, and the Edible Alchemy Aperolab. <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:resilience_thinking_diy" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilience_thinking_diy">Resilience Thinking DIY</a> was an exercise held at Central Saint Martin's College and summarised here to encourage readers to practice resilient thinking in design. <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:a_leaky_loop" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/a_leaky_loop">A Leaky Loop</a> by Bartaku narrates the kind of intimate and bizarre experience you can expect as a TpED creator and tester, while <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:silients" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/silients">Silients</a> is a fragmentary meditation on a peculiar variation of "resilients." Read more at <a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilients_in_review">Resilients in Review</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== The Pollinators ==== 2013-02-17 02:57:35 by Nik Gaffney In <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:the_pollinators_review" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/the_pollinators_review">The Pollinators</a>, nadine review the meaning and implications of reviving modes of cultural travel where the journey is the destination, as an antidote both for tourism and the utilitarian obsession with getting from A to B in the shortest time and space. [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== If you can't pay for a loaf... ==== 2013-02-17 02:58:49 by Nik Gaffney In connection with the Unmanned Resilience case study, Uro&scaron; Veber interviewed Helena Krapež, the owner of an excursion farm on the Gora plateau in western Slovenia. <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:bake_your_own" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/bake_your_own">If you can't pay for a loaf, go bake your own</a> is a fascinating ethnographic glimpse into the state of farming in this region, and by extension, the changes and upheavals taking place in wider society - not to mention the resourcefulness of one woman in challenging circumstances. Read more at <a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilients_in_review">Resilients in Review</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== From Pan to Panarchy ==== 2013-02-17 02:59:53 by Nik Gaffney Exploring methods of prototyping possible futures, Anna Maria Orru and David Relan discuss their scenario building toolkit in <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:scenario_symphony" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/scenario_symphony">Composing a Scenario Symphony</a>. This approach draws on a combination of Lance Gunderson and C. S. Holling's panarchy systems model outlined in <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:from_pan_to_panarchy" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/from_pan_to_panarchy">From Pan To Panarchy</a>, and the idea of <a class="wikilink1" title="resilients:temporal_model" href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/temporal_model">The Temporal Model in Future Scenario Building</a>. Read more at <a href="http://lib.fo.am/resilients/resilients_in_review">Resilients in Review</a> [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Resilients online ==== 2013-03-29 00:55:42 by Alkan Chipperfield [[>http://www.flickr.com/photos/foam/6918397210/]] {{http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5152/6918397210_ebfeece57d_o.jpg}} We are pleased to announce the compilation of the [[:resilients/|Resilients online publication]], representing the collected reflections and working notes gleaned from two years' prolific intentional voyages, experimental situations and real-life labs exploring creative resilient practices. Beautifully illustrated with specially-commissioned imagery from Strangehalos, we present this rich body of material as both a finished chronicle of our endeavours and as a plentiful archive of working ideas and notes that can be built on and modified by anyone interested in pursuing it further. In this way http://resilients.net can be approached from several angles: skim through the topics that interest you, peruse it as a reader, or drill deeper into the unruly compost of notes, quotes, and further reading to get at the raw <em>mat&eacute;riel</em> for future fabulations. We invite you in whatever way that suits to explore, be inspired by and build on the work presented here - which we believe will surely only become more relevant as this brave new century unfolds. [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Residency Family of Creatieves - Ceci est un magasin de vêtements ==== 2013-04-11 12:33:36 by Loes Jacobs Five people with different backgrounds (visual arts, fashion, architecture and anthropology) were 'running' a boutique together. It was a shop with no clothes on offer, a paradoxical shop where words, objects and people came together. Ceci set un magasin de v&ecirc;tetements was a shop residency project by Sara ten Westenend, Maaike Gottschal, Miriam Rohde, Annelies Kuypers and Isabelle Makay who used the contradictory set-up of the boutique without clothes as a place in fluctuation where text, objects (clothes), people and space could meet. The aim of their residency was to get an insight in practical aspects of dealing with objects or material as processes. Therefore they invited different people during their residency who are integrating a specific approach to objects and/or material in their work. [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== N°19 residency Family of Creatives ==== 2013-04-25 15:18:25 by Robert Brečević **After the tribe trip Pollinators Performing Pictures had an in situ residency in Rab, Croatia, the arrival point of the bike journey. The residency was organised there to process the vast material collected during the trip. Performing Picture worked on photo material, and mapping the chapels on the straight line the journeyers followed.** The end of the Pollinators journey with the public event in Rab where the participants shared their experiences of the trip and showed the rough material coming from the mobile process, was also the beginning of the Family of Creatives residency by Performing Pictures. Not only Geska and Robert Brecevic, but also Cesar Brecevic, the 13 year old son of Robert who had biked along the whole line were part of this residency. As part of the residency, further chapels were designed and placed on the island. The material was used for a artist photo-book essay (1 copy) and for the online map project by artist Pacome Beru, and the exhibition UnTied Notions. (Please note that this exhibition also encompassed works from another EU-project, the EITC 2011-7480. No costs for the exhibition has been charged to the Resilients project). [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== DIY-kit for roadside chapels ==== 2013-04-25 15:34:44 by Robert Brečević These are the recallings by Patrik Qvist, creator of the IKEA-style roadside solar-powered chapels left as beacons of light for fellow travellers by his friend Robert Brečević. It was somewhat sad to see R take off with a sackload of roadside chapels- I had very much wanted to partake in the journey, an adventure that would take him and his fellow travelers from suburban Stockholm down through an increasingly devout Europe. Or that it was how I imagined the lands south of here; a landscape devout in terms of number of people actively pursuing a faith within the framework of organized religion. I was curious to see how the chapels would be received along the way and to know to to what extent a crude miniature chapel could inspire to a moment of contemplation along different kinds of roads in this imagined Europe. The chapels traveled in bits and pieces; a DIY-kit that required little else than a few nails and a hammer for assembly. The image within was another matter. R brought a beautifully cast St Cristobal from Mexico made of resina, rock hard and with great detail. I spent a few nights trying to make a silicone mold from the figure which then would be used on the journey- my idea was that the figure would be cast the night before erecting the chapel, after the bikes had been dismounted and camp had been secured for the night, thus providing a night-long curing of the figure. It did not quite work out- I was lacking in experience with the material, and had already used up most of my provisions of silicone in a vain attempt to make a huge mold for the entire chapel ("no problem, Robert, you can pick up concrete anywhere along the way, all you'll need is some water and a trowel"). In the end, the chapel was made out of wood, and the faulty silicone mold for St Cristobal only held up for a few figures. Further down the road, the chapels became homes to icons that bore closer resemblance to the patron saint of travelers; icons that were assembled en route and thus spoke both of and for the landscapes transversed. Whatever sadness I may have felt at the departure soon gave way to a sense of joy at receiving reports from the trip. The chapels dotted the landscape and tied together nation-states, cultures, zones of languages and monetary systems in a rough squiggle from north to south-east. My small part of making this happen started out as something rather mundane: a few night spent with sketches, silicone and plaster. Into other hands, through other lands the chapels have transcended way beyond whatever my intentions may have been for them; I imagine a strike of lightning in a muddy field; the intent curiosity of a woodpecker and the careful token of dried flowers befalling unto the chapels as we speak. [[archive|Blog Archive]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ==== Unmanned Resilients videos ==== unmanned-resilients-vids Here is a collection of videos, documenting a series of Unmanned Resilience workshops, the SINUNI residency and the mountan hike & wild food discovering that all took place on Gora Plateau in August 2012. And we are now also adding the local TV show about our UR activities. 2012-10-01 11:36:35 by Uros Veber Here is a collection of videos, the documenting a series of Unmanned Resilience activities on Gora Plateau in August 2012. <html> <iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/63883122" frameborder="0" width="640" height="360"></iframe> <a href="http://vimeo.com/63883122">UNMANNED RESILIENCE UAS BRAMOR TESTS</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>. <iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/63673688" frameborder="0" width="640" height="360"></iframe> <a href="http://vimeo.com/63673688">RESILIENTS WORKSHOP</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>. <iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/63673687" frameborder="0" width="640" height="360"></iframe> <a href="http://vimeo.com/63673687">RESILIENTS MOUNTAIN CLIMB / HIKE SHORT VID</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>. </html> We are happy now to finally be able to upload the full show on Unmanned Resilience activities. The show is being played on local TV station as part od Sodobna Umetnost (Contemporary Art) TV series on rotating basis every month. Unfortunately it is all in Slovene and we were also asked to keep it password protected But here is the pass: resilients [[>http://vimeo.com/video/63653085]] Sodobna Umetnost - Unmanned Resilients [[archive|Blog Archive]]

  • resilients/blog/blog_dump_20130509_formatted.1368183241.txt.gz
  • Last modified: 2013-05-10 10:54
  • by nik