Difference between revisions of "Volumetric Regimes"

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__NOTOC__
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<span class="hi">This wiki is an ongoing workspace for a book in the making. ''Volumetric Regimes'' will be published by Open Humanities Press (2021) in the [http://www.data-browser.net/ DATA browser series], edited by Geoff Cox and Joasia Krysa.</span>
  
 
== Volumetric Regimes: material cultures of quantified presence ==
 
== Volumetric Regimes: material cultures of quantified presence ==
Edited by Possible Bodies (Jara Rocha and Femke Snelting)
 
  
Volumetric Regimes emerges from Possible Bodies, a collaborative project on the intersection between artistic and academic research. The project was initiated in 2016 to explore the very concrete and at the same time complex and fictional entities of so-called "bodies" in the context of 3D computation. Possible Bodies developed alongside an inventory of cases [1] and resulted in texts, workshops, visual essays and performances. This book would bring together diverse materials from an ongoing conversation between artists, software developers and theorists working with the techniques and technologies of detecting, tracking, printing, modelling and rendering.
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Edited by [https://possiblebodies.constantvzw.org/inventory/ Possible Bodies] (Jara Rocha and Femke Snelting)
  
The book will be organised in five chapters, each containing differently formatted materials. Each chapter starts with a commissioned contribution which addresses the material-discursive entanglements that emerge from the crossing of quite differentiated worldlings. Contributors include: Ramon Amaro, Maria Dada, Helen Pritchard, Nicolas Malevé.
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[[File:Book.png|border|500px]]
  
[[More|About]]
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'''Volumetric Regimes emerges from [https://possiblebodies.constantvzw.org Possible Bodies], a collaborative project on the intersection between artistic and academic research. The project was initiated in 2016 to explore the very concrete and at the same time complex and fictional entities of so-called "bodies" in the context of 3D computation. Possible Bodies developed alongside an inventory of cases and resulted in texts, workshops, visual essays and performances. This book would bring together diverse materials from an ongoing conversation between artists, software developers and theorists working with the techniques and technologies of detecting, tracking, printing, modelling and rendering.'''
  
    somatopologies: On the ongoing rendering of corpo-realities
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'''The book will be organised in five chapters, each containing differently formatted materials. Each chapter starts with a commissioned contribution which addresses the material-discursive entanglements that emerge from the crossing of quite differentiated worldlings. Contributors include: Ramon Amaro, Maria Dada, Helen Pritchard, Nicolas Malevé.'''
  
    Signs of clandestine disorder: The continuous after-math of 3D computationalism
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&rarr; [[About|More about ''Volumetric Regimes'']]
  
    x, y, z: Dimensional axes of power
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== Index ==
  
    Parametric unknowns: Hypercomputation between the probable and the possible
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=== [[Introduction]] ===
 
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=== [[somatopologies|somatopologies: On the ongoing rendering of corpo-realities]] ===
    Depths and densities: Accidented and dissonant spacetimes
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{{:somatopologies}}
 
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=== [[clandestine_disorder|Signs of clandestine disorder: The continuous after-math of 3D computationalism]] ===
 
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{{:clandestine_disorder}}
The conversations brought together in Volumetric Regimes were fed by and fed into various institutions and publications internationally, such as Goldsmiths Digital Arts Computing (Volumetric Ecologies, London), Hangar (Imagined Mishearings, Barcelona), BAK/Centre for the Humanities (Posthuman Glossary, Utrecht), La Gaîté Lyrique (Computer grrrls, Paris), UdK (How to Relate, Berlin), Schloss Solitude (Collective inventorying, Stuttgart), Universidad de la República de Uruguay (Naturoculturas Turbocapitalistas, Montevideo), Transmediale (Depths and Densities, Berlin) and La Casa Encendida (Bug Reporting, Madrid).
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=== [[x,_y,_z|x, y, z: Dimensional axes of power]] ===
 
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{{:x,_y,_z}}
Acknowledging the licenses of the included material, the book will be made available as Open Access.
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=== [[parametric_unknowns|Parametric Unknowns: Hypercomputation between the probable and the possible]] ===
 
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{{:parametric_unknowns}}
[1] https://possiblebodies.constantvzw.org/inventory/
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=== [[depths_and_densities|Depths and Densities: Accidented and dissonant spacetimes]] ===
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{{:depths_and_densities}}
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=== [[Colophon]] ===

Revision as of 07:10, 29 May 2020

This wiki is an ongoing workspace for a book in the making. Volumetric Regimes will be published by Open Humanities Press (2021) in the DATA browser series, edited by Geoff Cox and Joasia Krysa.

Volumetric Regimes: material cultures of quantified presence

Edited by Possible Bodies (Jara Rocha and Femke Snelting)

Book.png

Volumetric Regimes emerges from Possible Bodies, a collaborative project on the intersection between artistic and academic research. The project was initiated in 2016 to explore the very concrete and at the same time complex and fictional entities of so-called "bodies" in the context of 3D computation. Possible Bodies developed alongside an inventory of cases and resulted in texts, workshops, visual essays and performances. This book would bring together diverse materials from an ongoing conversation between artists, software developers and theorists working with the techniques and technologies of detecting, tracking, printing, modelling and rendering.

The book will be organised in five chapters, each containing differently formatted materials. Each chapter starts with a commissioned contribution which addresses the material-discursive entanglements that emerge from the crossing of quite differentiated worldlings. Contributors include: Ramon Amaro, Maria Dada, Helen Pritchard, Nicolas Malevé.

More about Volumetric Regimes

Index

Introduction

somatopologies: On the ongoing rendering of corpo-realities

Signs of clandestine disorder: The continuous after-math of 3D computationalism

x, y, z: Dimensional axes of power

Parametric Unknowns: Hypercomputation between the probable and the possible

Depths and Densities: Accidented and dissonant spacetimes

Colophon