Koert.com http://www.koert.com/home/index.php Investigating the strange and the beautiful en realkoert@koert.com Copyright 2011 Pivot Pivot - 1.40.1: 'Dreadwind' Sun, 19 Jun 2011 13:26:02 -0500 60 Atlas Radio 1 columns on our changing notion of Nature http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=278 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=278#comm Dutch Radio 1 show Atlas on our changing notion of Nature. This was much more fun expected. Here is a selection of the some the columns I want to share (All Dutch, all MP3):

Bacterie als Fabriek
Wilde Technologie
Scheermesjes Evolutie
Slachtofferloos Vlees
Biomimic Marketing ]]>
278@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Sun, 05 Dec 2010 14:57:00 -0500
NANO Supermarket http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=277 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=277#comm NANO Supermarket presents speculative nanotech products that may hit the shelves within the next ten years. Visit the shop, taste & test our products and experience the impact of nanotechnology on our everyday lives.

Opening: Saturday 23 October 17:00
Location: 18 Septemberplein, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Dates: 23-31 October
Times: 10:00-17:00
]]> 277@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Tue, 19 Oct 2010 16:08:00 -0500 First quarter 2010 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=276 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=276#comm
Jury | Hybrids Arts - Ars Electronica | Linz (OS) | Apr 2010

Radio Column | Link Atlas| Radio 1 (NL) | Apr 2010

Lecture | WDKA | Rotterdam (NL) | Mar 2010

Lecture | Royal Academy | The Hague (NL) | Mar 2010

Lecture | Demo Symposium | Le Fresnoy Studio National Des Arts | Lille (FR) | Mar 2010

Lecture | Transnatural | Trouw Gebouw | Amsterdam | Mar 2010

Lecture | Follow the Money | Balie | Amsterdam | Jan 2010

Exhibition | Niet Normaal | Beurs van Berlage | Amsterdam | Dec 09 - Mar 10 ]]>
276@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Wed, 21 Apr 2010 10:24:00 -0500
Nature Transformer – Microwave Festival 2009 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=275 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=275#comm Microwave International New Media Arts Festival in Hong Kong.

The festival is highly resonating on the nature caused by people and will also screen parts of the Next Nature DVD and reprint the Real Nature is not Green essay. Nature transforms along with us! ]]>
275@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Sun, 08 Nov 2009 15:35:00 -0500
VIRTUAL MONEY: COWS COINS CREDIT AIRTIME http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=272 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=272#comm


Virtual money is a pleonasm, a superfluous expression. Money is, by definition, virtual. And it always has been. Well, perhaps not in the time when people used cows and goats as barter. A cow is a living creature, and useful as well. You can drink its milk and when the creature no longer gives any milk you can always kill it and eat it. We may not think about, but it is actually a miracle that I can now at the butcher on the corner exchange a piece of paper for a rump steak.

A SHORT HISTORY OF MONEY

If we are to understand fully how money came into being, we must go back to ancient China where, as in many other places, a lively trading system arose: an apple for an egg, two goats for a cow, a hammer for a bucket. Because they were durable and universally useful, many tools were traded such as knives and ploughs, and in particular the shovel became a popular barter object. A rich man had a whole row of shovels on his land which were, in fact, not used to work the land but served purely as a means of trade. Smithies made additional shovels which became progressively smaller: these were not handy for digging, but extremely handy for bartering. At a given moment, the shovels had become as small as a present-day coin. Then finally somebody came up with the idea of making them round. The abstraction was complete.

AUTHORITY = REALITY

In order to emphasise their value, coins were frequently made from precious materials such as silver or gold. This brings us to a following step in the ongoing 'virtualization' of money. In 1973, the American government decided to dispense with the gold standard. Paper money had been introduced earlier: beautifully designed and printed notes but the material used, however, in contrast to coins, did not represent any particular value. The value of paper money exists purely thanks to the bank guarantee, by which a bank note can always be exchanged for the value concerned in coins. Much handier than having to lug round a bag of coins! At a given moment, paper money worked so well that few people were interested any more in whether there was a fort somewhere containing a pile of money for the value of all the bank notes together - it was a public secret that this hadn't been the case for quite some time. And thus the gold standard was relinquished: Money was from then on only based on trust. This is, in fact, a collective illusion, but as long as everybody believes in the value, it works excellently. Can it become even more virtual?

Agreed, you can introduce debit cards and credit cards, which means that your money is only stored digitally somewhere on the server of the bank. Because these methods of payment have only been introduced recently, we still have to grow accustomed to the idea and consider these monetary systems as 'virtual', which incorrectly suggests that the bank note I use to pay for my rump steak is actually 'real'. We conveniently, or perhaps it is better to say pragmatically, ignore the fact that money is actually by definition virtual: it only has a symbolic value that is ingeniously constructed as replacement for the unhandy and less than precise barter of commodities. The step from the bank note to the digital administration of your possession is only a baby step in comparison to the enormous symbolic leaps which had been made in the course of centuries: the replacement of valuable living creatures and commodities (such as cow, goat or tool) with valuable materials (such as gold and silver) to valueless representations of valuable materials (bank notes), to simple faith in a government that claims to guarantee the value of your bank note without having it backed up by a fort filled with gold … that's progress, people! Using your direct debit card for a pair of sport shoes (total bill: fifty Euro) is much easier than exchanging them for two chickens and an egg. It makes very precise payments, complex financial constructions and hot money that flashes round the world with the speed of light possible. There is also a downside.

Although it may be physically rather more convenient, because you no longer have to cart around a herd of cows or a basket of eggs, the introduction of money has created a cognitive burden: you have to think about it! You can't simply leave your money in a corner and be sure it will retain its value, you have to deposit it on the right account or invest it sensibly, keep track of inflation and watch out that the banker or the government that guarantees its value doesn't fall. That can prove very stressful and not without reason. For sometimes things can go terribly wrong, as they did in China in the fifteenth century, where a bank note worth 1000 coins dropped in value, as a result of hyper inflation, to just 3 coins, and this subsequently caused the government to do away with paper money altogether. Incidentally, the Chinese bank note was also dispensed with in the eleventh century and later reintroduced. Can that happen again? Of course. We shouldn't expect to pay for the rest of our lives with bank notes, credit cards and debit cards.

INNOVATION IN AFRICA: PAY WITH PHONE MINUTES

Recently, an interesting innovation in methods of payment has taken place in Africa. Africa is not particularly famous as a leader in the area of sophisticated technology. In various areas on the continent, cows were still used as currency until the 1960s and overgrazing caused by cattle that were only used as 'value deposits' was responsible for environmental problems until the eighties. Necessity, they say, in the mother of invention, and this is certainly the case in Africa where people have no access to a stable banking structure and therefore have started using phone minutes as currency. Africa currently has more than 100 million mobile phones and it is one of the fastest growing markets for mobile telephony. Expectations are that in 2011, more than 370 million telephones will be in use. They are used to download music, to send text messages and for playing games, but also as a wallet. The vast majority of telephone owners do not have a subscription, but purchase phone minutes from one of the many telephone shops. The mobile network on Kenya has an innovative payment technology called M-Pesa (M is for 'mobile', pesa is Swahili for 'money'), which allows people to send each other phone minutes via a text. At the start of 2008, the political instability in Kenya led to violence and many telecom shops were forced to close their doors; telephone cards became scarce.

People started sending each other phone minutes and - you know where this is going - these minutes were not used for telephone calls: they were used as currency. Very quickly, telephone cards became more valuable than cash. Family members could send each other phone minutes over great distances; that was much more reliable than an envelop with bank notes. Even aid organizations started distributing telephone cards which people then used to purchase food and other basic needs.

You will not be surprised that the telephone companies have followed this development with considerable interest. They are, after all, the ones who can create phone minutes at the press of a button. Certainly in the current situation, in which the financial system is under pressure throughout the world and traditional bankers have, with their unconcealed greed, shown their worst sides, telephone providers believe they have a good chance of becoming the new bankers. Perhaps in time it will no longer be the government that guarantees your money, but a commercial company such as Vodafone, AT&T or T-Mobile. I don't know, but I would advise you to put your eggs in more than one basket and, to be on the safe side, always keep at least one cow in your private meadow.

Written by KOERT VAN MENSVOORT, published earlier in Graphic Design Museum Magazine #2, Summer 2009. ]]>
272@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Tue, 06 Oct 2009 09:23:00 -0500
Next Nature DVD http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=274 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=274#comm Next Nature DVD with over twenty visions of artists, scientists, designers, filmmakers and thinkers who present their powerful imagery, radical ideas and visionary statements on how we can design, build and live in on the nature caused by people. ]]> 274@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Tue, 15 Sep 2009 00:00:00 -0500 Preface: Dearest Tinkebell http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=273 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=273#comm

ON THE INTERNET, YOU ARE A DOG


Who still remembers that famous cartoon from the early days of the Internet featuring a dog behind a computer screen, telling a fellow dog that "On the Internet, nobody knows you are a dog."

Back in the nineties when the cartoon was popular, we laughed because it so cleverly played with the presumed sense of anonymity, thought to be so characteristic for the Internet: one might as well be a dog and people wouldn't even notice!

Today, we've learned such anonymity really doesn't exist and especially not on the Internet, where all your behaviors are tracked and recorded in countless databases. Still, as with many successful and widespread jokes, there lies a profound truth underneath the pun. Yet it is not related to the unanimity part, it is more existential, the profoundness of the joke lies in simple fact that on the Internet you are a dog.

This is a book about dogs and cats. And the dogs don't like what is being done to the cats. The centerpiece of the controversy, is the hand crafted, home made 'cat bag', created by Tinkebell. This pleasantly unrealistically optimistic girly character, presents herself online with the infinite naive ambition to paint the world pink. Yet, as internet appearances are deceiving, in real life this pinkish girl is an artist, eager to create a debate around our hypocritical consumptive attitude towards animals.

Admitted, she has a point here. I mean, why do we routinely consume meat and leather produced in safely concealed large scale industrial sites - where we are kept ignorant of the living animals used in the process - while at the same time we are horrified by the explicitness of a little do-it-yourself leather production? Are we that stooped? At least Tinkebell is honestly aware of the direct animal suffering behind her highly desirable luxurious object. Now again, who exactly was the cynical person in the room?

Unfortunately such analysis is way too nuanced for the short-attention-span dogs crowding the internet. On average, their reasoning is as simple as it is inconsistent: "Yes, I do wear leather shoes. No, I am not a vegetarian. Yes, the bitch must die!" Just bark and press the 'sent' button. Immediate relief guaranteed!

Over the years Tinkebell received thousands of such 'dog mails', which attracted the interest of artist/designer Coralie Vogelaar. Together they set out in search for the people behind the emails, which - although typically sent unanimously - were often relatively easy to track back the via the email or ip address.

This book bundles the finest selection of their research. The result is both relieving and disturbing. Relieving, because - although Tinkebell pre-cautiously closes the drapes of her apartment every night - changes are minimal that the young woman from Dexter, Missouri USA, who threatens to "skin and make a suitcase from Tinkebell's fat bottom", will book a flight to Amsterdam, take the tram to her house, ring the doorbell and place her teeth in her pink flesh. Disturbing, because the people sending the dog mail are so amazingly normal. They have lives, family, friends, jobs, Facebook accounts, go on holidays and have parties. Apparently, the internet technology lets loose the inner dog in seemingly healthy, right minded people? Or perhaps is it just that the technological medium amplifies some part of our human condition? These are people like you and me. In fact, it could be you!

So, if you are reading this because your 'dog mail' is featured in the book, this is what I have to say: It is nice to meet you. You are part of the very first book that exhibits the people behind dog mails. Perhaps you feel somewhat insecure about being featured in this book. Please don't! It is a relief to learn you are a real person. I understand you better now. Perhaps the romantic dream of the Internet as a global network that connects all people to one and other is still possible. Now that I know where you live, I might drop by at your house some time. We could have a coffee together.

Koert van Mensvoort, March 2009. Dearest Tinkebell. ISBN 978-90-89101-29-7 ]]>
273@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Tue, 08 Sep 2009 10:13:00 -0500
A day in the Dutch dunes http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=271 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=271#comm Blocter.com. We had a nice day in the Dutch dunes. We inspected the Scottish highland cattle that acts as a replacement for the long extinct wild aurochs in the Dutch landscape and looked at cellphone antenna trees – a regular mast would, of course, spoil the landscape. Here is the Video of the Interview. ]]> 271@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Tue, 07 Jul 2009 15:56:00 -0500 Test Lab: what crisis? http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=270 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=270#comm Test Lab in Rotterdam this Thursday.

Test Lab: What Crisis
9 July 2009 20:00-23:00
V2_ Institute for Unstable Media
Eendrachtsstraat 10
Rotterdam
]]>
270@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Sat, 04 Jul 2009 15:50:00 -0500
Source/White Lady Lecture @ Design Academy http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=269 http://www.koert.com/home/pivot/entry.php?id=269#comm Source/White Lady lecture at the Design Academy. ]]> 269@http://koert.com/home/pivot/ default Thu, 18 Jun 2009 15:46:00 -0500