Close
When you subscribe to Furtherfield’s newsletter service you will receive occasional email newsletters from us plus invitations to our exhibitions and events. To opt out of the newsletter service at any time please click the unsubscribe link in the emails.
Close
All Content
Contributors
UFO Icon
Close
Irridescent cyber duck illustration with a bionic eye Irridescent cyber bear illustration with a bionic eye Irridescent cyber bee illustration
Visit People's Park Plinth
Private View at Full Moon
02/12/2009
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Venue: HTTP Gallery

DIWO at the Dark Mountain

18/10/2009 – 30/01/2010
Exhibition
Private View at Full Moon
02/12/2009
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Venue: HTTP Gallery

4th-12th December ’09,
Re-opening 8th-30th January ’10

Live performance at 8pm representing a central controversy arising during the project.

Visit the blog http://http.uk.net/diwodarkmountain

We live in a time of social, economic and ecological unravelling. All around us are signs that our whole way of living is already passing into history. – Uncivilisation, The Dark Mountain Manifesto.

The Dark Mountain Project is ‘a new cultural movement for an age of global disruption.’ It aims to ‘question the stories that underpin our failing civilisation, to craft new ones for the age ahead and to write clearly and honestly about our true place in the world.’ Do It With Others (DIWO) at the Dark Mountain, a mail-art project at HTTP Gallery, is a cultural collaboration for this age. “Uncivilisation,” the Dark Mountain Manifesto, calls for a cultural response to our current predicament. Its challenge was offered to network-minded artists, technologists, writers and activists as a provocation – to work together to re-envision the narratives and infrastructures that govern our relationships with the natural world and how they might be unravelled and rewoven to reconfigure our place in it. As “Uncivilisation” concludes, ‘the end of the world as we know it is not the end of the world full stop.’

https://vimeo.com/9052569
DIWO at the Dark Mountain, The Installation. This short film is created from a series of photographs. This shows the progression step by step of the exhibition “Do It With Others At The Dark Mountain”. By Emma Haggis.
Screenshot of Exquisite Copse by Neil Jenkins
Screenshot of Exquisite Copse by Neil Jenkins

Artists, technologists, writers, activists and all other living beings were invited to correspond with each other across physical and digital mail networks, and the exhibition at HTTP presents the results of this process. These have been gathered and the presentation devised during an Open Curation event involving collaborators in real and virtual space. Transmissions to be shown in the exhibition include collaborative image threads, net artworks, digital videos, drawings, paintings on wall and paper, sound works, and the full text of the discussion generated on the NetBehaviour list presented in numerous forms. The opening will also feature a performance representing a central controversy arising during the project. The exhibition offers new myths and maps for future uncivilisation at HTTP Gallery.

diwo-printer.jpg
Installation shot of collaborative contributions on the wall and text discussions about DIWO being printed out in real-time as they happen.
Annie Abrahams’s collaboration with Furtherfield. Her email our painting it onto a wall.

The Exhibition features contributions by:
Alan Sondheim; Alessandro Ludovico; Andreas Jacobs; Andrei Tisma; Annie Abrahams; Antonio Dias; Antonio Roberts; Arn; Bob Catchpole; Brian Gibson; Crowe; Curt Cloninger; Dan Walwin; Dave Miller; Dion Laurent; Dougald Hine; Edward Picot; Fung-Lin Hall; Helen Varley Jamieson; Karen Blissett; James Morris; John Criscitello; J. Trautwein; Lauren A Wright; Lucille C.; Maja Kalogera; Manik; Marc Garrett; Mark Cooley; Mark Hancock; Mez Breeze; Michael Szpakowski; Neil Jenkins; Olga Panades; Pall Thayer; Peter Gomes; Pim Peterse; Renee Turner; Paulo R. C. Barros; Riccardo Mantelli; Rhea Myers; Ruth Catlow; Simon Biggs; Simon Longo; Steven Read; Stuart; Valentin J.-A.; Vittore Baroni; Wolfgang Spaeth.

This is the second Do It With Others (DIWO) E-Mail-Art project initiated by Furtherfield. The first DIWO experiment in 2007 extended the Do-It-Yourself ethos of early net art, characterised by curiosity, activism and precision, towards a more collaborative approach, using the Internet as an experimental artistic medium and distribution system to foment grass-roots creativity.

Do It With Others at the Dark Mountain is a collaborative project by Furtherfield and The Dark Mountain Project.

+ More about The Dark Mountain Project

The Dark Mountain Project is curated by Paul Kingsnorth and Dougald Hine.

Paul is the author of One No, Many Yeses and Real England. He was deputy editor of The Ecologist between 1999 and 2001. His first poetry collection, Kidland, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry.

Dougald writes the blog “Changing the World (and other excuses for not getting a proper job).” He is a former BBC journalist and co-founder of the School of Everything and has written for and edited various online and offline magazines.

This project is part of Furtherfield.org’s three-year Media Art Ecologies programme, which aims to provide opportunities for critical debate, exchange and participation in emerging ecological media art practices and the theoretical, political and social contexts they engage. HTTP Gallery is Furtherfield.org’s dedicated space for media art. Furtherfield provides platforms for creating, viewing, discussing and learning about experimental practices in art and technology. Furtherfield.org and HTTP Gallery are supported by Arts Council England, London.

logo of partner in this project