The Anthropocene Project. An Encyclopedia (2014–) [EN/DE]
Filed under online resource | Tags: · aesthetics, air, anthropocene, capitalism, climate crisis, cybernetics, earth, ecology, geology, global warming, knowledge, machine, physics, weather

A glossary of 80 selected terms associated with the notion of the Anthropocene. Each entry is accompanied by numerous videos of talks and discussions held during The Anthropocene Project at Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, in 2013-2014.
“Forensics and cybernetics, climate crimes and neo-ecology, scopic systems, prosthesis, fossils, beauty, or the obscene. The Anthropocene Project’s core terminology appears incomprehensible and impenetrable at first. The encyclopedia, currently under development as an online presentation at büro eta boeklund, is dedicated to this vocabulary. It offers sidelong glances that can help to illuminate the jungle of discourse and show the beauty of the Anthropocene Project’s terminology in a clear and easily understandable fashion. Like every system of classification, this project calls into question our world’s unspoken habits when it comes to categorization.”
View online in English or German.
Comment (1)J. R. Pierce: Portrait of the Machine as a Young Artist (1965)
Filed under essay | Tags: · art, computer art, computer music, computing, film, literature, machine, music

“Mechanistic muses are expanding their domain to encompass every facet of creative activity.”
In this article published in the June 1965 issue of Playboy, Bell Labs engineer, communications satellite pioneer and science fiction writer John R. Pierce introduces the work done in computer music, literature, film, and visual art, and issues an invitation to artists to explore and “school” the computer to yield new paths.
Published in Playboy 12(6), 1965, pp 124-5 & 150 & 182 & 184
via Forum on the Genealogy of MediaThinking (the website contains many scans of essays on media theory and archaeology)
PDF (14 MB)
See also:
Grace Glueck’s criticism of computer art, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Computer, New York Times, 1983.
More writings by Pierce.
Garnet Hertz (ed.): Critical Making (2012)
Filed under artist publishing | Tags: · 3d printing, art, contemporary art, critical making, design, diy, diy biology, engineering, hacker culture, hackerspace, machine, maker culture, manifesto, open source, science, technology

“Critical Making is a handmade book project by Garnet Hertz that explores how hands-on productive work ‐ making ‐ can supplement and extend critical reflection on technology and society. It works to blend and extend the fields of design, contemporary art, DIY/craft and technological development. It also can be thought of as an appeal to the electronic DIY maker movement to be critically engaged with culture, history and society: after learning to use a 3D printer, making an LED blink or using an Arduino, then what?
The publication has 70 contributors ‐ primarily from contemporary art and academia ‐ and its 352 pages are bound in ten pocket-sized zine-like volumes. The project takes the topic of DIY culture literally by printing an edition of 300 copies on a hacked photocopier with booklets that were manually folded, stapled and cut. The 300 finished copies were primarily given away for free to project contributors, individuals and institutions important to them. Some of the handmade copies were traded for reviews, photographs, videos, lectures and were given to library archives.
Due to the large demand for this content, the entire collection had been scanned and released on conceptlab.com/criticalmaking and through the Twitter account @criticalpdfs.”
Publisher Telharmonium Press, Hollywood/CA, November 2012
Open Access
10 booklets, 352 pages total
Reviews: Debatty (We Make Money Not Art, 2013), Blue (Engine Institute, 2013).
single PDF (36 MB)
PDF contributions (67 pieces)