:-) I'm with you on that! Panorama is the only way I could make the titles
on the spines somewhat readable and also fit in a shot of most of both
shelves. The printed matter collection is one of my favorites, actually---
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 8:23 AM, A. P. Garcia <a.phillip.garcia at gmail.com>wrote:
aaaaaaaaaaa! there's a picture of 'printed
matter' -- straighten those
books! (please.)
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 5:02 PM, Lori Emerson <lori.emerson at gmail.com>
wrote:
Hello all, I wanted to move from lurker
to...whatever the opposite is by
introducing myself and the Media Archaeology Lab (MAL) I run. I'm
thrilled
to discover your listserv as I'm learning a
lot just by reading your
posts
and I think many of you will be interested in the
MAL.
http://mediaarchaeologylab.com
Founded in 2009 and housed on the University of Colorado at Boulder
campus,
the Media Archaeology Lab houses obsolete media
from the early twentieth
century to the twenty-first century for hands-on research, teaching, and
research creation.
I've come to see that the MAL is a remarkable configurable conceptual
object that, depending on how you approach it, houses items for research
and teaching, items that actually generate research; is a site for
artistic
interventions, experiments, projects; is an
archive for media objects; is
an archive for original works of digital art/literature along with their
original platforms. It belongs equally in literature departments, art
departments, media studies departments, history of technology programs,
computer science departments, libraries and archives.
The MAL is a "living archive" in the sense that, other than our stockpile
of spare parts, everything in the lab functions and is meant to be turned
on and used for tinkering, play, teaching, and research. It is also
living
in the sense that it is an ongoing, DIY project
primarily run by and for
the self-taught that continues to grow and change with every new influx
of
participants. In fact, one of the strengths of
the lab is that there are
almost no precedents for it and no clearly established set of best
practices.
The MAL's strongest collection is its historically important personal
computers from the late 1970s through the 80s and 90s - computers such as
the Apple II, Apple Lisa, and Apple Macintosh, as well as many early
works
of digital art/literature from the early 80s
through the late 90s.
If you'd like to know more about the MAL or if you'd like to donate,
please
visit our site:
http://mediaarchaeologylab.com
yours, Lori
---
Lori Emerson
Assistant Professor | Director, Media Archaeology Lab
Department of English, University of Colorado at Boulder
Hellems 101, 226 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0226
loriemerson.net |
mediaarchaeologylab.com
--
Lori Emerson
Assistant Professor | Director, Media Archaeology Lab
Department of English, University of Colorado at Boulder
Hellems 101, 226 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0226