Aug
6
2011
This is the second part of the interview with Stefanie Wuschitz. Read the first part here: On Women, Technology and Hacking Playground

Photo above by Selena Savic @Make Me Festival (cc)
Photo bellow: Miss Baltazar’s Laboratory with sound artist Lesley Flanigan
Taken from Stefanie’s private F-book album
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1 comment | tags: arduina, arduino, art activism, barbie, DIY, feminism, hacking, hacklab, hacktivism, hardware, interactive art, make me fetstival, miss baltazar's laboratory, new media art, open source, stefanie wuschitz, technology, tinkering, vienna, wearable technology, women, workshop | posted in animated film, arduino, art, art & science & technology, art activism, culture, dance, design, device art, DIY, education, fashion, film, hacktivism, human rights, interactive design, interviews, low tech, media art, mixed media, motion capture, new media, new media art, performative, robotics, science, sound art, video art, visual art, wearable, wearable technology
Aug
5
2011
Ladiez and Gentlemen, it’s time to start with a series of interviews I did during amazing Belgrade’s Napravi me / Make Me Festival in June. My first guest will be hardware hackin’ lady and artist Stefanie Wuschitz, the founder of Vienna’s Miss Baltazar’s Laboratory – Women and Trans hacklab.

Stefanie Wuschitz, photo taken from F-book (cc)
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1 comment | tags: arduina, arduino, art activism, barbie, DIY, feminism, hacking, hacklab, hacktivism, hardware, interactive art, make me fetstival, miss baltazar's laboratory, new media art, open source, stefanie wuschitz, technology, tinkering, vienna, wearable technology, women, workshop | posted in animated film, arduino, art, art & science & technology, art activism, culture, device art, DIY, education, fashion, hacktivism, human rights, installation, interactive design, interviews, low tech, media art, new media art, open sourcing, performative, robotics, visual art, wearable, wearable technology
Nov
10
2010
One of the rare situations when I’m neither stuck, nor speechless… but in minimalistic mood… I simply can’t write an intro about Helen Keller… cuz she speaks for herself more than I can possibly express…

Helen Keller as a child, August 1886
Taken from the American Foundation for the Blind
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no comments | tags: blindness, documentary, documentary films, film, footage, helen keller, pocket cinema, vintage | posted in culture, documentary film, film, human rights, pocket cinema, vintage
Nov
3
2010
Thanks to Pixel Pain I caught up earlier today great information about the new book titled In Praise of Copying by Marcus Boon, published by Harvard University Press… It’s fresh, new, free and you can practically sense the smell of ink and paper while you’re reading this post, right?
It has been awhile since I published a blog post in Readoholic, I know… But I’m terrible glad that with this post I’m not just cleaning the dust from my digital shelves…

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no comments | tags: book, free book, free culture, harvard university press, in praise of copying, marcus boon, open culture, pdf, readoholic | posted in books, culture, education, human rights, media art, open sourcing, readaholic, web, web2.0
Sep
29
2010
This is the second part of the interview with the photographer Srikanth Kolari. Read the first part here: Colours of India in B&W photography

Photo: Srikanth Kolari (c)
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1 comment | tags: aids, economy, human rights, india, interviews, kids, photo journalism, photographer, photography, poverty, social political, srikanth kolari, transgender, visual art, war, workers | posted in art, culture, human rights, interviews, kids, photography, visual art
Sep
28
2010
Srikanth Kolari aka Sri is an emerging photographer from India with a strong sense for social issues and amazing eye for sharping these moments through the camera viewfinder… I’m very happy to have Sri as the first interviewed photographer on Body Pixel…
Photo: Srikanth Kolari (c)
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2 comments | tags: aids, economy, human rights, india, interviews, kids, photo journalism, photographer, photography, poverty, social political, srikanth kolari, transgender, visual art, war, workers | posted in art, contemporary art, culture, human rights, interviews, kids, photography, visual art