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  • Computer Media  (1,952)
Type of Material
Consortium
  • 1
    UID:
    (DE-602)b3kat_BV045480249
    Format: 1 DVD-Video (54 min) , farbig , 12 cm
    Content: "Im Garten seines Pariser Domizils spricht Berger, der seit Jahren keine Interviews mehr gibt, mit seiner Tochter, der Filmkritikerin Katya Berger, über Motorräder und Rembrandt, Caravaggio und Rebellion. [...] Wie kaum jemand äußert John Berger sich in seinen Texten ungewöhnlich polyphon: in Betrachtungen zum Film, zur Fotografie, zur Malerei, in Gedichten, Romanen, Kurzgeschichten oder Künstler-Porträts ebenso wie in politischen Essays und den seinerzeit bahnbrechenden BBC-Lectures "Ways of Seeing". Sein außergewöhnliches Interesse am Dialog hat über die Jahrzehnte zu künstlerischen Tandems mit den unterschiedlichsten Weggefährten geführt, mit denen er "seine Augen teilt" und gemeinsam nachdenkt, schreibt, veröffentlicht. So unter anderem mit dem britischen Theaterregisseur und Schauspieler Simon McBurney, der Bergers Texte auf die Bühne gebracht hat; oder mit dem Schweizer Fotografen Jean Mohr, mit dem Berger eine ganz neue Art der politischen Text-Bild-Erzählung erfunden hat.[...]" [tvinfo.de]
    Note: Original: Deutschland 2016 , Fernsehmitschnitt: Arte 09.03. 2019 , Englisch - Untertitel: Deutsch
    Language: German
    Keywords: Berger, John 1926-2017 ; Film ; Interview ; DVD-Video
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Brooklyn, NY : punctum books | Baltimore, Maryland :Project Muse,
    UID:
    (DE-602)almahu_9947382491002882
    Format: 1 online resource (104)
    Content: In the 2011 book Dark Matter: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture, the artist Gregory Sholette posits that we are living in an era of surplus creative energies concentrated in a teeming archive of artists, the poor, the "unskilled" and the "economically invisible." It is a potentially disruptive archive that capitalism can't always manage but can still hope to eventually exploit and assimilate. Within this archive seethes creative energy that can extend itself in unique and unsettling ways, across multiple categories and disciplines. Often, however such energy is captured by the winners and arbiters in our "risk society" and thereby sanitized and neutralized. So it becomes necessary for artists, theorists, writers and activists to be versatile in their tactics, cryptic and evasive in their manifestations and criminally implacable in their visions.The Iron Garters are an "art gang" that masquerades, disseminates and performs as your archetypal "criminals," "outcasts" "mystics," "losers" and "lunatics": in short, a vital and necessary social surplus. Their antics have been traced back to Jean Genet's novel The Thief's Journal, the films of Kenneth Anger, as well as the Dada poems of Baroness Elsa and Hugo Ball. Yet still other Garters have been nourished on the Vienna Actionists, Genesis P-Orridge, Diamanda Galas, Gilles Deleuze, Samuel Delany, and the dulcet sounds of The Cramps. With a critical and aesthetic arsenal salvaged from underground "kulchurs" and academia's collective libido, the Iron Garters are not afraid to demand excitement along with analysis, frenzy coupled to resistance, and fashion inseparable from infiltration. Founded in San Francisco on a full moon night after a "deathpunk" show, the original members grew adversely impacted by the economic invasions reducing a once great city to a tepid monoculture. Fueled by queer, antinomian, heretical and radical traditions, the Garters pilgrimaged into various trans-continental sanctuaries and beachheads, leaving behind them radiant paper trails of provocation and sedition. This volume is one such radiant paper trail.Despite its many hiatuses, the Garters archive has grown more fertile, thanks in part to its endurance in imaginary/speculative realms. Currently, the Garters are remobilizing as a "crime art collective," with cells operating in cities most in need of "crime-art," while also re-asserting itself as an ongoing "transmedia" project. This present archive is a small fraction of the decade's worth of Garter experiments, epistles, stories and communiques. In a political epoch when risk and anxiety seem to predicate our every move, and when being poor, different, "unskilled" or "a failure" (as judged by the demigods of Profit, Fear, Reason & Security) means that you are essentially criminalized, then it becomes imperative for art (wedded to theory and style) to celebrate its own "criminal," "dangerous" and "unassimiliable" nature. So let the Garters initiate you into the mysteries that are already yours, once you rid yourself of fear, anxiety and the need to be respectable.Conceived in 2004 as a gritty mail art project called TresPassions Unlimited, the Iron Garters were established as a full-fledged "art gang" in the Bernal Heights area of San Francisco in 2010. Then almost instantly they vanished yet not before secreting reams of strange, tantalizing and vitriolic propaganda. Today, the Garters have reformed into several cells: a mail network, an inflammatory writing collective, a gaggle of art-activist instigators and a semi-fictional band of heathen outlaws. All of these groups unite and mobilize under the mantle, The Iron Garters Crime Art Collective. Prospective members should inquire for initiatory matters at: thesaltedlash@gmail.com.
    Note: English.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-692-28395-1
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Brooklyn, NY : punctum books | Baltimore, Maryland :Project Muse,
    UID:
    (DE-602)edoccha_9958102295402883
    Format: 1 online resource (104)
    Content: In the 2011 book Dark Matter: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture, the artist Gregory Sholette posits that we are living in an era of surplus creative energies concentrated in a teeming archive of artists, the poor, the "unskilled" and the "economically invisible." It is a potentially disruptive archive that capitalism can't always manage but can still hope to eventually exploit and assimilate. Within this archive seethes creative energy that can extend itself in unique and unsettling ways, across multiple categories and disciplines. Often, however such energy is captured by the winners and arbiters in our "risk society" and thereby sanitized and neutralized. So it becomes necessary for artists, theorists, writers and activists to be versatile in their tactics, cryptic and evasive in their manifestations and criminally implacable in their visions.The Iron Garters are an "art gang" that masquerades, disseminates and performs as your archetypal "criminals," "outcasts" "mystics," "losers" and "lunatics": in short, a vital and necessary social surplus. Their antics have been traced back to Jean Genet's novel The Thief's Journal, the films of Kenneth Anger, as well as the Dada poems of Baroness Elsa and Hugo Ball. Yet still other Garters have been nourished on the Vienna Actionists, Genesis P-Orridge, Diamanda Galas, Gilles Deleuze, Samuel Delany, and the dulcet sounds of The Cramps. With a critical and aesthetic arsenal salvaged from underground "kulchurs" and academia's collective libido, the Iron Garters are not afraid to demand excitement along with analysis, frenzy coupled to resistance, and fashion inseparable from infiltration. Founded in San Francisco on a full moon night after a "deathpunk" show, the original members grew adversely impacted by the economic invasions reducing a once great city to a tepid monoculture. Fueled by queer, antinomian, heretical and radical traditions, the Garters pilgrimaged into various trans-continental sanctuaries and beachheads, leaving behind them radiant paper trails of provocation and sedition. This volume is one such radiant paper trail.Despite its many hiatuses, the Garters archive has grown more fertile, thanks in part to its endurance in imaginary/speculative realms. Currently, the Garters are remobilizing as a "crime art collective," with cells operating in cities most in need of "crime-art," while also re-asserting itself as an ongoing "transmedia" project. This present archive is a small fraction of the decade's worth of Garter experiments, epistles, stories and communiques. In a political epoch when risk and anxiety seem to predicate our every move, and when being poor, different, "unskilled" or "a failure" (as judged by the demigods of Profit, Fear, Reason & Security) means that you are essentially criminalized, then it becomes imperative for art (wedded to theory and style) to celebrate its own "criminal," "dangerous" and "unassimiliable" nature. So let the Garters initiate you into the mysteries that are already yours, once you rid yourself of fear, anxiety and the need to be respectable.Conceived in 2004 as a gritty mail art project called TresPassions Unlimited, the Iron Garters were established as a full-fledged "art gang" in the Bernal Heights area of San Francisco in 2010. Then almost instantly they vanished yet not before secreting reams of strange, tantalizing and vitriolic propaganda. Today, the Garters have reformed into several cells: a mail network, an inflammatory writing collective, a gaggle of art-activist instigators and a semi-fictional band of heathen outlaws. All of these groups unite and mobilize under the mantle, The Iron Garters Crime Art Collective. Prospective members should inquire for initiatory matters at: thesaltedlash@gmail.com.
    Note: English.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-692-28395-1
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Brooklyn, NY : punctum books | Baltimore, Maryland :Project Muse,
    UID:
    (DE-602)edocfu_9958102295402883
    Format: 1 online resource (104)
    Content: In the 2011 book Dark Matter: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture, the artist Gregory Sholette posits that we are living in an era of surplus creative energies concentrated in a teeming archive of artists, the poor, the "unskilled" and the "economically invisible." It is a potentially disruptive archive that capitalism can't always manage but can still hope to eventually exploit and assimilate. Within this archive seethes creative energy that can extend itself in unique and unsettling ways, across multiple categories and disciplines. Often, however such energy is captured by the winners and arbiters in our "risk society" and thereby sanitized and neutralized. So it becomes necessary for artists, theorists, writers and activists to be versatile in their tactics, cryptic and evasive in their manifestations and criminally implacable in their visions.The Iron Garters are an "art gang" that masquerades, disseminates and performs as your archetypal "criminals," "outcasts" "mystics," "losers" and "lunatics": in short, a vital and necessary social surplus. Their antics have been traced back to Jean Genet's novel The Thief's Journal, the films of Kenneth Anger, as well as the Dada poems of Baroness Elsa and Hugo Ball. Yet still other Garters have been nourished on the Vienna Actionists, Genesis P-Orridge, Diamanda Galas, Gilles Deleuze, Samuel Delany, and the dulcet sounds of The Cramps. With a critical and aesthetic arsenal salvaged from underground "kulchurs" and academia's collective libido, the Iron Garters are not afraid to demand excitement along with analysis, frenzy coupled to resistance, and fashion inseparable from infiltration. Founded in San Francisco on a full moon night after a "deathpunk" show, the original members grew adversely impacted by the economic invasions reducing a once great city to a tepid monoculture. Fueled by queer, antinomian, heretical and radical traditions, the Garters pilgrimaged into various trans-continental sanctuaries and beachheads, leaving behind them radiant paper trails of provocation and sedition. This volume is one such radiant paper trail.Despite its many hiatuses, the Garters archive has grown more fertile, thanks in part to its endurance in imaginary/speculative realms. Currently, the Garters are remobilizing as a "crime art collective," with cells operating in cities most in need of "crime-art," while also re-asserting itself as an ongoing "transmedia" project. This present archive is a small fraction of the decade's worth of Garter experiments, epistles, stories and communiques. In a political epoch when risk and anxiety seem to predicate our every move, and when being poor, different, "unskilled" or "a failure" (as judged by the demigods of Profit, Fear, Reason & Security) means that you are essentially criminalized, then it becomes imperative for art (wedded to theory and style) to celebrate its own "criminal," "dangerous" and "unassimiliable" nature. So let the Garters initiate you into the mysteries that are already yours, once you rid yourself of fear, anxiety and the need to be respectable.Conceived in 2004 as a gritty mail art project called TresPassions Unlimited, the Iron Garters were established as a full-fledged "art gang" in the Bernal Heights area of San Francisco in 2010. Then almost instantly they vanished yet not before secreting reams of strange, tantalizing and vitriolic propaganda. Today, the Garters have reformed into several cells: a mail network, an inflammatory writing collective, a gaggle of art-activist instigators and a semi-fictional band of heathen outlaws. All of these groups unite and mobilize under the mantle, The Iron Garters Crime Art Collective. Prospective members should inquire for initiatory matters at: thesaltedlash@gmail.com.
    Note: English.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-692-28395-1
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 5
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    Wiesbaden : Universum-Verl.-Anst.
    UID:
    (DE-101)970397860
    Format: 1 CD-ROM , farb. , Beil. ([4] S.) , 12 cm, in Behältnis 20 x 14 2 cm
    ISBN: 9783898690478 , 3898690474
    Series Statement: Sicherheit und Gesundheit bei der Arbeit 6.1
    Note: Titel auf der Behältnis , Systemvoraussetzungen:Pentium PC oder vergleichbar; mind. 64 MB Arbeitsspeicher (empfohlen 128 MB), ca. 70 MB freier Speicherplatz;Windows 95/98/2000 (mit SP 2)/XP/ME/NT 4.0 (mit SP 5), Internet-Anschlus (optional für die Nutzung von Online-Angeboten), Microsoft Internet-Explorer ab 5.0 (empfohlen) oder Netscape ab 6.0 (aktuelle Versionen auf der CD-ROM enth.)
    Language: German
    Keywords: Arbeitsschutz ; Wörterbuch ; CD-ROM ; CD-ROM ; Wörterbuch ; Wörterbuch ; CD-ROM
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  • 6
    UID:
    (DE-101)996562893
    Format: 1 CD , mono
    ISBN: 9783898138925
    Note: Produktionsjahr: 1955
    Language: German
    Keywords: CD
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 7
    UID:
    (DE-101)990146529
    Format: 1 CD , 12 cm
    ISBN: 9783898979528
    Language: German
    Keywords: CD
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  • 8
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Berlin : Universal Family Entertainment
    Show associated volumes
    UID:
    (DE-101)978576942
    Format: 1 CD , stereo, digital, DDD
    ISBN: 9783899450729 (CDs) , 3899450728 (CDs) , 9783899450729 (Tonkassetten) , 3899450728 (Tonkassetten)
    Additional Edition: Digitale Übertragung Conni
    Language: German
    Keywords: CD
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  • 9
    UID:
    (DE-101)974557706
    Format: 1 CD-R , Beil. ([1] Bl.) , 12 cm
    Note: Titel auf der Beil. , Frankfurt (Main), Univ., Diss., 2004
    Language: French
    Keywords: Rilke, Rainer Maria 1875-1926 ; Gedankenlyrik ; Sein ; Char, René 1907-1988 ; CD-ROM ; Rilke, Rainer Maria 1875-1926 ; Poetik ; Char, René 1907-1988 ; CD-ROM ; CD-ROM ; Hochschulschrift ; CD-ROM ; CD-ROM
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  • 10
    UID:
    (DE-101)997457422
    Format: 1 CD , stereo , 12 cm, in Behältnis 13 x 15 x 7 cm
    ISBN: 9783905739145
    Additional Edition: Digitale Übertragung Alex-Rusch-Erfolgssystem
    Language: German
    Keywords: CD
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