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JAMES BRIDLE

drone

source: booktwoorg

James Bridle is a writer, artist, publisher and technologist usually based in London, UK. His work covers the intersection of literature, culture and the network. He has written for WIRED, ICON, Domus, Cabinet, the Atlantic and many other publications, and writes a regular column for the Observer newspaper on publishing and technology. James speaks worldwide at events including SXSW (Austin), dConstruct (Brighton), LIFT (Geneva), Web Directions (Sydney) and NEXT (Berlin).

In 2011, he coined the term “New Aesthetic”, and his ongoing research around this subject has been featured and discussed worldwide. His work, such as the Iraq War Historiography, an encyclopaedia of Wikipedia Changelogs, has been exhibited at galleries in the US, Europe and Asia, and has been commissioned by organisations such as Artangel and Mu, Eindhoven.

In 2012 he was a Happenstance resident at Lighthouse Gallery, lectured as part of the 4 Thought series on BBC Radio 4, contributed to the Istanbul Design Biennial and Guimaraes 2012 European City of Culture, and was adjunct professor on the Interactive Telecommunications Programme at New York University.
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source: spikeislandorguk

James Bridle is a London-based writer, artist, publisher and technologist whose work covers the intersection of literature, culture and the network.

In 2011, he coined the term ‘New Aesthetic’ to describe the increasing appearance of the visual language of digital technology and the Internet in the physical world. Here he discusses how perception has shifted in an age of rapid technological development and the potential implications of this “eruption of the digital” on contemporary visual practice.

In an interview with the Design Observer Group, Bridle explains, “The New Aesthetic is not criticism, but an exploration; not a plea for change, rather a series of reference points to the change that is occurring. An attempt to understand not only the ways in which technology shapes the things we make, but the way we see and understand them.”

James Bridle

James Bridle works widely in the fields of technology, publishing and art. He has written for WIRED, ICON, Domus, Cabinet, the Atlantic and many other publications, and writes a regular column for The Observer. Bridle speaks worldwide at events including SXSW (Austin), dConstruct (Brighton), LIFT (Geneva), Web Directions (Sydney) and NEXT (Berlin). His work, such as the Iraq War Historiography, an encyclopaedia of Wikipedia Changelogs, has been exhibited at galleries in the US, Europe and Asia, and he has been commissioned by organisations such as Artangel and Mu, Eindhoven.

In 2012 he was a Happenstance resident at Lighthouse Gallery, lectured as part of the 4 Thought series on BBC Radio 4, contributed to the Istanbul Design Biennial and Guimaraes 2012 European City of Culture, and was adjunct professor on the Interactive Telecommunications Programme at New York University. Bridle is also a member of the the Really Interesting Group, a design partnership based in East London.
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source: lighthouseorguk

A military drone aircraft makes an eerie incursion into the daily lives of Brighton residents in this project commissioned by Lighthouse for Brighton Festival 2013.

Installing Under the Shadow of the Drone by James Bridle. Photo by Roberta Mataityte.
For Brighton Festival 2013, guest directed by Michael Rosen, Lighthouse is presenting two projects that illustrate how contemporary military technology both enables acts of disappearance, and also conceals the machinations of war from us.
Under the Shadow of the Drone by James Bridle is a site-specific outdoor work. It is a one-to-one rendering of a military drone aircraft, as used by the US and UK military, above battlefields around the world.

This film, directed by Brian McClave, depicts the installation of the drone by James Bridle and the Hi-Way Services road-marking team, on May Day, 2013.

About the Project

The unmanned aerial vehicle, or drone, has become one of the most potent weapons of contemporary warfare. Remotely controlled by operators thousands of miles away, drones carry out aerial attacks which leave hundreds of people dead. They are one of the most controversial weapons of war.
Under the Shadow of the Drone makes them visible on our streets. It is a life-size depiction of a Reaper drone, one of a number of such weapons in service with US and UK forces. The Reaper is used for surveillance and bombing missions, in the declared war zones of Afghanistan and Iraq, and in the illegal wars of assassination taking place in Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere. Such wars are made possible by the invisibility of drones to most people
The stark marking out in an unexpected public space of a Reaper drone’s silhouette brings the reality of these technologies into our daily lives. The work critiques the way that contemporary networked technologies, while enabling the digitally saturated culture of the 21st century, can also obscure and distance us from political and moral responsibility.
London-based artist and writer, James Bridle, formerly creative technologist in residence at Lighthouse, has developed a highly attuned practice that addresses the presence of military weapons, such as drones in our lives.
He writes:
“Drones are just the latest in a long line of military technologies augmenting the process of death-dealing, but they are among the most efficient, the most distancing, the most invisible. These qualities allow them to do what they do unseen.”

“We all live under the shadow of the drone, although most of us are lucky enough not to live under its direct fire. But the attitude they represent – of technology used for obscuration and violence; of the obfuscation of morality and culpability; of the illusion of omniscience and omnipotence; of the lesser value of other people’s lives; of, frankly, endless war – should concern us all.”
By superimposing a large-scale drawing of the shadow of a drone in an urban location in Brighton, Bridle brings these chilling machines uncomfortably close to us, embedding them into our daily lives, and in the process perhaps making the reality of the daily occurrence of deadly drone strikes more tangible.

Context

Under the Shadow of the Drone is part of Brighton Festival 2013. It is accompanied by The Air Itself is One Vast Library, an exhibition by Mariele Neudecker, which explores disturbing, and often invisible, technologies of war. Both artists are continuing the long tradition of artists bearing witness to events that governments would prefer we did not see.
These projects further Lighthouse’s curatorial investigations into the invisible infrastructures that make up our world.
About the Artist
James Bridle is an artist, writer, and publisher based in London, UK. His work, including A Ship Adrift commissioned by Artangel, and The Iraq War Historiography, has been shown in galleries and museums internationally, in the UK, Netherlands, USA, Switzerland, France and China, and viewed by hundreds of thousands of unique visitors online. His formulation of the New Aesthetic research project has spurred debate and creative work, online and off, around the world. His recent work, Dronestagram, which documents the locations of US drone-strikes, has been featured in The Guardian, The Daily Mail, New York Magazine, the New Statesman and dozens of other publications. Bridle also writes for publications such as Wired, ICON and The Observer, where he publishes a regular column, and is a partner at the Really Interesting Group, a design partnership based in East London. He speaks regularly at conferences worldwide, including South by South West in Austin, dConstruct in Brighton, and Lift in Geneva.
James Bridle was creative technologist in residence at Lighthouse in 2012.