Thursday, February 2
7:30 PM
DFAB Room 131
7:30 PM
DFAB Room 131
The first film of the new year in our "Art That Moves" series is the controversial mash-up film Rip!: A Remix Manifesto. Released originally as an open-source film (meaning it was only offered on the Internet--and a few festivals--and could be downloaded and altered by anyone without penalty), Rip!, directed by Brett Gaylor, explores the nature of copyright rules in a new and constantly changing digital world.
Of particular interest to Gaylor is how the Internet has been the arena for the explosion of a global, cross-cultural, creative pastiche which builds largely on the sharing of ideas, concepts, and media and the remixing and re-contextualization of those ideas. This creative process, according to Gaylor, is the exact same creative process used by human beings throughout history, only supercharged and accelerated by the Internet. However, those who own the copyright to the ideas being remixed have begun to threaten this free exchange of creativity.
As you read these words, Congress is debating two bills with bipartisan support, called SOPA ("Stop Online Piracy Act") and Protect-IP, that would, if passed, essentially give corporations the right to block--or shut down altogether--any website that they even BELIEVE to be guilty of copyright infringement. Laws like these threaten the very type of creativity that Gaylor is talking about in his film. As a result, Rip!: A Remix Manifesto is every bit as relevant and timely today as it was when it was released in 2009.
The film's website offers this description:
Below is a trailer for the film:Immerse yourself in the energetic, innovative and potentially illegal world of mash-up media with Rip!: A Remix Manifesto. Let web activist Brett Gaylor and musician Greg Gillis, better known as Girl Talk, serve as your digital tour guides on a probing investigation into how culture builds upon culture in the information age.Biomedical engineer turned live-performance sensation Girl Talk, has received immense commercial and critical success for his mind-blowing sample-based music. Utilizing technical expertise and a ferocious creative streak, Girl Talk repositions popular music to create a wild and edgy dialogue between artists from all genres and eras. But are his practices legal? Do his methods of frenetic appropriation embrace collaboration in its purest sense? Or are they infractions of creative integrity and violations of copyright? You be the judge by watching RiP: A remix manifesto.
Please join us in Room 131 of the Dickey Fine Arts Building at 7:30 PM on Thursday, February 2, for an in-depth and entertaining (and admittedly one-sided) look at creativity in the new digital age and the forces that threaten it.