Difference between revisions of "Template:Featured/New media art"

From Culture.si
(Culture.si feature-bot!)
(Culture.si feature-bot!)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Featured article horizontal|Noordung Cosmokinetic Cabinet}}
+
{{Featured article horizontal|RadioCona}}
{{Featured article horizontal|Sonica International Festival of Transitory Art}}
+
{{Featured article horizontal|Nova Gorica Arts Centre}}
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__

Revision as of 12:35, 10 January 2021



RadioCona


RadioCona.jpgRadioCona

RadioCona is a temporary radio project for contemporary arts established in 2008 by Cona Institute, an institute for contemporary arts processing. The radio has become an important agent in claiming public radio-frequency space for artistic and broader social contexts. It runs an occasional innovative programme of its own production and serves as a common platform for various contemporary visual or performing arts events in Ljubljana.

radioCona maintains an important online audio archive of new media art, experimental music and recorded events such as round tables and debates on the major issues concerning the free-lance and independent production in Slovenia (cultural policy, public space and copyright) as well as international symposia (Reflective Dramaturgy by Maska Institute in the frame of the 2010 Ukrep - Festival of Dance Perspectives, for example). The archive is freely accessible on the radioCona blog.

NOT ROBOT, WRITING DONE, INFOBOX DONE, PROOFREAD DONE, FERTIK, NOVERIFY, NODEPO, PHOTO, FEATURED, Article, HAS LOGO, New media art, Media, Funding, professional and support services, Archives & Libraries, Support services, Articles maintained by Admin, New media art support services, Visual arts support services, New media art funding, professional and support services, Archives, Studios, COVER, New media art studios, New media art archives, New media art archives and libraries, Broadcasting, Radio, Media studios, Visual arts online media, New media art online media

RadioCona.jpg



Nova Gorica Arts Centre


The Nova Gorica Arts Centre (Kulturni dom Nova Gorica) was opened as a regional cultural and community centre back in 1980. Besides being a prominent concert and film theatre venue, it is nowadays also the most important concert producer for classical and early music in Western Slovenia. Besides using its own two event halls, the Arts Centre often sets up concerts at other venues, most regularly at the Kromberk Castle and the Franciscan Monastery at Kostanjevica, a hill just above Nova Gorica.

Its visual arts branch, the Nova Gorica City Gallery, is located within the Nova Gorica theatre building complex. The Arts Centre organises a range of other programmes, including the Pixxelpoint International Festival of Computer Art, the October Jazz festival, the International Saxophone Meeting and the Flores Musicae Festival of mediaeval and renaissance music. All in all, the Nova Gorica Arts Centre organises more than 500 events with almost 65,000 visitors per year.

Nova Gorica Arts Centre 2016 Front entrance Photo Matej Vidmar.jpgThe main entrance to the Nova Gorica Arts Centre, located in the centre of the town, 2016

NOT ROBOT, WRITING DONE, INFOBOX DONE, PROOFREAD DONE, FERTIK, NOVERIFY, NODEPO, PHOTO, FEATURED, Article, Producers, Articles maintained by Anže Zorman, Music, Music education, Course organisers, Music course organisers, Courses and workshops, Music courses and workshops, Music education and research, HAS LOGO, New media art, Awards and competitions, New media art awards and competitions, Updated 2017, HAS MAP, Public entities, Visual arts, Venues, New media art producers, Visual arts exhibition organisers, Exhibition organisers, Festival organisers, Music festival and event organisers, Music venues, Concert halls, Theatre venues, Film venues, Cultural centres, New media art festival and event organisers, New media art venues, Music festival organisers, Jazz, Competition organisers, New media art festival organisers, New media art competition organisers

Nova Gorica Arts Centre 2016 Front entrance Photo Matej Vidmar.jpg