Pop!Tech 9
Oct. 19-22, 2005
Seeing What’s There
Graham Flint
Bob Hanner
It’s Alive!
Norman Packard
Theo Jansen
Mind and Body
Todd Kuiken
Jesse Sullivan
Ze Frank
Explorer’s Club
Peter Diamandis
Marcia McNutt
Carolyn Porco
People, Place, and Planet
Mark Lynas
East Meets West
Oded Shenkar
Rebecca MacKinnon
Serious Games
Edward Castronova
Ivan Marovic
Steven Berlin Johnson
Davy Rothbart
The Participation Revolution
Nicholas Negroponte
Yochai Benkler
Ingo Gunther
Habitats
Suketu Mehta
Robert Neuwirth
Big Fixes
Cameron Sinclair
Bunker Roy
Neil Gershenfeld
The Future of Ideas
Sam Harris
Susan Blackmore
What Do We Know?
Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Robert Trivers
Summary
Bob Metcalfe
The Future of Africa
Panel Discussion
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 Ingo Günther, sculptor, born in 1957, grew up in the city of Dortmund, Germany. In the '70s, travels took him to Northern Africa, North and Central America, and Asia. He studied Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at Frankfurt University (1977) before he switched to the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in 1978, where he studied with Schwegler, Uecker, and Paik (M.A. 1983). In the same year, he received a stipend from the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf for a residency at P.S.1 in New York. He received a DAAD grant the following year and a Kunstfonds grant in 1987.
Ingo's early sculptural works with video led him towards more journalistic oriented projects which he pursued in TV, print, and the art field. Based in New York, he played a crucial role in the evaluation and interpretation of satellite data gathered from political and military crisis zones; the results were distributed internationally through print media and TV news. The goal was to make military and ecological information, that was up to this point inaccessible, known to the public in order to have a direct impact on political processes. On an artistic level, the work with satellite data led to Ingo's contribution to documenta 8 (1987), the installation K4 (C31) (Command Control Communication and Intelligence). In the same year, Günther received accreditation as a correspondent at the United Nations in NY.

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In his capacity as artist, correspondent, and author, he worked extensively with Japanese TV (NHK), covering topics that ranged from media studies to military technology. Since 1989, Ingo has used globes as a medium for his artistic and journalistic interests. In 1989, nine months before the reunification of Germany, he founded the first independent TV station in Eastern Europe, Channel X, Leipzig in order to contribute to the establishment of a free media landscape.
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002889.html
http://www.shift.jp.org/057/ingogunther/
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