Difference between revisions of "Annet Dekker"

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* editor, Virtueel Platform Research, ''[[Media:Virtueel_Platform_Research_Born-digital_kunstwerken_in_Nederland_2012.pdf|Born-digital kunstwerken in Nederland]]'', Amsterdam: Virtueel Platform, 2012, 95 pp. {{nl}}
 
* editor, Virtueel Platform Research, ''[[Media:Virtueel_Platform_Research_Born-digital_kunstwerken_in_Nederland_2012.pdf|Born-digital kunstwerken in Nederland]]'', Amsterdam: Virtueel Platform, 2012, 95 pp. {{nl}}
 
* editor, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=8884 Speculative Scenarios, or What Will Happen to Digital Art in the (Near) Future?]'', Eindhoven: Baltan Laboratories, 2013, 144 pp.
 
* editor, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=8884 Speculative Scenarios, or What Will Happen to Digital Art in the (Near) Future?]'', Eindhoven: Baltan Laboratories, 2013, 144 pp.
* editor, ''Lost and Living (in) Archives: Collectively Shaping New Memories'', Amsterdam: Valiz, 2017, 288 pp. [http://www.valiz.nl/publicaties/lost-and-living-in-archives.html]
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* editor, ''Lost and Living (in) Archives: Collectively Shaping New Memories'', Amsterdam: Valiz, 2017, 288 pp. [http://www.valiz.nl/en/lost-and-living-in-archives.html]
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 05:57, 22 September 2017

Annet Dekker is an independent researcher and curator. She is Assistant Professor Archival Science at the University of Amsterdam and Visiting Lecturer at London South Bank University. Previously she was Researcher Digital Preservation at Tate, London, tutor at Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam, and Fellow at The New Institute, Rotterdam. She initiated aaaan.net with Annette Wolfsberger in 2009; they coordinate artists-in-residences and set up strategic and sustainable collaborations with national and international arts organisations. Previously she worked as Web curator for SKOR (Foundation for Art and Public Domain, 2010–12), was programme manager at Virtueel Platform (2008–10), and head of exhibitions, education and artists-in-residence at the Netherlands Media Art Institute (1999–2008). Together with Annette Wolfsberger, she produced Funware, an international touring exhibition in 2010 and 2011 about fun in software (curated by Olga Goriunova). In 2014, she completed her PhD under the supervision of Matthew Fuller on the conservation of net art at Goldsmiths University of London, Enabling the Future, or How to Survive FOREVER. A study of networks, processes and ambiguity in net art and the need for an expanded practice of conservation.

Publications

Links