Tag Archives: digital poetry

remixworx launches new showcase

R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX – selected works

screenshot of remixworx - selected works page

screenshot: R3/\\/\\1X\\/\\/0RX - selected works

remixworx launches a gallery page of selected works from 5+ years of remixing

R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX is a collaborative creative space for remixing digital art, digital poetry, spoken word, audio, text, animation and playable media. It’s a micro-community of recombinant artistic practice that I’ve been involved with since January 2007. The R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX blog is where the remixing takes place and WordPress, our chosen software, provides a great social platform for remote creative collaboration. But the front page only displays the latest handful of works so the vast mass of the creative project tends to be hidden in the archives. Our new gallery page opens out the remixworx collection in a browsable interface of thumbnails where you can see, at a glance, relationships between remixes and have access to the works at your fingertips.

Many thanks to Randy Adams, who initiated the R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX project in 2006, for pulling together the selected works page. It currently contains 183 pieces, which represents about one third of the total number of remix works on the blog.

R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX is always open to new members – you should be media savvy and experienced with online publishing software. If you would like to join, let me know. Also, you may find interesting, my personal perspective on remixing with R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX.

remixworx in overview of E-Poetry 2009

ePoetry Barcelona 09Thanks to Chris Funkhouser, digital poet and researcher, for this fantastic, all-embracing report of E-Poetry 2009, the international festival and symposium of digital poetry that took place in Barcelona in May:

Encapsulating E-Poetry 2009: Some views on contemporary digital poetry

This was the first time I’d attended this biennial festival where I presented a selection of remixes from R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX. Here’s what Funkhouser had to say about it in the section on the May 26 Panel of works:

Wilks (whose comments on the presentation—as well as links to several works she showed—are posted at http://crissxross.net/wilx/2009/06/07/remixing-at-epoetry-barcelona-2009/) showed a series of works that have been presented on a collaborative blog titled remixworx. Members of the group have done roughly 500 multimedia remixes since 2006 (Wilks usually uses Flash). She presented “trails” of posts to the site—which is set up as a blog and artistic responses are posted in comment fields—that reflected how the works evolved, and also read a couple of text pieces from the site. Beyond the high quality of the works presented, the collaborative axis of remixworx is more than respectable, and the sheer variety of types of works (stylistically/aesthetically)—kinetic visual poems often combining text/animation/sound—appearing on the site is marvelous.