Updates

Ismailfarouk.com now using Wordpress

Last week I received an email from Blogger informing me that they are discontinuing the Blogger ftp service for custom blogs. It seems the service was not required by the majority of blogger blogs with only 0.5% of all blogs  hosted independently.

Unfortunately, my blog was one of the 0.5% and so the end of ftp support has meant the end of the blogger platform for ismailfarouk.com. The problem presented my web guru, Babak fakhamzadeh with a serious challenge and after some extremely geeky dreams, he concluded that migration to the Wordpress platform was the solution.

So its my absolute pleasure to launch the new ismailfarouk.com website – now using the Wordpress platform. There are some significant functional changes to the site but Babak has retained the overall look and feel of the old website. So far, the migration to Wordpress has gone fairly smoothly, thanks to dedicated support from Mastababa.

1001 thank you’s to Mastababa – Still the coolest traveling web guru by far!

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Planning for Chaos: African Cities Reader


Below find a link to my visual essay, ‘Planning for Chaos: Urban Regeneration and the Struggle to Formalise Trolley Pushing Activity in Downtown Johannesburg’ – published in the African Cities Reader (2009):

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African Cities Reader II: Call for Submissions

Press release

“Following on the heels of the first African Cities Reader, we remain as convinced as ever that the youthful demographic, informality and non-conventional insertion in global circuits by African urbanites is a starting point for a sustained engagement and retelling of the city in contemporary Africa. The cultural, livelihood, religious, stylistic, commercial, familial, knowledge producing and navigational capacities of African urbanites are typically overlooked, unappreciated and undervalued. The aim of the African Cities Reader is to bring their stories and practices to the fore. The Reader seeks to become a forum where Africans tell their own stories, draw their own maps and represent their own spatial topographies as it continuous to evolve and adapt at the interstice of difference, complexity, opportunism, and irony.

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Remembering Dinkies Sithole

It is with sadness that I write about the passing away of Soweto based artist Dinkies Sithole. Dinkies was a friend and colleague at The Bag Factory Artist Sudio in Fordsburg. He will be remembered for his tap dancing performances, and great enthusiasm for the arts. I am going to miss chatting to him about his crazy ideas for public performances in the dust bowls of Soweto. Here is a link to an obituary to Dinkies Sithole, by Rat Western on Arthrob

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Binary Existence: Reggie Watts

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Interactive Car Exhaust Sculpture: Official Photos

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Installation built for the Johannesburg EM/Di verging Metropolis Exhibition,
Mendrisio Switzerland 2007
More here: http://ismailfarouk.com/blog/2007/04/johannesburg-exhaust-structure.asp

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Ten Best International Multi-Platform Web 2.0 Projects of 2009 that Torque Documentary Form

By Patricia Zimmermann, professor of cinema, photography and media arts and codirector of the Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival, Ithaca College

Original Story here

Top ten lists of commercial films, high end art exhibitions, and books from the big publishers jam the press and websites this time of year. I devour these lists and end up saving them for my Netflix queue and my travel reading. That said, I find myself a lot more energized by projects that jack me into thinking about archives, history, concepts, politics, real people, real struggles and documentary practice in new ways. And that seduce me to keep coming back to see what’s new. The projects on my list engage some common strategies: collaborative, interactive, merging the digital and the real, the urgent and the imaginative. These are not auteurist projects – they are convenings. And are alphabetical order, in no particular ranking of importance.

1.The Hub, by Witness (an NGO based in NYC)
A user-generated, issue-focused, easy-to-search portal for uploading videos from around the world documenting a staggering array of human rights including armed conflict, labor, children’s rights, prisons, sustainable development, discrimination, violence, health, women’s rights, humanitarian issues, justice. A model of ethical, collaborative, social media, where uploading and sharing means taking action and campaigning for real world change for real people, not avatars or products.

2. Iranian Social Protest on Facebook
The Zapatistas wrangled the internet for politics. 15 years later, the Iran protest movement has nabbed social media and grabbed attention for turning recent updates into something more than your favorite youtube video or latte hang out. Despite the US state department’s enthusiasm for toppling regimes by any digital means necessary, Facebook and blogs have rendered the separation between the local and the global inoperative. Check out the link above for news about the men in head scarves movement.

3. Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change, Nunuvut, Canada
From Zacharias Kunuk and Ian J. Mauro, an exciting, interactive web project the gathers centuries of Inuit knowledge by elders and hunters on climate change in the Arctic, featuring blogs, multimedia, raw footage, live internet shows and skype. Say farewell to Al Gore and his multimillion dollar power point films.

4.Post Secret, by Frank Warren
This community art project is simple: people mail in their secrets anonymously on one side of a postcard. But the results are complex: condensations of psychic fissures and social relations. Images and words are posted on the blog daily. Several books have been published from this material and hit the NYT bestseller list. But it’s still a model of engagement worth taking a look at..and, according to its own website, it’s the largest advertising free blog in the world. Send one in. Noone will know it’s you.

5. Public Secret, USA, project conceived by Sharon Daniel in collaboration with Justice Now
A massive collaboration between digital artist Daniel, the Vectors Journal at USC, Justice Now, and incarcerated women. It explores gender, family, and the prison industrial complex with an elegant, spared down design that remaps our preconceptions all the first three. It also cuts through decades of documentary debate about images, victims and ethics with more clarity than most scholarly essays on the subject.

6. RMB City, China, by Cao Fei, aka in SL China Tracy
A project spanning RL (real life) and SL (Second Life) that satirizes overdevelopment and overbuilding in China through avatars and buildings in Second Life, and a web site promoting the RMB city including press releases, city channels, manifestos, maps, city views and a blog. Strapped for cash? You might want to book your next weekend getaway in RMB City…

7. Sarai, Delhi, India
The go-to hub in South Asia for cracking open the liminal zones between the digital and the real with the edgiest new media theory around, practical and concept-changing on the ground projects mapping urbanism, and endless innovations in convening people and ideas with art shows, editable and free CDs, books, audio, free software, publications, translations and dialogue across languages (Hindi and English), and cybermohallas (you gotta love it-exploring the alley ways and corners of communities and cities.)

8. Saving the Sierra, California, USA, project coordinated by Catherine Stifter and jesikah maria ross
A compelling, elegant, clear-sighted regional project chronicling the culture, economy and environment of the Sierra Nevada as it confronts development challenging sustainability. It marshalls public media, radio documentary, citizen storytelling, and story mapping. The multiple and diverse voices in this project as a mighty and awe inspiring as Yosemite, Lake Tahoe and the sequoias, the spectacles and cliches of the Sierras.

9. Soweto Uprising, South Africa, project by Ismail Farouk and Babak Fakhamzadeh
An interactive website creating a living archive and new cartography of the student uprisings on June 16, 1976 with participants and people living in Soweto, with video mapping, blogs, routes that are tagged, Flickr projects for image uploading, comments on the maps of the routes.

10. Transborder Immigrant Tool, A Mexico/US border Disturbance Project by Ricardo Dominguez, Brett Stalbaum, Micha Cardenas, and Jason Najarro
A mind-blowing and controversy-igniting project where cell phones as digital coyotes meet phone apps meet GPS to help immigrants from Mexico cross the border. Before they’ve been built, they’ve generated a lot of blowback all ready. Start googling and find out what all the fuss is about. And then, start thinking apps and maps as a new media form.

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Joburg a Global Top 10 Creative City

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Norah Walker – Cape Town Densification Strategy

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Ivan Turok – Challenges for Densfication

Snail has posted a doc:

Please visit the ACC website for more info on the Central Citylab: http://www.africancentreforcities.net

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