##plugins.themes.bootstrap3.article.main##

Maggie McCormick

Abstract

‘Skypeography: investigating and mapping the public mind space of urbaness’ is an overview of the public space of Skype. This article discusses how mediation by screens is creating new urban concepts across an emerging new spatial geography and its new sociologies and cartographies. It begins by tracing an overview from perceptions of ‘city’ to experiences of ‘urbaness’ and explores the role of screens in creating a mobile state of being and a conceptualization of urban public space as transient and paradoxical mind space. The paper argues that an appropriate urban lexicon or cartographic recording is yet to be developed in relation to the public space of screens. In an increasingly visualized world, art practice has a significant role to play in exploring and mapping urban transience, movement, rhythm and paradox that forms a state of ‘urbaness’. This article explores the concept of ‘Skypeography’ through the methods and aesthetics of artistic screen research practice undertaken in the fluid space of the SkypeLab research project. Key to the research is the project to identify 100 Questions emerging out of the practice of SkypeLab. Through its experimental approach in digital space, SkypeLab poses and exposes questions arising out of the practice, about urban space itself. Through both answers and questions, SkypeLab and its ‘Skypeography’ method contribute valuable knowledge towards an understanding of new conceptual territory within a profoundly changing urbanscape.

##plugins.themes.bootstrap3.article.details##

How to Cite
McCormick, M. (2018) “Skypeography. Investigating and mapping the public mind space of urbaness”, The Journal of Public Space, 3(1), pp. 3–12. doi: 10.5204/jps.v3i1.315.
Section
Overview
Author Biography

Maggie McCormick, RMIT University

Maggie McCormick is an academic, practicing artist, curator, writer and researcher who has exhibited, curated and undertaken research projects, presentations and publications in Australia, Europe, Asia and South America. McCormick is now Adjunct Professor, formerly the recent Program Manager, Master of Arts (Art in Public Space) at RMIT University and Professor at Reutlingen University, Germany. She established early public space art interventions with the City of Melbourne, beginning with No Vacancy in 1990, extending into cityartpublicspace and finally as urbanart that ran until 2006. The regular program made claim on vacant shops, tram shelters, staircases and other vacant non-art public spaces. Her research focus currently is on how art practice contributes to understandings of the changing nature of urban consciousness and conceptualisation of public space in an urbanized and digitalized century. Together with Henning Eichinger, artist, curator and PProfessor at Reutlingen University, Germany, she initiated and co-curates SkypeLab 2014-2018 (Australia/Germany/China/South America) and its predecessor Skypetrait (Australia/Germany) 2012-2013. www.skypelab.org Recent exhibitions include SkypeLab: transcontinental faces and spaces (2016) group exhibition, Städtische Galerie, Reutlingen, Germany 2016 and Skypescape (overview of SkypeLab and Skypetrait) at Salamanca Art Centre, Hobart, Australia 2018. Recent publications include Carto-City Revisited: unmapping urbaness (2017) in Elizabeth Grierson (ed.) Transformations: Art and the City, Intellect Books, Bristol, UK/Chicago, USA.


References

Bauman, Z. (2000). Liquid Modernity. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.

Castells, M. (1996). The Rise of the Network Society. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell.

Chaudron, S., Eichinger, H. (2017). Eagle-eye on Identities in the Digital World. Joint Research Centre (JRC) Technical Report. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union.

Cosgrove, D. (2006). Carto-City. J. Abrams & P. Hall (eds.), Else/Where: Mapping – New Cartographies of Networks and Territories (pp.148-157). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Design Institute.

Edwards, B. (1979). Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain. Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher.

Elliott, A., Urry J. (2010). Mobile Lives. USA, Canada: Routledge.

Gottmann, J. (1961). Megalopolis: The Urbanized North Eastern Seaboard of the United States. New York: Twentieth Century Fund.

Hillier, B. (2012). Studying Cities to Learn about Minds: Some Possible Implications of Space Syntax for Spatial Cognition. Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science. Volume: 39 Issue 1 (pp. 12-32). London: Sage Publications.

Koolhaas, R. (Ed.) (2004). Content. Cologne: Taschen.

Koolhaas, R., Boeri, S., Kwinter, S., and Tazi, N. (2001). Mutations: Harvard project on the city. Arc en reve centred’architecture.

Lefebvre, H. (2004). Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday Life, (trans. S. Elden and G. Moore). London and New York: Continuum. First published in French 1992.

Lefebvre, H., Régulier, C. (2004). The Rhythmanalytical Project and Attempt at the Rhythmanalysis of Mediterranean Cities. Lefebvre, H., (trans. S. Elden and G. Moore), Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday Life (pp. 97-109). London and New York: Continuum. First published in French 1986.

McCormick, M., Eichinger, H. (eds.) (2016). SkypeLab: Transcontinental Faces and Spaces. Germany: Keber Publications.

McCormick, M (2013). The Transient City: The city as urbaness. E. Grierson, & K. Sharp (eds.). Reimagining the City: Art, globalization and urban spaces (pp. 109-128). Bristol UK/Chicago USA: Intellect.

McCormick, M., Eichinger, H. (eds.) (2013). Skypetrait: Transcontinental Faces. Reutlingen, Germany: Stat Reutlingen.

McCormick, M. (2009). The Transient City: Mapping urban consciousness through contemporary art practice. PhD Thesis. Melbourne: The University of Melbourne.

Mitchell, W., J. (1995). City of Bits: Space, Place and the Infobahn. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.

Mumford, L. (2011). What is a City? LeGates, R., T. and Stout, F. (eds.). The City Reader. Fifth Edition (pp. 91-95). London and New York: Routledge. First published in Architectural Record 1937.

Nicolaides, K. (1941). The Natural Way to Draw. Boston: Houghton Miffin Co.

Radovic, D., Dukanovic, Z. (2007). Urbophilia. Belgrade: Faculty of Architecture, University of Belgrade.

Sassen, S. (2005). Cityness in the Urban Age. Urban Age Bulletin 2 (pp. 1-3).

Sassen, S. (1991). The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.

Urry, J. (2000). Sociology Beyond Societies: Mobilities for the Twenty-First Century. London and New York: Routledge.

Wark, M. (2012). Telesthesia: Communication, Culture and Class. Cambridge UK: Polity Press.