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Mute Music
pil and galia portrait

Introducing –
Pil and Galia Kollectiv,
one sixth of Mute's
ensemble music column

covering sonic adventures
across genres and time.
Email: info AT kollectiv.co.uk

Mute music column


No Room to Move
nils norman

No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
A fistful of research on the state of critical public art in the maelstrom of New Labour's regeneration programmes.
By Josephine Berry Slater and Anthony Iles


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M25: New Format Mute [November 2002] Editorial content | Vol I
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 16 November, 2005 - 14:26

m25_cover

Including: JJ King on the European Social Forum, Mark Crinson on Manchester's new Urbis museum,
Maria Fernandez and Matthew Hyland on Documenta 11, Horacio Tarcus on the political crisis in Argentina,
Heath Bunting & Kate rich in conversation with Matt Jones, Neil Mulholland on Ambient culture, Kate Rich
on Josh On, Pauline van Mourik Broekman & Josephine Berry in conversation with APG, a short story by
Gwyneth Jones and special projects by Futuresonic, Université Tangente and the Semantic Web crew
.
Price (select region, inc. P&P)
| read the full version online | PDF | low graphics | designed PDF | cover

Contents of this cluster

  1. Just A Few Of Our Many Products
  2. Reclaim the Media Romania
  3. Microsound Autumn Sale Now On
  4. European Social Forum
  5. Power to the People
  6. Bring Me Sunshine
  7. Commodities Leap the Species Barrier
  8. In Search of Lost Tyne
  9. Urbisville
  10. Liverpool's Art Haul
  11. Documenta Dreaming
  12. Democracy Unrealized
  13. Festival Mania
  14. The Semantic Web
  15. Futuresonic:Migrations
  16. Flash! ah ah... Saviour of the Universe
  17. Argentinian Stories
  18. I Am An Anarchist
  19. Walking the Chalk (Street testing the tech fad, War Chalking)
  20. Bill Posters is Guilty (On the cultural logic of ambient)
  21. Get Rid of the Lot of Them! (Argentinian society stands against politics)
  22. Countdown to Zero, Count up to Now (An interview with the Artist Placement Group)
  23. The 5th Werkleitz Biennial
  24. Pull the Plug
  25. The Non-Philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
  26. Dark Fibre (Tracking Critical Internet Culture)
  27. Greenpepper
  28. Blurting in A&L Online
  29. Justified Sinners
  30. In the Beginning was the Muwashshah
  31. One Place After Another (Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity)
  32. We Are All Normal
  33. My Father Is The Wise Man Of The Village
  34. Correspondences
  35. Phil
  36. Listener's Voice
  37. The No Music
  38. Revue Ou
  39. Leaving Reality Behind
  40. Vietnam: Behind the Lines
  41. Relaod: Rethinking Women + Cyberculture
  42. Email Art
  43. Privatising Culture
  44. The Atlas Group
  45. [dyne:bolic]
  46. Writings
  47. Garlic=Rich Air
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By Anthony Davies and Simon Ford
Sept 2000

New Labour orthodoxy maintains, in line with its predecessor, that public private partnerships are the only way forward economically. Transport, health and education have been the most controversial new enterprise zones, but is the cultural sector's restructuring any less absolute?

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