Posts Tagged ‘cultural diplomacy’

Battery Dance Company

DIP is collaborating with Battery Dance Company on a new cultural relations project exploring new ways to make global cultural relations work accessible to arts organizations throughout the United States and the world. The project was funded by a grant from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation.


Battery Dance Company performs at Space on White. Video by Rita J. King

The above short documentary was recorded and produced by Rita J. King as part of Battery Dance’s May 14 participation in Space on White, a new collaborative art space in Tribeca in New York City. The video is a montage of a series of interpretive dances featuring Battery Dancers Oliver Tobin, Robin Cantrell, Carmen Nicole and Sean Scantlebury who joined forces with visual artists John Kessler, Prawat Laucharoen and Jody Rasch to present site-specific dance at Space on White. Also featured in the video is Battery Dance’s Artistic and Executive Director, Jonathan Hollander.

We first met Jonathan at a Cultural Diplomacy retreat at White Oak Plantation where we learned that Jonathan’s efforts go well beyond providing a home for modern, independent dance in Lower Manhattan, but around the globe in some of the most remote corners of the world exploring how dance can serve as a bridge for cultural relations.

Jonathan’s commitment to cultural collaboration is local as well. He was recently featured in The Wall Street Journal about his participation in the creation of the Lower Manhattan Arts League, an effort to create more synergies between arts organizations in New York City.

Battery Dance Company’s impact and reach, finding inroads for cultural dialog through teaching and sharing dance has, in the last year, gone from, among other places, Uganda to Ghana and Algeria. The below clip is from the YouTube stream of the US Embassy in Algiers.


Battery Dancers were recently interviewed on Algerian television.

I asked Jonathan a question I saw tweeted recently by one of the British Council’s TN2020 fellows: “Some dance forms imply a set of values, esp in the south side of chicago. So, how do you find neutral forms for dialogue?”

His response: “I guess my reaction to this ‘neutral forms for dialogue’ is that modern dance fits the bill perfectly because it is a constantly changing, evolving form that can stretch in all kinds of directions. For example, when we gave young dancers the opportunity to be creative within the form and architecture of modern dance, they dove into the process … in Cambodia, Ghana, Algeria, Uganda, Swaziland, Germany, Taiwan, New York City public schools.”

[Battery Dance Company]
[Battery Dance Company Blog]

Brookings Institution: The Doha Forum

Inside the Ritz Carlton Hotel at the U.S.-Islamic World Forum in Doha, Qatar

In February 2008, Dancing Ink Productions’ Joshua S. Fouts and Rita J. King were invited by the Brookings Institution to be speakers at the U.S.-Islamic World Forum in Doha, Qatar. Dancing Ink Productions produced a mixed media event live from Doha and in the virtual world of Second Life. The event, which was entitled, “The Transfer of Cultural Energy,” featured Nashwa Al Ruwaini, host of the two top-rated television shows in the Middle East, “Nashwa” and “Poet of Millions”; Howard Gordon, executive producer of the Fox television show, “24″; and Ambassador Cynthia P. Schneider.

(A portion of this work is also featured in the findings of the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project, which was released January 2009.)

Avatar of Nashwa Al-Ruwaini
Avatar of Nashwa Al-Ruwaini
Howard Gordon and Rita King speaking to their virtual audience
Howard Gordon and Rita J. King speaking to their virtual audience

The event also featured two hip-hop artists, Palestinian Muhammed Mughrabi of the Jerusalem-based hip-hop group, G-Town, and Iranian Yas, who is the first hip-hop artist whose work is sanctioned by the Iranian government. The two sang a spontaneous Arabic-Farsi hip-hop performance, which can be viewed in its entirety here.

Muhammed Mughrabi and Yas perform at the U.S.-Islamic World Forum
Muhammed Mughrabi and Yas perform at the U.S.-Islamic World Forum

Proceedings of the U.S.-Islamic World Forum can be downloaded in PDF format here.

Dancing Ink Productions’ participation in the U.S.-Islamic World Forum so inspired us that we penned the following vision statement about the foundational aspects of our work, “Our Vision for Sustainable Culture in the Imagination Age.”

Dancing Ink Productions produced the below machinima video as part of their participation.

In Ambassador Cynthia P. Schneider’s forthcoming report about cultural diplomacy, “Mightier than the Sword: Arts and Culture in the U.S.-Muslim World Relationship,” includes the following recommendations:

Virtual Worlds: Although participation in virtual worlds is minimal at present in the Muslim world, the technology off ers the possibility over the long term of lectures, dialogues, discussions, concerts, screenings and other performances that could break down barriers of geography and incorporate “audiences” from diff erent parts of the world. Contests, such as the remix contest with Salman Ahmed’s music, increase distribution and engagement with diverse types of music. At the 2008 U.S.-Islamic World Forum, the Brookings Institution, in collaboration with Dancing Ink Productions, held a virtual world panel discussion featuring Howard Gordon (executive producer of 24) and Nashwa al Ruwaini (CEO, Pyramedia) and attended by people (via their avatars) from the U.S., South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. Th e session concluded with a freestyle hip-hop concert featuring top Iranian rapper YAS in Farsi and, in Arabic, Palestinian Muhammed Mughrabi, the leader and co-founder of the G-Town the Palestinian Hip-Hop Makers group in Jerusalem that had all the participants’ avatars dancing.

Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds

Rita J. King recently spoke about the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project at the 2010 Business Innovation Factory (BIF-6). Here’s the video:

(Rita J. King also presented the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project at the 2009 O’Reilly Media Gov2.0 Summit and Expo, for which she was recognized with the first-ever Gov2.0 Award. You can view that presentation here.)


Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds

With this report, Josh and Rita have illuminated a new path–a definite intelligible plan–for practical public diplomacy in an area of supreme urgency. Furthermore, they have done so by elevating humanity’s most distinguishing feature: the imagination.“ – Joel Rosenthal, President, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs

Cover page of the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds policy recommendations.

On January 29, 2009, Dancing Ink Productions Rita J. King and Joshua S. Fouts released the findings from the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. The project was funded by a grant from the Richard Lounsbery Foundation. The findings included a trilogy of actionable items available in digital format here.  By releasing three types of reports — policy recommendations, documentary video and graphic book — we hope to make what is still a very new medium as accessible as possible.

The idea for Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project was hatched with a very specific idea in mind: How could people learn about other cultures in an authentic, experiential space — specifically, how could we learn about cultures that self-identified as Muslim? We chose the virtual world of Second Life for many reasons, among them that it is the best international platform — more than 70% of its users are from outside the United States. Our goal was to to see what we could learn about Islam — not by inviting particular people with particular perspectives into Second Life, but rather to follow the trail of what was already happening culturally in the space that might yield new insight about Islam.

Read the Press Release announcing the project findings here and here.

Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project findings:

Watch the short documentary (low-res version) on YouTube:


Comments on the project:

“With this report, Josh and Rita have illuminated a new path–a definite intelligible plan–for practical public diplomacy in an area of supreme urgency. Furthermore, they have done so by elevating humanity’s most distinguishing feature: the imagination.”
– Joel Rosenthal, President, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs

“The project’s use of Second Life virtual experiences, where internet users can interact with each other through avatars to engage in intercultural dialogue, is indeed a pioneering initiative.”  “A ‘second life’ for public diplomacy in the Middle East,” by Prof. Muhammad Ayish, Abu Dhabi’s “The National”

“Joshua and Rita are THE great explorers of new possibilities and media for public diplomacy.”
– Tish Shute, propietor of UgoTrade.com and TishShute.com

“A fascinating clash of best intentions and actual spiritual desires, transplanted into the virtual realm.”Wagner James Au in New World Notes.

Eureka Dejavu in hijab
Pictured: Eureka Dejavu, avatar of Rita J. King in hijab before the virtual hajj.

Read Rita J. King’s remarks from the January 29, 2009 release of the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project, delivered at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.

Read Joshua S. Fouts’ remarks from the January 29, 2009 release of the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project, delivered at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.

In case you missed the event, you can watch the complete video on the Carnegie Council website. Carnegie Council has also uploaded the complete event transcript.

Evan M. O'Neil, managing editor of PolicyInnovations.org at the January 29 event.
Evan M. O’Neil, managing editor of PolicyInnovations.org at the January 29 event.

The Carnegie Council has uploaded edited excerpts from the January 29, 2009 release Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project. Each video is about a minute and a half long.

Non-Violence in Virtual Worlds — Rita J. King

Creativity in Virtual Worlds — Rita J. King

Online Diplomacy — Joshua S. Fouts

The Evolution of Revolution

Rita J. King's essay in Policy Innovations Magazine

Rita J. King's essay in Policy Innovations Magazine

The Carnegie Council’s Policy Innovations Magazine just published a new commentary by Rita J. King exploring broadly, the current State Department-funded technology delegation to Russia and whether “social media is the new jazz” (including quotes from John Perry Barlow) as a partial response to a recent Wall Street Journal essay by Evgeny Morozov.

From the essay:

Morozov’s op-ed was written in response to the State Department’s current Russian Tech Delegation (#RusTechDel on Twitter). The participants have been live-tweeting and inviting questions from their followers. But is social media the new jazz? Does Ashton Kutcher, one of the participants, a comedy actor and businessman who became a social media sensation only because he was already a celebrity, really have the same magnetic power as the jazz greats wordlessly shattering illusions so deeply entrenched in the human psyche? No, only music can reach the realm of unspeakable pain and injustice that afflicts so many people around the world, and that’s not what today’s Russia delegation is attempting.

Can a group of dedicated tech-focused Americans make a difference in Russia? Absolutely, and not just because they are encouraging more people around the world to use Facebook and Twitter.

Bonus Track: A Window into the Editorial Process

Rita J. King produced this video of her Saturday morning editorial process with Evan O’Neil, Managing Editor for the Carnegie Council’s Policy Innovations Magazine.

Evan O'Neil and Rita J. King in edit mode.

Evan O'Neil and Rita J. King in edit mode.

Art, Reality and Cultural Diplomacy

“In art, intentions are of little importance” — Pablo Picasso. At the Aspen Institute Summit on Cultural Diplomacy, Rita J. King reflects on the role of technology in art and cultural relations.

Rita J. King at the Museu Picasso in Barcelona.

Rita J. King at the Museu Picasso in Barcelona.

By Rita J. King
Barcelona, Spain. September 20, 2009

“In art, intentions are of little importance.” Pablo Picasso

The Aspen Institute held a forum in the ancient city of Avilés, Spain last week to discuss Culture & Security from a cultural diplomacy perspective. My collaborator Joshua S. Fouts and I spoke about our project, “Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds,” which took place across four continents in the physical world and in the virtual world of Second Life.

Second Life allows participants from all over the world an unprecedented opportunity to collaboratively imagine and build environments and identities in which cultural exchanges take place, free from the fetters of fear (whether generated by timidity, the possibility of violence, language barriers or simple lack of contact or motivation to initiate such discussions) that too often accompany sensitive cultural conversations in the physical world.

The same way a building can be designed and constructed virtually before the cornerstone is laid on actual grass, so can a new technique for cultural exchange be developed that promotes transparency and accountability and at the same time removes physical vulnerability.

Nevertheless, this concept is disturbing to many people, largely because the media hasn’t done Second Life any favors by consistently misrepresenting the importance of the platform and also because the entire concept is so new that people simply can’t imagine the value of such interactions, much less the fact that avatars are representations of real people in the physical world and not cartoons capable of destroying the fabric of society. That narrative is beginning to change now.

Many people at the forum were utterly fascinated, hearing about Second Life for the first time, and several have already booked us to discuss plans for proceeding with extremely exciting projects. A couple of people referenced our work (despite the fact that it took place primarily in the physical world and we’d flown thousands of miles to discuss it in person) as an example of digital interactions undermining the richness of personal contact in the physical world, as if every personal interaction is saturated with meaning that results in cultural illumination and progress.

While it isn’t easy for newbies to jump in-world and instantly discover the best of what the local culture has to offer, it’s worth the search. Second Life is filled with collaborative and individual creativity of such a sophisticated and remarkable nature that cultural advances are taking place on a daily basis. Never in the history of humanity have individuals from around the world been able to gather in real time to explore sensitive issues that require sustained philosophical focus without leaving their own physical communities. Never before have people been able to escape the circumstances of birth to form ties based on the essence of self above the telltale signs of class and privilege hierarchy.

As far as the practice of cultural diplomacy goes, we finally have a platform that equalizes all participants by making creativity and innovation the highest aim, and that’s a good thing. That isn’t to say that some people don’t use Second Life for less than progressive purposes, but so do people in the physical world and that doesn’t stop diplomats from practicing. Race, age, gender, ethnicity and extreme physical beauty or disability all cease to matter. Second Life is whatever users make of it.

Major institutions globally have turned the platform into a thriving, environmentally conscious business hub. Visionary educators have created three-dimensional, immersive learning environments. In the third grade, we made dioramas out of shoeboxes to depict the Gobi Desert from brown paper. It was great fun and there is no reason why anyone has to stop doing it just because now, thousands of learning institutions have created information rich mixed-media environments embedded with experiential knowledge for learners of all ages. Thanks to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s work in Second Life, for example, I’ve swum through the ocean from the poles to the equator to see the life it contains and the hazards of global climate change.

One of the major obstacles to right thinking regarding mixed-media, mixed reality environments is the notion that somehow participation in a virtual world isn’t “real.” Today, at the Museu Picasso in Barcelona, I had an epiphany about how to explain why the debate is misguided. Because the Culture & Security forum focused largely on art, including a number of conversations about how digital art (which is no lesser than any other art form), it is appropriate to use this example to explore the meaning of reality in any form of creative expression.

Between August and December 1957, Pablo Picasso created 58 interpretive works based on Velasquez’s painting Las Meninas. At the Museu Picasso, an ingeniously curated exhibit of two monitors on either side of a pane of reflective glass depicts Picasso’s work projected onto various segments of Las Meninas. I watched through projects of all 58 works, or however many were depicted, before stepping into the gallery where the pieces were hung.

Despite the fact that the projections are glorious, they are nowhere near as spectacular as the original pieces, with their brushstrokes that outlasted the hand of the artist. Much like the virtual hajj to Mecca in Second Life, which can’t possibly ever replace the physical experience of millions of hot, hungry physical bodies moving through a space all experiencing the manifestation of their sacred beliefs, the projections of the Velasquez and Picasso works aren’t meant to replace the originals, but simply to yield new perspective.

Beyond that, though, even the original canvases by Picasso aren’t “real.” After all, Picasso was merely interpreting a work by Velasquez. Come to think of it, even Las Meninas isn’t “real,” except in the broadest definition of the term (having a verifiable existence) which also applies to works in Second Life. The argument that no facsimile can ever be as rich as the original undermines the sheer force of creative power that fuels human progress in the form of artistic expression.

Nobody alive today can turn back the clock to be in that room with Velasquez. Our only glimpse comes from the weight of his work, much like the only glimpse I’ve ever had of ancient Mesopotamia (present day Iraq) where writing was invented comes from the work of the Federation of American Scientists who embarked on a collaborative global project in Second Life to rebuild the city based on real archeological data, right down to charred hearths, temples, markets and agricultural zones. Only through documentation can we experience a moment lost to the riptide of history. Arguably, the very act of people posing for the portrait, frozen in place for hours if not weeks on end wearing costumes to begin with is not real. So what? I’m glad they did it anyway, and that instead of debating the merit of interpreting that singular effort, Velasquez and Picasso picked up their brushes and got to work.

Art is an interpretation of the rhythm of human life on a fleetingly colonized planet in a vast, mysterious cosmos of infinite mystery. The relationship between art and the development of culture is such a mysterious one that language is often painfully insufficient in the attempt to describe it. Human bondage does not require physical bars for captivity. Art is the means by which symbolic bars are bent to create opportunities for people to pass through. The central question of cultural diplomacy in many ways is: If humanity is to earnestly attempt to outpace our current path of collective destruction with acts of trailblazing creativity, how can this sacred act, which undermines the underlying conditions that lead to violence, best be accomplished?

“Others talk,” Picasso once said. “I work.”

Rita J. King: Gov 2.0 Hero

Rita J. King joins Craig Newmark, among others, as a Gov2.0 Hero

Rita J. King joins Craig Newmark, among others, as a Gov2.0 Hero

Congratulations to Rita J. King for being recognized by Government social media site as Gov 2.0 Hero. The complete list of Gov 2.0 Heros is here. Also included in the list is EPA Gov 2.0 guru Jeffrey Levy (who, coincidentally, bears the distinction of being the person who introduced me to the Internet in 1991.)

Each Gov 2.0 Hero is asked a series of questions about their thoughts on government and technology. Rita’s entire response is worth a read, but here’s an excerpt:

What was your path to Gov 2.0?

I’ve been studying the cultural effects of digital anonymity since 1996, but when I discovered a Muslim woman in a virtual Jewish synagogue in Second Life in 2006 I realized that global culture had entered a powerful new realm. The idea of “avatars” is polarizing. Some people instantly see the benefit of this new form of identity and community construction while others, believing that avatars dehumanize people, are appalled. I was not a gamer, nor did I ever expect to be mesmerized by the virtual world of Second Life after a friend of mine who works at IBM suggested that I check it out. I was reading Joseph Campbell’s “The Power of Myth,” and I searched on temples, synagogues, churches and mosques during my first few hours and days in Second Life, which was how I found myself at prayer services in a virtual Jewish synagogue speaking to a Muslim woman.

On September 8 at the O’Reilly Gov 2.0 Expo, Rita J. King will be discussing “Digital Diplomacy: Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds” as part of the Government as Peacekeeper section.

DIP Speaking at Gov2.0 Expo

DIP will be presenting Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds on September 8

DIP will be presenting Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds on September 8

DIP is pleased to be among the featured speakers at the upcoming O’Reilly Media Gov2.0 Expo. Rita J. King and I will be speaking on the changing landscape for Cultural Diplomacy and discussing our case study “Digital Diplomacy: Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds.” Our project explores how project explores how foreign policy can augment existing physical world engagement with Islamic communities worldwide by utilizing complex, nuanced opportunities provided by 3d Immersive spaces.

Follow us @ritajking or @josholalia on Twitter for updates or @ reply us to let us know if you’ll be there.

Rita J. King’s remarks from the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds release

Following are Rita J. King’s remarks from the January 29, 2009 release of the Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds report, presented at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs:

Thank you to The Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, the Lounsbery Foundation, Evan O’Neil, ILL Clan Animation Studios and everyone who helped us gain a greater understanding of Islam and virtual worlds while we worked on this project across four continents in the physical world and, at the same time, in a three-dimensional, digital, virtual world called Second Life. I am grateful to Joshua S. Fouts, the co-director of this project, whose visionary work hinges on the notion that exploring other cultures is an adventure and a mission.

Virtual worlds give people space to inhabit and enhance one another’s ideas. Tonight, we will be sharing a short documentary video shot entirely in Second Life, excerpts from a 150-page graphic book and policy recommendations for the Obama Administration.

While we worked on this project we didn’t know who the next American president would be. We are happy to deliver our recommendations to an administration that has already demonstrated a great awareness of the transformative power of the Internet.

The Understanding Islam through Virtual Worlds project was guided by the 13th century Sufi mystic poet Rumi’s idea: ‘Out beyond ideas of rightdoing and wrongdoing there is a field. I’ll meet you there. When the soul lies down upon that grass, the world is too full to talk about. Ideas, language, even the phrase ‘each other’ doesn’t make any sense.’
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The War we need to Win

President-elect Obama cast in the State flags of the United States. Image credit: Tsevis.

President-elect Obama cast in the State flags of the United States. Image credit: Tsevis.

I’ve always liked the quote (and the Cerebus art) on Marc Lynch’s blog, “The battle’s done, and we kind of won so we sound our victory cheer: where do we go from here?” And I’ve been looking for a good opportunity to use it. Today I’ve found one. As I was going through my public diplomacy and the presidency files, I came across an August 1, 2007 speech that then-Senator Obama gave, in which he lists some of his public diplomacy goals once elected. You can read the full transcript here. Some points leap out for special consideration, which we’ve highlighted here. We’ll look forward to seeing how these ideas are implemented.

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