www.milgramreenactment.org
Rod Dickinson is an artist whose work examines belief systems, groups and cults and conceptions of the transcendental. His crop circles have been heralded as proof of extra-terrestrial life; his current ongoing projects, a set of reenactments including Stanley Milgram's infamous 'Obedience to Authority' experiments of 1961 and the Jonestown sermons and mass-suicides of 1978, have received widespread art press acclaim and popular press condemnation. He is the co-writer and programmer for three websites: Circlemakers, The Jonestown Reenactment and The Milgram Reenactment.
www.kenhollings.com
Ken Hollings is a writer based in London. His work has appeared
regularly in The Wire, Sight and Sound, Bizarre
as well as in Frieze, Gargoyle, CTheory, the
St. Martin's Press anthologies Digital Delirium and The
Last Sex. His minbending novel Destroy All Monsters
is available from Marion Boyars publishers.
www.stewarthomesociety.org
Stewart Home is the author of several novels including Pure Mania, No Pity and Slow Death, and works of non-fiction such as Art Strike Papers, Neoist Manifestos and What is Situationism?. A historian of the avant-garde as well as a relentless cultural agitator, he had been called by The Modern Review 'the art terrorist's art terrorist'.
http://alamut.com/cv_index.html
Paul Perry is a conceptual artist whose work shows a preoccupation
with the limits of the human and how these might be surpassed.
In 1997 he collaborated with scientists at the University of Maastricht,
mixing his own genes with those of a laboratory mouse to produce
a new, genetically viable sequence (Good and Evil in the Long
Voyage). In 2000 he directed the first episode of a multi-part
film on the simulation of Near Death Experiences (1000 Deaths,
Sortie 1).
www.rickyseabra.com/index.htm
Ricky Seabra is an artist and designer. He has worked for Miramax
Films, helping create posters for Pulp Fiction and The
Piano, and collaborated with choreographers in Holland, where
he lives, and his native Brazil. Enthusiastic about the possibility
of inhabiting unusual spaces, he has lectured at space industry
conferences anduniversities on lunar architecture and the potential
advantages of including artists in the International Space Station
venture.
www.btinternet.com/~gentry/
Alastair Gentry is the author of two novels, Their Heads are
Anonymous and Monkey Boys; three stage plays, Spines,
Lucky Cows and To the East; four radio plays, The
Radiators Talking, The Story of my Life in T-Shirts,
The Unclear Age and Horror Head; and a generative
audio installation, Nonambient. He is also the writer and
programmer of two websites: 100 Black Boxes, which is inspired
by flight recorders of crashed planes, and The Nothings,
a modular novel named for the first decade of the 21st Century.
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