Graham Harwood, Richard Wright, Matsuko Yokokoji
Graham Harwood (1960), Richard Wright (1963) and Matsuko Yokokoji (1960) are
an English-Japanese artist collective that has worked together for the first
time in 2004 under the name Mongrel. Working with a fusion of art,
electronic media and street culture, they try to reach beyond the
hierarchies of power and knowledge to involve those normally excluded from
expression and collaboration. Their works have been nominated for a BAFTA
award and are affiliated to the permanent collections of the Pompidou Centre
Paris and the Centre for Media Arts (ZKM) in Karlsruhe.
Tantalum Memorial 2008
The telephone-installation is a memorial to the more than 3 million people
who have perished in the complex wars that have gone on in the Congo since
1998, often referred to as the 'Coltan Wars'. The ore coltan is used as the
raw material for the metal tantalum, which is an essential component of
mobile phones and computers. Therefore tantalum is coveted by dozens of
international mining industries and local warring groups, and is nowadays
more valuable than gold. Built of electromagnetic 'Strowger' telephone
switches, invented in 1938, and connected to a computer, the installation
serves not only as a memorial, but functions also as a center of a social
telephone network that is used by Congolese immigrants living in the UK. The
network Telephone Trottoire builds on the traditional Congolese
communication practice of passing around news and gossip from pedestrian to
pedestrian on the street to avoid state censorship. In cooperation with a
London based radio program it calls Congolese listeners and plays messages,
which can be commented and forwarded. The project, which classifies as a
mean of communication between tradition and modernity, can note so far about
1.800 users. In 2009 Tantalum Memorial won the transmediale.09 award in
Berlin.
http://mediashed.org/TantalumMemorial