Difference between revisions of "Association of Autonomous Astronauts"

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The Association of Autonomous Astronauts is a worldwide network of community-based groups dedicated to building their own [spaceships]. The AAA was founded 23 April 1995. Although many of their activities were reported as serious participation in conferences or protests against the militarization of space, some were also considered art pranks, media pranks, or elaborate spoof.
  
The '''Association of Autonomous Astronauts''' is a worldwide network of community-based groups dedicated to building their own [[http://peterburnett.info/alien spaceships]]. The AAA was founded 23 April 1995. Although many of their activities were reported as serious participation in conferences or protests against the militarization of space, some were also considered art pranks, media pranks, or elaborate spoof.<ref name="Gravity">{{cite web
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The Association's ostensible five-year mission was to "establish a planetary network to end the monopoly of corporations, governments and the military over travel in space". Artists who became involved were often connected to the zine scene or mail art movements. The five-year mission's completion was marked at the 2000 Fortean Times conference. Some chapters have continued activities to the present day. Several AAAers have experienced zero-gravity training flights.
|url=http://www.fringecore.com/magazine/m4-3.html
 
|title=Escape from Gravity - The Dreamtime Mission Revisited
 
|author=Dee
 
|publisher=Fringecore magazine
 
|number=4
 
|date=April–May 1998
 
|url=http://www.sztuka-fabryka.be/encyclopaedia/items/multiple_name.htm
 
|title=Multiple name
 
|publisher=Sztuka Fabryka
 
|year=2004
 
|accessdate=2006-01-03}} Sztuka Fabryka is a worldwide non-profit artists organisation based in Belgium.</ref>
 
  
The Association's ostensible five-year mission was to "establish a planetary network to end the monopoly of corporations, governments and the military over travel in space".<ref name="Sztuka"/> Artists who became involved were often connected to the zine scene or mail art movements.<ref name="Sztuka"/> The five-year mission's completion was marked at the 2000 [[Fortean Times]] conference.<ref>{{cite journal
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The writer Tom Hodgkinson described participants as "a loose bunch of Marxists, futurists, and revolutionaries on the dole", going on to explicate their mission as "reclaim[ing] the idea of space travel for the common man". To the AAA, he said, "space travel represented an ideal of freedom".
|url=http://www.forteantimes.com/articles/159_necronauts.shtml
 
|title=Roads Less Traveled
 
|author=Mark Pilkington
 
|journal=[[Fortean Times]]
 
|date=June 2002
 
|accessdate=2006-01-03
 
|issue=159
 
|authorlink=Mark Pilkington (writer)| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20060208182553/http://www.forteantimes.com/articles/159_necronauts.shtml| archivedate= 8 February 2006 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}{{dead link|date=November 2009}}</ref> Some chapters have continued activities to the present day. Several AAAers have experienced zero-gravity training flights.
 
  
The writer Tom Hodgkinson described participants as "a loose bunch of Marxists, futurists, and revolutionaries on the dole", going on to explicate their mission as "reclaim[ing] the idea of space travel for the common man". To the AAA, he said, "space travel represented an ideal of freedom".<ref>{{cite book
+
Annick Bureaud of Leonardo/OLATS viewed their work as "space art" that "combine[d] freely space, cyberspace, raves, esoteric things, techno-music, etc.", calling attention to "how they recycle ... key images (the MIR Space Station, the astronauts on the Moon, etc.) ... mixed with science-fiction (and specially Star Trek) buzz-words or images" and then subjected these "sacred icons" to "iconoclastic treatments"
|title=How To Be Idle
 
|author=[[Tom Hodgkinson]]
 
|publisher=[[HarperCollins]]
 
|year=2005
 
|isbn=0-06-077968-3}}<!--|accessdate=2006-01-03--> Hodgkinson is editor of ''[[The Idler (1993)|The Idler]]''.</ref> Annick Bureaud of ''[[Leonardo Journal|Leonardo/OLATS]]'' viewed their work as "space art" that "combine[d] freely space, cyberspace, raves, esoteric things, techno-music, etc.", calling attention to "how they recycle ... key images (the MIR Space Station, the astronauts on the Moon, etc.) ... mixed with science-fiction (and specially Star Trek) buzz-words or images" and then subjected these "sacred icons" to "iconoclastic treatments".<ref>{{cite web
 
|url=http://www.olats.org/space/texts/beyond.php
 
|title=Space Art
 
|author=Annick Bureaud
 
|publisher=[[Leonardo Journal|Leonardo/OLATS]]
 
|year=1998
 
|accessdate=2006-01-03}} From the proceedings of the ''Rencontres du 13 avril'' interdisciplinary conference. Via the [[Internet Archive]].</ref>
 
 
 
In his book ''Unleashing the Collective Phantoms,'' the theorist Brian Holmes said of the AAA: "The ideas sound fantastic, but the stakes are real: imagining a political subject within the virtual class, and therefore, within the economy of cultural production and intellectual property that had paralyzed the poetics of resistance." <ref>
 
"Unleashing the Collective Phantoms", Brian Holmes, Autonomedia, 2008
 
</ref>
 
 
 
The London chapter participated in the J18 Carnival Against Capitalism protests during that year's G8 summit, with a contingent of AAA members dressed in space suits delivering a petition against the militarisation of space to the headquarters of Lockheed Martin.<ref>{{cite news
 
|url=http://nadir.org/nadir/initiativ/agp/free/global/j18london/0620financial.htm
 
|title=Anarchists attempt to paralyse the City 10,000 activists are due to join a protest in London against capitalism
 
|author=Sathnam Sanghera
 
|publisher=[[Financial Times]]
 
|accessdate=2006-01-03}}</ref><ref name="J18 photos">{{cite web
 
|url=http://www.globenet.free-online.co.uk/actions/uk.htm
 
|title=Halt the Nuclearization and Weaponization of Space: Report from the UK
 
|publisher=Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space
 
|accessdate=2006-01-03 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20051215194045/http://www.globenet.free-online.co.uk/actions/uk.htm |archivedate = December 15, 2005}}</ref> The group was particularly concerned about the [[Cassini-Huygens]] spacecraft and its [[radioisotope thermoelectric generator|RTG]] power source performing an earth fly-by to [[gravitational slingshot|boost its speed]] toward the outer Solar System.
 
 
 
==Timeline==
 
[[File:3-sided Football.jpg|thumb|300px|right|[[three sided football]] workshop, at the 1st Intergalactic Conference of the Association of Autonomous Astronauts,  [[Public Netbase]], [[Vienna]], [[Austria]] [[Summer Solstice]] 1997]]
 
 
 
*23 April 1995: Launch of the Association of Autonomous Astronauts in the grounds of [[Windsor Castle]], UK.
 
*23 April 1996: Publication of 1st Annual Report: "Here Comes Everybody!"
 
*23 April 1997: Publication of 2nd Annual Report: "Dreamtime Is Upon Us!"
 
*21–22 June 1997: 1st Intergalactic Conference – [[Public Netbase]], [[Vienna]], [[Austria]]
 
*23 April 1998: Publication of 3rd Annual Report: "Moving in Several Directions At Once!"
 
*18–19 April 1998: Intergalactic Conference – Link Centre, [[Bologna]], [[Italy]]
 
*23 April 1999: Publication of 4th Annual Report: "Space Travel By Any Means Necessary!"
 
*18 – 27 June 1999: Space 1999: Ten Days Which Shook The Universe – various venues, [[London]], UK. http://www.deepdisc.com/space1999/
 
*23 April 2000: Publication of 5th Annual Report: "See You In Space!"
 
*The 333 days : series of encounters following the 5YP, including Gravité Zéro festival in [[Paris]]
 
*23 April 2005: AAA's ten-year encounter in [[Paris]] (http://confluences.net), in support to [[Steve Kurtz]] and the [[Critical Art Ensemble]]
 
*23 April 2007 : AAA II Wake-Up Communique: "The Dream Is Just Beginning"
 
 
 
==AAA groups and links==
 
 
 
*AAA Vienna (At) : http://aaa.t0.or.at
 
*Raido AAA (UK) : http://www.uncarved.org/aaa.html
 
*Disconaut AAA (UK) : http://www.uncarved.org/disconaut/
 
*Oceania AAA : http://www.deepdisc.com/aaa
 
*AAA Toronto (Ca) : http://mirmnp.blogspot.com
 
 
 
==Further reading==
 
 
 
* ''"The Conquest of Space in the Time of Power"'', The [[Situationist International]] N°12, 1969 : http://www.bopsecrets.org/SI/12.space.htm
 
* ''Mind Invaders: A Reader in Psychic Warfare, Cultural Sabotage and Semiotic Terrorism'', Stewart Home, [[Serpent's Tail]] (London), 1997
 
::An overview of Neoist activities in the 1990s, including highlights of the AAA's first two years.
 
 
 
* ''"Unleashing the Collective Phantoms"'', Brian Holmes, Autonomedia, USA, 2008
 
:: A text discussing the AAA : http://www.republicart.net/disc/artsabotage/holmes01_en.htm
 
 
 
* "Anche Tu Astronauta: guida all'esplorazione independente dello spazio", Riccardo Balli, Castelvecchi editore, Roma, 1998
 
::An insight in Italian language into AAA's philosophy, literature, history and future.
 
:: The book is free online: https://archive.org/details/anche-tu-astronauta
 
 
 
* "Quitter la gravité", edited by Ewen Chardronnet, Editions de l'Eclat, Paris, 2001
 
:: A selection of texts in french language into AAA's philosophy, literature, history and future.
 
:: The book is free online in lyber : http://lyber-eclat.net/lyber/aaa/quitter_la_gravite.html
 
https://archive.org/details/anche-tu-astronauta
 
* "The Laboratory Planet" journal, in English and French : http://www.laboratoryplanet.org
 
 
 
==External links==
 
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20091026222408/http://www.geocities.com/redgiantsite Red Giant]
 
* http://world-information.org
 
*[http://www.olats.org OLATS, Observatoire Leonardo des Arts et Techno-Sciences]
 
*[http://makrolab.ljudmila.org Makrolab]
 
*[http://acoustic.space.re-lab.net Acoustic Space Lab]
 
*[http://e-ngo.org Ellipse]
 
*[http://www.elclubdelosastronautas.com El Club de los Astronautas, space agency founded by artists]
 
 
 
[[Category:Psychogeography]]
 

Revision as of 19:05, 3 February 2017

The Association of Autonomous Astronauts is a worldwide network of community-based groups dedicated to building their own [spaceships]. The AAA was founded 23 April 1995. Although many of their activities were reported as serious participation in conferences or protests against the militarization of space, some were also considered art pranks, media pranks, or elaborate spoof.

The Association's ostensible five-year mission was to "establish a planetary network to end the monopoly of corporations, governments and the military over travel in space". Artists who became involved were often connected to the zine scene or mail art movements. The five-year mission's completion was marked at the 2000 Fortean Times conference. Some chapters have continued activities to the present day. Several AAAers have experienced zero-gravity training flights.

The writer Tom Hodgkinson described participants as "a loose bunch of Marxists, futurists, and revolutionaries on the dole", going on to explicate their mission as "reclaim[ing] the idea of space travel for the common man". To the AAA, he said, "space travel represented an ideal of freedom".

Annick Bureaud of Leonardo/OLATS viewed their work as "space art" that "combine[d] freely space, cyberspace, raves, esoteric things, techno-music, etc.", calling attention to "how they recycle ... key images (the MIR Space Station, the astronauts on the Moon, etc.) ... mixed with science-fiction (and specially Star Trek) buzz-words or images" and then subjected these "sacred icons" to "iconoclastic treatments"