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    <title>MIT TechTV - Videos tagged with david</title>
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      <title>David H. Koch, Director &amp;amp; Executive Vice President, Koch Industries</title>
      <pubDate>2008-03-11 10:36:11 -0400</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>The David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research @MIT</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>
David H. Koch, Director &amp; Executive Vice President, Koch Industries
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>488</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228872500</guid>
      <title>Class of 2007 Journey to MIT</title>
      <pubDate>2007-06-19 16:15:08 -0400</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Commencement 2007</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>
Members of the class of 2007 describe their journey to MIT.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>109</itunes:duration>
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      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228851320</guid>
      <title>Inventor: David Reshef</title>
      <pubDate>2009-03-25 13:20:48 -0400</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Inventors</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>David Reshef is currently inventing a computer platform that could show you how a disease spreads to help minimize or eradicate diseases and their effects.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>56</itunes:duration>
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      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228830200</guid>
      <title>Triple Candie: The Problem with Triple Candie, a lecture-demonstration</title>
      <pubDate>2009-06-22 18:24:29 -0400</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Center for Advanced Visual Studies</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>The Problem with Triple Candie: A Lecture-Demonstration

Since 2006, the alternative space Triple Candie&#8212;founded in Harlem in 2001&#8212;has been producing exhibitions about art without art or artists. The shows have consisted of reproductions, sculptural surrogates, and theatrical stage-sets that are often discarded or recycled after they are reinstalled. Two especially notorious examples: &#8220;David Hammons: The Unauthorized Retrospective&#8221; was the largest survey ever of the influential and highly reclusive Harlem artist David Hammons, though it consisted exclusively of photocopies and computer printouts; and, &#8220;Cady Noland Approximately: Selected Work, 1984-2000&#8221;, the first-ever survey of the work of an equally influential and reclusive artist that consisted of sculptural surrogates made by the gallery using information gleaned from the Internet. Both exhibitions were produced without the artists&#8217; permissions.

Triple Candie&#8217;s other exhibition have included a collection of 1,200 reproductions clipped from art books; a survey of the work of Lester Hayes, a fictional, bi-racial artist; a theatrical recreation of a 1950s-era Greenwich village caf&#233; and photography gallery; and two exhibitions of common, everyday objects that have been extensively catalogued. This lecture-demonstration will serve as an educational primer on the gallery&#8217;s work and will delve into issues of artistic control, institutional license, and public access.

</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>5138</itunes:duration>
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      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228808940</guid>
      <title>David Robbins: High Entertainment</title>
      <pubDate>2009-06-30 15:04:16 -0400</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Center for Advanced Visual Studies</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>Visiting artist and writer David Robbins will talk about &#8220;high entertainment.&#8221; A practice for the future that combines the critical capacity of fine art with the pleasures and reach of show business, &#8220;high entertainment&#8221; could be what you are already making. Robbins&#8217;s objects, images, and writing reflect on spectacle and the position of the artist in the visual system, and suggest possibilities for a new relationship between art and the entertainment industry.

+

David Robbins has had over three dozen solo exhibitions in the United States and Europe and is the author of five books, most recently The Velvet Grind: Essays, Interviews, Satires (1983-2005) and a novella, The Ice Cream Social (1998, re-issued in 2004). He is currently writing an alternative history of twentieth century comedy.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>6349</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228789800</guid>
      <title>David Reinfurt: on Muriel Cooper</title>
      <pubDate>2009-07-12 21:07:35 -0400</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Center for Advanced Visual Studies</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>Center affiliate David Reinfurt will talk about Muriel Cooper and the Visible Language Workshop's legacy at MIT. As Design Director of MIT Press, professor in the School of Architecture, and co-founder with Ron MacNeil of the Visible Language Workshop, Muriel Cooper spent a career interrogating the methods and means of graphic design, carving out a series of spaces within MIT where fluid relationships between design, production, teaching, learning, making, reproducing and distributing were explored on a daily basis for twenty years. 

David co-founded Dexter Sinister a workshop in the basement at 38 Ludlow Street on the Lower East Side in New York City intended to model a &quot;Just-In-Time&quot; economy of print production, working on-demand, considering alternate distribution strategies, and collapsing editing, design, production and distribution into one efficient activity. 

</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>3804</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228770480</guid>
      <title>Gut Microbes and Cancer: A Pioneer's Passion - Part 2</title>
      <pubDate>2009-11-10 16:00:04 -0500</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Remembering David Schauer</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>&lt;b&gt;A Celebration of the Life and Work of  
David B. Schauer &lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
This symposium celebrates the 
professional life of Prof. David 
Schauer, with a focus on the field of 
microbial pathogenesis. David 
Schauer&#8217;s research dealt with the 
molecular mechanisms evoked by 
enteric pathogenic bacteria, and 
how the infections caused by these 
microbes perturb the 
gastrointestinal barrier, how they 
elicit host immune responses, such 
as inflammation, and how they 
produce clinically relevant disease.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>5229</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <guid>tag:techtv.mit.edu,:Array/228749280</guid>
      <title>Social Media: Overview</title>
      <pubDate>2009-11-16 12:32:02 -0500</pubDate>
      <itunes:author>Publishing Services Bureau</itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary>10/22/2009</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:duration>5822</itunes:duration>
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