The project Future Fluxus is an experiment on many layers of cultural memory. Like it should be, one should add, if it is true that, in many European countries, and since at least 1995, we have been fed back by diverse forms of online cultures that, so it is said and believed, actually, are developing 4-8 times faster than analogue cultures. Are we to be scared now?

Andreas Leo Findeisen
Andreas Leo Findeisen finds it interesting to research how the next generations will interface, with bits or without bits, into the construction of European identities and whether the European construction itself will still be around for them to contribute in 2021; after all, there are 1000 alternatives, and some of them you can copy; already back in 2000 he got yelled at by Friedrich Kittler for being too optimistic; he frequently calls himself a media theorist, others call him a philosopher, musician or project founder; he has been living in vienna for 20 years, studied composition and taught aesthetics and media philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts vienna; Assistant to the German philosopher Peter Sloterdijk until 2008; co-founder of interdisciplinary research projects in the arts & cultural sciences such as Serious Pop (Academy of Fine Arts vienna); Transforming Freedom (Mq vienna) or Future Fluxus (Mq vienna); researcher, mentor and part time co- coordinator (2008 / 09) of theviennaexperiment.org, Numerous keynote speeches and performances.
An Experimental Outline for the Design of an Estonian Contemporary Media Art Museum and the Transient Interlace of Three Squares in Tallinn, Estonia, the Freedom Square, The Iceland Square and a “White Square” near the harbour, on the Occasion of the 20th Jubilee of Estonian Re-Independence in the Year 1991 of the 20th Century.






