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Request edit on 27 May 2019

[edit]

UPDATE: I have made every effort to comply with Wikipedia guidelines in accurately sourcing the information here. I do not know how to be more specific than I am already. I'm frustrated and exhausted with this process and the poorly informed, overzealous editors reverting a straightforward article over long resolved claims of sock puppetry.

Consequently, I will be escalating this to a dispute resolution as the recommended measures have been completely futile. The sources are cited and credible and the Talk Page follows the X Y replace format as recommended.

A note: Wikipedia is by nature open source mandating discussions be public for transparency and I support that. Unfortunately, as Wikipedia has grown the sheer complexity of the process coupled with the occasional careless editors is transforming that transparency into an opaque impenetrable and unwelcome wall.

The article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Moeller appears to be in an edit war to avoid any further conflict I am requesting that the following changes are made for accuracy. These changes are being requested by the UCLA Design Media Arts faculty. Links have been provided for sourcing purposes.


The correct information is below.

Extended content

Please replace

birth_place = Frankfurt am Main, West Germany nationality = German

With

birth_place = Frankfurt am Main, Germany nationality = German/American


Christian Moeller

Please replace

Christian Moeller is an artist and professor at UCLA in the department of Design Media Arts.

With

Christian Moeller is an artist and Chair of the UCLA[1] in the department of Design Media Arts.


Please replace Life

He studied architecture at the College of Applied Sciences in Frankfurt and under Gustav Peichl at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. After working in the Stuttgart architect's office of Günther Behnisch he commenced as guest artist in the Institute for New Media in the Städelschule, Frankfurt, under Peter Weibel. In 1990 he founded his own artist studio and media laboratory in Frankfurt. From 1995 to 1997 headed the ARCHEMEDIA research institute at the College of Design in Linz, Austria. He was a professor at the State College of Design in Karlsruhe, Germany, until he moved to the United States in 2001.

Moeller is professor in the department of Design Media Arts at UCLA and operates his studio in Silverlake, Los Angeles, California. His large scale site specific works interrogate and explore the synergies between architecture and sound, technology and moving image.[2] He works with contemporary media technologies to produce innovative and intense physical events, realized from hand held objects to architectural scale installations.[3][4] Over the past two decades, his work has been increasingly focused on the field of public art and surveillance art.

With Early life and education

Growing up in Frankfurt, Moeller received his first professional education in a construction company where he trained as a draftsman in structural engineering. At age nineteen, he took a job opportunity in West Africa working for a railway construction project producing topographic and geological maps in Booué, a small village on the banks of the Ogooué river in central Gabon.

Following his return to Germany in 1981, Moeller studied architecture at the College of Applied Sciences in Frankfurt and under Gustav Peichl at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. While working at the architecture firm Günther Behnisch in Stuttgart, he began his transition into the arts, joining the Institute for New Media in the Städelschule, Frankfurt under Peter Weibel in 1990.


Selected Works

Please replace

Audio Grove, Spiral Art Center, Tokyo, 1997 Virtual Cage, Tochoji Auditorium P3, Tokyo, Japan, 1997 Audio Park, The Party Effect, Rotterdam, Holland, 1995 Cheese, Pasadena, California, 2003 Do Not Touch, London, United Kingdom, 2004 Nosy, Tokyo, Japan, 2007 Mojo, San Pedro, California 2007 Daisy, Singapore, 2008 Hands, San Jose, California, 2010 Stix, Nashville, Tennessee, 2015[5]

With

Kinetic Light Sculpture, Frankfurt, 1992 Electro Clips, at the Theater am Turm (TAT), Frankfurt, 1994 Audio Grove, Spiral Art Center, Tokyo, 1997 Virtual Cage, at Tochoji Auditorium P3, Tokyo, 1997 The Voice of the People, at Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, 1998 Cheese, at the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Taichung, 2004 Nosy, Tokyo 2007 Mojo, San Pedro, California 2007 Daisy, Singapore 2008 Hands, San Jose, California, 2010 Stix, Nashville, Tennessee, 2015 Trio, Calgary, Alberta, 2018 Loops, Charlotte, North Carolina, 2019


External links

Please add

http://newsroom.ucla.edu/dept/faculty/christian-moeller-is-appointed-chair-of-design-media-arts https://dma.ucla.edu/faculty/profiles/?ID=3

References

Boomslang (talk) 19:40, 28 May 2019 (UTC)[reply]

[1] [2]

Reply 28-MAY-2019

[edit]

  Unable to review   Your edit request could not be reviewed because it is unclear which references are connected to which claim statements in the text of your proposal. When proposing edit requests it is important to highlight in the text, through the use of ref tags, which specific sources are doing the referencing for each claim. The point of these inline ref tags is to allow the reviewer and readers to check that the material is sourced; that point will be lost if the ref tags are not clearly placed. Note the examples below:

Examples
INCORRECT

The Sun's diameter is 864,337.3 miles, while the Moon's diameter is 2,159 miles. The Sun's temperature is 5,778 degrees Kelvin.

References


      1. Sjöblad, Tristan. The Sun. Academic Press, 2018, p. 1.
      2. Harinath, Paramjit. "Size of the Moon", Science, 51(78):46.
      3. Uemura, Shū. The Sun's Heat. Academic Press, 2018, p. 2.

In the first example above there are three references provided, but the claim statements do not contain ref tags indicating which reference applies where. Your edit request similarly does not specify where the references you have provided are to be placed. These links between material and their source references must be more clearly made, as shown in the next example below:

CORRECT

The Sun's diameter is 864,337.3 miles,[1] while the Moon's diameter is 2,159 miles.[2] The Sun's temperature is 5,778 degrees Kelvin.[3]

References


  1. ^ Sjöblad, Tristan. The Sun. Academic Press, 2018, p. 1.
  2. ^ Harinath, Paramjit. "Size of the Moon", Science, 51(78):46.
  3. ^ Uemura, Shū. The Sun's Heat. Academic Press, 2018, p. 2.

In the second example above, the links between the provided references and their claim statement ref tags are perfectly clear. Kindly reformulate your edit request so that it aligns more with the second example above, and feel free to re-submit that edit request at your earliest convenience. Regards,  Spintendo  20:09, 28 May 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Request edit on 27 May 2019

[edit]
Extended content

The article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Moeller appears to be in an edit war to avoid any further conflict I am requesting that the following changes are made for accuracy. Some information in the current article is not accurate. These changes are being requested by the UCLA Design Media Arts faculty. Links have been provided for sourcing purposes.

I further request that references to Sock Pupperty be removed as that issue was resolved in February of 2019. This flag seems to continue to cause edit conflicts with overzealous editors.


The correct information is below.

Please replace

birth_place = Frankfurt am Main, West Germany nationality = German

With

birth_place = Frankfurt am Main, Germany nationality = German/American


Christian Moeller

Please replace

Christian Moeller is an artist and professor at UCLA in the department of Design Media Arts.

With

Christian Moeller is an artist and Chair of the UCLA[1] in the department of Design Media Arts.


Please replace Life

He studied architecture at the College of Applied Sciences in Frankfurt and under Gustav Peichl at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. After working in the Stuttgart architect's office of Günther Behnisch he commenced as guest artist in the Institute for New Media in the Städelschule, Frankfurt, under Peter Weibel. In 1990 he founded his own artist studio and media laboratory in Frankfurt. From 1995 to 1997 headed the ARCHEMEDIA research institute at the College of Design in Linz, Austria. He was a professor at the State College of Design in Karlsruhe, Germany, until he moved to the United States in 2001.

Moeller is professor in the department of Design Media Arts at UCLA and operates his studio in Silverlake, Los Angeles, California. His large scale site specific works interrogate and explore the synergies between architecture and sound, technology and moving image.[2] He works with contemporary media technologies to produce innovative and intense physical events, realized from hand held objects to architectural scale installations.[3][4] Over the past two decades, his work has been increasingly focused on the field of public art and surveillance art.

With Early life and education

Growing up in Frankfurt, Moeller received his first professional education in a construction company where he trained as a draftsman in structural engineering. At age nineteen, he took a job opportunity in West Africa working for a railway construction project producing topographic and geological maps in Booué, a small village on the banks of the Ogooué river in central Gabon.

Following his return to Germany in 1981, Moeller studied architecture at the College of Applied Sciences in Frankfurt and under Gustav Peichl at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. While working at the architecture firm Günther Behnisch in Stuttgart, he began his transition into the arts, joining the Institute for New Media in the Städelschule, Frankfurt under Peter Weibel in 1990.


Selected Works

Please replace

Audio Grove, Spiral Art Center, Tokyo, 1997 Virtual Cage, Tochoji Auditorium P3, Tokyo, Japan, 1997 Audio Park, The Party Effect, Rotterdam, Holland, 1995 Cheese, Pasadena, California, 2003 Do Not Touch, London, United Kingdom, 2004 Nosy, Tokyo, Japan, 2007 Mojo, San Pedro, California 2007 Daisy, Singapore, 2008 Hands, San Jose, California, 2010 Stix, Nashville, Tennessee, 2015[5]

With

Kinetic Light Sculpture, Frankfurt, 1992 Electro Clips, at the Theater am Turm (TAT), Frankfurt, 1994 Audio Grove, Spiral Art Center, Tokyo, 1997 Virtual Cage, at Tochoji Auditorium P3, Tokyo, 1997 The Voice of the People, at Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, 1998 Cheese, at the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Taichung, 2004 Nosy, Tokyo 2007 Mojo, San Pedro, California 2007 Daisy, Singapore 2008 Hands, San Jose, California, 2010 Stix, Nashville, Tennessee, 2015 Trio, Calgary, Alberta, 2018 Loops, Charlotte, North Carolina, 2019


External links

Please add

http://newsroom.ucla.edu/dept/faculty/christian-moeller-is-appointed-chair-of-design-media-arts https://dma.ucla.edu/faculty/profiles/?ID=3

References

Boomslang (talk) 20:13, 28 May 2019 (UTC)[reply]

[1] [2]

Please see the notice above.  Spintendo  20:23, 28 May 2019 (UTC)[reply]