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The Remilia Culture Encyclopedia is a community-curated reference documenting the art, history, mythology, and digital production surrounding Remilia Corporation and its associated movements. It serves as both an academic and archival resource for the study of New Net Art, Avant NFT, and related cultural phenomena emerging from Remilia's network between 2021 and the present.
Overview
Founded to provide a stable historical and theoretical record of Remilia's expansive ecosystem, the encyclopedia covers:
- The development of Remilia Corporation and its projects including Milady Maker, Bonkler, and Remilio Babies.
- The philosophical framework of New Net Art and Network Spirituality.
- Profiles of artists, collaborators, and pseudonymous figures connected to the Remilia milieu.
- Documentation of events, controversies, and cultural moments that shaped the community.
The encyclopedia operates as a living cultural record, combining traditional encyclopedic structure with archival fidelity to the language and documentation of online subcultures.
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Content
- NFT Collections
- Remilia NFT projects including Milady Maker, Bonkler, and Remilio Babies.
- People
- Biographies of founders, collaborators, and pseudonymous identities.
- Organizations
- Groups and collectives including Remilia Corporation.
- Events
- Raves, gatherings, and happenings such as 33reisen and Milady Rave.
- Exhibitions
- Art shows including I Long For Network Spirituality (Exhibition).
Concepts
- Ideas and Concepts
- Philosophical frameworks such as Post-Authorship and Network Spirituality.
- Internet Culture
- Online phenomena and memes including Vibe Shift and KALI/ACC.
- New Net Art
- The art movement and its manifesto.
- Digital Art Movements
- Broader movements including Avant NFT.
History
- Cancels and Controversies
- Disputes, lawsuits, and controversies including Milady Cancel and Remilia Lawsuit.
Editorial standards
All entries are written in an encyclopedic, neutral tone using MediaWiki syntax. Citations from social media and decentralized archives are considered valid sources when independently verifiable. Primary texts are presented in full on separate pages with reciprocal analysis links.
Articles should:
- Begin with a Remilia-anchored overview.
- Maintain chronological clarity and factual attribution.
- Provide context within the broader framework of Remilia historiography and mythopoetics.
- Include archival references and provenance tags.