3542 lines
185 KiB
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3542 lines
185 KiB
XML
<chapter>
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<title>Critique Art Politics</title>
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<desc>...</desc>
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<mails>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.0</nbr>
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<subject><nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
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<from>Brian Holmes</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Tue, 22 Jul 2008 23:57:08 +0200</date>
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<content>50 Ways To Leave Your Lover,
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Or, let's find a completely new art criticism
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For most of the twentieth century, art was judged with respect to the
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previously existing state of the medium. What mattered was the kind of
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rupture it made, the unexpected formal or semiotic elements that it
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brought into play, the way it displaced the conventions of the genre or
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the tradition. The prize at the end of the evaluative process was a
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different sense of what art could be, a new realm of possibility for the
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aesthetic. Let's take it as axiomatic that all that has changed,
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definitively.
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The backdrop against which art stands out now is a particular state of
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society. What an installation, a performance, a concept or a mediated
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representation can do with its formal, affective and semiotic means is
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to mark out a possible or effective shift with respect to the laws, the
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customs, the measures, the mores, the technical and organizational
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devices that define how we must behave and how we can relate to each
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other at a given time and in a given place. What you look for in art is
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a different way to live, a fresh chance at coexistence. Anything less is
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just the seduction of novelty - the hedonism of insignificance.
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If that's the case (if the axiom really holds), then a number of
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fascinating questions arise - for the artist, of course, but also for
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the critic. Where the critic is concerned, one good question is this:
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How do you address yourself to artists or publics or potential peers
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across the dividing lines that separate entire societies? How do you
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evaluate what counts as a positive or at least a promising change in the
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existing balance of a foreign culture?
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I'm sure you immediately see how difficult this is. Already in the past,
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it was hard enough to say that a particular aesthetic tradition and a
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particular state of the medium defined the leading edge, the point at
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which a rupture became interesting. Yet still there were times when all
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the painters seemed to flock to Rome, then later to Paris, then later to
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New York City; and so through the sheer aggregation of techniques and
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styles, the fiction of a leading edge could be maintained, at least by
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some. But in the face of a simultaneous splintering and decline of what
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used to be called "the West," and a correlative rise of some of "the
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Rest," who could seriously say that certain local, national or regional
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laws, customs, measures, mores and technical or organizational devices
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are really the most interesting ones to transgress or even break into
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pieces, in hopes of a better way of being? Or to be even cruder about
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it, and closer to the actual state of things: Who can seriously claim
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that the Euro-American forms of society are the benchmark against which
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change must be measured - even if those societies are still the most
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opulent and most developed and most heavily armed with all the nastiest
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of technological weapons?
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Let's face it, the task of a transnational critique for the new arts of
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living within, against and beyond the existing states of the world's
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societies is daunting to say the least. However, I think all is not lost
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in this domain, for three connected reasons. The first is that over the
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last, say, fifty years, and particularly over the last fifteen, we have
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seen the still very superficial but nonetheless real emergence of
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something like a world society. To put it another way, there is now some
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kind of connective tissue (call it the transnational economy, the
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transportation system and global English) that does bind our
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possibilities of life together, though without in any way reducing them
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to being identical. The second is that the vast proliferation of readily
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accessible archives (libraries, web pages, video banks, record
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collections, museums) offers at least some chance to rapidly sample all
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sorts of information and impressions about what kind of shape a
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particular society is in, and even what kinds of steps are being made to
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try and change it. And third, given the above and maybe a good
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translator too, what you can do is actually try to stage a dialogue with
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the people you are meeting, and hope that some of them respond, give you
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pointers, correct your mistakes, calm down your unconscious arrogance
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and add their own reflections and aesthetic productions into the mix -
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not only to obtain a better and more useful critique of their society,
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but also of yours. Which last, I might add, is something essential and
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desperately needed, particularly if you are a European or an American.
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The above is a theoretical program, but also just a reflection on some
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experiences as a critic and activist out in the wide world. The most
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recent of these experiences was particularly interesting: I was invited
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to participate in and to evaluate a project of artistic remembrance and
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envisioning, focused on the American military bases that are now (maybe)
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in the process of closing and moving out of the South Korean city of
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Dongducheon, and indeed of a range of sites around the DMZ, even as a
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new megabase is prepared further to the south in a place called
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Pyeongtaek. This was an incredible chance to get a first-hand look at
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what I think is the scourge of American and Western democracy, namely
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what Chalmers Johnson calls the "empire of bases." (And I happen to
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think that the first-hand look, however fleeting and superficial, is of
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tremendous importance whenever you really want to learn anything). As it
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turned out though, this was also an incredible chance to start getting
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to know a unique spot on the earth, South Korea, which for the worst of
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reasons has been particularly close to the U.S. over the last six
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decades, despite the fact that many many Koreans would really rather
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close that never-ending chapter called the Cold War on the Korean Peninsula.
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The trip was too short, but still amazing, and it got me to do some new
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things in criticism (maybe dubious ones), like using a pop song for
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starters rather than a quote from Foucault, and approaching street
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demonstrations via Korean feminists rather than Toni Negri. In the end I
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had to conclude that the old French saying, "Celui qui aime a toujours
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raison" (those who love something are always right), is in fact wrong,
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since we humans are capable of awful loves, and not only in aesthetics.
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That said, we're also uniquely capable of starting all over again, as
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y'all probably know in your intimate experience. And so let's ask the
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question: What would tomorrow look like without 750+ American military
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bases scattered across the earth? With a little help from some new
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friends, I tried to go further with that line of inquiry, as you can see
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right here:
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http://sunsetproject.wordpress.com
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And now the dialogue is open for whoever has inspiration.
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best, Brian</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.1</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
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<from>Michael H Goldhaber</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Wed, 23 Jul 2008 09:32:17 -0700</date>
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<content>Brian,
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I read your whole piece with interest, but I disagree with its two of
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its stated or inherent premises.
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First, art does not have to justify itself by offering a different way
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to live or to coexist. To put it most simply art justifies life; it is
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why we are here, or it can be.
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Second, while a visit to South Korea or any other host to our hundreds
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of bases can show what empire is like and what it does to its targets,
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to find the sources of the outlook that backs these bases, we have to
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look at American political life. A simple economic justification in
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terms of empire would be hard to demonstrate: China and India, which
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never had American bases, are far more important to us economically
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than countries that do have them. Likewise, Vietnam, which succeeded
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in throwing out our bases seems to be on a trajectory not terribly
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different from S. Korea or China. Nor is "cultural imperialism"
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strongly correlated with where the bases are. "Pirated" videos and
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music spread our culture far more effectively than does military
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occupation. Indian and Chinese immigrants with degrees in medicine,
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science or engineering increasingly fill occupational niches that
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Americans do not enter in enough strength, for whatever reason.
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So what does cause continued imperialism? For one thing, America's
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inward looking. Our politics is mostly localist and parochial, and yet
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politicians end up making decisions to sustain foreign involvements on
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the basis of little knowledge. It is always safer to view the outside
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world as menacing rather than benign. It is always safer to refer to
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the US as the greatest country and to assume that the world needs our
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armies and weapons rather than not.A pointless patriotism helps hold
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this disparate country together, much as India is partially held
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together by such means. And, as in the case of the British empire,
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what keeps ours going is mostly habit ? a bad habit, but hard to
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change ? perhaps addiction would be the better word.
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If the US is so inward looking, doesn't reporting such as yours from
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South Korea help create balance? Very little, I suspect. The internal
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"patriotic" reading would only be that some Koreans are "ingrates,"
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who "don't know what's good for them," which implies they need our
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protection despite themselves. While "ingratitude" might be taken as a
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reason to leave, in practice it only seems to reinvigorate the myth of
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the necessity of staying, much as the American causalities so far in
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Iraq become, for the right at least, a reason not to leave. The
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possible difference there, as it was in Vietnam, and even in the
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Korean war, is really the threat of future casualties, but if these
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can be diminished, so will the pressure to pull out.
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This imperialism can only be changed, I think, if it either becomes
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unaffordable or if a really different US self-conception can take
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hold, for instance of our being simply one country that ought to be
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striving to live cooperatively with the rest of the world. I think we
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should take heart that the Iraq war has proved so unpopular despite no
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draft and despite the US death toll being far below Vietnam levels. I
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think a new "Iraq syndrome" will sharply reduce the tendencies towards
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such active military adventures for another generation. But
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dismantling the existing network of bases is another story. To give up
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the addiction to military spending and the idea that the military
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offers a good career for certain young people will be less rather than
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more easy if the US monetary economy keeps declining. The only hope I
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see is the rise of an utterly new sense of who we are. That , of
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course, will be intensely resisted.
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Best,
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Michael</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.2</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
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<from>Brian Holmes</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Wed, 23 Jul 2008 19:18:35 +0200</date>
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<content>Hello Michael -
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And first of all, thanks for your reading! Always interesting to hear
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your views.
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> First, art does not have to justify itself by offering a different way
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> to live or to coexist. To put it most simply art justifies life; it is
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> why we are here, or it can be.
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Well, art is also famously what people disagree about, which is OK by
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me. I offered a distinctly political definition of art, one which does
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not simplify or deny all the subtle potentials of form and metaphor and
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reference that I do appreciate, but instead suggests that all those
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qualities come into strongest relief and offer the greatest resonance in
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ourselves when they stand out against the background of a society and,
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rather than justifying life as it is, open up possibilities of becoming
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different. A definition which seems relevant to much good art these
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days, and could be interesting to disagree about too!
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> So what does cause continued imperialism? For one thing, America's
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> inward looking. Our politics is mostly localist and parochial, and yet
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> politicians end up making decisions to sustain foreign involvements on
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> the basis of little knowledge. It is always safer to view the outside
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> world as menacing rather than benign. It is always safer to refer to the
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> US as the greatest country and to assume that the world needs our armies
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> and weapons rather than not.A pointless patriotism helps hold this
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> disparate country together, much as India is partially held together by
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> such means. And, as in the case of the British empire, what keeps ours
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> going is mostly habit — a bad habit, but hard to change — perhaps
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> addiction would be the better word.
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This seems to me a little naive, Michael, if you can excuse me saying
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so. I think that "their" empire (I would never call it "ours") is upheld
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not just by our localist politics (of course that lets it go
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unchallenged, you are right) but above all because it is in the interest
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of certain people to uphold it. I do not believe that America went to
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Iraq out of parochialism or ignorance, but because the party of war, oil
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and engineering saw immense profits in setting up shop there. Similarly,
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I think that the army, air force and navy all stay in South Korea
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because the maintenance of that Cold War standoff helps justify, not
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just U.S. presence in that particular country, but on outposts all over
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the world. Arms production, engineering contracts and the maintenance of
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high-paying officer jobs associated with rank, privilege and amazing
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technology to play with are some of the benefits of prolonging Cold War
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conditions, which is why the Pentagon set about looking for a "near
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peer" right after 1989, and finally decided to accept a "long war
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against terrorism" instead.
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Beyond the direct military establishment, the free trade and free
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capital flows from which the United States has prospered so
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disproportionately since WWII are linked in the minds and strategies of
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the corporate and political elites to the regulatory presence of a
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world-spanning army, which has also been the reason that our huge debts
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have been shouldered by other countries such as Japan, since
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manufacturing exports declined in the 1970s. One of the most bald
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statements of this kind of "free trade guaranteed by the military"
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doctrine can be found in Thomas Barnett's recent books; but when you
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look closer at the intellectuals staffing the State Department over the
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last 60 years, the same doctrine is everywhere, from Kennan and Acheson
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on forward. That this is an addiction - to power, to profit, to oil, to
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big projects and machines - is something I would agree with.
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> If the US is so inward looking, doesn't reporting such as yours from
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> South Korea help create balance? Very little, I suspect. The internal
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> "patriotic" reading would only be that some Koreans are "ingrates," who
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> "don't know what's good for them," which implies they need our
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> protection despite themselves.
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Along these lines, even a cursory scan of the Internet will dredge up
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exactly those kinds of opinions from the largest group of Americans
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having anything to do with the two Koreas, namly, ex- and current
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servicemen. It is much as you say. And I definitely agree that finding
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ways of convincing these kinds of people is a real problem. Even Mark
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Gillem, the author of America Town and himself part of the air force,
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does not read as very convincing from the viewpoint that one finds on
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these Internet sites about Korea.
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> This imperialism can only be changed, I think, if it either becomes
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> unaffordable or if a really different US self-conception can take hold,
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> for instance of our being simply one country that ought to be striving
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> to live cooperatively with the rest of the world. I think we should take
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> heart that the Iraq war has proved so unpopular despite no draft and
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> despite the US death toll being far below Vietnam levels. I think a new
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> "Iraq syndrome" will sharply reduce the tendencies towards such active
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> military adventures for another generation.
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Yes, I think you are right and I also think it is interesting to add to
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that feeling of rejection. The low American profile after Vietnam was a
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good thing imho.
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> But dismantling the existing
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> network of bases is another story. To give up the addiction to military
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> spending and the idea that the military offers a good career for certain
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> young people will be less rather than more easy if the US monetary
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> economy keeps declining. The only hope I see is the rise of an utterly
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> new sense of who we are. That , of course, will be intensely resisted.
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Yes, I think that's where art can become so interesting as a force of
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change! If all of us want it to, anyway. There again is another reason
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that I chose the definition of art that I initially put forth.
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Thanks again, Michael, for your perspectives.
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best, BH</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.3</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
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<from>Michael H Goldhaber</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Wed, 23 Jul 2008 12:02:51 -0700</date>
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<content>Brian,
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Rather than being naive, I think I was engaging in a kind of
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shorthand, leaving out intermediate reasons. Of course there is
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military-industrial complex which tries to perpetuate itself, but it
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is successful only because others at times believe its clumsy
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arguments. Also, oil companies may indeed profit from invasions such
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as of Iraq, but mostly because the threat of war helps increase the
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price of oil, which would probably have gone up anyway. The threat of
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instability in Nigeria, say, without any US intervention, increases
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the price as well. So the military costs incurred by invading Iraq,
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say, are unnecessary on that score. Even if the oil interests believed
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otherwise, they would not have been able to invade Iraq if the public
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were not convinced that reasons entirely unconnected with oil were at
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stake. As for the argument that America's place in the world economy
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depends on our having bases and a round-the -world military presence,
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I think the examples I gave of the value to us of India and China show
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that view is itself naive. Finally, countries like German and the
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Netherlands demonstrate that having an imperial presence is quite
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unnecessary for economic success.
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It could well be argued that US military expenditures drag down the US
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economy, as Seymour Melman used to argue, calling the result "Pentagon
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Capitalism." The counter-argument to that:military Keynesianism (mK)
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as a necessary economic stimulant to keep capitalism going internally.
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As I argued against Melman in the 80's, government spending on
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anything other than the military tends to compete with "private
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enterprise, " which is why we have military expenditures rather than
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say single-payer health care (which would drive insurance companies
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out of business). We could spend the money on , say, going to Mars,
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but it is too clear to too many people that we don't need to do that,
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while "defending our way of life" is, as I noted, harder to argue
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against. While "national security" provides some rationale for
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confining military expenditures to non-out-sourced industries and so
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does to some degree prop up the internal economy, there is now too
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much "leakage," so that mK now is not particularly effective. Even at
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its bloated levels, it is also probably too small to be of substantial
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effect, certainly not what is needed when the US monetary economy
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turns down. The world today cannot afford the level of destruction
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commensurate with WWII that would do a similar economic job today. (At
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least I hope that is off the table.) So today, Melman would probably
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be right. American imperialism is an irrational (and naive) addiction
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that only helps the most narrowly defined interests. Still, tapering
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off will not be easy. Some will suffer directly, and they will shout
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much louder than the much larger group of those who would benefit
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mildly and mostly indirectly.
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Best,
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Michael</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.4</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
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<from>Ed Phillips</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Thu, 24 Jul 2008 10:50:43 -0700</date>
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<content>> Of course there is military-industrial complex which tries to perpetuate
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> itself, but it is successful only because others at times believe its
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> clumsy arguments.
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There is indeed, Michael. Thanks for dialog-ing here about this about
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this matter of...
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If we are to seize the means of production of truth itself in
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cyberneticscapes, it actually behooves, I think to ask not only what clumsy
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arguments are believed, but rather why the sales job for a bizarre complex
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that is directed at more and more excessive, spectacular, even arbitrary
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displays of power that will never be used is so successful. Here the image
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comes to mind of jet fighters that rotate on a dime. Something so insanely
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exhorbitant in expenditure, flaming, flaring off, exploding in test after
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test.
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I ask myself what it serves to reassure in a body politic that is
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profoundly insecure.
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We promise "security", and a nice comfortable home, and an aggregate 10%
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return on your capital.
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Here our comrade Sloterdijk-Diogenes is really helpful: Quaro Homines
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As some kind of internet-cyberscape squatters I take us to be looking for
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the human agency in all this madness and circumstance. The question, the
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discussion now has a kind of squatter's right to lift up a lamp in the
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midday to enquire into how our personal political economy has actually
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siezed the means of the production of truth, the means by which a discourse
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listens to itself, the way "govermentality" understands itself in a kind of
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pidgin kynical nettime argot.
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To keith hart, a kind of storimasta, that entering into dialogue is going
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to look different than it is to you or Brian or I.
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Brian keeps making some very fundamental points that I do not see mentioned
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enough, and he is thinking "with" them:
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1. Is to think in terms of geocapital and the nation states and Empire(s)
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as a complex interweaving, a totality.
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Here the agents of capital and the agents of nation states act in the mode
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of "on behalf of", in a kind of Empire that even as it exploits every new
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market, to excesses of gain and destructive creation, has to understand
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itself, to justify itself.
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Too much discourse is too focused on a "naive" nation state, too much the
|
|
kid blown away by the display, by the spycraft, the operations, by the
|
|
show, when the apologists openly discuss and attempt to liberalize, to
|
|
understand the very global order that they cannot quite map themselves even
|
|
as they hold the levers of power.
|
|
|
|
Some of these agents view themselves as charged with maintaining regular
|
|
prices and steady growth, to ensuring that world markets and economies are
|
|
following along on their business cycling just fine act as they say. They
|
|
fail spectacularly at times, and the prices reset.
|
|
|
|
We are in a completely unprecedented world that has seen and is seeing huge
|
|
shifts. Many of the institutions of the previous era of geoeconomics are
|
|
registering a profound shift. The dramatic rise of the central banks with
|
|
their portfolio rounding little offshoot sovereign wealth funds. The
|
|
presence of China felt everywhere.
|
|
|
|
The crisis in financialization is a child of surplus and a puncturing of
|
|
cultural inflation (of a set of easy-debt inspired valuations) at the same
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
Brian asked Keith about the "looters". My minds-eye flashed with a
|
|
headline: Dutch Pensioneers Accused of Looting.
|
|
|
|
Dutch pension fund (wrlds third largest) Stichting Pensioenfonds ABP, in a
|
|
press release in which they mentioned their intent to move some of the 40%
|
|
of their portfolio that was invested in debt instruments (still bow tie
|
|
pension fund respectable banking investment) revealed that the reason the
|
|
only lost 5% this last half year is that well they had 13% in those evil
|
|
commodities and I think 9% in hedge funds, the kids with the naked shorts
|
|
in the global pool.
|
|
|
|
In the politics of global finance, the hedge funds are specialized,
|
|
politically incorrect exploiters of new markets in financialization. There
|
|
is something of a homologue to the excessive expenditure on the security
|
|
state in the fact that the hedge fund niche emerged from portfolio security
|
|
and risk management. What begins as a a way to hedge up or secure
|
|
something, gets up on a monkeys paw and takes revenge on its creators,
|
|
cronos eats his own children. Structured investment vehicles, originally
|
|
mandated to hedge bank portfolios bring them down. The very same
|
|
broker-dealers are shorted down by their own trading arms.
|
|
|
|
The agile security state gets bogged down in a quagmire of its own making
|
|
in afghanistan-pakistan-iraq-iran. What begins as Rummy's lite force
|
|
removal of despotry becomes the greatest sign up and organization of
|
|
feudal-peasant jihadis against global security state capital and the place
|
|
where the security state discovers its own powerlessness. The power is
|
|
eating itself in gruesome Goya fashion and here I cannot remove the image
|
|
of Kronos slurping in the ripped carcass of one of his children from my
|
|
eyes.
|
|
|
|
In a game of endless deferral that is represented so perfectly by that
|
|
still most stable investment in big central bank treasuries, debt rises as
|
|
the perfect embodiment, even with its exessive self destroying aspects.
|
|
Witness the gobbling up of treasuries by China and the petrodollar states
|
|
in the last few months. Only a small percentage of their surplus goes to
|
|
commando capital investment, a small but no less important percentage.
|
|
|
|
And China piles up its own debt to its very bios.
|
|
|
|
This is most likely no end point, but a way stage in which the prosthetic
|
|
net kritik is called short, as stunned as the tourists were and are who
|
|
both walked around the world trade center towers stunned by their sheer
|
|
verticality and then even more stunned by their absence.
|
|
|
|
The amero-european housing bubble is a crisis in the ideology of "Home
|
|
Beautiful" and comfortable estrangement as our old friend
|
|
Diogenes-Sloterdijk might say. Stunning in rise and fall.
|
|
|
|
"You are blocking my Sun light" says the kritik to the Emperor.....</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>0.5</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
|
|
<from>Brian Holmes</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Fri, 25 Jul 2008 01:54:57 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Ed Phillips asked:
|
|
|
|
> why the sales job for a bizarre complex
|
|
> that is directed at more and more excessive, spectacular, even arbitrary
|
|
> displays of power that will never be used is so successful. Here the image
|
|
> comes to mind of jet fighters that rotate on a dime. Something so insanely
|
|
> exhorbitant in expenditure, flaming, flaring off, exploding in test after
|
|
> test.
|
|
|
|
I was wondering about exactly this today, as I read in the New York
|
|
Times about four air force generals seeking $16 million in public monies
|
|
to build two-room designer-appointed "comfort capsules" for their
|
|
personal transport through the imperial skies. But then my curiosity
|
|
only mounted higher as my eye moved further down the page, where I read
|
|
about the Bush administration plans to use $230 million of
|
|
"counter-terrorism" money to upgrade Pakistan's F-16s. "The officials...
|
|
said the timing was driven by deadlines of the American contractor,
|
|
Lockheed Martin." No further comment about those deadlines then ensued...
|
|
|
|
> Brian keeps making some very fundamental points that I do not see mentioned
|
|
> enough, and he is thinking "with" them:
|
|
>
|
|
> 1. Is to think in terms of geocapital and the nation states and Empire(s)
|
|
> as a complex interweaving, a totality.
|
|
|
|
Thanks for noticing that, Ed. One of the real interesting things that
|
|
became concrete for me in South Korea (though I already understood it
|
|
theoretically) was the way that Fordist and military-industrial
|
|
development has been driven, in both countries, by the deliberate
|
|
maintenance of red-alert status at the 38th parallel. Far-off sites of
|
|
conflict that Americans only see in the movies serve as pretexts for the
|
|
development of the most sophisticated weapons imaginable (never forget
|
|
that the US military budget is now as big as the rest of the world's
|
|
combined). Meanwhile on the soil of that far-off site something
|
|
different has been happening: build-up of heavy industry under
|
|
dictatorial discipline until from 1960 to 1988, then rapid
|
|
neoliberalization peaking with the 1997 Asian crisis to throw the
|
|
country open to outside capital looking to feed on educated labor. The
|
|
complex interweaving produces very different political and cultural
|
|
outlooks as part of one internally differentiated system. Yet I would
|
|
agree with Keith that this does not make "totality," not even the
|
|
totality of something called kapitalism. The imperial interweave is a
|
|
system of power, it's dominant, it imposes its militarist will in
|
|
staggeringly violent and absurd ways, yet there is so much else to life
|
|
under the sun and the stars and the electric streetlamps. No less
|
|
important than the act of looking into the eye of power is the act of
|
|
looking away.
|
|
|
|
best, BH</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>0.6</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
|
|
<from>Ed Phillips</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Fri, 25 Jul 2008 11:28:43 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>> complex interweaving produces very different political and cultural
|
|
> outlooks as part of one internally differentiated system. Yet I would
|
|
> agree with Keith that this does not make "totality," not even the
|
|
> totality of something called kapitalism. The imperial interweave is a
|
|
> system of power, it's dominant, it imposes its militarist will in
|
|
> staggeringly violent and absurd ways, yet there is so much else to life
|
|
> under the sun and the stars and the electric streetlamps. No less
|
|
> important than the act of looking into the eye of power is the act of
|
|
> looking away.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yes. Exactly, Brian. One system, human made, human struggled over which is
|
|
something that I think that our squatting here on nettime is about.
|
|
|
|
Another way to look at power is at its insecurity, it's vulnerability. Not
|
|
only is it not total in a deterministic sense, our sense of determinism
|
|
being the index of a collective passivity, it is profoundly insecure and in
|
|
need of constant reassurance.
|
|
|
|
Empire has always been so. When I first saw Velasquez's portrait of that
|
|
grandly dominant despot, Felipe el Segundo, I could see as clearly as I see
|
|
the profound weakness and insecurity and even pathos of our "fearless"
|
|
pygmy leaders, felipe's profound insecurity before the gaze and the brush
|
|
of the artist, of the other.
|
|
|
|
The insecurity before the gaze of those who wield the means of the
|
|
production of representation or vorstellung. The despot feels that profound
|
|
insecurity because he has a first person seated view of the hallucinations,
|
|
of the hallucinated reinvestment in old dead fig leafs, old dead emblems
|
|
and magical insignia of a power that never was. The very form that power
|
|
takes is of a reinvestment in what one hopes must have been a reassuring
|
|
hallucination at some previous time by some prior regime of power.
|
|
|
|
Power, and here I mean very particular people acting as agents of power,
|
|
hallucinates and reinvests in outmoded hallucinations first and then
|
|
samples and tests and adapts as best it can it's very clumsy and unwieldy
|
|
hallucinations and representations.
|
|
|
|
Prosthetic power is even more insecure as it adapts itself also to the
|
|
technical apparatus and machine ontology that is coming into being even as
|
|
the multitude is coming into being.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>0.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
|
|
<from>Ed Phillips</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Fri, 25 Jul 2008 13:38:51 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>> Empire has always been so. When I first saw Velasquez's portrait of that
|
|
> grandly dominant despot, Felipe el Segundo, I could see as clearly as I see
|
|
> the profound weakness and insecurity and even pathos of our "fearless"
|
|
> pygmy leaders, felipe's profound insecurity before the gaze and the brush
|
|
> of the artist, of the other.
|
|
|
|
It's funny how as I typed that up, I replaced, in a kind of slip, Felipe el
|
|
cuarto with el segundo, his dead ancestor, in comparison to which el cuarto
|
|
came off as some kind of dandyish pygmy, even as Bush II is to his father.
|
|
The state as Empire grows in power as it decays in form and representation.
|
|
Velazquez's realism is a kind of leading, testing edge of a regime deeply
|
|
committed to hallucination and counter-reformation. It needs the labyrinth
|
|
of a tentative, delayed realism to keep alive the obscenity of its
|
|
hallucination. Velazquez plays with and represents that labyrinth of
|
|
representation in which the ghostly sovereign appears in a glass darkly.
|
|
|
|
<...></content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>0.8</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
|
|
<from>Eric Kluitenberg</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 27 Jul 2008 15:34:22 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>Thank you Brian for a challenging and stimulating set of ideas and
|
|
suggestions!
|
|
|
|
Also for your report from Korea.
|
|
|
|
A minor contribution here on two points you are making, some comments more
|
|
than a criticism.
|
|
|
|
On Jul 22, 2008, at 23:57, Brian Holmes wrote:
|
|
|
|
> For most of the twentieth century, art was judged with respect to the
|
|
> previously existing state of the medium. What mattered was the kind of
|
|
> rupture it made, the unexpected formal or semiotic elements that it
|
|
> brought into play, the way it displaced the conventions of the genre or
|
|
> the tradition. The prize at the end of the evaluative process was a
|
|
> different sense of what art could be, a new realm of possibility for the
|
|
> aesthetic. Let's take it as axiomatic that all that has changed,
|
|
> definitively.
|
|
|
|
As I have come to understand this is that rupture is part of process of
|
|
negation, a negative dialectics as some have called it (Adorno / Lyotard),
|
|
in the case of the visual arts a 'negative dialectics of the image'. Now
|
|
the point of negation is not the replacement of one mode of the visual by
|
|
another, alternative one. Much rather the object of negation is to 'break'
|
|
the image, to show its disfunctionality, to expose that every image hides
|
|
more than it reveals.
|
|
|
|
This negation then opens up an experiential void, a non-space and a
|
|
non-time (Lyotard has discussed at length how Kant had already described
|
|
this as a "UnForm" (non-form) in his analytic of the sublime). In critical
|
|
aesthetics this idea has been expanded and transformed further: In the
|
|
experiential void opened up by the negation of the visual no imagination
|
|
or life is possible. It is the very threat of the end of life as such. To
|
|
put the threat to life at bay new modes of the visual are (immediately)
|
|
put in place. Perhaps our brains are hard-wired to do this. But in this
|
|
moment of negation, the breaking of the image, of the visual, an infinity
|
|
is opened up, an infinity of possible modes of the visual, an infinite
|
|
range of alternatives, one of which has to be (temporarily) adopted.
|
|
|
|
The real point of the negation and this negative dialectics as it was
|
|
emblematically embodied by the bold quest of the avant-gardes, was not to
|
|
find a somehow "better" alternative for that which was negated
|
|
(perspective, unity of space, unity of time, surface, support, material,
|
|
medium, etc etc...) but much rather to reveal the infinity of
|
|
possibilities, the infinite space of alternatives.
|
|
|
|
Now what has changed and where I would follow you in most of your analysis
|
|
is that the context in which art, criticism, and critical cultural
|
|
production operate, has diversified to the point where multiplicity has
|
|
replaced revolt.
|
|
|
|
The second important change is that I think that the kind of practices
|
|
that were previously labelled as avant-garde have long been supplanted and
|
|
taken over by actors in non-art contexts, stimulated and accelerated by
|
|
the expansion of the digitised media infrastructures. The negation of
|
|
symbolic structures now plays out and articulates itself in a much wider
|
|
social and political domain, which makes your next remarks al the more
|
|
prescient:
|
|
|
|
> The backdrop against which art stands out now is a particular state of
|
|
> society. What an installation, a performance, a concept or a mediated
|
|
> representation can do with its formal, affective and semiotic means is to
|
|
> mark out a possible or effective shift with respect to the laws, the
|
|
> customs, the measures, the mores, the technical and organizational
|
|
> devices that define how we must behave and how we can relate to each
|
|
> other at a given time and in a given place. What you look for in art is
|
|
> a different way to live, a fresh chance at coexistence. Anything less is
|
|
> just the seduction of novelty - the hedonism of insignificance.
|
|
>
|
|
> If that's the case (if the axiom really holds), then a number of
|
|
> fascinating questions arise - for the artist, of course, but also for the
|
|
> critic. Where the critic is concerned, one good question is this: How do
|
|
> you address yourself to artists or publics or potential peers across the
|
|
> dividing lines that separate entire societies? How do you evaluate what
|
|
> counts as a positive or at least a promising change in the existing
|
|
> balance of a foreign culture?
|
|
|
|
Adopting the formula outlined above I would say that the negation of
|
|
dominant modes of symbolisation serves not just to point out and develop
|
|
alternatives, but first of all to show that an infinite range of
|
|
alternatives exists in which every possible mode of symbolisation (image,
|
|
sound, text) hides more than it reveals (about actual social realities on
|
|
the ground).
|
|
|
|
This is where I see the real significance of such 'symbol-hacking'
|
|
practices, which can of course never stand on their own. They becomes a
|
|
force for change when there is a local application and the material means
|
|
to bring them further - but then we get into the discussion of strategies
|
|
and tactics. Here I wanted first to comment on the theoretical proposition
|
|
you made. How this then works for activists, artists, critics in oractice
|
|
is the next step.
|
|
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
The second comment relates to the use of the concept of Empire. I wonder
|
|
if the concept of Empire is really productive here to address your
|
|
question of finding "a different way to live, a fresh chance at
|
|
coexistence", which I read as a call for pluralism and multiplicity.
|
|
Empire, however, suggest the rise of a hegemonic and more or less unitary
|
|
form of social and economic/political organisation (along with its
|
|
military extensions). Of course in Negri and Hardt's vision there are many
|
|
internal struggles and conflicting actors within the body of Empire, but
|
|
still they seem guided by a similar organisational logic and set of
|
|
(hegemonic) objectives.
|
|
|
|
If, however, I look somewhat naively at geopolitical developments around
|
|
me, I see much more of a fractallisation of Empire at the moment, i.e. the
|
|
emergence of a multitude of self-similar, but self-contained empires.
|
|
Importantly, these factal-empires also contest and counter-act each other
|
|
to the point where their objectives and strategies become so
|
|
heterogeneous that I wonder how productive the rather monolithic concept
|
|
of Empire still is to analyse, let alone do something useful with this
|
|
heterogeneity.
|
|
|
|
Much rather I would opt for an approach focused on a simultaneous
|
|
localisation and multiplication of alternatives to such hegemonic forces
|
|
and leave the concept of Empire behind.
|
|
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
Finally, on the reduction of American bases and how this plays out locally,
|
|
in the case of your report in S-Korea, highly fascinating!
|
|
|
|
In such a localised address to a shift in 'hegemonic domination', I see
|
|
the most productive approach to a new form of social and cultural
|
|
critique. It will be very difficult to build that critique convincingly,
|
|
given the lingual, cultural, material, economic and social rifts that
|
|
separate the various actors that would need to be included in this, and
|
|
also given the reliance on a global pigeon-English that many of us are
|
|
struggling with..., but still this could be truly productive.
|
|
|
|
A problem that worries me on a more day to day basis and that follows
|
|
directly from your account of the reduction and shifts of foreign US
|
|
military basis is the question of the demilitarisation of society, and the
|
|
technology and research sector in particular. It seems to me that there is
|
|
a continuing legacy of the cold war era in which the military / industrial
|
|
complex attempts to hold its ground, not just in the US, but also in the
|
|
Russian Federation and many of the post-Soviet and other 'Western' powers,
|
|
in terms of contracts, jobs, positions, production-infrastructures,
|
|
international market-shares, entrenched financial positions. I.e. this is
|
|
now a completely post-ideological space of political action.
|
|
|
|
Especially the domain of technological research and development has become
|
|
so deeply militarised (fuelled even further by the 'war on terror'
|
|
discourse) that it becomes difficult to imagine how to get rid of this
|
|
condition. A reliable inside source told me years ago that even a
|
|
relatively 'civil'-looking institution such as the MIT Media-Lab was at
|
|
the time supported for more than 65 percent by military funding, carrying
|
|
out projects that are conducted in utter secrecy, about which we can
|
|
safely assume that they exist, but about which we cannot get any reliable
|
|
information as to what they are and what they aim for. Stuff that you will
|
|
never see on their public web pages. No doubt this percentage has only
|
|
grown since, and it is presumably even worse in many other technological
|
|
R&D centres.
|
|
|
|
How do "we" as cultural producers, critics, artists, deal with such
|
|
realities if we are so prominently working in and with the products of
|
|
this technological domain? How to bring this back to the civil domain?
|
|
|
|
Some 'help' might be expected from the apparent economic demise of the US,
|
|
making it increasingly difficult to provide for the upkeep for the world's
|
|
largest army (hence the reduction and re-alignment of foreign US military
|
|
bases). In effect, the upkeep is currently mostly financed by China. This
|
|
is, however, certainly not a problem of the US alone, and it plays out
|
|
very differently in different contexts. The shared problem faced is how to
|
|
turn this trend around (without a complete collapse), how to civilise the
|
|
technological domain?
|
|
|
|
This is one area where the search for alternatives seems highly urgent,
|
|
and it will require more than a process of mere 'negation' - A process of
|
|
negation of dominant symbolic modes of hegemonic domination only serves to
|
|
show that an infinity of other worlds is possible, I would say.
|
|
|
|
Well anyway, just some thought on a damp Sunday afternoon (it's hot and
|
|
wet in Amsterdam).
|
|
|
|
bests,
|
|
Eric</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>0.9</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
|
|
<from>Brian Holmes</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 27 Jul 2008 21:54:26 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>Concerning the concept of artistic rupture, Eric Kluitenberg wrote:
|
|
|
|
> As I have come to understand this... rupture is part of process of
|
|
> negation, a negative dialectics as some have called it (Adorno / Lyotard),
|
|
> in the case of the visual arts a 'negative dialectics of the image'. Now
|
|
> the point of negation is not the replacement of one mode of the visual by
|
|
> another, alternative one. Much rather the object of negation is to 'break'
|
|
> the image, to show its disfunctionality, to expose that every image hides
|
|
> more than it reveals.
|
|
...
|
|
> The real point of the negation and this negative dialectics as it was
|
|
> emblematically embodied by the bold quest of the avant-gardes, was not to
|
|
> find a somehow "better" alternative for that which was negated
|
|
> (perspective, unity of space, unity of time, surface, support, material,
|
|
> medium, etc etc...) but much rather to reveal the infinity of
|
|
> possibilities, the infinite space of alternatives.
|
|
>
|
|
> Now what has changed and where I would follow you in most of your analysis
|
|
> is that the context in which art, criticism, and critical cultural
|
|
> production operate, has diversified to the point where multiplicity has
|
|
> replaced revolt.
|
|
|
|
This way of thinking, developed from Adorno to Lyotard among many
|
|
others, is one of the more powerful and compelling stories that can be
|
|
told about the vanguard "overcoming of art," and my thanks to Eric for
|
|
bringing in this precise theoretical level of conversation. When I said,
|
|
"let's take it as axiomatic that all that has changed," I was indeed
|
|
thinking of the end of any transcendence of artistic representation, and
|
|
therefore of any reason or art to go on referring to art alone, to its
|
|
sequential evolutions and/or ruptures. Of course, the idea that there is
|
|
one single story of the avant-gardes in the 20th century is itself
|
|
totally dubious, but I think that many of the stories which have been
|
|
elaborated lead to the point art serves as some sort of ever-changing
|
|
mediation between an active multiplicity and an existing context of
|
|
social reality. How that kind of mediation works is, I think, the
|
|
subject for a micropolitical aesthetics - but I'd like to touch on that
|
|
in a later reply to Snafu's excellent post on productivism. As Eric says
|
|
hee,
|
|
|
|
> How this then works for activists, artists, critics in practice
|
|
> is the next step.
|
|
|
|
Concerning the "existing context of social reality" which forms the
|
|
backdrop to any next step, that is definitely where geopolitical
|
|
thinking becomes an issue. How to name the context? Is there any
|
|
overarching structure? If so, how to avoid supporting it with one's own
|
|
conceptual activity?
|
|
|
|
> The second comment relates to the use of the concept of Empire. I wonder
|
|
> if the concept of Empire is really productive here to address your
|
|
> question of finding "a different way to live, a fresh chance at
|
|
> coexistence", which I read as a call for pluralism and multiplicity.
|
|
> Empire, however, suggest the rise of a hegemonic and more or less unitary
|
|
> form of social and economic/political organisation (along with its
|
|
> military extensions). Of course in Negri and Hardt's vision there are many
|
|
> internal struggles and conflicting actors within the body of Empire, but
|
|
> still they seem guided by a similar organisational logic and set of
|
|
> (hegemonic) objectives.
|
|
|
|
Well, what I am talking about is first of all best approached as
|
|
classical imperialism, not Empire in Hardt and Negri's sense of a
|
|
centerless, networked imperium -- because what we have seen in the past
|
|
five years, with the Iraq war, is clearly an attempt to project a
|
|
specifically American sovereignty onto a resource-rich country. Beyond
|
|
the war, I think the case for American hegemony is very strong and tends
|
|
to be understated, if only because people on the left would
|
|
understandably like to see other alternatives. However, lucidity is also
|
|
important. The acts of the Bush administration have forced me, as a
|
|
responsible citizen, to look at the consequences of US military bases
|
|
all over the world, military domination of space, financial domination
|
|
through the continuing status of the dollar as international reserve
|
|
currency, techoscientific domination through the fruits of military R&D
|
|
spending, cultural domination through global English and the benchmark
|
|
status of American universities, etc. etc. All of this is, to be sure,
|
|
in decline, and that is probably why it has gotten so ugly in recent
|
|
years. But decline can go on for a long time... and in the meantime,
|
|
unfortunately, this whole construct of military-industrial imperialism
|
|
continues to furnish the basic definitions of what is good in life,
|
|
including the canonical measures of economic growth and prosperity
|
|
inherited from the Fordist/Cold War era, which still hold sway among all
|
|
the official bodies and orient, for the worst, the development of the EU
|
|
in particular (not to mention China). The really obscene victory of US
|
|
hegemony is making everyone desire and love this bloated form of
|
|
overdevelopment.
|
|
|
|
Now, I definitely do not have a one-dimensional view of all this,
|
|
because the geopoliical study that I have carried on within the
|
|
Continental Drift project definitely suggests that regional
|
|
bloc-formation and the increasing sovereignty of countries that already
|
|
have a continental scale (China, India, Russia) is the wave of the
|
|
future. I see two likely scenarios over the next 20 years. Either
|
|
continued American decline will allow other major actors to literally
|
|
"buy in" to the American hegemony, eventually achieving a true
|
|
intra-imperial distribution of power and consequent tempering of the US
|
|
capacity to go lashing out with its military when the other major
|
|
players do not agree -- and then we will really reach the state that
|
|
Hardt and Negri described in Empire. Or, the existence of any worldwide
|
|
hegemony will gradually fade, and much greater power will accrue to the
|
|
continental ensembles, giving rise to some kind of truly multi-polar
|
|
world. In the best of cases this could lead to the "fractalization" you
|
|
suggest, with interesting roles for multiple kinds of plurality in the
|
|
system (not that there isn't plurality already, but this would be
|
|
quantitatively and qualitatively different, more heterogeneous). Or, in
|
|
the worst of cases, we could easily get rivalries between blocs,
|
|
resource wars, etc.
|
|
|
|
The obvious thing that keeps these scenarios at a distance is the
|
|
gigantic disproportion between the US military and all the rest. But it
|
|
may be that popular resistance of all kinds will finally prove that to
|
|
be an "ineffective disproportion" -- finally answering Madeleine
|
|
Albright's famous question by showing that having such a great army
|
|
really is useless, and thus opening up the possibility, at least, of
|
|
more positive scenarios. This is the geopolitical reason why I am
|
|
antimilitarist. The other reason is unreflected and immediate: I don'
|
|
think men with guns is the way to solve any problem.
|
|
|
|
> Much rather I would opt for an approach focused on a simultaneous
|
|
> localisation and multiplication of alternatives to such hegemonic forces
|
|
> and leave the concept of Empire behind.
|
|
|
|
It can be a very good philosophical approach and also the right one, I
|
|
think, to base alternative strategies on (including aesthetic
|
|
strategies). However the trick is keeping reality enough in mind that
|
|
you can actually hope to change it, i.e. leave the military-industrial
|
|
pimp behind and find some better lover.
|
|
|
|
> ---------
|
|
>
|
|
> Finally, on the reduction of American bases and how this plays out locally,
|
|
> in the case of your report in S-Korea, highly fascinating!
|
|
>
|
|
> In such a localised address to a shift in 'hegemonic domination', I see
|
|
> the most productive approach to a new form of social and cultural
|
|
> critique. It will be very difficult to build that critique convincingly,
|
|
> given the lingual, cultural, material, economic and social rifts that
|
|
> separate the various actors that would need to be included in this, and
|
|
> also given the reliance on a global pigeon-English that many of us are
|
|
> struggling with..., but still this could be truly productive.
|
|
|
|
Yes, to the extent that we have a world society, we do need a cultural
|
|
critique that can work through global divides, with all the quite
|
|
fascinating and, I think, rewarding difficulties that you mention. In my
|
|
opinion, this kind of dialogical exchange is one of the ways to leave
|
|
behind the imperial tendency to oppressive hegemony, but without falling
|
|
back into essentialism and identity-thinking.
|
|
|
|
> A problem that worries me on a more day to day basis and that follows
|
|
> directly from your account of the reduction and shifts of foreign US
|
|
> military basis is the question of the demilitarisation of society, and the
|
|
> technology and research sector in particular. It seems to me that there is
|
|
> a continuing legacy of the cold war era in which the military / industrial
|
|
> complex attempts to hold its ground, not just in the US, but also in the
|
|
> Russian Federation and many of the post-Soviet and other 'Western' powers,
|
|
> in terms of contracts, jobs, positions, production-infrastructures,
|
|
> international market-shares, entrenched financial positions. I.e. this is
|
|
> now a completely post-ideological space of political action.
|
|
|
|
You are so right. The vampires are keeping the cold warbody "alive" so
|
|
that they can maintain the dead-end mode of production that has been put
|
|
in place since, or rather by, the Second World War.
|
|
|
|
> Especially the domain of technological research and development has become
|
|
> so deeply militarised (fuelled even further by the 'war on terror'
|
|
> discourse) that it becomes difficult to imagine how to get rid of this
|
|
> condition. A reliable inside source told me years ago that even a
|
|
> relatively 'civil'-looking institution such as the MIT Media-Lab was at
|
|
> the time supported for more than 65 percent by military funding, carrying
|
|
> out projects that are conducted in utter secrecy, about which we can
|
|
> safely assume that they exist, but about which we cannot get any reliable
|
|
> information as to what they are and what they aim for. Stuff that you will
|
|
> never see on their public web pages. No doubt this percentage has only
|
|
> grown since, and it is presumably even worse in many other technological
|
|
> R&D centres.
|
|
>
|
|
> How do "we" as cultural producers, critics, artists, deal with such
|
|
> realities if we are so prominently working in and with the products of
|
|
> this technological domain? How to bring this back to the civil domain?
|
|
|
|
I think this remains the key question. In my reading, for instance, A
|
|
Thousand Plateaus is entirely about this question, it's about subverting
|
|
and derailing the warmachine of the state, mostly from within, through
|
|
the undermining of what they call "royal science." It is true that one
|
|
always works largely on the state's domain (that's the very definition
|
|
of hegemony, it sets the terrain for everyone). So the question you
|
|
raise is really the central problem, culturally as well as politically.
|
|
|
|
> Some 'help' might be expected from the apparent economic demise of the US,
|
|
> making it increasingly difficult to provide for the upkeep for the world's
|
|
> largest army (hence the reduction and re-alignment of foreign US military
|
|
> bases). In effect, the upkeep is currently mostly financed by China.
|
|
|
|
Actually, Japanese capital remains tremendously important as well...
|
|
Along with Middle Eastern and European money, the genius of empires has
|
|
always been to get others paying tribute. Basically because they want
|
|
the protection of -- or are frankly afraid of -- the empire's military.
|
|
However, this seems to be headed for a change. A collapse of the dollar,
|
|
a real run on the dollar, would signify a radical change. We will see...
|
|
I am not betting on it as I think that everyone is afraid of such a
|
|
violent turnabout. I think the strategy of the other world powers is to
|
|
hollow the US out from the inside, and then just wait and see what can
|
|
be done about the hard core of the military, wait and see whether it
|
|
will really decline along with the middle class and the old bridges and
|
|
levees and so on. The strategy of the US, as Brzezinski said flat out in
|
|
The Grand Chessboard, is to hold on to hegemony as long as possible.
|
|
|
|
> This
|
|
> is, however, certainly not a problem of the US alone, and it plays out
|
|
> very differently in different contexts. The shared problem faced is how to
|
|
> turn this trend around (without a complete collapse), how to civilise the
|
|
> technological domain?
|
|
|
|
Thanks, Eric, it is great to see that we can finally ask a big question
|
|
again. All that tactical shyness was kinda buggin' me...
|
|
|
|
> This is one area where the search for alternatives seems highly urgent,
|
|
> and it will require more than a process of mere 'negation' - A process of
|
|
> negation of dominant symbolic modes of hegemonic domination only serves to
|
|
> show that an infinity of other worlds is possible, I would say.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, the continued return to avant-garde negation is pointless. I
|
|
think it is intimately bound up with the tautological self-reference of
|
|
art to itself alone, which is strangely persistent, mainly because it
|
|
was institutionalized as the definition of modern art (another zombie
|
|
category as Ulrich Beck puts it). My off-the-cuff manifesto was meant to
|
|
say that self-reference and radical negation ought to be things of the
|
|
past for art - stages which have truly been overcome - so I heartily
|
|
agree with the above!
|
|
|
|
> Well anyway, just some thought on a damp Sunday afternoon (it's hot and
|
|
> wet in Amsterdam).
|
|
|
|
Hmm, can we hope for more such reflective weather in the future? It's
|
|
pretty hot in Paris but it only rains at night!
|
|
|
|
> bests,
|
|
> Eric
|
|
|
|
my best to all as well, Brian</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>0.10</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Gurstein</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 27 Jul 2008 08:04:56 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>I happened to be in Seoul at what was I guess, roughly the same time as
|
|
Brian and had some parallel thoughts on developments there that might be of
|
|
interest... (I was attending, as a Civil Society representative, an OECD
|
|
Ministerial meeting on the Future of the Internet Economy...
|
|
|
|
(This is taken from a somewhat longer trip report...
|
|
|
|
|
|
2. Canada and the OECD Ministerial
|
|
Canada hosted the first event in this series in Ottawa in 1998 and much was
|
|
made at various points particularly in the beginning about the Seoul event
|
|
being somehow linked to the Ottawa event. Unfortunately for Canada the
|
|
comparison between Canada in the Internet economy in 1998 and in 2008 is
|
|
something of an embarrassment. Where in 1998 Canada was an active innovator
|
|
in a wide range of areas concerning the Internet Economy and (not
|
|
incidentally) Society, in 2008 it was clear that Canada had either been more
|
|
or less stagnant in the interim period (and thus slipping behind its
|
|
international competitors in whatever tables concerning the Internet Economy
|
|
one might wish to focus on).
|
|
|
|
Where other countries notably in this instance Korea but also the EU had
|
|
chosen to provide significant support for infrastructure development and
|
|
R&D, Canada had (currently governed by Neo-Liberal ideologues) pretty much
|
|
withdrawn from any public involvement in these areas. And where Canada in
|
|
1998 had had a very progressive/inclusive national policy approach to
|
|
extending participation (and the related benefits of the Internet--Economy
|
|
and Society) to all, this had by 2008 disappeared from the public agenda.
|
|
|
|
The benefits of a public policy approach to broad Internet inclusion are
|
|
manifestly obvious in Korea where some 90 per cent of the populations is
|
|
Internet connected almost all, with very fast broadband connectivity. This
|
|
has proven to be a tremendous spur to various aspects of the Internet
|
|
economy including the ever-receding grail of innovation but also to overall
|
|
appropriation of the Internet into all aspects of both commercial life and
|
|
daily life. Canada by losing sight of the social goals of the extension of
|
|
Internet access and use has seemingly as a consequence allowed itself to
|
|
drift backwards in those areas.
|
|
|
|
Michael Gurstein</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject><nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Geert Lovink</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 11 May 2009 21:29:14 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
On the event of the Montevideo/Netherlands Media Art Institute 30th
|
|
anniversary, departing curator Susanne Jaschko put together a one day
|
|
symposium entitled Positions in Flux. Régine Debatty at We Make Money
|
|
Not Art blogged about it. Unfortunately, I was only able to attend the
|
|
morning session. The event on May 8 2009 took place in Trouw
|
|
Amsterdam, the followup of Club 11. From what I heard, Positions at
|
|
Flux had a critical take towards the common media art discourse and
|
|
asked relevant questions. It was a relief to see that the attention
|
|
was, for once, not focused on history, preservation and conservation.
|
|
Cultural heritage has already taken over way too much attention space–
|
|
in part because this is one of the few areas where there is still
|
|
plenty of funding. Sigh. Just for one day, no celebration of “medium
|
|
religion” or “art meets science”. Director Heiner Holtappels opened by
|
|
noticing that new media art is not easily accepted by fine art.
|
|
Traditional art has become eclecticism. According to Heiner, all art
|
|
is technology based. The subject of the symposium was a visible break
|
|
with the video art heritage that Montevideo has been known for.
|
|
Politics topics, a courageous step? “Is there a future for us?” is a
|
|
question not many institutions dare to ask. In the Dutch daily De
|
|
Volkskrant of that day, ex-Montevideo curator Bart Rutten (now
|
|
Stedelijk Museum) took up the role of expressing the ambivalent
|
|
feelings of the Dutch art establishment towards the new but no longer
|
|
young art form. Whereas he praised Montevideo’s work, he himself had
|
|
moved on. “You can ask yourself if Montevideo should continue to show
|
|
only media art works. In this way they preserve their specialism. It
|
|
was my main reason to leave.”
|
|
|
|
In Zero Comments I mapped the current challenges for new media arts.
|
|
While society at large is inundated with (new) media, the art branch
|
|
that deals with the digital moved itself in a ghetto. While this
|
|
analysis still holds up, many in the sector openly admitted the
|
|
shortcomings and are now putting in place strategies to escape the
|
|
dead end street. Technology has lost its original fascination, while
|
|
spreading even faster in society. Is this a reason enough to abandon
|
|
the field? While experimentation with electronics and the digital
|
|
might have lost its aura and the spirit of curiosity has somewhat
|
|
fained, the field of new media arts at large is still growing, despite
|
|
institutional setbacks here and there. What most participants shared
|
|
was the feeling that, despite the intimidating institutional violence
|
|
of the large players, museums will die or become a zoo if they do not
|
|
deal with the Digital. Some say new media arts lacks the timeliness
|
|
and the depth. Whereas ICA London closed its media lab, Laboral in the
|
|
North of Spain, which opened in 2007, is now a large exhibition space,
|
|
devoted to media art. Chairman Chris Keulemans emphasized that new
|
|
media arts was always at it best when it criticized the media itself,
|
|
with its codes and nodes. Each of the three presentations in the
|
|
morning session gave a different answer to the question how relevant
|
|
political work could be produced.
|
|
|
|
The Iraqi-American artist Wafaa Bilal is known from his installation
|
|
Domestic Tension, in which the artist lived in a gallery space for a
|
|
month, pointed at by paint ball gun operated by web users. Shoot an
|
|
Iraqi had 80 million visitors and, according to Bilal, was a “strange
|
|
mix of aesthetic pain and pleasure.” What made the work so popular was
|
|
the power of viral connections, in particular through chatrooms and
|
|
video he put online. What happened here was a confrontation between
|
|
conflict zone and comfort zone, disengagement and engagement, virtual
|
|
versus physical platform — both in the case of the artwork and war in
|
|
Iraq itself. Bilal concluded that the body has its own language that
|
|
is not in sync with the electronic reality. Bilal made a distinction
|
|
between interactive works, in which the end-states is already
|
|
determined, and dynamic pieces that are open ended. A lot of the old
|
|
school new media art is interactive. Increased user participated was
|
|
illustrated in Bilal’s story of the ‘virtual human shield’, a group of
|
|
people that gathered to protect the artist from being shot at. Dog or
|
|
Iraqi was a month long online debate who gets waterboarded: a dog or
|
|
an Iraqi? Bilal also briefly discussed his modded version of a 2003 US
|
|
shooting game that he renamed into Virtual Jihadi. Instead of killing
|
|
Sadam the user can now hunt GW Bush. This and other projects were
|
|
documented in Wafaa Bilal, Shoot an Iraqi (City Light Books, San
|
|
Francisco, 2008).
|
|
|
|
Former Etoy Hans Bernard of Uebermorgen.com didn’t show projects but
|
|
read a text concerning the role of “European techno fine art avant
|
|
garde.” I am great fan of Uebermorgen. It’s in fact becoming
|
|
impossible to list all their interventions and hacks. Uebermorgen is
|
|
all about “surreal outcomes”, not bound by any medium. “The
|
|
transformation from digital to physical is important. The work is not
|
|
pop art, it is rock art. We are not activists, we are actionists.” For
|
|
a while seeking large audiences was a thrill, but that’s no longer the
|
|
main motivation. There is a new strategy for each new project. Bernard
|
|
did his best to prove that Uebermorgen’s intentions were neither
|
|
political nor ideological. The aim should be Art, not Politics.
|
|
Communication is the 9-5 job, but that not the passion. Bernard’s
|
|
insistence on the non-political status didn’t convince. Uebermorgen’s
|
|
claim, not to have any political agenda, refers to an ancient, rigid
|
|
definition that was already problematic in the late seventies when I
|
|
studied political science. Maybe in Austria politics is still
|
|
associated with corrupt parties and fat, ugly politicians but
|
|
elsewhere in the world people use a much broader definition of “the
|
|
political”. His insistence on artistic freedom is amiable but the idea
|
|
that once art becomes political it turns into politics and seizes to
|
|
be art, simply doesn’t hold. His separation between the private
|
|
opinion of the artist as a citizen and the Artist as a public figure
|
|
is problematic for the same reasons. Bernard’s insistence that
|
|
“perception and production need to separated” sounds good–but we all
|
|
know that visual arts no longer operates outside “perception
|
|
management.” Autonomy, at least in the Dutch context, is the official
|
|
state religion. We all anticipate aesthetic impact, even if we reject
|
|
the categories of the day and undermine the dominant visual logic.
|
|
Hans, there are no commissars anymore that control the ateliers. If
|
|
there is any censor it’s probably the Politically Correct Self. So, if
|
|
we state, “in production we need to be free,” there is no one who will
|
|
stop us — but ourselves.
|
|
|
|
Knowbotic Research, teaching and working in Zurich, was the third
|
|
presenter. Their translocal distributed temporary works avoid–and seek–
|
|
the Political in yet another manner. Christian Huebler showcased the
|
|
Blackbenz Race project between Prishtina and Zurich, a city marketing
|
|
proposal that was refused because of its negative image of the proper
|
|
Swiss finance capital. The broader idea was to play with the Kosovo-
|
|
Albanian-Swiss people that hover in-between places. Code words are
|
|
fog, smoke, blurred spaces and multiple identities. The self-built
|
|
stealth boat project has a similar intention. The micro audiences
|
|
become actors here. Activism doesn’t need more exposure and
|
|
transparency. Art doesn’t need moral outcry. The celebrity industry
|
|
took over this role. Art questions and creates new spaces for
|
|
reflection. What’s required are slow spaces. All three projects showed
|
|
that new media art “doesn’t need to be a monade, merely celebrating
|
|
itself.” (Huebler) This is the age of entering other contexts, times
|
|
and spaces–assisted by production houses that have in-house knowledge
|
|
about the specificity, and the Eigenartigkeit, of digital technologies.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.1</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>jo van der spek</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Wed, 13 May 2009 17:27:22 +0200</date>
|
|
<content><citaat van="Geert Lovink">
|
|
|
|
>Activism doesn't need more exposure and transparency.
|
|
|
|
I agree, the obsession with media by activists is killing activism and
|
|
(re)producing mirrors of narcism, aka transparency....
|
|
|
|
>Art doesn't need moral outcry.
|
|
|
|
It does not NEED it, but some kinda passion is imho an important
|
|
generator. This passion can be questioned, exposed or reflected on. That
|
|
is why I agree with you that
|
|
|
|
> Art questions and creates new spaces for reflection.
|
|
|
|
> What's required are slow spaces.
|
|
Yes, but why not also new confrontations, new dynamics, tactics, etc?
|
|
And indeed, why not reflect on morality as well?
|
|
|
|
Jo van der Spek
|
|
m2m.streamtime.org</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.2</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Thu, 14 May 2009 22:28:59 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
On Monday, May 11 2009, 21:29 (+0200), Geert Lovink wrote:
|
|
|
|
> While society at large is inundated with (new) media, the art branch
|
|
> that deals with the digital moved itself in a ghetto.
|
|
|
|
This is too true, and that branch has to reinvent itself from scratch
|
|
or it will collapse very soon (if it isn't already collapsing). But it
|
|
goes for the entire "new media" field, including academic new media
|
|
studies which have used up their credit within the humanities. It's
|
|
already happening in arts education where famous media art schools
|
|
have been rolled back or integrated into Fine Art courses.
|
|
|
|
It's not even a question of too narrow technological focus, but one
|
|
of perceived artistic quality. Historically, "media art" has been
|
|
a tactical alliance between radical artists from Nam June Paik to
|
|
ubermorgen.com and high tech academic research lab art that has no
|
|
whatsoever contemporary art credits. From the late 60s to today, one
|
|
hand washed the other - the former brought the artistic credibility,
|
|
the latter the money and infrastructure. Festivals like STRP or ars
|
|
electronica perfectly illustrate it. However, the research lab art,
|
|
particularly in the form of "interactive installations", has always
|
|
dominated the field in sheer mass, quantity and visibility. A visitor
|
|
who would visit an arbitrary new media festival with an interest
|
|
in contemporary art would see, first and most of all, preposterous
|
|
machine parks. Or, in friendlier terms, it's the kind of art that
|
|
rather belonged, as an educational or aesthetic gimmick, into a museum
|
|
of technology than into a contemporary art discourse.
|
|
|
|
However, I find it hard to get past a certain attachment to the
|
|
"media art" ghetto because it tends to combine the very worst (even
|
|
painfully, unspeakably stupid and monstrously worst) with - IMO - the
|
|
very best to be found in contemporary art. Ubermorgen are an excellent
|
|
example, needless to drop further names here. And I'm afraid that
|
|
abandoning that ghetto, although it's theoretically the right thing to
|
|
do, will in the end result in even greater collateral damage.
|
|
|
|
Since the 1990s, the so-called Fine Arts do provide no really
|
|
desirable environment either, likely they're even worse. It is telling
|
|
enough that the term "Fine Art" suddenly has become a universally
|
|
accepted standard while, not a long time ago, any self-respecting
|
|
contemporary artist would have fiercely rejected if not opposed it. In
|
|
the past ten years of reading contemporary art magazines or visiting
|
|
art biennales and Documentas, I've been flabbergasted by the lack
|
|
of vision and radicalism in this field. It has morphed, somewhat
|
|
comparable to New (composed) Music after the 1960s, into an academic
|
|
discourse ruled by a neo-bourgeois jet set of hipster curators posing
|
|
as cultural theorists on the basis of a not-even-half-baked knowledge
|
|
and recycling of postmodern philosophy and cultural studies. The
|
|
system consists of artists who have been academically trained to
|
|
produce works - along with non-understood theory lingo - that fit the
|
|
required curatorial buzz. Along with this development, the paradigm of
|
|
the white cube and art works as good-looking exhibition objects has
|
|
become stronger than ever before and rules out any art practice not
|
|
fitting this format. All the while, the system thrives on the delusion
|
|
that it still represents visual art as a whole although, unlike, for
|
|
example, in film where 'highbrow' and 'lowbrow' still coexist, its
|
|
popular forms like comic books, tattoos, fantasy figurines, t-shirt
|
|
illustrations, wildlife paintings... have long been excluded from its
|
|
system.
|
|
|
|
I dare to claim that under "saner" conditions, no Documenta and
|
|
no Biennale curator would get around artists like ubermorgen or
|
|
the Yes Men, just like no Documenta curator got around Beuys in
|
|
the 1970s and 80s. Instead, we get artists like Mike Kelley all
|
|
over the art world in whose work I'm either not getting something
|
|
or indeed seeing the Emperor's new clothes. ("Review" babble like
|
|
http://www.frieze.com/issue/article/tomorrow_never_comes1/ affirms the
|
|
suspicion that the art world has no clue either.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
> Director Heiner Holtappels opened by noticing that new media art
|
|
> is not easily accepted by fine art. Traditional art has become
|
|
> eclecticism. According to Heiner, all art is technology based.
|
|
|
|
This is true, yet contemporary art has mostly given up on reflecting
|
|
its media. [I can almost hear an iPhone-wearing curator saying that
|
|
reflecting one's media is outmoded modernism.] It's most obvious in
|
|
the way video installations have become its mainstream format, in the
|
|
form of video loops shown in booths inside exhibition spaces. Video
|
|
is just taken as a documentary TV or wannabe-cinematic format, as if
|
|
radical video art from Paik to Infermental had never happened. (It
|
|
seems as if most contemporary artists actually don't know it anymore
|
|
which is comparable to painters no longer knowing about abstract
|
|
painting.) One should perhaps advise Montevideo just not to leave its
|
|
video art roots behind.
|
|
|
|
-F
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
blog: http://en.pleintekst.nl
|
|
homepage: http://cramer.pleintekst.nl:70
|
|
gopher://cramer.pleintekst.nl</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Matze Schmidt</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Fri, 15 May 2009 17:23:12 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Thursday, May 14, 2009, 10:28:59 PM, one wrote:
|
|
> On Monday, May 11 2009, 21:29 (+0200), Geert Lovink wrote:
|
|
|
|
>> While society at large is inundated with (new) media, the art
|
|
>> branch that deals with the digital moved itself in a ghetto.
|
|
|
|
> This is too true, and that branch has to reinvent itself from
|
|
> scratch or it will collapse very soon (if it isn't already
|
|
> collapsing).
|
|
|
|
Mh, so let it be killing itself, the Reinvent Yourself-Discourse is a
|
|
line from the Pet Shop Boys from the 90s and says nothing than "Nobody
|
|
knows the trouble I've seen" in a 'modern' reinvented (sic!) way. But
|
|
I cannot see the trouble of this hard front line between a Paik and
|
|
a Ubermorgen. For example the "1001 Songs of eBay" of uebermorgen is
|
|
just a funny funny project I can implement over the weekend dealing
|
|
with online politics sex. And this confused and disoriented waiting
|
|
for the new-old avantgarde like "Let's do many Paiks" is boring and
|
|
does not have anything to do with the real world in which electronics
|
|
are the basis of the doings. What was really radical in a Paik?
|
|
Fucking the Porta Pack with Alternative TV-Ideas or the TV-Sets with a
|
|
magnet? Were the neo-dada fluxus guys radical anyway or just radical?
|
|
|
|
> as if radical video art from Paik to Infermental had never happened.
|
|
> (It seems as if most contemporary artists actually don't know it
|
|
> anymore which is comparable to painters no longer knowing about
|
|
> abstract painting.) One should perhaps advise Montevideo just not to
|
|
> leave its video art roots behind.
|
|
|
|
I'd like to point out at this point that institutions like Montevideo
|
|
are revolutionizers of money, e.g. they payed Jaromil for working
|
|
on dynebolican stuff and by this means they are able to rescue the
|
|
middle-class fantasies of a free arty market of software on the basis
|
|
of electronics, a market without too much money and with lower prices,
|
|
with all effects of an open source software"z" driven by the mediate
|
|
support of the state.
|
|
|
|
But while talking to them some years ago the Montevideo people turned
|
|
out to be very naive in political questions. They have no idea about
|
|
economy and no idea of what is going on out of their field. That's
|
|
okay, as long as they incorporate all folklore and avantgarde at the
|
|
sam time, because it is their mandate and mission.
|
|
|
|
Matze Schmidt</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.4</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>jaromil</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 17 May 2009 14:05:54 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
|
|
Hash: SHA1
|
|
|
|
|
|
re all,
|
|
|
|
first of all thanks Matze for your consideration of my activity, but
|
|
let me warn you are overestimating the benefits of my collaboration
|
|
with Montevideo / Time Based Arts ... which is now called Nederlands
|
|
Instituut voor Mediakunst (NIMK, BTW): it takes more to be "rescuing
|
|
the middle-class fantasies of a free arty market of software" as you
|
|
say, if we speak of a national institute that started in a squat in
|
|
Amsterdam 30 years ago and has seen a constant flow of contributions
|
|
by various people through all these years, most of them really worth
|
|
considering.
|
|
|
|
On Fri, May 15, 2009 at 05:23:12PM +0200, Matze Schmidt wrote:
|
|
> I'd like to point out at this point that institutions like
|
|
> Montevideo are revolutionizers of money, e.g. they payed Jaromil for
|
|
> working on dynebolican stuff
|
|
|
|
if it would be just the action of redistribution of wealth, then it
|
|
wouldn't be revolutionary at all. Some artists produced and
|
|
distributed by Montevideo did became rich, but for them Montevideo
|
|
mostly contributed to the production quality of their artworks rather
|
|
than direct funding.
|
|
|
|
just consider that if my lifestyle would be "middle-class fantasy" i
|
|
could not afford to sustainably live in Amsterdam relying on my
|
|
current employment, but lucky me i'm not a yuppie :) and i'm fine like
|
|
that. for the minimum support i get, needed as i care to support me
|
|
and my extended family when needed, i have to do much more than just
|
|
developing "my own projects", but still all results can be free to the
|
|
public,: that shouldn't be special for a public institution, right? i
|
|
believe this is the good signal NIMK gives - not such a revolutionary
|
|
one, but pretty honest: there are often various degrees of corruption
|
|
leading public institutions to play commercially with public
|
|
resources.
|
|
|
|
other than that, we can call "progressive attitude" - rather than
|
|
revolutionary" - when institutions are keen to interact with liminal
|
|
contexts, with dwellers on the dystopian hearth pulsating in every
|
|
metropolis of our "Free Western World". This kind of interaction (and
|
|
the respect for the uncommon ground in between) is indeed part of the
|
|
heritage of a city like Mokum A - unfortunately decaying rapidly as
|
|
Europe is turning into a Fortress for the privileged and their fears
|
|
of the disinherited children of the welfare mirage.
|
|
|
|
at last about the interaction i mention here: i'm not sure how to
|
|
define it, its likely not a negotiation nor a compromise, i'm just
|
|
sure it is necessary in any case: whether we accept the upcoming
|
|
institutionalised "Reinvent Yourself" strategy or not. I would
|
|
recommend a case-by-case analysis in this regards, rather than
|
|
thinking universally... like institutions often do ;^)
|
|
|
|
regarding your vague critiques let me reply:
|
|
|
|
> with all effects of an open source software"z" driven by the mediate
|
|
> support of the state.
|
|
|
|
dyne.org development is not driven by any state, corporation or
|
|
institution rather than by the many problems these power structures
|
|
generate. we dedicate most of our free time to peer reviewed free
|
|
software development in socially relevant contexts (please note
|
|
"development", not provision of services) and as hackers we operate
|
|
pragmatically, on-line as well in various different on-site contexts.
|
|
|
|
> But while talking to them some years ago the Montevideo people
|
|
> turned out to be very naive in political questions. They have no
|
|
> idea about economy and no idea of what is going on out of their
|
|
> field. That's okay, as long as they incorporate all folklore and
|
|
> avantgarde at the sam time, because it is their mandate and mission.
|
|
|
|
i'd be curious to know what you consider "naive in political
|
|
questions": myself i've felt enriched by the past 4 and more years
|
|
spent in Amsterdam, by my colleagues at NIMK (which is not so
|
|
uniformed in its composition BTW) as well by the squatters in A'dam,
|
|
from De Bierkoning to the Waag Society.
|
|
|
|
backing my objection, i'll point you out some coverage on NIMK's 30
|
|
years symposium (just happened last week):
|
|
|
|
http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/archives/2009/05/the-netherlands-media-art-inst.php
|
|
|
|
pasting you here the transcription of my intervention at this
|
|
symposium, let it be also a contribution to this interesting
|
|
discussion thread:
|
|
|
|
------------
|
|
|
|
At the NIMK's symposium "Positions in Flux" I've taken the occasion to
|
|
share thoughts on the current perception of Free Software and Open
|
|
Source philosophy in art, along with some overdue criticism of the
|
|
Creative Commons hollow hype, as well of the Creative Industries and
|
|
their systematised processing of art for the global market. Even if
|
|
not obvious, I believe the dynamics of these two phenomenons are
|
|
related; among the quoted in the intervention are Benjamin Mako Hill's
|
|
"Towards a Standard of Freedom: CreativeCommons and the Free Software
|
|
Movement"[1] and Florian Cramer's post on nettime "The Creative Common
|
|
Misunderstanding"[2], while the vigorous critique of the Creative
|
|
Industries stands on Rana Dasgupta's essay "The Next Idea of the
|
|
Artist (Art, music and the present threat of creativity)"[3]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Here below a short transcript:
|
|
|
|
"Open Source" doesn't mean free access, nor open space or open air; it
|
|
presumes a seamful[4] approach to design as a response to the
|
|
increasing reliance on technology and its accessibility; it is
|
|
interactive without prescribed boundaries, following a combinatorial,
|
|
generative approachto development; it is peer to peer as no producer
|
|
can control further interaction patterns; it is grassroot as creations
|
|
are born out of initiative and cohesion based on needs felt and
|
|
understood in first person by community members.
|
|
|
|
About Creative Commons, its motto "Some rights reserved." is a
|
|
relatively hollow call: the slogan factually reverses the Free
|
|
Software and Open Source philosophy of reserving rights to users, not
|
|
copyright owners, in order to allow the former to become producers
|
|
themselves. The dis/appropriating loop of creativity must be recursive
|
|
to be fruitful: not only productionmeans belong to the people using
|
|
them, further creations should be free to be recombined. rights must
|
|
be granted focusing on people interacting, not just those providing
|
|
the interactive infrastructure.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately there is a diffuse lack of perception for alternatives
|
|
offered by the Open Source and Free Software approach over current
|
|
profit models. As a present problem, also deriving from the lack of
|
|
understanding of the importance of grass-root creativity, top-down
|
|
cultural management is patronising art production: massmedia
|
|
aesthetics of an entirely sanitised and efficient creativity, of the
|
|
sort that will not rely on unstable people and can therefore be
|
|
globally rationalised.
|
|
|
|
That the great artists of modern Western culture managed to produce
|
|
what they did, despitethe danger and intensity of their effort, was
|
|
due in large part to improvised social forms built around close-knit
|
|
networks where thought and affect circulated with high velocity,
|
|
andwhere it was possible to try out forms of non-conventional human
|
|
relationships that would not destroy, nor be destroyed by, a life of
|
|
art. Seen from an historical perspective, In the second half of the
|
|
twentieth century many of the functions of creative networks were
|
|
already taken over in Europe by institutions (government funding
|
|
bodies, universities, museums, etc) and much of their excessive
|
|
feeling wasneutralised. This was only a small part of a general
|
|
process of the time: the absorption of human emotion into bureaucratic
|
|
channels, and the emergence of a social coolness, anefficiency of
|
|
feeling.
|
|
|
|
At this stage in the twenty-first century, we are in the middle of
|
|
another large-scale restructuring of ideas of creativity and
|
|
culture. As one of the most significant generators of image and value,
|
|
creativity now has become a critical resource for the global economic
|
|
engine. What creativity is, and how it can be systematised and
|
|
circulated, are therefore urgent questions of contemporary capitalist
|
|
organisation. As cultural producers are thrust into the full
|
|
intensity of globally dispersed, just-in-time production, new images
|
|
of creative inspiration and output are required that sit tidily within
|
|
the systematised processes of the global market. Creativity must be
|
|
rendered comprehensible, transparent and rational: there can be none
|
|
of the destructive excesses evident in the lives of many of the
|
|
greatest artists of European history. Creativity must circulate
|
|
cleanly and quickly, and it should leave no dirty remainder. For what
|
|
interests Hollywood, and the market in general, is not creativity as a
|
|
complex human process, weighed down in bodies and relationships and
|
|
empty days, but creativity as an abstraction, free of irrationality
|
|
and pain, and light enough to hover like a great logo above the
|
|
continents.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps, as the logic of systematised production occupies the terrain
|
|
of human creativitymore completely, we will reach a stage where we
|
|
surrender all knowledge about this troubling domain, and it will
|
|
become entirely alien to us. Perhaps one day we will be terrified of
|
|
what explosive dangers might rise up from the creativity of human
|
|
beings.
|
|
|
|
[1] http://mako.cc/writing/toward_a_standard_of_freedom.html
|
|
|
|
[2] http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0610/msg00025.html
|
|
|
|
[3] http://ranadasgupta.com/texts.asp?text_id=45
|
|
|
|
[4] http://www.themobilecity.nl/2008/01/05/designing-for-locative-media-seamless-or-seamful-experiences/
|
|
|
|
|
|
- --
|
|
|
|
jaromil, dyne.org developer, http://jaromil.dyne.org
|
|
|
|
GPG: 779F E8B5 47C7 3A89 4112 64D0 7B64 3184 B534 0B5E</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.5</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Media Mutations - Life | Registration | Simulation (was: Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis)</subject>
|
|
<from>xname</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 17 May 2009 15:40:16 +0200 (CEST)</date>
|
|
<content>> jaromil said:
|
|
> Montevideo / Time Based Arts ... which is now called Nederlands
|
|
> Instituut voor Mediakunst (NIMK, BTW)
|
|
> if we speak of a national institute that started in a squat in
|
|
> Amsterdam 30 years ago
|
|
|
|
Hello.
|
|
|
|
I did not remember that the 'Nimk' was started in a squat: isn't this the
|
|
story of Paradiso and Melkweg?
|
|
|
|
As far as I know the 'Netherlands Media Art Institute' was born when
|
|
'Monte Video' and 'Time Based Arts' merged (1993).
|
|
|
|
Monte Video was founded by René Coelho in 1978, and initially operated
|
|
from his house in Amsterdam. (was that squatted? I tend to doubt.)
|
|
Monte Video focused on video art and provided equipment for producing
|
|
works and space to show them (soon collecting and distributing...
|
|
video-tapes!).
|
|
|
|
Time Based Arts was founded in 1983 by the Association of Video Artists,
|
|
so it was an artists run association creating a network for distribution;
|
|
it was more performance oriented than Monte Video, according to the story
|
|
that was narrated to me, and which I deduced from the collection. (Can
|
|
anyone confirm this, please?)
|
|
Were they squatting? But they were getting funding...
|
|
I am somewhat curious.
|
|
|
|
Maybe other people on this list know more.
|
|
|
|
There is a page of history on the nimk.nl, but i saw no wikipedia entry on
|
|
this topic.
|
|
I find the *story of this institute quite beautiful and paradigmatic in
|
|
the development of the (non-linear) chain of media mutations (which could
|
|
off course be expanded):
|
|
|
|
happening/performance (art=life)
|
|
electronic art
|
|
video-art (art=registration)
|
|
media-art, software-art (art=simulation)
|
|
|
|
I paste it below.
|
|
|
|
Best,
|
|
Eleonora
|
|
|
|
===
|
|
|
|
**History**
|
|
|
|
1978
|
|
Monte Video is founded by René Coelho. From his home on the Singel in
|
|
Amsterdam he makes equipment and documentation available, and furnishes
|
|
one room as a gallery. The first video artist whose work is shown here on
|
|
the Singel was Livinus van de Bundt, Coelho's inspiration. Other artists,
|
|
such as Bill Viola, Gary Hill, Shelly Silver and Gabor Body, soon make
|
|
contact. It is not long before Monte Video has a large selection of works
|
|
available for rental.
|
|
|
|
1983
|
|
Thanks to government funding Monte Video is able to move to Amsterdam
|
|
North. There is now sufficient space to offer regular presentations. Not
|
|
only Dutch artists, but also those from other countries are given a chance
|
|
to show their videos or installations.
|
|
|
|
1986
|
|
Government funding received by Monte Video is cut back to almost nothing.
|
|
Monte Video does receive several small transitional grants from the city
|
|
of Amsterdam.
|
|
Time Based Arts, which had been founded in 1983 by the Association of
|
|
Video Artists, is fast becoming well-known as a distributor of video art,
|
|
and continues receiving government funding.
|
|
|
|
1986-1993
|
|
René Coelho continues on his own. Monte Video moves back to his home on
|
|
the Singel. The acquisition of production facilities, distribution,
|
|
documentation and promotion goes on, financed from his own income and by
|
|
organizing large projects. One of these, as an example, was 'Imago', an
|
|
exhibition of Dutch video installations which toured worldwide for five
|
|
years beginning in 1990. There were also plans laid for the first
|
|
conservation programs for video art.
|
|
The chairman of Time Based Arts, Aart van Barneveld, died; his death was
|
|
followed by many conflicts within the organization. In the early 1990s
|
|
Time Based Arts also lost its subsidies and threatened to go under. Monte
|
|
Video and Time Based Arts decide to provide a joint art program for
|
|
Amsterdam cable TV, Channel Zero.
|
|
|
|
1993
|
|
Time Based Arts merges with Monte Video. Their work is continued under the
|
|
new name of Netherlands Media Art Institute, Montevideo/Time Based Arts.
|
|
This fusion does free up national funding. In both 1997 and 2001 the
|
|
grants are expanded and converted into a structural subsidy for four
|
|
years.
|
|
|
|
1993-2002
|
|
The Netherlands Media Art Institute moves twice, in 1994 to the Spuistraat
|
|
and in 1997 to its present location on the Keizersgracht.
|
|
The Institute continues to grow through these years, and adopts the
|
|
following mission statement: The Netherlands Media Art Institute supports
|
|
media art in three core areas: presentation, research and conservation. At
|
|
the same time, through its facilities it offers extensive services for
|
|
artists and art institutions. Among these services are educational
|
|
programs, to be developed to accompany all activities.
|
|
|
|
and
|
|
|
|
**History of the Collection**
|
|
|
|
The collection of the Netherlands Media Art Institute, Montevideo/Time
|
|
Based Arts reflects the turbulent history of the Institute. In addition to
|
|
the collection of Monte Video, the predecessor of the Netherlands Media
|
|
Art Institute, the Institute administers the collections of four
|
|
institutions: the Lijnbaan Center (1970-1982), Time Based Arts
|
|
(1983-1994), De Appel (1975-1983) and the Institute Collection
|
|
Netherlands. This combination of artists' initiatives (Time Based Arts, De
|
|
Appel and the Lijnbaan Center) and more formal institutions (Institute
|
|
Collection Netherlands and the present Netherlands Media Art Institute)
|
|
affords the collection a surprising diversity. In addition to renowned
|
|
artists like Bill Viola, Nam June Paik and Gary Hill (who were represented
|
|
in the collection as far back as the 1970s), there are internationally
|
|
known Dutch artists who experimented with the medium for only a short
|
|
period in the 1970s, such as Marinus Boezem, Jan van Munster and Pieter
|
|
Engels.
|
|
Before any institutions at all had yet been created for the purpose of
|
|
collecting small centers were set up in various parts of The Netherlands
|
|
which facilitated and promoted the use of video by and for artists. The
|
|
earliest examples of this were Agora Studios in Maastricht, the Lijnbaan
|
|
Center in Rotterdam (itself a merger of the studio of Venster in Rotterdam
|
|
and the video studio which was set up for the Sonsbeek exhibition in 1971
|
|
in Arnhem), and a couple of individuals such as the artists Miguel-Ángel
|
|
Cárdenas and Jack Moore in Amsterdam, who made their cameras available for
|
|
other artists. Many of the works which were made in this earliest period
|
|
of Dutch video art only surfaced from oblivion in the course of the 1990s.
|
|
Surprising discoveries among them are the works of Dennis Oppenheim, Terry
|
|
Fox, Wim Gijzen, Nan Hoover and Tajiri.
|
|
|
|
With the arrival of the collection of De Appel an enormously rich
|
|
collection of video records of performances was added. De Appel flourished
|
|
in the 1970s as one of the most progressive international work sites for
|
|
performance art. The collection of this institution contained unique works
|
|
by Vito Acconci, Laurie Anderson, Gina Pane, Carolee Schneemann and
|
|
others. But in addition to records of events in her own gallery, Wies
|
|
Smalls, the founder of De Appel, also built up a collection of
|
|
international video art in order to enable the Dutch public to become
|
|
acquainted with what was happening internationally, including work by
|
|
Douglas Davis, Ulrike Rosenbach, Joan Jonas and Alison Knowles.
|
|
|
|
In the early 1980s, with De Appel as its base, efforts were begun to
|
|
establish an association for video artists, which later created the Time
|
|
Based Arts Foundation. The collection of this artists' association, in
|
|
addition to works by artists based in The Netherlands, such as
|
|
Abramovic/Ulay, Hooykaas/Stansfield, Ben d'Armagnac, Christine Chiffrun
|
|
and Lydia Schouten, also included work by international artists like Mona
|
|
Hatoum and General Idea.
|
|
Time Based Arts maintained an active collection policy, in which any
|
|
artist who worked with video could try to have his or her work included in
|
|
the collection. As it grew the collection became enormously diverse and
|
|
afforded a good overview of the various ways that video could be employed
|
|
in the visual arts. Through in to the 1990s Time Based Arts played an
|
|
important role in the collection, distribution and support of video art
|
|
until, in 1994, under pressure from the municipal authorities of
|
|
Amsterdam, it entered into a merger with Monte Video.
|
|
|
|
René Coelho began his video gallery Monte Video in 1978, and in doing so
|
|
laid the foundation for the present Institute. Monte Video was a gallery
|
|
which specialized in electronic art and especially in video art that
|
|
sought out the creative possibilities and qualities of the medium itself.
|
|
An important impetus for establishing the institution was the work of the
|
|
Dutch video pioneer Livinus van de Bundt. He was therefore the first
|
|
artist to be shown in the gallery. Later the Vasulkas, Bert Schutter,
|
|
Peter Bogers, Matthew Schlanger and many others followed. In addition to
|
|
the works that were to be seen in the gallery, Monte Video began to be
|
|
active in collecting and distributing work. Bill Viola, Gary Hill, Shelly
|
|
Silver and Gabor Body were for instance artists who 'stabled' their work
|
|
with Monte Video. The gallery owed its international success chiefly to
|
|
this. When in the 1990s the conservation of video works became a pressing
|
|
problem, the then merged Montevideo/Time Based Arts established itself as
|
|
the goad and later as the center of technical expertise for carrying out
|
|
the Conservation of Dutch Video Art project. As well as the collections
|
|
described above, there was integral cooperation with museums that over the
|
|
course of time had also collected video work. In addition to much
|
|
technical research, the conservation efforts also prompted considerable
|
|
recording work and research into content. Among questions dealt with were
|
|
the status of the vehicle, the significance of the material chosen and
|
|
establishing the boundary conditions for proper exhibition. Because of the
|
|
differences in approach among the institutions from which they came,
|
|
considerable time was spent integrating the collections with one another,
|
|
and getting the possibilities for the use of the works coordinated with
|
|
one another. But now, with the end of the conservation project in sight,
|
|
the gaps between the collections appear to be closing ever more, and we
|
|
can proudly present our multi-faceted collection to the public, as we do
|
|
here.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.6</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Media Mutations - Life | Registration | Simulation (was: Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis)</subject>
|
|
<from>Matze Schmidt</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 18 May 2009 11:22:02 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>>> [...] Arts
|
|
|
|
> what art
|
|
|
|
> True, art
|
|
|
|
In short: No money (as one of the forms of profit) without art, no art
|
|
without politics. This is a simple formula and any Baudrillard would
|
|
have secretly subcribed this, even in an epoch of ended (Hegel and
|
|
followers) or never realized (Debord and followers) art. The fact is,
|
|
we* don't need art as art, but -- and someone like jaromil shows this
|
|
to us** -- we need other conditions, as painting, code or video or
|
|
diy-cooking if you like, I don't care -- changing media is always good.
|
|
But we are not able to produce the conditions 'now' -- like someone like
|
|
jaromil is may thinking -- because the conditions produce us, alienate
|
|
us; they will allways produce us (products produce consumption and vice
|
|
versa), but these conditions are (straightforward now) have to be
|
|
uncaged from ruling modes of production, in the meant sector reproduced
|
|
by national institutions (ZKM in Germany, Ex-Montevideo in NL, your
|
|
personal MTV at home). The New Media Arts Crisis is not my crisis, It's
|
|
just the crisis of the middle-class (Yuppie or not, fallen programmer or
|
|
rising video-installer) in form of some arts with newer or older media,
|
|
may it a t-shirt or an lcd. So there is no aftermath here but the
|
|
effects of a mixed up (I love this status and condition) highbrow, baby!
|
|
elite meshed with an alternative "green" and independent buisness party
|
|
with no idea of real coding out there (forget networks, they are roped
|
|
parties).
|
|
__________
|
|
* and ** Me, I and you as the readers who follows this text.
|
|
|
|
M</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Renee Turner</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Fri, 15 May 2009 18:07:37 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Hi Florian,
|
|
|
|
You point towards a classic issue, the relevance of context. What do
|
|
different registers (fine art, media art, design, activism, popular
|
|
culture etc.) give to a particular work and what does a categorization
|
|
exclude, meaning what does it make *impossible*. Every register
|
|
influences interpretation, (in)visibility, production and funding.
|
|
|
|
> Since the 1990s, the so-called Fine Arts do provide no really
|
|
> desirable environment either, likely they're even worse. It is
|
|
> telling enough that the term "Fine Art" suddenly has become a
|
|
> universally accepted standard while, not a long time ago, any
|
|
> self-respecting contemporary artist would have fiercely rejected
|
|
> if not opposed it. In the past ten years of reading contemporary
|
|
> art magazines or visiting art biennales and Documentas, I've been
|
|
> flabbergasted by the lack of vision and radicalism in this field. It
|
|
> has morphed, somewhat comparable to New (composed) Music after the
|
|
> 1960s, into an academic discourse ruled by a neo-bourgeois jet set
|
|
> of hipster curators posing as cultural theorists on the basis of a
|
|
> not-even-half-baked knowledge and recycling of postmodern philosophy
|
|
> and cultural studies. The system consists of artists who have been
|
|
> academically trained to produce works - along with non-understood
|
|
> theory lingo - that fit the required curatorial buzz.
|
|
|
|
Can you speak more specifically about which curators, what art
|
|
educational programs, which artists and what practices? For a
|
|
constructive debate, it's important to avoid caricatures, otherwise
|
|
there's a risk of creating false enemies, or missing out on how to
|
|
best counter the real ones.
|
|
|
|
And as an aside, I have to admit when I read "not-even-half-baked
|
|
knowledge" and "non-understood, I caught myself wondering who are
|
|
the guardians of proper interpretation when it comes to theory. (not
|
|
to mention, which theories) After all, couldn't theory be mutable in
|
|
different contexts or even hackable? In other words, can it too be
|
|
practiced, tested and changed once it hits the ground or encounters a
|
|
specific situation or discipline?
|
|
|
|
> Along with this development, the paradigm of the white cube and art
|
|
> works as good-looking exhibition objects has become stronger than
|
|
> ever before and rules out any art practice not fitting this format.
|
|
|
|
It's true the white cube is a dominant force to be reckoned
|
|
with (or not, depending on what art world you dwell in ;-), but
|
|
interventionists/social/political practices have also continued....
|
|
(both of the digital and analog sort). You mention UBERMORGEN, and I
|
|
would add The Temporary Travel Office, SubRosa, Mongrel, AUDC, Jorge
|
|
Blasco's Cultures of the Archive, Marcelo Exposito's various projects,
|
|
The Center for Land Use Interpretation, Beatriz da Costa and others...
|
|
Maybe "tactical" is a red thread through these works?
|
|
|
|
> All the while, the system thrives on the delusion that it still
|
|
> represents visual art as a whole although, unlike, for example, in
|
|
> film where 'highbrow' and 'lowbrow' still coexist, its popular forms
|
|
> like comic books, tattoos, fantasy figurines, t-shirt illustrations,
|
|
> wildlife paintings... have long been excluded from its system.
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
hmmmm....not sure about this, having worked as a hybrid artist/
|
|
designer/curator/media artist/collaborator for some time now, again
|
|
I reiterate that there are many different artworlds (and for that
|
|
matter artists/inhabitants/vagrants). Sometimes they intersect, rub
|
|
next to each other, come into agitation or simply run on parallel
|
|
tracks. (Not too disimilar from the so-called new media world.) Think
|
|
of open source practitioners, the Max/Flash folk, and those that poach
|
|
the web's detritus for their own purposes, they're all a part of new
|
|
media arts, but each tend to dwell in different corners of the digital
|
|
universe (or maybe not, if you're one of those cross-pollinators :-)
|
|
|
|
> Instead, we get artists like Mike Kelley all over the art
|
|
> world in whose work I'm either not getting something or indeed
|
|
> seeing the Emperor's new clothes. ("Review" babble like
|
|
> http://www.frieze.com/issue/article/tomorrow_never_comes1/ affirms
|
|
> the suspicion that the art world has no clue either.)
|
|
|
|
I haven't seen this particular work so hesitate to judge. I do however
|
|
find it a little problematic to make sweeping statements about the
|
|
Emperor's New Clothes and the "art world's" cluelessness based on one
|
|
review and one artist.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>> Director Heiner Holtappels opened by noticing that new media art
|
|
>> is not easily accepted by fine art. Traditional art has become
|
|
>> eclecticism. According to Heiner, all art is technology based.
|
|
>
|
|
> This is true, yet contemporary art has mostly given up on reflecting
|
|
> its media. [I can almost hear an iPhone-wearing curator saying that
|
|
> reflecting one's media is outmoded modernism.]
|
|
|
|
ouch, how stereotypes do prevail. I wonder if there would be a
|
|
paradigm shift if he/she had been envisioned with a pre-paid nokia.
|
|
;-)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Renee
|
|
http://www.geuzen.org/
|
|
http://www.fudgethefacts.com/
|
|
http://www.geuzen.org/female_icons/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.8</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sat, 23 May 2009 02:05:03 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Hey Renee,
|
|
|
|
> You point towards a classic issue, the relevance of context. What do
|
|
> different registers (fine art, media art, design, activism, popular
|
|
> culture etc.) give to a particular work and what does a categorization
|
|
> exclude, meaning what does it make *impossible*. Every register
|
|
> influences interpretation, (in)visibility, production and funding.
|
|
|
|
Yeah, and inevitably, these registers are not just different chosen
|
|
perspectives we have on particular works, but also institutional and
|
|
disciplinary contexts in which workers have to put their work and
|
|
whose written and unwritten rules they can't avoid abiding.
|
|
|
|
> Can you speak more specifically about which curators, what art
|
|
> educational programs, which artists and what practices?
|
|
|
|
I was really thinking of the contemporary art system as it has been
|
|
described by its own protagonists, for example in Isabelle Graw's
|
|
2008 book "Der grosse Preis", or has been analyzed, with means that
|
|
really deserve the term "artistic research", by Hans Haacke as early
|
|
as in the 1970s in such pieces as "The Chocolate Master". And many
|
|
people have criticized that system from within, from Henry Flynt in
|
|
the 1960s to the writer and "Thing Hamburg"-blogger Michel Chevalier
|
|
today. I think it is legitimate to make a sweepingly general critique
|
|
of the contemporary art system just as it is legitimate to generally
|
|
criticize and attack the music industry and contemporary popular music
|
|
system for example. That doesn't mean that there would be absolutely
|
|
no good music coming out of that system. But unlike other culture
|
|
industries, the contemporary (Fine) Art system often falsely believes
|
|
in its own autonomy. And it's my general experience and opinion that
|
|
the art I'm more interested in is more often than not to be found in
|
|
places outside that system. In the 1960s, this was true for Fluxus
|
|
and Situationism, in the 1970s and 1980s for the Mail Art Network and
|
|
postpunk, and in the 1990s for Net.art, the Luther Blissett project or
|
|
the alternative pornography movement. Today, to speak in terms of our
|
|
both hometown Rotterdam, I'm finding the interesting contemporary arts
|
|
at places like WORM and De Player and only rarely at Witte de With,
|
|
for example.
|
|
|
|
> For a constructive debate, it's important to avoid caricatures,
|
|
> otherwise there's a risk of creating false enemies, or missing out
|
|
> on how to best counter the real ones.
|
|
|
|
Well, this is true, and I admit that my posting was polemical
|
|
- and emotional. My gripes with the contemporary art
|
|
system are also based on bad personal experience and
|
|
confrontations such as the one with the "Just Do It" exhibition
|
|
<http://www.mail-archive.com/nettime-l {AT} bbs.thing.net/msg02876.html>.
|
|
|
|
> hmmmm....not sure about this, having worked as a hybrid artist/
|
|
> designer/curator/media artist/collaborator for some time now, again
|
|
> I reiterate that there are many different artworlds (and for that
|
|
> matter artists/inhabitants/vagrants).
|
|
|
|
Indeed. It's just that the particular art world I mentioned above
|
|
- and which can be roughly described as the art world of the many
|
|
biennials, the Documenta, contemporary art spaces like PS.1 and KW,
|
|
contemporary art journals like October, Texte zur Kunst, Springerin
|
|
and Metropolis M, too often monopolizes the term "art" for the art
|
|
that it represents. Admittedly, its system can be permissive and
|
|
include 'outside' practices, particularly when a curatorial subject
|
|
requires it. However, it would be possible to map the institutions
|
|
mentioned above just by the overlap of the people they involve,
|
|
and come up with a fairly good representation of what makes up
|
|
contemporary art.
|
|
|
|
They same is true, no doubt, if you take ars electronica, transmediale
|
|
and ISEA, plus Leonardo, Neural, Rhizome and Nettime, ZKM and ICC
|
|
Tokyo, and pin down the system "media art". But just as that latter
|
|
system is now being - deservedly - questioned and undergoing a huge
|
|
if not terminal structural crisis, I think it is as legitimate to
|
|
question the contemporary Fine Art system, and the Western concept of
|
|
autonomous art. So, going back to Geert's initial report about the
|
|
discussion about the crisis of "Media Art" at Montevideo Amsterdam,
|
|
I think that it can't be a solution to integrate a very questionable
|
|
"media art" system into an equally questionable contemporary art
|
|
system. [As it is now happening, in education, too, for example in the
|
|
Zurich art school media department where Felix Stalder teaches, and
|
|
where the media programme has been rolled back into Fine Art on the
|
|
Master level.]
|
|
|
|
> Sometimes they intersect, rub next to each other, come into
|
|
> agitation or simply run on parallel tracks. (Not too disimilar from
|
|
> the so-called new media world.) Think of open source practitioners,
|
|
> the Max/Flash folk, and those that poach the web's detritus for
|
|
> their own purposes, they're all a part of new media arts, but each
|
|
> tend to dwell in different corners of the digital notion universe
|
|
> (or maybe not, if you're one of those cross-pollinators :-)
|
|
|
|
Yep, only that what you describe above is really declining and may not
|
|
see much art funding or support in the future. The writing is on the
|
|
wall.
|
|
|
|
> >> Director Heiner Holtappels opened by noticing that new media art
|
|
> >> is not easily accepted by fine art. Traditional art has become
|
|
> >> eclecticism. According to Heiner, all art is technology based.
|
|
> >
|
|
> > This is true, yet contemporary art has mostly given up on
|
|
> > reflecting its media. [I can almost hear an iPhone-wearing curator
|
|
> > saying that reflecting one's media is outmoded modernism.]
|
|
>
|
|
> ouch, how stereotypes do prevail. I wonder if there would be a
|
|
> paradigm shift if he/she had been envisioned with a pre-paid nokia.
|
|
> ;-)
|
|
|
|
I should have told that the above example was taken from a real
|
|
life experience, although it's admittedly a deliberate caricature
|
|
when I I blew it out of proportion as above. I agree very much with
|
|
Brian that artistic practices (to put it as broadly) are deeply
|
|
intertwined in culture and communication. There's a good chance,
|
|
and I really mean this, that I am getting old - in punk terms:
|
|
a boring old fart - who's insisting on outmoded viewpoints. But
|
|
I think that critiques of modernism, as legitimate as they are,
|
|
become problematic when they're used to legitimize and maintain the
|
|
status quo. [An extreme example is the contemporary art gallery
|
|
scene and private collections in Berlin and their intrinsic links to
|
|
the German discourse of "Neue Bürgerlichkeit" ("new bourgeoisie")
|
|
<http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neue_Bürgerlichkeit>.] The current
|
|
economic, political and social developments should render all
|
|
notions of posthistoire and non-rupture in the fabric of culture and
|
|
communication, and hence also in the arts, all the more obsolete.
|
|
They also question the bourgeois insistence on artistic practice as a
|
|
product of individual subjectivity. And finally, the contemporary art
|
|
field has been much ahead of the media art system in postcolonialism;
|
|
however, if this reflection is serious, it should not exclude the
|
|
notion and system of art itself.
|
|
|
|
Well, anyway, since the Geuzen collective of which you're a member
|
|
operates in its own carefully chosen grey zone between art, activism,
|
|
design, media, research and education, I actually think that our
|
|
standpoints are quite similar, just that our points of departure
|
|
regarding the usefulness of the contemporary art system might
|
|
differ. For me, the projects of De Geuzen are a very good example
|
|
for a post-autonomous artistic practice. Again, although I'm no
|
|
friend of the media art system, I'm quite sure that it would be
|
|
practices like those of the Geuzen that would suffer and struggle
|
|
to find institutional support once the "media art" system will
|
|
have vanished and been replaced with the existing contemporary art
|
|
system (particularly the more cut-throat kind of the USA, Germany
|
|
and England, with people who are anxious not to pollute Fine Art
|
|
with applied or sociocultural practices they hate and detest as
|
|
non-artistic [1].).
|
|
|
|
Florian
|
|
|
|
|
|
[1] a good example would be Berlin's Künstlerhaus Bethanien, a renown
|
|
contemporary arts space, whose director Christoph Tannert bitterly
|
|
fights a group of squatters and their sociocultural center in his own
|
|
building.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
blog: http://en.pleintekst.nl
|
|
homepage: http://cramer.pleintekst.nl:70
|
|
gopher://cramer.pleintekst.nl</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.9</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Renee Turner</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 25 May 2009 13:37:41 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Hi Florian,
|
|
|
|
My apologies for a slightly delayed response. I completely agree that
|
|
there are aspects within the art world which need critical scrutiny. I
|
|
was simply asking for specificity, and I appreciate that you've taken
|
|
the time to clarify.
|
|
|
|
> But unlike other culture industries, the contemporary (Fine) Art
|
|
> system often falsely believes in its own autonomy.
|
|
|
|
I wonder if this is true. Feminist/post colonial practices have often
|
|
argued the opposite and with much efficacy. Think of Jean Fisher's
|
|
critical texts, Adrian Piper's work and Lucy Lippard's writing and
|
|
curatorial projects and even the recent educational department at
|
|
Goldsmiths of Irit Rogoff; all of these practices seem to point to an
|
|
art world/system which is political, embodied and implicated.
|
|
|
|
> And it's my general experience and opinion that the art I'm
|
|
> more interested in is more often than not to be found in places
|
|
> outside that system. In the 1960s, this was true for Fluxus and
|
|
> Situationism, in the 1970s and 1980s for the Mail Art Network and
|
|
> postpunk, and in the 1990s for Net.art, the Luther Blissett project
|
|
> or the alternative pornography movement.
|
|
|
|
I'm also interested these movements, practices, antics/pranktics,
|
|
but unlike you, I see them as a part of a complex and multifaceted
|
|
art world (not outside of it). I find it problematic to define the
|
|
system as only popular art mags, the market and large institutions
|
|
when there's so much other interesting work going on. (not to mention,
|
|
how would you classify those of us involved in art education?)
|
|
|
|
> Today, to speak in terms of our both hometown Rotterdam, I'm finding
|
|
> the interesting contemporary arts at places like WORM and De Player
|
|
> and only rarely at Witte de With, for example.
|
|
|
|
Yes, here we can look into specific curatorial approaches and talk
|
|
about who these various institutions and orgs are addressing. (this
|
|
takes more time than I have now... but I'm nonetheless interested in
|
|
exploring this further at a later juncture) >> > Indeed. It's just
|
|
that the particular art world I mentioned above > - and which can
|
|
be roughly described as the art world of the many > biennials, the
|
|
Documenta, contemporary art spaces like PS.1 and KW, > contemporary
|
|
art journals like October, Texte zur Kunst, Springerin > and
|
|
Metropolis M, too often monopolizes the term "art" for the art > that
|
|
it represents. Admittedly, its system can be permissive and > include
|
|
'outside' practices, particularly when a curatorial subject > requires
|
|
it. However, it would be possible to map the institutions > mentioned
|
|
above just by the overlap of the people they involve, > and come up
|
|
with a fairly good representation of what makes up > contemporary art.
|
|
|
|
I agree, this *is* truly the crux. It's crucial to map the overlap of
|
|
people/institutions and ask ourselves who's setting the agenda, who's
|
|
controlling the funding and whose *corner* of art world is being
|
|
represented, and moreover, what do these representations make
|
|
impossible, meaning what do they render invisible.
|
|
|
|
|
|
> They same is true, no doubt, if you take ars electronica,
|
|
> transmediale and ISEA, plus Leonardo, Neural, Rhizome and Nettime,
|
|
> ZKM and ICC Tokyo, and pin down the system "media art". But just
|
|
> as that latter system is now being - deservedly - questioned and
|
|
> undergoing a huge if not terminal structural crisis, I think it is
|
|
> as legitimate to question the contemporary Fine Art system, and the
|
|
> Western concept of autonomous art.
|
|
|
|
It's absolutely legitimate to question art's autonomy, and it's been
|
|
happening for some time now. Besides the previous examples listed
|
|
above, recently there has been much debate about the proliferation of
|
|
biennials how art feeds into a neoliberal agenda.
|
|
|
|
> So, going back to Geert's initial report about the discussion about
|
|
> the crisis of "Media Art" at Montevideo Amsterdam, I think that it
|
|
> can't be a solution to integrate a very questionable "media art"
|
|
> system into an equally questionable contemporary art system. [As it
|
|
> is now happening, in education, too, for example in the Zurich art
|
|
> school media department where Felix Stalder teaches, and where the
|
|
> media programme has been rolled back into Fine Art on the Master
|
|
> level.]
|
|
|
|
In many respects this cycle has happened to photography (remember
|
|
when John Tagg wrote that no history of art photography could be
|
|
written without taking into account, pornography, daguerreotypes,
|
|
propaganda and family snapshots.) Or video's roots in activism,
|
|
home videos, street journalism (Martha Rosler's essay: Shedding the
|
|
Utopian Moment).... there's much to learn from these histories of
|
|
assimilation. It's important to look at how institutionalization
|
|
"tames" media...disciplines the discipline. But while questioning the
|
|
systems of Fine Art, Media Art etc, I think as producers, viewers,
|
|
educators and implicated accomplices, it's imperative to ask what do
|
|
we want to see happen or change.
|
|
|
|
As a graduate student in the eighties, I was taught by Harmony
|
|
Hammond, a painter and co-founder of Heresies. In her painting
|
|
class, she reserved time to present her personal collection of
|
|
artists' works she felt were under-represented by the mainstream art
|
|
world. It was a small but extremely powerful gesture. Eventually, in
|
|
2000 the collection was published under the title, Lesbian Art in
|
|
America: A Contemporary History. I learned much from Harmony, but
|
|
the most influential part of her teaching was watching her practice
|
|
*otherwise*.
|
|
|
|
So in this context, I'm asking myself how can I/we practice
|
|
*otherwise* and how might that *doing* nudge or broaden the scope of
|
|
dominant discourses and visual regimes.
|
|
|
|
best,
|
|
|
|
Renee
|
|
http://www.geuzen.org/
|
|
http://www.fudgethefacts.com/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.10</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>carlos katastrofsky</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 17 May 2009 10:59:58 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
what i am always wondering about is why the media arts field is so
|
|
concerned with its media. is dealing with "new media" or "old media"
|
|
an excuse for making good or bad art? IMO defining art by its media
|
|
is on the same level as defining art by its subject. not getting over
|
|
these definitions will result in a ghetto-situation sooner or later.
|
|
the problem -IMHO- is not that media art is not recognized by the fine
|
|
art world but that the fine art world is dealing with other subjects.
|
|
when was the last big exhibition dealing solely with "painting" or
|
|
"sculpture" you've seen? ars electronica and the others are doing that
|
|
every year: "new media art" with changing subtitles.
|
|
|
|
the same problem persists when new media artists and theorists
|
|
insist on "politicalness" and "radicality". those terms don't say
|
|
anything about certain works either, no matter which media is used
|
|
in it. they only say that they may be recognised as "political" in a
|
|
certain time in a certain context. but that doesn't say anything about
|
|
it's "artness" either. "art doesn't become art by having specific
|
|
characteristics but by a specific kind of processual reference to it."
|
|
(J. Rebentisch, Aesthetik der Installation)
|
|
|
|
and -please hit me hard if i'm wrong- the "fine art world" questions
|
|
such things. this "eclecticism" and "cluelesness" some are claiming
|
|
exist, but despite the ugly quest for the next blockbuster there is a
|
|
lively scene developing things further without thinking about making
|
|
"political art" or "painting". seen from this point of view i think
|
|
that hans' claim "The aim should be Art, not Politics." is totally
|
|
right, even if it is harshly critisized by geert. to put it bluntly:
|
|
if i want to learn something about politics i would read a book with
|
|
proper information about it and not go to see art that repeats the
|
|
common sense that there are bad things existing in our world. i want
|
|
to see art. neither new media nor politics.
|
|
|
|
carlos
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
http://katastrofsky.cont3xt.net
|
|
http://cont3xt.net</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.11</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Rama Hoetzlein</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 17 May 2009 11:48:02 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>i agree.. i'm new to nettime, but following it silently until now, and
|
|
have been doing research in this area.
|
|
here are a few earlier notes i've made on this topic:
|
|
http://www.rchoetzlein.com/theory/
|
|
|
|
in my view, the problem is that new media theory - the theory side
|
|
anyway (not the art) - is largely defined by what we read from new media
|
|
theorists, such as lev manovich and baudrillard. yet these philosophers
|
|
do their primary work in "media theory" itself, that is the
|
|
anthropological study of how media influences culture. thus, their
|
|
central message is that media has meaning, and meaning changes culture:
|
|
|
|
"True, art is on the periphery for me. I don't really identify with it.
|
|
I would even say that I have the same negative prejudice towards art
|
|
that I do toward culture in general. My point of view is
|
|
anthropological. From this perspective, art no longer seems to have a
|
|
vital function; it is afflicted by the same fate that extinguishes
|
|
value, by the same loss of transcendence." - Jean Baudrillard
|
|
|
|
i do not deny their contributions to media theory of course, but despite
|
|
the fact that they may be open about their field of study (as this quote
|
|
shows), the new media arts has not moved to define itself as an "art
|
|
form", but rather defines itself in terms of media. of course, as an
|
|
artist, i disagree about defining media art in such post-modernist terms
|
|
(that is, purely as an outgrowth of culture). contrast the view of art
|
|
above with this one:
|
|
|
|
"The activity of art is based on the fact that one, receiving through
|
|
his or her sense of hearing or sight another's expression of feeling, is
|
|
capable of experiencing the emotion which moved the one who expressed
|
|
it." - Leo Tolstoy
|
|
|
|
New media art should be defined from an art-philosophical perspective.
|
|
In this view, meaning is present in all works, to varying degrees,
|
|
regardless of how they might be appropriated by culture. At what time is
|
|
history was art not appropriated by culture? None the less, people
|
|
continued to create art. The process of art-making is one of creating
|
|
meaning, and this relation between the artist and the work is not
|
|
changed despite how the object is ultimately appreciated, used, or
|
|
abused by culture.
|
|
|
|
-rama hoetzlein</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.12</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Brian Holmes</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 17 May 2009 23:32:13 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Rama Hoetzlein wrote:
|
|
|
|
> New media art should be defined from an art-philosophical
|
|
> perspective. In this view, meaning is present in all works, to
|
|
> varying degrees, regardless of how they might be appropriated
|
|
> by culture. At what time in history was art not appropriated by
|
|
> culture? None the less, people continued to create art. The process
|
|
> of art-making is one of creating meaning, and this relation between
|
|
> the artist and the work is not changed despite how the object is
|
|
> ultimately appreciated, used, or abused by culture.
|
|
|
|
It's great to read such a fundamental comment. I shall add something.
|
|
My viewpoint includes both Tolstoy's and Baudrillard's. I find that
|
|
informatic art (my own off-the-cuff term, but surely better than new
|
|
media) is compelling precisely when it places subjective expression
|
|
within the most strongly coercive social arena of our time, namely
|
|
the digital networks. Your idea that there is an art-philosophical
|
|
perspective that could exclude or bypass social determinism seems,
|
|
begging your pardon, somewhat naive. What is more, I think all the
|
|
interest of art itself disappears when it is shorn from the contexts
|
|
of power and held up as a pure conductor of subjectivity. Approached
|
|
in that way, the art work tends to become no more than a mirror for
|
|
our own emotions and fantasies -- far from any state of empathy,
|
|
Einfuhlung or whatever one chooses to call it. So I am not surprised
|
|
that you move from Tolstoy's fascinating quote (reproduced below) to
|
|
the "relation between the artist and the work." I guess I am more
|
|
interested in, well, media: the way the work relates the artist to
|
|
others.
|
|
|
|
However, your observation about new media theory (Kittler and McLuhan
|
|
were recently mentioned here) is spot on. What we are given from
|
|
the podium, over and over again, are lessons about the power of
|
|
technoscientific systems. The predicament of the human singularity,
|
|
caught within the net of determinisms yet resisting, creating another
|
|
reality and expressing this rather fantastic adventure through
|
|
whatever kind of material or semiotic medium has been chosen, is left
|
|
out of the story, which thereby becomes a monument to the crushing
|
|
regularity of the status quo. The same thing, of course, happens to
|
|
resistant political action in the hands of the sociologists and the
|
|
Heideggerean philosophers of an essential, "historial" alienation.
|
|
Both ethics and aesthetics take it on the chin.
|
|
|
|
In my view, the great inspiration for new media theory has come from
|
|
hackers themselves, who create alternative possibilities for existence
|
|
within the overwhelmingly powerful networked environment. This is why,
|
|
in essays which are inseparably about art and technics, I tend to
|
|
use concepts like "reverse imagineering" or "escaping the overcode."
|
|
Expression, for me, is the rupture of code, an excess which does not
|
|
abolish the labyrinth in which we are caught, but at least opens up a
|
|
possible new path through it.
|
|
|
|
That's one approach. There could be many others. The problem, as
|
|
you point out, is that usually there are not, because the theory
|
|
very rarely meets any actual practice. The necessary discussion of
|
|
technological power holds the center stage. Of course that is easier
|
|
for the whole "new media" social circuit, because then you don't have
|
|
to think very much, or feel very much, or try very hard to find out
|
|
what might be at stake in a particular work.
|
|
|
|
This list, I guess, is about the best place to talk about how to
|
|
approach media art. Thanks to all for starting the conversation. I'm
|
|
ready for more. Let the thousand info-aesthetics bloom!
|
|
|
|
best, BH</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.13</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Rama Hoetzlein</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 17 May 2009 17:24:51 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Brian, thanks for your reply. In general, i'm glad to see that
|
|
we're mostly in agreement. Based on my observations of nettime-l,
|
|
disagreement is often the norm, so I'm glad to see that there is
|
|
some consensus between us that the new media theorists are currently
|
|
the only option we've been given, and that we really need some
|
|
alternatives.. Now, for some responses.
|
|
|
|
> Your idea that there is an art-philosophical perspective that could
|
|
> exclude or bypass social determinism seems, begging your pardon,
|
|
> somewhat naive.
|
|
|
|
I'm not suggesting that art-philosophy can bypass social determinism.
|
|
I have no illusions about the difficulty the artist faces in creating
|
|
any real social change, since my view of art does not negate any of
|
|
the real research done by the media theorists. My own view is that
|
|
the idea of art-for-social-change is long outdated. You suggest
|
|
that hackers are the source of real inspiration in new media theory
|
|
because they alone are able to transform the media itself, and thus
|
|
undermine the system toward some possible escape path. Yet, there
|
|
is no reason to believe that even if the media itself changes, that
|
|
society will too. In my view, the only way we could overcome the
|
|
current technoscientific system would be due to a deep, fundamental
|
|
transformation in all individuals - and while I believe art is
|
|
capable of doing this one person at a time, I don't think any one
|
|
artwork, hacker or otherwise, is capable of really altering the
|
|
technoscientific system we find ourselves in on a global level. Thus,
|
|
all social change we talk about now is still part of that system. This
|
|
is the media theorist perspective, of course - which i agree with -
|
|
but as an artist, its incomplete.
|
|
|
|
The reason I advocate art-philosophy is for the sake of the
|
|
individual, and the field of art itself. While i just said the artist
|
|
is powerless to transform culture, perhaps to a degree greater than
|
|
most would like, the artist is _not_ powerless to transform him or
|
|
herself, and others which that person touches through the art..
|
|
Despite whatever the technoscientific system may do, to create art is
|
|
an intentional act by an individual, and thus has an immutable meaning
|
|
just by virtue of being "created". We get to choose what is created
|
|
(this does not make it good art necessarily).
|
|
|
|
That meaning is present in all work "to varying degrees". By this, i
|
|
mean that we each have a unique relationship to our artwork. For some,
|
|
it is a mirror of personal emotions and fantasies (and probably my
|
|
own work most of the time), while others may be able to communicate
|
|
more.. So, I'm not evaluating art. Some is good, some is not. However,
|
|
having an art-philosophical does not automatically reduce our works to
|
|
emotional fantasies. In fact, it is more likely to result in genuinely
|
|
empathetic works since it creates a solid foundation for art based on
|
|
a philosophy in which art is encouraged to be empathetic, rather than
|
|
responsive to a system.
|
|
|
|
I'm simply stating -- which I think we perhaps both agree with here --
|
|
that so far we have not been given any other alternative view of new
|
|
media art other than that proposed by the new media theorists. The way
|
|
out of this problem is, I believe, through a philosophy of art whereby
|
|
the artist has full awareness of the problems of society (hopefully),
|
|
yet continues to create works of art despite this. It is possible to
|
|
have no illusions about the inability of art to bring about explicit
|
|
social change, but understand that it can bring implicit change
|
|
through individual communication.
|
|
|
|
-rama</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.14</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>ben . craggs</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 18 May 2009 08:42:05 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
> what i am always wondering about is why the media arts field is so
|
|
> concerned with its media. is dealing with "new media" or "old media"
|
|
> an excuse for making good or bad art? IMO defining art by its media
|
|
> is on the same level as defining art by its subject. not getting
|
|
> over these definitions will result in a ghetto-situation sooner or
|
|
> later. the problem -IMHO- is not that media art is not recognized
|
|
> by the fine art world but that the fine art world is dealing with
|
|
> other subjects. when was the last big exhibition dealing solely
|
|
> with "painting" or "sculpture" you've seen? ars electronica and the
|
|
> others are doing that every year: "new media art" with changing
|
|
> subtitles.
|
|
|
|
<...>
|
|
|
|
An interesting addition to this would be the emergence of 'New, new
|
|
media arts'. I am thinking here, of practices in the field currently
|
|
defining itself as bioart. Here the medium that is being manipulated
|
|
is a form of living or sem-living matter, or tissue. Bioartist,
|
|
Eduardo Kac and curator Jens Hauser have sought to specifically
|
|
identify this new art practice, expressly on the basis of the medium
|
|
itself. Bioarts, they argue, are most definitely are not those works
|
|
that take bios or a form of life, as a subject, but manipulate it as a
|
|
medium. That said, the manipulation of living tissue can be executed
|
|
through a number of divergent practices, specific technologies, and it
|
|
is these that seem to be defined by some as the media, not the living
|
|
tissue they manipulate. I guess a somewhat simplistic comparison
|
|
would be between with identification of various 'digital media' in
|
|
abstraction from the advances in computer technology on which they are
|
|
based.
|
|
|
|
My current work in the field of bioart is increasingly
|
|
pushing me towards a frustration at the distinction between
|
|
art/science/media/technology/old/new that recurs in the majority of
|
|
literature, and if I am not wrong seems to predicate this current
|
|
discussion. In the light of these new practices I have been working
|
|
towards re-imagining what art and media are in themselves, as
|
|
technologies and processes not as distinct practices - the specific
|
|
media or declared purpose seem less relevant from this perspective. So
|
|
I wonder whether 'meaning is present in all works, to varying degrees,
|
|
regardless of how they might be appropriated by culture' could be
|
|
extended beyond a simple valorisation of art.
|
|
|
|
It also seems that those new media theorists, such as Manovich and
|
|
Baudrillard are somewhat restricted in their approach in that new
|
|
media is perceived in a somewhat teleological sense, newness for
|
|
the sake of newness, with new theories to match new media - without
|
|
asking what is actually recurring in new media. IMO it seems that
|
|
most new media, are really just old media anyway, particularly so in
|
|
bioart. Is the creative growth of tissue not what we do continually
|
|
as part of our natural bodily processes? Would it be facetious
|
|
then to ask whether all media be considered from this originary
|
|
perspective, negating the discussions about relative newness or
|
|
cultural categorization (ie i's art, it's science, it's technology,
|
|
it's media).
|
|
|
|
Ben</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.15</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>carlos katastrofsky</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 18 May 2009 16:11:26 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
> The way out of this problem is, I believe, through a philosophy of
|
|
> art whereby the artist has full awareness of the problems of society
|
|
> (hopefully), yet continues to create works of art despite this.
|
|
> It is possible to have no illusions about the inability of art to
|
|
> bring about explicit social change, but understand that it can bring
|
|
> implicit change through individual communication.
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
but can "change" be a parameter for art? what is to be changed through
|
|
art? i agree that a "change" in whatever direction is possible but
|
|
IMHO art mustn't be reduced to it. to me art is also someting i can
|
|
admire without thinking of having to change something. in fact even
|
|
if i see some really good "political art" the first step is to admire
|
|
it (wow, great work) and then to think about consequences. art is
|
|
something autonomous. to me such an approach would free it from being
|
|
a mere form of communication, a medium, or "new media art". but at the
|
|
same time it can be all of that.
|
|
|
|
best,
|
|
carlos
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
http://katastrofsky.cont3xt.net
|
|
http://cont3xt.net</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.16</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Rama Hoetzlein</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 18 May 2009 10:11:25 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
exactly.. even if we are fully unconcerned with political art, when
|
|
you say "wow, great work", thats just and only what i mean by implicit
|
|
change (you are changed).. art is autonomous here because, while the
|
|
work may or may not be political, this implicit change defines only
|
|
the meaning-relation between the artist, the work, and the viewer.
|
|
And that relationship is established independent of the impact of
|
|
media on society, i.e. politics. A philosophy of art should provide a
|
|
foundation for complete autonomy, and this is done by observing that
|
|
the basis of art is creating and appreciating.. keeping in mind that
|
|
theory only gets you so far as an artist.
|
|
|
|
rama</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.17</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Brian Holmes</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 19 May 2009 15:44:02 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>carlos katastrofsky wrote:
|
|
|
|
> if i see some really good "political art" the first step is to admire
|
|
> it (wow, great work) and then to think about consequences. art is
|
|
> something autonomous. to me such an approach would free it from being
|
|
> a mere form of communication, a medium, or "new media art". but at the
|
|
> same time it can be all of that.
|
|
|
|
What does one admire a piece of art? What is its autonomy? And what could
|
|
be its consequences? I have asked myself these questions for years. Like
|
|
most thinking people, I have come to a few conclusions. And since I like
|
|
the idea that art can be "all of that" - a form of communication, a medium,
|
|
new media art - I would like to share these conclusions with you.
|
|
|
|
Humans are excessively complex by nature, and inherently social. We are
|
|
defined by the surfeit of symbolic activity that goes on in our brains and
|
|
indeed, in our full sensorium, and that comes out not only from our mouths
|
|
but in all sorts of gestures and postures and practices directed toward the
|
|
senses and symbolizing activities of others. A long anthropological
|
|
tradition running from Sapir through Levi-Strauss to Sahlins holds that
|
|
so-called "primitive" societies are no less complex than modern ones: their
|
|
languages show comparable range and variety, but are (according to
|
|
Levi-Strauss) oriented differently, more concrete in one case, more
|
|
abstracted in the other. There is so much going on in any human being and
|
|
between any group of human beings that just ordering or harmonizing all
|
|
this excessive symbolization - I mean, excessive over what the utilitarians
|
|
think of as the simple quest for satisfaction or corporeal pleasure -
|
|
becomes a problem in itself. Because madness always lurks on the edges of
|
|
our reeling imaginations, and then there is also depression, or anger, or
|
|
jealousy, or prejudice or extreme paranoia, indeed a great number of
|
|
obscure problems that can disrupt the life of the one and of the many.
|
|
|
|
Religion has been the great social technique for bringing all this roiling
|
|
thought, expression and sensation into some kind of predictable pattern and
|
|
harmony, constituting entire narrative and figural universes, with their
|
|
built environments, rituals, music, poetry, smells, tastes, etc, all
|
|
associated and carefully correlated with orders of kinship, canons of
|
|
sexuality, responsibilities of care, expressions of tenderness,
|
|
commandments, prohibitions and the like. What we now call art, as it
|
|
gradually detached itself from religion and became a series of aesthetic
|
|
traditions interpretable and modifiable by individuals - as it became
|
|
autonomous in other words - seems to have taken on the role of being the
|
|
sensuous and ideational mirror of the individual's proper "fit" with
|
|
society; it became a way of continuing the vast and mostly imaginary
|
|
conversation about the ways that the one relates to the many, and
|
|
vice-versa. However, this conversation was no longer necessarily about
|
|
harmony: because depending on the very particular context, the proper "fit"
|
|
could have aspects of a "misfit," and the quest for an idealized harmony
|
|
could involve extreme disruptions of the status quo, disruptions appearing
|
|
both in art and in life itself. Just think about the Antigone of Sophocles
|
|
and you will see that this kind of problematic was not invented with the
|
|
romantics, it goes back quite a ways. Clearly it gets particularly intense
|
|
in modern democracies, where we are all brought up to conceive ourselves as
|
|
both legislators and revolutionaries.
|
|
|
|
Now, amusingly, one of the reasons I ever even bothered to think about such
|
|
complex and excessive things, so far from
|
|
"direct political action" and what have you, is that for
|
|
many years I have found myself with a certain nagging problem of getting up
|
|
in the morning. Perhaps others have experienced this? It so happens that on
|
|
certain mornings I may spend as much as an hour just thinking about a
|
|
certain constellation of things: a group of people, an artwork, a political
|
|
issue, a line from a song, a concept, a phrase from a book, an image, a
|
|
rhythm. Without showing any particular signs of anxiety, insanity,
|
|
delirium, fever, swine flu or whatever, I still found it necessary to bring
|
|
such constellations of ideas and sensations into some kind of dynamic
|
|
pattern that would lend a spring to my step, a direction to my speech, an
|
|
effectiveness to my gestures. Being a bit of a misfit - according to the
|
|
aforementioned tradition in the democratic societies - I had to work on
|
|
this question of how to fit all this in, nonetheless: how to fit into my
|
|
own overflowing symbolic and sensate world, first of all, and how to fit
|
|
that world into the multitude of others with whom daily activity brings me
|
|
into contact. Thus I began to think that what is pleasing, satisfying,
|
|
attractive, intriguing, inspiring, shocking, repellent, etc in the formal
|
|
allure of artworks is also somehow the result of other people's struggles
|
|
with the excess of symbolization in which they are embroiled, and that the
|
|
"success" of the artwork (wow, great work) is always some variation on the
|
|
"infinite theme of the artist(s) trying to break out of one universe and
|
|
"fit into another - whether we're talking about a purely abstract universe
|
|
"of chromatism or rhythm, or some Hegelian quandry of historical
|
|
"dialectics, or the current discussion about cap and trade, or the latest
|
|
"dispute over the coolest tattoos in the punk or heavy-metal circle that
|
|
"encloses your secret passion. An aesthetic form doesn't directly solve any
|
|
"of the weighty social problems - but it helps get a world together, it
|
|
"helps structure a pattern and a dynamic and an enthusiasm, which is always
|
|
"a good start.
|
|
|
|
So how 'bout the politics then? Well, according to my little theory, the
|
|
personal is clearly both aesthetic and political, because if you can't get
|
|
out of bed you are definitely not going to make it to the office, the
|
|
march, the meeting, the voting booth, the library, or wherever your
|
|
activity is going to have some consequences in terms of organizing social
|
|
relations. What is more, this is not just my little theory, because going
|
|
back to Plato's Republic or maybe the Rig Vedas, social thinkers have been
|
|
very conscious of the influence of things like music on the order and
|
|
harmony of the community, the city, state or whatever. Indeed, not long
|
|
ago we saw with dazzled and almost disbelieving eyes that a great
|
|
nation-state like China could put a significant fraction of its resources
|
|
into organizing an aesthetic display which was not just supposed to knock
|
|
everybody out, American style, with its overwhelming show of wealth, but
|
|
also and above all to enact and celebrate an ideal of harmony and societal
|
|
coordination which, from my anarcho-individualist viewpoint, was at once
|
|
vastly impressive and also frankly terrifying, because here I could see an
|
|
intensive use of all the latest, hypercomplex aesthetic techniques to knit
|
|
together an order that could power a vast authoritarian economic machine
|
|
and infuse it with the enthusiam and belief of the many - which is a lot,
|
|
when we're talking China. So you want new media? Replay your avi file of
|
|
the opening ceremonies of the 2008 Olympics.
|
|
|
|
What I am trying to get at with all of this is that art is essentially
|
|
media, it is not merely but essentially about communication, only what is
|
|
communicated is not just a phrase or a slogan or a piece of information,
|
|
but a problematic attempt to reconfigure a world on every level of sensate
|
|
and imaginary experience. That can be an attempt to fit in or to stick out,
|
|
to harmonize or to disrupt, to smash the current relation of self and
|
|
society or to conserve it or to invent another one; but insofar as art is
|
|
expression, it always projects this struggle over the shape and balance of
|
|
a world towards the ears and eyes and excessive imaginations of others.
|
|
When we say that art is autonomous, we situate it in the long democratic
|
|
tradition where the self, autos, tries to help establish the law, nomos,
|
|
accordingly which it can freely develop in the company of fellow human
|
|
beings. Now, the problems of this attempt at autonomy are almost infinite,
|
|
they are sexual, technical, ecological, emotional, mystical, contractual,
|
|
material, they involve philosophy, science, babies, great art and also the
|
|
plumbing. And they always involve the relations of individuals and groups
|
|
to others whose worlds they do not understand, whose rhythms they do not
|
|
feel pulsing in their own veins, whose tacit concepts of harmony and
|
|
disruption are not expressed by the same patterns and shapes and colors and
|
|
combinations of tones. So when I say, Wow, great art - as I often do, just
|
|
the way people in the new media arts circles have done for years at
|
|
festivals sponsored by Philips and Microsoft and Sony and the like - the
|
|
first consequence for me is to inquire into the world from which that art
|
|
arises and to which it points, and eventually to see how I fit into or
|
|
desire to break out of that world. This means that a deep and searching
|
|
criticism can never just be criticism of the work, it always has to look
|
|
further back, into the world from which it sprang, and ahead to the
|
|
consequences of a potential change in the worlds we share, or at least to
|
|
the consequences of a change in the way that *I* or *we* will relate to
|
|
other worlds in the future.
|
|
|
|
Finally, it seems to me, in my anarcho-democratic world, that to say Wow,
|
|
great art, without inquiring into the consequences, is one of the closest
|
|
things one can do to never getting out of bed, i.e. it's close to
|
|
sleepwalking. Because at best, you would then be just letting the great
|
|
art fit into your own great dream, or letting it be the colorful and
|
|
striking tattoo that will fit you into your small chosen circle. That's at
|
|
best - because in the present world of biopower and noopower, just admiring
|
|
a work in itself and for itself can mean accepting without question the
|
|
world that it mediates, which in the case of the networked technologies
|
|
sold by Sony and Microsoft Philips and abused by a vast array of
|
|
corporations and governments, can be an extremely predatory world,
|
|
configured precisely in order to capture your consciousness and extract
|
|
some value or utility out of your passions and dreams. Value that can
|
|
ultimately be devastating for the collectivity (as in the debt-fueld
|
|
consumption boom of this decade), utility that can make you into the most
|
|
terrible of instruments (like the voters lured by nationalist rhetoric into
|
|
supporting our proliferating wars).
|
|
|
|
It has been years since I read Lev Manovich, so what follows may be totally
|
|
unjust to his work, but as I recall, what always irritated me in his
|
|
writing was a kind of smug insistence that the new media were essentially
|
|
defined by a certain kind of rhythm, a certain multiplication of screens, a
|
|
certain connection to databases, etc. - in other words, that the new media
|
|
were essentially defined by the dominant trends of contemporary capitalist
|
|
society. For me this seemed like a total abdication of criticism itself,
|
|
and it also seemed to be a sort of cheerful, "I'm on the winning side"
|
|
version of the dark technological determinism and philosophical doomsaying
|
|
promoted by the post-Leftist thinkers in the wake of Baudrillard. What I
|
|
missed was the very question of autonomy, and some recognition of its
|
|
quasi-infinite complexities as they've been ceaselessly developing from the
|
|
Neolithic to now, in the long and discontinuous series of messages passed
|
|
from human world to human world. Imho, the poverty of new media art - its
|
|
"crisis" - has intrinsically to do with the poverty of media
|
|
critique tout court. It is the failure to see how the cultural politics of
|
|
individuals and groups are mediated in the work, how they are expressed at
|
|
every level of their ineluctable complexity and excess over the "mere
|
|
communication" of what already exists.
|
|
|
|
best, Brian</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.18</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael H Goldhaber</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 19 May 2009 12:30:11 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
Thanks for some beautiful and thought-provoking statements, especially
|
|
Brian’s and Carlos’s. I would add that to me the real medium of all
|
|
art is attention, attention the viewer or reader or listener must pay,
|
|
feels consciously drawn to pay, in a deepening and all encompassing
|
|
way. That attention amounts to a transformation of self — into the
|
|
mind and body of the artist, as it were. The rest of the world falls
|
|
away for that moment, and so does time —the moment might be a long one
|
|
—and,a s Brian suggests will recur later on, in recollection and
|
|
reflection.
|
|
|
|
If that is art, it is always political, because it always takes the
|
|
attention payer out of the “system,” whatever it might be and however
|
|
much the managers of the system in fact solicited the artist or the
|
|
work to begin with. The huge abstract paintings of the 1950’s cold
|
|
only fit on the walls of the rich, but nonetheless, as long as they
|
|
were there, they took over those walls, and made the space different
|
|
from what the collector might have intended, and the same goes for
|
|
Renaissance art and art of other periods.
|
|
|
|
The reason different media come in is that the artist has an on-going
|
|
problem as to how to capture attention as distractions and competition
|
|
multiply. In some way, to be really focussed on, art must avoid being
|
|
too easy to experience, for then it can become just the background,
|
|
just decoration or elevator music, or something that can always be
|
|
attended to “later” — I.e., usually never. This is a serious and
|
|
significant problem for new media as well, including much Internet art.
|
|
|
|
Expressly political art can only succeed, it seems to me, if it comes
|
|
from the inner depths. For instance, I just finished reading Istvan
|
|
Kertesz’s “Fatelessness;” I don’t think it is intentionally political
|
|
but it certainly made me boil with anger at the human mistreatment and
|
|
neglect of others. Such art brings what was already there inside us
|
|
and adds to its centrality. But that doesn’t happen often. In my
|
|
experience most political art is superficial and therefore bad, just
|
|
as likely to turn off sympathetic feelings in the viewer as the
|
|
opposite.
|
|
|
|
Incidentally, I don’t know that good art necessarily causes us to
|
|
think “Wow! I admire that.” But it doesn't easily let go of us.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Best,
|
|
Michael</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.19</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>eyescratch</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sat, 23 May 2009 10:30:31 -0400</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 9:44 AM, Brian Holmes <brian.holmes {AT} wanadoo.fr> wrote:
|
|
|
|
> So you want new media? Replay your avi file of the opening
|
|
> ceremonies of the 2008 Olympics.
|
|
>
|
|
> What I am trying to get at with all of this is that art is
|
|
> essentially media, it is not merely but essentially about
|
|
> communication, only what is communicated is not just a phrase or
|
|
> a slogan or a piece of information, but a problematic attempt
|
|
> to reconfigure a world on every level of sensate and imaginary
|
|
> experience.
|
|
|
|
Much of media studies is obsessed with witnessing an existence that is
|
|
part of mediality, to borrow a term from the previous discussion, by
|
|
placing great emphasis on inserting the observer into the equation.
|
|
Nevertheless these studies formulate a distinction to preserve some
|
|
authorship role. What this kind of representational relationship
|
|
ignores is that it precludes any kind of intervention in favor of a
|
|
conservation. If the art cannot be conserved because it is conceptual
|
|
or a piece of code, the identity of the author is preserved and
|
|
celebrated. This is because a piece of media arrives at its monetary
|
|
value by being bundled with products that claim to correct the
|
|
injustices, needs, or ailments being described in that piece of media.
|
|
The media is monetized either for its value of showing a certain lack
|
|
or showing the idealized completion that a product might fulfill. An
|
|
authorship identity, it turns out, can fulfill this marketing function
|
|
nicely for the lack of any particular object that might or might not
|
|
exist or lacks monetary value, culminating it seems these days in a
|
|
guarded wikipedia entry.
|
|
|
|
Turns out, while searching for a word to describe the process of
|
|
entering into communication via media I looked up mediated. There is
|
|
plenty of secondary literature on McLuhan using this word to capture
|
|
the processes McLuhan describes, but he himself only uses the word
|
|
mediated with the original definition to describe the arbitration
|
|
that happens in a conflict. Using the term mediated in the sense that
|
|
a form of communication is performed via media, still implies that
|
|
there is an exchange occurring where each party must sacrifice some
|
|
of their preconceptions in a productive process that is manufacturing
|
|
representation. Otherwise this representation veers very quickly
|
|
towards the ideological.
|
|
|
|
hTTp://eyescratch.tk</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.20</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 18 May 2009 23:04:49 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
On Sunday, May 17 2009, 10:59 (+0200), carlos katastrofsky wrote:
|
|
|
|
> what i am always wondering about is why the media arts field is so
|
|
> concerned with its media. is dealing with "new media" or "old media"
|
|
> an excuse for making good or bad art? IMO defining art by its media
|
|
> is on the same level as defining art by its subject. not getting
|
|
> over these definitions will result in a ghetto-situation sooner or
|
|
> later.
|
|
|
|
I am not so sure whether I agree. It all depends on your definition of
|
|
"media". The problem is that the word "media" means quite different
|
|
things in different contexts: In the arts, it traditionally refers
|
|
to the material means of expression from which artworks are created
|
|
[painting, sculpture, photography, video, performance - that were also
|
|
the media meant with such terms as "intermedia", "mixed media" and
|
|
"multimedia" since the 1960s]. In communication studies, "media" is
|
|
practically synonymous with mass media and refers to an apparatus and
|
|
system of communication, including newspapers, radio, TV, Internet.
|
|
In other humanities, there is a notion of media as any symbolic or
|
|
semiotic carrier.
|
|
|
|
For example, in the contemporary art (but not media art) world,
|
|
there just has been a series of exhibitions on pornography, from
|
|
"BodyPoliticx" in Rotterdam to "The Porn Identity" in Vienna. One
|
|
could call pornography a medium and thus say that these exhibitions
|
|
were curated from a media perspective. After all, the ars electronica
|
|
did almost the same thing with its "Next Sex" theme in 2000. Or, a
|
|
random example taken from just having browsed the Tate Modern site
|
|
and its blurb on the current exhibition "Stutter": "The onomatopoeic
|
|
word 'Stutter' refers to an act of speech interrupted by agitated,
|
|
spasmodic, or involuntary repetitions. As the title for this
|
|
exhibition, it suggests a metaphor for questions of disruption and
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discontinuity in processes of thought, systems of communications
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or conceptions of knowledge." Again, this is pretty close if not
|
|
identical to curatorship from a media and communications viewpoint.
|
|
|
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> the problem -IMHO- is not that media art is not recognized by the
|
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> fine art world but that the fine art world is dealing with other
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> subjects.
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|
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If I take, for example, the subjects of the last nine transmediale
|
|
festivals ("Do It Yourself", "Go Public", "Play Global", "Fly Utopia",
|
|
"Basics", "Reality Addicts", "Unfinish", "Conspire", "Deep North"),
|
|
they could just as well have been the names of contemporary art
|
|
exhibitions at PS.1 in New York, KW in Berlin, Witte de With in
|
|
Rotterdam, or any other contemporary art space.
|
|
|
|
> when was the last big exhibition dealing solely with "painting" or
|
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> "sculpture" you've seen? ars electronica and the others are doing
|
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> that every year: "new media art" with changing subtitles.
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|
|
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One could just as well say that contemporary art deals with "white
|
|
cube installation art" with changing subtitles.
|
|
|
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> the same problem persists when new media artists and theorists
|
|
> insist on "politicalness" and "radicality".
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|
|
|
The same terms abound in the contemporary art discourse if you read,
|
|
for example, "October" or "Texte zur Kunst".
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|
|
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> those terms don't say anything about certain works either, no matter
|
|
> which media is used in it. they only say that they may be recognised
|
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> as "political" in a certain time in a certain context.
|
|
|
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IMO art is, like any public expression, always political. Art that
|
|
claims not to be political being all the more political as a matter
|
|
of fact (with symbolist l'art-pour-l'art being a prime example). What
|
|
I would describe as the political-artistic quality in the art of,
|
|
for example, ubermorgen is that unlike 'actual' politics, it can be
|
|
willfully and even criminally irresponsible. One could admittedly
|
|
dismiss this as a romanticist argument, but it has nevertheless a lot
|
|
going for it, not just if we look at gothic aesthetics and Bataille's
|
|
aesthetics of evil, but also at more recent artistic practices like
|
|
Otto Muehl's commune and Eastern European art since the 1980s.
|
|
|
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> but that doesn't say anything about it's "artness" either. "art
|
|
> doesn't become art by having specific characteristics but by a
|
|
> specific kind of processual reference to it." (J. Rebentisch,
|
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> Aesthetik der Installation)
|
|
|
|
Not knowing the full context of this quote, I nevertheless find such
|
|
systemic definitions of art quite risky. If the basic quality of art
|
|
- in the sense of 'Fine Art' - lies in its self-reference to its own
|
|
system, then it would be something very narrow and ultimately boring,
|
|
and something already exhausted by Duchamp in the 20th century. It
|
|
would pay a high price for having, since the 19th century, rid itself
|
|
from more popular forms of visual culture. Such a definition does not
|
|
even apply to the arguably most elitist forms of other contemporary
|
|
arts such as poetry and contemporary classical music, since poetry can
|
|
still be defined outside its own system as highly condensed/conjugated
|
|
language and new music as highly organized sound. - On top of that, it
|
|
is an exclusively Western concept of art which blatantly contradicts
|
|
the post-1990s efforts of integrating postcolonial considerations into
|
|
contemporary art. Remarkable enough, these integrations never question
|
|
the concept of "art" itself - although the concept of autonomous art
|
|
only exists in Western cultures or as a Western cultural import in,
|
|
for example, Asian countries (which traditionally do not separate art
|
|
from craft).
|
|
|
|
> if i want to learn something about politics i would read a book with
|
|
> proper information about it and not go to see art that repeats the
|
|
> common sense that there are bad things existing in our world.
|
|
|
|
True. Only that exhibitions like Documenta XI have been haunted by
|
|
this concept of art.
|
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|
|
-F
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|
|
|
--
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|
blog: http://en.pleintekst.nl
|
|
homepage: http://cramer.pleintekst.nl:70
|
|
gopher://cramer.pleintekst.nl</content>
|
|
</mail>
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|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.21</nbr>
|
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<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>carlos katastrofsky</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 19 May 2009 15:14:35 +0200</date>
|
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<content>> I am not so sure whether I agree. It all depends on your definition of
|
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> "media". The problem is that the word "media" means quite different things
|
|
> in different contexts:
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|
|
i agree. but exactly this is the point: media theory is swallowing
|
|
everything, but where are its boundaries? what i am trying to find as
|
|
artist (neither theorist nor philosopher) is a definition for art that
|
|
goes beyond a mere definition as "media" in whatever sense.
|
|
that is why i am aiming on the much-maligned term of "autonomy" (and
|
|
i'm following here the previous mentioned philosophy of j.
|
|
rebentisch). to me this doesn't mean art is somewhat apolotical or
|
|
dealing solely with itself (l' art pour l'art - i guess you had this
|
|
in mind when stating "[...] If the basic quality of art - in the sense
|
|
of 'Fine Art' - lies in its self-reference to its own system, then it
|
|
would be something very narrow and ultimately boring, [...]"). art is
|
|
made to be seen/heard/whatever - to be experienced. and this
|
|
experience is what defines art and not media. it can change in time
|
|
-we quite surely don't experience cave paintings in the same way the
|
|
ones did who made them- but i'm not sure if "the media" does, no
|
|
matter if it's read as "painting/drawing" or as "hunting scene". what
|
|
i am hoping to find by this is a possibility to think about "art" and
|
|
neither media nor porn or politics. these are -let's say- "themes"
|
|
that can be interpreted, but i hope that art goes beyond being a good
|
|
designed set of political opinions. i mean, what political context is
|
|
reflected in leonardo's "last supper"? we surely can speculate but do
|
|
we know? these are things that are bound to their time and context but
|
|
nevertheless we still percieve it as "art".
|
|
|
|
> If I take, for example, the subjects of the last nine transmediale
|
|
> festivals ("Do It Yourself",
|
|
[...]
|
|
> One could just as well say that contemporary art deals with "white cube
|
|
> installation art" with changing subtitles.
|
|
[...]
|
|
> The same terms abound in the contemporary art discourse if you read, for
|
|
> example, "October" or "Texte zur Kunst".
|
|
|
|
yep, exactly. and this what the "art world" makes as boring as "new
|
|
media art". what i had in mind when saying that the "fine art world is
|
|
dealing with other subjects" was not the (i would like to call it
|
|
nonexistent) contemporary discourse. what can be seen in the fine arts
|
|
field (but not in the big biz -documenta, ps1, kw, ...) is an
|
|
inclusion of possibilities in expression and perception which i never
|
|
saw in any media-art discourse (though i have to admit i am far from
|
|
following everything in that area).
|
|
|
|
> Not knowing the full context of this quote, I nevertheless find such
|
|
> systemic definitions of art quite risky. If the basic quality of art
|
|
> - in the sense of 'Fine Art' - lies in its self-reference to its own
|
|
> system,
|
|
|
|
i'm sorry if this comes through that way, i'm not the best in
|
|
formulating things. i never wanted to present art as solely
|
|
self-referential system. if autonomy is read as autonomy of the object
|
|
(l'art pour l'art) i would agree totally with you. but seen from the
|
|
viewpoint that "art" may not lie in an object but somewhere between
|
|
the object and the observer (experience, perception) an autonomy of
|
|
art is essential.
|
|
|
|
|
|
thank you all for your replies :-)
|
|
|
|
best,
|
|
carlos
|
|
--
|
|
http://katastrofsky.cont3xt.net
|
|
http://cont3xt.net</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.22</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>Station Rose</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 24 May 2009 13:52:26 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>
|
|
On Sunday, May 17 2009, 10:59 (+0200), florian cramer wrote:
|
|
|
|
>If I take, for example, the subjects of the last nine transmediale
|
|
>festivals ("Do It Yourself", "Go Public", "Play Global", "Fly
|
|
>Utopia", "Basics", "Reality Addicts", "Unfinish", "Conspire", "Deep
|
|
>North"), they could just as well have been the names of contemporary
|
|
>art exhibitions at PS.1 in New York, KW in Berlin, Witte de With in
|
|
>Rotterdam, or any other contemporary art space.
|
|
|
|
but it wasnt like that cause it was happening ONLY in a festival .
|
|
<ghetto> situation .
|
|
|
|
as I see it, many art people are not going to events like
|
|
transmediale, cause its not seen as an important place for art. I dont
|
|
go, besides when we are actively part of it.
|
|
|
|
looks like media art is not sexy enough. the exhibits, as part of
|
|
festivals, are often too prudish. everything sensual seems forbidden,
|
|
|
|
too often it s needs written explanations to understand the
|
|
(political) work.
|
|
|
|
I do not believe - and I say that as an artist- that the written word
|
|
is necessary to <understand> a piece of art.it can help and make
|
|
details transparent, but its not necessary in advance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
my own experience with Station Rose media art projects-like recently
|
|
LogInCabin in MAK Vienna- is : they are recognized & seen in art
|
|
spaces, museums by the art scene, but not as much in a so called media
|
|
art context as festivals are.
|
|
|
|
basically my impression is that as long as a dicussion like that one
|
|
goes on, it makes clear that the art world is something and the media
|
|
art scene is out of it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
Station Rose digital_audio - visual art http://www.stationrose.com
|
|
.................... Gary Danner & Elisa Rose
|
|
|
|
Frankfurt - Cyberspace - Vienna.
|
|
|
|
* recent project: 20 Digital Years. "LogInCabin" mediascultpure at
|
|
MAK Vienna_sold
|
|
* new: "Interstellar Overdrive CD" Japan release (2.09)</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.23</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis</subject>
|
|
<from>John Hopkins</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Wed, 20 May 2009 17:01:58 -0600</date>
|
|
<content>carlos katastrofsky wrote:
|
|
|
|
> what i am always wondering about is why the media arts field is so
|
|
> concerned with its media. is dealing with "new media" or "old media"
|
|
|
|
exactly Carlos...
|
|
|
|
this revolves around the common (still, ongoing, & perhaps permanent!)
|
|
problem of identifying creative impulses by their materialized remains
|
|
(media, mediated forms). There are precisely identical histories of the
|
|
rise of
|
|
(materially) specialized festivals, research centers, art school
|
|
departments, workshop venues, etc etc -- photography, for example.
|
|
Where are all the institutions and organizations and events that swirled
|
|
around that particular material result of creative impulse? They are
|
|
gone, gone, gone. Abd the ones who remain -- does anyone think they are
|
|
center for radical creative experimentation? Most people don't even
|
|
remember them. the Rencontres Internationale de la Photographie and the
|
|
Ecole Nationale de la Photographie in Arles, etc etc, huh, who cares?
|
|
|
|
when there is this material obsession, it is bound to be outmoded simply
|
|
because things aren't IT, looking at the world as a bunch of things
|
|
doesn't reveal the phenomenal nature of life: another words, focusing on
|
|
the detritus that is left, dead, after the creative forces have altered
|
|
the local universe -- well it's simply a death cult and is a dead end.
|
|
<<yawn>> why ponder on it? Better to skip the material categorization
|
|
process altogether 'cause it IS a dead end...
|
|
|
|
jh</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>2.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject><nettime> open letter to art critics</subject>
|
|
<from>Geert Lovink</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Thu, 25 Oct 2012 15:03:18 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>(Written in response to the lack of debate during last weekend's
|
|
Creative Time conference in NYC. I think art criticism is important
|
|
source of inspiration and reference (or not) for net critique. The
|
|
letter also refers to the ongoing, almost funny neglect by the 'art
|
|
world' of 'new media'. /geert)
|
|
|
|
|
|
An open letter to critics writing about political art
|
|
- Stephen Duncombe & Steve Lambert
|
|
|
|
Last weekend Creative Time held their fourth annual summit on the current
|
|
state of artistic activism. Over two days, scores of political artists from
|
|
around the world gave short presentations and organized longer workshops.
|
|
Hundreds of people participated.
|
|
|
|
The critical response, so far, has been underwhelming: few critics
|
|
attended and those that did had little substantive to say. It would be easy
|
|
to account for the overall silence and dismiss the surface commentary with
|
|
some snarky criticism of our own about a bullshit art world with their
|
|
head up their ass who can't recognize that something important is
|
|
happening right in front of them. And while this may be self-righteously
|
|
satisfying, it is not very helpful. We want to help.
|
|
|
|
How this event was -- and wasn't -- covered is indicative of the state of
|
|
criticism when it comes to political art. The problem is not necessarily
|
|
lazy criticism, but the fact that we don't have a developed vocabulary
|
|
with which to understand, and criteria with which to evaluate, political
|
|
art and activist artists. In an effort to develop a language and criteria
|
|
with which artistic activism can be usefully criticized, we offer the
|
|
following seven questions for the critic to consider:
|
|
|
|
1. Does it work?
|
|
|
|
Art about politics is not necessarily political art. The function of
|
|
political art is to challenge and change the world. This should be obvious,
|
|
but there is plenty of "political art" which uses social injustice and
|
|
political struggle as mere subject matter: making these forces objects for
|
|
contemplation and, perversely, appreciation. The point of political art is
|
|
not to represent the world but to act within it.
|
|
|
|
Thus, the first question to ask of political art is: Does it Work? We
|
|
don't mean: does it work aesthetically? but does it work politically. This
|
|
entails asking more questions. Questions like: What does the artist want
|
|
to achieve with their work? What change do they see happening through
|
|
their work? How will this change happen? Who is affected, what affect will
|
|
the work have on them, and what actions will these people take?
|
|
|
|
We're not suggesting that there's one criterion of efficacy for political
|
|
art, nor is there one goal that all political arts should move towards.
|
|
What we are saying is that political artists, if they want to change the
|
|
world, need to think about what they want their work to do. And critics,
|
|
if they want to seriously interrogate and evaluate this work, have to both
|
|
examine those political aims and ask whether the artist has succeeded.
|
|
|
|
It is hard to truly succeed as a political artist. Many times, an artist
|
|
aims short and sets out to "intervene" and "raise awareness" about a social
|
|
problem or political issue. This is the low hanging fruit of political art.
|
|
Other work sets out to have a direct impact in a discernible way. Using
|
|
art to defeat a pending policy, or elect a politician. This is more
|
|
ambitious on the part of the artist, and easier -- if not boring -- for the
|
|
critic of political art to judge. Much harder, much more ambitious, and
|
|
therefor much more difficult to evaluate, is art that intends to change
|
|
the very way we see, act and make sense of our world -- including what we
|
|
understand to be politics itself. It is hard to measure the long term
|
|
total victory of a shift in the culture.
|
|
|
|
2. Who is the audience?
|
|
|
|
The art critic is the audience for most art, and therefor it's quite valid
|
|
for the critic to write from his or her own perspective. The audience for
|
|
political art is quite different. Political art, by it's very name, has the
|
|
"polis" as its audience and this constitutes a much broader demographic --
|
|
one in which the art critic is confronted with readings of art radically
|
|
different than their own. As diverse as we'd like to imagine the audience
|
|
for most art to be it draws from a very narrow population, one in which
|
|
the art critic is at home. But when the audience is a wider public, the
|
|
tried and true perspective of the veteran art critic comes up short. The
|
|
critic of political art needs to place themselves in the minds of very
|
|
different people. This takes humility. It may even require taking the
|
|
radical step of talking to the audience, asking them what they see, what
|
|
they think. These are basic techniques of journalism and ethnography that
|
|
an art critic may not be accustomed to.
|
|
|
|
3. What is the relevant tradition?
|
|
|
|
The tradition that serves conventional art criticism doesn't often work
|
|
when it comes to political art. Drawing together art's historical and
|
|
theoretical connections, while impressive to the writer's erudite
|
|
readership, and possibly entertaining, is largely irrelevant. There are
|
|
connections to be drawn, to be certain, but the valid ones here are more
|
|
likely to be found in histories of social movements and textbooks in the
|
|
fields of marketing, advertising, and public relations. Theories in human
|
|
cognition and decision making, for example, are far more applicable,
|
|
useful, and insightful into the work of the artistic activist than
|
|
discussion of its relation to the newest aesthetic or Albers' color
|
|
theory. The training most critics have is not sufficient for fully
|
|
understanding this work. Indeed, knowledge of sociology, community
|
|
organizing, or rhetoric lends crucial insight into what political artists
|
|
are doing, and whether they are doing it well. You are not alone in your
|
|
ignorance. We readily admit that many artists are in dire need of this
|
|
knowledge as well.
|
|
|
|
4. What medium and why?
|
|
|
|
For art critics, medium is important. It situates the work within an
|
|
historical canon, provides context and meaning, and a sense of continuity.
|
|
For the artistic activist medium is important too, but as a means: the
|
|
instrument through which one reaches the audience to effect change.
|
|
Therefor, discussions about means are dependent on political
|
|
considerations, such as who is the audience, how they are most effectively
|
|
reached, and so on.
|
|
|
|
To privilege one medium over another in the absence of a discussion of
|
|
efficacy is to miss the point. A good political artist's practice is
|
|
promiscuous when it comes to medium. Critical Art Ensemble said it best
|
|
with four words. The artistic activist works: "by any media necessary." A
|
|
good critic, therefor, judges the political artist on the mastery of the
|
|
medium they choose for the task at hand.
|
|
|
|
5. What kind of mastery is required?
|
|
|
|
Fine artists are often rewarded for the degree of control and mastery over
|
|
their medium. We valorize artists who can transform materials to fully
|
|
express their vision without compromise.
|
|
|
|
Political art, however, is engaged in the world. The world is messy. It
|
|
has a lot of moving parts. This material is impossible to fully control or
|
|
master -- and shouldn't be (unless you have fascist ambitions). Whereas
|
|
compromise for the traditional artist means diluting their vision,
|
|
compromise for the political artist is the very essence of democratic
|
|
engagement.
|
|
|
|
The venue for the traditional artist is galleries and museums -- controlled
|
|
spaces where the art itself does not need to speak very loudly because all
|
|
attention is focused on it. Political art has a dauntingly large venue: the
|
|
street, the marketplace, the mass media. This is an out-of-control space
|
|
where one competes with the cacophony rather than retreating into silence
|
|
and solitude. Political art, responding to this space, is often brash and
|
|
loud. Subtlety is sometimes not its strong point. But we shouldn't fault a
|
|
creative activist practice for what's inherently required of it. Indeed,
|
|
it should be judged on how well it opens up a space, is read, and
|
|
understood within this arena.
|
|
|
|
Some art lovers may be turned off by this focus on the practical and
|
|
tactical, but for creative activists these concerns are essential. We are
|
|
not, however, arguing that the informed art critic should simply be
|
|
judging political art on how effective it is in communicating a message.
|
|
Aesthetics matter -- but they needn't be seen in opposition to efficacy. If
|
|
one's goal is to affect change, form serves function. Art that succeeds
|
|
aesthetically also has a better chance of succeeding politically.
|
|
Beautiful art is art that people are drawn towards. The power of art lies
|
|
in its ability to open up a space to ask questions rather than deliver
|
|
answers. We think this makes for good politics too.
|
|
|
|
6. What am I missing?
|
|
|
|
The "art world" is truly a world all its own, with separate cultural
|
|
spaces, communities, and languages. The detachment of fine arts from
|
|
popular culture is the norm.
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, for creative activists, popular culture is their briar
|
|
patch. Whereas in fine art, engaging in this terrain is read as pandering,
|
|
ironic, "critical," and at all times, exceptional, for political artists
|
|
it is the rule. In order to reach everyday people one must speak in a
|
|
language they understand. This can be interpreted as dumbing things down.
|
|
It is not. In order to convey complex radical ideas in a vernacular
|
|
largely developed for and oriented toward consumer sales and crass
|
|
manipulation requires a great deal of intelligence and skill. And the
|
|
better you do it, the more likely it is to be overlooked.
|
|
|
|
Within the fine art world to stand out and be noticed is a clear sign of
|
|
success. In the practice of artistic activism you are more successful the
|
|
more your art weaves into the fabric of popular culture -- lost to the art
|
|
world. The entire effort is shrouded in camouflage.
|
|
|
|
Critics are forgiven for passing over the best of this work in the past,
|
|
but let's all begin to look more carefully, ok?
|
|
|
|
7. What's my role as a critic?
|
|
|
|
The relationship between artists and critics is often a fraught one.
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Critics can be lauded for how well they skillfully and cleverly demolish
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and denigrate artists' work. This aligns with the dominate competitive
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logic of the commercial art world. This is the paradigm, in part, that
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political art is trying to change. Despite this cannibalistic tendency,
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we all know that makers and critics live in symbiosis. This is especially
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true when the art operates in the broader society and the function of the
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work is not to be a unique and valuable object but to effect the world.
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In this realm, the art critic is part of the team, with everyone working
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towards the big win of a better world. Being a good team member for artists
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means making powerful work. Being a good team member for the critic means
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offering insightful, relevant, and instructive criticism.
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Art critics raise questions. Questions are good. But questions for what
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purpose? If you're a political artist, and you're primarily showing people
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how smart and clever you are, you're not producing good political work.
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The energy is misdirected. The same goes for critics. If you're writing
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primarily as a demonstration of how smart and clever you are, you have lost
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the soul of being a critic.
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The critic might want to ask themselves, why am I writing this? Am I
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clarifying and illuminating the work? Am I instructing the artist and the
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audience so that better work is produced. Or am I "problematizing" as a
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demonstration of my prowess as a thinker. ("Problematizing" is too often
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used as a cheap substitute for understanding, analyzing and aiding.)
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Being a critic, like being an artist, involves some degree of
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selflessness. There is a larger purpose. The critic, through their
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attention and analysis of the work, provides a helpful service.
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Of course we all know this, but it's easy to get off track.
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It's bigger than you and it's bigger than the art.
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Modern art is rooted in the belief that the artists' individual expression
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is important. In turn, the individual critic's opinions about said artists
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and art are important. Think Pollock and Greenberg.
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With political art a bigger game is being played. There are still
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individual artists and individual critics, but the stakes are not about the
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reputations of artists and critics. What's at stake is the transformation
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of the entire society. If this sounds grandiose, you may be in the wrong
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business.
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We don't train people to be good political artists in our art schools.
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Most institutions are slow to adapt and are, at best, fighting the old myth
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of the lone genius artist expressing their vision in spite of society,
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rather than moving forward towards a world in which artists work
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collectively in an embedded engagement with society.
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Call us optimists, but we assume anyone producing creative work to affect
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power is doing it from a sincere and passionate place. If it's not working,
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it's not because they don't care enough or aren't committed. It's because
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we haven't developed a critical tradition that helps artistic activists
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strengthen their work. Political art needs help.
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This is why we need you.
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Because we're all in this together.
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--
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See also:
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http://artisticactivism.org/2012/10/an-open-letter-to-crtitcs-writing-about-political-art/an-open-letter-to-art-critics/
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The Center for Artistic Activism: artisticactivism.org
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Steve Lambert: visitsteve.com
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Stephen Duncombe: stephenduncombe.com</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>2.1</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> open letter to art critics</subject>
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<from>Brian Holmes</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Thu, 25 Oct 2012 15:14:35 -0500</date>
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<content>
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An open letter to critics writing about political art
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- Stephen Duncombe & Steve Lambert
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</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>2.2</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> open letter to art critics</subject>
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<from>Flick Harrison</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Fri, 26 Oct 2012 07:44:07 -0700</date>
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<content>When I read a sentence like this:
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"Much harder, much more ambitious, and therefore much more difficult to
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evaluate, is art that intends to change the very way we see, act and make
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sense of our world -- including what we understand to be politics itself."
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I see my life story unfolding in a single problem.
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This kind of subtle, provocative or ontologically-challenging work means,
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for one thing, an audience limited to those interested in both art and
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politics simultaneously.
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I would add, however, that the words "art" and "politics" could be swapped
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in that sentence, with equal truth.
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When engaging with activists there is a demand for practical political art;
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agitprop, posters, propaganda, fundraising videos, etc. When the artist
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strays from dogma, they become useless, if not dangerous, to movements.
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Meanwhile, engaging the art world with politicized art brings the spectre
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of partisanship (with its threat to state funding & rich donors) if not
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|
simple disinterest or politically-motivated rejection.
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Therefore at the same time as you call for more critical consideration of
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political art, I'd call for more political consideration of it as well.
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I'm currently in a collective doing what's called here "publicly engaged"
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art; that is, artist residencies in community centres etc where the act of
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bringing people together to make art is seen as a positive political
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|
action. The content of the art is irrelevant to that - except insofar as
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the content must emerge from the participants, rather than from above.
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It's important to push for high-quality final product, to create a
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dedicated team, etc, but the politics is contained in the form of the
|
|
project rather than in the results.
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|
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Here's our website:
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|
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http://somethingcollective.ca/
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|
Critical reception for this kind of art, as far as I can tell, is pretty
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|
slim. It's not considered "good enough" to warrant proper critical review,
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|
sort of like community theatre, and the political process contained in the
|
|
work isn't relevant to art theory, or something.
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|
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|
Headlines Theatre is another group that does this kind of work in a
|
|
different way - they do Boal-based Theatre of the Oppressed projects, i.e.
|
|
interactive forum theatre with audience members getting on stage to try to
|
|
work out the characters' problems. The theatre critics often don't really
|
|
consider it proper theatre, though there is the occasional review.
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|
|
|
This one is from Jerry Wasserman, who is the head of the UBC Theatre and
|
|
FIlm Department, which I suppose is as legit as it gets, although UBC is
|
|
more production- than theory-oriented:
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|
|
|
http://www.vancouverplays.com/theatre/reviews/review_after_homelessness_09.shtml
|
|
|
|
In any case, my latest work is this video I created with an anonymous
|
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activist group in Newfoundland, who took advantage of my residency at Black
|
|
Bag Media Collective to get me on board their anti-pesticide campaign. I'd
|
|
love to hear any critical reaction to it.
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|
http://youtu.be/QEoZJWmcBjk
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|
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|
-Flick
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|
|
|
--
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|
* WHERE'S MY ARTICLE, WORLD?
|
|
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Flick_Harrison
|
|
|
|
* FLICK's WEBSITE & BLOG: http://www.flickharrison.com</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>2.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> open letter to art critics</subject>
|
|
<from>Margaret Morse</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sat, 27 Oct 2012 09:52:48 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>Dear Flick,
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|
|
|
I agree with you and Geert that publicly engaged art is important and that
|
|
it gets little critical attention. What struck me about the theater review
|
|
from Vancouver--
|
|
http://www.vancouverplays.com/theatre/reviews/review_after_homelessness_09.shtml
|
|
-- is that it provided a valuable description of the remarkable performance
|
|
as well as the reviewer's despair about the eventual prospects for success
|
|
of this emerging form of theater in actually providing actionable ideas for
|
|
social change. The Vancouver play offers the audience the delicious
|
|
opportunity to see some audience members actually intervene in the
|
|
performance and take the unfolding narrative in another direction again and
|
|
again. Furthermore, we have a life/art connection of the actors and the
|
|
audience who have experienced difficult and demoralizing life events and
|
|
lived. What failed for the critic was the reception by the audience,
|
|
particularly in the focus discussion afterwards.
|
|
|
|
However, the stakes here are far more fundamental. Why not think about this
|
|
as a matter of practice and cultivation? Why should a public be good at
|
|
this when they have so few opportunities to develop their critical
|
|
capacities? For me, this genre takes off from Bertolt Brecht's ideas and
|
|
pushes them further along. Brecht's performance practices aim at
|
|
activating critical faculties that lead to action in the world--the
|
|
audience should be able to see unfolding dramatic events in the life course
|
|
as far from inevitable. That entails a number of performance practices
|
|
typical of a Brecht play:-for instance, the actors don't embody or identify
|
|
with their roles; the narrative is constantly being interrupted with
|
|
moments for reflection; dramatic events are put within a larger
|
|
socio-political context and discourse. We critics of publicly engaged art
|
|
also need more practice in writing on such performances. We also need to
|
|
create a space and an audience with which we can engage and hone our
|
|
abilities. I regret having had to put down my pencil for several years
|
|
after co-convening a very successful conference on The Art of Collaboration
|
|
held at UC Santa Cruz in 2008. Word did not get out about the conference
|
|
contributions, to my regret.
|
|
|
|
All the best,
|
|
Margaret</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
</mails>
|
|
</chapter> |