Josephine Bosma on 15 Feb 2001 10:53:17 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] organising net art: net-art.org |
The last two years sites that promote, sell or investigate net art in general have erupted from the digital magma. These sites vary in quality, background and style, but most of them do provide some kind of new approach, some piece of the puzzle that builds a necesary haven for experiment in a future art environment. Andrew Forbes is the initiator of net-art.org, a site which invites everybody to nominate and vote for net art projects outside the usual festival or other art awards. Forbes is a webdesigner first of all. He does engage in artistic practice himself too though, and his work was part of for instance the Amsterdam exhibition 'Net Affects' (hosted on the net by pavu). He was also one of the main designers behind a rather obscure but interesting re/deconstruction of a collection of hell.com works called 'chaos' (a site that unfortunetaly recently closed its doors). Andrew Forbes lives and works in London. It so happens that the so-called first generation of net.artists never were interested in claiming the domain net.art.org or something similar. One can wonder why this was so. Maybe the very idea to present all different types of net art under one name was thought to somehow obscure an existing variety of works and collaborations, or maybe the name was simply too obvious to be interesting? The appearance of a site by the name net-art.org did create a certain feeling of caution in net art circles. This caution was based on the fact that everybody knew one day a site with this name would be created, but the question was: would it be done by someone who just wanted a free ride on the back of the net art hype or would it be a 'genuine net art initiative'? net-art.org proofs to be the latter. net-art.org is interesting enough to investigate. It's strength lies in a pure and uncorrupted network approach to the valuation of net art. * JB: When did you set up net-art.org and what were your plans with it at the time? Andrew Forbes: In '98 we had the first 'net-art' edition. Just a series of coincidences, sort of surfing on web and for real brought it together. I thought a friend said: "check a site called 'e13'". As a green commercial web designer I was kind of overwhelmed by that, followed links to other sites such as 'superbad'. The friend denied the next day he had ever heard of 'e13'. Soon I had a bookmark list, and it is kind of in my nature to want to share. I had another friend, Tim Deighton, who is a database guru, and I had server space at my work. Another friend, Prof John Hyatt, who was main organizer of ISEA98 in Manchester UK gave us a platform to present net-art.org. I felt like I was in privileged position to create a public web space where this work would get extra exposure. JB: Did you change the initial concept or did it develop in any unexpected way at all? AF: It has been more a process of refining. Obviously I have my hand on tiller (when it isn't on auto) but there have always been a panel of people to help me steer, and to discuss which projects that are nominated fit. We use the Bookchin/Shulgin 'definition' of web specific 'art'. The biggest upset the first year ('98) was when creator of www.doodie.com nominated himself and me and Alan accepted it as a joke, and then the guy put a link on his site and we were totally swamped in the stuff. After a few days he had more votes than anybody else put together, and me an Alan started soul-searching as to how we could dump him. Fortunately for us, Mr Doodie realised himself no one else was 'campaigning' and he suggested he withdraw. The main problem (other than making interface as usable and as sympathetic as possible) remains defining where we stand on the question of 'competition'. This year the result of net-art99 forced us to clearly state that creators of listed sites should not 'campaign' in any way to 'win'. This last year, in 2000 the panel was Alex Galloway, Richard Barbeau, Meiko and Ryu, Alan Jennifer Sondheim, Phil Wood and myself. JB: net-art.org is clearly not a gallery because it does not make a selection for the audience, instead it involves both artists and audience in a competition: the artists as competitors, the audience as judges. Do you think selecting artworks for an exhibition is somehow wrong to do, or do you feel unable to make a selection yourself? AF: I think it is clear our net-art.org is a reaction and an alternative to the traditional jury awarded competition, I think it is clear now that a limited number of individuals, with art institution careers etc, are staffing one jury after another. And a body of literature is building up sanctifying a limited group of artists and their work. Therefore particularly things like the lecture/event circuit and museum commissions are becoming the domain of a privileged circle. Clearly some of that circle deserve their rewards, others I would say don't. There is a battle for the 'soul' of net-art, whether it belongs in marble halls or whether it is a popular medium. Generally net-art practitioners can't really gauge there public appreciation in the same way as a music recording artist, a movie director or a comic artist, so our net-art.org is partly an attempt to provide that reaction, in a simple form. It is noticeable that the previous results at net-art.org for '98 and '99 have shown at the top a mixture of 'recognized' artists and something new, and other 'recognized' artists haven't registered 'appreciation'. In our on-going refining of what we mean by 'competition' at net-art.org the phrase I have used most recently is 'open web specific art arena', like an annual parade around an arena, with a more or less mass audience to applaud the 'entries' or otherwise, so basically I see the voting as a kind of 'clapometer'. In 2001 I hope we are going to launch net-art01 with local workshops and 'net-art displays' from Barcelona's two week street festival, Festival Gracia. At that Festival different streets in one quarter of Barcelona are decorated by their inhabitants along a theme they choose and they have street party every night for two weeks. And a committee awards prizes for best dressed street. So this is very similar for instance to Notting Hill Carnival where prizes are awarded to the best Carnival 'camp'. At Notting Hill there is a jury, but they are surrounded by huge crowd at their judging point on the Carnival route, and they are like the mouthpiece of the Carnival crowd. I would say totally unlike the closed discussions of a traditional 'Fine Art' competition jury. So I would hope that net-art.org is like this street display and competition for acclaim, and will become more so. I think we realise at net-art.org that not all net-art projects will appeal or work in the context of net-art.org, but there are other ways and forums to 'disseminate' and experience 'net-art'. We are just one, but I like to think we add a perspective that doesn't really happen elsewhere. JB: How do artists find your site, and how does the audience? Do you send personal invitations, do you promote the site? AF: Normally me and rest of the panel start the ball rolling by entering a few favorites of our own (maybe 15 in total), after that it is from creators or occasionally fans of particular projects. Since everybody at net-art.org so far does it for free we have to mix with earning living and other commitments, so the simple answer is that we don't promote enough as a result. I don't think it has reached it's potential audience nearly as well as it might do. But audience and number of participants is gradually going up. In '00 I did quite a bit of mailing of previous participants and registered voters very late on, it produced a lot of late nominations and visits etc. Much room for improvement in '01. JB: Your site seems to ask for a lot of input from its visitors. There is very little info about all projects listed, one has to click through all works to get a grip on the matter. In a way this is highly sympathetic, as it, amongst other things, shows the horror many judges of the endless list of other art competitions have to go through. Have you ever considered making life more easy for your audience by adding more info about the seperate projects listed? AF: Basically the mechanism of net-art.org has remained unchanged for three years (other than that we used to have a public forum, but hardly anybody wrote). One or two artists have complained this year that the presence of a net-art.org frame when viewing their project is intrusive, one or two voters have complained about being forced to vote when they don't want to. Also the list of participants is getting longer and therefore harder to approach. What we have tried to do is make the format technically as flexible as possible, view only sites you haven't visited, those you have, with or without comments of panel and creators, at the same time as collecting votes. I think we will have big review of format this year but I can't say what the result will be, other than that I hope we can bring out the 'street spirit' of what we try to do further. JB: I get a lot of requests for directions on how to handle and where to find good net art. How do you feel about this demand for easier access to net art, and how do you feel about the appearant yearning of both the audience and certain art professionals for clear quality definitions of net art? AF: To establish an official 'cannon' of net-art? I hope this doesn't happen. I think that to a certain extent this has happened for first generation of net-artists already. But actually the possibilities and even nature of the medium is moving so fast that institutional commentators and curators just are too scared to put their foot in mouth, so they are being left behind again. I actually think it is possible that what is termed 'net-art' now will become the early very experimental stage of an 'art form' that eventually rivals or merges with TV and film. I do hope net-art.org will also serve as some kind of archive and record of people's reaction to different projects from this 'era' now as opposed to what any future textbooks may delineate as the 'net-art' genealogy. JB: Is it possible to survive as independent net art organisation, doing all the technical, promotional and other work on your own, when you have to compete with more and more big art institutions and festivals? AF: We can't go head to head with the likes of Ars Electronica and wouldn't want to I think. But I don't think we can rule out more sponsorship or support but the question is who. We talked about getting under the RHIZOME.org umbrella for a while last year, which might have been good. If it happens I think the association with Festival Gracia this year could be very good and interesting. JB: You are a designer professionally. Do you feel the tension between art and design on the net as a good or bad influence on art? AF: Not sure about good or bad. But tension I think is very clear in several respects. There are all the design zines (shift.jp.org, threeoh.com, k10k.net etc) that by starting with a well defined audience (commercial web designers) and mutual support and linking actually built and reached an audience bigger than any 'net-art' medium so far. There is of course cross over, often net-art work and projects are listed by them. Some people function very much in both arenas (praystation for instance), other net-artists feel very strongly that elements of their work has been appropriated by designers. I think the big distinction is that at the end of the day what is show-cased on these sites has more or less its ultimate criterion in whether that work can be re-positioned to work for whoever is paying. So the work must in the end be content 'neutral', any content can be poured in. And generally who is paying is people who want to see a direct economic return and link through to a purchase being made by the consumer. So really this work usually (but not always) is determined by this need to navigate or lead the consumer towards that purchase, not inter-react, not surf, not dawdle and savor. Sometimes customers for work do have the foresight to let go and take the path of commissioning something that sufficiently gratifies the visitor with that experience that therefore their product wins the support of the visitor. I would say requiemforadream.com is an example of this. Then the hired hand designer is more free to express themselves and I guess crossover to be some kind of 'artist'. Personally as an essentially daytime e-commerce designer and night-time net-art practitioner myself there is a big (sleep deprivation) tension. I suppose I should mention that personally I also have a tension (I think a healthy one) between being a member of no-such.com (a clearly elitist collective/club of net-artists (formerly hell.com, JB)) and what I see as openness and public democratic nature of net-art.org. It is kind of my own personal yin and yang. site: http://www.net-art.org/ http://www.net-art.org/definition.asp http://www.net-art.org/98/results.html http://www.net-art.org/99/results2.asp Andrew Forbes: http://rnd.net-art.org Panel net-art.org award 2000: Alex Galloway: http://rhizome.org/splash/daggett/ Richard Barbeau: http://archee.qc.ca/ Meiko and Ryu http://www1.stas.net/6/meikoandryu/ Alan Sondheim: http://lists.village.virginia.edu/~spoons/internet_txt.html http://www1.stas.net/6/meikoandryu/ Phil Wood: http://www.medialounge.org/indexmoney.html _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold