John Hopkins on Wed, 22 Jan 2003 08:25:20 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> rhizome: burn rate |
Hallo all -- also being disturbed by the further reification and centralization of the "history" of networks and creative actions of the past decade, I would make the observation that I did send the following post to Mark Tribe when he/rhizome solicited reactions to the question of hibernation or asking for cash infusions for survival. I said: "go into hibernation. rhizome has become an institution, a centralized broadcast system, a mechanism for attracting money and redistributing it. this has nothing to do with networking and everything to do with traditional run-of-the-mill art-world institutions. [the PR language of your announcements places rhizome there literally, explicitly.] what has happened to rhizome is what happened to the independent tv collectives of the late 60's early 70's. the collective centralized and started the endless hunt for cash to legitimize and fortify its "organization" in order to "compete" among cultural institutions. [they forgot about distributed community-based action. they forgot about community.] I'd say hibernate, ESPECIALLY if hibernate means getting back to distributed systems and decentralizing the flow and not aiming to be something other than another node in a living system. the accumulated praxis of daily living is what maps the real impact of "artistic" endeavor, not how central one becomes to ANY flow. think of everything that is rhizome, then think of everything that is not rhizome, add the two, then dive in to the unified field... I, for one, need no centralized distribution system to "participate" in my network. I don't rely on nettime, rhizome, 7-11, neoscenes, or any other system. I rely on point-to-point dialogue, sustained and attentive. I liked rhizome better when it represented less than a handful of en-faced people. now it is an institution. I don't need any more institutional influences in my life. I need more point-to-point to displace what institutional penetration there still is." Mark told me that I was the only respondent who promoted hibernation vs requiring cash subscriptions. Didn't anyone else tackle the issue? As a distribution system rhizome had a good track record to a point. it is only when that system began to work as an accumulation system paired with very selective re-distribution that it evolves into a more traditional structure of cultural patrimony. there is a difference, and there is a clear choice to shift fundamentals or ... hibernate. hmmm. and of course, not to mention Raul's comments. it is DEFINITELY on the slippery slope of cultural elitism, but on the other hand, one does not need to look in the direction of rhizome for tips, there are many other healthy networks out there. it is only annoying that people who DON'T have (or don't trust) their own sensibilities, when they view an organization like rhizome as the arbiter of net.art taste... It's tragically limiting and misses the power of networker and networking. reducing the whole thing to an archive and daily press releases of pre-digested pablum... can't anybody offer rhizome a free majordomo account? jh # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]