eduardo on Thu, 22 Apr 2004 17:49:55 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Help! |
To: nettime-l AT bbs.thing.net Subject: <nettime> Help! From: "DOUGLAS LEMAN" <doug AT belper.fsnet.co.uk> >> I would just like some input as to what contributers to nettime think generally about the thesis, and the relationship between telecoms art and conceptual/performance art. Reagrds Doug ---------------- My response: This question proposes quite a complex approach to understand the Art/Not Art dichotomy. First I would suggest to select a methodology(ies) -- a combination of more than two might prove to be somewhat more productive. It seems you have already chosen your method by combining the "outproductive" team of the rhizomatic pheens and the well respected Mr Eco. I would also suggest looking at people who are writing today with a clear awareness of where poststructuralism and all other post-isms may be at the beginning of a new century. But in the end, one must pose the question: What is the role of art in culture today, not only locally but also globally? Art has always played a role in culture always close to (if not serving) the elite. The many commercial faces of art today makes this awareness almost invisible unless one is overtly invested in the dissection of culture on an everyday basis. This is where I see the problem: "My thesis is that the telecommunications art projects are a truly post modern art form (decentralised, non hierarchical etc) that represent the pinnacle of the dissolution of the art object." My proposition is that the "art object" no longer needs to be physical. I am by far not the first to say this. We should consider what was the incentive behind the dematerialization of the art object in the seventies by conceptual artists. This aesthetic, of course, has many variations across the world. Conceptual art in Latin America is very different from that of Europe, or Asia, and of course the one that gets the most attention of all: North America. But all these movements share a clear questioning of the object of art with the implicit aim to renegotiate the way art was being commodified by the Institution as just another product supporting the machine of Capital. Of couse these were the times where many socialist ideas were also being questioned. And I think it is safe to say that we all know what happened when those who came to be called the "neo conservatives" or "neo liberalists" arouse from the left in the postmodern eighties. In the end even conceptual art was effectively commodified which means that whether the object is physical or not is no longer an issue, because today we exchange information -- or if you want to be blunt about it "exhibtion value" a la Benjamin. Symbolic Capital is just as valuable as actual capital, especially when we consider the potential in increase of value of anything -- this is the main reason why collaborations thrive on the web and why the whole internet was able to be developed at a global level. Although the commercial market does ride on a more concrete ground for investment we can consider the history of companies like Amazon or Yahoo who never made a profit in their early years as an example of entities who took off the ground based on future promise as opposed to a solid economic base. But all this leads to my point. The reason why your position is problematic is because, yes, while you can claim that there is a decentralized network, this does not mean that there are no longer complex hierarchies at play; if anything, today we have intra/transnational situations where individuals are part of a network involving many nations but which are ultimately controlled by key corporations, often centralized in first world countries. The hierarchy is also more efficient today more than before at the same time that more autonomy is given to branches of a corporation across the globe. With this in mind we can see tha the type of conceptualism that you are referring to is not effective today--that is if you want the type of criticality that conceptual artists from the seventies exercised during their time period put into effect today via telecommunications, you will only exercise pastiche because such art practice is already at play as a well established strategy in the art world at large. In fact it is expected of most artists coming out of art school today to implement some sort of conceptual approach in their art practice. The default mode of this is Appropriation. "nothing is original" "Hey, where is my urinal?!" My point is that the dissolution of the art object does not immediately connect telecommunications to a conceptual art practice. We need no object to exchange capital or have an aesthetic experience. Claiming that the dissolution of the art object in this day and age automatically holds critical value is simply mute. Especially if you are attaching the anti-establishment narratives of conceptualism as I described above to current art practices in emerging technologies. Telecommunications can support to create objects of art, yes. Their immateriality is incidental as to how these could be coopted by criticism. Critical positions need to move past this smokescreen. In short telecommunications do not represent the pinnacle of dissolution of the object of art if you imply with such dissolution a critical position as understood by traditional art practice--especially conceptualism aiming to dismantle the capitalistic machine. Telecommunications is the manifestation of the effective cooption of conceptual practice as a commodity of globalization. Peace, Eduardo Navas # 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]