Katherine Sweetman on Sat, 7 Jun 2008 07:30:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Getty's "Video Revolutionaries" website "overthrown" by digital |
Getty's "Video Revolutionaries" website "overthrown" by digital artists. As part of the California Video exhibition, The Getty launched a website called "Video Revolutionaries". This website invited the public to upload their own video art inspired by the works of the artists in California Video collection. In spite of this request for work influenced by many of the outrageous and transgressive artists in the show, the website also lists criteria that the public's videos must abide by. A list of rules and regulations imposes traditional censorship upon the applicants. The site then also gives the public rules on how they can interact with the videos on the website. The "Video Revolutionaries" website states that all video posts will be reviewed by the Getty and deemed acceptable before being posted to the Video Revolutionaries website. It further explicitly forbids sexually explicit material, certain kinds of violence, and the use of any sort of automated voting methods. But this is the Internet. And the website's security features, not to mention the overall structure, are extremely flawed. For instance, one could change the number of views the video received by simply refreshing the webpage. Continuing to click the refresh button could push up the number of views and put a selected video onto the front page of the site. One group of artists, The Infinity Lab, exploited the weaknesses of the website to show The Getty that its experiment into this realm of new media would not go unchallenged. The Infinity Lab soon came to DOMINATE the Highest Viewed and the Highest Rated categories of the site. The Infinity Lab's submission, appropriately titled, "Digital Highjack" is both the Most Viewed and Highest Rated video on the site. "Digital Hijack" is also probably the most ridiculous video on the site. A plastic skeleton dances around a plastic swimming pool pausing to drink beer out of a straw and then three semi-costumed characters with tin foil masks tell the audience, "We ... think ... you're ... strange". The description under the video reads "The Infinity Lab's Digital Hijack has been successful." The Getty, one of the most powerful art institutions on the planet, tried to throw themselves into the pop-culture, technological, contemporary art world without realizing that the Internet is a much larger, stranger place than the safe confines of a museum. Article: http://theinfinitylab.com/story.html http://post.thing.net/node/2046 http://rhizome.org/announce/view/51610 http://newmediafix.net/daily/?p=2005 # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]