robert adrian on 14 Feb 2001 12:27:57 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: Josephine Berry's net art history |
Josie - It seems a bit unfair to accuse net-artists of "having failed in their own terms" because the art institutions have noticed them. The art industry is desperately trying to find some collectable or commodity aspect of the transient work on the web (which is getting so much attention) and are naturally chasing the few names who started early and established a reputation. Since net artists have nothing to sell the next best thing is to do residencies, lectures, whatever. Call it 'branding' if you like but it is still possible to operate critically while enjoying the comforts of institutional hospitality: Geert Lovinck has been doing it for years -- its known as 'biting the hand that feeds you'. :) The thing to notice is that working with tele- communications technology -- once difficult, marginal and infrequent -- has become simple, central and ubiquitous. Everybody's doing it, including artists who simply want to distribute and/or publicise their work in other media. The Internet has become 'public space', as we have seen with the demos and protests in which the street events are a kind of simulation of the real events in the network. All of the artists you mention treat the Internet as public space and, no matter what their other agendas may be, an important political element of their work is to claim that space as a place for art. Friedrich Kittler is not the only theorist to have noticed that talking of media (in the plural) is absurd at a time when all the media-- prlnt, photography, sound recording, film, television, radio, whatever-- are disappearing, being devoured by the meta-medium 'computer'. Net art may be the first (only?) evidence of the existence of this meta-medium, being conceived, produced, distributed, received and archived entirely within a single medium: _networked computers_. Net art, or something like it, will thrive in the new paradigm -- it remains to be seen how the traditional art institutions will cope. Far from being over, the game is is just beginning to get really interesting. b. ___________________ robert adrian wiedner hauptstrasse 37/69 a-1040 vienna austria tel: +43 1 504 3110 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold