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*************************************************************** cream 4 **************************************************************** Summer is here. Have your cream before it melts. In this cream we concentrate on the heart of the critical matter, if we can still speak of one in the digital arena. Can we define 'criteria for net art' and if yes, what are they? Sarah Cook reports from Venice and describes what she found at the Slovenian pavillion. Two different curators with two different mind sets and two different catalogues in one exhibition: one the official curator, one an artist. Then cream offers you two very different attempts to get some grip on those slippery net art criteria. Steve Dietz reflects on the nature of the changes networked media bring to the arts. His thoughts will no doubt create some disturbance. Does it still make sense to write criticism at all and what does it serve? Sarah Thompson looks at examples of net art to see what she thinks works best. What are the strong sides of network art, what kind of projects work best and why? Enough said, enjoy! And do share some cream with your friends. ::::::::: In this fourth issue::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :criteria for net art: Report: Sarah Cook - Twice Curated - the criteria for net art in the economy of the Venice Biennale Thought: Steve Dietz - Criteria {net.criteria} Thought: Sarah Thompson - Art grows up? :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Sarah Cook is a PhD researcher at the University of Sunderland, England where she co-edits a site called the Curatorial Resource for Upstart Media Bliss (www.newmedia.sunderland.ac.uk/crumb). - Twice curated - the criteria for net art in the economy of the Venice Biennale In the introduction to his catalogue to accompany his presentation in the Slovenian pavilion at the 48th Venice Biennale Vuk Cosic writes (and I think it bears reprinting in full): "While it would be truly polite to congratulate ourselves for the inclusion in the Biennale, it is nevertheless important to offer a fair account of how it actually happened. The fact that net.art has become part of the official history of the Biennale is a consequence of the art-political vacuum in Slovenia. The previous selection of artists for this show have raised so much bad blood (mauvais sang) that the key institutions have de facto boycotted the selection process staged by the culture ministry. I am mentioning this in order for the historians of net.art not to fall into unjustified glorification of Slovenia or Eastern Europe as a natural basin for net.art to establish itself as mainstream like the recent issue of CIAC magazine from Montréal is suggesting. The relationship between net.art and the art system remains silly, and possibly the expression 'net.art.system' expresses its impossibility." In fact the Slovenian pavilion, titled "Absolute One" includes three artists: Vuk Cosic, 0100101110101101.org and Tadej Pogacar. The exhibition was curated by Aurora Fonda (her name writ large on the posters like the Aurora Borealis, scarcely a mention of the artist's names). Her criteria, from her introduction states: "Absolute One is a project which began with the proposal to highlight the differences which still exist in forms of cultural and artistic expression flourishing in the so-called "non-Western" countries, in which a market is still in a phase of adjustment - and in certain cases still inexistent - plays an important role in the development not only of the arts, but generally in man/object relations." It is in light of this, she argues, that she chose work that finds its home on the web - a different kind of economic market space - and in its disdain or lack of need for actual exhibition space and hence actual museum or art world institutional structures. But what is the validity of such a gesture (this art doesn't need exhibition space, so let's give it some in Venice to highlight that aspect of it)? In fact, if you look at just economics alone you discover that an unfortunate divide was evident in Venice: Eastern European and other fiscally-challenged small countries decided to show the work of many artists (3 for Slovenia, 3 for Latvia, 3 for Greece, 15 for Armenia, 5 for Turkey, 6 for Ukraine) -- getting more bang for their buck? -- whereas the countries which are recognized as having a center of the art world market within their borders were able to show one or at the most two of their star artists (France, England, Germany, USA). From Vuk Cosic's perspective the gesture wasn't enough and it didn't actually speak to the real economies of scale at work in the selection process. Therefore, he gambled away a year's salary and curated an exhibition of net.art as part of his presentation within the pavilion, to, as he says contextualize the work. He called this show the Temporary Autonomous Pavilion and it was based around the theme of New Low Tech Media. It included in addition to Vuk Cosic: 0100101110101101.org, Heath Bunting, Tom Jennings, Vinyl Video, Jodi and RTMark. In light of the fact that the Venice Biennale was itself a huge event (65 countries, 286 artists and more than 30,000 square meters of exhibition space - and that's not including all the national pavilions outside the Giardini and the Arsenale), you wouldn't think that one tightly budgeted, temporary and autonomous exhibition would have much impact. But of course it did: it pointed out the fact that, like the "Manchester Pavilion" -- a bar run by some British artists -- across the canal, you don't need the sanction of the art system in order to be included in and noticed by the big art world, that you can define and set your own criteria, depending on how big a loan you can secure. ::....____-> Steve Dietz is curator of new media at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, USA. - criteria{net.criteria} - "Whatever the time spent swooning, the mathematician, like the lepidopterist, is _professionally_ engaged in an effort to limit the loveliness that he sees [infinitude], the mathematician fixing in formalism what the lepidopterist fixes in formaldehyde. But the desire to see and the desire to ratify what one has seen are desires at odds with one another, if only because they proceed from separate places in the imagination." David Berlinksi, "The Advent of the Algorithm" The desire to understand--to ratify what one has seen through naming, classifying, formalizing--is not limited to "professionals," of course. It is human nature. Yet, is there not the assumption that the professional has a special burden: to make judgments, to provide explanations, to be authoritative? And what are the criteria for being a net art critic or a curator of new media, anyway? Which is what interests me about the net. It changes everything. Or does it? How quickly we have gone from infinite possibilities to the construction of limits. Infinity is too difficult to grasp and besides, we're getting tired of ideas that don't work; work that doesn't produce. When will we see some real art? Some net art we can really value, in the market? The Duchampian gesture of the readymade suggested, at least initially, that art could be what the artist asserted. It changed ... a lot. To say that Michael Heizer's "Double Negative" owes something to Duchamp is not to suggest it is a readymade or to deny that it is executed in a medium with some of its own distinctive characteristics. It is to acknowledge the definitional role of artistic practice per se. In this sense, net art is more of Duchamp. It is what the artist makes of it. Duh. What is different, perhaps counterintuitively, is the network of distribution; of access. Disintermediation was the rhetoric. The critic-curator as filter is the return of the repressed. Net works compel the desire to understand. The network is an infinite ratification process, so to speak, for which criteria are points of view not authority; for which consensus is distributed, cumulative, and mutable not stone-cold commandments from on high; for which diversity is a system not a regret. The network changes ... some things--not human nature but, perhaps, the imagining of professionalism and institutionalization. ::............__________-> Sarah Thompson writes www.content-type.org.uk , a website dedicated to reviewing net based art practice. She has studied FineArt, contributed reviews to Rhizome under the e-name of Aurora Lovelock, taught art and visual theory and is currently also a part time carer. - art grows up? - With net art, art 'grows up'. Net art separates art from the colonizing effects of art institutions, retaining a relationship but of a different, perhaps more adult, kind. From Harwood's Tate de mongrel website, via the Temporary Autonomous Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, to the open source net art histories at the Whitney Museum, net art sets about demystifying the relationships between art, institutions and audiences. Meanwhile the absurdist, playful side of net art lies more often in the exploration and subversion of the computer and its uses, as well as the 'user' controlled by technology: "you are now inside my computer" and the other boundary games of browser art, surprise the unsuspecting net idler. The net art work by Michael Daines: "it is now safe to turn off your computer" plays with these dilemmas of separation. Is the user in control of the boundary between human and machine or have they become totally enmeshed? As a work it is very relaxing. Just one page. "There are many dangers beyond the protective sphere of your glowing computer screen, and, were you to turn the machine off at the wrong moment, you might risk injury, death, or worse." Is the net safe, or does it overly feed our anxieties and fantasies? Suicidejournal.com uses the 'net-art perspective' to explore suicidal depression. 'Seminal creator "innergirl" becomes fascinated with his/her own damaged mental process and charmed by the spell of self-deprecation.' What is the culture surrounding innergirl's depression? An invaded sense of self? Online, it takes the form of 'pure' and painful revelation within the paradoxical boundary of anonymity. In fact, it is proposed that only through anonymity can artistic integrity be preserved. Richard Saul Wurman has said, "We are what we read... The information we injest shapes our personalities." (Information Anxiety, 1989). According to Wurman, the only way we can control the influx of information, for our own self-protection, is by a) going on an information diet and/or b) consciously developing a subjective view of the world - separation based on what interests us as personalities, and importantly, without guilt. Heath Bunting is very good at this. His recent splash page for Rhizome, "stuff done by heath bunting over the past five years", is a bit like Wurman's suggestion of a "curriculum verite", which is like the curriculum vitae, only honest. Bunting lets us meander through some select personal experiences and quixotic moments and it's so relaxing. In an information society, the user must find ways to interact differently with data overload, to build their own subjective mapping techniques in order to cope with the anxiety cultural data flows inevitably cause. Net art makes subjective mapping manifest by subverting the dominant codes of institutions, corporations, interfaces and now language itself, while at the same time emphasizing participation. Furtherfield's DIDO - Day in Day out global diary, and Twenteenth Century Studios' Dicshunary both currently ask us for textual participation. Its werds, werds, werds. When does net art not work so well? When the individual artist demands too much attention, - enfant terrible like - without being humorous about it. This goes against the aesthetics of net art. It also conveys the wrong signals to the browsing public. Bookchin & Shulgin's Introduction to Net Art (1994-1999) states that net art should be: "...3.b. Beyond institutional critique: whereby an artist/individual could be equal to and on the same level as any institution or corporation. c. The practical death of the author." Net artists want the public to treat them like adults, by becoming responsible for informing themselves about art as well as everything else. Net art works best when it is sufficiently exaggerating dominant codes, either explicitly, like entropy8zuper or implicitly like Bunting. As soon as net art moves into the realms of converging media, like e-books, web operas etc, then it no longer exaggerates dominant codes - but instead proposes new forms, in the processes of evolving. These new forms are trying to find new bounds, and their transitional morphologies are not subverting but redefining and reforming. These are often new, but as yet, insufficiently mapped territories. Territories which are being opened up by net art. it is now safe to turn off your computer http://rhizome.org/object.rhiz?2358 Suicidejournal.com http://rhizome.org/object.rhiz?2342 stuff done by heath over the past five years http://rhizome.org/splash/heath Dido http://www.dido.uk.net Dicshunary http://twenteenthcentury.com/dicshunary/ <-_________________________::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: cream is an experimental collaboration of writers and curators in the field of net art. cream will come to you as a (sometimes irregular) bi-weekly newsletter devoted to theory and criticism concerning art in network culture. All texts and reviews are kept as short as possible, they are not introductions to larger texts elsewhere on the net. The idea behind it is to provide a continuous injection of critical thought into the net art field, to provoke a more prominent critical and theoretical discourse around art in net culture and to do this in a way that asks for discussion rather then that it obstructs a flow of discourse. You can subscribe to cream and we invite you to forward this mail to anybody you feel might be interested in the content of cream. Contributors to cream: Saul Albert, Inke Arns, Tilman Baumgaertel, Josephine Bosma, Sarah Cook, Florian Cramer, Steve Dietz, Frederic Madre, Tetsuo Kogawa, Sarah Thompson. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: cream site (under construction) : http://www.laudanum.net/cream Subscriptions to cream via cream-info@laudanum.net :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: cream would not be possible without the work and hospitality of the House of Laudanum, http://www.laudanum.net . :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: _______________________________________________________________ you are subscribed to the cream mailing list to send feedback to the list, write to mailto:cream-info@laudanum.net?subject=cream feedback to unsubscribe, send an email to cream@laudanum.net with 'unsubscribe' in the subject line mailto:cream@laudanum.net?subject=unsubscribe to retrieve a help file, send an email to cream@laudanum.net with '@help' in the subject line mailto:cream@laudanum.net?subject=@help cream is kindly supported by the house of laudanum http://laudanum.net _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold