Alan Sondheim on Sun, 18 Jun 2006 23:49:04 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> re: Cinema |
Making a general reply, in regard to cinema, digital, analogic, or otherwise:: First, There is _no_ cinema; there are discursive practices, fields of all sorts, with fuzzy boundaries, technologies that come and go, labors and energies that drive them. 'Cinema' itself already connotes style, 'seri- ousness,' formal and overdetermined histories, a viewpoint which already tends towards its status as the 'dominant form' of art in the 20th century. I submit there is no dominant art form in any century; this is what art historians do: make dominance. For whom would cinema be dominant in this manner? What demographics? Is this the result of polling? What is cinema? Perhaps rock is dominant? The novel and proliferation of literacy in general? Street theater? War? Disease? Second, perhaps you know more conservative or media-bound people than I do; almost all the interesting work (video, qt, flash, etc.) I've seen online is done by people without a film, or for that matter, a digital video background. Someone will say or write, 'I've done a piece in quick- time'; they don't say they're videomakers or filmmakers or web artists (well, sometimes) or net artists (that phrase already seems overdeterm- ined as well with such a short 'history'). And they certainly don't say they're 'quicktime artists' or some such. Even 'film theory' - Metz for example - works as well with avatars, online behavior, MOOs, performance, being onine or offline. Film theory did interesting turns back then as theorists themselves increasingly blurred the boundaries of their subject matter until everything inside and outside media was encountered. I think distinctions should be dropped at this point; they're rotted! They're rotted because of the effects they continue to have - on universi- ty departments (what is and is not acceptable), on granting organizations, on distributors, on both online and offline venues. I give an example of my own work, obviously closest to that. I do laptop performance, have a show up now with video and computer projections, video and computer moni- tors, my online work splashes across a variety of media (defined in terms of applications), some has been interactive, some not, some has deliber- ately broken down, some seems to play forever. When I apply for a grant in category X, I'm told the work doesn't 'fit.' I'm not the only one in this situation - if I was, it could be nothing more than pathology, idiolect. Most artists I know - some from video, some from film, some ab nihilo in terms of background - run into these problems. In other words, definitions a priori carry power, carry the _cut,_ exclude by their very nature. (I should add this is particularly true for artists whose work is primar- ily online (one way or another): this is where all those issues of intellectual property, history, grants to the ephemeral, come to roost. And schools generally respond to all of this by rear-guard creation of new boundaries, divisions; it's interesting as well to see what is academically acceptable and not acceptable in terms of online publication - this continues to change, as academies hold onto non-Wiki/blog bound objecthood, even in the absence of material, i.e. paper, production.) This isn't anything new; it's out of Foucault obviously. But the problems persist, as if humans today have to learn how to _look_ again, without the cultural baggage that leads eventually to connoisseurship and all the problems that entails. And 'cinema,' 'cineaste,' has, one way or another, been deeply embedded with, in bed with, the connoisseur. If I believed in manifestos, I'd be screaming: Down with Definitions! Destroy All Cinema! Learn To Look! (but then I'd be already imitating the old Destroy All Music festivals which produced some of the most interest- ing performance, sonic or otherwise, that I've encountered). Finally, at least in some areas, for example net art, the very use of distinctive terminology carries arrogance and (cultural) power with it - again, whose net art, what history, etc. etc.? There are probably well over a billion online at this point, and as Tom points out, everyone is making video, but also everyone is making everything; in the midst of the misery of the planet, creation is bursting forth. So there's a political agenda to my reply here: Online, let the URL or whatever, telnet, ftp, etc. etc. take you to unfathomable places where you're lost, challenged, surrounded, exhilarated. And leave the old forms, whatever they are or were, with whatever histories, far behind. Even if one is bound to recreate the past, it's _new._ - Alan # 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: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net