Armin Medosch on Thu, 26 Oct 2006 10:13:48 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> waves as the material and medium of media art |
dear nettimers i do something unusual here. I post an article which has been published on the Metamute website, and a response to it which I have written using the comment function of their drupal. I am not posting this here for self-aggrandisement. I am taking this unusual step because the waves exhibition was discoursive and raises fundamental questions about a theory of media art which has not yet been written. RIXC and me, in doing this, were raising a research question. This research question we would like to have some feedback to. Rob van Kranenburgs article in Mute actually did not really deal with the exhibition and concept at all. I am not attacking Rob. he has his concerns which are legitimate. However, WAVES did pose some quite clear questions regarding media art. I love, well, like, nettime (not the recent male bonding thread, I am from the male feminist queerist international) but netime has not been particularly good in posing questions about art. there was a brief flare when david garcia and olia lialina discussed the relationship between net art and video art in 1997. BUt basically nettime has been doing something else, it has been about the net and society and technology and all that. This is important. I was also very attached to those questions in my work as an editor of Telepolis. However, in my life I felt the need to go back to the question of art, which is, where, in the end, I am coming from. With WAVES, RIXC and me posed that question about what is the nature and definition and essence (forgive me that word, I am not an essentialist, maybe the greek word eidos would be better wouldnt it have been occupied by a computer game company) of media art by making an exhibition. I continue to think that art is important and that it is distinct from creative industries and technological innovation. I also think that there is such a thing as media art (to which belongs net art, video art, computer art, software art, generative, locative ... in my definition media art is still the umbrella term, as empty as it is or may seem). One basic thesis is (which I will argue below) that the media art of old was quite successful in institution building but the discourse was built on false premises. I am talking about the ZKM/ArsElectronica/ sort of high- tech alienating stuff. They did not manage to build the foundations of a discourse which would go on. The second sort of main thesis is that if we want to create a sound theory of media art (not a general media theory, thats another story) we need to base it on the materiality of the media involved. Lev Manovich has expressed this in his much acclaimed book with the phrase digital materialism. BUt Lev being Lev and living in South California, he did not really put his thesis through, he was not consequential (konsequent, in deutsch). In this sense WAVES was not just an exhibition but a discoursive attempt in raising such A question wether how it is possible to build up such a more konsequent discourse and after 40 years of tinkering and nobody really knowing what it is there may be finally one half of a materially based theory of media art (waves being one half, the other being code - yet largely unexplored, but i am saying too much now). So I am posting now Rob's article and my response. It's all a bit messy, but hopefully that will be understood. At the bottom of my response there is also the link to my introductory article for the exhibition. to open source fundamentalists I say sorry for the .doc format, but it all happened very quickly. And I think that teyt is worthy of reading too. My honestly heald hope is that we have really the chance of building foundations of a theory that lasts. In order to achieve that, I am looking forward to your constructive criticism - or you ripping me apart. I dont mind. But it is about feedback and something that can only evolve collectively. cheers Arminovitch http://www.metamute.org/en/When-Wireless-Dreams-Come-True When Wireless Dreams Come True Editorial content | Articles view pdf printer friendly version Submitted by mute on Thursday, 5 October, 2006 - 10:27 ByRob van Kranenburg Waves, a recent exhibition and conference in Riga curated by RIXC and Armin Medosch, tuned in to artistic engagements with the electro-magnetic spectrum. By exploring the material, if imperceptible, base of the information sphere, this event attempted to escape the conventional fetishisation of message over medium. But here, Rob van Kranenburg argues for a less esoteric, more abrasive confrontation with the 'matrix' 0riginality is clearly ancestor worship gone wrong - Konrad Becker The Urgency: Wireless is increasingly pulling in all kinds of applications, platforms, services and objects (RFID) into networks. Many people communicate through mobiles, Blackberries, digital organisers and palmtops. Cars have become information spaces with navigational systems, and consoles like Nintendo DS have wireless capabilities and Linux kernels installed. We are witnessing a move towards pervasive computing as technology vanishes into intelligent clothing (wearables), smart environments (which know where and who we are) and pervasive games. We will see doors opening for some and closing for others. Mimicry and camouflage will become part of application design. iPods will display colours and produce sounds that correspond to your surroundings. Yet there is an intrinsic autonomous trajectory in this hybrid space that needs to be explored and evidenced not in applications, but in programming and design principles. For me this is what the Waves Conference ? part of the 8th Art + Communication new media art festival, which took place in Riga, Latvia this August ? brought out. The coming to consciousness of an intuitive knowing that we are at a crossroads where artists should take control of the very principles and materiality of the 'network waves'. Artists become, in the words of Waves co-curator Armin Medosch, 'political engineers'. Opportunistic networking vs citizen design networks In terms of spectrum policies, our enemy is not the military. Corporate commercial broadcasters are - John Wilson This movement of digital technology towards our everyday life and our daily encounters in the streets, which are themselves becoming a digital territory, a hybrid space made up of services and communication protocols, is currently being negotiated by the logistics, retail, telecommunications and security industries. But as the Waves conference showed us, the convergence of highend EU projects like Haggle and citizen designed networks like Hivenetworks is becoming real in its technological and scaling aspects. Processing.org (an open source programming language and environment for images, animation, and sound), for example started out as a programming environment for visuals, and is now moving away from the screen to produce the conceptually sound and working Arduino board. As the site explains: 'Arduino is an open- source physical computing platform based on a simple I/O board and a development environment that implements the Processing/Wiring language.' Meanwhile, Jaromil (dyne.org) is fitting up Nintendo DS (a handheld games console with wireless capabilities) with Linux to create small, cheap computers for rural environments. Images: "Sensor_Sonics_Sights", Gas of Latvia & Oskar Poikans, "Electromagnetic Moments" Usman Haque, Bengt Sjolen and Adam Somlai Fisher - architects and programmers shaping both locative media theory and practice - are working on Asus(brand) Wl-Hdd, wireless hard disk boxes to make up as Linux computers in order to disperse them, like smart dust, into our streets. A forebear of these citizen designed networks is the i3 sponsored project LiMe that predicted all this connectivity in daily settings. According to Alexei Blinov (Hivenetworks.net) whose project is to liberate embedded computers for artistic use, we can now see the network as a content structure, 'no longer only a connectivity structure through which access to the global internet is facilitated'. In this respect it is interesting to see EU sponsored academic lab projects such as Haggle trying to achieve the same objectives as Hivenetworks. Citizens become professional managers of their own lives Symphathetic resonance is another word for artistic investigations into materials and properties, where in reverse engineering, ?almost by accident? information occurs/evidences itself. - Joyce Hinterding The coming decade will see the European nation states' monopoly of knowledge-power crumble; the digitally literate middle class will script its own forms of solidarity (with its nationally non-affiliated community), breaking with the 19th century democratic institutions (starting with the health, education and security systems), and triggering new class wars between the disempowered majority of non- cognitariat unemployed and the cognitariat which abandons national solidarity. The middle class - backbone of what once was democracy - is deciding it has had enough of shoddy organisation, bad return on its investment ( taxes) and suddenly believes itself to be Nietzsche's Ubermensch: all this connectivity! And it seems free! Look what happened from the first visual browser Mosaic 1993: First phase: personal gain: online medication, travel, health information, banking. Second phase: interpersonal gain: sharing, ebay, peer groups, gaming avatars. The coming decade will see the third phase: institutional gain: organising parallel structures. The rich have always done this, now the middle class in the Western European countries is going to do it too. This withdrawal from responsibility for the commons, public space, public facilities and sense of solidarity will be the end of the democratic state at an organisational level. This stems from the logic of techné, outsourcing memory and agency to an ever more seemingly controllable environment on an individual level. The fact that this scenario is hastened by the great cultural and racial tensions in Western European cities and countryside ( where extreme right wing parties keep growing) is secondary. Waves showed us where we are now: moving to the outskirts, leaving the centre wide open for reactionary, wild capitalist forces and the threat of a barren commons. Image: Arduino: an open-source physical computing platform Susanne Ackers describes how McLuhan saw satellite communication systems both as an extension of the human nervous system and as a point of no return. The satellite infrastructure creates connectivity from above. The RFID infrastructure creates connectivity from below. Once you could say: 'And we are in the middle'. Currently, however, there is no we as in 'we human beings', the 'we' is an information space like any other. It no longer relates to an analogue human conciousness. There is no longer a need for a human interpretation of these data. Smart cameras have software that decides whether a movement is illegal or not. RFID is tied to biometrics and how the stages of biometric development consist of several steps: firstly, the securing of authentication and verification of identities in documents, and secondly the implementation of biometric access points in the entire communicational chain, from mobile phones to computers and PDAs, thus securing the fears of business (IP, patent business models) and governments (vested interests of families looking out for their future generations). Isn't this full out war on free minds? What else is it? The Matrix is being build in front of our eyes and off we go to do what? Mapping? I really don't get all this mapping stuff. Why do it again, on your own, when all terrains are mapped already? Theorising? Theorising what? Theory is a 19th century pastime. All this talking. What does it build? Games? Kids play games. Image: Living Memory: connecting the community The problem with the avant garde is that it is always somewhere else. That is its function, yes, no quarrel with that. Yet the Conference clearly showed how two key figures of the locative movement are taking this too literally. Marko Peljhan is doing projects at the Poles, on global warming and Julian Priest is losing himself ( as he himself exclaimed) in spectrum politics. At this very moment in time when technology has become cheap, malleable and potent enough to wire up our own streets, who cares about this bunch of people drawing neat nice lines on worthless paper? How productive it could be to get all this conceptual power focused on real, concrete, discrete objectives. This is not about alerting the public any more. There is no more public. People just go from one scandal to another and could not care less if 12 cameras were installed in one afternoon. This is about us. Saving us a place - a space - where we can breathe, discuss, think and dream manic dreams. We have two options: either we assist policy to ensure that at least some public space survives, or we build our own parallel systems. We start Mixed Reality Corporation with about 200 locative artists and become the new Microsoft of the 21th century ourselves instead of helping - through all our wonderful unscalable stuff - IP become wiser and feeding the machine with all our lovely ideas. Things are serious. This is not a game. Time to organise. Waves, Exhibition Hall Arsenals, Latvian National Museum of Art, Riga, Latvia. Conference: August 25 - 26; exhibition: August 25 - September 17, 2006, http://rixc.lv/waves/en/home.html subject: Art | Conferences | Free Software | Network | New Media | RFID | Society | Technology view pdf printer friendly version | 627 reads Some added information and clarifications Armin Medosch - Sat, 07/10/2006 - 3:05pm I find it unfortunate that this text is presented as if it were a review of the WAVES exhibition and conference. It certainly isn't. This is an opinionated text about things the author is currently interested in but completely ignores the themes of WAVES and the work that has been shown in the exhibition. Most of the examples that he mentions, such as Processing or Jaromil's dynebolic, which both are great projects in themselves, have not been on show in the exhibition nor would they have fitted the theme. The author is entitled to have his opinions and research interests. However, the WAVES exhibition, conference, and film and performance program was about other things. Marc Tuters has written up his impressions from Waves on his research blog with more detailed descriptions of some of the works and the exhibition in general. http://interactive.usc.edu/members/mtuters/2006/08/rixc_makes_wav es.html In addition to this text I would like to clarify a few things about the intentions behind the exhibition and event. The misperception starts with the first word already -- 'Wireless' this commercial catch all term for wireless technologies. WAVES instead was an art exhibition which instisted to use an alltogether different language and had nothing to do with commercial interpretations of New Media. This can be criticised, but the fundamentally different approach needs to be made clear as a position statement. The practice and theoretic reflection of media art is not only legitimate but also necessary and this practice is distinct from technological development per se or creative industry applications of new technologies. Full Stop. The exhibition's theme is summed up in the sub-heading "electromagnetism as material and medium of art". For me this was/is part of a wider investigation into principles or foundations of media art. My thesis is that the media art of old (Ars Electronica, the large scale interactive computer installation, Weibel/Shaw et al - see my MA dissertation http://theoriebild.ung.at/view/Main/TechnologicalDeterminismInMediaA rt) has not managed to build sound foundations of media art. This is why we have to start afresh. In discussions with Franz Xaver of Medienkunstlabor Graz, sponsor of my current theoretic work and pioneer and 'mentor', came to the conclusion that any theoretic work needs to build from the bottom up and start with the materiality. We identified two principle materials of media art, waves and code. Code haveing been already done by Ars Electronica, albeit badly, this exhibition focused on waves. The second sort of main thesis behind the exhibition is that in the 20th century the focus has always been on the signal transported by waves, radio and tv. Yet there are many artists who have engaged with waves in a much more direct way, working with the properties of waves directly. Usually these works are part of shows which have other themes, they appear in camouflage of locative or sound art or video art. Yet the great response of artists showed that artists themselves understood and shared our interest in engagement with waves on a deeper physical layer. This was one of the first big museum shows emphasising waves as such and how they function and what can be done with them apart from transporting sound and images in the traditional radio/tv format. Here kicks in a third thesis. As we do not have senses for most parts of the electromagnetic spectrum - only light and heat - we need antennae to get access to this part of reality. The antenna as a physical object has, on one hand, sculptural properties - consisting of certain materials which must be arranged in certain proportions in order to send/receive specific frequencies - and on the other hand allows us to gain access to Hertzian space. This means that the traditional notion of the sculpture is expanded into the formless world of electromagnetism - the electromagnetic sculpture. In other words, it looks good AND it also does something. The work which exemplified this approach most in the WAVES exhibition was the work of Joyce Hinterding. In her own words she does Aeriology - a subjective 'science' of the waves. http://rixc.lv/waves/en/5.html She makes different types of antennae, for instance for receiving very low frenquencies by creating a large copper coil which is a fantastically aesthetic object but also creates electricity through induction. For the Waves exhibition we settled for another piece, PURPLE RAIN, which she co-produced with David Haines. Here, they use tv antennae to receive massively powerful tv frequencies - although we dont feel it tv still sends radiation tens of thousends of watts strong through the world. On a screen they show a 'romantic' image of high mountains with an avalanche coming down -- the unstoppable avalanche being a metaphor for the sheer force of the waves generated by tv. Depending on the strength of tv waves received this image is interrupted by white noise, the occasional systems breakdown and the face of an 'anchor woman' tv presenter. Yet the main things that happens is that the avalanche is going on and on and on. This work is an exception insofar as it uses metaphor - her other works are more direct without employing metaphor at all, but it is a good one which works well as a critique of the contaminating force of mass media. Similar, in a certain regard, the work by Franz Xaver. He has built his own radio telescope which is positioned somewhere far from any city in a region in Upper Austria and it is oriented at the sky to receive the frequency emitted by the atomic element H (Hydrogen) - thus he receives the radiation from the birth of the universe. This radiation is transformed directly/electronically into sound - )not through any digitization and thereby 'interpretational' process, you can actually hear the background radiation of the universe. He says, quite polemically, ten years of WWW versus million years of radio history - the radiation which he receives is not oly coming from very far away but also from the deep past. Such works make us aware of times and dimensions which we are usually not thinking in and thereby they are powerful political statements opening up a completely different horizont against which to discuss current developments. I am convinced that there is nothing 'esoteric' about this. Those waves exist, they are very real and artists are developing ways of making us experience that reality. This type of engagement with waves - another good example would be the works by Erich Berger and Bob Adrian, were central themes that guided us when we made this exhibition and all that is completely ignored by Rob van Kranenburg with his trendish interest in ubiquituous wireless. Also, it seems he did not go into the exhibition because the few examples he mentions are all from the conference. While the exhibition was puristic and coherent in its focus on waves, the conf was a bit more open to other themes, which is where hive networks and such things came in, which seems to have confused Rob about the intentions of the exhibition and events, I must assume. Rob wrote: "This movement of digital technology towards our everyday life and our daily encounters in the streets, which are themselves becoming a digital territory, a hybrid space made up of services and communication protocols, is currently being negotiated by the logistics, retail, telecommunications and security industries." It seems we are being criticised here for not engaging with the dominant powers behind and direction of development of technology. Absolutely right, we didn't. We dared to make an exhibition which was NOT about what interests RvK currently. We did not engage with the mainstream of ICT development, or, maybe only insofar as we were showing the radical 'other' of those industry developments. We stepped OUT of the mainstream and tried to find a position -- which is what I think artists need to do. Otherwise we could all join the Microsoft or Sony research lab or the EU tech development boards or whatever. Sorry, but we were having our own little investigation here. Because of that Waves allowed us to take a breath of fresh air, getting out of the overcrowded discourse zone. By making WAVES we tried to make a point that it is still possible to make a curated media art exhibition with a strong theme, which is coherently interpreted and which functions outside the utilitarian paradigm which government funding policies want to impose on the arts and specifically on media art. This was not about 'new media' or creative industries, or technological innovation. More importantly, there was no outside agenda behind Waves, this exhibition was done because RIXC and me shared an interest in the proposed theme, and this was the one and only reason. For RIXC it also was the 10th anniversary of their Art & Communication festival and they used this opportunity to make a big exhibition for the first time. It was a risk and getting the funding together was maybe the hardest part. As there was no single main sponsor who would probably also have had an influence on the agenda, funding was sourced from many different funding agencies, which was difficult but also allowed us to have that thematic independence. Funding or other institutional/structural restraints and oppressive tendencies had no impact on the content. This was maybe the most beautiful thing for me. Apart from that, it was in a sense a traditional exhibition, housed in the major exhibition space in Riga, it was not alternative or activist, but yes, a grown up, beautiful and large exhibition with about 40 works. The show was about art but also political in that sense that it showed alternative uses and a sort of pragmatic utopianism - not the utopianism of never-never land but things which can be done and work although maybe society cares currently little about them. Thus, it was neither esoteric nor escapist in the way some 'art & science' shows are. As an exhibition it spoke through the works themselves in a way we cannot experience often these days, providing an intellectually and aesthetically stimulating type of engagement. On top of that we also had a conference, films and performances. We invited Erwin Van'Hart from DeBalie cinema who curated an evening programme of projections of some early classics of waves film and video art. This was part of an overall strategy of working against the usual short term memory of creative new media confusion. We also had a number of more senior artists in the show, for instance Anthony McCall or the Russian artist Bulat Galeev. It was important to bridge those 35 - 40 years to put current practice into perspective and highlight that there is not one media art history but that there are histories, different local histories of media art. We also had Paul DeMarinis, this years Golden Nica winner, who deployed a 100 year old 'forgotten' radio technology. The artists generally seemed to feel very positive about the project because it provided a context for their work which is normally not recognised. It was in that sense also an artist's axhibition - not only by but also for artists. But the public also came in great numbers. At the opening we had 'tout Riga', about 400 - 500 people and on the following days the exhibition hall was always busy with people, families with children, old people, all kinds of people. So I can say, as a kind of resumme, sorry Rob, but beat us up a little bit more for being the Avantgarde. Please note: The text WAVES - An Introduction, written for the WAVES catalogue, has now been published in Mute Magazine's Public Library. http://www.metamute.org/en/WAVES-An-Introduction At the same time the RIXC team and me are working on making available more documentation but this could still take some time. # 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