Nmherman on Wed, 24 Nov 1999 17:18:50 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Oz's talking about Luther Blissett |
In a message dated 11/23/1999 9:43:05 AM Central Standard Time, luther@syntac.net writes: > >are you against the idea of an artist making money from their work? I have a > >particular spin on this idea - I prefer NOT to make a career out of my art > >(writing) because I don't wish to put my art under any sort of "survival" > >pressure, but I respect and understand the decision of other artists who > >want to do that. I think this is a pretty interesting question. If we call everything "art," then you are either for or against people having money. If we call some things art and some things by another name, there is a possibility of money only being exchanged for the non-art activity. The area we call "art" could be completely excluded from the cash economy. Sometimes we wish to give money to people who are doing things we like. Call it a gift, geras, honor-prize. What would it mean to never exchange money for any kind of art? After all, if no art is copyright you can just make your own copy for free. It is possible that some artists could decide not to earn or accept any financial reward directly from their art. Thus all music would be free, all writing, all painting, all sculpture, film, video, and entertainment. We don't realize the enormous consequences of charging money for art. The first and permanent result of art for pay is the creation of a hierarchy, a professional class. This is analgous to the caste systems of more ancient cultures, but the arbitrary and conventional process of selection goes unnoticed if the illusion of a free market prevails. If everyone has access to an art medium--painting for example--there can be no harm or hypocrisy in profit-making by the most talented and competitive painters. Of course this logic is the mirror of the corporate ethos, ridiculous on its face but accepted wisdom nonetheless. The danger of a digital stock market is that money looks after itself, first and foremost. At least in the USA, preserving the value of investments is a top governmental priority. Recession is not an option even if the economy is disastrously out of balance with concrete and verifiable externalities. No one wants to deny him or herself the convenience and gratification of payment, endorsement, ordination, whatever. However, we may be entering a stage in history for which the commercial (profit-seeking) mechanism of media production is completely unsuitable and possibly dangerous. Antitrust law has been used in the past to protect diversity for producers and consumers. But when actual market presence for a given activity is limited to unrealized and unrecognized potential, an externality caused by insufficient capitalization, monopoly practices can become confused with simple efficiency. Which way is the global market going on the issues of copyright and the super-corporation in media production? More or less along the path set by Reagan when he canceled the Fairness in Reporting Act and allowed telecommunication to self-regulate. Viacom expunges uncomfortable content from its Chinese broadcasts in order to stay in with the government there. These kinds of problems may ultimately prove to be irrelevant and inevitable, should the multinationals actually achieve the utopia they're planning. From my personal perspective however, I doubt the prospects of the WTO most seriously and consider intervention now to be the number one job of everybody. To the extent that artists remain in their prescribed economic niche, they will have no effect on the larger developments of the next fifty years. But this is nothing new. Artists have always posed a threat to economic interests because markets can only be organized through media. Max Herman The Genius 2000 Project www.geocities.com/~genius-2000 # 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