Randall Packer on Wed, 31 Oct 2001 19:36:01 +0100 (CET)
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[Nettime-bold] US Department of Art & Technology
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Title: US Department of Art &
Technology
FYI:
Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2001 8:15:41
-0400
To: President George W. Bush
<president@whitehouse.gov>
From: Randall Packer <rpacker@zakros.com>
Subject: U.S. Department of Art and Technology
Cc: Vice President Dick Cheney
<vice.president@whitehouse.gov>
RE: U.S. Department of Art and Technology
(http://www.usdept-arttech.net)
Dear Mr. President,
Two years ago, upon moving to Washington, D.C., I had the grand idea
that what our country needed most was a new government agency to
oversee the integration of art and technology. As an artist working
with new media, I was seeking a way to engage with the government and
to stimulate collective action, and felt strongly that my expertise in
this area qualified me to found the U.S. Department of Art and
Technology and be appointed as its first Secretary. My plan was to
build an agency that effectively uses the Net to give artists access
to the political process so they can impact national policy, and
reciprocally, to give the nation access to the artist's vision as a
means to cope with an increasingly technological society. For, as
Marshall McLuhan has so profoundly stated, "The artist picks up the
message of cultural and technological challenge decades before its
transforming impact occurs. He, then, builds models or Noah's arks for
facing the change that is at hand."
At this dramatic moment in our country's history, there is a
profound need for new initiatives that are critical to the cultural
and spiritual well being of a nation under attack. This is precisely
why I am writing to you, sir: to propose a new branch of the
government be formed that will no doubt be successful in healing our
wounded nation through the revitalization of utopian ideologies,
ideologies that have long been fading since the heady days of Thomas
Jefferson and the framers who created our Constitution. Mr. President,
though it is well known that you are not a big supporter of the
avant-garde, nor the expansion of government, you have proven to
understand the need to act quickly and decisively to broaden the reach
of the government, such as your recent action to found the Office of
Homeland Security. You must now understand that today's artists are
probing the depths of issues that are of vital concern to the health
of America, issues such as the impact of media on the national psyche
in times of war, as well as the virtualization of human interaction
resulting from the widespread assimilation of information
technologies. People of all ages across the country and around the
world are engaged with telematic devices to the point where they are
forced to confront the dematerialization of the physical world,
terrorists who control their media and their minds, a confused view of
reality, and the disintegration of their perception of time and space.
The condition of the human race is in dire trouble as we begin the
21st Century.
Mr. President, it is the
artist and only the artist who can understand the depth of these
dramatic changes. The U.S. Department of Art and Technology will
safeguard our most precious resource--the visionary aspirations of
avant-garde artists working with technology--and will, in turn, bring
their message, essential to the well-being of our country, to all
corners of this nation and around the world.
I know you will understand and acknowledge the urgency of my decision
in these difficult times. In the spirit of our forefathers, the
artistic visionaries who understand the complexities and dangers
inherent in maintaining a free nation, a creative nation, a
technological nation, must be given voice and play a key role in the
ongoing process of shaping public policy in order to save our troubled
world.
I would like to end this letter with a quote from the British artist
Wyndham Lewis, who articulated the need for my request so well:
"The artist is always engaged in writing a detailed history of
the future because he is the only person aware of the nature of the
present."
Mr. President, knowledge of this simple fact is now necessary for
human survival in our cybernated and media-saturated society. I look
forward to working with you as a new member of your cabinet in
bringing the artist's message to the people.
Yours sincerely,
Randall Packer,
Artist
Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2001 8:16:02
-0400 (EST)
From:
Autoresponder@WhiteHouse.GOV
Subject: Re: U.S. Department of Art and Technology
Sender: White House Mail Relay Autoresponder
To: rpacker@zakros.com
Comments: FCP version 1.7 jms/990907
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