philip pocock on Tue, 30 Sep 2003 21:35:28 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Don't Call it Art: Ars Electronica 2003 |
On Montag, Sep 22, 2003, at 20:34 Europe/Budapest, Lev Manovich wrote: > Lev Manovich > > Don't Call it Art: Ars Electronica 2003 > > > In choosing CODE as its theme, Ars Electronica 2003 has capitalized on > (some would say: appropriated) developments within the field of new > media > art that already have been going on for a few years. if the title isnt disparaging enough, the opener is certainly a put-down (some would say: sour grapes). what a ridiculous inferrence, that recent developments are ineligible as a symposium theme. this in no way defends how ars electronica dealt with 'code' as 'the current hardcore language of culture'. usually such events look back at recent developments to extract an appropriate theme. CODE certainly is appropriate. What is Soft Cinema, if not a superficial attempt to dig into what code is about, an attempt that veils the wizard behind the curtain in Oz. When open we see and hear Manovich, the GUI, pulling some levers to help the software along. > As Andreas > Broeckmann, the Artistic Director of the Transmediale festival > (Berlin), > reminded the audience in his concluding presentation during the Ars > Electronica symposium, already 5 years ago New York based artist John > Simon suggested that it would be useful to treat software-based art as > a > separate category. there are several software art and network art platforms out there and discourse is aided not be segregating but by integrating. the main issue here is that few of the powers-that-be are far behind the aesthetics that code-based art opens. perhaps the most backward (some might say: modernistic, as opposed to modern) thesis stems from Manovich's misappropriation of current database-driven media in the 'Language of New Media', there' a plug, some might title 'Language of Lost Media') i was not able to attend ars this year, although Unmovie was there, somewhere. Still i hope that they were correcting the course which was sent ascew by the incredibly dumb misunderstanding of any differentiation between libraries, archives and databases that cause Manovich to call Dwiga Vertov an original database filmmaker. such tautologies drive Madison Avenue and CNN but it is the job of events such as ars to wipe the slate clean of self-serving histories like Manovich's, hopefully soon forgotten. this bok has caused me more problems with my media students who beleive that they must work like Manovich (equivalent to working like CNN, see my last mail to nettime on that) and i steer them far from that text so they might understand what a database and code can do other than Mondrianize a pre-recorded sound track with images, like MTV overlaying CNN, that is the message of database art in the future according to my reading of Manovich' pretentiously titled book. was it sidelined in Ars E? is this the rationale for a long-winded mail i am stoking? ok, enough, in brief, i applaud CODE as an issue to be explored from an aesthetic point of view, and 'don't call it art' is a typical ideological stance, that ignores the poesis and architecture that code can share with many. > Consequently, since 2001 the Transmediale festival > competition has included "artistic software" as one of its categories, > and > devoted a significant space to it in the festival's symposiums. Another > important platform for presenting software art has become the Whitney > Museum in New York and its Artport web site where curator Cristiane > Paul > has organized a number of important exhibitions during the last few > years. <...> philip pocock gabelsbergerstr. 1 d- 76135 karlsruhe germany mobile 0049 1707369870 tel/fax/msg 0049 721 830 2714 *the more we share, the more we have* -- leonard nimoy # 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