olia lialina on Mon, 30 Nov 2015 11:46:35 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Not Art&Tech |
Dear nettimers,Earlier this month I had a chance to introduce my thoughts on what media theory's role in universities of applied arts could be in times when Media is vanishing and Technology is raising. Let me share it with you. I paste the first part below but suggest to follow the link for the annotated hyper-linked multimedia version
http://contemporary-home-computing.org/art-and-tech/not/ Not Art&TechOn the role of Media Theory at Universities of Applied Art, Technology and Art and Technology.
/UniversitÃt fÃr angewandte Kunst Wien, November, 201 Thank you for the chance to introduce my ideas. Iâm a net artist, active in the field since 20 years, 16 of these years I am teaching new media designers at Merz Akademie. Iâm also a co-author of the book Digital Folklore. Since the beginning of the century I collect, preserve and monumentalize the web culture of the 90âs. âWhat Does It Mean to Make a Web Pageâ is the doctoral thesis I work on right now. As an artist, researcher and teacher I value user culture and medium specificity in both design and research, and as an every day routine. I see my work contributing to critical digital culture, media literacy and the development of languages and dialects of New Media. But there are many obstacles on my way. Three years ago I grasped and boiled them down to three: technology, experience and people. Or rather âtechnology,â âexperienceâ and âpeopleââI have nothing against any of these concepts unless they are used by hardware and software companies as substitutes for âcomputer,â âinterfaceâ and âusers.â The situation is serious and these substitutions are happening on an epidemic scale. In my essays Turing Complete User[1] and RUE[2] I trace the metamorphoses that happened to the terms âusersâ and âinterfaces.â Today, talking about the role of media theory at the University of Applied Arts, I would like to start to elaborate on âtechnologyâ and why to resist âArt and Technology.â I should note that by defending the words in the left column, I always find myself in an unfortunate situation. First of all because in our field you should always go for the new, the next term if you are unsatisfied with the current one,ânot backwards, at least not to the nearest past. Nobody wants to be called âuser.â The effort to deface this word was enormous and successful. Even when you understand that âpeopleâ coming from the tech industryâs mouth is pure hypocrisy, you would prefer to fight for your user rights by calling yourself âdigital citizen,â not a userâ though there is no digital city, state or constitution. And I also find myself in awkward situations. Like it is the case now, because I know that there is Art and Technology department at your University; and because the next moment I use an institution as an example that I have very close relations to, and that is probably the only one in the world that supports my work, because it is devoted to net art and keeping an archive of it: Rhizome at the New Museum in New York. A year ago, during their community campaign, Rhizome, whose priority is to push critical digital culture released nicely designed bags. If it would be another organization, or if it would be a bag of a size that wouldnât suggest that its purpose is to carry around your personal computer, I would pass by, but it was not the case, so the bag was vandalized. âDonât fall for the word âtechnologyââ, Ted Nelsons concludes in the last paragraph of Geeks bearing Gifts,[3] âIt sounds determinate. It hides the fights and the alternatives. And mostly it is intended to make you submissive.â He appeals to not accept computer technology as WYSIHAMâhis own acronym for What You See is Wonderfully, Happily, Absolutely Mandatoryâbut to see the tensions, the history and the alternatives. It is an important call, but only one third of the argument I have against the term technology. Submission is one issue, but sedation is even more important. âTechnologyâ as a replacement for digital technology or computer technology, who are in turn already substitutes for âprogrammed system,â is a figure of speech known as synecdoche: in this particular case when the whole is referring for a part. It is a rhetorical trope that makes the computer dissolve in all other technologies, becoming an invisible part, just one of many technologies. It is in the interest of the industry, because it makes users unaware of the computer as a system that is programmed, that can be reprogrammed any moment, that could potentially be programmed or reprogrammed by their users. There are (re-)programmable technologies and many that are not programmable. But constant repetition of the word technology instead of computers sedates and makes forget that the system you hold in your hands is a programmable one. It appears that another good reason to say technology instead of computer is that anywayâthey sayâcomputers are inside almost every piece of technology anyway, or as Kevin Kelly writes in his book What technology Wantsânot recommended reading, but canât avoid to mention it hereâ: âthese days all technology follows computer technology.â[5] In the end of the day, technology is explicitly used as a new word for computer, not any other technologies, including digital ones, but explicitly digital ones. So the purpose is to avoid saying computer. Indeed technology is not a synecdohe but an euphemism. âItâs time to give up this talk of technology with big T and instead figure out how different technologies can boost and compromise the human condition.â Evgenij Morozov makes a rare constructive suggestion in his sour To Save Everything Click Here.[6] It is tempting to agree, but I would argue again that both Technology with big T as well as technologies with small ts should be replaced by computer with whatever sizes of the c. I know computer is an abstraction as well, but it still connotates algorithmic powers, programmability. It describes what happens with society, with culture, with arts. Rhizomeâs most successful event is Seven on Seven. The promotional text says: â[â] Seven on Seven conference pairs seven leading artists with seven luminary technologists, and challenges them to make something new together â be it an application, artwork, provocation, or whatever they imagine â over the course of a single day.â Technologist are people of different backgrounds, including art or at least artistic ambitions, with something in commonâthey can program orâ which was more of the case latelyâthey represent the software industry. Art and Technology as of today, or even âArt&Techââa term I learned about in early 2014 while reading articles reporting about both Seven on Seven and the monumental exhibition Digital Revolution at Barbican, Londonâis not a revolutionary art form or an artistic movement. Art&Tech is, like âtechnology,â a figure of speech. It swiftly replaces Computer Art, Digital Art, Media Art. Art&Tech alludes to the almost 50 years old E.A.T program of the Los Angeles County Museum of ArtâExperiments with Art and Technology. In 1967 E.A.T was promoted as artists bridging the world of technophobes and technophiles, art entering the world of engineers, âworking with materials that only industry can provide.â[7] Contemporary art institutions love Art and Technology as a brand because it gives a strong connection to E.A.T., which is both history and establishment, and a celebrated example of artists collaborating with West Coast Industries. The next epochal 70 artist group-exhibition I am in will take place 2016 at Whitechapel, London. The title is Electronic Superhighway, a term coined by Nam June Paik in 1974, but the show is IMHO artificially extended back to 1966, to be less Media/Computer/Internet, to include artifacts of E.A.T., and be more âtech.â âTechnologyâ sedates. âArt&Techâ beams loyalty. [please continue reading: http://contemporary-home-computing.org/art-and-tech/not/] # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org