Josephine Bosma on Sat, 23 Aug 1997 21:47:56 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> CAE interview pt 1: CAE |
Critical Art Ensemble (CAE) was interviewed about the text 'As Above, So Below', which they wrote with Faith Wilding. The collective includes 5 people: Steve Barnes, Dorian Burr, Steve Kurtz and, (not appearing in Ljubljana) Hope Kurtz and Beverly Schlee. I cut the interview in two, the first part you have here. It deals with the history and methods of working of CAE. The second part, which digs deeper into the text I mentioned, will appear as a part of the Documenta Workspace block on technoscience on the workspace site and here on nettime as well. For those of you that want to get into the matter Q: Have all five of you been together for ten years? CAE: Almost ten years, a little over nine. This fall it will be ten years since the first CAE event. We met at university, and shared the usual dissatisfaction with the art program and the cultural scene in general. We were interested in addressing political issues and constructing a different style of art practice. We were all looking to participate in cultural production and trying to find the most efficient way to do it. We decided a collective was the best approach. Q: What was the first thing the collective produced? CAE: It was a multi-media event at Club Nu--a disco in Miami. The up side was that we got to experiment with communicating with a party audience. We've always been looking for different ways of intersecting different aspects of cultural production and social activity. The downside was that we were fired the second night, and had to sue the club owners to get the money they owed us. Q: What kind of media did you focus on first of all? CAE: We never focused on any one media, that was part of our whole point. In the early days of the collective we would work any site that was open to us. Every event was site-specific, and hence we would use whatever media seemed to be best for that place and audience. We still follow this strategy to this very day. Early on we developed a number of tactics, which was possible for us because all the members of the collective had different specializations and skills. When we pooled our talents just about any medium was available to us. So we did performance, film and video, computer work. I can remember using mac classics (laughter) in some of our early works toward a hypertextual poetry. We were using photography and slides...whatever we thought would best blend with the culture; whatever we thought would have the greatest impact on the people that were most likely to look at it. The performance that you saw here in Ljubljana was a work designed specifically for a very intellectual festival circuit. But we are just as capable of doing more guerrilla style work on the street. We've done community art, museum installation, gallery exhibitions, telepresent actions. We have used pretty much any cultural model that you can name. If there is a good place for a medium, we'll use it. When it comes to different media or social space, we have no allegiances. Our only consistent pattern is resistance against authoritarian culture. Q: In these ten years, has there been a shift in the media that you use? Have some media become more important then others? CAE: There have been a few shifts. One of the shifts has been that we no longer produce our own events. In the early days, we did that a lot. Now we are primarily content providers to different situations, as opposed to having to build everything from the ground up. Total event production was very representative of our first five years, but has not been so characteristic of the second five. I think another thing that changed (for all multi-media artists) is that the computer has become a much more significant tool in the production of work. After all, it's synthesizing all the various media into a single work station. This has had an impact on our production process. However, in terms of the finished product, our practice is still very diversified. And the means for conceptual production has remained consistent. Finally, some new options for addressing the public have emerged. For instance, when CAE first started, there was an internet then, but the audience was so small and the artistic possibilities were so limited that we did not see it as a very attractive place to work. Now with the WWW and the great amount of people that are on-line, there really is a significant audience to address on-line using a variety of communication and production options. If access and bandwidth problems are ever solved, artists are going flock to the Internet. Q: You seem to work very strongly from, let's say, political issues. Has there been a shift in that also? What kind of issues did you start off with and if they changed, how did they change? CAE: I think our issues have remained reasonably consistent. This is because cultural production in and of itself has never really been our core interest. Looking at an art work, especially under western aesthetic systems, is a process in which you look at the object, then reflect on it, and hopefully something good happens (aesthetic experience, intellectual insight, etc.) from that process. We were activities that engaged the immediate. Generally, such occurrences do not emerge out of art. They come out in other ways. We like Andre Breton's aphorism: "Beauty will be convulsive or not at all." Art has very few characteristics that are convulsive. Going to a gallery is more like going to church, since it's such a repressive environment. Now there are plenty of activities in the world that have to do with immediacy, direct sensuality, and extreme pedagogy; unfortunately, most of these activities, particularly in the US, are illegal. CAE's question was, how do we create situations through the use of cultural production that would somehow make cultural activity exciting and fun, while at the same intiating a radical political perspective? Of course standing in our way are the authoritarian structures of culture. This blockage led to a body of work aimed at either exposing or disrupting these structures, and to the creation of environments or situations in which authoritarian power (domination) would be diminished. So in a general sense, our mission has remained the same. In a particular sense, specific issues change as culture changes. Q: And what do you call culture then? CAE: Culture is the sum total of ideational and material social components such as values, norms, language, and artifacts. Unfortunately, specific forms of these categories become hegemonic. In turn, other categories are marginalized or eliminated. To act as agents for cultural anarchy (that is, maximum diversity) is another CAE goal. We want to either reveal and promote alternative perspectives or to produce a situation in which they can reveal themselves. For CAE, culture is a grand term that encompasses everything from the social to the political to the economic. We mean it in a very grand sense, not just in the sense of highbrow music, art, and literature. * --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de