Jon C. Ippolito on Sun, 29 Mar 1998 08:56:35 +0200 (MET DST) |
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Re: <nettime> Mel Bochner at The Drawing Center |
>>>on 03/23/98 10:03AM murph the surf <murph@interport.net> wrote: Over the weekend I happened to stop in at the "Drawing Room," which is a project space run by The Drawing Center in New York and found an exhibition put on by a group called "Parasite"....[Bochner's] small exhibition, easily ignored and misunderstood, keeps resonating for me as an artist as a kind of manifestation of "net.art".<<< I'm glad Robbin Murphy saw the same parallels I did between the Internet and Parasite's restaging of Mel Bochner's _Working Drawings and Other Visible Things on Paper Not Necessarily Meant to be Viewed As Art_ (1966). She's right that Parasite's nomadic, collaborative approach to projects--derived no doubt on the practice of member artists like Ben Kinmont--bears a very interesting comparison to network practices like copyleft or MOOs. For me, however, the most provocative comparison was not with Parasite's curatorial work in the 1990s but with the work of Bochner's from 1966s that Parasite chose to exhibit. His use of a photocopy machine to generate the artistic content of the show suggests the infinite reproducibility of e-mail messages and Web pages. And his juxtaposition of "working drawings" from such disparate fields as art, algebra, and accounting reminds me of the Internet's tendency to cross-contaminate disciplines. One of the most interesting parallels is Bochner's invitation to the viewer to see technical information or diagrams as art. It is tempting to explain Bochner's xeroxbooks as a Duchampian gesture: information is readymade art. But central to Bochner's project is his preoccupation with uncertainty--which is why the title is not "Other Visible Things on Paper That Are Perfectly Legitimate As Art." And so I am left with the question implicit in Bochner's title: what is gained--and what is lost--in cutting these diagrams out of their original context and inserting them into art? For example, did Bochner's display of mathematical formulae or electrical diagrams validate jodi and other technology-as-art practitioners %avant la lettre%, or did it prove them unnecessary? After all, if we accept circuit diagrams as art, then you could argue that science has already produced more beautiful formulae (such as Euler's equation) and meaningful diagrams (such as a Lorenz attractor) than jodi could hope to accomplish. (The argument that "scientific diagrams cannot be art because they are tools" doesn't work in the case of Galois theory and other abstract mathematics, which has very few, if any, useful applications.) I'm still contemplating this last question and would be interested to know if anyone else is. By the way, the contents of Bochner's xeroxbook were published in 1997 by Cabinet des estampes (Geneva), Walther Koenig (Cologne), and Picaron (Paris). For more on the similarities between a digital network and the working methods of artists like Ben Kinmont, see Laura Trippi's remarks in "The View from the Street" _World Art_ (Summer 1996) or mine in "Out of the Darkness and into the Loop," _Flash Art_ (March-April 1995). For more on the issue of whether mere information can qualify as art, see "Where did All the Uncertainty Go?" _Flash Art_ (July-August 1996). Jon Ippolito www.three.org --- # 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@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl