Nettimers_anonymous on Fri, 23 Jul 1999 19:15:34 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> The Third Way in New Media Art |
The Third Way in New Media Art Leading European New Media Centres Launch Privatisation Offensive London, 13.07.2000 - In a press conference held in the BBC-Tower in central London today a joint initiative by leading European New Media Centres was announced. The ICI, Lex Centre and Orgtec, London, together with De Waffle, Amsterdam, V1, Rotterdam, CKM, Karlsruhe, ASE, Linz and Netpack, Vienna, announced that within a years time they want to form a holding company with the aim of bringing it to the stock market. To underline their efforts towards privatisation, only a handful of selected journalists was admitted to the briefing, which was at the same time broadcasted via satellite conference systems to the board rooms of leading IT- and financial services firms worldwide. Reading from a written statement by the ICI director Philipp Dodgy (who was absent), his deputies Heidi Hairdryer and Benjamin Vile said that "it would be an illusion that new media art can remain in the public sphere. Privatisation is the only key to success". To achieve their goal of making money through issuing stocks, "staff of new media centres will have to go through training courses in corporate style new management methods". Representants of IT-consultancy firms Cap Virgo and Anderson Insulting confirmed that their respective companies would be taking new media art managers on specially taylored courses at preferential rates. "It is widely acknowledged that the stakeholders society is a huge success in every aspect of human live, so why not also in new media arts", they said. Program makers at new media centres such as Hairdryer, Vile, Marie Wrangler, Gregor Single-Malt or Garfield Stueckler will go through 6 months training courses to learn how they can successfully develop their brands. No concrete numbers for costs of these training courses were given but they are said to be "under ten million pound sterling". Critizism, that this money might furtherly reduce budgets available for artists - which have been marginal already until now - was strongly rejected. "The culture of the Third Way" Vile said, "is that style ranks over substance. We subscribe to that". "We have to create a culture of exclusivity", Hairdryer agreed, "only then investors will recognize the symbolic value of our new media centres". Rumours that the new British Prime Minister Peter Mendelson had ordered this drive towards privatisation by threatening to withdraw lottery funding are said not to be true. Peter Mendelson, who is on holiday on David Bowies private island on the Bahamas, was not available for comment. According to Gregor Single-Malt from the Lex Gallery "all this critizism from depraved artists and journalists is pure nonsense. Our relentless drive to privatisation is our very own idea and therefore will surely succeed." "We have already shown that we do not have to know much about new media art to successfully run our businesses. We have no doubt at all that with better management techniques the IPO will go ahead as planned withing a year", said a collective statement of the new media art alliance that was distributed at the press conference. Business analysts in the City of London, however, reacted in a slightly sceptical manner. "If all this had happened in 1998/99 I would have given it a chance. But if they do not bring any major players on board such as the Giggleheim or Museum Luddite, I doubt that the stock will find that booming reception they are obviously hoping for" one unnamed source from Deutsche/Wankers Trust Internet department said. # distributed via nettime-l: no commercial use without permission of author # <nettime> is a moderated mailinglist 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 # un/subscribe: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and # "un/subscribe nettime-l you@address" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org/ contact: <nettime@bbs.thing.net>