MAIL ART NETWORKING ART

Recently, I have observed many signs that make me feel as if Mail Art is
drawing to a close, and that there are many past publications that could be
seen as 'compilations' of Mail Art. Quite a few predecessors of Mail Art
have passed away, including Ray Johnson(USA), the Father of Mail Art,
G.A.Cavellini (ITALY), Robin Crozier (ENGLAND), Robert Rehfeldt (GERMANY),
G.Deisler (GERMANY), Carlo Pittore (USA), and others. This is probably also
because exchange by mail in the age of computers is considered primitive,
and after the end of the COLD WAR between the East and the West, the
necessity of correspondence between those two different worlds has been
lost.
On the other hand, I have been regularly receiving mail art by mail and fax,
in response to my BRAIN CELL PROJECT dating from the year 1985, which has
been numbered issue no.652, as of June 2006. Every time I receive mail art,
I am pleased to see more and more new participants. After making them a
collage of their drawings, designs, logos, seals, stickers and the like, I
make it a rule to send the finished project back to each participant. Mail
Art is far from finishing. I appreciate the role of collaboration in Mail
Art. It is important to have new participants each time, but it is more
important to be evoked by other mail artists' ideas from within the large
and deep Network with a diverse range of expressions and concept. I can make
mail artists' ideas more interesting by actively availing myself of seals
and stamps and other materials sent from others and through my own printed
matter. What is more, I can give other mail artists the feeling that they
can utilise other's art and collaborate their ideas.
We have the Doppler effect in physics. The sound coming nearer to us becomes
narrower between the sonic waves and sounds higher and more urgent in our
ears. On the contrary, as waves travel away from us they get relatively
wider and the sound appears lower. There are a variety of physical sounds
around us: for example, the sound of cars coming and going. This phenomena
is also true of art. Some art comes towards me, while other art goes away.
People very often ask me how we can know good from bad in art. It does not
matter whether this representational painting is good in composition and
colour and technique, or whether that piece of abstract art is good in
balance and rhythm. I don't think it important to generally decide which
style of art is better than the others. That is to say traditional ways of
thinking about art is fading away from me.
Often other artists only use limited new techniques in spite of what is
called 'originality and individuality,' to the constant efforts predecessors
had made for so long. A variety of works of modern art with too much false
assertion of originality and individuality are also travelling away from me.
When I was at art school, I used to draw or paint representational, moved by
Cezanne's composition, and Matisse's brightness and his own style of plane.
Later on I had some exchange with members of the Gutai Group, so I learned
new concepts of art through contemporary art. Consequently I have been
participating in Mail Art Networking. I claim that this was a natural
changeover and has no inconsistency with my personal concept of art. We need
no large studio or storage space for paintings. Whoever wants to take part
in mail art does so freely.
We can deny the authority of the traditional art world, because mail artists
directly exchange their own artworks. The fascination for Mail Art, more
than twenty years ago, approached me with a high sound. Even now the
collaborative concept of Mail Art is coming closer to me with a much higher
sound.
We don't have any fixed "ism" in the infinite expanse of the Mail Art
Network. Postcards, xeroxes, collages, drawings, photos, CGs, CDs, and other
forms are sent in by mail, fax, e-mail etc. We are overwhelmed by the
diversity of how mail art members think and express themselves. We realise
that countless "isms" are mixed together in a state of chaos that is
represented in Mail Art. Of course, we don't copyright our works. Interested
in others' works, we add something to them or combine them together, and
then send them back or forward them on to a third party. We occasionally
find them changed into pieces with quite an unexpected concept.
At a glance, the jungle looks as if it is made up of gigantic trees, but the
fact is that the rain-forests in the Amazon of South America consists of
numerous species that cohabit harmoniously: ferns and mosses parasitic to
the gigantic trees, very tiny insects that hide themselves under the fallen
leaves, insects camouflaging in dead leaves and twigs against the enemies,
puny insects swarming together as a threat, birds displaying their existence
with colorful feathers and a shrill cry and many other mammals and birds.
We really wonder at how diverse these living things are! We can lean from
the rain forest that there are a multitude of LIFE FORMS. We are not chained
to any fixed "ism" as this frees us from constraint, nor do we care for
copyright we prefer to revise and copy others' works in a free and easy
style. In such a network there is the possibility of our experiencing much
by communication of mail art. This is the very LIFE FORM that we can
experience in a variety of ways.
Networking Art is art that enables us to be a praying mantis in camouflage,
or butterflies flying on colourful wings.
Nowadays I have come to realise that we are all part of a FRACTAL, and that
I can be a piece of that FRACTAL, and that I can create art, in a way that
extends beyond myself as an individual, in communication with infinite mail
artists' ideas.
In the same way that we appreciate the various kinds of LIFE FORMS in the
amazon, we can experience a multitude of art forms in the MAIL ART NETWORK.
It is only human beings who can experience plural LIFE FORMS, by which we
can acquire a genuine sense of new creation.

JUNE 2006
RYOSUKE COHEN
Ryosuke Cohen c/o Brain Cell
3-76-1-A-613 Yagumokitacho Moriguchi City Osaka 570 Japan
TEL&FAX +81.6.6991.1507
E-mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.h5.dion.ne.jp/~cohen/info/english.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryosuke_Cohen





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