Hereby the new item "Eternal Network" for my "Mail-Art Encyclopaedia"
project.
It will be online on Monday also. Hope you like it.
Thanks to Christine Tarantino and Douglas Dawson for language control.


Eternal Network:

The 'Eternal Network' is the concept of an ongoing, global artistic network
in which each participating artist realises that s/he is part of a wider
network. It is a model of creative activity with no borders between artist
and audience, with both working on a common creation. The concept of an
'Eternal Network' originated with the poets and Fluxus artists Robert
Filliou (France), who died in 1987, and George Brecht (U.S.A.). They
introduced the idea of the 'Eternal Network' in April 1968 on a poster and
mailed it to their correspondents. This was the first mention of a model of
an international network of artists working together by communication.

The ideas of Filliou and Brecht find their origin in a time when
experimental art began to flourish. The ideas of Marcel Duchamp (France)
re-emerged, and avant-garde art groups such as Fluxus and Nouveaux Réalistes
appeared. Daniel Spoerri (Romania) introduced Filliou to the arts after they
met in Paris. As was common in the experimental arts of the sixties, also
for Filliou technique was important only as a means to realise ideas and
concepts. For Filliou, art is a "permanent creation" and entirely embedded
in and inseparable from daily life. Art is one part of the society, as the
world is one fragment of the universe, and the universe itself a product of
a permanent creation. Art is direct action in the world, in the same sense
that religion is only possible in its practice - creating art is art,
finishing it is not, and exhibiting it is anti-art.

The idea of a "birthday" for Art grew out of this philosophy of "permanent
creation". In 1963 Filliou declared January the 17th as 'Art's Birthday'.
According to Filliou, it was exactly one million years ago on that date that
Art was born when someone dropped a dry sponge into a bucket of water.
Filliou's declaration of 'Art's Birthdau' fits into the Fluxus tradition of
absurdum and humour. Even today artists all over the world connect, usually
through the internet or at actual parties and exchange-art events, on this
date to keep alive the concept of the 'Eternal Network'. The only condition
is that each group having a birthday party send and receive birthday
presents for Art.

"Filliou proposed a public holiday to celebrate the presence of art in our
lives. In recent years, the idea has been taken up by a loose network of
artists and friends around the world. Each year the Eternal Network evolves
to include new partners - working with the ideas of exchange and
telecommunications-art. Artists have celebrated Art's Birthday with lavish
parties and gatherings, correspondence and mailart, and through Telematic
networks using SloScan TV, Videophones, music composed for telephone lines,
modem-to-modem MIDI connections, early bullentin board and chat systems, and
(starting in the mid 1990's) the Internet." Art's Birthday.Net. (n.d.). Art'
s Birthday [WWW page] URL http://artsbirthday.net/

>From 1965 through 1968, Brecht and Filliou had a shop, the 'Cédille qui
Sourit', located in a small fishing village in the South of France.  The
shop, never registered with the chambers of commerce, was open only upon
request, and was the centre for their international creativity. Here they
created and manufactured objects and poems, all according to the philosophy
of "permanent creation", and sold them by correspondence. In 1968, as a
result of the closing of the shop and the imminent departure of Brecht back
to the United States, they came up with the concept of the 'Fête Permanente'
or  'Eternal Network'.

The 'Eternal Network' seeks to close the gap between artists and non-artists
by encouraging collaborations together on common creations. Brecht and
Filliou's vision of collaboration, established in their shop, should
continue, now disconnected from an actual space. As other artists were
invited to participate in the late Sixties and early Seventies, the 'Eternal
Network' idea found its form in the Mail-Art network, the postal system
being the primary long distance communication form of that era.

"In a few short years this idea would find fertile ground in an emerging and
geographically dispersed network of self-identified correspondence artists.
Rejecting the exclusiveness and competitiveness of existing art world
institutions in favour of open and collaborative exchanges via the postal
system, a community of participants slowly established themselves as a
parallel counter-institution during the late 1960s and early 1970s. It is
for these reasons that correspondence art, also known as mail art or postal
art, has often been referred to by its practitioners, as the Eternal
Network." Perkins, S. (n.d.). Utopian Networks and Correspondence
Identities. [WWW page] URL
http://sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/atca/subjugated/two_5.htm

Since the Mail-Art network is true to Filliou and Brecht's concept of a
network in which common creation through communication is more important
then the resulting piece of art, many Mail-artists refer to Mail-Art as the
'Eternal Network'. For example, Chuck Welch (U.S.A.) named his book, the
first publication about Mail-Art Eternal Network: A Mail Art Anthology. The
'Fluxus Bucks' of Julie Jefferies aka. Ex Posto Facto (U.S.A.) bear the
heading "United Eternal Network", with the instruction to modify the 'Fluxus
Bucks', and then return it or pass it on in the Mail-Art  network.


Related Topics:
[01] Network
[02] Fluxus
[03] Filliou, Robert
[04] Brecht, George
[05] Nouveaux Réalistes
[06] Internet
[07] Mail-Art
[08] Welch, Chuck
[09] Fluxus Bucks
[10] Jefferies, Julie

References:
[1] (C. Welch, e-mail, December, 2002)
[2] Baroni, V. (2003). A concise chronology of artists' money. In P. Ciani,
& V. Baroni P. (Eds.) Bank of fun, Banknote delle nazioni unite fantastiche
(pp. 8-9). Bertiolo, Italy.
[3] Friedman, Ken. (1995). "Eternal Network." Eternal Network, Chuck Welch,
ed. Calgary: University of Calgary Press, xiv-xvii. [Introduction.]
[4] Perkins, S. (n.d.). Utopian Networks and Correspondence Identities. [WWW
page] URL http://sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/atca/subjugated/two_5.htm
[5] Music & technology. (n.d.). Art's Birthday 2006 [WWW page] URL
http://www.eevolute.com/index.php?assetname=text&id=99
[6] Art's Birthday.Net. (n.d.). Art's Birthday [WWW page] URL
http://artsbirthday.net/
[7] Friz,A. (2004). Essay from Scrambled_Bites / Art's Birthday [WWW page]
URL http://artsbirthday.net/2004/essays/ab-essay.html
[8] Ouy, C. (n.d.). The New Media Encyclopedia [WWW page] URL
http://www.newmedia-art.org/cgi-bin/show-art.asp?LG=GBR&DOC=IDEN&ID=D000
657

Date last update:
November 18, 2006



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