Pall Thayer a écrit : > The talk I referred to was given in either 2002 or 2003. Interesting that we > were essentially saying the same thing about the requirement for constant > connectivity. But then again this was an issue that was being somewhat > widely discussed if I recall correctly. >
some people still think that net art does not need the net, and some people think that art without a market is not art (check this: http://www.imal.org/HolyFire/en/ ) i think that net art needs the net, like painting needs pigments, and that art does not need a market to be art. as artists, we have to know what sense we put in words, this is also what define our practices. your manifesto is a good exercise on this way. > The reason I tagged the 2.0 on there was in reference to the term "Web 2.0". > To me the whole idea behind "Web 2.0", where content is being updated > constantly, day and night, every day, has a lot to offer for netart at a > conceptual level. The idea that a work of art can at any given moment be > reflecting not just semi-current but immediately current contemporary trends > and issues regardless of the age of the work, I find highly intriguing. > i like this idea, and work with it, but 2.0 label is a also a big buzzword recovering many differents points of view, and blurring sense. 2.0 is also a kind of catch-all in order to concentrate data within proprietary platforms, while marketing the illusion of a global fun and cool real time collaboration between so many "friends"... ++ > best r. > Pall > > On Wed, Apr 2, 2008 at 12:24 PM, info <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >> Pall Thayer a écrit : >> >>> There is a lot of other work that will stop functioning as >>> soon as you disconnect from the Internet. I'm saying that that is Netart >>> 2.0, the other work essentially just uses the Internet for distribution. >>> >>> >> i agree 50% - i wrote that in 2002, but in french ... >> http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-fr-0209/msg00020.html >> >> i disagree 50% - because you don't need "2.0" label, it's a definition >> for "net art" >> >> ++ >> _______________________________________________ NetBehaviour mailing list [email protected] http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
