I am struck by the description of the loose movement you propose, Mark, and
point at a new project that now has some of the great and good worldwide
signed up to it, though for a different area. They are working on 'The
Rules', to create some ethical guidelines in the field of technology
development. I link it here because notions such as the  'ad hoc committee'
and their version control system might or might not inspire further thought
on the structure for the writing of the many-festo.

https://edocs.uis.edu/kmill2/www/TheRules/ 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of marc garrett
Sent: 16 October 2010 13:00
To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] From today...

Hi all,

I have been reading, catching up on the discussions about 'authenticity of
art in a neoliberalist world'.

One thing that kept coming back to me when reading all of the great
concepts, cross-thinking and shared explorations around the subject, was
- how the hell does this all translate into an everyday practice?

It seems to me that as an overall, blanket of rules or ethical
implementation on arts culture as whole it really would not work; because
people need their own space to experiment and discover their own creative
noise or voices. To suggest everyone becomes the same or reads from the same
song sheet, would be a mono-cultural and self-defeating experience; very
likely stunting individual agency on art-making and its local, contextual
terms.

So, there needs to be a contemporary body of people or movement engaged in
dealing with these actual questions, specifically.

A group who is willing to organize a shared (agreed) 'manyfesto' for a
collective practice; for producing alternative art contexts challenging
through its practice the destructive nature of neoliberalism and its ideals,
and influences on our cultures world wide. So far, there have been small
groups and individuals who have done this, but as an art movement
specifically re-evaluating and challenging art culture and the neoliberalist
agenda as its main focus; through ethical reasonings in order to redefine
the mannerisms of art behaviour, with guidelines for others to discuss,
debate, use themselves, as a shared create commons, is another thing.

The reason I propose 'manyfesto', instead of manifesto is because, we need
to be 'consciously' aware in our shared decisions in challenging some of the
older more singular modernist (even post-modernist) languages bit by bit. If
we take the 'i' out of manifesto, it feels actually less 'masculine'
originally (from Italian, from manifestare to manifest). "...maybe we should
jointly define the goals ... write some sort of many-festo as marc garrett
would call it" collaboratively user designed, Armin Medosch.
http://www.thenextlayer.org/node/18#comment-7

Obviously goals would be agreed by consensus, but a manyfesto would be
worked out in order to bring into fruition a focus and direction (even
rules, yes rules) making it easier for individuals and groups to define
their own situations, circumstances and differences, actively incorporating
process as 'critiques' as 'real' palette, material or 'thoughtful manure'
and nourishment in making such works. Such works need not be technologically
informed or based, but more exist in recognition or through acknowledgement
of the guidelines proposed, shared via the movements own deliberation.

The movement would of course need its own doubters, critical thinkers,
theorists to act as the consciousness of the collective/movement, but at the
same time there needs to be a consensus and agreement that the work
introduced into the world is from an activist position, and getting it out
there is important and urgent, for all concerned.

Even though I am equally enthralled in theorizing about various ideas, much
of this excellent, independent, intelligent and inventive/imaginative
discourse can work towards informing a pro-active art practice.

Wishing all well.

marc



 > Think we're pretty much in agreement here!
 >
 > Thanks for the discussion, Alan
 >
 >
 > On Thu, 14 Oct 2010, Curt Cloninger wrote:
 >
 >>> The best art teaching I've seen (and hopefully articipated in) was Lutz
>>> Presser's in Tasmania, and David Askevold's at Nova Scotia; in both
cases,  >>> they/we assumed the students were already artists/agents, and
treated them  >>> as such. So making art became a cooperative effort -
sharing techniques  >>> when needed, but not imposing anything. And believe
it or not, everyone  >>> rose to the occasion. It's as if nothing was taught
at all but everything  >>> was learned. It was astonishing.
 >> This sits well with me as a pedagogical practice. It makes me think  >>
of Ranciere's "Ignorant Schoolmaster." If I am the teacher/explicator  >>
with the correct answer, then in order to liberate my students with  >> my
wisdom and knowledge, I first have to convince them that they  >> aren't yet
liberated. This is a form of oppression masquarading as  >> emancipation. As
the situationists say, "Don't liberate me. I'll take  >> care of that."
 >>
 >> I, as the teacher, don't arbitrate/decide "what matters." But the  >>
student still must decide this for herself. That is her own pragmatic  >>
question as a practicing artist. Because she has been thrown into the  >>
world with a body that can act on things and with a limited amount of  >>
time to live. She is the steward of this body and time. So the art  >> work
she makes must at least matter to her; otherwise she would spend  >> her
time, money, and bodily energy on some other activity she deemed  >> more
worthy.
 >>
 >> What kind of pedagogy best comes alongside my student and helps her  >>
discover what matters to her? That becomes my own "pragmatic"
 >> question as a practicing teacher.
 >>
 >> _______________________________________________
 >> NetBehaviour mailing list
 >> [email protected]
 >> http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
 >>
 >>
 >
 >
 > ==
 > email archive: http://sondheim.rupamsunyata.org/  > webpage
http://www.alansondheim.org  > music archive:
http://www.espdisk.com/alansondheim/
 > ==
 > _______________________________________________
 > NetBehaviour mailing list
 > [email protected]
 > http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
 >

_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to