And a Happy New Year to you : )))

Thanks Helen, Rob, Richard, Sal, Mez and Renee for your encouragement
and suggestions. 

We think that we have a bodacious thing going here at Furtherfield! This
is all down to the energy and persistence of the people who take part in
the ongoing exchange of the content and contexts of our lives as
artists, explorers, thinkers and doers- not forgetting the all the
things that make up the ever-changing infrastructures in which this
takes place.

It's pretty rare to have a shared space where people bother to grapple
with the complexities of hyper-connected network culture in the way - at
once scrappy, rigorous and unexpected - that happens on this list.

In addition to giving me a warm fuzzy feeling, your comments have
crystallised a practical thought we hadn't quite got to yet... online
donation facility.

A group of Furtherfielders have been holed-up in the sweat lodge of web
development and data migration at Furtherfield for the last 9 months (at
least). We hope to have the new Furtherfield site live by the end of
next week. The purpose of this work has been to make the every day life
and work of this community more visible and open to newbees and also to
create a more sustainable and flexible back end (now running in
Drupal). 

So Helen, thanks for the prompt! We are going to attempt to set up a
donations facility in the new site. At this time all donations will go
towards technical work on the site (hopefully with everyone's feedback
and suggestions). Great stuff! 

Over the last few years, funding from the Arts Council has made it
possible for us to run an exhibition programme and to develop tech
infrastructure. In the face of the coming landslide in public funding
for the arts in the UK we are doing what we can at the moment to argue
for the ongoing public value of this work- both Furtherfield's
contribution and the wider contribution and impact of this area of work
(do we still call it new media art, media art?) to wider society. I
think what is interesting is that orgs/communities like ours produce
extraordinary value but not necessarily in terms that relate to GDP. 

Your answers on a postcard please :)

I may ask this again soon- be ready with your postcards : )))

Once we are awake to the new year it would be good to have a proper
conversation about different organisational and constitutional
structures for a small group such as ourselves too. 

Furtherfield is currently registered as a not-for-profit LTD company
Richard what is your experience of a company LTD by shares? 

The only reference I have is my father's description (he's a cellist) of
the running of the London Symphony Orchestra where the players own the
orchestra - and they appointed their own executive. It seems to work
really well. 

However I have a feeling that these kind of structures work best to run
more traditional, established kind of operations. It might become more
difficult when working with emerging cultural forms where lots of people
contributed different things and different times and with different
intensities both to artistic and organisational stuff.There is also the
connotation with "shareholders" of a membership motivated by financial
gain.

A cooperative sounds more like it...but we don't know enough about it
and it isn't so easy to take advice about these things as the people who
are purported to know also tend towards establishing more fixed and
permanent things.

Finally, thanks Rob for this - Art after Neoliberalism
http://robmyers.org/weblog/2008/10/art-after-neoliberalism.html
You didn't mention Hirst's "For the Love of God" (perhaps you didn't
want to give him more air) but I think its an excellent example of
neo-liberalism expressing itself and finding representation through an
artwork. I was reminded of something I heard on the radio a while back
that said that Koons's and Hirst's market success could be put down to
hedge-fund managers needing somewhere to park their millions and having
an affinity with these artists' 'entrepreneurial' spirit ie
I think I have been struggling for years to really resolve the
philosophical arguments for and against artists becoming
"entrepreneurial". I do know that if everything becomes about money;
ways to get more money, faster, more efficiently, we will not survive
and perhaps we won't even live before we die.

thanks everyone.
warm fuzzies all round

x
Ruth


-----Original Message-----
From: helen varley jamieson <[email protected]>
Reply-to: [email protected], NetBehaviour for networked
distributed creativity <[email protected]>
To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity
<[email protected]>
Subject: [NetBehaviour] supporting furtherfield?
Date: Thu, 30 Dec 2010 15:35:09 +0100


yesterday i received an email from rhizome requesting donations. i've 
been a rhizome member since "forever", i.e. before they started charging 
a membership fee, & have been dutifully paying the basic membership of 
US$25 for the last however many years. but the reality is that i almost 
never read the emails & almost never go to the rhizome web site. i last 
updated my profile in february 2009 & it's not even my own profile, it's 
for avatar body collision.

so, why give $25 to rhizome, which is largely irrelevant to me now, & 
not to furtherfield, which is a much more interesting, useful & relevant 
part of my life? the only reason i have is that i can't find anywhere on 
the furtherfield site to make a donation ...

h : )

____________________________________________________________

helen varley jamieson: creative catalyst
[email protected]
http://www.creative-catalyst.com
http://www.avatarbodycollision.org
http://www.upstage.org.nz
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