Hi Patrick,

I just wanted to come in at this point - although, we are at this very 
moment putting together last minute details for the 'Invisible Forces' 
exhibition for tomorrow afternoon...

So, it will be brief & I'll have to jump back in over the weekend when I 
have more time.

 > What is art in the 21st Century?

We can be sure damn sure that those who gatekeep history will manipulate 
the question according to their top-down orientated, hegemonic means.

The way I see it in one sense, is that it's up to individuals and groups 
like us, and people on this list and those exploring beyond 'given', 
established agendas; to challenge the onslaught of banal 'official' 
versions of what is accepted as 'is'.

We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century
We are the art in the 21st Century

We claim it now, become it, hack it, break it, share it, and do whatever 
we want with it ;-)

Will get back to this as soon as I can.

Thanks Patrick,

Best wishes.

marc


 > What is art in the 21st Century?
 > (Asked of me by Second Life artist Vaneeesa Blaylock on Facebook)
 > At the risk of sounding brusque or curmudgeonly, I have always felt 
that asking what art is has been my bane ever since art school, because 
there’s really no clear cut answer, and I feel it is generally a pretty 
banal question.  People often ask that question in order to plumb the 
shape of culture at a given time, or in order to “know what art is” so 
they know what to make.  But perhaps I am a bit cynical.
 >
 > I find that art is a set of cultural and aesthetic practices that 
have many categories and cultural functions.  It is driven by position, 
context, history, community – all these things.  It is a dim mirror for 
the human condition, and an early indicator of trends in culture.
 >
 > There are many kinds of art and corresponding cultural functions for 
these forms.  There are the independents, of whom Gregory Sholette 
states constitute the “dark matter” of the art world; there are the 
artists who to it for therapy, there are décor artists like Max and 
Kinkaide, there are art fair artists, there are ones who do it for the 
joy of making art.
 >
 > I think the most interesting ones are the sort who knowledgeably 
tries to move the art historical discourse forward through 
experimentation and challenge of the cultural norms.  To me this is what 
can be considered as the current state of the ‘avant’ and the real 
drivers of the art conversation.  The reason why I couch myself in these 
terms is that in many media, and especially electronic media, there is 
such seduction for the technology that because of its novelty or beauty, 
artists often feel what they make is groundbreaking only to find that 
fifty are doing it on deviantart.  In my opinion, some of the best work 
questions form and practice, and springboards from historical frames.  
This is my biggest problem with communities that use technologies like 
Bryce, Poser, and Second Life, as it is relatively easy to do work that 
“looks like art” when they are saying nothing new.  New Media does not 
necessarily mean new ideas.  On the other hand, there are artists like 
Cao Fei, and Gazira Babeli, in Second Life who pushed distinctive 
aspects of the medium in its Golden Age (2006-2008), to paraphrase 
Antin.  To go further into this is an essay into itself.
 >
 > Another aspect of the question of “What is Art?” is really another 
question altogether, and that is “What is HIGH Art?”, which is the art 
that gets into Art in America and Flash Art and the museums, and that is 
a very specific question.  This is the question that is often asked when 
people ask, “What is Art?”, which actually translates to “What kind of 
art gets recognized by the art world establishment?”.  This is where we 
get to the foundations of the matter – are you making art because you 
love making, or do you want to be an art star?
 >
 > In the latter case, High Art is the locus of an ecosystem of power, 
money, fashion, and history driven by curators, critics, collectors, 
museums, and other institutions.  It is a circuit of power, money and 
influence that has began to resemble the current milieu in the early to 
mid 20th Century, especially through figures like Peggy Guggenheim, 
Jackson Pollack, and the New York scene of the 50’s.  The problem with 
this is that is reduces the question of what art is to being what 
curators, collectors, and critics accept as art through the system of 
taste and desire that are currently defined.  This is far from a clear 
definition, but a Cleveland gallerist, William Busta once gave me a key 
insight into what art is by merely looking at my portfolio when I was 
very young, turning to his bookshelf, pulling out copies of Parkett, 
ArtNews, Art in America, et al.  He spread these before me and said, 
“Buy these. Read them. Understand what the conversation is about.  If 
you are still here in ten years, I would love to talk to you.”  Perhaps 
that is what I am trying to say – art is a conversation, and his 
demonstration was the most useful thing anyone has ever done for me in 
regards to my development as an artist.
 >
 > As for art in the 21st Century,  perhaps what has become most 
interesting is the emergence of social practice as extension of 
performance art.  The best examples of this is Creative Time’s 
groundbreaking exhibition, “Living As Form” and Gregory Sholette’s book, 
“Dark Matter: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture”.  These 
sources show that Bourriaud’s Relationalism is now behind the curve, and 
traditional performance art is relatively dead, as Marina Abramovic 
continues to emphasize. What seems to be at the edge of the Avant is a 
set of social processes as conceptual art put forth by groups like 
Temporary Services, 16 Beaver, Critical Art Ensemble and many others.  
Probably the closest progenitor of this line of thought is Joseph Beuys 
and his concept of “social sculpture” and Kaprow, et al’s idea of the 
Happening.
 >
 > In closing, as this question was put forth to my by an artist working 
in Second Life, and that my root practices are in New Media, it might be 
surprising that I have made so little mention of technological art, and 
this is intentional.  Why? This is due to my observations that the 
linkage of the idea of the trope of the 21st Century as linked to 
cultural production automatically calls into play so many other agendas 
like technology, “innovation”, and “creativity”.  This invokes a circuit 
of other agendas of technological and industrial seduction that want to 
disguise themselves as art but are ostensibly about technophilia.  It is 
so easy to be seduced by the tools and their flexibility that they can 
masquerade as content.  But my favorite analogy is the famous like 
uttered by Bruce Lee when disciplining a pupil that is focusing on 
technique rather than content, feeling, and gestalt.  He points to the 
moon and says (I paraphrase) “Do not look at the finger, or you will 
miss all that heavenly glory…”  The finger is the seduction of techne, 
and the moon is the addressing of humanity that art provides.  This is 
why as a new Media artist and practitioner who works in media like 
Second Life and Augmented Reality, I am particularly conscious of the 
seductions and absurdities of my own practices, and use those as part of 
my process.
 >
 > There is nothing specific to Second Life, or AR, or physical 
computing that makes my art any more compelling, as art still comes down 
to looking into that smoky fun-house mirror of human experience.  In 
asking what art is in the 21st Century, I think what is important is 
that we not be distracted by the seduction of our shiny toys, but 
perhaps reflect on why we might use a given medium and practice and how 
it reflects the current condition.
 > _______________________________________________
 > NetBehaviour mailing list
 > [email protected]
 > http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
 >


-- 
Other Info:

Furtherfield - A living, breathing, thriving network
http://www.furtherfield.org - for art, technology and social change 
since 1997

Also - Furtherfield Gallery & Social Space:
http://www.furtherfield.org/gallery

About Furtherfield:
http://www.furtherfield.org/content/about

Netbehaviour - Networked Artists List Community.
http://www.netbehaviour.org

http://identi.ca/furtherfield
http://twitter.com/furtherfield

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

Reply via email to