Hi All,

I enjoyed this recent post from Jon Ippolito to the New Media Curating list.

It connected in my mind with other lived art critiques that are parasitical on 
artworld surpluses.
Kate Rich's Feral Trade 
<http://www.http.uk.net/exhibitions/FeralTradeCafe/index.shtml> and Marc's and 
my We Wont Fly For Art 
<http://www.furtherfield.org/features/we-wont-fly-art-media-art-ecologies>
  
We recently wrote about these in the context of the Furtherfield Media Art 
Ecologies programme for Remediating the Social.
http://www.elmcip.net/story/remediating-social-e-book-released  DIWO: DO IT 
WITH OTHERS – No Ecology Without Social Ecology pg 68-74

: )
Ruth

--------

Date:    Sat, 17 Nov 2012 11:48:33 -0500
From:    Jon Ippolito<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Hospitality – Hosting Relations in Exhibitions at Academy of Visual

Not to sideline this month's important discussion of curating online, but this 
post touched a nerve for me:

> Academy of Visual Arts Leipzig
> Hospitality – Hosting Relations in Exhibitions
> Conference, December 13–14, 2012
>
> Every curated encounter creates a situation of hospitality. Whoever claims 
> curatorial responsibility can appear in the role of host, while the 
> invited—artists, audiences but also exhibits—can take on that of guest.

I have recently been asking anyone who invites me to a conference to put me up 
on a couch instead of in a hotel. For the past couple of years, I have been 
rewarded for overcoming my shyness by hosts across three continents who have 
opened their homes to me.

I don't know if staying with local families can "scale" to a conference with 
hundreds of participants. (CouchSurfing.org seems to do pretty well.) But if 
I'm going to blow a planeful of greenhouse-emitting jet fuel on travel, I want 
to learn how people live in that part of the world, rather than what 
distinctive shampoo containers they have in their hotel rooms.

I don't want to interrupt my hosts' routines or get special treatment, and am 
practiced at washing dishes and other household chores. Yet I always return 
home with a debt in my heart to the individual or family who took me in. These 
are often the conference organizers themselves, who have way too much on their 
plate to accommodate me--and yet somehow manage. Thankfully, anthropologist 
James Leach says that debt that generates new social bonds can be a good thing.

I've described the connection between hospitality and curation previously on 
this list in the form of an anecdote reported by Eva and Franco Mattes of 
0100101110101101.ORG when they stayed at my place in Maine. In the early days 
of Soros-funded new media art, the Mattes--like many net artists--would 
periodically cobble together enough resources to travel to an exhibition or 
festival in Eastern Europe. The organizers rarely had a big hotel budget, and 
the installation space often lacked Internet, equipment, and at times even 
electricity.

So the exhibition would take a back seat to late-night conversations over 
drinks, and the hotel would frequently turn out to be the curator's living 
room. These informal gatherings turned out to be more important to the culture 
of net art than whatever took place in the official venues.

The Mattes are now celebrated enough to be sought after by the mainstream art 
world. Eva and Franco described their experience of being flown to New York or 
LA to find their work beautifully installed in an immaculate museum gallery. 
Unfortunately, all the Mattes get from the curators today is a handshake at the 
opening, leaving them free to return to their fancy hotel room and its 
prosthetic hospitality.

jon

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

Reply via email to