Hi Dave and Netbehaviourists

It takes a lot for me to comment on things these days but I'm behind you here 
mostly Dave.

I was at Venice Biennale in 2003 when there was actually a brilliant and brave 
exhibition curated by Hou Hanru Z.O.U Zone of Urgency. It didn't focus on the 
individual artist but was rather a packed environment that dealt with daily 
living and culture to create a both chilling and exciting environment cutting 
across national boundaries.  It didn't go down very well with the critics but 
that year being the year of the war with Iraq was hailed as brave in its 
politicisation. I still reel from the time I was watching a video about 
homelessness in South America (in the exhibition The Structure of Survival) in 
the same year  while a group of people around me were very loudly discussing 
how they could get entry to Jay Jopling's 40th birthday party (after a short 
two sentences about how moving the show was). Where the politics exist, it is 
an opportunity for people to absolve their conscience. They've seen the work, 
commented sympathetically, which makes them politically motivated....

Regarding Jeremy Deller, I actually think that he means what he says in his 
work and as you say 'he does it well'. But he has successfully negotiated the 
art market - does that mean he's a sellout? Probably  yes. He probably thinks 
that it is good that he has been able to manoeuvre into this position and get 
on message. I probably feel like Dave on this one - not good enough...and it 
will just be bought by those people wealthy enough to buy it. However, I can't 
help but like the images I've seen.

The bigger problem is Venice Biennale. Most people involved in the arts go 
there at some point whatever their thoughts about it (I've been twice and 
represented an artist once while not liking the experience much and I'm not 
alone) - it is an opportunity to network with a range of people (not just 
investment bankers). But for me it is a horrible sociopathfest in the name of 
art that mostly misses the point of what the power of art can be in a 
socio/political context. It was ok when there were outlets for experimental 
practice but visual arts has been reduced to community/wellbeing and/or the art 
market.  Venice Biennale shows both with only surface gloss around concepts, 
ideas and sociopolitical issues. It's not that the work is not good, but it is 
the environment in which it is shown in and the complicity of the artist  to 
that environment that is negative. There are always some great shows in Venice 
but it takes a lot and a "critical" mass to make it so.  

Unfortunately I suspect  that art no longer occupies the Zone of Urgency. Some 
of its language does though and there are many on this list that are involved 
in activism and interesting art approaches. At the moment I really have to 
salute Mark McGowan for his work (which is some really hardcore performance) on 
politics in UK and of course Furtherfield who make it possible for people to 
post on this list in this way without worrying about a whole agenda about the 
history of media/arts and the key players in it.

I have a couple of projects on the go at the moment for next year that I hope 
will broach some of these issues. More on that later... Meantime thanks for 
reading if you got this far. It's time we were more vocal.

All the best
Helen
Helen Sloan
Director
SCAN

On 28 May 2013, at 21:10, dave miller wrote:

> or is it just fake rage?
> 
> http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2013/may/28/venice-biennale-jeremy-deller-in-pictures#/?picture=409654763&index=2
> and this...
> http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2013/may/28/venice-biennale-jeremy-deller-british-pavilion
> 
> Maybe more like theft - an establishment artist stealing from the rest
> of us? He does it well though.
> Calculated fake political art that will most likely get bought by an
> investment banker, as for sure these will be good investments.
> 
> dave
> _______________________________________________
> NetBehaviour mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

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