Share Your Sorrow
An Online Curatorial Project

Share Your Sorrow is an online curatorial project launched by Domenico Quaranta 
in September 2012, and focused on strategies of social preservation of net 
based, digital art. The project deals with the work of Kevin Bewersdorf, an 
artist that, after being very active online between 2007 and 2009, retired and 
deleted from the internet any content he published in previous years. Everybody 
who got in touch with his work and collected it is invited to dig into his / 
her personal archives and contribute. Because the museum of the future may be 
your hard drive.
Art preservation is normally associated with museums, archives and collections, 
that is with authority and power - be it institutional, cultural or economic. 
It has not always been like this. Museums and archives emerged in modern times, 
and art collecting as an elitist practice started in the Renaissance. Along 
history, art has been saved by graveyards, natural catastrophes, copies, reuse 
and abuse, chance, monks, and ordinary people.
In the digital age, artists started making art with digital means and 
circulating it online, and computer users started saving and archiving it, as 
they do with any other kind of cultural content. Of course, the art world 
started applying its rules and conventions to digital art as well, pretending 
that some files are poor copies and others are original, and talking about 
editions, resolution, certificates of authenticity and so on. The file you 
downloaded is not the same file Mr. Saatchi bought. That's fine. But what if 
your file survives, and Mr Saatchi's one gets lost? What if the artist pretends 
that the original artwork is the one he put on the net?
Kevin Bewersdorf wrote in 2007: "I would drop [my laptop] off a cliff without 
hesitation... The seeds of my data are already safely spread across the web, 
and this data is what concerns me." Then, at some point, he removed everything 
from the Web, but the seeds of his data survived. They survived in the work of 
other artists that responded to them. They survived on other websites that 
reblogged them. And they survive in the disk space of many anonymous users who 
saved them, and that keep them jealously or just forgot about them. These are 
the true collectors of Kevin Bewersdorf's work: a work that was available to 
anybody, and that's now subject to the condition of scarcity that is the 
premise to any act of collecting. 
Share Your Sorrow invites them to share the seeds of Kevin's data again; to 
allow them to circulate online again, to be downloaded, manipulated and remixed 
by other users, to keep being part of the cultural dialogue, that is the best 
way for art to survive.

To contribute: 

- go to http://shareyoursorrow.tumblr.com/submit and submit your content, or
- upload it on Tumblr and tag it "share your sorrow", or
- just send an email to [email protected]. And,
- please try to provide as many contextual elements as possible (name, date, 
original location, etc.)

More info: http://shareyoursorrow.linkartcenter.eu/.

Domenico Quaranta (1978, Brescia, Italy) is an art critic and curator. He is a 
regular contributor to Flash Art and Artpulse. He is the editor (with M. 
Bittanti) of the book GameScenes: Art in the Age of Videogames (2006) and the 
author of Media, New Media, Postmedia (2010) and In Your Computer (2011). He 
has curated various exhibitions, including Holy Fire: Art of the Digital Age 
(Bruxelles 2008, with Y. Bernard), Playlist (Gijon 2009 and Bruxelles 2010) and 
Collect the WWWorld (Brescia 2011 and Basel 2012). He is a co-founder and 
Artistic Director of the Link Center for the Arts of the Information Age. 
http://domenicoquaranta.com

---

Domenico Quaranta

email: [email protected]
skype: dom_40

http://domenicoquaranta.com
http://www.linkartcenter.eu



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