<nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis

Geert Lovink on 2009年5月13日 14:07:25 +0200 (CEST)


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<nettime> Political Work in the Aftermath of the New Media Arts Crisis


On the event of the Montevideo/Netherlands Media Art Institute 30th 
anniversary, departing curator Susanne Jaschko put together a one day 
symposium entitled Positions in Flux. Régine Debatty at We Make Money 
Not Art blogged about it. Unfortunately, I was only able to attend the 
morning session. The event on May 8 2009 took place in Trouw 
Amsterdam, the followup of Club 11. From what I heard, Positions at 
Flux had a critical take towards the common media art discourse and 
asked relevant questions. It was a relief to see that the attention 
was, for once, not focused on history, preservation and conservation. 
Cultural heritage has already taken over way too much attention space– 
in part because this is one of the few areas where there is still 
plenty of funding. Sigh. Just for one day, no celebration of “medium 
religion” or “art meets science”. Director Heiner Holtappels opened by 
noticing that new media art is not easily accepted by fine art. 
Traditional art has become eclecticism. According to Heiner, all art 
is technology based. The subject of the symposium was a visible break 
with the video art heritage that Montevideo has been known for. 
Politics topics, a courageous step? “Is there a future for us?” is a 
question not many institutions dare to ask. In the Dutch daily De 
Volkskrant of that day, ex-Montevideo curator Bart Rutten (now 
Stedelijk Museum) took up the role of expressing the ambivalent 
feelings of the Dutch art establishment towards the new but no longer 
young art form. Whereas he praised Montevideo’s work, he himself had 
moved on. “You can ask yourself if Montevideo should continue to show 
only media art works. In this way they preserve their specialism. It 
was my main reason to leave.”
In Zero Comments I mapped the current challenges for new media arts. 
While society at large is inundated with (new) media, the art branch 
that deals with the digital moved itself in a ghetto. While this 
analysis still holds up, many in the sector openly admitted the 
shortcomings and are now putting in place strategies to escape the 
dead end street. Technology has lost its original fascination, while 
spreading even faster in society. Is this a reason enough to abandon 
the field? While experimentation with electronics and the digital 
might have lost its aura and the spirit of curiosity has somewhat 
fained, the field of new media arts at large is still growing, despite 
institutional setbacks here and there. What most participants shared 
was the feeling that, despite the intimidating institutional violence 
of the large players, museums will die or become a zoo if they do not 
deal with the Digital. Some say new media arts lacks the timeliness 
and the depth. Whereas ICA London closed its media lab, Laboral in the 
North of Spain, which opened in 2007, is now a large exhibition space, 
devoted to media art. Chairman Chris Keulemans emphasized that new 
media arts was always at it best when it criticized the media itself, 
with its codes and nodes. Each of the three presentations in the 
morning session gave a different answer to the question how relevant 
political work could be produced.
The Iraqi-American artist Wafaa Bilal is known from his installation 
Domestic Tension, in which the artist lived in a gallery space for a 
month, pointed at by paint ball gun operated by web users. Shoot an 
Iraqi had 80 million visitors and, according to Bilal, was a “strange 
mix of aesthetic pain and pleasure.” What made the work so popular was 
the power of viral connections, in particular through chatrooms and 
video he put online. What happened here was a confrontation between 
conflict zone and comfort zone, disengagement and engagement, virtual 
versus physical platform — both in the case of the artwork and war in 
Iraq itself. Bilal concluded that the body has its own language that 
is not in sync with the electronic reality. Bilal made a distinction 
between interactive works, in which the end-states is already 
determined, and dynamic pieces that are open ended. A lot of the old 
school new media art is interactive. Increased user participated was 
illustrated in Bilal’s story of the ‘virtual human shield’, a group of 
people that gathered to protect the artist from being shot at. Dog or 
Iraqi was a month long online debate who gets waterboarded: a dog or 
an Iraqi? Bilal also briefly discussed his modded version of a 2003 US 
shooting game that he renamed into Virtual Jihadi. Instead of killing 
Sadam the user can now hunt GW Bush. This and other projects were 
documented in Wafaa Bilal, Shoot an Iraqi (City Light Books, San 
Francisco, 2008).
Former Etoy Hans Bernard of Uebermorgen.com didn’t show projects but 
read a text concerning the role of “European techno fine art avant 
garde.” I am great fan of Uebermorgen. It’s in fact becoming 
impossible to list all their interventions and hacks. Uebermorgen is 
all about “surreal outcomes”, not bound by any medium. “The 
transformation from digital to physical is important. The work is not 
pop art, it is rock art. We are not activists, we are actionists.” For 
a while seeking large audiences was a thrill, but that’s no longer the 
main motivation. There is a new strategy for each new project. Bernard 
did his best to prove that Uebermorgen’s intentions were neither 
political nor ideological. The aim should be Art, not Politics. 
Communication is the 9-5 job, but that not the passion. Bernard’s 
insistence on the non-political status didn’t convince. Uebermorgen’s 
claim, not to have any political agenda, refers to an ancient, rigid 
definition that was already problematic in the late seventies when I 
studied political science. Maybe in Austria politics is still 
associated with corrupt parties and fat, ugly politicians but 
elsewhere in the world people use a much broader definition of “the 
political”. His insistence on artistic freedom is amiable but the idea 
that once art becomes political it turns into politics and seizes to 
be art, simply doesn’t hold. His separation between the private 
opinion of the artist as a citizen and the Artist as a public figure 
is problematic for the same reasons. Bernard’s insistence that 
“perception and production need to separated” sounds good–but we all 
know that visual arts no longer operates outside “perception 
management.” Autonomy, at least in the Dutch context, is the official 
state religion. We all anticipate aesthetic impact, even if we reject 
the categories of the day and undermine the dominant visual logic. 
Hans, there are no commissars anymore that control the ateliers. If 
there is any censor it’s probably the Politically Correct Self. So, if 
we state, “in production we need to be free,” there is no one who will 
stop us — but ourselves.
Knowbotic Research, teaching and working in Zurich, was the third 
presenter. Their translocal distributed temporary works avoid–and seek– 
the Political in yet another manner. Christian Huebler showcased the 
Blackbenz Race project between Prishtina and Zurich, a city marketing 
proposal that was refused because of its negative image of the proper 
Swiss finance capital. The broader idea was to play with the Kosovo- 
Albanian-Swiss people that hover in-between places. Code words are 
fog, smoke, blurred spaces and multiple identities. The self-built 
stealth boat project has a similar intention. The micro audiences 
become actors here. Activism doesn’t need more exposure and 
transparency. Art doesn’t need moral outcry. The celebrity industry 
took over this role. Art questions and creates new spaces for 
reflection. What’s required are slow spaces. All three projects showed 
that new media art “doesn’t need to be a monade, merely celebrating 
itself.” (Huebler) This is the age of entering other contexts, times 
and spaces–assisted by production houses that have in-house knowledge 
about the specificity, and the Eigenartigkeit, of digital technologies.
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