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NEW-MEDIA-CURATING  July 2012

NEW-MEDIA-CURATING July 2012

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Subject:

From:

"W.Lieser [DAM] Berlin|Cologne" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

W.Lieser [DAM] Berlin|Cologne

Date:

Mon, 30 Jul 2012 10:27:06 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

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Hello, greetings still from our trip to Cornwall,UK,  

not much connection and so only from time to time, that I can download the comments. 
For me specially as I'm mostly involved in the usual gallery business, meaning: trying 
to create enough to keep everything going and the artists happy, it is very interesting 
and fruitful to follow this discussion even so I find it's still leaving a lot of loose ends, if I can say 
so, which would need to be researched and backed up by statistics and facts. But the 
viewpoints and perspectives alone are great. This kind of crossover discussion between 
the art scene and the new media scene is rare, still I'm missing some comments from 
the members of the list, which are more in institutions. 

Domenico again it is so right what you say, wouldn't it be for the love of some 
collectors most of the early work of computer art of the 1960s and 1970s would already 
have disappeared. Can you imagine a Frieder Nake plotter drawing was at that time 
60 Deutsch Marks, about 100 US Dollars, and was often thrown away after some time.
It took up to the recent years to really discover the value of his work and that is now nearly
50 years later. 

Anyhow the situation, how I  perceive it: new media lines of promoting your work e.g. 
as Jon mentioned it through Rhizome and the other structure through galleries and museums etc. 
still exist mostly as a parallel world. There are artists like Yves Netzhammer, who works with the computer 
quiet successfully e.g. he represented Switzerland at the biennale in Venice some years ago, but never 
even appeared on festivals or typical new media events. He is making a good living of his art. 
On the other hand and here are the artists Jon talks about re Rhizome, how are they doing, are they really doing well? 
even so they are ranking that high in rhizome? 
 


All the best 

Wolf


 




Mit besten Grüßen / With best wishes


Wolf Lieser

PS: We are on a summer break, so emails might not be answered on a daily basis. 

[DAM]Berlin "Summer Splash", Eelco Brand, Vuk Cosic, Gerhard Mantz, Evan Roth, Marius Watz
The gallery is closed for a summer break until the 6th of August.
[DAM]Cologne closed due to relocating. 

DAM Projects GmbH
New Location in Berlin:  Neue Jakobstr.6/7, D-10179 Berlin, Phone: +49 30 28098135
GF Wolfgang Lieser HRB 90873 Charlottenburg DE 161744610
www.dam.org





















On Jul 28, 2012, at 8:18 AM, domenico quaranta wrote:

> Dear Crumbers,
> 
> sorry for disappearing from the list - I actually disappeared in the mountains with my family, where I'm enjoying a very bad connection, healthy life and good food. Copying and pasting the whole discussion on a text file and reading it offline was a pleasure that brought me back to the 90s. Thank you Steve for summing up my thoughts so well, and thanks Jon for mentioning the upcoming book - I really look forward to read it!
> 
> It wasn't my intention to hijack the debate toward the good old topic of New Media Art's integration in the contemporary art world, as well as to create such a strong connection between collecting and the art market. It was - I think - an inevitable side effect, because collecting - the topic of this debate - is common practice in the contemporary art world, where it's mostly mediated by the art market; while, on the other side, is little or no practiced in the new media art world. Even if there are dozens of new media art institutions all around the world, just a few of them actually focused on collecting the artworks they exhibit and produce, and just a few of them set up a permanent display for their collection. This is something we should take into account in this discussion: why so many festivals and art centers, and such a few museums? even if many artists, as Simon suggest, feel confortable in the new media
> niche-ghetto-community-artworld-whatever, they have to admit that this world is doing little to actually save their work for the future. My question is: why? Is it just a consequence of the push for the new? Or simply the models of collecting and museums don't fit in this world and its idea of art?
> 
> Somebody may argue that collecting is not the only way to save art for the future. I completely agree with this, and I think that many attempts to force immaterial, ephemeral, temporary forms of art into physical forms in order to "save" them and fit them into the museum remind me of stuffed animals, or anathomical parts preserved in glass jars. Are we "saving" art or its corpse? We try to save for the future what we love and what we consider important for us and for future generations. Sometimes, this means preserving the actual object. Sometimes not. I loved my grandpa, and I think that my sons should know who he was, what he did, what he told to me. So, I'm try to save him for the future. Of course, I'm not doing it by preserving his corpse, but by preserving the "performance" of his life through documentation, objects that belonged to him, and my personal memory. The same happens all the time in the field of art, and not just in the case of
> ephemeral art practices. I still believe that Duchamp's Fountain is best preserved by the issue of The Blind Man that featured it as a cover story, than by the replicas made in the 70s; and that accounts and bad documentation of her early performances "preserve" Marina Abramovic's work better than the huge prints we see at art fairs.
> Often, computer based art is too connected with the present to be meaningful in the future. Every year, I show to my students wwwwwwwww.jodi.org; and every year, it becomes more and more difficult to communicate it. The web is too different now from what it was in 1995. So, this year I started showing, together with the work, some early accounts and some video reactions by Youtube users (that sometimes Jodi themselves use in their performances). The students got it better - at least, they were able to experience something more of what makes this piece meaningful to the first generation of internet users. We can try to preserve this piece technically - but it would be just the mummy of the actual piece, if we don't save its story.
> 
> A last note. Discussions about strategies of collecting are useful, but sometimes I feel that they are turning into a cold, impersonal practice an instinctive, romantic, personal one. Again: we save what we love, and we instinctively find a way to save it, when it's time to do it. Of course, institutions should work another way - but art was never saved by institutions in the first place: it was saved by chance, by the love of a single, passionate collector or by the respect of the people. 
> 
> My bests,
> Domenico
>  
> ---
> 
> 
> Domenico Quaranta
> 
> 
> web. http://domenicoquaranta.com/
> email. [log in to unmask]
> mob. +39 340 2392478
> skype. dom_40
> 

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