Dear List,
Thanks Jon and Leigh for a fine start! I'm very interested in Jon's
"consumerist model" of commissioning, and Leigh's concerns that the
model is indeed becoming much more commercial compared to a more 'hands
off' fine art commissioning model. In an interview on the CRUMB site,
Benjamin Weil describes a "curator as producer" mode of working with
Christian Marclay - quite hands on, but not a director model.
Might models and roles from film be useful here, or is there a danger
that new media gets treated like commercial mass media - quite the
opposite of Open Source ethics? I know that Richard Rinehart has an
interesting Open Source model for archiving net art ...
Yours,
Beryl
On 2 Mar 2010, at 12:41, Variant wrote:
> Hi Jon, and all
>
> Messier still, I'm interested in 'commissioning' in the context of
> unfolding experiences in Scotland and the proposals for Creative
> Scotland, a non-artform specific supersession of the Scottish Arts
> Council and Scottish Screen said to encompass the 'creative
> industries'.
>
> As to a clear division of roles, the commissioning processes you
> describe appear not to address the tectonic shift of public subsidy
> with regard to encouraged IPR retention & exploitation. (Public
> subsidy is already of paramount importance here, but will increasingly
> be so given the recession.)
>
> With the proposals, artists/filmmakers will have to 'pitch' to
> Creative Scotland in what is increasingly looking like a commissioning
> process, with the need to appeal for advocacy within the NDPB. This is
> a significant shift from previous 'arms length' public sector models
> of support (however partial and problematic they continue to be).
>
> It is still very hazy, even at this late date, but the proposals
> appear to include Creative Scotland look to also generate income
> streams (for itself, as well as encouraging other cultural
> institutions to do so) through the exploitation and retention of
> Intellectual Property Rights of the material it will effectively
> 'commission'. (The proximity of Edinburgh's financial/legal sector is
> palpable.)
>
> NESTA was the outcome of such an exploration of copyright- and
> profit-orientated approaches to ‘investment’ and would seem to be the
> guiding light of Creative Scotland. NESTA advocates its retention of
> patent rights for intellectual property resulting from publicly funded
> work and the wider state exploitation of IPR. One other example we
> have is the Catalan Department of Creative Industries' "refundable
> contribution [credit / loans] system as a way to have financial
> participation in market driven cultural projects and, therefore, be
> subject to enterprise risk." Creative Scotland will also introduce
> loans.
>
> As Nicholas Garnham has written:
>
> “ [T]he cultural industries are seen as complex value chains where
> profit is extracted at key nodes in the chain through control of
> production investment and distribution and the key “creative” labour
> is exploited not, as in the classic Marxist analysis of surplus value,
> through the
> wage bargain, but through contracts determining the distribution of
> profits to various rights holders negotiated between parties with
> highly unequal power (Caves 2000). ... [T]he political economy
> approach placed its major emphasis on the technologies of
> distribution, on the ways in which key economic and regulatory debates
> were to be seen as struggles over access to distribution under
> shifting technological conditions without any necessary effect on
> either the nature of the product being distributed or the relation
> with the audience. In particular, this analysis stressed the ways in
> which the profits of the whole process were returned to controllers of
> technological distribution systems rather than to the original
> producers of the cultural products or services.”
>
> (‘From Cultural to Creative Industries: An analysis of the
> implications of the “creative industries” approach to arts and media
> policy making in the United Kingdom’, Nicholas Garnham, International
> Journal of Cultural Policy Vol 11, No. 1 2005)
>
> All best,
> Leigh
>
>
> -------------------------------------------
> Variant
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>
> On 2 Mar 2010, at 11:16, Jon Ippolito wrote:
>
>> Thanks, Beryl, for inviting Rick Rinehart and me as guests for this
>> month! Later this week I'll be reporting from the DOCAM conference in
>> Montreal, where we'll unveil the third-generation Variable Media
>> Questionnaire developed by John Bell, and where I expect to learn of
>> other exciting developments culminating from the research that Alain
>> Depocas and the Langlois Foundation have nurtured over the past five
>> years. And I'm looking forward to hearing reports from other
>> correspondents on Friday's BALTIC conference.
>>
>> Rick and I have the distinction, or perhaps more accurately infamy,
>> of having played both roles of artist and curator in various
>> commissions. As a double agent, I see the process as a bit messier
>> than might be visible from the outside. To see if I'm not alone, I'd
>> like to lob some questions at all of you artists, curators, and
>> others who have been, or will soon be, involved in the commission of
>> a variable media work:
>>
>> 1. The process of commissioning offers more give-and-take between
>> artist and curator than just buying work out of a gallery, which is
>> tantamount to shopping at a store for art. But the traditional
>> artistic commission still divides responsibilities according to a
>> consumerist model, this time based on freelance labor: the curator
>> defines the job and hires the artist; the artist makes the work; and,
>> depending on the terms of the agreement, either the artist or the
>> curator inherits the work, along with the sole responsibility to
>> maintain it. I'm interested to know whether the experiences of people
>> on this list have echoed or disrupted this clear division of roles.
>> How involved are curators in the production of the work? How involved
>> are artists in its documentation and preservation? And how subversive
>> can an artwork be if it is "work for hire"?
>>
>> 2. The word "commission" comes from the etymological root "to
>> entrust," which in medieval Latin became "put into custody." So, from
>> those who've been involved in commissions on this list, I want to
>> know who trusted whom with what, and whether that trust was honored
>> or betrayed. Who got custody of the "child" of this unnatural union
>> between artist and curator? Of the hardware? Of the source code? If
>> the work was created collaboratively, how were the rights and credit
>> apportioned? What did you keep, and what did you let go? Who made out
>> better in the end?
>>
>> 3. How, if at all, did the variability inherent in technological and
>> process-based artwork complicate or enrich your commission? I'm
>> especially interested in any problems you encountered--with an
>> institution, an artist, or a technology--and whether the solution you
>> hit upon was satisfactory.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> jon
>> ______________________________
>> Still Water--what networks need to thrive.
>> http://still-water.net/
>>
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Beryl Graham, Professor of New Media Art
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