Robert Atkins on Mon, 11 Nov 2002 09:05:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Robert Atkins lectures on The Artworld, Community and Activism: AMeditation Inspired by the Events of September 11th London, Bristol,Valencia |
November 13: 6:30 pm CARTE/University of Westminster, Portland Hall at the Univ of Westminster, Little Titchfield Street London November 20, 6:30 pm: Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol November 25 Polytechnic University, Valencia The Artworld, Community and Activism: A Meditation Inspired by the Events of September 11th In the wake of September 11th, we are awash in government- and mass media rhetoric about "patriotism," "sacrifice," and "change." Many of these representations serve to further the already-defined agenda of those in power, rather than to promote discussion and democracy. Art's role in crisis--if it is regarded as relevant at all--is seen as entirely therapeutic. Crisis creates pressures to dispense with business-as-usual, sometimes revealing the real (cultural) fissures of the day. In terms of arts practice, we might consider such questions as: What does community mean in a Western culture of increasing transience, materialism and diminishing public space? Given the apotheosis of the artist as an individual genius for the past 500 years, is the very idea of post-Renaissance art involving community a contradiction in terms? Why have exemplars of community-minded, often public art been excluded from the art-historical canon? (Consider the performances of Suzanne Lacy, the confrontational AIDS-activist works by the Gran Fury collective and many others, and even Joseph Beuy's founding of the Free University in 1972.) Is the Internet the last, best hope for art attempting genuine social change? What effective community-oriented initiatives have been created online? What catalytic or symbol-making role can artists play in times of crisis? How can critical works find their place in an entertainment-oriented museum culture? And in an increasingly monolithic, mass-media age how can the arts promote the emergence of diverse and independent voices? This illustrated lecture will address these matters, tracing the post-sixties history of activist art and the emergence of organizations such as Artists Call Against U.S. Intervention in Central America and Visual AIDS, as a backdrop for considering both current cultural conditions and artistic practice. The evolving interpretations--and use and abuse--of representations of September 11th during 2002 will also be discussed. Robert Atkins--a New York and California-based art historian, author and activist--is a former columnist for The Village Voice, the author of books including "ArtSpeak: A Guide to Contempory Ideas, Movements and Buzzwords" and "From Media to Metaphor: Art About AIDS," as well as the recipient of numerous awards for art criticism . A fellow at Carnegie Mellon's Studio for Creative Inquiry, he is arts editor of The Media Channel (www.mediachannel.org), editor in chief of Artery: The AIDS-Arts Forum (www.artistswithaids.org/artery), an instructor at the Rhode Island School of Design, and the former editor-in-chief of the Arts Technology Entertainment Network. He is a founder of Visual AIDS, the group that originated Day Without Art and the Red Ribbon, the initiator of 911‹THE SEPTEMBER 11 PROJECT: Cultural Intervention in Civic Society (http://rhizome.org/911), and is currently at work on an anthology of his writing called "I Witness: Art Writing as Activism, Criticism and Reportage." _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold