Amy Alexander on 26 Feb 2001 07:26:48 -0000 |
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<nettime> Re: net art history - Interview Yourself! |
Olia's right! Josephine's right! The critics are short on time, and having them spend it doing interviews just creates a bunch of Art Stars - it's essentially a whole new Art World created in the process of trying to flee the old one... and look what we've got; overworked critics, unhappy net artists... this won't do.... I propose a new approach, as part of the Plagiarist "New Millenium Disorder" project: The Interview Yourself Project. Since it will hopefully generate lots of interviews, the acronym will be the "IY-IY-IY-IY-IY" Project. Everyone, please interview yourself, and post your interview to the usual mailing lists; heck, I'll even make a whole website for the archives if people submit them. Think of the benefits... it subverts the Net Art World Institution, and makes everyone a star.... or, uh, makes nobody a star, depending on how you want to look at it... it finally gives the interviewees a chance to answer the kinds of questions they *wish* they'd be asked about their work... it gives us shy people who sometimes clam up with real interviewers the chance to finally open up in an interview... and, it saves wear and tear on critics and journalists! Concerned that the tough questions won't get asked? Not to worry; IY-IY-IY-IY-IY doesn't preclude critics from doing interviews, just sort of er, open sources the interview process. (I just love working "open source" in anywhere I can... ) So, hop to it everybody! (you too, critics!) you've got an interview to prepare - History Awaits! -@ olia lialina wrote: Josephine Bosma wrote: >err.... ascii paparazzi? Sorry dear Olia, this is too insulting to come >from you. Anyway, the biggest problem net art journalists and observers >have is that we are too few with too much to do. Josephine, I don't underestimate your work. The paragraph you refer to is full of love and respect. And I do enjoy interviews as a genre (I love dialogues). But it is a pity that interviews dominate the critics' output. The interview approach cultivates stars, not ideas. And stars, especially superstars, can be very lovely targets. You can pronounce them dead whenever you like. Ideas live longer. Interviews are easy to read. They catch a moment. They let future readers touch the past. A picture develops. History's created. But it's a history of artists' arrogance, self promotion, mood changes. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net