Brian Holmes on Sat, 3 Nov 2007 22:51:02 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Whatever Happened to Cybernetics? |
Robbin Murphy wrote: > Your time frame, 1978 to 1994, fits roughly between the death of > Robert Smithson - who I would call a cybernetic artist, maybe the last > - in 1973 and the reprise of cybernetic thinking, if not the term > itself, caused by the popularity of the net after '94 Even as a very latecomer to all this (late 90s) I would agree that something very "cybernetic" was in the air of that time. The idea that a boundary decision is both an aesthetic and a political one, delineating a system, bringing it to consciousness, asking questions about its development and destiny, and finally, taking material and symbolic action to support its particular ecology - all that was very much the spirit that I discovered, basically through nettime, then by meeting and working with all kinds of hackers and artists and net activists. However, I would say that in the 90s, most people were quite mesmerized by complexity theories, with their notions of phase-changes occurring through some kind of collective alchemy that could catalyze the chaotic relational processes of networks. In other words, we were caught up in the multiple ramifications of second- and third-order cybernetics. Most people did not realize that more centralized forms of decision-making could still be imposed, precisely through a systems logic that had grown out of control engineering models in the post-WWII and Cold War period. > It's amazing now, looking back, how fast things happened and how > overpowering the California Ideology was. Within months an industry > was born and without alternative funding artists had to find a way > to work with it. Few artists, it turns out, profited much from the > setup financially or artistically. And the art world. Harrumph. > They protected their little turfs and are only now taking little > steps outside their huts for a look-see clutching their copies of > "Relational Aesthetics". Ha ha, on iDC I just read a post doing exactly what you say, it's truly lamentable, let's not waste the bandwidth. More interesting is the question, Who was doing systems analysis a la E. S. Quade in the early 1990s? Or in other words, who was taking exactly the role that Jack Burnham wanted to assign to the artist, as a kind of Duchampian arbiter of technocultural development? I don't know, but I have a guess for research: the planning consultants for the business consortia that installed the routers and GIX accelerators after the migration of the net out of the National Science Foundation. I would look there, rather than to the cable companies who also made huge investments, because for them, it was a kind of no-brainer, they were already in the business, demand was rising etc. But installing the commercial routing infrastructure must have been (correct me if I'm wrong) a highly speculative enterprise, and to carry it out must have required some predictive system modeling, in order to convince all the people involved that they were making the right kinds of decisions. And then, upstream of that, one could also look at the regulators who made the decision to migrate in the first place. We are told, e.g. by Janet Abate in her book Inventing the Internet, that it was done because of laws about strictly public, non-commercial use of government infrastructure, such that you couldn't charge even nominal fees for any kind of service, which became untenable in a situation of expanding and diversifying participation. But I would be oh so curious to know if there were other calculations involved. Because if any technostructure or power elite ever had to take a systems ecology into account, in economic terms, it was for those very complex bets on what was still an experimental and highly anarchic technology. Of course we know very well the ideologues who pushed for it (Brand, Kelly, etc.). But I am sure there is a layer or two of mediation between them, the governmental decisions, and the money that ultimately made the California Ideology real. > But I digress. We've been talking about this, and whatever happened > to Jack Burnham's System Esthetics, for a while and I think it's a > worthwhile subject to pursue until we get some answers that aren't > quite so evident. Well, yes, I totally agree with you. I would be very curious to know more about your conclusions, or even the way you frame the question. I looked up Burnham's text (took a while to find time to read it, which is why I have been so slow to answer) and his concluding remarks about the productivist artists and architects being absorbed into the Soviet industrial system sound very ironic in today's light. Because today, not just net.art and its kissing cousins, but almost all of aesthetics has been absorbed into the globalized American industrial-financial economy, where culture -- i.e., entertainment and advertising, as well as high-end tourist attractions like the "Bean" sculpture out here on Chicago's grotesque Millennium Plaza -- forms just one more subsystem, whose value is relentlessly calculated and whose contours are reshaped accordingly. What I find curious in the Burnham text is that he places such a strong emphasis on the artist as "Homo Arbiter Formae" without ever exploring the ontological and epistemological bases on which such world-shaping aesthetic decisions would be taken. But maybe there are other aspects of his writing which are not reflected in this one article? I think such a romantic or demiurgical idea of the artist is still interesting, because its very naivete points raises the question of the values, the aspirations, the dreams or the drives on which decisions about our increasingly artificial environment are made. Become your own subsystem, and try your damndest to steer it at cross currents, seems to be the surviving cybernetic wisdom for collectives of thinkers and doers today. Let's continue these discussions, all the best, Brian Refs: E. S. Quade: http://rand.org/pubs/papers/P4053/ Burnham text: http://www.volweb.cz/horvitz/burnham/systems-esthetics.html Gold-mine site by Robert Horvitz with extensive info about Burnham: http://www.volweb.cz/horvitz/burnham/homepage.html # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org