Will Jackson on Wed, 24 Jun 2015 13:33:36 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Claire Bishopâs Game: Subversive |
Claire Bishop's radical compliance is most compellingly argued for in the fo= llowing passage: > the saga suggests why a new term was required that retained an aesthetic d= imension whilst dispensing with much of the onerous historical baggage. This "certain historical amnesia" is obscured by Bishop's considerable resea= rch and deft sewing of seemingly disparate social, political, and artistic t= hreads. Relatively dry tracts of analysis are animated by fascinating anecdo= tal evidence. Her writing can be enjoyable enough that I forget my critical f= aculties, thank goodness. But more to the point, "the social turn" put again= st Tactical Media illuminates an interesting schism. By your light "the soci= al turn" is sanitized of recent historical influences, whereas Tactical Medi= a is a framing specifically tuned to the historical. My art project which in= tervenes in the tradition of Tactical Media will probably be read with an ey= e towards previous reorganizations of communication, e.g. John Nevil Maskely= ne's "hack" of the first "secure" wireless telegram. My art project in the t= radition of social practice might (now) be more in dialogue with the massive= reenactment of key Bolshevik uprisings. Both reframings would probably have= to be addressed in some kind of expository text accompanying the work, that= is, we are likely splitting hairs (but it can be fun and rewarding to do so= ). The social turn forsakes the "post war cybernetic paradigm," is in short,= farsighted. Enough of this rehashing! Now we reach my prescription: Bishop a= rgues under a suppressed premise for Art proper as a dialogue necessarily me= diated by institutions, precisely the ones circumnavigated or prodded by int= erventionist politics. A key feature of Ranci=C3=A8re's writing on art is the resurrection of figur= es important in their own time, now relatively forgotten, and placing them a= longside canonical works / careers. Curiously, and in support of your point t= hat Bishop never intends to draw blood from the hand which feeds, she shies a= way from such bathos. She mostly reinscribes celebrated and relatively under= appreciated artists. Importantly, they are often involved with academia in s= ome manner. Bishop's narrative sticks to the most concrete manipulations of sensory expe= rience - representation, sculpture, and performance. Tactical Media might no= t sit comfortably alongside these entrenched methodologies of art. The Tacti= cal Media Wikipedia page, whose footnotes read like an index of Nettime's to= rchbearers, reminds me why I might not categorize Nettime or Tactical Media a= s art: "practices that engage and critique the dominant political [artistic]= and economic order," might do well to distance themselves from the channels= of power they play in. (Although one of my favorite artists, Claire Fontain= e, demolishes this argument elegantly). That is to say they occupy, for me, a= privileged space in my life separate from art! Of course, Nettime never cla= imed art as its domain, but I believe a conversation nearly as old as myself= , which provokes and unsettles my worldview near-daily, might be the closest= thing there is to an institution of intervention vis-a-vis Tactical Media. In a final bid for situating Tactical Media and Nettime within a framework p= roper to their aims, as endeavors in their own right rather than the red-hea= ded stepchildren the brittle and institutional regime of art, allow me two p= assages from Montaigne: ... observe how Caesar spreads himself when he tells us about his ingenuity i= n building bridges and siege-machines .... His exploits are sufficient proof= that he was an outstanding general: he wants to be known as something rathe= r different: a good engineer. And, I cannot remain fixed within my disposition and endowments. Chance plays a g= reater part in all this than I do. The occasion, the company, the very act o= f using my voice, draw from my mind more than what I can find there when I e= xercise it and try it out all by myself. [A] And that is why the spoken word= is worth more than the written =E2=80=93 if a choice can be made between th= ings of no value. Footnotes, citations available on request Will Jackson Nobody at Large # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org