pedro lopez casuso on 24 Jan 2001 16:28:32 -0000 |
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[nettime-lat] fwd net art y museos? |
> Museum Tries Mounting Its Latest Show in Cyberspace > http://www.nytimes.com/2001/01/08/arts/08ARTS.html > > January 8, 2001 > ARTS ONLINE > By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL > > Museums know how to deal with the past. Lob a pre-Columbian artifact > into the curatorial department's "in" box, and the staff will have > a pretty good idea what to do next. Like everybody else, though, > museums sometimes struggle with the future. Ask a museum how the > Internet will figure in its mission, and you may become an artifact > before you get the answer. > > If they reply, most museums will direct you to their Web sites, > which typically serve as a visitor's center, study guide and > gift-shop annex. But a few museums have started to look to the > future, based on the realization that the Internet can be an > aesthetic medium as well as an information resource. > > David A. Ross, director of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, > was among the first to recognize that the Internet will play a > central role in the artistic activities of the 21st-century museum. > To advance that notion further, Mr. Ross last week opened the > museum's exhibition "010101: Art in Technological Times." > > The museum was closed for the opening, certainly a deviation from > standard museum practice. That did not prevent anyone who had > access to the Internet from viewing the exhibition's five freshly > commissioned works when "010101" went online one minute after > midnight (Pacific time) on Jan. 1. > > As its name suggests, "010101" consists of digital artworks that > were created to be shown on the Internet. The interactive pieces > are displayed in a virtual gallery that exists solely online > (www.sfmoma.org/010101/). > > Mr. Ross had planned to attend the premiere during his New Year's > Eve dinner, only to discover, he said, that "the Internet has yet > to penetrate the hallowed walls" of Chez Panisse, the landmark > restaurant in Berkeley, Calif. Instead, after arriving home, he > fired up his computer and toured the Web site. > > Online content that can be accessed anywhere is not new. But > "010101" was probably the first museum opening of 2001. Mr. Ross > said he hoped this Internet-only event would help demolish the > boundaries between the art-cluttered halls of museums and the > virtual walls of cyberspace. > > "At the beginning of the New Year," Mr. Ross said, "we do allow > ourselves to think in certain ways that we don't in other parts of > the year. So we specifically chose this time to begin a rumination > about the moment, and about the future we think museums should be > engaged in. There is symbolic value to the idea that the first > exhibition to open in the new millennium will be one whose material > is completely invisible." > > For museums, which are collections of objects, the intangibility > of digits raises some interesting questions. How do you register a > work when it has no physical presence? How do you preserve an > online piece that the artist continues to update? > > Benjamin Weil, the San Francisco museum's curator of media arts, > said that for the first time the elements of an artwork in this > case, the programming code, a network connection, computers, > software had been completely separated from the experience of the > art itself. As a result, he said, "Intelligent museums are going to > have to start reassessing their knowledge about what art is." > > No one expects digital art to replace painting and sculpture or > online exhibitions to supplant museum visiting. But as Glenn D. > Lowry, director of the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan, noted, > "The digital reproduction of works of art on the Internet is just > that, but the experience of works of art uniquely created for the > Net is a fundamentally different category." In short, a Rembrandt > on the Internet is a reproduction; something created digitally is > original art. > > Mr. Weil, the curator, said: "We should quit categorizing art by > medium. All of it is art." Yet even he acknowledged that `it's > definitely weird." He added: "We have a long way to go before > everybody's comfortable with the computer screen as an environment > in which you have not only your work of the day, but your art, > too." > > Artists have been using the Internet as a creative medium almost > since its inception, spawning an international subculture that > exists outside the gallery system because the works' intangibility > obviously limits its marketability. > > Now that museums are starting to augment the Matisses on their Web > sites with Internet-only pieces, they are validating the genre > while giving work, and income, to artists who were mainly producing > labors of love. The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and the Dia > Center for the Arts in Chelsea routinely present online projects. > > Last year's Biennial survey at the Whitney Museum of American Art > included nine Web-based works, and the museum will offer its own > exhibition of Internet art, "Data Dynamics," in March. The > Guggenheim Museum also has some initiatives under way. > > The Modern in Manhattan, which has presented digital works as > adjuncts to several recent exhibitions, is planning to commission > four or five online art works this year."TimeStream,"a history of > the moving image by the noted multimedia artist Tony Oursler, will > be the first. > > With the Modern's midtown building about to undergo a major > expansion, there are practical as well as aesthetic considerations > for sponsoring online art. Mr. Lowry said, "As our exhibition space > is compressed because of our construction program, the Internet > provides us with the opportunity to continue presenting major > shows." > > Most of the digital artworks in the "010101" exhibition are as > visually appealing as they are conceptually intriguing. But be > prepared: a fast Internet connection will help reduce the time it > takes to view the works, and visitors must learn to navigate the > exhibition site's complicated user interface. (Hint: the box in the > upper left-hand corner of the black grid leads to the art.) > > "Feed," a work by Mark Napier of New York, is perhaps his most > accomplished work to date. It asks visitors to submit a Web-page > address, then takes that site's underlying data and processes it in > a variety of graphically arresting ways. With its emphasis on raw > materials, "Feed" is a latter- day action painting, albeit one with > actual action. There is interaction, too: visitors can resize and > reposition the displays to their liking. > > Among the other works, "Eden.Garden 1.0," by Michael Samyn and > Auriea Harvey, recasts the biblical setting as a 3-D computer-game > environment. The artists portray themselves as an animated Adam and > Eve, complete with fig leaves. Again, viewers are asked to submit a > Web address, and code from the site determines the characters' > movements and other elements of the scene. > > On March 3, "010101" will expand into the San Francisco museum's > real-world galleries, where two dozen works in more traditional > media will be keyed to the exhibition's overall theme: how artists > are responding to a world that increasingly revolves around > technology. > > Mr. Weil and Mr. Ross are still debating whether computers should > be installed in the galleries so visitors can view the online works > in a public space, not only from their homes or offices. > > In the spring, the museum will hold seminars on how museums > themselves are responding to a world that increasingly revolves > around technology, and Mr. Ross is undeterred by the prospect that > some of the discussions will become heated. > > "We're all frogs in the slowly boiling pot," Mr. Ross said. "You > know, in that old saw, you dropped the frogs in and they were smart > enough to jump out? Well, we're all smart enough to know where we > are, and we're not jumping out." > > > > The New York Times on the Web > http://www.nytimes.com > -- _______________________________________________ nettime-lat mailing list nettime-lat@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-lat