intim@ on Sun, 18 Oct 1998 01:21:00 +0100 |
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Syndicate: "why & how" to exhibit net art? |
dear syndicalists, melentie explained many facts about the seafair98 and he was kind enough to share with us also some details about organising such a festival which is obviously a heavy task (especially for us who are not doing such things: we just go to the festivals, present our projects and return home). from that point further i'm not going to analyse seafair anymore but only going to talk about net art exhibitions in general. i want this to be clear. = = = = = = = = = = "art is never chaste, one should keep all innocent buffoons steered well away. people who are not prepared well enough for art should never be allowed near it. yes, art is dangerous. if it's chaste, it's not art." (pablo picasso) somehow i do understand the position of the organisers of different net art festivals and exhibitions: there are people all around the world who are dealing with net art exhibitions. and they need to do something, to be present and known as curators as those who have power to promote you or to bring you down. the stupid game which is present in different art spheres (fine art, theatre, music etc.) so why would net are be an exception. olia lialina explained many things concerning net art festivals and exhibitions very well in her historical "cheap.art" article <http://www.v2.nl/mail/v2east/0455.html> tonight i recognise two problems: a) money b) concepts a) money there is never enough money, of course. if george soros (no matter how we critique him) wouldn't finance our work there wouldn't be any nettime and syndicate meetings, there wouldn't be many net art festivals and exhibitions etc. but george soros is not enough, so jaka zeleznikar told me (as a joke - but as a conceptional one) that he's waiting some other organisations to be establish: like CCNCA - The CocaCola Network for Contemporary Arts or MDNCA - The McDonalds Network for Contemporary Arts. until then we'll be without enough money because george soros is not enough (uh, that's ok - how would it looks if he would own the complete net art scene). but the organisers of net art festivals and exhibitions get the money somehow. there are many possibilities, of course. some organisers even get some money from different sponsors, ngo, foundations and also from the governments (ministries for culture). but of course, they want to keep it for themselves as much as they can. "to keep it" means to spend it for posters, fancy multicolored catalogues, tv and printed commercials and announcements etc. - for their own rating as curators and organisers. it's very expensive to organise theatre festivals, because you have to bring the complete scenography, many actors, technical equipment and it costs a lot. net art is perfect: you just publish some urls on one page in the catalogue and that's it. the rest are presentations of sponsors, and maybe four or five pages of curator's text to prove that she/he knows what she/he is doing and to do some self promotion. everybody are satisfied - even the artists: we put the catalogue into our cv and we feel good: we think: hey, i'm an international star, they are inviting me to many festival and exhibitions... some of the exhibitions and festivals are honest: they tell you in advance that the presentation will be on internet only (virtual stays virtual). now it depends of how well known the organiser and the curators are, how important are they in net art world, what's the concept of the festival / exhibition etc. so you can decide by your own if you will submit your work to such an event. here are 3 good examples of such net-only exhibitions (professionally prepared and well done). there are probably others also but unfortunately i don't know them. http://ir.uz http://www.altx.com/ds http://aleph-arts.org/m2m/ the problem is that the content is almost the same in every exhibition mentioned here, but that is another thing. another good example is what Rhizome is doing. on their website <www.rhizome.com> they randomly exhibit different net art projects at the entrance. also very professionally done and completely inside the spirit of net art. and there are others: once i was invited to the net art festival where they treated us like hollywood stars. they covered all the travelling expenses, the best hotel in town, a lot(!) of money for daily allowances, dinners on the boat organised by very rich sponsors, prepared interviews and press conferences etc. like in heaven. i came together with my wife and we wanted to pay all the extra costs for her: they said no, there's no need to do that, we'll pay all. they selected the artist who won the first prize: 10.000 DM, can you imagine? speaking of my wife: she is often invited to many philosophical conferences, contemporary dance and theatre festivals and meetings all around europe and she never spent one single dollar of her own money for these events (not even mine :). everything is well organised and the organisers knows that they have to pay if they want to have some people there. otherwise they would be alone sitting at a round table end debate with walls. the net artist should demand the same treatment. if you want me, if i'm good enough for you, if my project is so special that you invited me on the festival or exhibition: pay. you don't have to pay anything for my project because it's free, available on the net and anybody can visit it, but pay for my body to be transferred to your gallery, museum or any other exhibition/festival space. because my body (meat, flash, bones etc.) is equal to my net art project: that's me. but of course: if you are organising net art festival for yourself - please do it, but don't use my name to attract the audience. in some cases the audience must even pay to enter the gallery where net art projects are exhibited on the exhibition! - isn't that strange? there are also other, maybe more strange concepts: some festivals are charging entry fees to the net artists who are submitting their works to the jury or curators. what a perversity! sometimes i'm asking myself: why do we have our syndicate? aren't syndicates meant to protect their members in their relationships with <...who...>? b) concepts the inflation of the net art festivals and exhibition also results in the lack of concepts. what do some net art festivals and exhibitions understand as the main theme? all the festivals have some title which represents the main theme and the projects should somehow be inside the theme. but we all know that this are just titles, not very often followed by the real concept that one can see at the final selection on the exhibition. just look at the titles: general themes that any project can fit in. net art as a media is very democratically: it is available on the net for free and to everybody. big net art indexes were made for the audience to make it easier to find them and to enjoy art. so if you are intending to organise a festival or an exhibition you must have a very very good reason for that. a very very good concept. if not you better stay away, observe and enjoy net art projects like any other surfer. don't do anything. nobody would blame you. because dealing with art is dangerous, very dangerous. pablo picasso said (and i'm proud to repeat it in the present context): "art is never chaste, one should keep all innocent buffoons steered well away. people who are not prepared well enough for art should never be allowed near it. yes, art is dangerous. if it's chaste, it's not art." the question still remains: how / why to exhibit net art? free your mind and the rest will follow. igor stromajer / intim@