melinda jørgensen on Tue, 20 Oct 1998 10:53:40 +0100 |
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Re: Syndicate: "why & how" to exhibit net art? |
this is a more personal response from the "south" rather than the "east" or "west " perspective to the general net.art discussuion which i find particularly relavent.. it often feels to me that the practice of net.art is a community service that net.artists provide, while either burning themselves out earning an alternate income or living in a tragic electronic version of attic poverty, and the main issue regarding exhibiting net.art is unencubmered payment for artists. Why should net.artists bother putting work in net.shows when they are not getting any income from it? for the love of it? so you are accessable to new audiences? so the CV gets bigger? on egalitarian principle? I have chosen to workonline because its the nervous system of our planet, however I only get paid if my net.work is shown on a moniter or data projected within a gallery context. no matter how many fancy web shows i can put on my CV, or if my freely available work is used for teaching in universities, or written about internationally, i dont recieve any financial benifit. i can feel flattered, but it doenst pay my isp account. Therefore i must fleshily speak for my work, (as apparently net.art is valueless if it speaks for itself) and write of my work, creating an even greater information glut in our gluttonous age. the other alternatives ..endless self promotion...gambling that a government committee likes my sales pitch for financial support, or a friendly art jury awards me a prize for fitting into their adgenda. I'd like to see painters having to stand up next to thier flat rectangular things explaining them to viewers in galleries before they recieved token payment. >the net artist should demand the same treatment Last year i gave a paper about my work and virtual identity at a glamorous academic and media industry conference. i was attached to a university at the time and they paid the substantial registration fee, i paid all other costs. My paper was published online and in print, but payment wasn't an option..presentation and publication was situated generally as one of thoes "opportunities" to which we as net.artists are passively positioned - -to have a choice to demand payment implies at least two alternatives which have equal value. Frequently it is either do it for free; or piss off cause there are 10 people eagerly standing behind you who will. There is no unity, no security.. strike and starve, or work for free and still starve but maybe you'll get something later. This isnt choice. there arent large individual or instutional patrons in this isolated island enonomy i live in, and government support, although it has its problems, enables net.art to survive. ive been lucky this year with grants and have gotten to go to polar and meet some of you, and have my next site supported. But this is not consistant income from what is my job, ie net.artist, which i believe is a necessary profession in our global virtual society, which deserves to have a liveable income just like any other professsion. Artists initiatives and independent curators who circumvent the dominance of govt and institution and resource money from somewhere (what a great talent to have!) to pay net.artists for net only shows are the only "free" future of net.art and deserve to be supported, and of course they will learn as they go, and of course some of them will have no idea what they are involved with, but i hope the better informed will survive and succeed. and we will all benifit. melinda jorgensen/rackham melinda jørgensen www.subtle.net