Arthur Bueno on Wed, 14 Oct 1998 12:46:55 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Theory and Practice of Conferencing |
Theory and Practice of Conferencing An account of JUNCTION SKOPJE By Arthur Bueno A week after the Syndicate meeting JUNCTION SKOPJE. We have a new and very neat Syndicate reader, there are pictures, 70 hours of video and some discussion has started on the list about the presentation of net.art, but there isn't any report yet, so I'll give it a try. This was my first experience with this kind of event, and I am filled with impressions, many of which will be obvious to conference veterans. So what happened there? People fly into the Balkans. An SCCA bus collects them from the airport and drives them through Skopje. We see the hill at the river Vardar that more or less divides the Moslem and Christian parts of the city, on one side shopping malls and cappuccino, on the other minarets and Turkish coffee. On the hill stands the old fortress and next to it the Museum of Contemporary Art. The bus stops. Throughout the hallway computers on pedestals are waiting, only recently filled to the brim with selected net.art projects. In order not to get lost between the unfamiliar faces I make a quick categorisation of the crowd as theorists, artists, local visitors and organisers. We are led into the dark conferencing hall and the meeting opens with a web-art presentation VIRTUAL AQUARIUM by Andras Negyessy, Tomas Kovacs; a project which enables us to deform the face of the person you are video-conferencing with without him knowing it. I always wanted to do that! Deformation remains the subject as Mark Dery, not the typical Syndicalist, pleads for a re-embodiment in net.art. With much consideration for his audience the incredibly eloquent Dery slowed his speech down to Warp 5, which was still a bit fast for many of us, and too much even for the very skilled translator. 'How am I doing, do I still have a pulse rate out there?' We learned to see the grotesque as a model for the re-emergence of the body in art. After 40 minutes Dery leaves us with a stage filled with monsters and deformed bodies and a sudden desire for drinking beer or vodka. At just that moment Inke Arns falls from the sky to present us the second Syndicate reader: the best fruit of the mailing list, a lot of carefully edited, interesting stuff to read on the way back. My categorisation remained helpful the next day, although the divisions were not as sharp as I first thought. I estimate that the theorists have the majority over artists. Still it's a strange symbiosis. The one seems to need the other to legitimate his activities. So many words appear to be needed to accompany artistic experiments these days. Aren't artists limiting themselves more and more to the conceptual? I ask a friendly looking Ryszard Kluszinsky (Poland) in the canteen. He retreats for a few hours and returns on stage to give an extensive lecture on 'The position of the interactive artist'. As a direct reply to my question, is my pleasant illusion. In another theoretic discourse Lev Manovich (USA) gives us an academic, historic account of the development of New Media. The analogy between the film projector and the Turing machine is discussed, and although it's interesting I find myself beginning to wonder what to do with this knowledge. Maybe I'm more the workshop kind of a man. A meeting like in Skopje clearly functions great as an occasion to meet and exchange ideas, to find support in the social group the Syndicate has obviously become. But the official part of the meeting was to me a bit confusing. Themes had been formulated such as: Discussion about implementation of the various aspects of the new and emerging media in Europe, and: European East - West exchange of ideas and discussion about techniques for the communication within European emerging electronic art & media scene and: Ways and means of improving the study of the emerging arts and new technologies But these formulas were a bit too broad to be functional. They quickly vaporised. The program of a meeting might be discussed in the mailinglist on forehand, resulting in a more detailed program and a clearer view of the goals. I suppose I expected a bit more of a pragmatic approach. After all here people with similar occupations and interests, that work in similar situations and have similar practical problems are meeting. A beginning media art could benefit more from the presence of more experienced organizations. Exchange programs could be set up, strategies discussed, plans for co-operation made. This feeling was expressed during the presentation of the Virtual Museum System by van Gogh TV. In the lecture concentrating on software-development, there was a heartfelt plea for better co-ordination, co-operation, pragmatism, setting your objectives in a realistic way. Everybody wants to define the whole area as his working space, starting projects that include every thinkable activity that finally result in 20% of the quality that was strived for. It seemed to me an appropriate approach for Syndicalists, especially the representatives of local media-labs that want to do it all: developing databases, maintaining an online gallery, set up education programs, offering facilities, producing art-projects, being politically active. How often is the wheel reinvented, what would be gained by co-operation? It was useful and interesting to see the work some of the Syndicalists had made during the past months, like the presentation of Iliyana Nedkova (Bulgaria) and Nina Czegledy (Canada) of Crossing Over 3 and Virtual Revolutions. The presentations of individual art-projects were also illuminating, although sometimes they took that peculiar form where the artist takes the audience by the hand and browses them through his website meanwhile reading the texts that we can see for ourselves in the computer-beam projection. So much for interactivity. A revelation was the performance of the Slovenian singer Igor Stromajer. Stromajer, both a tenor and a countertenor, gave a chilling interpretation of the self-composed 'Story about net.art'. He appears to be active in the net.art business as well. A quite versatile man. Things became more (anti) political when Luchezar Boyadziev (Bulgaria) discussed his initiative for a Culture Board for Bulgaria, a plan already brought to the mailinglist, and Oleg Kireev (Russia) gave an insight in the sort of anarchistic, anti-professional views of his group, which although not really media-related, were interesting for those who read the magazine RADEK and Kireev;s occasional contributions to the Syndicate list. Finally there was a second reading by Manovich, who had undergone a total transformation in two days. His lecture on the Database and Narrative in New Media was a psychedelic experience. Manovich was rapping through his text, in front of projected fragments from Vertof's Man with a Camera, with one hand conducting a musical soundtrack that consisted of waves of techno- and ABBA-music, and with the other hand drinking from two alternating bottles of beer, one of which represented the Data, the other one the Algorithm. The clear conclusion was: database rules! This live illustration of the deconstructing of a narrative climaxed in an uneasy flabbergasted silence as the soundtrack had reached its end. Questions? Why Abba!