Re: [-empyre-] economics of the art system: the example of documen ta



I have not participated much on Empyre, so I don't want to put my foot in my mouth by jumping in here.  But Christina's more candid account of the Documenta experience strikes a familiar chord with me.

I have had several several run-ins with what I'll call, for want of a better term, "institutional new media organizations."  These groups are well-funded, prominent in the wider cultural community (ie not just among new media people or even artists), and hopelessly disconnected from (what I see as) the real current new media art scene.

At their worst, these groups exploit independent artists financially or artistically, as Christina's story relates.  This has happened to me (on a smaller scale than Christina's story) several times.  

More often, these groups merely damage the field of new media art by mounting high-profile exhibitions which claim to be authoritative views of our field but which in fact show very outdated work, work that isn't new media art, or work at the most obnoxious fringe of new media.  These shows give the public a false impression of our field and deprive most new media artists of the opportunity to have their work shown in prominent venues, because these venues have such strange curatorial policies.  Meanwhile, all the grant money goes to this kind of organization, so little remains for independent artists.

The situation is made worse by the fact that it is frightening to even discuss this issue for fear of offending the people who might possibly support our work (you will notice that I named no specific organization and gave no specific details!).

Millie  

- original message -
Subject:	Re: [-empyre-] economics of the art system: the example of documenta
From:	Christina McPhee <christina112@earthlink.net>
Date:		07/29/2007 18:14

hi all

back in California,  I feel as if i can speak a bit more plainly  
about -empyre- and what has happened at Documenta 12.

Just as background,  I want to quote from my introduction to the =- 
empyre- discussion on 'bare life' in connectionw with Documenta 12:
>
>
> The increased intensity of global communication and simultaneity  
> makes the challenge of trying to 'be' an individual subject --  
> whatever that is--- continually more complex and overwhelming. -  
> empyre-, if not implicated in this process, is still in the midst  
> of it and perhaps may be, as our founder Melinda Rackham has called  
> it , our 'soft-skinned space', a space of resistance as well, in  
> that we can hope to generate -- on the fly--- a contemporary art  
> and new media ethics in a public space we create for ourselves and  
> others.


Indeed.  What does 'being an individual subject mean in the context  
of a situation in which our texts have been made so inaccessible that  
Google can't find them?   More broadly, how can we resist Documenta 12?


Let's start with money.   Rumor has it that funding was cut from the  
project as early as 18 months to 2 years ago. The vision of the  
magazine project was apparently truncated in midstream.  The person  
who initiated it, Georg Schoelhamer of Springerin, was always  
enthusiastic, and I do not doubt his sincerity;  yet something went  
terribly wrong.  The entire Documenta 12 is said to have cost 19  
million euros.  How the 1100 or so Chinese visitors were funded as  
well as the clandestine flights for special dinners at an artist's  
restaurant in Spain remains obscure.   In AU  -empyre- tself is run  
entirely for free by people volunteering their time. We have no  
support from the Australian cultural apparatus except for the free  
sever space at COFA-UNSW, for which we are very grateful, and to our  
webmaster Nigel Kerstin at COFA.   For D12,     I   edited  over 300  
pages of network generated content , from hypertext to linear text,  
revised to standard publishable English , created pdfs (which of  
course are completely invisible in the documenta 12 interface), and  
the html;  The number of hours I have given to this is easily equal  
to  4 months of full time labor in 2005-2007.

  The curation at the exhibition involved commodifying art objects so  
that their innate power and resonance and ability to shock is  
dampened to the point of indiffference.  Works succeed in the  
documenta exhbition when they provided within themselves, their own  
contextualization, like Andrea Geyer 's suite of photos and text on  
land rights and spiritual tenancy in the American Southwest.  Even as  
powerful an artist as Mary Kelley was trivialized through the  
funerary kitsch of lurid color surrounding her project "Love  
Songs" (at the Neue Galerie).
.

  Taschen with presumably the leadership of D12  were able to set up  
a monetarization of the public's  moment to moment physical  
engagement with D12's 'magazine project' (coming to D12, paying for  
books in the bookshop), much like Adwords on Google. ---in part by  
setting up a myth of  cool amazing marginal heroic avantgarde  
magazines and editors from around the world as a branding concept.   
Why not indeed?  Meanwhile the rules of the game required that if we  
published anything online, copyrights were acceded to Documenta 12.    
The problem was there was no monetary/ market pressure to actually  
publish the huge cultural production that this initiative called  
forth from artists, writers, and editors around the world in many  
languages.  The online interface really didn't have to work for D12  
to be able to market its so called Magazine Readers.  We are just a  
lure, just a bit of perverse glamour: as Peter Sinclair of Radical  
Philosophy   (http://www.radicalphilosophy.com/ ) aptly noted when I  
met him at D12, we are involved so that Taschen can make money.  It  
is the idea of us that matters, not  what we are actually writing  
about or publishing.  We might as well  be publishing a stock market  
report.


So exploited as precarious labour, see  http://www.metamute.org/en/ 
precarious_reader, or , if you want to get hard core about it,   
volunteer slavery.  Willingly, I did take this time, and so did you.   
-empyre- is, with or without documenta 12, a resonant space for  
discourse and even, a kind of powerful spontaneous electronic  
literature.    I loved setting up our conversations; yes, they were  
over the top, thanks all. I am and will always be extremely proud of  
the  literary and critical quality of the texts (see March 2006, July  
2006, and January 2007, accessible  via pdf on http://www.subtle.net/ 
empyre and, at least to the end of D12 , in html at  http:// 
magazines.documenta.de/frontend/

original hypertexts at

https://mail.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/2006-July/
https://mail.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/2006-March/
https://mail.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/2007-January/

Michele White was prescient.  She predicted this scenario already  
last summer.  (Michele is theorist and author of The Body and the  
Screen: Theories of Internet Spectatorship,  MIT Press 2006).   
Michele wrote to -empyre-:

> [-empyre-] Documenta?
>
>  Documenta?s process of potentially
> introducing some of the listserv material into a
> magazine may seem to provide various engagements but
> does not (at least yet) provide an open dialogue
> between listserv participants and Documenta. This
> structure articulates an inside and outside where
> listserv participants seemingly engage and talk about
> the empowered center but no one from the Documenta
> structure answers. It creates even more press coverage
> and engagement with Documenta and centers the event
> but what does it do for the listserv? How do we keep
> any control over our voice or write into the structure
> that Documenta produces?


https://mail.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/2006-July/msg00097.html



What i observed at the Documenta  Halle, was that the public was  
really trying to actually read our magazines. This is why  have sent  
the MALMOE text..   How about other voices? Your voices, - 
empyreans-.   The commodification of the magazine project works best  
when the slaves stay quiet.



-cm
















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