[iDC] shelf life
Annette Weintraub
annette at annetteweintraub.com
Sun Nov 18 00:06:52 UTC 2007
Everyone,
There have been some fascinating comments so far. One thing I find
curious is that much of the discussion looks [back] at archiving, and
not to strategies going forward.
Myron commented, "I don't think many of us who were using computers
10 and 15 years ago quite understood the rapidity with which the
technologies would advance." This is certainly true; and if we knew
or suspected, perhaps we were temporarily blinded by fascination by
potential and by pure technophilia. We do know now, but are we
necessarily cannier? Are we working differently because we have
experienced axiom 1 and feel the acceleration? Do all of those
students coming out of new media programs know what they are getting
into?
I've always liked looking at new media work with artists who are
involved in other aspects of contemporary art. Their critique
frequently involved a brutal stripping away of the same elements that
I found compelling. It was bracing to look at work sans
tech-mystique. We are all so accepting of projects that don't quite
work; most people coming into a gallery with non-functioning works
have an entirely different perspective. Adobe recently sponsored an
interactive project to promote one of their projects on Union Square
in NY. The spot seemed ideal, a lot of street traffic, a space that
created a dark alcove for the projection and was right on the street.
Yet within about two weeks, it had stopped working, and never got
fixed, confirming the stereotype.
One of the delights of the present is to rediscover the past, and see
things anew. Patrick is entirely correct, we would be much poorer if
we didn't have our history available, in some form, to explore. If we
work in media that self-erase, then acceptance of the cycle of
degeneration is key, and as Sean says, turns out to be more
intrinsic to digital forms than we first thought. We live not only
with instability of meaning, but with the instability of the object
itself. Humans are said to be the only animals who have foreknowledge
of their own death; new media artists now have inescapable
foreknowledge of the likely erasure of their work.
Best,
Annette
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