[iDC] shelf life
Richard Rinehart
rinehart at berkeley.edu
Mon Nov 19 21:05:05 UTC 2007
This is a timely discussion; thanks and please allow me to chime in.
First, I've been involved in some consortium projects that are all
about preserving digital/media art, so let me refer you all to them
for lots of info and research on the topic. The Variable Media
Project of which I'm a parnter has already been cited, so please also
see the "Archiving the Avant-Garde" project site for video of a 1-day
symposium we had on this very topic at Berkeley (Bruce was among our
speakers), as well as papers, etc:
http://bampfa.berkeley.edu/ciao
<full-disclosure>I'm a self-avowed digital artist, but also curator
of digital art in a museum context and teacher in an academic context
and so my comments come from those perspectives</full-disclosure>
Below I just wanted to reply to some of the comments so far, in no
particular order:
>axiom 3: ease of distribution is in inverse proportion to longevity
>(the spoken word is easiest, but lasts only the instant it is
>communicated; stone carvings last for millenia, but are difficult to
>lug around)
I don't know. I'd counter this statement with the following:
>
>Critical to the issue of shelf-life for digital works is the use of
>Free Software and Open File Formats.
But even open formats don't ensure immortality (SGML anyone?), but
they do extend the time periods between necessary migrations and thus
help. But it's really more the idea of openness and massive
distribution and access that's important here. It's certainly true
that someone needs to take responsibility for preserving our culture,
in digital and other forms, and at this point in history, we're
counting on the long-term social memory institutions to do that;
museums, libraries, and archives. But I think one can have a hybrid
model where digital culture is preserved both by stable institutions
and simultaneously by unstable folkloric traditions. Kurt Bollacker
of the Long Now Foundation refers to this as "moveage" a form of
storage that requires keeping the data moving around, in circulation,
OPEN. So, while Axiom 3 is true from a certain perspective, the
fluidity of things like language and indeed digital media that can
aid it it's longevity if we recognize the fluid nature and don't
fixate on fixity.
For instance, instead of fighting the variability of the media as an
obstacle to preservation, I think we need to embrace it; turn that
obstacle into a strategy. I propose thinking of media works
analogously to musical works; the hardware/instrumentation can change
as long as the essential score is the same (see a full explication in
a paper I published in Leonardo recently:
http://rinehart.bampfa.berkeley.edu/~rick/refresh/rinehart_leonardo.pdf)
>Perhaps museums have to start considering also having hardware
>and software specialists with appropriate conservation skills? Will they do
>this?
Kinda. Museums are starting to wake up to the fact that digital art
is obsolescing at a rate far beyond works on paper, photography, etc.
and they need preserving now, not later. But since preservation is a
practical as well as a theoretical problem, maintaining antique
hardware is really not an option. It's just not feasible in the real
world to keep a Mac SE in working condition for 200 years.
Replacement parts will be unobtainable and refabrication is not
possible within a museum/library (or probably other) context.
Software is another matter, and emulation points in some interesting
directions. But the bottom line is that museums need to create
recipies for re-creating the work rather than preserving the machine
or even fixating on the "one, true, original" machine, code, etc.
Such recipies can be created upon collecting a work and in
conversation with the artist if possible, since as someone mentioned,
intentionality is important, if not all-defining, in a work of art.
With proper "scores" for media art, it can be re-performed into the
future.
>On the matter of "shelf-life" I tend to agree with Patrick, that artists
>bear a good deal of responsibility for the longevity new media work.
I think it's ideal to involve artists in both general preservation
strategies (the consortium projects above do just that), and to
involve them/us in the preservation of their own work, but I don't
think that's the same as trying to prescribe that artists adhere to
"preservation safe" practices, materials, formats, or anything of the
sort. That would have been like telling Eva Hesse to work only in
bronze and not her ephemeral, crumbling synthetic compounds. Artists
should have the freedom to experiment with materials or to
purposefully create works that are ephemeral. It's then a wonderful
kind of dance with the social memory institutions that then try to
preserve these works. They dance together, but no one leads.
Oh, and archiving should always be a future-oriented activity!
Anyway, I could on and on beyond anyone's patience, so I'll stop here. Thanks!
Richard Rinehart
---------------
Digital Media Director & Adjunct Curator
Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive
bampfa.berkeley.edu
---------------
University of California, Berkeley
---------------
2625 Durant Ave.
Berkeley, CA, 94720-2250
ph.510.642.5240
fx.510.642.5269
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