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art and code can be deeply aesthetic in a conceptual way
art and code can be deeply aesthetic in a conceptual way
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museums have difficulty accepting computer-based
museums have difficulty accepting computer-based
art, because they aren’t always aware of the evolving
art, because they aren’t always aware of the evolving
relationship between the front- and the back-end?
relationship between the front- and the back-end?
#
#
New media art looks at many of
New media art looks at many of
the same themes and issues that have been discussed in art
the same themes and issues that have been discussed in art
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acceptance within the art world at large.
acceptance within the art world at large.
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looking forward to joining but not willing to change.
looking forward to joining but not willing to change.
are digital artists are unwilling to make curatorial decisions
are digital artists are unwilling to make curatorial decisions
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support the ‘single star’ system of the traditional art
support the ‘single star’ system of the traditional art
world.
world.
New media art
 
runs counter to museum infrastructures in so many ways,
New media art runs counter to museum infrastructures in so many ways,
from the ‘materiality’ or rather ‘immateriality’ of the work
from the ‘materiality’ or rather ‘immateriality’ of the work
and the question of what constitutes the art object, to open
and the question of what constitutes the art object, to open
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organisation of museums
organisation of museums
will need to change if they want to accommodate this art.
will need to change if they want to accommodate this art.
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Why would the new art want to be part of this structure?
Why would the new art want to be part of this structure?
new media is doing well on its natural enviornment ( internet )
new media is doing well on its natural enviornment ( internet )
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museum world itself.
museum world itself.
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link the resurgence of performance art to digital art
link the resurgence of performance art to digital art


All these works exist within a space of participation and performativity that, in my opinion, is a
All these works exist within a space of participation and performativity that, in my opinion, is a
reflection on the culture in which we live.
reflection on the culture in which we live.
Artists engaging in these more traditional practices are also reflecting on
Artists engaging in these more traditional practices are also reflecting on
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CHanging art by filtering it through these web platforms
CHanging art by filtering it through these web platforms
these platforms are no medium or art form, they are just a technical platform
these platforms are no medium or art form, they are just a technical platform
I also don’t think there is
I also don’t think there is
any tool in the world that intrinsically promotes creativity.
any tool in the world that intrinsically promotes creativity.
Some tools might be better suited for creative endeavours
Some tools might be better suited for creative endeavours
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creating a platform and a tool.  
creating a platform and a tool.  
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Light
Light
Heavy
Heavy
Weight
Weight
Curating
Curating
#
#
From virtual to augment reality
From virtual to augment reality
The stuff of which the world is made now  
The stuff of which the world is made now  
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and develops his personae in response to the platform as
and develops his personae in response to the platform as
well as the techno-societal culture of the early Web
well as the techno-societal culture of the early Web
#
#
meme was born from the architectonics of the participatory life
meme was born from the architectonics of the participatory life
Meme as a form of habituation of images
Meme as a form of habituation of images
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#
#
31str1
 




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the museum cant sell any works! only sold to the comitions
the museum cant sell any works! only sold to the comitions
A conservetive idea for protecting art. ( national pride :D )
A conservetive idea for protecting art. ( national pride :D )
All restricted by the funders.
All restricted by the funders.


digitising artwork - opening the archive to the public  
digitising artwork - opening the archive to the public  

Revision as of 13:07, 11 December 2013

How would you define a digital aesthetic, and how does it relate to contemporary art? possibilities; the separation between the front- and backend of the artwork, where the back-end could be a complex mathematical language and the front-end could be abstract visuals; new forms of connectivity reconfiguration of space and time. participatory and interactive artworks is the consideration of response as a medium. participant changes the work.

any artwork is ‘interactive’, in the sense that it involves a mental activity --- this is only to understand the artwork; althout the artwork can be interpreted differently a shift in aesthetics ( felt strongly in the DADA movement ) to the point that computer art and code can be deeply aesthetic in a conceptual way _______________________________________________________________________________________

museums have difficulty accepting computer-based art, because they aren’t always aware of the evolving relationship between the front- and the back-end?

New media art looks at many of the same themes and issues that have been discussed in art for centuries; to name a few: the construction of identity, representation, abstraction, realism, etc tricky part So it is important to document their history and, in order to do this, we need more momentum and funding, which in turns requires acceptance within the art world at large. ________________________________________________________________________________________

looking forward to joining but not willing to change. are digital artists are unwilling to make curatorial decisions such as naming the best digital artist or specifying important periods, events or people.

But the nature of new media art runs counter to the infrastructure of museums in many ways: the medium itself and the decentralisation it entails; the fact that most digital art doesn’t rely on the museum and gallery to be ‘distributed’ to the public; the question of authorship – very often digital works are created by collaborative teams, or artists create a framework and the artwork is then executed by the audience. New media doesn’t necessarily support the ‘single star’ system of the traditional art world.

New media art runs counter to museum infrastructures in so many ways, from the ‘materiality’ or rather ‘immateriality’ of the work and the question of what constitutes the art object, to open modes of creation and distribution systems that do not rely on the white cube. organisation of museums will need to change if they want to accommodate this art. ______________________________________________________________________________

Why would the new art want to be part of this structure? new media is doing well on its natural enviornment ( internet ) its very wide recognised and maybe if it was standing in the museum, it would be less known. But if digital media is not considered in relation to more traditional art forms, we’re constructing two different kinds of art history. This separation would lead to? Artists are in contact with each other, but again you don’t see these exchanges in the museum world itself. ____________________________

link the resurgence of performance art to digital art

All these works exist within a space of participation and performativity that, in my opinion, is a reflection on the culture in which we live. Artists engaging in these more traditional practices are also reflecting on the conditions of a digital society, which have been created through connectivity and the participatory nature of digital technologies.

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Although, I think it is problematic to speak about art in direct connection to a brand name, another question that comes up is how these artworks should be understood and recognised, and their effects classified in the constantly expanding and evolving technological landscape that is primarily geared towards commercial interests?

This theme envelopes into the developing of web 2.0

CHanging art by filtering it through these web platforms these platforms are no medium or art form, they are just a technical platform I also don’t think there is any tool in the world that intrinsically promotes creativity. Some tools might be better suited for creative endeavours than others, but there is a lot more to creativity than just creating a platform and a tool. __________________________________________________________________

Light Heavy Weight Curating

From virtual to augment reality The stuff of which the world is made now

The heaviness of the material turn is inscribed into the computational: hyperstimulation, corporate control, an overflow of mass-produced material, big data, massive scale, and software undercoating, in which the users are illiterate but creative (or not, or both).

The novel lightness is about staying afloat or, rather, remaining operational at whatever depth is required.

Such language-based metaphors should not lure us into the realm of representation; the devices need to be as much reflective of ‘formal language elements’ as of ‘procedural entities’4 or, rather, performances

all forms the inventory of computational living matter.

Computational matter is profoundly aesthetic, social and luxurious.6 This luxury, absolute excessiveness of culture, of aesthetic germination, expands spaces, out of which multiple creative acts sprout for no reason at all.

This lightness takes a heavy toll: the aesthetic work brought to life by such germinations cannot be brushed aside, but the vocabulary and devices for making sense of it are yet to be developed.

Today, no-one suffering logorrhea faces the dark oblivion of the table drawer in which the manuscript is tucked away: blogorrhea perpetuated by ’Rasputins of prose’8 is a vital creative excess forging and making use of the new conditions, in which the absurd and unneeded, the undescribed, that which has no immediate value but propels itself, through humans, computers, networks, languages, images, is welcome.

The welcome it receives is not even always capitalist, but it is computational and computationally socio-cultural


data driven curation is very light for the traditional way


Rémi Gaillard’ PRANKING http://nimportequi.com Individual and collective effort, or the vicissitudes of the condition that might be called creatorrhea couples with network specificity and plays out globally through very careful entanglement of the aesthetic, performative, linguistic, visual and computational.


The pre youtuber Gaillard is the early YouTuber, who performs and develops his personae in response to the platform as well as the techno-societal culture of the early Web

meme was born from the architectonics of the participatory life Meme as a form of habituation of images

4chan unfolded over time as an exercise in luring the technical and the human into editing, reposting and spreading them. within 4chan and between 4chan and other networks can also be seen as a new curatorial biomechanics.

TRANSLATIONS in artworks to be shown in museums

Confronted lightly and omnipresently with the new aesthetic values ceaselessly churned out by the operations of computational matter, the curator’s or art institution’s work is heavy.

The new capitalist forms – ludic and cognitive capitalism – appropriate desiring production in its infancy, a half-virtual state, capture and capitalise upon the living drives of matter turned computational, where the condition of its being computational is among the leading changes that enable such appropriation.

To imagine outside and before the appropriation capitalist march, attuned to change and reliant on the imaginativeness of its new subjects

Curators are having a hard time dealing with it. When memes were initially being produced as an aesthetic form, they were not only not quite based on social-networks and not quite capitalist, but also outside art. Their environment is some where and ended up rather secluded.


A return to the animated gif is undoubtedly more complex than exploitation: it builds on the sentimentalism of retro as well as working on a production of a new type of time – the extended present.

A computational and curatorial device of such a type could be imagined as the one opening artistic vocabulary to the people by building on one of the most powerful gestures of the music of the last century.

a curation of subjectivity outside art? A biomechanical curating of creative matter?

Marcell Deschoun


Renata Litvinova once said in an interview that nothing has a meaning of its own and it is only what you assign and creatively produce as a meaning, in entanglement with various forces, that becomes one, with all its force and inevitability

Her acute sensitivity to the condition of today can be extended to curating and the future of art and memory institutions too: when there are no clear boundaries, routines and institutional practices to produce forms of art, subjects and knowledge such as the ones we are used to knowing, it is what we, as part of computational matter, strive for, produce and sense out, that becomes.

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The museums - funded - and have to keep up to date.

  1. Museum selling a work. people went crazy.

the museum cant sell any works! only sold to the comitions A conservetive idea for protecting art. ( national pride :D ) All restricted by the funders.

digitising artwork - opening the archive to the public

athics of a museum

The computational is needed because, a person is unable to watch the abundance of the videos.

Youtubre filtering information for you, although the museum does it also! The museum has to be transparent to be about their disiciouns.

- youtube dealing with deleted material

much more complicated  TRACING VIDEOS, so they keep it


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other work

Aesthetics from not a semantics point of view. The method of the proccess of the back end.

The beauty of efecientsy, of simplicity in programing. The aesthetics always related the matterial.

Brings out a certain type of esthetics.

Axiomatic nature of computing The txt mises examples!!! too abstract!