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Xerox Alto(1973), first personal computer with desktop metaphor
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..., artists are being led into a technological kindergarten the idea being that the artist<br> can amuse himself and some of the populace with the gadgetry of modern life.</i>
..., artists are being led into a technological kindergarten, the idea being that the artist<br> can amuse himself and some of the populace with the gadgetry of modern life.</i>
<br> G. Metzger  <ref> Metzger, G 1969, Automata in history</ref>
<br> G. Metzger  <ref> Metzger, G 1969, Automata in history</ref>
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In the last years, online platforms for distribution, sharing and production of digital art opened there doors for a public at large and picture them selfs as a "revolutionary new way to collect, share and trade art"<ref name="sedition"> http://www.seditionart.com/</ref>, claiming to "push the possibilities of creativity" <ref>https://devart.withgoogle.com/</ref> or to "place the artist’s work in a broader global visual context free from the hegemonic monetary system" <ref> https://cointemporary.com/about/ </ref>. However, my gradution project will focus on this recent developments, impacts and discussions of those art platforms and how I will bend the conditions of an artwork.</b>
In the last years, online platforms for distribution, sharing and production of digital art opened their doors for a public at large and picture themselves as a "revolutionary new way to collect, share and trade art"<ref name="sedition"> http://www.seditionart.com/</ref>, claiming to "push the possibilities of creativity" <ref>https://devart.withgoogle.com/</ref> or to "place the artist’s work in a broader global visual context free from the hegemonic monetary system" <ref> https://cointemporary.com/about/ </ref>. However, my gradution project will focus on this recent developments, impacts and discussions of those art platforms and how I will bend the conditions of an artwork.</b>
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On the 21st of November at 8 o'clock in the morning I took the "ICE105" going from Amsterdam to Frankfurt. In Cologne two men wearing black business suites set on the seats next to me. They started to talk something about equity, interest, feedback, CEO and meetings. Then one explained a situation about "bought a bank in Ukraine", and the other asked "What happened with the rest of the budget?". His answer: "Ah, we bought art."!<br>
On the 21st of November at 8 o'clock in the morning I took the "ICE105" going from Amsterdam to Frankfurt. In Cologne two men wearing black business suits sit on the seats next to me. They started to talk something about equity, interest, feedback, CEO and meetings. Then one explained a situation about how they "bought a bank in Ukraine", and the other asked "What happened with the rest of the budget?". His answer: "Ah, we bought art."!<br>
Two days later at my final destination Vienna, I meet at this year's soundartdays a soundartist and -engineer, who originally studied painting. Telling him about my undertaking and the first step for it(this proposal), he told me that once a software by him was sold as part of an artwork. As a former painter, he was surprised that only the digital code without actual artistic output could be sold, as well as his code was published under GPL(General Public License).<ref group="footnotes">The artist is aware, that this license is not in conflict with commercial use.</ref>.  
Two days later at my final destination Vienna, I met at this year's soundartdays a soundartist and -engineer, who originally studied painting. Telling him about my undertaking and the first step for it(this proposal), he told me that once a software by him was sold as part of an artwork. As a former painter, he was surprised that only the digital code without actual artistic output could be sold, as well as his code was published under GPL(General Public License).<ref group="footnotes">The artist is aware, that this license is not in conflict with commercial use.</ref>.  
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Telharmonium(1897),  early electronic distribution system for music
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The are different definitions of "digital art" or for a "digital artwork". Starting from software as artwork to Nelson Goodman's aesthetic, but due to lack of time<ref group="footnotes">This is a proposal!</ref> I assume as 'digital art' a form of data consisting of zeros and ones somewhere on a storage, that somebody would consider as art and is mostly viewed on the internets<ref group="footnotes">The author decided to write "internets" in plural.</ref>(like every kind of art nowadays). As we know, digital data can be copied by pressing the keyboard button combination "ctrl + c" and "ctrl + v", with the mouse clicking on "Copy" and "Paste" or via command line "cp *source file* *destination file*". It has been often assumed, that by this methods of "digital" reproduction the aura of an traditional artwork in the sense of the famous Walter Benjamin artwork essay can not be evoked. In this case, it is similar to that what Benjamin applied to photography. The aura of the digital artwork comes from somewhere else, so argued recently Italian art critic Domenico Quaranta: "The aura of the work of art, removed by the functional design of the screen we use to look at it, its infinite reproducibility without loss of quality, its accessibility and complete lack of financial value, re-emerges in the form of “tag clouds”."<ref name="quaranta127"> p.127, Quaranta, D 2013, Beyond New Media Art, LINK Editions, Brescia.</ref> Quaranta circumscribes with "tag clouds" a value created by users attention, and furthermore describes "it applies particularly in the case of a form of art that does not generate any “real” economy."<ref name="quaranta127" />. The argument lacks in considering the attention economy, as a actual economical value system. Remember price determination of the market, by increasing demand the price will go up! Speaking about art and economy, media theorist Lev Manovich explanation for the artist and a artwork made with a mass media, "... the economy of the art system dictated that they would use technologies designed for mass reproduction for the opposite purpose – to create limited editions. (Thus visiting a contemporary art museum we find such conceptually contradictory objects as video tape, edition of 6 or DVD, edition of 3.)"<ref>Manovich, L 2001, "Post-media Aesthetics" in <i>Lev Light Reader</i>, eds. A Brouwer, J Swager, C Zomer and E Wijenbergh, Second Tuesday, Amsterdam </ref> Thru development of the last years,  this observation of creating limited editions can be also applied to digital art on a broader scale.
The are different definitions of "digital art" or for a "digital artwork". Starting from software as artwork to Nelson Goodman's aesthetic, but due to lack of time<ref group="footnotes">This is a proposal!</ref> I assume as 'digital art' a form of data consisting of zeros and ones saved somewhere on a storage, that somebody would consider as art and is mostly viewed on the internets<ref group="footnotes">The author decided to write "internets" in plural.</ref>(like every kind of art nowadays). As we know, digital data can be copied by pressing the keyboard button combination "ctrl + c" and "ctrl + v", with the mouse clicking on "Copy" and "Paste" or via command line "cp *source file* *destination file*". It has been often assumed, that by this methods of "digital" reproduction the aura of an traditional artwork in the sense of the famous Walter Benjamin artwork essay can not be evoked to an digital artwork. In this case, it is similar to that what Benjamin applied to photography. The aura of the digital artwork comes from somewhere else, so argued recently by Italian art critic Domenico Quaranta: "The aura of the work of art, removed by the functional design of the screen we use to look at it, its infinite reproducibility without loss of quality, its accessibility and complete lack of financial value, re-emerges in the form of “tag clouds”."<ref name="quaranta127"> p.127, Quaranta, D 2013, Beyond New Media Art, LINK Editions, Brescia.</ref> Quaranta circumscribes with "tag clouds" a value created by the users attention, and furthermore describes "it applies particularly in the case of a form of art that does not generate any “real” economy."<ref name="quaranta127" />. The argument lacks in considering the attention economy, as an actual economical value system. Remember the price determination of the market, by increasing demand the price will go up! Speaking about art and economy, media theorist Lev Manovich's explanation for the artist and a artwork made with a mass media, "... the economy of the art system dictated that they would use technologies designed for mass reproduction for the opposite purpose – to create limited editions. (Thus visiting a contemporary art museum we find such conceptually contradictory objects as video tape, edition of 6 or DVD, edition of 3.)"<ref>Manovich, L 2001, "Post-media Aesthetics" in <i>Lev Light Reader</i>, eds. A Brouwer, J Swager, C Zomer and E Wijenbergh, Second Tuesday, Amsterdam </ref> Through development of the last years,  this observation of creating limited editions can be also applied to digital art on a broader scale.
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The current model of an artist could be called "exhibition artist"(in German "Ausstellungskünstler")<ref>Brätschmann, O 1997, Ausstellungskünstler. Kult und Karriere im modernen Kunstsystem. DuMont, Köln </ref>  -  a term coined by the Swiss art historian Oskar Brätschmann.  The exhibition artist doesn't - like his predecessor the court artist - rely on commissions by his king, a lord or an aristocrat. As a patron and distributor for idea of this "free" artist gets the gallery into the game. In this association the gallery functions mostly as his and sometimes as her point of sale. In this case they act as an agent for the artist by exhibiting there works and managing the costumer relations. The ideal customer of course is an ambitious collector who's interested in the artists aesthetics. Thereby his investment he is supporting the cultural identity of society in a healthy relation with the foresight of curators, the judgment of critics, the acceptance of the audience and contextualization by art historians.  
The current model of an artist could be called "exhibition artist"(in German "Ausstellungskünstler")<ref>Brätschmann, O 1997, Ausstellungskünstler. Kult und Karriere im modernen Kunstsystem. DuMont, Köln </ref>  -  a term coined by the Swiss art historian Oskar Brätschmann.  The exhibition artist doesn't - like his predecessor the court artist - rely on commissions by his king, a lord or an aristocrat. The gallery works as a patron and distributor for the idea of this "free" artist. In this association the gallery functions mostly as his and sometimes as her point of sale. In this case they act as an agent for the artist by exhibiting their works and managing the costumer relations. The ideal customer of course is an ambitious collector who's interested in the artists aesthetics. Thereby his investment he is supporting the cultural identity of society in a healthy relation with the foresight of curators, the judgment of critics, the acceptance of the audience and contextualization by art historians.  
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This is a romanticized picture of an artist in modernity characterising him or her as a independent agent working purely for his aesthetic needs. This well known stereotype never existed, but it's  still deep embedded in the picture of  societies of an artist role. As we know only to well, that art is and was instrumentalized by ideology. For instance from the sponsorship of art is a common method by banks to multi-coloredwashing there image (the greenwashing of the artsystem), right up to the choice of  certain curators for particular artists as a strategical decision, over the common practice of gallery owners which often board members of public museums to pushing decision in there own (financial) interest, and not to forget the artists which are aware of there economic situation. So it's a logical consequence to assume this is the reason why "flat-ware" is still the main artistic outcome. To summarize, all this circumstance are going far beyond the scope of the intension which had artist in mind for there artworks, but this external influnces are still part of the artwork. <b>The whole association is shaping it in that sense it is hard to suppose the artist as the only actor working on his or her artwork.</b></p>
This is a romanticized picture of an artist in modernity characterising him or her as a independent agent working purely for his aesthetic needs. This well known stereotype never existed, but it's  still deep embedded in the picture of  societies of an artist role. As we know all to well, that art is and was instrumentalized by ideology. For instance from the sponsorship of art is a common method by banks to multi-coloredwashing their image (the greenwashing of the artsystem), right up to the choice of  certain curators for particular artists as a strategical decision, over the common practice of gallery owners which often board members of public museums to pushing decision in there own (financial) interest, and not to forget the artists which are aware of their economic situation. So it's a logical consequence to assume this is the reason why "flat-ware" is still the main artistic outcome. To summarize, all this circumstance are going far beyond the scope of the intention which had artist in mind for their artworks, but these external influnces are still part of the artwork. <b>The whole association is shaping it and in that sense it is hard to suppose the artist as the only actor working on his or her artwork.</b></p>
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The term association is commonly used in Actor-Network-Theory - an "material-semiotic" approach - for an social network between human and non-human actors. In the case of sedition, a wide range of different actors are involved in the network. For me, the most interesting part in this association is how the limitation of a digital reproducible artworks originates and therefore creates a framework for Digital Right Managment. Some concerning questions: What is the connection between the platforms DRM system and the artworks "aura"? What role has the technical setup next to the Terms of Use for this type of "aura"? Is it possible to speak of blackboxing<ref group="footnotes">explain blackboxing</ref> the medium of digital artworks? Platforms like Sedition are going beyond providing certain technological framework like for instance Flash(TM).  
The term association is commonly used in Actor-Network-Theory - a "material-semiotic" approach - for a social network between human and non-human actors. In the case of sedition, a wide range of different actors are involved in the network. For me, the most interesting part in this association is how the limitation of a digital reproducible artworks originates and therefore creates a framework for Digital Right Managment. Some concerning questions: What is the connection between the platforms DRM system and the artworks "aura"? What role has the technical setup next to the Terms of Use for this type of "aura"? Is it possible to speak of blackboxing<ref group="footnotes">explain blackboxing</ref> the medium of digital artworks? Platforms like Sedition are going beyond providing certain technological frameworks like for instance Adobe Flash.  
But for now lets summarize this mechanism of Digital Right Managment defined in the whole association with Benjamins notion of the aura, as „ A strange weave of space and time: the unique appearance or semblance of distance, no matter how close it may be.[sonderbares Gespinst aus Raum und Zeit: einmalige Erscheinung einer Ferne, so nah sie sein mag]“<ref>Benjamin, W 1931, Little History of Photography</ref>
But for now lets summarize this mechanism of Digital Right Managment defined in the whole association with Benjamins notion of the aura, as „ A strange weave of space and time: the unique appearance or semblance of distance, no matter how close it may be.[sonderbares Gespinst aus Raum und Zeit: einmalige Erscheinung einer Ferne, so nah sie sein mag]“<ref>Benjamin, W 1931, Little History of Photography</ref>
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My outcome will contain - next to <b>a critical analysis of a particular platform in form of an essay</b> - a project that deals with the condition that those platforms create. At this initial stage, the project will go in one of two directions as a intervention on a platform or a platform as a parody  created by myself. First, my plan is a intervention in a distribution system as a disruption of the ongoing behavior and by that I can get information of it's own mechanism. Second, the created platform will mimic a already existing commercial orientated platforms, but at the some time turns the internal mechanism one eighty degrees(180 °) and thereby parodies it's own circumstances.
My outcome will contain - next to <b>a critical analysis of a particular platform in form of an essay</b> - a project that deals with the condition that those platforms create. At this initial stage, the project will go in one of two directions as a intervention on a platform or a platform as a parody  created by myself. First, my plan is an intervention in a distribution system as a disruption of the ongoing behavior and by that I can get information of it's own mechanism. Second, the created platform will mimic an already existing commercial orientated platforms, but at the some time turns the internal mechanism one eighty degrees(180 °) and thereby parodies its own circumstances.
The final exhibition or the graduation show can expect a documentation in form of <b>a installation about the process that my project triggered</b>. I am aware that presenting online projects or process based artworks in a exhibition is always a difficult undertaking, therefore I'm searching for a way to present it as physical installation.  
The final exhibition or the graduation show can expect a documentation in form of <b>a installation about the process that my project triggered</b>. I am aware that presenting online projects or process based artworks in a exhibition is always a difficult undertaking, therefore I'm searching for a way to present it as physical installation.  
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Practice makes perfect! In this initial state of the project, my thoughts are exploded and thereby my possibilities for a final project are indefinitely. Lost in total confusion, and struggling with the conception of project, I'm challenging myself with different experiments:
Practice makes perfect! In this initial state of the project, my thoughts are exploded and thereby my possibilities for a final project are infinite. Lost in total confusion, and struggling with the conceptions of project, I'm challenging myself with different experiments:
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* A script downloading a number of 3d-objects of thingiverse.com(a huge database for printable 3d-files) and combining them in a new meaning together! Exploring automation and how it could be used for an autonomous agent, that will interact with a platform.
* A script downloading a number of 3d-objects of thingiverse.com(a huge database for printable 3d-files) and combining them into a new object - with different meaning - together! This practical step exploring automation and how it could be used for an autonomous agent, that will interact with a platform.
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In previous projects, I focused on the unmasking of underling mechanism of the artsystem and artworks sometimes involved in a parodistic way and an exaggeration of a specific action.  
In previous projects, I focused on different mechanisms of the artsystem and artworks sometimes involved in a parodistic way and an exaggeration of a specific action. In <b>piano for 3 seconds</b>(2010) a specific intervention for an exhibition the artwork was destroyed before the opening. The remains were sent to an archive of an "important" museum for art and media as a jump over of the normal states in the life of an artwork and to archive it there immediately. In the exhibition viewers could only see the conformation of the postal order. In the case of <b>Gsell_1</b>(2011) the artwork willl destroy itself by sawing on the own woodbranch. It is connected to the idea of auto-destructive art. The well known <b>Artblockplus</b>(2013) was realized during my first year in the PZI. It is an addon/extension for Firefox and Chrome browsers to help the user block art. In <b>Analysis of 20 artworks on the assembly line</b>(2013) I applied statistical analysis(in this case a computer vision object detection) to 20 images of artworks and presented the graphical outcome on a running assembly line.
In <b>piano for 3 seconds</b>(2010) a specific intervention for an exhibition the artwork was destroyed before the opening. The remains were sent to a the archive of an "important" museum for art and media as a jump over of the normal states in the life of an artwork and to archive it there immediately. In the exhibition viewers could only see the conformation of the postal order.  
In the case of <b>Gsell_1</b>(2011) the artwork willl destroy itself by sawing on the own woodbranch. It is connected to the idea of auto-destructive art.  
The well known <b>Artblockplus</b>(2013) - was realized during my first year in the PZI - is an addon/extension for Firefox and Chrome internetbrowsers to help the user blocking art.
In <b>Analysis of 20 artworks on the assembly line</b>(2013) I applying statistical analysis(in this case a computer vision object detection) to 20 images of artworks and presented the graphical outcome on a running assembly line.
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Latest revision as of 16:03, 26 November 2014

The following text implies some mistakes evoked by my dyslexia and writing skills! A correction follows soon.





Proposal


Xerox.gif

Xerox Alto(1973), first personal computer with desktop metaphor


..., artists are being led into a technological kindergarten, the idea being that the artist
can amuse himself and some of the populace with the gadgetry of modern life.

G. Metzger [1]


Introduction

In the last years, online platforms for distribution, sharing and production of digital art opened their doors for a public at large and picture themselves as a "revolutionary new way to collect, share and trade art"[2], claiming to "push the possibilities of creativity" [3] or to "place the artist’s work in a broader global visual context free from the hegemonic monetary system" [4]. However, my gradution project will focus on this recent developments, impacts and discussions of those art platforms and how I will bend the conditions of an artwork.


Recent observations

On the 21st of November at 8 o'clock in the morning I took the "ICE105" going from Amsterdam to Frankfurt. In Cologne two men wearing black business suits sit on the seats next to me. They started to talk something about equity, interest, feedback, CEO and meetings. Then one explained a situation about how they "bought a bank in Ukraine", and the other asked "What happened with the rest of the budget?". His answer: "Ah, we bought art."!
Two days later at my final destination Vienna, I met at this year's soundartdays a soundartist and -engineer, who originally studied painting. Telling him about my undertaking and the first step for it(this proposal), he told me that once a software by him was sold as part of an artwork. As a former painter, he was surprised that only the digital code without actual artistic output could be sold, as well as his code was published under GPL(General Public License).[footnotes 1].


Telharmonium(1897), early electronic distribution system for music


The artwork in the age of Digital Rights Management

The are different definitions of "digital art" or for a "digital artwork". Starting from software as artwork to Nelson Goodman's aesthetic, but due to lack of time[footnotes 2] I assume as 'digital art' a form of data consisting of zeros and ones saved somewhere on a storage, that somebody would consider as art and is mostly viewed on the internets[footnotes 3](like every kind of art nowadays). As we know, digital data can be copied by pressing the keyboard button combination "ctrl + c" and "ctrl + v", with the mouse clicking on "Copy" and "Paste" or via command line "cp *source file* *destination file*". It has been often assumed, that by this methods of "digital" reproduction the aura of an traditional artwork in the sense of the famous Walter Benjamin artwork essay can not be evoked to an digital artwork. In this case, it is similar to that what Benjamin applied to photography. The aura of the digital artwork comes from somewhere else, so argued recently by Italian art critic Domenico Quaranta: "The aura of the work of art, removed by the functional design of the screen we use to look at it, its infinite reproducibility without loss of quality, its accessibility and complete lack of financial value, re-emerges in the form of “tag clouds”."[5] Quaranta circumscribes with "tag clouds" a value created by the users attention, and furthermore describes "it applies particularly in the case of a form of art that does not generate any “real” economy."[5]. The argument lacks in considering the attention economy, as an actual economical value system. Remember the price determination of the market, by increasing demand the price will go up! Speaking about art and economy, media theorist Lev Manovich's explanation for the artist and a artwork made with a mass media, "... the economy of the art system dictated that they would use technologies designed for mass reproduction for the opposite purpose – to create limited editions. (Thus visiting a contemporary art museum we find such conceptually contradictory objects as video tape, edition of 6 or DVD, edition of 3.)"[6] Through development of the last years, this observation of creating limited editions can be also applied to digital art on a broader scale.


There is a bunch of platforms offering exclusive "digital art". One of them is Sedition[2][footnotes 4], a platform established in the last 3 years and owned by the gallery Blain | Southern. Contemporary artists like Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin, media artists like Ryoji Ikeda, Casey Reas, next to Internet artist like Paolo Cirio or Rafaël Rozendaal are represented by the "curated"-part on the platform and offering digital limited editions of their works of art. Once a complete edition is sold, it is possible for users to sell their digital property to other users, for this Sedition is offering a secondary market. Digital reproduction or not, there is still someone called "the artist" embedded as the creator of works of art.


The current model of an artist could be called "exhibition artist"(in German "Ausstellungskünstler")[7] - a term coined by the Swiss art historian Oskar Brätschmann. The exhibition artist doesn't - like his predecessor the court artist - rely on commissions by his king, a lord or an aristocrat. The gallery works as a patron and distributor for the idea of this "free" artist. In this association the gallery functions mostly as his and sometimes as her point of sale. In this case they act as an agent for the artist by exhibiting their works and managing the costumer relations. The ideal customer of course is an ambitious collector who's interested in the artists aesthetics. Thereby his investment he is supporting the cultural identity of society in a healthy relation with the foresight of curators, the judgment of critics, the acceptance of the audience and contextualization by art historians.


This is a romanticized picture of an artist in modernity characterising him or her as a independent agent working purely for his aesthetic needs. This well known stereotype never existed, but it's still deep embedded in the picture of societies of an artist role. As we know all to well, that art is and was instrumentalized by ideology. For instance from the sponsorship of art is a common method by banks to multi-coloredwashing their image (the greenwashing of the artsystem), right up to the choice of certain curators for particular artists as a strategical decision, over the common practice of gallery owners which often board members of public museums to pushing decision in there own (financial) interest, and not to forget the artists which are aware of their economic situation. So it's a logical consequence to assume this is the reason why "flat-ware" is still the main artistic outcome. To summarize, all this circumstance are going far beyond the scope of the intention which had artist in mind for their artworks, but these external influnces are still part of the artwork. The whole association is shaping it and in that sense it is hard to suppose the artist as the only actor working on his or her artwork.


The term association is commonly used in Actor-Network-Theory - a "material-semiotic" approach - for a social network between human and non-human actors. In the case of sedition, a wide range of different actors are involved in the network. For me, the most interesting part in this association is how the limitation of a digital reproducible artworks originates and therefore creates a framework for Digital Right Managment. Some concerning questions: What is the connection between the platforms DRM system and the artworks "aura"? What role has the technical setup next to the Terms of Use for this type of "aura"? Is it possible to speak of blackboxing[footnotes 5] the medium of digital artworks? Platforms like Sedition are going beyond providing certain technological frameworks like for instance Adobe Flash. But for now lets summarize this mechanism of Digital Right Managment defined in the whole association with Benjamins notion of the aura, as „ A strange weave of space and time: the unique appearance or semblance of distance, no matter how close it may be.[sonderbares Gespinst aus Raum und Zeit: einmalige Erscheinung einer Ferne, so nah sie sein mag]“[8]


Outcome

My outcome will contain - next to a critical analysis of a particular platform in form of an essay - a project that deals with the condition that those platforms create. At this initial stage, the project will go in one of two directions as a intervention on a platform or a platform as a parody created by myself. First, my plan is an intervention in a distribution system as a disruption of the ongoing behavior and by that I can get information of it's own mechanism. Second, the created platform will mimic an already existing commercial orientated platforms, but at the some time turns the internal mechanism one eighty degrees(180 °) and thereby parodies its own circumstances. The final exhibition or the graduation show can expect a documentation in form of a installation about the process that my project triggered. I am aware that presenting online projects or process based artworks in a exhibition is always a difficult undertaking, therefore I'm searching for a way to present it as physical installation.


Practical steps

Practice makes perfect! In this initial state of the project, my thoughts are exploded and thereby my possibilities for a final project are infinite. Lost in total confusion, and struggling with the conceptions of project, I'm challenging myself with different experiments:

    • A script downloading a number of 3d-objects of thingiverse.com(a huge database for printable 3d-files) and combining them into a new object - with different meaning - together! This practical step exploring automation and how it could be used for an autonomous agent, that will interact with a platform.


Previous practice

In previous projects, I focused on different mechanisms of the artsystem and artworks sometimes involved in a parodistic way and an exaggeration of a specific action. In piano for 3 seconds(2010) a specific intervention for an exhibition the artwork was destroyed before the opening. The remains were sent to an archive of an "important" museum for art and media as a jump over of the normal states in the life of an artwork and to archive it there immediately. In the exhibition viewers could only see the conformation of the postal order. In the case of Gsell_1(2011) the artwork willl destroy itself by sawing on the own woodbranch. It is connected to the idea of auto-destructive art. The well known Artblockplus(2013) was realized during my first year in the PZI. It is an addon/extension for Firefox and Chrome browsers to help the user block art. In Analysis of 20 artworks on the assembly line(2013) I applied statistical analysis(in this case a computer vision object detection) to 20 images of artworks and presented the graphical outcome on a running assembly line.

References

    1. Metzger, G 1969, Automata in history
    2. 2.0 2.1 http://www.seditionart.com/
    3. https://devart.withgoogle.com/
    4. https://cointemporary.com/about/
    5. 5.0 5.1 p.127, Quaranta, D 2013, Beyond New Media Art, LINK Editions, Brescia.
    6. Manovich, L 2001, "Post-media Aesthetics" in Lev Light Reader, eds. A Brouwer, J Swager, C Zomer and E Wijenbergh, Second Tuesday, Amsterdam
    7. Brätschmann, O 1997, Ausstellungskünstler. Kult und Karriere im modernen Kunstsystem. DuMont, Köln
    8. Benjamin, W 1931, Little History of Photography

Footnotes

    1. The artist is aware, that this license is not in conflict with commercial use.
    2. This is a proposal!
    3. The author decided to write "internets" in plural.
    4. A recent interview with the platform http://www.digicult.it/news/sedition-platform-will-change-contemporary-art-market/
    5. explain blackboxing