<nettime> Victims to their own volatile intent
Bruce Sterling
bruces at well.com
Mon Mar 8 18:29:34 CET 2010
http://www.bampfa.berkeley.edu/about/formalnotation.pdf
1 Digital / Media Art and the Need for a Formal Notation System
Digital and media art forms include Internet art, software art,
computer-mediated installations, as well as other non-traditional art
forms such as conceptual art,
installation art, performance art, and video. It is important to point
out the inclusion of digital art in the approach explored here
because of its unique nature, even among media art forms, and because
of how digital informatics informs models that may apply to all the
above art forms.
It is also important to note that the types of works discussed here
are not limited to the traditional meaning of "media" art as analog,
electronic media (i.e. video, film, audio, and electronics). Here,
media art is intended to include digital art
and other variable media art forms.
These art forms have confounded traditional museological approaches to
documentation and preservation because of their ephemeral,
documentary, technical, and multi-part nature and because of the
variability and rapid obsolescence of the media formats often used in
such works. In part due to lack of documentation methods, and thus
access, such forms do not often form the foundation of research and
instruction.
In many cases these art forms were created to contradict and bypass
the traditional art world's values and resulting practices. They have
been successful to the point of becoming victims to their own volatile
intent.
Individual works of media art are moving away from all hope of
becoming part of the historic record at a rapid rate. Perhaps as
important, the radical intentionality encapsulated in their form is
also in danger of being diluted as museums inappropriately apply
traditional documentation and preservation methods or ignore entire
genres of these works altogether.
A new way of conceptualizing media art is needed to serve the needs of
documentation and preservation as well as other activities that
surround media art such as education and collaborative creation. New
projects from the artistic, academic, and museum communities are
being formed to address these needs.
This paper is a direct outgrowth and continuation of the efforts of
two such projects, Archiving the Avant Garde (1) and the Variable
Media Network (2). ...
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