Antonio C Pinto on Fri, 1 Jun 2001 18:15:03 +0200 (CEST) |
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[nettime-lat] SAT2 - Seminario de Arte Y Tecnologia - MEIAC - badajoz - espana - |
event: SAT-2 subject matter: museums, art communities and action in the 21 st century location: spain badajoz meiac (museo extremeno y iberoamericano de arte contemporaneo --> http://www.meiac.org/ ) schedule: 2001 november 16 - 17 (10:00 - 14:00 / 17:00-21:00) speakers - provisional list will be posted by june 15 ............. audience (including a list of 25 special guests): artists, art critics, museum curators and directors, gallery owners, teachers - mostly from spain and portugal abstract (1st draft): What did you say? Did you say digital? Digital art? Art in the digital era implies not only a huge technnical problem related to it´s survival - as an artifact and as a specific media - but also an immediate ideological debate about the most obvious contradiction that seems to exist between art as a contemporary museum item for the entertainment society, and the new art that seems to emerge from the digital paradigm, as a new 'techné', as a new kind of cultural action, as a language rhizomatic blossoming and as a subjective expression. If the survival of digital documents is for quite a while a serious preocupation within the entire techno community - the only one that seems to be aware of the implications of what one might call the digital fragility of this new world - for us, artists, art producers, gallery owners, curators, museum directors and critics, concern seems yet to begin with the many doubts we all have about the definition of digital art and what to do with it's products... But if this is so, there is also a great probability that 21st century art will introduce the most radical transformation in the human esthetic sphere since the invention of perspective and the discovery of oil painting. I would like to describe this transformation as the transformation of narrative art into 'code art'. When does 'code art' begins? Can it be a "variable media", like Jon Ippolito and many others wish? And if not? Where does it happen? I mean where does 'code art' makes it's point? Would it be in some private space (the screen as an intimate space?); or in a new kind of public space (the screen as a communication 'agora'?). Would this kind of art survive in a classical museum environment? Would you see it as a merchandize? How large is it's territory when we think about it as part of the technosphere expansion? Hipothesis: when we've got the best art students learning the 'code', then the many doubts that we now have will vanish into the air. - A project curated by antonio c pinto for meiac
begin:vcard n:C Pinto;Antonio tel;fax:+351 217 963 509 tel;work:+351 217 979 723 x-mozilla-html:FALSE url:http://www.risco.pt/ org:Aula do Risco adr:;;R. Alberto Oliveira (Corucheus), At 27;Lisboa;;1700-019;Portugal version:2.1 email;internet:antonio.c.pinto@risco.pt title:Director note;quoted-printable:Antonio C Pinto is an artist and writer living in lisbon since the early seventies. To read he's cv please go to=0D=0Ahttp://www.risco.pt/a-cv.html x-mozilla-cpt:;3 fn:Antonio C Pinto end:vcard