Salon des refuseurs?

@M_PF If you’re at the Barbican you can visit our geofenced counter-DevArt online exhibition: http://hacktheartworld.com/exhibition.html

(Thanks for posting the geofence hack, @kcmic: set your location to 51.52, -.09 to view, https://developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/mobile-emulation#device-geolocation-overrides)

Dear hacktheartworld: It seems to me that this show is not so much an act of refusal as I thought when reading ‘counter-DevArt’, but one of circumventing the gatekeepers to be part of the conversation, on their territory. Intra-DevArt, perhaps? But your rhetoric in naming your event and in the open letter to Larry & Sergey doesn’t seem to match your entrepreneurial spirit. It hides your opportunism (which I respect) behind a worn-out, adversarial art world rhetoric that emphasizes material poverty along with essential artistic possession.

Frame semantics as explained by George Lakoff state that an argument that deploys the opposing frame still reinforces it by perpetuating the reigning metaphor. Perpetuating a location through virtual reference may just do the same. And indeed it seems that you are quite ok with working for Google, too. In your letter – after mildly, and possibly appropriately, chiding Google for a lack of media art history – you state “we can’t afford to work on a piece of art for two months, only not to get the commission in the end. We have to pay the rent, and eat once in a while too. That’s why we didn’t enter the DevArt competition.”

You are correct in saying that “[t]he art world is still stuck in an era of paintings and sculptures.” But maybe it’s time to disrupt the starving artist rhetoric first. The NEA has posted quite a well-written document: How the United States funds the Arts. http://arts.gov/sites/default/files/how-the-us-funds-the-arts.pdf
It emphasizes Entrepreneurialism, while also pointing to contrasting policies in other parts of the world. Entrepreneurial artists need to be – at best principled – opportunists. It is much more exciting to fess up to that.

Disclosure: I participated in the DevArt contest, was among 20 finalists, and for that received a ticket to Google I/O. Larry and Sergey apparently were not there, but Paul Kinlan was, who was on the DevArt organizing team.

Posted in Art&Tech, remarks

Chicago Cultural Center residency Diagram workshop with Hatch projects curators JGV/WAR and 6 artists

 

 

 

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Yesterday, curatorial team JGV/WAR entered the Matrix, with artists whose work they will exhibit in the fall as part of a residency at Hatch Projects they are all participating in. Towards developing their exhibition, we used the 3-Line Whiteboard and Fractal 3-Line Matrix printed blanks, facilitating conversations about each artist’s and the curators’ modes of working. 2 1/2 hours pretty much evaporated, enough time for a first step that included brief individual meetings with each, but we arrived at a few fruitful questions. Those can now be addressed by the group down the road. This was a first, and I much enjoyed experimenting with this process with Wil and Gibran, Andi, Benjamin, Lily, Lauren, Edyta and Kiam.

 

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Posted in 3Line_Matrix, facilitating

Knowing then Thinking then Knowing then …

It is a familiar phenomenon. An artist knows what is right and does it. Then comes contextualization, and as that is internalized, it leads to more work. A double helix, in a way. 

To be around my exhibition, Enter the Matrix, through the residency opportunity at the Chicago Cultural Center means I frequently get called out to explain. Not surprisingly, that promotes accelerated thinking, particularly about connections to previous works and thoughts around those.

The first two weeks have yielded two fundamental realizations. First, about how the current choice of material relates to a previous curatorial project: all images in the exhibition are inkjet prints embedded in vitreous enamel on steel – Whiteboards. For quite a long time, maybe the previous 3 years, I had pondered a form of survey, or retrospective, of my work that would not include the actual pieces made over the last 30 years, but new works derived from them. Those new works were supposed to bind all previous works into one material – the same material new works were expressed in. So I made selections from photographs I had taken along the way, privileging those that had a more theatrical character or emphasized the modularity of many of the pieces, freshened them up in photoshop, and had them printed as Whiteboards, just as the new diagrams and the 10 portraits selected from Face Field. How that material choice is connected to other thinking emerged when I explained the Hairy Blob diagram to a visitor. The Hairy Blob diagram is on one of the wheeled Whiteboards in the residency space. It contains a series of drawings that visualize Western, historic concepts of time. Those drawings had led to a curated exhibition at the Hyde Park Art Center, bringing in artworks that related to what I see as the most recent, emerging understanding of time – the Hairy Blob. In a nutshell, the hairy blob concept of time is that everything is now: artifacts ( for example in museums), records (for example in libraries), and the minds that interpret them, everywhere on the planet, all sticking out from the big ball towards the sky around it. That simultaneity is what I am trying to evoke by bringing my archive into one substance, as a new work of art.

The second realization concerns why it is so appropriate to bring my diagrams together with the explorations around Face Field, in collaboration with Robert Woodley. The diagrams in the exhibition are derived from interviews with artists. The 10 portraits are synthesized from ‘face ingredients’, selected from a database of photos through algorithms that have been constrained through the program Robert wrote. It’s glaringly obvious, really, and goes back to reading Vilém Flusser’s writing on Technical Images. Technical Images are images created from texts. Flusser posits that Mass Technical Images are made by operating apparatuses (cameras) and Elite Technical Images are made by operating a drawing tool (pen). I have discussed this more extensively, here, in “Stalking the Continuum”. Mass Technical Images look deceptively as if they depicted reality. Elite Technical Images seem much more abstract, depict relations and concepts. With that, “Enter the Matrix” combines both types of technical images – Images created from texts.

 

Posted in 3Line_Matrix, art, exhibitions, remarks

Follow the residency at #CCCres1

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Upcoming: A diagram of Stockyard Institute History with Jim Duignan –  Musician diagrams, with James Falzone – student groups from SAIC, Columbia College, Illinois Institute of Art – visitor response video recordings  …

Posted in art, events

Flexible Art Worlds

My essay on arts ecologies – Flexible Art Worlds – is in this new book: Whose Culture Is It, Anyway?: Community Engagement in Small Cities.

Posted in publication

Chicago Cultural Center – exhibition and residency

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It’s official – as of yesterday, I’ve been awarded the first residency in the newly renovated first floor Chicago Cultural Center Garland Gallery, April 25 – mid July. It’s an amazing space. I’m also opening an extensive exhibition of my diagrams in one of the adjacent Michigan Gallery spaces that day, along with shows by Miller & Shellabarger and Shane Huffman, April 25 – August 24, 2014. (And I also have a couple of pieces in the Public Art Survey on the 4th floor.) In the exhibition, called “Enter the Matrix”, I am showing a brief retrospective through documentary photos of earlier installation work that foreshadows the later development of the matrix; a series of diagrams based on artist/musician interviews in Vienna and Krems, with musical responses by Andrea Sodomka and Maria Gstaettner, and a poetic reading of all exhibited artist diagrams, recorded by Judith Leemann; there will also be a series of randomly generated portrait prints, a collaboration using face detection algorithms, with programmer Robert Woodley.

At the residency space, I will conduct interviews with artists and further explore the mechanisms of critique, program community ecology related events, also around projects that the management studio class at SAIC is currently supporting me with, and will work towards a series of videos of responses to my diagrams. We will also host our Art&Tech Meetup there, and Robert is looking to offer programming workshops. If you are in Chicago, stop by the opening at 5:30, before the SAIC MFA show, which opens at 7:00.

I will publish residency related info as events arise. Please let me know if you want to get involved.

https://www.facebook.com/events/600129410062426/

https://www.facebook.com/events/733374910027174/

http://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/dca/supp_info/mers.html

WALKSHEET (PDF)

It would be wonderful to see you there,

Adelheid

Posted in 3Line_Matrix, art, events, exhibitions, facilitating, public art

working on:

  • Arts Ecologies of Hyde Park, Kenwood, Oaklawn, Washington Park and Woodlawn:  Interviews + Diagrams, with the South East Chicago Commission and SAIC Management Studio.
  • Arts Ecologies of East Lawndale: Interviews + Diagrams, with the Homan Square Foundation and SAIC Management Studio.
  • “Enter the Matrix”, an exhibition of Whiteboards at the Cultural Center Michigan Avenue Galleries, April 11 – June 22, 2014. Arts Ecologies and Artist interviews, with responses and contributions by Maria Gstättner (sound), Andrea Sodomka (sound), Judith Leemann (words), Robert Woodley (Facefield). The blank Fractal 3Line matrix will be available for on site diagramming sessions.
  • Performance Lecture: Flexible Artworlds @ Drury University, Springfield, MO, April 5
  • Keynote @ Mapping Culture: Communities, Sites and Stories, Coimbra, Portugal,  May 28-30, 2014
Posted in 3Line_Matrix, conferences, exhibitions, facilitating, teaching

Chicago Art&Tech Meetup

Chicago Art&Tech Meetup is scheduled for Thursday, 3/6, 6pm @ Columbia College, 1104 S. Wabash. Great speakers:  https://twitter.com/julietaSpace,http://geistweidt.com/ , http://www.catalyzechicago.org/
The Meetup Site is still down, but we’re on.

Posted in events

Conference Matrix Kufstein, Austria

In January, I participated in the 8th annual conference of the Fachverband Kulturmanagement in Kufstein, Austria. I presented the 3Arts commissioned Matrix, Granting for Arts Organizations and Individuals seen from Artists’ Perspectives, and also created a new 3-Line Matrix based on the conference proceedings.

The theme was cultural funding, Dispositive der Kulturfinanzierung. The full title doesn’t translate easily. Dispositive refers to Foucault’s dispositif, translated into English as apparatus in Agamben’s What is an Apparatus? It sounds clunky: Apparatuses of Cultural Funding? The organizers chose Dispositions of Cultural Funding.

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Posted in 3Line_Matrix, conferences

3Arts Matrix update

Just added a slideshow oft the Grant making diagram. It compiles in 5 commented steps.

Posted in 3Line_Matrix, conferences