philip pocock on Sat, 15 Feb 2003 07:53:33 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: Re: <nettime> Sorry... (FWD) |
is it not time to consider or call for an embargo on australian media art works (as well as any stemming from uncle sam and his 'coalition of the willing')?? my intuitive humanist canadian nature tells me it is time to think about such an action. i can imagine that the high-cost high-tech industrialization of new media aesthetics from promoter-designer jeffrey shaw are acclaimed by western industrial sponsors as they glorify western industrial might, showing those powers-that-be how to co-opt the new energy of new digital media to old industry ends, only to buttress what charlie chaplin disparaged in 'modern times', at the cost of no money left in institutions shaw and company control for what young artists working with new media and networks are radically investigating and creating at low- almost no-cost. such australian-inspired cultural politics sends young radical media artists a discouraging message, a message that new media is only supported if and when it invests a 'big blue magic' in its submissive role extending the 'heroic' military-industrial complex electro-mechanical conveyor belt control over any radical use of media, seen as irrational when not serving what w. burrough's calls 'the Board' of 'Control'. is it not time to speak out against such negative new media cultural politics, costing hundreds of thousands of dollars if not millions in support of 'picasso persiflage' complexes we are learning to call 'media stars' when new media collectives outside the world of the 'coalition of the willing' find themselves broke and in the shadow at the end of the 'digital art pecking order' with the industrialization of works like 'shaw's looming in the foreground, supported full force by a thinking process that needs rethinking? shaw's recent material, expensive, energy-sucking inflatable nostalgic spin off of a 60s-style worlds fair buckie fuller 'dome' in 'future cinema' turns its new media participants into servo-electro mechanical image-gristmilling subordinates, pixel-pumping galleon slaves, pumping and grindin to catch bunker-window-style glimpses of improperly, voyeuristically mythologizing, and visually-cliché exoticized human beings, thev entire mechanical circus activity sending an antiquated and industrial-paradigm-occupied message that does not embrace cultural tolerance or new media as offering a collaborative 'noosphere' of collective understanding. the user must submit to the machinery in order to get the digital pay-of. is such work not questionably supporting the general world political stance of this artist's country of origin at the current moment? true, it iis difficult to equate art and nationality, but my intuition tells me that it is time to realize that cultural production is our best bet at a pan-foreign ministry and radical other art forms are now perhaps the best diplomat, or communicator. such australian aesthetics as promoted by shaw, currently a cultural politician in australia promoting such aesthetics worldwide, only furthers the polluting idea of industrial progress into realms of new media which are perhaps, imho, one of the last holdouts for cultural diplomacy and translocal tolerance. and his expensive space-taking works are in essence siphoning funds from meaningful radical experimental new media collaborative projects. should the online community not consider speaking out, or are we as douglas davis wrote in the 70s still a 'cottage industry' where to speak out is ostracizing and the prices is to be labeled a subversive disturbance and ignored? this mail follows up my critique of lev manovich's 'soft' approach to co-opting new media, and misrepresenting current new media database paradigms in order to prop up, update and fog critique of any mechanisms perpetrated for american global media executive control. his 'soft cinema' work is a digital mannerist version of any cnn or western nightly news report. his database algorithms, 'rule-based' are even less imaginative than cnn editors searching for images to tack onto to an 'approved' fixed pre-recorded soundtrack. is it not time to expose such tactics that try to conscript database concepts and make them backward compatible to tv news? what message does that send young media artists, whose work seems dysfunctional when works like manovich's are considered as a measure? soft cinema's preset soundtrack, decorated with pretty pictures madison-avenue-ad-agency-styled a la piet mondrian (for no good reason other than cosmetic) is primarily a closed information system, the GUI being manovich himself he proclaims in humility. this banal product parades itself as a database new media cinematic work. such works as this which conscript the language of new media to revisit the 20th century american propaganda machine built from misinterpreting precedents in bolshevik experimental cinema (d. vertov) sends a clearly muddy and damaging message to young digital media artists who would imagine from manovich's example that a database is nothing more than a malleable dossier, archive or library of author-controlled and censored data a la fbi-goes-digital. in doing so lev manovich confuses the slogan of new media with old ones and helps 'The Board' to gat a database facelift for an ailing and credibility-losing american propaganda media industry, at the cost of radical alternative open, collective database new media initiatives which do not pander to the misunderstandings of new media in sponsor circle looking to get some of that 'media magic' into the affectivity of their military-industrial complex message, threatened of course by an open database algorithm which manovich either avoids, is unable to program or considers peripheral, when in fact it is the distinguishing quality of the 'language of database media'. any who study 'soft cinema' will soon find the single wizard behind the curtain in oz, and realize they are in an eye-candy-colored virtual prison that appears labyrinthian yet remains inalterable by users, just a regular penitentiary design. is it not in new media that a cultural politic or a politic for cultures as pushed for by the jeffrey shaw and the lev manovich, both imho subliminally promoting with their ideas and designs the industrial and medial messages of the 'coalition of the willing' - australia and america? or am i off the deep end? i encourage an informal communication-based non-organized movement supporting a full embargo and discourse concerning the current mechanisms and messages pushed by american and australian new media producers. Am Friday den, 14. February 2003, um 04:29, schrieb Patrick Lichty: This came through on another list. It makes me want to cry, or scream out, or something -- to think that Australia has come to this under the disgustingly oppressive Howard government. It's a bit long, but important reading. Betty Betty McLellan P.O. Box 688 Townsville Q Australia 4810 Phone: +61 (0)7 4772 6060 Fax: +61 (0)7 4772 6544 email: bettymc@austarnet.com.au From: "Ron Gray / Irene Gale" To: Subject: Guantanamo Bay Rules used in Australian Detention Centres Date: Thu, 9 Jan 2003 16:41:31 +1030 Dear all, Please forward this on to your contacts - and take some action about it! Irene The following is from the Victorian Greens refugee spokesperson, Pamela Curr. It makes chilling reading. The question is whether Australia is becoming another redneck USA, or brownshirt Germany (if, indeed, there's any difference)? <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net