Myths of Immateriality
I came across this telelecture on “Myths of Immateriality: Curating, Collecting and Archiving Media Art,” and since we had talked about the issue of archiving media art in class last week, I thought you might be interested in checking it out.
Presentations are given by Christiane Paul and Paul Sermon, followed by a discussion afterward. Christiane Paul is Adjunct Curator of New Media Arts at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the director of Intelligent Agent, a service organization and information resource dedicated to digital art. Paul Sermon is a media artist and scientist at the University of Salford, UK; many of his works focus on telematic work, such as one of his earlier works, Telematic Dreaming, in which a bed is turned into a projection space that might show a partner a thousand miles away. The projection of the other person on the bed results in a remarkable suggestion which turns the touch of the projected body into an intimate action.
Paul gives an interesting talk about the subtleties of interactive telematic work, and Christiane Paul, speaks frankly about the issues of museums presenting new media art:
Presenting new media art is very challenging to an institution and other venues because of their ephemeral, network-oriented, telepresent nature that is to a large extent — immaterial…
In the video of the discussion, moderator Michael Freund says of her comments:
This is very enlightening and interesting, especially coming from somebody who is a curator, who basically says that museums are not equipped, for a variety of reasons, to do the kind of job [for new media art] that they’ve been doing for traditional art.
Check it out:
Paul Sermon Christiane Paul Group Discussion
February 9, 2008 - Posted by Josephine | archiving | archiving, Christiane Paul, curating, immateriality, Paul Sermon | 3 Comments
3 Comments »
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Wow, this was interesting Josephine, thanks!
It was great to hear from the 2 points of view (curator & artist) about their thoughts & feelings on the movement of new media art that has been unfolding for some time now.
It was great to understand their take on archiving vs. collecting as well. I now have a better sense of this, though it seems the struggle to have this “new art” embraced by: museums, galleries & collectors and critics, may carry on for a while. I feel ‘traditionalists’ seem to resist change but this is a huge part of our future.
Christiane did mentioned, for ex: how video art/installations from recognized names such as a Bill Viola hadn’t sold in recently and how new art isn’t viewed or regarded w/ the same respect as more traditional art (generally speaking.)
The fight may continue for some time for this movement (especially in the US.) I am still mulling all of this information over and will let it marinate in my brain. It was extremely helpful, thanks again.
- RAI
Does anyone know when this talk took place? Is it a few years old or?
Rai -so glad you enjoyed it!
Tyler -it was actually just last year; the session was held on May 27, 2007. Here’s the Myths of Immateriality info page. The links to the archived video streams on that page seem not to be working though, but they do work on this page, which also happens to be the archive page for the rest of the telelectures- might find some more interesting stuff there.