Difference between revisions of "Media art and culture"

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The term '''media art''' is useful and used for projects bringing up the technological, social, cultural, legal and political issues that come along with the emergence of new media. Since 1990s the new media have included internet, web, mobiles, wireless, GPS, and others. '''Media culture''' in this regard uses and is used by new media.
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The term '''media art''' is useful and used for artistic projects bringing up the technological, aesthetical, social, cultural, legal and political issues that come along with the emergence of new media. Since 1990s the new media have included internet, web, mobiles, wireless, GPS, and others. '''Media culture''' in this regard uses and is used by new media.
  
Media art includes projects exploring ''technological'' issues of emerging tools - devices ([[video art|video]], [[computer art|computer]], [[mobile art|mobile devices]]), standards and software ([[net art|internet]], [[software art|software]], [[code poetry|code]], [[game art|computer games]], [[streaming]], [[locative media|GPS]]). These projects usually focus on the manuevre limitations, stereotypes of perception, or aesthetics of these tools. (There is a significantly increasing number of entertainment projects andservices created for commercial and/or social networking purposes. These are not of our attention here, since we are interested in writings on media culture, rather than in media culture production.)
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Media art includes projects exploring ''technological and aeshetical'' of emerging tools and standards, such as [[:Category:video art|video]], [[:Category:computer art|computer]], [[:Category:mobile art|mobile devices]], [[:Category:net art|internet]], [[:Category:software art|software]], [[:Category:code poetry|code]], [[:Category:game art|computer games]], [[:Category:streaming media|streaming]], [[:Category:locative media|GPS]], [[:Category:sound art|sound production devices]], or [[:Category:robotic art|robotics]]. These projects usually focus on the manuevre limitations, stereotypes of perception, or aesthetics of these tools.  
  
Looking at the media art and culture mailing lists, conferences and festivals, the current discussions are held on [[public domain|accessibility of data/software/devices]], [[protection of personal data|protection of identity]], [[open spectrum|democratization of electromagnetic spectrum]], [[web 2.0|social web]] and [[debates on politics|responsibility in world affairs]]. Projects dealing with such ''social, cultural, legal and political issues'' stemmed from media art discourse and still can be considered as a part of it.
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Looking at the media art and culture mailing lists, conferences and festivals, the current discussions are held on various topics, such as [[:Category:public domain|public domain and accessibility of data, software, and devices]], [[:Category:open spectrum|democratisation of electromagnetic spectrum]] (open spectrum), [[:Category:web 2.0|social web]] (or web 2.0), [[:Category:protection of personal data and identity|protection of personal data and identity]], and [[:Category:human rights|human rights]], and deal with related ''social, cultural, legal and political'' issues.
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==Theories and definitions of media art==
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===Wilson: Information Arts (2003)===
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[[Stephen Wilson]] in his ''Information Arts''<ref>Stephen Wilson, ''Information Arts: intersections of art, science, and technology'', MIT Press, 2003, [http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~infoarts/links/wilson.artlinks2.html (online)], [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=45 (full book)], [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0262731584 (google books)]</ref> offers classification of the works according to technologies used (counting 80+ categories).<br>
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Wilson integrates art and techno-scientific research with critical theory into "art as research".<br>
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Also: [[Boundary_objects_between_arthistory%2C_history_of_technology%2C_and_sociology#Stephen_Wilson.2C_Information_Arts_.282003.29]]
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===Manovich: New Media (2001)===
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[[Lev Manovich]] in ''The Language of New Media''<ref>Lev Manovich, ''The Language of New Media'', Cambridge: MIT Press, 2001, [http://www.manovich.net/LNM/ (online)], [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=36 (full book)], [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0262632551 (google books)], [http://kyberia.sk/id/2928844 (excerpt)]</ref> moves from the materiality of new media to their forms.<br>
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''In section ''Media and Computation'' I show that new media represents a convergence of two separate historical trajectories: computing and media technologies. Both begin in the 1830's with Babbage's Analytical Engine and Daguerre's daguerreotype. Eventually, in the middle of the twentieth century, a modern digital computer is developed to perform calculations on numerical data more efficiently; it takes over from numerous mechanical tabulators and calculators already widely employed by companies and governments since the turn of the century. In parallel, we witness the rise of modern media technologies which allow the storage of images, image sequences, sounds and text using different material forms: a photographic plate, a film stock, a gramophone record, etc. The synthesis of these two histories? The translation of all existing media into numerical data accessible for computers. The result is new media: graphics, moving images, sounds, shapes, spaces and text which become computable, i.e. simply another set of computer data. In ''Principles of New Media'' I look at the key consequences of this new status of media. Rather than focusing on familiar categories such as interactivity or hypermedia, I suggest a different list. This list reduces all principles of new media to five: '''numerical representation, modularity, automation, variability and cultural transcoding'''. In the section, ''What New Media is Not,'' I address other principles which are often attributed to new media [digitally encoded media is discrete in contrast to analog, different media types are displayable using one machine, random access,  digitization inolves loss of information, endless copying w/o degradation of media, interactivity]. I show that these principles can already be found at work in older cultural forms and media technologies such as cinema, and therefore they are by themselves are not sufficient to distinguish new media from the old.''
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; Response
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* '''Medosch''': ''The history of media as told by Manovich appears to contain only unbroken continuity. For him, the Jacquard loom is a kind of predecessor of the computer because it could be 'programmed' to produce different ornaments using punctured strips. In typical technological deterministic thinking the logic of progress is at work, while human actors are sidelined. Lewis Mumford sees the Jacquard loom in a different light. According to Mumford aesthetic demands motivated the invention of the 'programmable' Jacquard loom - it were the complex patterns fashionable at the time which necessitated its invention (Trögemann and Viehoff 2005). Where Mumford sees human motivation, Manovich sees a 'logic' at work: from Daguerreotype and the Differential Engine (Babbage) to cinematograph, radar, television and computer, with the side-streams of the Hollerith machine, telegraphy, radio waves and wireless telegraphy. Yet Manovich never looses a word about where all those inventions come from. There is always a 'logic', a 'trajectory', some intrinsic reasons at work, why technology progresses in this or that way. Thus, technological progress becomes naturalised. Taking this to its final consequence, technological progress would be motivated by a teleology of which computer based (new) media appear as the provisional end point. [..] <br> Lev Manovich claims that the aesthetic principles at work in new media culture have been developed by Russian and German avant-garde film makers in the 1920s.<br> A hundred years after cinema's birth, cinematic ways of seeing the world, of structuring time, of narrating a story, of linking one experience to the next, have become the basic means by which computer users access and interact with all cultural data. (Manovich 2001, 78 -79)<br> In particular Dziga Vertov's film The Man with a Movie Camera (1929) can be used as the guide to the understanding of the language of new media. In order to give the aesthetics of cinema such a privileged role in its influence on new media, he has to neutralise the key counter-argument, namely that computers are interactive. According to Manovich it is a non-statement to say that computers are interactive - they are so by their very nature (Manovich 2001, 55). He says that he would offer only qualified notions of interactivity, and that in principle all art forms are interactive (ibid., 56). With this conceptualisation he basically kills interactivity as a category specific to media art. In order to cement his key thesis that computer based media can be seen through the lens of 1920s avant-garde movies he introduces an extensive genealogy of the screen.<br> VR, telepresence, and interactivity are made possible by the recent technology of the digital computer. However, they are made real by a much older technology, the screen. (Manovich 2001, 94).<br> Only by dismissing interactivity and by making the screen the central component of new media art, he can say that Russian avant-garde cinema has laid the foundations for media art. Thus, a seemingly progressive position is turned into a conservative one. Manovich appears to suggest that aesthetic innovation ended 80 years ago whereas we now move forward in making more perfect technically what Vertov et al have achieved then. The revolutionary methods (in the 1920s) of montage, of zooms and pans, of the liberated and accelerated kino-eye have become menu functions in Photoshop. American software engineers are providing the public with drop-down menu access to the aesthetic innovations of the 1920s.''  [http://kyberia.sk/id/2928844]
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* '''Medosch about Batchen's critique'''. ''Geoffrey Batchen criticises Manovich for using cinema as the key conceptual lens through which to address the language of new media, ignoring the histories of photography and telegraphy (Batchen 2004). The use of 35mm discarded movie film by Zuse, the German inventor of the computer, is evidence enough for Manovich to see "all existing media translated into numerical data accessible for the computer."<br> But the plausibility of this particular historical metaphor depends on two particular claims: 1. that computing and photo-media have no interaction until the 1930s, and 2. that cinema is the key to any understanding of the forms and development of new media. <br> In his own account Batchen shows how closely the histories of the computer, photography and telegraphy were interwoven, partly because inventors such as William Fox Henry Talbot and Charles Babbage on one hand, and Samuel Morse and Louis Daguerre were in close contact with each other. According to Batchen four "inter-related technologies and their conceptual apparatuses - photography, mechanical weaving, computing and photo-mechanical printing" were first conceived around 1800 and need to be understood in the context of modernity, which means "capitalism, industrialisation, colonialism, patriarchy." It is important to note that Babbage and his assistant Ada Lovelace saw the computer as "a cultural artefact that enabled nature (and therefore God) to represent itself in the form of mathematical equations".<br> That means that Babbage's calculating machines were seen as proof of the existence of God. Batchen concludes that any single 'conceptual lens' is inadequate and therefore also any linear chronology. He demands "a more complex rendition of the relations of past and present," "a threedimensional network of connections," a history "thick" with unpredictability which faces up to the "political challenge" about the way how history is written.''[http://kyberia.sk/id/2928844]
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* '''Cubitt''': ''is new media, are new media, unified by an intrinsic quality or field of qualities? Or is it perhaps their very modularity, variability, transcoding, that marks them out as a loose aggregation without a single defining presence?'' [http://manovich.net/LNM/review_Cubitt.html]
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* '''Holmes''': ''what always irritated me in Manovich's writing was a kind of smug insistence that the new media were essentially defined by a certain kind of rhythm, a certain multiplication of screens, a certain connection to databases, etc. - in other words, that new media were essentially defined by the dominant trends of contemporary capitalist society. For me this seemed like a total abdication of criticism itself, and it also seemed to be a sort of cheerful, "I'm on the winning side" version of the dark technological determinism and philosophical doomsaying promoted by the post-Leftist thinkers in the wake of Baudrillard. What I missed was the very question of autonomy, and some recognition of its quasi-infinite complexities as they've been ceaselessly developing from the Neolithic to now, in the long and discontinuous series of messages passed from human world to human world. Imho, the poverty of new media art - its "crisis" - has intrinsically to do with poverty of media critique tout court.'' [http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0905/msg00062.html]
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* '''Looper''': ''Manovich is not content to just define new media but to redefine old media (or traditional media) as well. He will charmingly dismiss photography as the “the art of the footprint”. The problematics of “reality” is then used to legitimate this arbitrary distaste. To give it an idealism it lacks. He is not just content to dismiss cinema as a “fuzzy” but wants to go further, to challenge this very definition of cinema, his own definition, he will go so far as to contradict this definition, to argue that cinema is (instead) not grounded in the art of the index, the art of the footprint, in fuzzies, wax museums or naturalism, but will have it’s origins in animation! From the point of view of deconstruction we could easily (if somewhat ungenerously) use Manovich’s own words against him, as if he were suggesting (and I challenge anyone to see how this reading does not follow), that cinema shows us animation is the art of the footprint (or vice versa). The solution for Manovich and others is that the cinema has at least two parents, a history of animation and a history of photography, neither of which can claim sole custody of their child. Photography itself has at least two parents: optics and alchemy. The cinema can be regarded as a case of what Deleuze might call a "disjunctive synthesis". The mutually exclusive definitions of cinema that Manovich and others might want to hold apart from each other, lest they come face to face, and implode, is without foundation. They will not implode. They did not implode. The result became the cinema. The new media supports a theoretical vector identifyable in some forms of cinema, particulartly early russian cinema, and perhaps the new media provides a better vehicle for such a vector. But the cinema also embodies other theoretical vectors for which the new media has only recently (strangely enough) adopted in a widespread manner: and that is those digital works created through digital cameras. The "fuzzies". The art of the footprint has entered the "new" media landscape as well. Manovich has recently retreated into the world of software programming - not a bad place to be. One can entertain all sorts of pure formalities in this domain. But even in this domain there is no real escape from the art of the footprint. The art of image analysis, the stuff of machine vision, google image search, xbox kinect. This sort of thing emerges from the art of the footprint, yet completely escapes Manovich's idealist definitions of new media and re-defintions of older media. To put it another way (rhetorically): if this stuff doesn't belong to new media where does it belong?''
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===Penny (1993)===
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[[Simon Penny]] v texte "Consumer Culture and the Technological Imperative: The Artist in Dataspace"<ref>Simon Penny, "Consumer Culture and the Technological Imperative: The Artist in Dataspace", 1993 [http://simonpenny.net/texts/consumerculture.html (full article)], in: Simon Penny (ed.), Critical issues in electronic media, SUNY Press, 1995, [http://books.google.com/books?id=vzFJnyBjaLMC (google books)]</ref> hovori o digitalnom, pocitacovom a elektronickom
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umeni (pouziva ich ako synonyma) ako o spojnici troch historickych
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prudov: techniky (engineering), transnacionalneho komoditneho
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kapitalizmu, a tradicneho vytvarneho umenia. kedy digitalni
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medialni umelci pracuju s estetikou technologii, ktore su
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v kulture technologiami moci.<br>
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''In many discussions of computer arts, the conversation has focused upon a dialectic between the sciences and the arts, a recapitulation of C. P. Snow's somewhat dated dualism. I want to insert a third term, without which such a discussion can have only limited relevance to contemporary culture: consumer commodity economics. [..] In this discussion, the terms "computer artists," "electronic media artists," and "artists who use technology" are used interchangeably, as I know of no useful and brief blanket term. There will be some specific reference to interactive media artpractice.''
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; Response
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* '''Medosch''' adds to Penny's three fields another two: cultural industry (the Frankfurt School) and socio-political movements (activism). He treats "media art" as umbrella term, in analogy to above mentioned terms.<br> ''To this list of Simon Penny (above) I would add two fields: the culture industry (Adorno 1991), now re-branded as the creative industry, and socio-political movements. The field of media art cannot be understood without asking which connections media art has with other fields in society. As Penny's choice of words suggests those 'forces' do have a strong influence on the field and sometimes it looks as if the combined power of those influences is so overwhelming that a core of media art is hard to identify. My personal position in this regard is that it is important to acknowledge those contextual links, yet to insist that media art is not reducible to the contextual relations it has. The field has historically always struggled to define its boundaries. Those boundary struggles are very revealing about the differentiation process of the field in relation to the art system, the overall political economy, the computer and telecommunications industry, the creative industries and political activism. Any more extensive mapping of the field would have to consider those relationships instead of trying to define an 'essence' of media art.''[http://kyberia.sk/id/2927577] [http://wiki.kunstlabor.at/bin/view/MKL/MediaArtContext]
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===Medosch: Media Art (2005)===
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Medosch talks about media art being justified by its institutional context<ref>Armin Medosch, "Technological Determinism in Media Art", 2005, [http://www.thenextlayer.org/node/676 (full text)], [http://kyberia.sk/id/2927577 (excerpt)]</ref>.<br>
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''It is not a diffuse 'essence' of media art which justifies it to speak of it as a separate field but the existence of a system of institutions which are more or less exclusively concerned with it. Institutionally media art is characterised by the existence of two types of institutions. On one hand there are large festivals, such as Ars Electronica, since 1979 held in Linz, Austria, and large brickand-mortar institutions such as the ZKM in Karlsruhe, which attract major funding, organise big exhibitions and produce heavy catalogues. On the other hand there are many small institutions, sometimes called 'self-institutions' - so called media labs or hack labs - which have been thriving over the last 10 years, forming an alternative or 'unstable' field (Druckrey 2005) with increasingly world-wide connections and a more decentralised and networked approach. Whereas the large institutions face typical pressures for legitimisation such as demands to be instrumental in regional development, the world-wide network of small institutions often lives on shoe-string budgets mostly provided by state funding agencies. Some activities are not funded at all or are rather selffunded - made possible by the energy and work of participants. According to Bourdieu this area could be called a field of restricted production. Economically it is insignificant but discursively it is important. I am not trying to construct a binary opposition between two types of institutions and acknowledge the existence of many medium sized institutions and a lively transfer between the fields. However, it is important to state that there is an institutionalised field and that it is not homogenous but heterogeneous.'' [http://kyberia.sk/id/2927577]<br>
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''The thesis is, in short, that certain founding fathers have succeeded  in establishing media art institutionally but it was a pyrrhic victory. the language and 'philosophy' they have employed was about a  fetishized notion of disembodied information and an equally fetishized notion of interactivity. Thus, they have failed to build solid theoretic  and terminological foundations. Because of the internet being  openend up their discoursive relevancy was over by 1995-96.  Although some good things came afterwards this sort of foundational  mistake has blighted the field and subsequently lead to the confusion  and misunderstandings we find ourselves in now.'' [http://www.mail-archive.com/spectre@mikrolisten.de/msg00354.html]
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===Fuller: Media Ecologies===
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===Lovink: New Media (2005)===
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[[Geert Lovink]] <ref>Geert Lovink "New Media, Art and Science: Explorations beyond the Official Discourse", 2005, [http://laudanum.net/geert/files/1129753681/index.shtml?1219586505 (full text)]</ref>
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===Gere: Art and Realtime Systems (2006)===
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[[Charlie Gere]] in ''Art, Time and Technology''<ref>Charlie Gere, ''Art, Time and Technology'', Berg, 2006, [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=231 (full book)]</ref>: ''This book is concerned with the question of the role of art in the age of real-time systems. (By ‘art’ in this instance I generally refer to visual art, rather than literature, music or film for example.) The term ‘real-time systems’ refers to the information, telecommunication and (multi)media technologies that have come to play an increasingly important part in our lives, at least in the so-called ‘developed’ countries. [..] Real-time computing underpins the whole apparatus of communication and data processing by which our contemporary techno-culture operates. [..] ‘Real time’ can also stand for the more general trend toward instantaneity in contemporary culture, involving increasing demand for instant feedback and response, one result of which is that technologies themselves are beginning to evolve ever faster. [..] since the 1960s, artists have engaged seriously in the possibilities of realtime technologies for the making of art under various banners, including computer art, art and technology, new media art, and, most recently, net.art and internet art. [..] Another title for this book could be ‘the work of art in the age of realtime systems’.''
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===Snow: Two Cultures (1959)===
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Lecture by '''C.P.Snow'''<ref>C.P.Snow, "The Two Cultures", 1959, [http://classes.dma.ucla.edu/Fall07/9-1/pdfs/week1/TwoCultures.pdf (full text)] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Two_Cultures wikipedia]</ref>
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===Lyotard: New materials (1979)===
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Lyotard in book ''La Condition Postmoderne'' (1979), in which he prophesised the end of the grand narratives, the end of man's control over being (Descartes), the end of the humanist tradition. In [[Les Immatériaux]] exhibition he curated he made the visitor realise that the existence of '''new materials''' (new technologies, computerized spaces, internet) would alter man's relationship with the world even more extremely. These 'new materials' would force him to recognize that the old Cartesian programme of mastering and posses¬sing nature was history. These 'new materials' were not, as Lyotard explained, materials that are new, but materials that 'work' or 'talk' themselves and thus question the idea of Man being the only one who works, talks, plans and remembers. Goods, images and signs themselves generate new processes, resulting in ever new goods, images, signs and meanings. The sphere of influence of these processes extend far beyond the conscious intentions and interpretations of those who make and absorb it. This is the most fascinating proof of the ability of 'a work' to work and to affect its own operations. It has a 'life' of its own.
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===Grau: Media Art (2007)===
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[[Oliver Grau]] in ''MediaArtHistories'' - ? <ref>Oliver Grau (ed.), ''MediaArtHistories'', Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2007</ref>
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; Response
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* '''Kluitenberg''' [http://www.springerin.at/dyn/heft_text.php?textid=1985&lang=de] (German)
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* '''Kluetsch''' [http://www.kunsttexte.de/2007-3/kluetsch-christoph-1/PDF/kluetsch.pdf] (German)
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* '''Frost''' [http://www.metamute.org/en/Butterfly-Catching]
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===Grau: Virtual Art (2003)===
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[[Oliver Grau]] in ''Virtual Art''<ref>Oliver Grau, ''Virtual Art: From Illusion to Immersion'', Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2003, [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=55 (full book)]</ref>: ''Media art, that is, video, computer graphics and animation, Net-art, interactive art in its most advanced form of virtual art with its subgenres of telepresence art and genetic art, is beginning to dominate theories of the image and art. [..] Media artists represent a new type of artist, who not only sounds out the aesthetic potential of advanced methods of creating images and formulates new options of perception and artistic positions in this media revolution, but also specifically researches innovative forms of interaction and interface design, thus contributing to the development of the medium in key areas, both as artists and as scientists. [..] However, a central argument of this book is that the idea of installing an observer in a hermetically closed-off image space of illusion did not make its first appearance with the technical invention of computer-aided virtual realities. On the contrary, virtual reality forms part of the core of the relationship of humans to images. It is grounded in art traditions, which have received scant attention up to now, that, in the course of history, suffered ruptures and discontinuities, were subject to the specific media of their epoch, and used to transport content of a highly disparate nature. Yet the idea goes back at least as far as the classical world, and it now reappears in the immersion strategies of present-day virtual art. Further, it is the intention of this book to trace the aesthetic conception of virtual image spaces, their historical genesis, including breaks, through various stages of Western art history. It begins with the broad, primarily European tradition of image spaces of illusion, which was found mainly in private country villas and town houses, like the cult frescoes of the Villa dei Misteri in Pompeii, the garden frescoes in the Villa Livia near Primaporta (ca. 20 b.c.), the Gothic fresco room, the Chambre du Cerf, and the many examples of Renaissance illusion spaces, such as the Sala delle Prospettive. [..] [After demise of the panorama,] technology was applied in the attempt to integrate the image and the observer: stereoscope, Cine´orama, stereoptic television, Sensorama, Expanded Cinema, 3-D, Omnimax, and IMAX cinema, as well as the head-mounted display with its military origins. [..] attention [of this book] centers on 360-degree images, such as the fresco rooms, the panorama, circular cinema, and computer art in the CAVE: media that are the means whereby the eye is addressed with a totality of images. This book engages with media in the history of art that concentrate on immersive image spaces. [..] The image spaces and media discussed here are the subject of many treatises, but never before have they been examined in the context of an art-historical analysis of the concept of immersion. So far, there has been no historically comparative or systematic theoretical approach to virtual realities.''
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===Frieling and Daniels: Media Art (2005)===
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[[Rudolf Frieling]] and [[Dieter Daniels]]: media art is "by definition multimedia, time-based or process-oriented"<ref>Rudolf Frieling, Dieter Daniels (eds.), ''Media art net 2: Thematische Schwerpunkte/Key Topics'', Springer, 2005, [http://www.medienkunstnetz.de/mediaartnet/ (online)], [http://books.google.com/books?id=XO65lAOABHUC (google books)]</ref><br>
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''We pointed out the special qualities of media art reception in the introduction to ''Media Art Net 1''. This applies both to direct knowledge of the artworks and also their technological and theoretical context; we would like to sum this up succinctly in the following three theses:<br>''
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* 1. ''Media art must be conveyed multimedially so that its time-based, processual and interactive aspects can be understood.''
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* 2. ''Media art needs a special theory that combines competencies from art theory, media science and media technology.''
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* 3. ''Multimedia presentation and special theory are mutually dependent; they have to relate to each other and be published on a joint platform.''
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''To these we can now add a fourth thesis as the sum of our past experiences:''
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* 4. ''Contexts can be created and presented only through the Net: the idea of networking the competencies of curators, academics, mediators and institutions met with a great deal of willingness to cooperate. So finally, thanks to these many collaborators, it was possible to finance a large number of additional themes, projects and materials. Here the bandwidth of the approaches, which were often very heterogenous in terms of method, first reflects existing divergencies of theory and practice. But at the same time the joint, collectively filled data pool, starting from the work, makes it possible to respond to these works and to make them productive in this way. Cross-links between the text were built in editorially. This led to an intensification process that we often found remarkable; it crystallized out from multiple references to a whole series of older, but also more recent artistic positions.''
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===Weibel: Digital Image (1984)===
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[[Peter Weibel]]<ref>Peter Weibel, "On the History and Aesthetics of the Digital Image", 1984, [http://90.146.8.18/en/archives/festival_archive/festival_catalogs/festival_artikel.asp?iProjectID=9369 (full text)], [http://kyberia.sk/id/2928852 (excerpt)]</ref> claims "Futurism, Cubism, Cubofuturism, Suprematism, Dadaism, Surrealism, etc."
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to be conceptual precursors of media art. New art forms emerging after
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WW2 such as "action painting, Fluxus, Happening, Pop Art, Kinetism, Op-Art, Ambiente, Arte
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Povera, actions, performances, etc.," are enlisted to the cause of preparing the ground for the
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'liberated' digital image.
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===Ascott (2003)===
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[[Roy Ascott]] in ''Telematic Embrace'' - ? <ref>Roy Ascott, ''Telematic Embrace: Visionary Theories of Art, Technology, and Consciousness'', Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003, [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=64 (full book)]</ref>
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===Druckrey (2007)===
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[[Timothy Druckrey]] at ''Media Art Undone'' conference presentation <ref>Timothy Druckrey, ''Media Art Undone'' conference presentation, 2007, [http://www.mikro.in-berlin.de/wiki/tiki-index.php?page=Timothy+Druckrey (full text)] [http://www.mikro.in-berlin.de/wiki/tiki-index.php?page_ref_id=6 (discussion)]</ref>:<br>
 +
''The more specific question for us in terms of the media arts have to do with the evolution - let's say since the 60s - from phases. I'm not making this categorical phases, but a kind of a test case, which is a kind of shift from this first phase, which I call the '''phase of ambiguity''', which was the sort of phase of the 60s and maybe into the middle 80s, when electronic arts, computer arts seemed ambiguous and certain had no real focus and were just kind of playful. And yet underneath it we know there were some serious thinking being done, and you can start to undertsand by a series of exhibitions that there's kind of a re-thinking of this period of the 60s, the exhibition at the ZKM now called Buffalo MindFrames which talks about the experimental terlevision experiments from the 60s, of Paul Sharits and Stan Brakhage and Weibel and Vasulka and the James Blue and others. That this material finally started to be on earth for us again and we have to sort of confront the transition that happend in the 60s to 80s from film to video, video to computer and then this kind of second period, if I can say it, which is a kind of period which I call the '''proliferation period''', let's say it's from the late 80s to the 90s in which there was kind of an explotion, everybody was doing it, everybody was faster by it, we finally and very sadly inherited this really hard name for it - new media, a phrase that I hate more than anything else in the world.''<br>
 +
''New for me means something that is instanteneous forgetting, the new is about erasure for me, the new is about a relentless present, the new is about no reflection, it's about singularity, it's a slogan of the advertising campaign and the fact that we use it has been damageable for fifteen years. I hope you understand that.''<br>
 +
''In this phase, this proliferation of festivals happen, the locations of subcategories, some of them that Olia talks about, these subcategories which have also for me undermined the basic idea that we have a kind of a large-scale set of intentions that are connected to eachother. Once you create these subcategories - what did she say - blog art, net art, software art - for me it really undermines our project in a very specific way and makes us even more marginal, more elite, more differentiated, more unwilling to sort of see that our project is actually a comprehensive project.''<br>
 +
''And now let's say there is this third project, a third phase, which is this '''phase of ubiquity'''. It's a period where we now have to start to understand that once the status of the medium reaches into every atmosphere of culture, then our job is even harder than it's ever been. And therefore it's more urgent for us to sort of come to terms of understanding that we are neither autonomous nor assimilated without pardon and we're not just another spin of the wheel that there's a sense in which the stagings of the media that we work within -and I've really considered very deeply - are slightly different than the fact that everybody has access, everybody has gadgets, everybody has hardware, everybody has cellphones with cameras and the new iPhone, everybody's integrated, because I kind of feel like preferring the unintegrated and I will fight always not to be integrated into that system. It's a niche that I don't really want to live in. So, if we look back into these phases, this kind of history of the 21st century and think about the way that the media - by the way a term that is profoundly complex, but I can't find an alternative - but if we look back into this, we understand that the theories of the media evolved from the culture theory of the 1930s to the consciousness media of the 1950s, and now integrated in a way into the, what's been called, the creative industries and this for me is the final incorporation of what happens to media.''
 +
 
 +
===Tribe and Jana: New Media Art (2006)===
 +
[[Mark Tribe]] and [[Reena Jana]] in ''New Media Art''<ref>Mark Tribe and Reena Jena, ''New Media Art'', Taschen/Brown, 2006, [http://wiki.brown.edu/confluence/display/MarkTribe/New+Media+Art (full text)]</ref>: ''New Media art and older categorical names like "Digital art," "Computer art," "Multimedia art," and "Interactive art" are often used interchangeably, but for the purposes of this book we use the term New Media art to describe projects that make use of emerging media technologies and are concerned with the cultural, political, and aesthetic possibilities of these tools. We locate New Media art as a subset of two broader categories: Art and Technology and Media art. Art and Technology refers to practices, such as Electronic art, Robotic art, and Genomic art, that involve technologies which are new but not necessarily media-related. Media art includes Video art, Transmission art, and Experimental Film -- art forms that incorporate media technologies which by the 1990s were no longer new. New Media art is thus the intersection of these two domains. We chose to limit the scope of this book to work that was made after the term New Media art was broadly adopted in 1994, and to focus on works that are particularly influential, that exemplify an important domain of New Media art practice, and that display an exceptional degree of conceptual sophistication, technological innovation, or social relevance. Deciding what counts as media technology is a difficult task. The Internet, which is central to many New Media art projects, is itself composed of a heterogeneous and constantly changing assortment of computer hardware and software?servers, routers, personal computers, database applications, scripts, and files?all governed by arcane protocols, such as HTTP, TCP/IP, and DNS. Other technologies that play a significant role in New Media art include video and computer games, surveillance cameras, wireless phones, hand-held computers, and Global Positioning System (GPS) devices. But New Media art is not defined by the technologies discussed here; on the contrary, by deploying these technologies for critical or experimental purposes, New Media artists redefine them as art media. In the hands of Radical Software Group (RSG), for example, data surveillance software, similar to that used by the United States' Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), becomes a tool for artistic data visualization. In addition to exploring the creative possibilities of this software, RSG develops a critique of surveillance technology and its uses.'' According to the authors, contemporary new media art pieces tend to deal with themes such as collaboration, identity, appropriation and open sourcing, telepresence and surveillance, corporate parody, as well as intervention and hactivism.
 +
 
 +
===Paul: Digital Art (2003)===
 +
[[Christiane Paul]] v ''Digital Art''<ref>Christiane Paul, ''Digital Art (World of Art series)'', London: Thames and Hudson, 2003, [http://www.thameshudson.co.uk/books/Digital_Art/9780500203675.mxs/37/36/ (online)], [http://kyberia.sk/id/2928865 (commentary)]</ref> rozlisuje medzi umenim, ktore
 +
pouziva digitalne technologie ako nastroje pre tvorbu tradicnych
 +
umeleckych objektov (fotografia, tlac, socha, hudba) a umenim,
 +
pre ktore su tieto technologie jeho vlastnym mediom, v ktorom
 +
je produkovane, zaznamenavane a prezentovane a ktoreho
 +
interaktivne a participativne vlastnosti taketo umenie vyuziva.
 +
 
 +
; Response
 +
* '''Medosch''': ''I would tentatively add to Christiane Paul's definition that many works of media art contain an element of self-referentiality; that they are not just 'using' a medium but also questioning and challenging its boundaries; that they try to make implicit or explicit statements about properties of media technologies and thereby raise questions about the intersections of science, technology and culture. Such a definition points to a qualitative difference in the understanding of media art. The medium in this definition of media art is not just a carrier of content but formative for the creation of meaning. Technology and culture are not seen as categorically separated but understood to be intricately linked. However, such a definition of media art can not be assumed to be universally shared.'' [http://kyberia.sk/id/2927577]
 +
 
 +
==Kember and Zylinska: After New Media (2012)==
 +
 
 +
===Murin: New Media (2000)===
 +
[[Michal Murin]] <ref>Michal Murin, "Nové médiá", in: ''Profil'' 4 (2000) pp. 4-5 (Slovak), [http://web.archive.org/web/20030714093943/http://profil-art.sk/00_4/004_005.htm (full text)] (Slovak)</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Rišková: New Media Art (2008)===
 +
[[Mária Rišková]] in <ref>Mária Rišková, "Agónia a extáza umenia nových médií", in: ''Flash Art'' Fall (2008) (Slovak)  [[Media:Rišková, Mária (2008) - Agónia a extáza nových médií.pdf|PDF]]</ref>: "Uznanie umenia nových médií ako relevantnej súčasti inštitucionalizovaných dejín vizuálneho umenia sa naplnilo, keď sa rozšíril termín ''media art'' (umenie médií, mediálne umenie), ktorý jasnejšie vytýčil pravidlá hry a uspokojil zástupcov konvenčných dejín umenia:
 +
* prepojil súčasné nové médiá s historickým vývojom = nové médiá sú pokračovateľom experimentov niektorých avantgárd (ktoré už dosiahli akceptáciu v akademických kruhoch)
 +
* akceptoval zaradenie autorov nepochádzajúcich z akademickej umeleckej scény do oblasti umenia
 +
* odstránil sporné adjektívum „nový“ a zhrnul pod „médiá“ už prediskutované pojmy multimediálneho a intermediálneho umenia = spolupôsobenie zvuku – obrazu – pohybu – času – procesu – priestoru...
 +
* prijal fenomény, ktorú už nemohol nikto v súčasnej kultúre prehliadať = interaktivita, úloha publika atď."
 +
 
 +
===Kera: New Media===
 +
[[Denisa Kera]] <ref>Denisa Kera, "Nová média", [http://artlist.cz/?id=149 (full text)] (Czech)</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Fabuš: New Media (2009)===
 +
[[Palo Fabuš]] <ref>Palo Fabuš, "The World Engufled by Technology: A Critique of New Media", in: ''Umělec'' 1 (2009), [http://www.divus.cz/umelec/article_page.php?set_lang=2&item=1519 (full text)] (English/Czech/German/Spanish)</ref>
 +
 
 +
===regional and national histories===
 +
; Books
 +
* '''Eastern and Central Europe'''. [[Stephen Kovats]] (ed.), ''Media Revolution. Electronic Media in the Transformation Process of Eastern and Central Europe''. (German title: Ost-West Internet.)  Edition Bauhaus 6, Campus Verlag, Frankfurt/M.  and New York, 1999. 381 pp., illus. (All texts Engl. and German.) ISBN:  3-593-36365-8.  With CD-Rom: Ostranenie 93 - 95 - 97. Bauhaus Dessau Foundation, Dessau, 1999. Mac & PC. ISBN: 3-910022-30-8, [http://www.campus-management.de/isbn/9783593363653/aggt/inhaltsverzeichnis]. [http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0003/msg00208.html Review by Andreas Broeckmann]
 +
* '''Slovakia'''. [[Katarína Rusnáková]], ''História a teória mediálneho umenia na Slovensku'', Bratislava: AFAD Press, 2006, (Slovak), with DVD
 +
* '''Czech Republic'''. ''Lanterna magika: nouvelles technologies dans l’art tchèque du XXe siècle = New technologies in Czech art of the 20th century'', Praha: KANT, 2002. — 261 p. — ISBN 8086217361, (French/Czech). Includes timeline on media arts in the Czech Republic since 1920.
 +
* '''flemish Belgium'''. [[Liesbeth Huybrechts]] (ed.), ''CROSS-over, een overzicht rond kunst, media en technologie in Vlaanderen'', BAM and Lannoo, 2008, [http://www.lannoo.be/content/lannoo/wbnl/listview/1/index.jsp?titelcode=14298&fondsid=10]
 +
* '''United Kingdom'''. [[Lucy Kimbell]] (ed.), ''New Media Art: Practice and Context in the UK, 1994-2004'', London and Manchester: Art's Council and Cornerhouse, 2004, [http://www.cornerhouse.org/books/info.aspx?ID=1427&page=0] ISBN: 0-94879-788-6 
 +
* '''Bulgaria'''. [[Dimitrina Sevova]] (ed.), ''Communication Front Book, Crossing Points East-West'', 2002, (Bulgarian/English), [http://www.cfront.org/cf00book/en/index.html]
 +
* '''Germany'''. [[Rudolf Frieling]] and [[Dieter Daniels]] (eds.), ''Media Art Action – The 1960s and 1970s in Germany'', commissioned by Goethe-Institut and ZKM Center for Art and Media, Vienna/New York: Springer, 1997, (German/English), plus CD-ROM, ISBN:3-211-82996-2
 +
* '''Germany'''. [[Rudolf Frieling]] and [[Dieter Daniels]] (eds.), ''Media Art Interaction – The 1980s and 1990s in Germany'', commissioned by Goethe-Institut and ZKM Center for Art and Media, Vienna/New York: Springer, 2000, (German/English), plus CD-ROM, ISBN: 3-211-83422-2
 +
 
 +
; Articles
 +
* '''Central and Eastern Europe'''. [[Rossitza Daskalova]], "The ground for net.art in the former Eastern Block (Central and Eastern Europe)", 2001, [http://www.ciac.ca/magazine/archives/no_12/en/dossier.html]
 +
* '''Croatia'''. [[Klaudio Štefanović]], "New Media Art in Croatia", 2007, [http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0807/msg00024.html]
 +
* '''Croatia'''.[[Darko Fritz]], "Media Arts in Croatia", [http://www.noemalab.org/sections/ideas/ideas_articles/pdf/fritz_media_art.pdf]
 +
** ''Response''. [[Ana Peraica]], "HR - A remark on art & technology research in regard to the place of origin taken as the state, place of living, as well as only a domain", [http://anarchiva.blogspot.com/2008/02/hr-remark-on-art-technology-research-in.html]
 +
* '''Slovenia'''. [[Marko Brumen]], "Intermedia arts in Slovenia", chapters: Timeline; Support infrastructure and funding; artists; producers; festivals; training and research; sources and bibliography, [http://www.culturalprofiles.org.uk/slovenia/Directories/Slovenia_Cultural_Profile/-7645.html]
 +
* '''Belgium'''. [[Dominique Moulon]], "Digital Art in Belgium", 2008, [http://www.newmediaart.eu/belgi.html]
 +
* '''United Kingdom'''. [[Pauline van Mourik Broekman]], "Waste Net, Want Not: Art and new media in 90s Britain", [http://radioqualia.va.com.au/artnetuknow/texts.html#pauline]
 +
* '''United Kingdom'''. [[Steve Dietz]], "British New Media Art", April 2004, [http://www.yproductions.com/writing/archives/british_new_media_art.html]
 +
* '''former Soviet Union'''. "Prometheus: Art, Science and Technology in the Former Soviet Union: Special Issue", ''Leonardo'', Vol. 27, No. 5 (1994), [http://www.jstor.org/stable/i270971]
 +
* '''Russia'''. "Media Art in Russia", ISEA Newsletter #95, January-February 2004, [http://homepage2.nifty.com/ISEA-Japan/inl/inl95.html], [http://homepage2.nifty.com/ISEA-Japan/inl/inl95a.html]
 +
* '''Hungary'''. [[Nina Czegledy]], "Media Art: The Hungarian Model", in: ''CIAC's Electronic Art Magazine'' 12 (2001) [http://www.ciac.ca/magazine/archives/no_12/en/site.html]
 +
* '''Romania'''. [[George Sabau]], "Contextual history of Kinema Ikon", 2005, [http://kinema-ikon.projects.v2.nl/pages/txt.htm]
 +
* '''Norway'''. "New media art in Norway - Overview", [http://www.culturalprofiles.net/Norway/Directories/Norway_Cultural_Profile/-2070.html]
 +
* '''Ukraine'''. [[Katya Stukalova]], ''Ukrajinské mediální umění - V očekávání'', in: ''Umělec'', 2005, (Czech), [http://www.divus.cz/umelec/cz/pages/umelec.php?id=1153&roc=2005&cis=3]
 +
* '''Lithuania'''. [[Renata Sukaityte]], "New Media Art in Lithuania", 2007, [http://193.171.60.44/dspace/handle/10002/410]
 +
* '''Albania'''. [[Geert Lovink]], "Media Art in Albania, First Steps. An Interview with Eduard Muka (Tirana)", 1996, [http://www.medialounge.net/lounge/workspace/deep_europe/DOCS/mail/0151.html]
 +
 
 +
==More writings ==
 +
* Má pojem nová média dnes ještě co říci? 2007 [http://okno.all2all.org/pipermail/mtp-teoria/2007-August/]
 +
* [[Media:The_Media_Book_2002.pdf|''The Media Book'']], Edited by Chris Newbold, Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Hilde Van den Bulck, © 2002 Arnold, Great Britain, Co-published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press Inc., 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY10016
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
{{Reflist|2}}
 +
 
 +
==Resources==
 +
 
 +
* http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~infoarts/links/wilson.artlinks2.html
 +
* http://www.netzwissenschaft.de/mob.htm
 +
* http://www.mediaartnet.org/
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 +
* [[Media art festivals|Festivals]]
 +
* [[Media art conferences|Conferences]]
 +
* [[Media culture mailing lists|Mailing lists]]
 +
* [[Media art academy programs|MA programs]]
 +
* [[Media art and culture PhD programs|PhD programs]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{{Humanities}}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{{Media art and culture}}

Latest revision as of 22:18, 25 April 2016

The term media art is useful and used for artistic projects bringing up the technological, aesthetical, social, cultural, legal and political issues that come along with the emergence of new media. Since 1990s the new media have included internet, web, mobiles, wireless, GPS, and others. Media culture in this regard uses and is used by new media.

Media art includes projects exploring technological and aeshetical of emerging tools and standards, such as video, computer, mobile devices, internet, software, code, computer games, streaming, GPS, sound production devices, or robotics. These projects usually focus on the manuevre limitations, stereotypes of perception, or aesthetics of these tools.

Looking at the media art and culture mailing lists, conferences and festivals, the current discussions are held on various topics, such as public domain and accessibility of data, software, and devices, democratisation of electromagnetic spectrum (open spectrum), social web (or web 2.0), protection of personal data and identity, and human rights, and deal with related social, cultural, legal and political issues.


Theories and definitions of media art[edit]

Wilson: Information Arts (2003)[edit]

Stephen Wilson in his Information Arts[1] offers classification of the works according to technologies used (counting 80+ categories).
Wilson integrates art and techno-scientific research with critical theory into "art as research".
Also: Boundary_objects_between_arthistory,_history_of_technology,_and_sociology#Stephen_Wilson.2C_Information_Arts_.282003.29

Manovich: New Media (2001)[edit]

Lev Manovich in The Language of New Media[2] moves from the materiality of new media to their forms.
In section Media and Computation I show that new media represents a convergence of two separate historical trajectories: computing and media technologies. Both begin in the 1830's with Babbage's Analytical Engine and Daguerre's daguerreotype. Eventually, in the middle of the twentieth century, a modern digital computer is developed to perform calculations on numerical data more efficiently; it takes over from numerous mechanical tabulators and calculators already widely employed by companies and governments since the turn of the century. In parallel, we witness the rise of modern media technologies which allow the storage of images, image sequences, sounds and text using different material forms: a photographic plate, a film stock, a gramophone record, etc. The synthesis of these two histories? The translation of all existing media into numerical data accessible for computers. The result is new media: graphics, moving images, sounds, shapes, spaces and text which become computable, i.e. simply another set of computer data. In Principles of New Media I look at the key consequences of this new status of media. Rather than focusing on familiar categories such as interactivity or hypermedia, I suggest a different list. This list reduces all principles of new media to five: numerical representation, modularity, automation, variability and cultural transcoding. In the section, What New Media is Not, I address other principles which are often attributed to new media [digitally encoded media is discrete in contrast to analog, different media types are displayable using one machine, random access, digitization inolves loss of information, endless copying w/o degradation of media, interactivity]. I show that these principles can already be found at work in older cultural forms and media technologies such as cinema, and therefore they are by themselves are not sufficient to distinguish new media from the old.

Response
  • Medosch: The history of media as told by Manovich appears to contain only unbroken continuity. For him, the Jacquard loom is a kind of predecessor of the computer because it could be 'programmed' to produce different ornaments using punctured strips. In typical technological deterministic thinking the logic of progress is at work, while human actors are sidelined. Lewis Mumford sees the Jacquard loom in a different light. According to Mumford aesthetic demands motivated the invention of the 'programmable' Jacquard loom - it were the complex patterns fashionable at the time which necessitated its invention (Trögemann and Viehoff 2005). Where Mumford sees human motivation, Manovich sees a 'logic' at work: from Daguerreotype and the Differential Engine (Babbage) to cinematograph, radar, television and computer, with the side-streams of the Hollerith machine, telegraphy, radio waves and wireless telegraphy. Yet Manovich never looses a word about where all those inventions come from. There is always a 'logic', a 'trajectory', some intrinsic reasons at work, why technology progresses in this or that way. Thus, technological progress becomes naturalised. Taking this to its final consequence, technological progress would be motivated by a teleology of which computer based (new) media appear as the provisional end point. [..]
    Lev Manovich claims that the aesthetic principles at work in new media culture have been developed by Russian and German avant-garde film makers in the 1920s.
    A hundred years after cinema's birth, cinematic ways of seeing the world, of structuring time, of narrating a story, of linking one experience to the next, have become the basic means by which computer users access and interact with all cultural data. (Manovich 2001, 78 -79)
    In particular Dziga Vertov's film The Man with a Movie Camera (1929) can be used as the guide to the understanding of the language of new media. In order to give the aesthetics of cinema such a privileged role in its influence on new media, he has to neutralise the key counter-argument, namely that computers are interactive. According to Manovich it is a non-statement to say that computers are interactive - they are so by their very nature (Manovich 2001, 55). He says that he would offer only qualified notions of interactivity, and that in principle all art forms are interactive (ibid., 56). With this conceptualisation he basically kills interactivity as a category specific to media art. In order to cement his key thesis that computer based media can be seen through the lens of 1920s avant-garde movies he introduces an extensive genealogy of the screen.
    VR, telepresence, and interactivity are made possible by the recent technology of the digital computer. However, they are made real by a much older technology, the screen. (Manovich 2001, 94).
    Only by dismissing interactivity and by making the screen the central component of new media art, he can say that Russian avant-garde cinema has laid the foundations for media art. Thus, a seemingly progressive position is turned into a conservative one. Manovich appears to suggest that aesthetic innovation ended 80 years ago whereas we now move forward in making more perfect technically what Vertov et al have achieved then. The revolutionary methods (in the 1920s) of montage, of zooms and pans, of the liberated and accelerated kino-eye have become menu functions in Photoshop. American software engineers are providing the public with drop-down menu access to the aesthetic innovations of the 1920s.
    [1]
  • Medosch about Batchen's critique. Geoffrey Batchen criticises Manovich for using cinema as the key conceptual lens through which to address the language of new media, ignoring the histories of photography and telegraphy (Batchen 2004). The use of 35mm discarded movie film by Zuse, the German inventor of the computer, is evidence enough for Manovich to see "all existing media translated into numerical data accessible for the computer."
    But the plausibility of this particular historical metaphor depends on two particular claims: 1. that computing and photo-media have no interaction until the 1930s, and 2. that cinema is the key to any understanding of the forms and development of new media.
    In his own account Batchen shows how closely the histories of the computer, photography and telegraphy were interwoven, partly because inventors such as William Fox Henry Talbot and Charles Babbage on one hand, and Samuel Morse and Louis Daguerre were in close contact with each other. According to Batchen four "inter-related technologies and their conceptual apparatuses - photography, mechanical weaving, computing and photo-mechanical printing" were first conceived around 1800 and need to be understood in the context of modernity, which means "capitalism, industrialisation, colonialism, patriarchy." It is important to note that Babbage and his assistant Ada Lovelace saw the computer as "a cultural artefact that enabled nature (and therefore God) to represent itself in the form of mathematical equations".
    That means that Babbage's calculating machines were seen as proof of the existence of God. Batchen concludes that any single 'conceptual lens' is inadequate and therefore also any linear chronology. He demands "a more complex rendition of the relations of past and present," "a threedimensional network of connections," a history "thick" with unpredictability which faces up to the "political challenge" about the way how history is written.
    [2]
  • Cubitt: is new media, are new media, unified by an intrinsic quality or field of qualities? Or is it perhaps their very modularity, variability, transcoding, that marks them out as a loose aggregation without a single defining presence? [3]
  • Holmes: what always irritated me in Manovich's writing was a kind of smug insistence that the new media were essentially defined by a certain kind of rhythm, a certain multiplication of screens, a certain connection to databases, etc. - in other words, that new media were essentially defined by the dominant trends of contemporary capitalist society. For me this seemed like a total abdication of criticism itself, and it also seemed to be a sort of cheerful, "I'm on the winning side" version of the dark technological determinism and philosophical doomsaying promoted by the post-Leftist thinkers in the wake of Baudrillard. What I missed was the very question of autonomy, and some recognition of its quasi-infinite complexities as they've been ceaselessly developing from the Neolithic to now, in the long and discontinuous series of messages passed from human world to human world. Imho, the poverty of new media art - its "crisis" - has intrinsically to do with poverty of media critique tout court. [4]
  • Looper: Manovich is not content to just define new media but to redefine old media (or traditional media) as well. He will charmingly dismiss photography as the “the art of the footprint”. The problematics of “reality” is then used to legitimate this arbitrary distaste. To give it an idealism it lacks. He is not just content to dismiss cinema as a “fuzzy” but wants to go further, to challenge this very definition of cinema, his own definition, he will go so far as to contradict this definition, to argue that cinema is (instead) not grounded in the art of the index, the art of the footprint, in fuzzies, wax museums or naturalism, but will have it’s origins in animation! From the point of view of deconstruction we could easily (if somewhat ungenerously) use Manovich’s own words against him, as if he were suggesting (and I challenge anyone to see how this reading does not follow), that cinema shows us animation is the art of the footprint (or vice versa). The solution for Manovich and others is that the cinema has at least two parents, a history of animation and a history of photography, neither of which can claim sole custody of their child. Photography itself has at least two parents: optics and alchemy. The cinema can be regarded as a case of what Deleuze might call a "disjunctive synthesis". The mutually exclusive definitions of cinema that Manovich and others might want to hold apart from each other, lest they come face to face, and implode, is without foundation. They will not implode. They did not implode. The result became the cinema. The new media supports a theoretical vector identifyable in some forms of cinema, particulartly early russian cinema, and perhaps the new media provides a better vehicle for such a vector. But the cinema also embodies other theoretical vectors for which the new media has only recently (strangely enough) adopted in a widespread manner: and that is those digital works created through digital cameras. The "fuzzies". The art of the footprint has entered the "new" media landscape as well. Manovich has recently retreated into the world of software programming - not a bad place to be. One can entertain all sorts of pure formalities in this domain. But even in this domain there is no real escape from the art of the footprint. The art of image analysis, the stuff of machine vision, google image search, xbox kinect. This sort of thing emerges from the art of the footprint, yet completely escapes Manovich's idealist definitions of new media and re-defintions of older media. To put it another way (rhetorically): if this stuff doesn't belong to new media where does it belong?

Penny (1993)[edit]

Simon Penny v texte "Consumer Culture and the Technological Imperative: The Artist in Dataspace"[3] hovori o digitalnom, pocitacovom a elektronickom umeni (pouziva ich ako synonyma) ako o spojnici troch historickych prudov: techniky (engineering), transnacionalneho komoditneho kapitalizmu, a tradicneho vytvarneho umenia. kedy digitalni medialni umelci pracuju s estetikou technologii, ktore su v kulture technologiami moci.
In many discussions of computer arts, the conversation has focused upon a dialectic between the sciences and the arts, a recapitulation of C. P. Snow's somewhat dated dualism. I want to insert a third term, without which such a discussion can have only limited relevance to contemporary culture: consumer commodity economics. [..] In this discussion, the terms "computer artists," "electronic media artists," and "artists who use technology" are used interchangeably, as I know of no useful and brief blanket term. There will be some specific reference to interactive media artpractice.

Response
  • Medosch adds to Penny's three fields another two: cultural industry (the Frankfurt School) and socio-political movements (activism). He treats "media art" as umbrella term, in analogy to above mentioned terms.
    To this list of Simon Penny (above) I would add two fields: the culture industry (Adorno 1991), now re-branded as the creative industry, and socio-political movements. The field of media art cannot be understood without asking which connections media art has with other fields in society. As Penny's choice of words suggests those 'forces' do have a strong influence on the field and sometimes it looks as if the combined power of those influences is so overwhelming that a core of media art is hard to identify. My personal position in this regard is that it is important to acknowledge those contextual links, yet to insist that media art is not reducible to the contextual relations it has. The field has historically always struggled to define its boundaries. Those boundary struggles are very revealing about the differentiation process of the field in relation to the art system, the overall political economy, the computer and telecommunications industry, the creative industries and political activism. Any more extensive mapping of the field would have to consider those relationships instead of trying to define an 'essence' of media art.[5] [6]

Medosch: Media Art (2005)[edit]

Medosch talks about media art being justified by its institutional context[4].
It is not a diffuse 'essence' of media art which justifies it to speak of it as a separate field but the existence of a system of institutions which are more or less exclusively concerned with it. Institutionally media art is characterised by the existence of two types of institutions. On one hand there are large festivals, such as Ars Electronica, since 1979 held in Linz, Austria, and large brickand-mortar institutions such as the ZKM in Karlsruhe, which attract major funding, organise big exhibitions and produce heavy catalogues. On the other hand there are many small institutions, sometimes called 'self-institutions' - so called media labs or hack labs - which have been thriving over the last 10 years, forming an alternative or 'unstable' field (Druckrey 2005) with increasingly world-wide connections and a more decentralised and networked approach. Whereas the large institutions face typical pressures for legitimisation such as demands to be instrumental in regional development, the world-wide network of small institutions often lives on shoe-string budgets mostly provided by state funding agencies. Some activities are not funded at all or are rather selffunded - made possible by the energy and work of participants. According to Bourdieu this area could be called a field of restricted production. Economically it is insignificant but discursively it is important. I am not trying to construct a binary opposition between two types of institutions and acknowledge the existence of many medium sized institutions and a lively transfer between the fields. However, it is important to state that there is an institutionalised field and that it is not homogenous but heterogeneous. [7]
The thesis is, in short, that certain founding fathers have succeeded in establishing media art institutionally but it was a pyrrhic victory. the language and 'philosophy' they have employed was about a fetishized notion of disembodied information and an equally fetishized notion of interactivity. Thus, they have failed to build solid theoretic and terminological foundations. Because of the internet being openend up their discoursive relevancy was over by 1995-96. Although some good things came afterwards this sort of foundational mistake has blighted the field and subsequently lead to the confusion and misunderstandings we find ourselves in now. [8]

Fuller: Media Ecologies[edit]

Lovink: New Media (2005)[edit]

Geert Lovink [5]

Gere: Art and Realtime Systems (2006)[edit]

Charlie Gere in Art, Time and Technology[6]: This book is concerned with the question of the role of art in the age of real-time systems. (By ‘art’ in this instance I generally refer to visual art, rather than literature, music or film for example.) The term ‘real-time systems’ refers to the information, telecommunication and (multi)media technologies that have come to play an increasingly important part in our lives, at least in the so-called ‘developed’ countries. [..] Real-time computing underpins the whole apparatus of communication and data processing by which our contemporary techno-culture operates. [..] ‘Real time’ can also stand for the more general trend toward instantaneity in contemporary culture, involving increasing demand for instant feedback and response, one result of which is that technologies themselves are beginning to evolve ever faster. [..] since the 1960s, artists have engaged seriously in the possibilities of realtime technologies for the making of art under various banners, including computer art, art and technology, new media art, and, most recently, net.art and internet art. [..] Another title for this book could be ‘the work of art in the age of realtime systems’.

Snow: Two Cultures (1959)[edit]

Lecture by C.P.Snow[7]

Lyotard: New materials (1979)[edit]

Lyotard in book La Condition Postmoderne (1979), in which he prophesised the end of the grand narratives, the end of man's control over being (Descartes), the end of the humanist tradition. In Les Immatériaux exhibition he curated he made the visitor realise that the existence of new materials (new technologies, computerized spaces, internet) would alter man's relationship with the world even more extremely. These 'new materials' would force him to recognize that the old Cartesian programme of mastering and posses¬sing nature was history. These 'new materials' were not, as Lyotard explained, materials that are new, but materials that 'work' or 'talk' themselves and thus question the idea of Man being the only one who works, talks, plans and remembers. Goods, images and signs themselves generate new processes, resulting in ever new goods, images, signs and meanings. The sphere of influence of these processes extend far beyond the conscious intentions and interpretations of those who make and absorb it. This is the most fascinating proof of the ability of 'a work' to work and to affect its own operations. It has a 'life' of its own.

Grau: Media Art (2007)[edit]

Oliver Grau in MediaArtHistories - ? [8]

Response
  • Kluitenberg [9] (German)
  • Kluetsch [10] (German)
  • Frost [11]

Grau: Virtual Art (2003)[edit]

Oliver Grau in Virtual Art[9]: Media art, that is, video, computer graphics and animation, Net-art, interactive art in its most advanced form of virtual art with its subgenres of telepresence art and genetic art, is beginning to dominate theories of the image and art. [..] Media artists represent a new type of artist, who not only sounds out the aesthetic potential of advanced methods of creating images and formulates new options of perception and artistic positions in this media revolution, but also specifically researches innovative forms of interaction and interface design, thus contributing to the development of the medium in key areas, both as artists and as scientists. [..] However, a central argument of this book is that the idea of installing an observer in a hermetically closed-off image space of illusion did not make its first appearance with the technical invention of computer-aided virtual realities. On the contrary, virtual reality forms part of the core of the relationship of humans to images. It is grounded in art traditions, which have received scant attention up to now, that, in the course of history, suffered ruptures and discontinuities, were subject to the specific media of their epoch, and used to transport content of a highly disparate nature. Yet the idea goes back at least as far as the classical world, and it now reappears in the immersion strategies of present-day virtual art. Further, it is the intention of this book to trace the aesthetic conception of virtual image spaces, their historical genesis, including breaks, through various stages of Western art history. It begins with the broad, primarily European tradition of image spaces of illusion, which was found mainly in private country villas and town houses, like the cult frescoes of the Villa dei Misteri in Pompeii, the garden frescoes in the Villa Livia near Primaporta (ca. 20 b.c.), the Gothic fresco room, the Chambre du Cerf, and the many examples of Renaissance illusion spaces, such as the Sala delle Prospettive. [..] [After demise of the panorama,] technology was applied in the attempt to integrate the image and the observer: stereoscope, Cine´orama, stereoptic television, Sensorama, Expanded Cinema, 3-D, Omnimax, and IMAX cinema, as well as the head-mounted display with its military origins. [..] attention [of this book] centers on 360-degree images, such as the fresco rooms, the panorama, circular cinema, and computer art in the CAVE: media that are the means whereby the eye is addressed with a totality of images. This book engages with media in the history of art that concentrate on immersive image spaces. [..] The image spaces and media discussed here are the subject of many treatises, but never before have they been examined in the context of an art-historical analysis of the concept of immersion. So far, there has been no historically comparative or systematic theoretical approach to virtual realities.

Frieling and Daniels: Media Art (2005)[edit]

Rudolf Frieling and Dieter Daniels: media art is "by definition multimedia, time-based or process-oriented"[10]
We pointed out the special qualities of media art reception in the introduction to Media Art Net 1. This applies both to direct knowledge of the artworks and also their technological and theoretical context; we would like to sum this up succinctly in the following three theses:

  • 1. Media art must be conveyed multimedially so that its time-based, processual and interactive aspects can be understood.
  • 2. Media art needs a special theory that combines competencies from art theory, media science and media technology.
  • 3. Multimedia presentation and special theory are mutually dependent; they have to relate to each other and be published on a joint platform.

To these we can now add a fourth thesis as the sum of our past experiences:

  • 4. Contexts can be created and presented only through the Net: the idea of networking the competencies of curators, academics, mediators and institutions met with a great deal of willingness to cooperate. So finally, thanks to these many collaborators, it was possible to finance a large number of additional themes, projects and materials. Here the bandwidth of the approaches, which were often very heterogenous in terms of method, first reflects existing divergencies of theory and practice. But at the same time the joint, collectively filled data pool, starting from the work, makes it possible to respond to these works and to make them productive in this way. Cross-links between the text were built in editorially. This led to an intensification process that we often found remarkable; it crystallized out from multiple references to a whole series of older, but also more recent artistic positions.

Weibel: Digital Image (1984)[edit]

Peter Weibel[11] claims "Futurism, Cubism, Cubofuturism, Suprematism, Dadaism, Surrealism, etc." to be conceptual precursors of media art. New art forms emerging after WW2 such as "action painting, Fluxus, Happening, Pop Art, Kinetism, Op-Art, Ambiente, Arte Povera, actions, performances, etc.," are enlisted to the cause of preparing the ground for the 'liberated' digital image.

Ascott (2003)[edit]

Roy Ascott in Telematic Embrace - ? [12]

Druckrey (2007)[edit]

Timothy Druckrey at Media Art Undone conference presentation [13]:
The more specific question for us in terms of the media arts have to do with the evolution - let's say since the 60s - from phases. I'm not making this categorical phases, but a kind of a test case, which is a kind of shift from this first phase, which I call the phase of ambiguity, which was the sort of phase of the 60s and maybe into the middle 80s, when electronic arts, computer arts seemed ambiguous and certain had no real focus and were just kind of playful. And yet underneath it we know there were some serious thinking being done, and you can start to undertsand by a series of exhibitions that there's kind of a re-thinking of this period of the 60s, the exhibition at the ZKM now called Buffalo MindFrames which talks about the experimental terlevision experiments from the 60s, of Paul Sharits and Stan Brakhage and Weibel and Vasulka and the James Blue and others. That this material finally started to be on earth for us again and we have to sort of confront the transition that happend in the 60s to 80s from film to video, video to computer and then this kind of second period, if I can say it, which is a kind of period which I call the proliferation period, let's say it's from the late 80s to the 90s in which there was kind of an explotion, everybody was doing it, everybody was faster by it, we finally and very sadly inherited this really hard name for it - new media, a phrase that I hate more than anything else in the world.
New for me means something that is instanteneous forgetting, the new is about erasure for me, the new is about a relentless present, the new is about no reflection, it's about singularity, it's a slogan of the advertising campaign and the fact that we use it has been damageable for fifteen years. I hope you understand that.
In this phase, this proliferation of festivals happen, the locations of subcategories, some of them that Olia talks about, these subcategories which have also for me undermined the basic idea that we have a kind of a large-scale set of intentions that are connected to eachother. Once you create these subcategories - what did she say - blog art, net art, software art - for me it really undermines our project in a very specific way and makes us even more marginal, more elite, more differentiated, more unwilling to sort of see that our project is actually a comprehensive project.
And now let's say there is this third project, a third phase, which is this phase of ubiquity. It's a period where we now have to start to understand that once the status of the medium reaches into every atmosphere of culture, then our job is even harder than it's ever been. And therefore it's more urgent for us to sort of come to terms of understanding that we are neither autonomous nor assimilated without pardon and we're not just another spin of the wheel that there's a sense in which the stagings of the media that we work within -and I've really considered very deeply - are slightly different than the fact that everybody has access, everybody has gadgets, everybody has hardware, everybody has cellphones with cameras and the new iPhone, everybody's integrated, because I kind of feel like preferring the unintegrated and I will fight always not to be integrated into that system. It's a niche that I don't really want to live in. So, if we look back into these phases, this kind of history of the 21st century and think about the way that the media - by the way a term that is profoundly complex, but I can't find an alternative - but if we look back into this, we understand that the theories of the media evolved from the culture theory of the 1930s to the consciousness media of the 1950s, and now integrated in a way into the, what's been called, the creative industries and this for me is the final incorporation of what happens to media.

Tribe and Jana: New Media Art (2006)[edit]

Mark Tribe and Reena Jana in New Media Art[14]: New Media art and older categorical names like "Digital art," "Computer art," "Multimedia art," and "Interactive art" are often used interchangeably, but for the purposes of this book we use the term New Media art to describe projects that make use of emerging media technologies and are concerned with the cultural, political, and aesthetic possibilities of these tools. We locate New Media art as a subset of two broader categories: Art and Technology and Media art. Art and Technology refers to practices, such as Electronic art, Robotic art, and Genomic art, that involve technologies which are new but not necessarily media-related. Media art includes Video art, Transmission art, and Experimental Film -- art forms that incorporate media technologies which by the 1990s were no longer new. New Media art is thus the intersection of these two domains. We chose to limit the scope of this book to work that was made after the term New Media art was broadly adopted in 1994, and to focus on works that are particularly influential, that exemplify an important domain of New Media art practice, and that display an exceptional degree of conceptual sophistication, technological innovation, or social relevance. Deciding what counts as media technology is a difficult task. The Internet, which is central to many New Media art projects, is itself composed of a heterogeneous and constantly changing assortment of computer hardware and software?servers, routers, personal computers, database applications, scripts, and files?all governed by arcane protocols, such as HTTP, TCP/IP, and DNS. Other technologies that play a significant role in New Media art include video and computer games, surveillance cameras, wireless phones, hand-held computers, and Global Positioning System (GPS) devices. But New Media art is not defined by the technologies discussed here; on the contrary, by deploying these technologies for critical or experimental purposes, New Media artists redefine them as art media. In the hands of Radical Software Group (RSG), for example, data surveillance software, similar to that used by the United States' Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), becomes a tool for artistic data visualization. In addition to exploring the creative possibilities of this software, RSG develops a critique of surveillance technology and its uses. According to the authors, contemporary new media art pieces tend to deal with themes such as collaboration, identity, appropriation and open sourcing, telepresence and surveillance, corporate parody, as well as intervention and hactivism.

Paul: Digital Art (2003)[edit]

Christiane Paul v Digital Art[15] rozlisuje medzi umenim, ktore pouziva digitalne technologie ako nastroje pre tvorbu tradicnych umeleckych objektov (fotografia, tlac, socha, hudba) a umenim, pre ktore su tieto technologie jeho vlastnym mediom, v ktorom je produkovane, zaznamenavane a prezentovane a ktoreho interaktivne a participativne vlastnosti taketo umenie vyuziva.

Response
  • Medosch: I would tentatively add to Christiane Paul's definition that many works of media art contain an element of self-referentiality; that they are not just 'using' a medium but also questioning and challenging its boundaries; that they try to make implicit or explicit statements about properties of media technologies and thereby raise questions about the intersections of science, technology and culture. Such a definition points to a qualitative difference in the understanding of media art. The medium in this definition of media art is not just a carrier of content but formative for the creation of meaning. Technology and culture are not seen as categorically separated but understood to be intricately linked. However, such a definition of media art can not be assumed to be universally shared. [12]

Kember and Zylinska: After New Media (2012)[edit]

Murin: New Media (2000)[edit]

Michal Murin [16]

Rišková: New Media Art (2008)[edit]

Mária Rišková in [17]: "Uznanie umenia nových médií ako relevantnej súčasti inštitucionalizovaných dejín vizuálneho umenia sa naplnilo, keď sa rozšíril termín media art (umenie médií, mediálne umenie), ktorý jasnejšie vytýčil pravidlá hry a uspokojil zástupcov konvenčných dejín umenia:

  • prepojil súčasné nové médiá s historickým vývojom = nové médiá sú pokračovateľom experimentov niektorých avantgárd (ktoré už dosiahli akceptáciu v akademických kruhoch)
  • akceptoval zaradenie autorov nepochádzajúcich z akademickej umeleckej scény do oblasti umenia
  • odstránil sporné adjektívum „nový“ a zhrnul pod „médiá“ už prediskutované pojmy multimediálneho a intermediálneho umenia = spolupôsobenie zvuku – obrazu – pohybu – času – procesu – priestoru...
  • prijal fenomény, ktorú už nemohol nikto v súčasnej kultúre prehliadať = interaktivita, úloha publika atď."

Kera: New Media[edit]

Denisa Kera [18]

Fabuš: New Media (2009)[edit]

Palo Fabuš [19]

regional and national histories[edit]

Books
  • Eastern and Central Europe. Stephen Kovats (ed.), Media Revolution. Electronic Media in the Transformation Process of Eastern and Central Europe. (German title: Ost-West Internet.) Edition Bauhaus 6, Campus Verlag, Frankfurt/M. and New York, 1999. 381 pp., illus. (All texts Engl. and German.) ISBN: 3-593-36365-8. With CD-Rom: Ostranenie 93 - 95 - 97. Bauhaus Dessau Foundation, Dessau, 1999. Mac & PC. ISBN: 3-910022-30-8, [13]. Review by Andreas Broeckmann
  • Slovakia. Katarína Rusnáková, História a teória mediálneho umenia na Slovensku, Bratislava: AFAD Press, 2006, (Slovak), with DVD
  • Czech Republic. Lanterna magika: nouvelles technologies dans l’art tchèque du XXe siècle = New technologies in Czech art of the 20th century, Praha: KANT, 2002. — 261 p. — ISBN 8086217361, (French/Czech). Includes timeline on media arts in the Czech Republic since 1920.
  • flemish Belgium. Liesbeth Huybrechts (ed.), CROSS-over, een overzicht rond kunst, media en technologie in Vlaanderen, BAM and Lannoo, 2008, [14]
  • United Kingdom. Lucy Kimbell (ed.), New Media Art: Practice and Context in the UK, 1994-2004, London and Manchester: Art's Council and Cornerhouse, 2004, [15] ISBN: 0-94879-788-6
  • Bulgaria. Dimitrina Sevova (ed.), Communication Front Book, Crossing Points East-West, 2002, (Bulgarian/English), [16]
  • Germany. Rudolf Frieling and Dieter Daniels (eds.), Media Art Action – The 1960s and 1970s in Germany, commissioned by Goethe-Institut and ZKM Center for Art and Media, Vienna/New York: Springer, 1997, (German/English), plus CD-ROM, ISBN:3-211-82996-2
  • Germany. Rudolf Frieling and Dieter Daniels (eds.), Media Art Interaction – The 1980s and 1990s in Germany, commissioned by Goethe-Institut and ZKM Center for Art and Media, Vienna/New York: Springer, 2000, (German/English), plus CD-ROM, ISBN: 3-211-83422-2
Articles
  • Central and Eastern Europe. Rossitza Daskalova, "The ground for net.art in the former Eastern Block (Central and Eastern Europe)", 2001, [17]
  • Croatia. Klaudio Štefanović, "New Media Art in Croatia", 2007, [18]
  • Croatia.Darko Fritz, "Media Arts in Croatia", [19]
    • Response. Ana Peraica, "HR - A remark on art & technology research in regard to the place of origin taken as the state, place of living, as well as only a domain", [20]
  • Slovenia. Marko Brumen, "Intermedia arts in Slovenia", chapters: Timeline; Support infrastructure and funding; artists; producers; festivals; training and research; sources and bibliography, [21]
  • Belgium. Dominique Moulon, "Digital Art in Belgium", 2008, [22]
  • United Kingdom. Pauline van Mourik Broekman, "Waste Net, Want Not: Art and new media in 90s Britain", [23]
  • United Kingdom. Steve Dietz, "British New Media Art", April 2004, [24]
  • former Soviet Union. "Prometheus: Art, Science and Technology in the Former Soviet Union: Special Issue", Leonardo, Vol. 27, No. 5 (1994), [25]
  • Russia. "Media Art in Russia", ISEA Newsletter #95, January-February 2004, [26], [27]
  • Hungary. Nina Czegledy, "Media Art: The Hungarian Model", in: CIAC's Electronic Art Magazine 12 (2001) [28]
  • Romania. George Sabau, "Contextual history of Kinema Ikon", 2005, [29]
  • Norway. "New media art in Norway - Overview", [30]
  • Ukraine. Katya Stukalova, Ukrajinské mediální umění - V očekávání, in: Umělec, 2005, (Czech), [31]
  • Lithuania. Renata Sukaityte, "New Media Art in Lithuania", 2007, [32]
  • Albania. Geert Lovink, "Media Art in Albania, First Steps. An Interview with Eduard Muka (Tirana)", 1996, [33]

More writings[edit]

  • Má pojem nová média dnes ještě co říci? 2007 [34]
  • The Media Book, Edited by Chris Newbold, Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Hilde Van den Bulck, © 2002 Arnold, Great Britain, Co-published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press Inc., 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY10016

References[edit]

  1. Stephen Wilson, Information Arts: intersections of art, science, and technology, MIT Press, 2003, (online), (full book), (google books)
  2. Lev Manovich, The Language of New Media, Cambridge: MIT Press, 2001, (online), (full book), (google books), (excerpt)
  3. Simon Penny, "Consumer Culture and the Technological Imperative: The Artist in Dataspace", 1993 (full article), in: Simon Penny (ed.), Critical issues in electronic media, SUNY Press, 1995, (google books)
  4. Armin Medosch, "Technological Determinism in Media Art", 2005, (full text), (excerpt)
  5. Geert Lovink "New Media, Art and Science: Explorations beyond the Official Discourse", 2005, (full text)
  6. Charlie Gere, Art, Time and Technology, Berg, 2006, (full book)
  7. C.P.Snow, "The Two Cultures", 1959, (full text) wikipedia
  8. Oliver Grau (ed.), MediaArtHistories, Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2007
  9. Oliver Grau, Virtual Art: From Illusion to Immersion, Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2003, (full book)
  10. Rudolf Frieling, Dieter Daniels (eds.), Media art net 2: Thematische Schwerpunkte/Key Topics, Springer, 2005, (online), (google books)
  11. Peter Weibel, "On the History and Aesthetics of the Digital Image", 1984, (full text), (excerpt)
  12. Roy Ascott, Telematic Embrace: Visionary Theories of Art, Technology, and Consciousness, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003, (full book)
  13. Timothy Druckrey, Media Art Undone conference presentation, 2007, (full text) (discussion)
  14. Mark Tribe and Reena Jena, New Media Art, Taschen/Brown, 2006, (full text)
  15. Christiane Paul, Digital Art (World of Art series), London: Thames and Hudson, 2003, (online), (commentary)
  16. Michal Murin, "Nové médiá", in: Profil 4 (2000) pp. 4-5 (Slovak), (full text) (Slovak)
  17. Mária Rišková, "Agónia a extáza umenia nových médií", in: Flash Art Fall (2008) (Slovak) PDF
  18. Denisa Kera, "Nová média", (full text) (Czech)
  19. Palo Fabuš, "The World Engufled by Technology: A Critique of New Media", in: Umělec 1 (2009), (full text) (English/Czech/German/Spanish)

Resources[edit]

See also[edit]


Studies

Anthropology, Art history, History of architecture, Biomechanics, Classics, Commons, Cultural techniques, Cyberfeminism, Cybernetics, Decolonial aesthetics, Design research, Digital humanities, Information theory, Marxist aesthetics, Media archaeology, Media ecology, Mediology, Modern periodical studies, Neuroaesthetics, Neural aesthetics, Philosophy of technology, Posthumanities, Postmedia, Poststructuralism, Semiotics, Sensory ethnography, Software studies, Structuralism, Systems theory
Writers.


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