thought #16
"WEB 2.0" AS A NEW
CONTEXT FOR ARTISTIC PRACTICES
By Juan
Martin Prada
- and published here with his kind permission.
1. The inclusive logic of "Web 2.0"
The economic model for what is called "Web 2.0" is based on
promoting the desire to share and exchange things, an attempt to
make profits from the voluntary collaboration of its users and its
potential for compiling data and making them available to the
public. The new companies operating on the Internet base their role
on promoting cooperative communities and managing access to the data
and files contributed. This business model increasingly tends not to
sell any product at all to the consumer, but rather sells the
consumer to the product, integrating the user and the files he or
she contributes into the actual service being offered.
The user and his or her contributions are the main content being
distributed by networks. They channel and use as an economic force
the desire felt by a multitude of users to be part of social
networks, to share and make public their interests, to dialogue, to
communicate with others, to express themselves publicly, to feel
useful, and to cooperate. That is, what is exploited (if we can
understand something like that happening today in the field of
networks) is users' capacity to produce sociability and their desire
to do so. Now the actual user (instead of only his or her needs) is
the true origin and destination of new technological developments.
The inclusive logic of Web 2.0 is based on an elementary principal:
the more users there are, the better a given application or social
network will be. That is, there is a value to volume. The
quantitative becomes qualitative in this second stage of the Web.
And since the quantitative is one of the key elements of today's
production, it is understandable that the new companies on Web 2.0
are striving to generate a need for belonging and participation, to
stimulate our need to feel tied to a group, a digital community, to
collaborate and contribute things to share them on the new social
networks (be they videos, photographs, comments, etc.). One thing we
must keep in mind is that even those people who do not want to
contribute to the conformation of these gigantic collective
databases will do so collaterally by using them, involuntarily
increasing the value of those applications because the routes they
use will be offered as orientative data for other users. For example,
on many Web sites, once a user has purchased something, he or she is
offered information about what products other people bought, what
they were interested in, and so on. The way Web 2.0 works is based
on managing to add the user to the available information. That is
why it has been so often said that today, we are all turning into
software components or "bionic software", and that Web applications
"have people inside them". A recurring simile is comparing Web 2.0
to the 18th century automaton that played chess because a person was
hidden inside it[1].
The "input" for the new Web is the users themselves; however, that
does not mean that there is open possession of the databases they
generate. Although the majority can be used freely, they are the
property of the company that manages them, which also holds the
rights to how they will be used in future. This has led to intense
criticism, leading to the inevitable development of an intense
parallel movement to the one for "free software": the movement for "free
data".
The fact that the central axis of Web 2.0 today is the production
and management of social networks proves that it brings together
social and economic production. Companies on the new Web try to
produce social life, human relations, in an extremely profitable
strategy that does not distinguish among the economic, emotional,
political and cultural. The design of forms of human relations
comprises the instrumental base of production. The new businesses of
today are the new economy of the immaterial.
The promotion of collective experiences of users, the enhancement of
emotional interactions among participants, and making the
aggregation of information originating in those networks based on
affinity groups possible has required the development of huge
efforts to advance in "social software". That refers to software
used to manage the needs and potentials of aggregating data,
exchanges and communicative interactions among users in the on-line
social networks.
In this respect, identifying art works as "social software", which
would seem to fit with what we may understand by the term "net.art
2.0", would influence the idea that the most committed art practice
would aim to reconfigure the ways in which personal and social
interactions take place on today's Internet Web. Of course, many of
the principles of what was called more or less improperly "Relational
aesthetics" are found, in fact, in the area of the new networks, one
of its best possible fields for future development.
2. Power 2.0
With the process of involvement and inclusion of individuals in
economic production and subjective systems which are part of the
Web, the new forms of power today are trying to organize our entire
lives. In the current network society, power blends into life,
becoming abstract. It is no longer exercised over individuals;
instead, it circulates through them (we all more or less consciously
make it
circulate) with the result that it seems logical that the most
effective devices for the exercise of power are based on
participatory logic, on flows of social activity.
In contrast to efforts at homogenization, of treating everyone in
the same way, the economic logic of Web 2.0 is based on
differentiating and singling out each procedure or allowing each
person to use it their own way. The goal is for there to be nothing
we can be against, by offering a super-abundance of free choices and
freely taken decisions. There is a proliferation of constant
strategic games of personal initiatives and freedom. The system aims
to correspond to the multiplicity of singularities forming the
connected multitude by forcing the multitude into submission through
its involuntary conversion into a transmitter of the new forms of
power.
However, in this second stage of the Web, we should speak not of
power but of the relations of power, given that dominion is not a
unilateral relation here, but rather it operates through power plays
that are mobile, unstable, based on diffuse circulation strategies
and the transmission of individual initiatives and freedom.
We could even say that in the context of the new culture of digital
participation, politics can only be conceived properly as the
organization of social interactions. Ideally, the most appropriate
political model would be that inherent to the connected multitude
itself, self-organizing its interactions in the full exercise of its
decision and participation possibilities. The autonomy of politics,
as a notion that implies separation or representativity, would thus
no longer have any meaning. This political and social model would
begin to take form today in those forms of organization distributed
in networks, in the multiplicity of all the connected singularities,
characterized by that Spinozan thought, where beings are constituted
through desire, through the pleasure of being alive.
3. "Amateur" creativity
If we look back in time to the beginning of the Internet network,
the contents it offered were generated by professional suppliers who
incorporated a variety of information on their Web sites, and users
were essentially consumers of that information. On Web 2.0, in
contrast, many service platforms such as Myspace, Youtube or Flickr,
allow their users to participate in community, collaborating and
sharing files, photographs, videos, etc. They even transform and
re-edit them (e.g., Jumpcut) in such a way that users are no longer
mere consumers of information but also suppliers of contents.
Therefore, ideally, Web 2.0 would be a Web "for" users and also
generated "by" users, on the basis that any of its services improves
if more people use it. Essential catalysts of this process are the
large blogs for uploading photographs and videos, as well as the
huge development of "do it yourself" platforms proliferating on the
Web.
The fact that anyone can be a producer and distributor of visual and
audiovisual materials of all kinds has led to an unstoppable,
intense "amateurization" process of the creative practices that
statistically comprise a significant part of the contents available
on-line. This "amateurization" is clearly a contrast to the
professionalism that characterized the 20th century on all levels.
In today's world, that former concept of a given individual as the
exclusive location of "artistic talent" and the accompanying
suppression of that talent among the "great masses" no longer has
any meaning. It increasingly belongs to the past, following the
extreme attenuation of all divisions of work (which Marx saw as the
main cause of that suppression).
Undeniably, many hopes have always been focused on the conversion of
consumers into producers of means. For Guy Debord, to cite one
example, there was no possibility of freedom in the use of time
unless one possessed modern instruments for constructing everyday
life. Only through their use, he said, could one progress "from a
utopian revolutionary art to an experiential revolutionary art"[2].
Hardt and Negri proposed the conversion of the multitude into an
autonomous agent of production and that could be channelled through
trying to achieve free access to and control over the primary means
of biopolitical production, which would also involve the production
of subjective means. Those are knowledge, information, communication,
and emotions which certainly constitute the primary elements of the
production fabric of our time.
An increasingly minor part of aesthetic innovations occur nowadays
in a professional or industrial environment. Many of those aesthetic
innovations occur in the "social fabric" formed by users; that is,
after industrial production[3]. That is why there has been talk of
an emerging process of "democratization of innovation"[4], or of "open
innovation"[5], related to the "customer-made" formula. It implies
an active connection between companies and users in the production
of goods and services. What is happening is that this way, consumers
are becoming producers of certain products, which means they are
both consumer and producer, giving rise to the newly coined term "prosumers".
The contradiction between producers and consumers is certainly not
inherent to current digital means. And while that is true for
creative fields, it is even more so in information technology
environments. The "blog phenomenon" is clearly the best example of
the emergence of massive "amateurization" of the production of
information and opinion. Almost all of the large information media
include a section for blogs or even what some call "citizen
journalism" or "participatory journalism". Spaces like Wikinews[6]
have proliferated, where information and articles are written by
readers, and they can decide what news they want covered.
However, many people see this growing hegemony of the amateur as a
danger, considering the cultural model of Web 2.0 to be an "oclocracy";
that is, mob rule, one of the specific ways democracy can
degenerate[7]. These standpoints rest on the suspicion that society,
though it has all the media at its disposal, has nothing to say, or
worse, is "unable to make the necessary social use of them"[8].
Faced with these issues, it seems only sensible to view the field of
participation that was opened by the evolution of networks as a
horizon full of possibilities for achieving many of the social and
political objectives that Debord and Enzensberger, among many others,
set forth decades ago. Moreover, we can say that the Web today may
have reached a first stage of true fulfilment of its communicative
and social possibilities, offering us a glimpse of what may someday
become actual proof of Dan Gillmor's statement that identified "us"
with "the media" ("We, the media")[9].
At the political level, the new collaborative paradigm of the second
stage of the Web protagonized by that connected multitude that
expresses itself and shares on networks is one of the clearest steps
toward the effective existence of a social model that considers a "democracy
of the multitude" (in keeping with the thought of Occam, Marsilius
of Padua, or Spinoza, among others) as the absolute form of politics.
Accepting this standpoint, the connected multitude, an infinite
multiplicity of active singularities, could be considered in its
most emancipatory and creative potentials, as the origin of a
politics not over life but of life, that is, a clear example of the
introduction of "the power of life"[10] into politics.
The connected multitude poses no threat to individualism, given that
homogenization is not a part of its constitution. It is a multitude
that has nothing to do with the concept of "the masses" which played
a major part in political thought in the past. To the contrary, we
should consider its presence as our most efficient, promising
possibility for resistance in the face of attempts at an
undifferentiated unification, attempts at the destruction of
individual singularity that has always been the goal of the
traditional mass communication media.
However, one inevitably must admit that "amateur" creative
production is plagued with repetition and imitation, as examples of
singularity in that milieu are statistically extremely scarce in
relation to the number of participants. However, behind the
repetition and what is of no interest we should also be able to see
the vitality underlying that show of free creation and public
sharing, as well as imagining with Blochian hope all that it
promises. For there is nothing sterile about this intensification of
creativity on everyone's part; nor about the independence of their
productions from any professional context of receivers and any
compensation other than that of making those creations available to
the public, free of charge.
On the Web, a whole new field of social opportunities is arising
from the creative and communicative potentials that are taking form
in the infinite number of social networks and cooperatives that make
up Web 2.0. This progressive indifferentiation between information
transmitters and receivers means, above all, that the production of
representation and the ordering and organization of contents is no
longer a monopoly of professionalized sectors.
Anthropologically speaking, the most important characteristic of the
majority of the images and videos we see on photoblogs and
videoblogs is that they do not depict other, possible worlds or even
variations and extensions of this one. Instead, the images portray
the world we inhabit. They are images of our life in this world,
life that aims to intensify itself through permanent
self-representations and visual records of events and pleasure.
Millions of photographs and videos of all kinds of things and
moments have escaped from their former privacy in private albums and
are now available to millions of people. A community is thus created
of people taking part in a representation that fundamentally is also
a reflection of themselves.
Each photograph, each video that is uploaded onto the Web is a small
sample of its authors' lives. In sharing it, they are trying to pass
along their enthusiasm to others. Their aim, beyond publicly
communicating any particular experience, may be to feel a certain
kind of "communion" with many others in the experience they share
through that file. For all expressions of life, especially all
images of pleasure, always seek the confirmation of their experience
through the figure of the collective, and at this time that is
completely possible.
In this new context, the most effective criticism can only now be
conceived in terms of creating something new, as a production of
alternative imagined realms. Maybe we should even accept that we can
now only interpret the world by transforming it, recreating it. The
clearest foundations for the proposal are to be found, without a
doubt, in Foucault, for whom political resistance, conceptualized
only in terms of negation, would represent only a minimally
effective form. Thus, resistance should be understood as the
creation of new forms of life, of a new culture, where minorities
should affirm themselves "not only as far as their identity but also
as a creative force"[11]. They also propose the development of an
alternative ontological base, centred and sustained by the
multitude's creative and productive practices, for its constituting
force would be the product of its creative imagination, which would
configure its own constitution[12].
The development of the participatory possibilities of the Web today
has certainly facilitated the construction of new circuits of value
and meaning charged with great creative autonomy and a notable
subversive capacity. The creative potentials of the diversity of the
connected multitude hold great potential which is already being
activated. And that given the fact that almost all offers for
participation in the current Web are formed by a studied system of
economic management. The development of that huge power to create
and share is incomparably more important in the new stage of the Web
than anything that business parasites can obtain from it. The
possibilities of production of differentiation and singularity that
appear on the networks are much more powerful than the patterns of
repetition and imitation of stereotypical commercial and
professional models which, statistically, comprise the majority of
contents on those networks.
However, many detractors of Web 2.0 see that interest in other
people's images, videos, experiences, opinions and private lives as
similar to what already happened with the "Big Brother" television
phenomenon. A certain fascination for what is not worth reading,
seeing, or hearing, which means the Web is being filled with records
of completely irrelevant events, following the overbearing logic of
"you are the information".
What is definitely happening is an abandonment of privacy at all
levels, perhaps because we are increasingly less able to understand
it and value it, given that it practically does not exist in our
lives. Today the multitude of users on the large participatory Web
platforms upload videos and photographs of their most personal
experiences, making them public, showing no hesitation but rather
enjoyment in giving access to images of their private life to anyone
who comes across them or looks for them. Perhaps an explanation lies
in a certain effect of a new stage in the process of exteriorization.
In the 1960s, McLuhan pointed out that people were beginning to wear
their brains outside their skulls and their nerves outside their
skin[13], and subsequently there was an enormous exteriorization of
memory through the development of personal digital storage systems.
Today that exteriorization has taken another step, where users store
things in memory systems they do not even own. That is, the
collective memories of the large Web 2.0 platforms that have become
gigantic files, eliminating any relation of necessity or dependence
linking privacy and a space that is private or with limited access.
A new challenge of the utmost importance in the field of "non-amateur"
creation is posed by the fact that much of the visual production
that is enjoyed and shared on the networks is not made by
professionals in image-making fields. We might say that today one
gets a glimpse of what Rousseau proposed in his Carta a d'Alembert
(1758), where he suggested that public festivities replace
theatrical performances. "Place a post crowned with flowers in the
centre of a town square, gather the townspeople, and you will have a
party. Do something even
better: offer the audience as the performance; turn them into the
actors"[14].
4. Art 2.0?
Admitting that Rousseau's idea fits the present does not
mean that the role of the artist has dissolved in the infinite
stream of unintentionally artistic, or purely amateur, images and
visual productions. At this point, in the field of the networks, the
possible differences between "art" and "not art" are a matter of
nuance in terms of the intensity with which each creation reveals
and expands upon the essential aspects and potentials of living and
of the critical consciousness possible in that connected multitude.
The most effective artistic thought would not be limited merely to
forming part of the expression of the vitality of the productive
multitude. It would also generate the most intense evocations of the
infinite wealth of differences that form the connected multitude,
while also revealing the multitude lying beneath each single subject.
In this sense, if the on-line multitude is formed by infinite
subjects that, like atoms, move and find each other according to "clinamens
that are always untimely and exceptional"[15], then perhaps it is an
essential mission of artistic practices to show the emancipatory
potentials that, still dormant, lie beneath the exceptional and
single nature of those clinamens.
What we could call "art" in the context of Web 2.0 is certainly what
most reinforces our belief in the potentials of the connected
multitude, in its possibilities for the free production of critical
thought and new life. That all means that art, the optimal form of
resistance in the context of the new networks, would be an extreme
herald of the constituting power of the multitude. That is, the
world that the multitude can build is foreshadowed in the best
artistic proposals, always manifested from the demands of
interpretive thought, of critical and meaningful communication.
Through the most interesting artistic proposals an attempt, at least,
would be made at a poetic reconfiguration of the social interactions
of the connected collectives.
Given the above, an essential aspect in assessing the relative
interest of 2.0 creative productions would be the degree of
intensity with which the creations express and foreshadow a form of
"liberated freedom" as opposed to freedom as merely a business
strategy, which is what the majority of "amateur" creative
production is subject to. Thus, the success of any given artistic
proposal in the Web 2.0 context would depend on its capacity to
evoke in the interior of the singularity of that specific creation
not only abstract aspects of the life of a global space but above
all the tensions of renewal and transformation, of critical thought,
pleasure, more freedom and more singularity that are inherent to the
connected multitude.
That means in no case can we conceive of the idea of art on the
networks as an element transcending life. To the contrary, it must
be seen as an element able to penetrate life, affirm existence and
the power of difference, of the exceptional in each of the infinite
elements forming the infinity of connected lives. At the same time,
we must view it as what proves the common underlying that whole
world of singularities: a need to live more fully, with more shared
expressions of solidarity, of a life accommodated to others not
through homogenization but rather through an enjoyment of
differences. Accumulating evidence of that "common" through the
celebration and identification of the infinite singularities is, in
a way, advancing in a form of resistance that foreshadows what is
affirmed in the slogan "Another world is possible" and which, as
Negri said, implies "an exodus toward ourselves"[16].
5. Social networks and affectivity
In this second stage of the Web, we see how vital interrelations are
fully productive economically. A new theory of value must be put
into place given that the new informational economy, the production
of social networks, is based on increasingly immaterial work, almost
completely based on emotional production: on the manipulation and
management of emotions and sociality. Given that, we can affirm that
the nature of production mechanisms of collective subjectivity are
already intrinsically emotional today. That is why, in the emotional
application of social relations, the new cultural and entertainment
industries are expected to possess a greater transformative capacity
of the social as their major lucrative potential. That is why, to a
large extent, the artistic projects that explore the world of the
social networks, the places and the ways that encounters occur,
dialogues and exchanges on the Internet are fundamentally
approximations to the problems that arise in relation to the
emotional nature of biopolitical production.
It seems almost impossible to question that, in the context of the
connected society, the possibility of efficient political resistance
should be approached from the appropriation and recognition of the
emancipatory potential of the principles that form an essential part
of productive biopolitical dynamics such as affection, cooperation,
and friendship. The mission of the new resistance is to rescue them
from their domestication by companies. That resistance should make
the potential they contain for the production of a new community
clear, to generate an active set-up of the principle of the common.
And perhaps artistic creation (let's remember that traditionally,
aesthetic experience has been considered purely emotional) is one of
the best means for carrying out this rescue.
6. Filtering and "tagging"
Participation and synergy in real time is what this new stage in the
Web should ideally offer; that is, broadening potentials for
acquiring knowledge. No one knows everything but everyone, jointly,
can know everything. An extremely important step forward in
collectivized, mutualised knowledge. It is the arrival of a stage of
broadened "co-intelligence", of the reciprocal production of
knowledge among infinite persons, of a multitudinous cooperative
development and of the increasingly open possession of knowledge,
all channelled through inclusive systems, and not designed to
prevent anyone from the possibility of contributing. Undoubtedly,
the potential illuminators of "general intellect"[17] are none other
than teleology of the commons on linguistic interchange and
cooperation.
This all leads to constant attempts to apply the free software model
to any field of creation and knowledge[18] and explorations in
relation to "Commons-based peer production"[19], are not few in
number either. That is, the study of modes of production based on
the cooperation of autonomous agents in coordinating the creative
energy of a huge number of persons, in which the efforts and
pleasure of a multitude of singularities are joined, and in which
each of its members has different abilities, very different
knowledge, properties that are added up and creatively complement
those of others.
More so than in the field of collective creation, the requirements
for applying these models when the amount of available data of all
kinds circulating on the Web is so huge make the tasks of tagging,
filtering, and prioritization of the available information much more
crucial. In fact, applying the cooperation potential inherent to the
system of the connected multitude in this direction and specific
applications are one of the primary operating fundamentals on Web
2.0. We mustn't forget that what can be understood as this second
stage of the Web consists of "content generated by the user" as much
as "content filtered by the user"[20]. That is, its primary action
axis would be the implementation of strategies allowing "collective
intelligence" to act as a filter and engine for the efficient
organization of the available information, and that ordering can be
useful not only for the main flows on the Web but also for more
specific, particular ones. Going from the task of offering "data" to
providing "metadata" is a step forward that would also explain the
complementarity of the concepts of Web 2.0 and semantic Webs, based
on the incorporation of all kinds of metadata (descriptors,
identifiers,
etc.)
The essential character on Web 2.0 of activities such as classifying,
tagging, selecting, voting, scoring, etc. makes data organization
methods for the culture of the networks one of the areas of greatest
interest in on-line artistic creation. And of all the paths
initiated in the artistic themes of data filtering, identification
and assessment, those focused on "tagging" have generated the
greatest interest. Examples of this path are some of the initiatives
of Les Liens Invisibles and Jonathan Harris, among many other
authors[21].
Undoubtedly, the relation between images and identifying terms, or
"tags", is linked in the field of the theory of contemporary art to
an old relation between image and word, and between art work and
title. The problematic nature of the relations established between
text and image, that were essential in conceptual art, have once
again been activated by the new dynamic of "tagging" as a practice
of social organization of the visual elements of the culture in
which a huge field has opened up for artistic reflection.
7. Blog art?
A key element of many blogs is that personal life, information and
opinions are not separate. One of its most interesting potentials is
its capacity to create collectivity through resources and positions
that in many cases are merely autobiographical; that is, through
subjectivity expressed, shared, and commented on. The blog
phenomenon is surely the clearest return to the "self" and to
subjectivity itself in the field of media, the activation of a
certain "egology". It is about reclaiming a democratization of the
possibilities of the expressive "self", of subjectivity made public,
that is shown and exhibited, as a catalyst of many other internal
voices that will be encouraged to follow the exercise of a "self",
giving public voice to personal consciousness that is expressed and
investigated, practiced in writing, in the collection and
interrelation of things and aspects that it finds of interest.
Obviously, many of the propositional, creative and expressive
aspects of the blog phenomenon make many of their authors define
their blogs as art works in their own right. Of course, many blogs
show extremely creative and poetic qualities that make them much
more than alternative systems for personal and interpersonal
expression and communication. Actually, the most interesting cases
are true examples of the possibilities of artistic thought to act in
the reconfiguration of models for communicative practices and of
cultural and social criticism of networks. In many of them, we see
the huge capacity that poetic activities have, through the
interpretive demands of art works, to effect an intense, efficient
criticism of current processes for the inclusion of the subject in
the society of interconnected media. Of course, the perverse irony
that characterizes the majority of "blog art" proposals actively
collaborates in the suspension (and even subversion) of the most
deeply rooted expectations about the communicative interactions that
we consider to be informative, normal, or useful in the present
field of networks. The proposals of blog art also constitute intense
questioning of whether the world is, as many blogs seems to show in
their extreme intensification of the presence of an ego, a correlate
of what "I perceive", "I feel", and "I believe".
Some of the most interesting results so far of "blog art" have
emerged from projects centred on studying the recording of time
innate to blogs. Only from the field of artistic propositions could
we understand, for example, the extreme degree to which life is
subject to recorded time in projects such as "Obsessive Consumption"[22]
by Kate Bingaman (2007) or the work titled "Eat 22"[23] by E.
Harrinson (2007). These two examples evoke the huge set of proposals
of blogs taken to the limit which are only comprehensible from the
perspective of conceptual art. They refer to the complexity inherent
to the time relationship established among the blog, the subject who
"posts" something, and the readers, which is none other than that
relationship of life itself in the shared recording of its passage
through time. These projects emphasize the fact that we are
fundamentally shared time (which is exhibited and recorded on media
in today's world). Due to the above, "blog art" can be said to be an
experiment not with a new media but rather of the artist in it (while
being watched by many others).
8. Artistic practices in the
reconfiguration of communicative interactions
Of special value is creativity oriented to the production of
cooperative devices for activating and developing communities, of
means for free communication of the parasitic behaviour of companies
dominating the Web today. In fact, many of the most interesting
projects we can identify within the broad group of artistic
practices are centred on promoting the public domain, on how to
facilitate the voluntary provision of public goods that are
communicatively and experientially meaningful.
One of the traditional definitions of artistic creation has been a
critical experimentation in language or the invention of new
languages. Perhaps in this sense, many of its still to be revealed
capacities will reconfigure communicative interactions in the new
era of digital political activism. That is, provided that it is
based on the belief that it is possible to solve many of the new
social and political problems of new societies through developing a
different kind of public communication. It is reasonable to think
that it possesses a hugely valuable capacity to diminish the effects
of the colonization of communication by economic interests.
And perhaps we can affirm that the role of creation most committed
to social and political reflection in the new networks resides in
its capacity to overcome a certain incommunicable character of the
battles in the network society. There, everything seems to be
legitimated on the basis of principles such as progress,
communication, participation, etc., which seem to strangle all types
of effective dissention. Perhaps the critical thought innate to
artistic practices can help us immensely in gaining a better
understanding of what we can consider as truly social with respect
to some new technologies and applications that, as in the context of
Web 2.0, are always presented to us as completely social media.
It is clear in the most interesting proposals of the new "on-line"
artistic behaviours that art can make part of the information and
data circulating on the networks not only consumed but also properly
situated in relation to their existential elements. That is, one of
the major commitments of the best artistic creations in the context
of Web 2.0 would be to design new paths for taking the interpretive
experience model inherent to artistic practices to the field of
social and communicative interaction. It behoves us to give
intensive thought to the possibilities of artistic practices in the
face of an ecological recomposition of communication.[24] This would
be a new attempt to overcome the imprisonment in the constant but
banal communication process inherent in mass media, and also to
define that refusal to communicate that Theodor Adorno considered as
a measure of the truth of art works in a cultural system where
communication is organized via manipulation in order to produce a
given effect, where the former would only have an alienated
existence[25].
Due to the above, it is logical that nowadays there are quite a few
artistic proposals centred on the ways the new digital social
networks function. Their intention is to bring to the forefront of
public attention the ways language and communicative interactions in
general can be toyed with. That is, showing how the economic
appropriation of free communication and the desire to cooperate is
carried out, offering a poetic rendition of how the ideal of
interactivity is truncated. We can only imagine that ideal as giving
oneself linguistically to another, as an exchange of what one does
not have, that is, what one is. The great challenge of artistic
creation then is, in the boundary-crossing dynamics of human
presences in network environments, to build flows of value and
meaning independent of the logic of markets and corporate interests.
The fact that the most recent artistic proposals on the networks are
so ironic and critical instead of optimistic is because Web 2.0 has
been presented to us corporatively as an idyllic field of happiness,
joy, friendship, sharing, and communication, all increasing
endlessly. With networks today defined through these principles,
there is an assumption of a blanket neutral ideology. The most
critical of these art works and actions oppose the acceptance of
that assumption, and will do so repeatedly. The subjects of those
art works and actions coincide with specific ways the Web 2.0 works.
Interpreting them demands an interpretive, critical and political
reflection of the ways the Web works as well as the mediation
mechanisms and socialization control predisposed by the Web.
It is quite likely that the interpretive values of the new "on-line"
artistic practices are based on the important possibility of
opposing the disappearance o fan awareness of reality as a pace full
of oppositions and frictions. That awareness is becoming
increasingly difficult given that everything is veiled behind
continuous telematics, set out through principles and promises
always linked to communication that already impedes a perception of
any contradiction whatsoever.
This attempt would explain that a recurring purpose of artistic
practices is to reveal what interests are behind those business
mediators and how they manage to regulate communicative interactions
on the networks, in addition to merely making them possible.
NOTES
[1] I refer to the false automaton known as "The Turk", built in
1770 by Wolfgang von Kempelen (1734-1804).
[2] Guy Debord, "Tesis sobre la revoluci?n cultural", in Textos
situacionistas sobre arte and urbanismo, La Piqueta, Madrid, 1977,
p. 122.
[3] See Johan Soderberg, "Reluctant revolutionaries -
the false modesty of reformist critics of copyright", [Internet].
Journal of Hyper(+)drome. Manifestation. <http://journal.hyperdrome.net/issues/issue1/soderberg.html#_ftn16>.
[Accessed 20 July 2007].
[4] See Erik von Hippel, Democratizing Innovation, MIT Press, 2005.
[5] See Henry William Chesbrough, Open Innovation: The New
Imperative for Creating and Profiting from Technology, Harvard
Business School Press, 2003.
[6] <http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Main_Page>. [Accessed 20 July
2007].
[7] See, in relation to these aspects, the book by Andrew Keen The
Cult of the Amateur: How Today's Internet is Killing Our Culture,
Doubleday/Currency, New York, 2007.
[8] Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "Constituents of a Theory of the
Media", in John Thornton Caldwell, Theories of the New Media, The
Athlone Press, London, 2000. p. 68.
[9] See Dan Gillmor, We the Media: Grassroots Journalism by the
People, for the People, O'Reilly Media, 2004.
[10] According to Roberto Esposito "if, as Deleuze believes,
philosophy is the practice of creating concepts appropriate to the
event affecting and transforming us, this is the time to rethink the
relationship between politics and life in a way that, instead of
subjecting life to political leadership (which occurred over the
last century quite clearly), introduces into the power of life into
politics". Esposito, Roberto, Biopol?tica and filosof?a, Grama
ediciones, Buenos Aires, 2006, p. 17.
[11] See Michel Foucault, Dits et ?crits, iv, Gallimard, Paris,
1994, p. 741.
[12] Michael Hardt - Antonio Negri, Imperio, Ediciones Paid?s
Ib?rica, Barcelona, 2002, p. 43.
[13] Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media, McGraw-Hill, New York,
1964.
[14] Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Carta a d'Alembert, Editorial Tecnos,
Madrid, 1994.
[15] Seg?n Negri, "las multitudes son conjuntos de ?tomos que se
encuentran seg?n clin?menes siempre intempestivos and excepcionales".
Negri, Antonio, "El arte and la cultura en la ?poca del Imperio and
en el tiempo de las multitudes", [Internet]. Ediciones simbi?ticas,
2005.
: <http://www.edicionessimbioticas.info/article.php3?id_article=553>.
[Accessed 20 July 2007].
[16] Ibid.
[17] See, referring to this concept, the work of Pierre Levy, Aux
Origines de L'Intelligence Collective. Pour une anthropologie du
cyberspace, La Decouverte, Paris 1994; of James Surowiecki Cien
mejor que uno: La sabidur?a de la multitud o por qu? la mayor?a es
m?s inteligente que la minor?a, Ediciones Urano, Barcelona, 2005;
and of J. Heron, Cooperative Inquiry: Research into the Human
Condition, Sage, Londres, 1996.
[18] This would in fact be one of the basic premises inferred in the
expression "Free Open Knowledge of Production" (FOKP).
[19] See Yochai Benkler, The Wealth of Networks: How Social
Production Transforms Markets and Freedom, Yale University Press,
2006.
[20] Ross Dawson, Web 2.0 and user filtered
content, [Internet], 9 September 2006. <http://www.rossdawsonblog.com/Weblog/archives/2006/09/post_2.html>.
[Accessed 20 July 2007].
[21] Of the many existing proposals, the artwork titled "Subvert"
<http://www.subvertr.com/de> Les Liens Invisibles may be one of the
most clearly oriented to politically subvert the relations between
image and word. The application "10x10T" www.tenbyten.org, designed
and developed by Jonathan Harris, attempts to represent visually
each hour as well as, through 100 images and words, the collective
imagination of news at a global scale. It would influence more than
any other project the possibilities of artistic practice as a
visualization system of the relations of images to news events in
the era of globalized communication, of the forms of its repetition
and dissemination at a global level.
[22] <http://obsessiveconsumption.com/>. [Accessed 20 July 2007].
[23] <http://www.eat22.com/>. [Accessed 20 July 2007].
[24] See, in relation to this idea of an ecological recomposition of
communication, the interview by Futur Ant?rieur of F?lix Guattari
titled "Hacia una autopoi?tica de la comunicaci?n", [Internet].
<http://biblioWeb.sindominio.net/telematica/guattari.html>. [Accessed
20 July 2007].
[25] See Theodor W. Adorno, Teor?a Est?tica, Taurus, Madrid, 1992.
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