Tuesday, July 06, 2010

The Coming of Googleheim

In a recent post of just a bit over a month ago, I wrote:
Our goal should be to produce a multi-media, collective autobiography of practice that spatializes the narrative of new media forms of art and the mutant offspring that will grow out of this network distributed mind-mesh (what in other posts I have referred to as a co-poietic unfolding).

How will this co-poietic unfolding alter the art market of the 2020's?

One of the more difficult aspects of investigating this last question as deeply as one would like to relates to the use of sociological methods that challenge the subject-position of the voices of the artists themselves, many of whom invent their digital personae as instrumental narrative devices to further build their own personal mythologies on the Internet and thus continue the creative process of making (art) history up as they go along.

This will serve as a wake up call to contemporary media art historians who think they have the final say on how history gets read.

Especially given the fact that by the time the 2020's roll around, history will no longer be read per se but rather will be invented (yet again) as part of this collaboratively generated, network distributed creative act.
But what has emerged in that last month that makes me want to take it all back?

How about:

Digital Art @ Google

YouTube Play: The Creative Biennial of Creative Video

Adobe Museum of Digital Media

Art Basel's special panel on "Contemporary Art and New Media: Toward a Hybrid Discourse" featuring Nicolas Bourriaud, Peter Weibel, and Michael Joaquin Grey

Forget the 2020s. And while we're at it, let's delete this whole idea of the voices of the artists themselves, many of whom invent their digital personae as instrumental narrative devices to further build their own personal mythologies on the Internet and thus continue the creative process of making (art) history up as they go along..

These developments above will serve as a wake up call to contemporary media art historians who think they have the final say on how history gets read.

Make no mistake about it: we are all working for Google now...

... which makes everything so much easier.

I just need the perfect all-in-one mobile tablet to serve as the distribution medium and exhibition display context.

Oh wait, that's already out now too: the iPad.

But is there more to the future of digitally networked media art than i-Apps chained to the iOS?

Apple, what's your next move?



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