The digitization of Contemporary Art: Re-imagining Reality & the Cult of Culture.


The digitization of Contemporary Art: 

Re-imagining Reality & the Cult of Culture.

The digital revolution has provided an avenue of expression and distribution for Contemporary Art that was unavailable in previous times prior to the invention of the world wide web, iphone and the personal computer.  Contemporary art is more than ‘art that is produced currently at this time in the 21st century’, there is a sense of pervasiveness of the digital throughout its production, presentation & dissemination. Whatever the distinct definition for the current times may be, it is aptly described by media author, Marshall McLuhan, as ‘art is anything that you can get away with’ (McLuhan as cited in Shaidle,2002) and hence is unable to be categorized into any definable style or formalism.  With the advent of conceptualism in the 1970’s, Contemporary Art has branched into two distinguishable forms; one being commodified art, as collectable, and the other as Activist and dematerialized (Milliss, 2014.p,1). In the conservative art market, an artwork yields different amounts of value and the value can be summed up as emotional stimulation and ideas including its impartation of these ideals (Fisher, 2013). Concurrently it is assumed that this existential artistic production engenders change and reconfigures the future in terms of influencing the current reality of culture, it is not merely anthropological, art has its own codes (Drucker,2005). Superimposed upon the contemporary culture of the last twenty years is the increase in education, financial prosperity and the technological advances of ‘cyberspace’ included in an affluent western world view.



The results of a new economy based on information, globalization, and networking all as a result of electronically constructed communications, creates “power that is increasingly organized around the space of flows” (Flew,2008.p,85). One of these flows is constituted culturally through the “shared experiences and practices of geographically mobile managerial and knowledge worker elites”. This points to social inequalities of inclusion and exclusion (Castell, 1996 as cited in Flew, 2008:89).  Just as the industrial revolution created exploitation of the working class as highlighted by Frederich Engel since 1845, the new tech economy has compounded class struggle with affluency, gender and ecological troubles (Atkinson, 2015.p,65&135). The pivotal difference in the contemporary from previous times is the virtuality of this new reality, where presence not substance dictates value (Atkinson,2015.p,198).  Although a globalised capitalist economy is now flourishing amongst the West, the other two thirds struggle on bare subsistence levels (Singh, 2018), there is a sense of tactile anorexia inherent within the new virtual human condition. 

Damien Hirst For the Love of God (2007)

Meanwhile a diamond and platinum encrusted 18th century skull made by Damien Hirst For the Love of God (2007) sits as testimony to the ineffectiveness of an artwork to affect any real liberation such as feeding the poor and hungry.  It serves to merely point to neo-liberal inequalities with its opulence.  Within this virtual reality there is more hype and information overload that cheapens the ‘culture as a lived experience’ (Flew, 2008:92). Art attempts to solve this tactile anorexia through art movements such as Activist/Eco Art and Relational Aesthetics.  Relational Aesthetics aims to fill a niche to create mostly positive community engagement and brief dalliances of interpersonal communication via an artist’s collaboration within the gallery space as Bourriard explains “learning to inhabit the world in a better way”.  Works considered relational such as Rirkrit Tiravanija's Pad Thai (1990) where the artist cooks curry for people in the gallery and Vanessa Beecroft VB 35 (1998) displaying live models instructed to stand motionless while scantily clad in black rhinestone bikini’s (Artspace, 2016).  These are examples of art culture’s attempt to fill this social void of the passive spectator (Bourriaud, 2009. p,13). Meanwhile proving that the intangible aspects of human consciousness have a place for expression because there is a lack of community due to the advent of computer mediated communication (Flew,2008:24).

Rirkrit Tiravanija's Pad Thai (1990)

Vanessa Beecroft VB 35 (1998)


These kinds of soft relational aesthetics are criticized by art historian Claire Bishop as ignoring class struggles and not challenging the social and political structures enough (Bishop,2014).  Bishop in her article is assuming activist art is meant to instigate change.  Bishop advocates the effect of Santiago Sierra’s 160cm line tattooed on four people (2000) & The wall of a gallery pulled out out, inclined sixty degrees from the ground and sustained by five people, Mexico City (2000), while explaining that Sierra believes ‘everything and everyone has a price’ in the economic reality.  Bishop ignores this as any kind of exploitation of cheap labor or a reflection of the cruelty of the artist on his fellow humans claiming it to be ‘ethnographic realism’ and merely ‘antagonistic’ (Bishop, 2014).  It seems blatant cruelty is now acceptable in the name of critically engaging art.  Could this be due to the postmodern theorists espousing that there is no absolute truth and meaning is arbitrary so that fact and reality of human suffering is neatly intellectualised? (Atkinson,2014.p,209) There is a dark side to the permissibility of contemporary art highlighted by “the very value-ladenness of the term ‘creativity’ carries the assumption of goodness in such a way that we cannot talk of an evil creativity without it seeming a contradiction in terms, even in a post-Frankenstein age in which science itself does not hold that all human creativity is good or at least morally neutral regardless of its consequences.”(Patterson, 1999.p,126).    At least artist and writer Hannah Black reduces political artist’s activisms to white cultural tokenism.   Black describes ‘both to be a miraculous body, capable of absolving white and misogynist institutions just by your presence, and to have this miraculous power ascribed to a narcissistic desire for difference’ expressing that collective struggle is too much for any artist to carry (Black, 2016).  Black’s point that ‘Art is a place to think, even it it’s also a place where that thought gets repackaged and commodified’ relates to works such as Sierra’s as using marginalised people and the capitalistic system for the artists own benefit.  Yet we don’t see Sierra lining up to be tattooed in his own relational artwork.  Contemporary Art, as it digitally develops in volume and interactive features, is serving as a radar for the health of today’s culture (McLuhan, 1964.p,xi) as well as an inevitable commodified product.  Even though dematerialized art practices motivated from the radical activist point of view are intangible, the digitization of art enables still photos and recordings to be exhibited and a physical experience of the event is not necessary. 




Santiago Sierra:The wall of a gallery pulled out out, inclined sixty degrees from the ground and sustained by five people, Mexico City (2000)


It is important to outline how this tactile anorexia mentioned previously has originated rather than focusing entirely on the greyness of social conscience. This cultural deficiency is explained by the tremendous value that western society has placed on literacy.  Media theorist McLuhan points out that “as an intensification and extension of the visual function, the phonetic alphabet diminishes the role of the other senses of sound and touch and taste in any literate culture…Phonetic culture endows men with the means of repressing their feelings and emotions when engaged in action.  To act without reacting, without involvement is the peculiar advantage of western literate man” (McLuhan, 1964.p,87).  The eastern cultures of China and India with their use of ideograms ‘enables them to retain a rich store of inclusive perception in depth of experience that tends to become eroded in civilized cultures’(McLuhan, 1964.p,86).  McLuhan illustrates this with an example from The Ugly American where well-meaning UNESCO workers build pipes to bring water to tribal homes in an Indian village and they are promptly told to take them out as the communal fabric had become impoverished because there were no longer interactions at the local well (McLuhan, 1964.p,88).  Perhaps the water pipes can be equated to the invisible electronic networks of the ‘matrix’ undermining the social fabric of face to face connection under the guise of a faster, cleaner more efficient existence.  The role of contemporary art ‘transforms lived experience into symbolic forms’ (Drucker,2006).  Art may have the ability to fill the gaps with personal interaction where western culture is lacking in depth of experience for the individual.  This is due to a digital isolation via the virtual social experience through various personal LED interfaces that affect reality namely facebook or Instagram (Flew, 2008)&(Atkinson, 2015.p,198).  Literate people become their own curators of personalised content with the pervasiveness of low cost technology and the modern ease of uploading data into the virtual world.  

Duchamp’s Fontaine (1917)


The place of art criticism in shaping culture is important whether it functions to grade an artwork according to quality and generate interest like an advertising campaign driving converts to a product or ‘rousing the lethargic public to a more ardent appreciation of the refurbished Muses’(Fisher, 2013:p,2) to create deeper meaning.  Modernism strived to separate art from mass culture and artists articulated their differences as a culturally distinct movement, culture was only high culture because of literacy (Levenson,2011.p,197). The shock and hype of groundbreaking art such as Duchamp’s Fontaine (1917), the readymade, was reverberated throughout the contemporary culture for decades because of the slow pace of the early 19th century telegraph/print communications.  Yet in more recent times street artist Banksy remotely shreds his Girl with Balloon (2004) purchased for $1.4 million dramatically self-destructing in a Sotherbey’s auction (Reyburn, 2019).  The event fades away within weeks due to the hype and informational overload of the digital age.  It is unlikely that Banksy will ever receive the same kudos as Duchamp (Willsdon, 2004) for deconstructing mindsets about art.  The key issue for the public today is the “lightning speed and prolixity with which symbols are invented and used for communication before their meanings have had a chance to become established” (Fisher,2013.p,5).  



The recent 49th Art Basel exhibition in Switzerland called PUSH IT TO THE LIMIT! ART BASEL UNLIMITED 2018: ART UNLIMITED is the most compelling evidence of this inundation of new symbolism (Voloshyn, 2019).  The symbol needs time to become conventional such as with advent of Abstraction in the slower paced times of modernity. Due to the the modernity axis of Paris/Milan/Munich/London renowned art critic Clement Greenberg and most art historians to this day have no idea that two women preceded the movement before Kandinsky (1911). Georgiana Houghton (1871) Solo Exhibition New British Gallery, London and Hilma Af Klint with Promordial Chaos (1906).  Klint’s complete collection of works of 214 pieces was locked away in Switzerland for 20 years after her death due to conditions in her will, plenty of time for the symbolism of abstraction to communicate.  Further to that there is still limited realization in the pedagogy that trained the abstract canon of artists revered today from Piet Mondrian, Sonia Delaunay and Kazimir Malevich, all went through a particular unique kind of childhood education devised by Frederich Froebel which spread across Europe, USA, Russia and England from 1840 -1900 (Brosterman and Togashi, 2014.p,28).  This educational method was responsible for plotting grids, geometry and primary colours, a new conventional symbology, into the minds of the young across continents when no other method was available for ideas to be transmitted between abstract artists globally in that time period.  








Today’s cyber-television child is up to date with inflation, rioting, wars, gender issues, taxes, gaming, graphic design and a case of information overload is inevitable with over 30 billion web pages available in 2007 (Flew,2008.p,28).  The problem across culture and its formulation of reality is that digital information can store misinformation “as much as it can store the truth, so that the text or images it generates may be wholly misleading and produce erroneous belief rather than knowledge”(Graham 1999.p,89 as cited in Flew, 2008).  This is where sublimation is significant, a Freudian term used to describe any form of artistic production where the libidinal drives are re-channelled into social goals and is dependent on the artist to be subjective and separate from publicly received knowledge (Willis, 2007.p,129).  The opinion that the artist becomes controlled by mass-media and hence de-sublimated. Creative impotence is a possibility and has the dangers of re-imagining a desensitised reality as can be seen with racial domination ideals conveyed though Hitler’s nationalism propaganda (Debord, 1999.p,50).  This explains how the term cult can be applied to culture as the moral indicators of how people treat one another are watered down gradually via the cauterising of community conscience through a virtual life of high turnover fads, celebrity worship, materialism and the “highlighting of aberrant and quirky behaviour which becomes images for others to imitate” (Bell, 1978 as cited in Harrison, 2003). Hence the current ubiquity of tattoos, street art, beards, hipsters, unicorns, alpacas (Willis, 2007) and Lady Gaga’s personal vomit artist Millie Brown indicate that mass media is creating superficiality, a dangerous utopia of ‘simulacrum’.  As long as an image or set of images is reproducible it can create reality according to sociologist Baudrillard (Atkinson,2015.p,198).  These examples also support Debord’s theory that human rationale is influenced by a fabricated reality of images.  This creates a distorted consciousness which does allude to the existence of a true authentic unique identity which is covered over by this conformity to a capitalistic regime (Debord,1999).  Finding hope for humanity beyond scientific rationale and donating to  endless charitable crowd funding campaigns is challenging when every well fed westernised literate person loves their comfort,money and complete denial of the spiritual implications of their behavior.  Who shall ever save us? Certainly not Contemporary Art or the act of immersing oneself electronically into the slippery folds of the cult of culture.



The contemporary art world is only one of the machines that feed the cult of culture and its value can be found in the stimulation of ideas and token gestures of experience for mass culture consumption. The sheer inundation of information & cultural scope provided by the digital age has brought in a keener sense of social justice, ecological issues and awareness of inequalities.  Yet this virtual connectedness is a form of isolation, a reduction of the sensorial experience of culture due to a reduced tactile participation, a ‘simulacra’.  There is also a redundancy of artistic currency at a rate far greater than seen in the art movements of modernity and postmodernism.  This is due to its digitization creating sheer volumes of information, without authentic experience or guarantees of life enhancing knowledge.  Artists that succeed to make a living must be able to place themselves right on the edge of social and political arenas in a competitive manner and have a currency that engages perceived value for galleries, museums, wealthy patrons and spectators alike.  Activism with ethical public production and commodification of contemporary art seem to combine well for public spectacle. Virtual networks enable protests to be heard but established symbology and impact cannot be felt due to the inundation of media information. Positive effects of mass media culture and literacy has leveled out the previous demarcations of art as separate to culture but only in the affluent West.  The contemporary artist is not always subject to rigorous research methodologies compared to the days of Duchamp or Kandinsky and de-sublimation of the artistic practice risks the removal of essential ethical considerations towards human life. Nevertheless, the artist still has a license to discover ways in which the creative depth of experience can be pushed to overcome the constraints of a society drowning in the complexity of excess information.  

Simple Gospel : hope in a hopeless world



References
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  1. This is the greatest essay I have ever written ! But is anyone even having a great read of it?

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