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[personal profile] imomus
I've had a couple of meetings this past week with a gallerist who's working on an innovative way to sell media art. She's collecting together 70 media artists and plans to sell their work by -- well, I won't let the cat out of the bag yet; all will be revealed when she launches later in the year.

In some ways it would be ideal for me if she could succeed, because I'm "an artist without prices". The last show I held in Chelsea, and my Whitney Biennial performance, were presented as having "nothing prepared, nothing sold and nothing archived". I think, in an art world which is perceived as being more and more about money, this is actually rather refreshing. And note that the "nothing archived" claim rebuffs over-zealous academics too. While money and academic attention can undoubtedly vitalize the art world, too much investment and too much institutional respect tends to deaden it.



After thinking about this stuff more, I decided I like the perversity of this "nothing for sale" stance better than the possibility of getting paid. So for the moment I continue to be an artist with nothing for sale. It's almost like an artwork in itself. I've opted out of the gallerist's scheme, though I wish her every success with it.

She doesn't seem to mind; last night we went for a drink at Barbie Deinhoff's bar in Kreuzberg. "I feel like a tourist in the art world," I told her, "and I want to keep that feeling of its glamour." She started telling me "the art world isn't as glamourous as it --" but I cut her off, sticking my fingers in my ears with a smile and shouting "La la la la la!"

The thing is, glamour, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. If I want art to be glamourous, glamourous it shall be! To me, anyway. And perhaps a condition of that continued attraction is to stay somewhat distanced from the bumpy mechanisms and machinations of art's market. I like to quote Kafka about my attitude to Japan, but the same quote applies to the art world: "Happiness consists in having an idea of the good life, but not advancing towards it." I suppose you could think of it as endless foreplay.

You may ask what's left of the art world when money is taken out of the equation. What's left is perhaps what Brian Eno described, in a talk entitled "What Art Is For", delivered last month at Design Indaba Conference in South Africa: “Art is everything we don’t need to do. Art is a way of commonly testing other realities and it is a way of staying in tune with each other.”

One way I am participating in the art world's current money boom is by writing more and more articles about art and artists (for money, hypocrisy hounds!) for catalogues. I just finished a piece about Beck's Futures Prize-winner Matt Stokes which will appear in a book about him published later this year by the Edinburgh Artists' Collective, and a conversation between me and critic Carlo Antonelli will appear in the catalogue of a big exhibition about Futurism to be staged soon at the Bergamo Museum in Italy.

What interests me in writing about artists is how they self-define their own style, hone their interests, and how those interests connect with mine. Matt Stokes, for instance, documents early 90s rave culture as if he were a cultural archeologist of the early Christian period -- as if the sites of M25 "orbital" parties were the catacombs off the Via Appia. In the essay, I connect this to my own ideas about "the passion and ecstasy of a Tokyo train driver", and conclude that subcultures can also be "superlegitimate".

The images on this page are of an installation Mr Liam Gillick made for the communal area of the CCA in Kitakyushu in 2000. His installation consisted of benches, low tables, bookshelves and Japanese lanterns. A book later appeared based on the project.

I've been aware of Gillick (who currently teaches at Columbia) for years, but I think he's someone I should find out more about. His work draws together an elegantly minimalist didactic look (he shares with Julian Opie an interest in spareness and idealized office environments), great colour combinations, Marxisant titles like "Lapdogs of the Bourgeoisie" or "The State Itself Becomes a Super Commune", and "fictional yet non-narrative essays" -- something which brings to mind other "investigative" artists like Jeremy Deller, Rainer Ganahl, Luke Fowler or Annika Eriksson. I think they share something with designer James Goggin and his "ostentatiously non-demonstrative", socially-engaged, playfully didactic design.

I'm just pulling names out of a hat here, but you get the point: as a tourist, all I need is to find one interesting figure, and the whole big top of the art world is justified. Let the money, the logistics and the hype look after themselves. Sure, following my arguments the other day some of you will say "Money, logistics and hype are the whole context of the art world, its field. They change the meaning of every statement in it." That may be true, but to say that the art world was just money speaking money would be gross reductionism. The saving slippage lies in art's non-instrumentality, its eccentricity -- as Eno says, it's "everything we don't need to do".

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 11:21 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Why are you so attracted to glamour? (Serious question: I don't think all artists are attracted to it or particularly concerned by it, some are even repulsed by it.)

Defining art as "everything we don't need to do" is I guess a way of glamourising it (the decadence of uselessness!), but I don't find it terribly convincing. We're making aesthetic decisions every hour of every day. There haven't been cultures without art. There is a compulsion and therefore necessity there.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 11:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
I was just reading an essay that quoted something an artist called Cildo Meirelles said, which went along the lines of "both the artist and the gold miner are always looking for what they haven't lost".

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 11:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Why are you so attracted to glamour?

Glamour, for me, represents:

* Narcissism about the other

* Projection as construction (in other words, glamour produces rather than merely consuming

* Sexual desire

* Exogamy

* Advance by appetite

Eno puts non-necessity at the heart of his definition of art because he's not a Romantic ("we MUST create!") and because he's a fan of Rorty's ideas about contingency.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 11:51 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I can not figure out if you are being Adornian or a Maoist intellectual?
That lady is trying to SELL media art works?
The art world is "full of sound and fury"... The art world want to represent itself as flying over money and economy - like a transcendent universe - but at the same time they build galleries, present their artists in biennales, search for the critics article in a magazine... and so forth... So, is it possible, in our economic degree of civilization, be apart from money...?
Maybe Berlin cultural milieu is the most interesting experiment... (with all the glamour of the folk-technological bohemians...) ... or maybe non-western contexts where art exists only to sell figurines to the western rich people (that happily celebrate non-western cultural production as a manifestation of pos-colonial atitude...).
Tell us... adornian or maoist intellectual?

Pedro Félix

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 11:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Money underpins everything but does not need to overween everything!

(Old "moist intellectual" slogan.)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 12:20 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
In the present state of things you have three possibilities (I think):

- "perform" in the core of the high art world (using cars, garbage, whatever...) and accept the fact that once you enter a museum or gallerie your are in an different context where money, aesthetics, cultural politics are synonymous... and live with it!

- "perform" as a non-popular-cultural artist (whatever that means).. neither a high-cultural artist!

- Run away from the academic milieu!

I'm trying to life apart from all this but it's too emotionally stressful (at least in the academic world) where your production is evaluated by the money you raise for your Institution (even if you are working on Adorno and Popular music!!!!)


Pedro

Viva Post-bit Capital!

Date: 2007-03-16 12:24 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Money is glamourous! Producing more than it consumes! If we turn ‘unneededness’ into a requirement, then it becomes a need? Like windows and doors in an architect’s plan - "I'd like something daffy or forlorn, toying with whimsical dejection. By Friday, please." Post-unneeded need is the new ‘unneededness’, brothers and sisters! There is no escape from the happy bosom of Post-bit Capital! The suckle itself, a glorious anthem of production!
From: [identity profile] rinusvanalebeek.livejournal.com
Maybe Berlin cultural milieu is the most interesting experiment...

Maybe..unless some one starts to write about it, categorize it, makes it ready for digestion, ah well..bla.

From tomorrow on I will do radio in a gallery space. It will be done during the working hours. Because the artist has asked us. And we (it is Adrian Shephard and me) gladly present her this exclusive joy, of having a live radio team, making radio just for her to make work more enjoyable.
There won't be any visitor, because the doors will remain closed. And when the doors open the visitor can have a glance at a work in progress without the worker (or us) being present.

It is a bit like what i think an exhibition should be like
1.prepare the exhibition in a space open to public (10 days)
2. opening of the show (15.00 to 17.00)
3. ask people if they want to eat something, and gather money from those who say yes. (17.00- 17.30)
4 go out shopping, come back and start preparing dinner.(18.00 - 19.30)
5 serve dinner and eat and drink ( 19.35- 21.35)
6 close the exhibition with a finishing off party (22.00 - until late)

next day: clean the mess


Eno Left Roxy Music To Do His Laundry

Date: 2007-03-16 12:33 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
What Is Art For?
Coming from a community arts background for us it was about liberation from the poverty of expectation. I suppose right there you have the in tune with others and exploring other realities. In the tight constraints of the limited view, eccentricity and escape were frowned upon. Unless they served the dominant controlling forces. Like the artistry of the gangster in Performance.
As always there are value judgements. Grant funding,the poverty industry. What is worth it. Have you earned it yet, baby?

Either this post is really deep or this is kicking coffee. Recent viewings of Hip Hop's appropriation by the art world in the mid 80s show the compulsion to create other realities. In a sense that needed to be done.

With glamour I am more of a Scots traditional definition man. A shape shifting hex. To change how things appear to someone.

"Glamour cannot exist without personal social envy being a common and widespread emotion. - John Berger"

Re: Eno Left Roxy Music To Do His Laundry

Date: 2007-03-16 12:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] niddrie-edge.livejournal.com
Looks like LJ is playing log out sign in games again.

That was me being anonymous up there. Shapeshifters!

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 12:58 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
$_$ creating without the hope of money, fame, etc. It's a rare thing these days, which is why it might be refreshing.These days art is produced exclusively to fatten the investment portfolio of some New York or French banker; god knows what's happened to writing.

There's definitely less of that weird creative community (in all things), and more of that ... obsessive careerist type deal. Nobody just wants to have fun with imagination anymore. :[ :[

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 02:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
"Happiness consists in having an idea of the good life, but not advancing towards it."

Hence, my address.

I like glamor too

Date: 2007-03-16 02:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zzberlin.livejournal.com
My one famous friend tells me if I ever get famous, I'll hate it. But I don't listen to what other people say, I have to do it for myself! I have to get famous so I can have glamor so I can hate it and wish it were back the other way.

<< Art is everything we don’t need to do >>

I sit and think about what would happen if the machines really could do all our work. What would I do if I didn't have to work? Probably OD on smack. But if I were able to keep my wits about me in the face of unstructured time, I suppose the only things to do are practical jokes and art.

If the machines do our work, and our needs are met, I suppose that leaves us at the top of Maslow's pyramid. A fabulous place to be. Nothing to do but amuse ourselves and loved ones with our creative efforts, and make the world a more beautiful place.

I hope we get there some day! I think, if we do, though, we will have already moved to another planet. I do not think humans will be able to leave strife behind until we have moved off this planet.

Re: I like glamor too

Date: 2007-03-16 03:20 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I hope if we ever reach that state, we already found a way to.. well, control people's minds. At least to some sort of level. Work distracts a lot of people from questions or boredom/emptiness which would make them mad. So there would have to be the possibility of directing people to do creative work instead of either commit suicide or kill their way to world domination, in search of something that makes their lives seem un-senseless. If not, the world will pretty much go down in chaos, violence and anger.


R

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 03:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bikerbar.livejournal.com
I agree completely. Seems to me there are those who play the game successfully, and then there are the majority who are left out of the dialogue for not being contemporary enough or not having gone to the right school or just not pushing enough.

Now those who are having a modicum of success in the art world just say "sour grapes" and continue there little fashionista eurochic party.

I don't think Momus would have access to this type of artworld game playing if he hadnt made his name in music before. Also the eyepatch helps .. ie most of what one sees these days is for effect. Ironic little conceptual ploys as ephemeral as champagne bubbles ...

yeah I'm a bitter little hobbyist (see my post today), but atleast the game's not over yet. One reason I chose art in the first place was that its a calling that lasts a lifetime. Unfortunately for me, I'm more the type that stays in the studio rather than going out and trying to network or strategize on "the next big thing"

I am a nihilist

Date: 2007-03-16 03:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zzberlin.livejournal.com
<< well, control people's minds. At least to some sort of level. Work distracts a lot of people from questions or boredom/emptiness which would make them mad. So there would have to be the possibility of directing people to do creative work instead of either commit suicide or kill their way to world domination, in search of something that makes their lives seem un-senseless.>>

Why control their minds? Let them take themselves out. Death happens. We need to weed the planet anyway.

Okay say we get off the planet before we're much more evolved. We get to a new place with plenty of space. Resources are plentiful. No one *has* to do anything. What happens?

Some people die. Some people step up and use the time well. There will probably be violence while we figure out what it's like not to need anything. Do we start fighting over each other's husbands and wives?

We get to a point where the people left can handle unstructured time. And hopefully we get a lot of beautiful stuff to experience as a result.

I guess I'm more of an optimist than I thought.

I just don't mind if people, or I, die in getting to a better place. Don't get me wrong, am not brave, but I figure death is like jumping off a grand cliff and falling forever in a delightful way.

Am remembering that Stanislaw Lem wrote about such a quasi-utopian situation in, I believe it was "MEMOIRS Of A SPACE TRAVELER. Further Reminiscences of Ijon Tichy." That man was a visionary.

Using Click Opera to promote political agendas

Date: 2007-03-16 03:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zzberlin.livejournal.com
hi momus,

I am campaigning for a 2008 U.S. presidential candidate. Are you going to get pissed if I promote him here? Hahahah I know you will, but will you stop me? If I do it gracefully, will you let me get away with it?

Was this a problem in the 2004 election? Did U.S. readers advocate for the their political preferences in these pages?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 04:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cheapsurrealist.livejournal.com
I'm just pulling names out of a hat here

me too ¢ (http://members.aol.com/joeyknow/jk7.html)

C'mon!

Date: 2007-03-16 05:45 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Well, I'm a Brazilian curator and I know a financial institute that are very interested in buying works of media art. I can tell that this statement:

(...) collecting together 70 media artists and plans to sell their work by -- well, I won't let the cat out of the bag yet;

...is pretty frustrating.

Coitus interruptus

Re: C'mon!

Date: 2007-03-16 06:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
If you email me (mailto:momasu@gmail.com) I can put you in touch with her.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 06:39 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Sorry for being a bit off topic but I recall you mentioning a phobia connected with the unwill to wear any other colour than black. What was it called again? I've been trying to search on google.com but I haven't found anyhting...

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 06:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cap-scaleman.livejournal.com
Ooops, that was me...

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 06:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Maybe "chromophobia", the fear of colours, as expounded in David Batchelor's book of the same title (http://www.amazon.com/Chromophobia-FOCI-David-Batchelor/dp/1861890745)?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 06:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cap-scaleman.livejournal.com
That's the one! Thank you!

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 09:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nicepimmelkarl.livejournal.com
i'm singing in the rain.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 09:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Bit an intellectual last week. Surprisingly moist. Limited shelf-life, though. Stale in a day.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-16 10:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dzima.livejournal.com
momus-sensei's lectures are always a riot.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 12:22 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Happiness never really comes. What we should strive for is emotional maturity. That's what I tell my puppet collection, anyway.

Re: I am a nihilist

Date: 2007-03-17 12:29 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
No, you are not a nihilist. A dreary, solipsistic, middle class brat who writes like A.A. Milne on Benecol perhaps...

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 01:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Happiness never comes, you say? You poor emotionally mature fellow! Here's a purple oxalis to cheer you up:

Image

You can play with my puppets anytime.

oldest professions

Date: 2007-03-17 02:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pay-option07.livejournal.com
pay options are wonderful to philosophize about
but the art brothels of the world certainly promote
their flux for glamour.

Wasn't much of a Roxy fan. Pragmatists, ok by me.

you were in my thoughts last night

Date: 2007-03-17 02:29 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
i was driving south on long beach blvd. where an obscure cinema was advertising films by women, that was the title, the sign, films by women. and i thought, why do we women, clearly use words like this, to make sure the audience knows "women" created these pieces? is it that women think they have "something" men don't? and at this point, i think that is what it is, we women think we have "something" men dont and that is why we need to use such words to show our seperation, our highness even though the use of the words depict us as an opposing,lower being, perhaps. (what do you think?)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 08:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stanleylieber.livejournal.com
'as Eno says, it's "everything we don't need to do".'

Meanwhile, someone else has to do those things.

Re: I am a nihilist

Date: 2007-03-17 08:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stanleylieber.livejournal.com
That's not very nice. Can you tell me why I'm not a nihilist as well?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 08:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stanleylieber.livejournal.com
art is already detached from commerce on the internet

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 08:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stanleylieber.livejournal.com
old-school academia is dead but the body isn't cold yet. momus is internet famous without making a dime. these words are the ones that will live forever after all the books are burned.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 08:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stanleylieber.livejournal.com
so then happiness is seasonal.
From: [identity profile] stanleylieber.livejournal.com
it is the sound of one hand being told to clap (http://www.archive.org/download/Eve/Eve-Track_05-The_Sound_Of_One_Hand_Being_Told_To_Clap_vbr.mp3).

Re: I am a nihilist

Date: 2007-03-17 09:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bikerbar.livejournal.com
I guess we'll all eat digital coconuts?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 09:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bikerbar.livejournal.com
I can't wait to get a Readius, and read about 19th century Berlin while riding in the tram

Re: you were in my thoughts last night

Date: 2007-03-17 09:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
It means "films by the gender other rather than the gender it". But that would look a bit clunky on a poster.

On the one hand, it's good to allow equality and specialization within a miniworld, and that's what the creation of a competition category for "gender others" allows. On the other hand, to promote equality at such a price has the effect of diminishing equality within the big world, the world of the "gender it".

And the question then is, is the world of the "gender it" more real just because it's bigger, richer and more powerful? Should we try and change it from within, or without? Does allowing the gender other into a relatively unchanged gender it film world diminish the asymmetrical strength of the gender it or boost it?

It's hard to imagine a world where gender is a difference that no longer makes a difference. And it would be a mistake to imagine it as necessarily a more equal world than the one we live in. Other binary distinctions, other "its and others", would structure our lives.

I think also that we have to see the asymmetry between men and women as producing "women's films" as we know them. In a world where gender was no longer a "difference that made a difference" (a structural difference), say goodbye to the whole idea of women's films!

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 09:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Someone else has to do the things we don't have to? Is there a wretched subproletariat somewhere making video art so that we don't-have-to-but-do-anyway?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 09:34 am (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 03:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Perhaps, but I'm not entirely sure that's a defining characteristic. So much is seasonal, after all (hurricanes, tornadoes, Christmas, etc).

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-17 04:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Interesting video of a Liam Gillick talk at the Tate. (http://www.tate.org.uk/onlineevents/archive/liam_gillick/gillick.ram)

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