Most developments
in art are superseded and often directly initiated by advances in technology
and science. The past century is a prime example of how awesome breakthroughs
subjected art through fascinating transformations. Liberated from its
past role of pure representation, art emerged dynamically to draw new
courses through a remarkable array of experimentation and theoretical
discourse. This journey, in its vast entirety, was sustained through
great personal struggles of independent artists and the few individuals
and institutions that supported them.
Art in the 20th century ceased to be solely defined through previously
established modes of expression. The very notions of painting, sculpture,
literature, music and theater were indeed challenged and further expanded
to new territories. Photography and cinematography emerged as new mediums.
Mass production and transportation changed the way things were made
and accessed. Further modes of expression started to interact dynamically
creating new hybrid mediums. Art literally exploded into an unprecedented
proliferation of creative vocabularies, offering a renewed desire to
re-examine our world through its spectrums. Unfortunately many of the
brave new developments were so advanced that they remained doomed into
obscurity. On the other hand, the widely known versions of artistic
development were encumbered by a growing desire to be branded and capitalized
simply as a new way to re-represent the world. Art saturated and tantalized
continued to remain eclectic commodity and taking further back steps,
it fulfilled perfectly the role of prostitute for any other scientific,
social, political, economic, religious need of society.
As the world was propelled with greater impetus through the advances
of the latest information technologies, the symptoms persisted through
the new millennium. All this of course is not the result of any artist,
art critic, or art patron. There is no point in searching for any faults
here but simply a compelling call to reflect upon the new parameters.
The new technologies of the 21st century assembled even greater hyperdromes
from which art could shoot off to bold new dimensions. Digital art,
multimedia art, internet, animation, virtual art, electronic, blogart
- the list surely does not stop there. New -isms, spasms, chasms are
born and art continues to flourish yet remain somehow in chains. It
seems an oxymoron that while offered such immense new possibilities
art, has remained captive of its own treasures.
The signs of this captivity are overwhelming. Art continues to be a
commodity; one of superior and unique quality available to the very
few, and one of ephemeral often degrading quality, readily available
for mass consumption. Furthermore, despite numerous and elaborate transformations
art continues to reconstitute and recycle the imagery and languages
of its past. This of course, contrary to what the frontrunners of the
avant-garde might think, is not detrimental in itself but it does begin
to feel restrictive and somewhat oppressive if it characterizes the
vast majority of art produced today.
On the other hand the ability to re-produce reality and its numerous
re-presentations almost instantly and with unprecedented ease has indeed
been so proliferated (and rightly so) that it has turned the whole aspect
of artistic production to a form of democratic re-production. That is
indeed a fascinating perhaps even liberating phenomenon that goes beyond
the mere outlines of any particular style and its omnipresence around
the globe. It may also be a necessary means of allowing effectively
a sort of time delay for the digestion of the super fast technological
advances and their cultural impact.
Yet one has to seriously consider the impact of this fast food art.
What are the un-seen repercussions of minimal direct engagement in terms
of production and consumption to the overall value of any artwork? How
can abstract thought or deeper philosophical and psychological issues
be effectively addressed and engaged within an overwhelming state of
flux. Flashart, the new global mode of art production, capitalization
and consumption seems to have placed a few significant parameters on
the backburner while it readily remakes_ replays_ recycles everything
and anything from past to present.
There are good signs though to look for in this new technutopia we are
living in. The need for human interaction has been greatly embellished
by so many means but mostly it is the use and applications of computers
and the internet that have brought a real revolution in the way we engage
and learn from each other. During most of the 20th century, information
and communication was limited to immediate locality. Any information
reached its target audience with considerable time lag and with hardly
any opportunities for interaction and feedback, making it a rather sterile
endeavor. Today every single human being with internet access can readily
share, distribute, exchange, assess, and re-adjust the flow and nature
of information in a truly global scale. Information has become multidimensional
and perhaps the very activity of handling it is an art form in itself.
How all this will affect art is yet to be seen but some indications
are readily available. The ability to create virtual nodes of information;
to bring together pools of resources and groups of people (that would
otherwise be left in modes of singular activity), has carved new ways
of collaboration and progress. Art is readily available and readily
effective. Limitations of physical space will be in their majority bridged.
Institutions and galleries continuing to rely on their current modus
operandi will be rendered virtually irrelevant and ineffective to shape
cultural and artistic trends. The internet will emerge from its modest
beginnings of digital showcase to become a global workshop; a place
to create and share art - not simply advertise it. Words will become
increasingly important and will enter intrepidly the creative vocabularies
of many artists. The infinite capacity of words to behold concepts and
abstract ideas will be recombined with a renewed capacity to flash them
and project them into new realms. Symbols and words will clash strongly
with hordes of images. We dont know and cant predict where
art will lead us as individuals or as societies, or if it will indeed
lead at all. We can reasonably predict though, that art will continue
to spiral relentlessly and bring forth new as well as old values.
Technology inevitably, helped liberate our perceptions; it will further
encourage and facilitate individual creativity. Art will be given a
chance to refocus on its pure origin; the simple need of every human
being, to communicate and share what would otherwise remain unchartered
terrain.