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Sunday, October 21, 2007

"Yuo_ser:The Consumer Century¨" until 31.12.07 ZKM, Karlsruhe (D)


On the occasion of its anniversary celebration “10 Years of ZKM in Hallenbau A,” ZKM | Center for Art and Media turns its attention to the effects of net-based, global creation on art and society with the exhibition “You_ser: The Consumer Century.”
Over the past years, the ZKM | Media Museum has already presented in the context of its collection of interactive art, the largest in the world, the most important pathfinders and currents in participatory art of the twentieth century: Op-Art, kinetic and cybernetic art, Arte Programmata, Conceptual art, Fluxus, and Happenings, interactive computer-aided installations, and virtual environments. Instructions for use and changeable objects activate beholders. In this way, you, the visitor, take part in the construction of the artwork. In the Internet, portals such as www.flickr.com, www.youtube.com, www.myspace.com; and virtual worlds, such as www.secondlife.com or blogs now offer a newly structured space for the creative statements of millions of people. The artist no longer has a monopoly on creativity.
Users deliver or generate the content or put it together. They become producers and program designers and thereby, competitors to television, radio, and newspapers, the historical media monopoly. Audience participation reshapes itself as consumers’ emancipation.
These transformations concern not only the global expanses of the Internet, but also the museum. It reacts to the changed cultural and social behavior and supports those tendencies, which, in an Enlightenment spirit, are applied for democracy and the idea of access to education for all.
The new installations presented in the exhibition transfer the potential for co-designing by the user that has been developed on the Internet into the context of art and allow the visitors to emancipate themselves.
They can act as artists, curators, and producers. The exhibition visitors, as users, as emancipated consumers, are at the center of focus. YOU are the content of the exhibition! The museum is bound to a fixed location and set times. Through the Internet, it can develop into a communicative platform independent of place and time. The historical model of culture, in which Darwinist selection takes place and only a few select find acceptance in its storage and distribution apparatus, embodied by the principle of Noah’s Ark, has been displaced.
The new Noah’s Ark of the Internet has an endless storage space, which, in principle, is open to all inhabitants of the industrial and newly industrializing countries.
Is this the new cultural space for the emancipated consumer, the visitor as user who will decide the culture of the twenty-first century, just as slaves, workers, and citizens as historical subjects have done in the past?

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Von Bill Viola bis Aernout Mik until 24.02.08 Hambuger Bahnhof, Berlin


This autumn, in addition to its permanent exhibitions of 19th century works from the collection at the Alte Nationalgalerie and of 20th century works at the Neue Nationalgalerie, the National Gallery is presenting a selection of newly acquired works in the fields of contemporary video art and painting at the Hamburger Bahnhof. The recently acquired filmic work "Refraction" by Dutch artist Aernout Mik is at the heart of the exhibition. Flanking it are films by the group "Die Tödliche Doris" and American artist Jack Goldstein. In addition, we are showing paintings by artists including Eve Aschheim, Dexter Dalwood, Eberhard Havekost, Sergej Jensen, Johannes Kahrs, Raoul de Keyser and Chris Newman.