[aha] Expanded Box - Curatorial Statement
Domenico Quaranta
qrndnc at yahoo.it
Sat Jan 31 14:13:34 CET 2009
Expanded Box – Caring for an Expanded Conception of Art
Domenico Quaranta
[MORE INFOS AT: http://www.domenicoquaranta.net/ARCO2009.html]
In the vast, variegated panorama of contemporary artistic
experimentation there are various practices germinating that find it
difficult to carve a niche for themselves in the official discourse
and channels, despite the undeniable appeal they possess. The thing
that makes them so precious, and as delicate as a flower growing under
the snow, is not the fact that they use the “new media”, because
everyone uses the media - and now they are anything but new. What
makes them so special is the fact that like the aforementioned flower,
they contain a new strength, and a new promise. The strength is that
of those who go about their lives without a thought for the rules that
govern the world they live in, and who create the conditions that
enable them to live, successfully, in a radically altered context; the
promise regards this radical transformation.
Everyone in the contemporary art field knows perfectly well that the
context in which artists operate today was by and large established
during the 20th century by Marcel Duchamp, and given structure and
supported by a renewed museum and market system. According to this
model, art no longer consists in the masterful implementation of a
technique (painting, sculpture, music or writing) to present a world
(the so-called “real” world, the unconscious world of the Surrealists,
etc.). Anything can be art, if given a specific discourse and a
specific conception, and if conveyed by means of a specific context.
The aura of a work of art, which may be lost and found time and again,
is now attributed by means of a precise process of consecration, which
takes place on the market and in the museums. Without venturing into
value judgements, it will suffice to consider the duration of this
model to understand that what comes into being within it now is pure
academicism. Murakami is to Duchamp and Warhol as Bouguerau is to
Poussin and David. The gradual, unstoppable transition to the
information society has radically challenged this model, nurtured in
the bosom of the industrial society, but has not succeeded in
destroying it altogether. It lives on as an act of faith, a consensual
hallucination, a superstition boosted by the fear of what is to come.
It survives, and continues to produce masterpieces, basking in the
splendour which characterizes all periods of decadence.
The new world is there, just round the corner – or, to return to the
cutesy flower metaphor - under the snow. It is in the art that exists
outside the confines of the art world, rejecting the “contextual
definition” of Duchampian origin which seems to persist, as Joline
Blais and Jon Ippolito wrote in their book At the Edge of Art, purely
by inertia; it is in the art that seeks out public space, media space,
biotechnology labs and the world of information, communications and e-
commerce as its operative environment; it is in the art that draws on
other practices and other specific fields of knowledge, to a point
where at times it has problems seeing itself (and being seen) as art;
it is in the art that enthusiastically embraces technological
reproducibility, the variability of data and the fluidity of
information, abandoning - and radically challenging - the status of
precious fetish, and it is in the art that is open to interaction with
the spectator, that forges and develops relationships, that breaks
down the wall which interrupts and conditions our mental and physical
dialogue with a work.
This art exists, and it is at once strong and delicate, timid and
aggressive, marginal and supreme. It is entrenched in the
contradictions of all revolutions: it rebels against a world, but
needs the cares of that world to resist. It has tried to escape, to
open up new channels, but in the end it will succeed in changing our
idea of art, defeating the academicism and opening the way to the
future by means of dialogue and mediation. A future, which as the
novelist William Gibson said, is already here, just badly distributed.
The historic function of Expanded Box, the last embodiment of an
enduring attention Arco devoted to new media and languages, is
precisely that of cultivating and redistributing the future, and
supporting an ?expanded? definition of art. In the last ten years, and
through different programs, Arco has done exactly that, hosting and
offering market opportunities to a growing number of galleries that
take up this challenge, at their own risk. When you see this compact
block of eight galleries that offer their space to monographic
projects - often decidedly ambitious - you could be forgiven for
thinking that Expanded Box is one of those typical cultural
initiatives increasingly staged on occasion of contemporary art fairs,
with the idea of accompanying the dialogue and exchanges between
galleries and collectors, but without attempting to compete with them.
This is not the case.
Expanded Box, today, is the place where Leo Castelli would go to sell
and Alfred H. Barr would go to buy. I am aware that this might sound
rhetorical, and possibly a little ingenuous, but I cannot find a non-
rhetorical way to say that there, more than anywhere else, the seeds
of an evolution are germinating. They rest, well protected, in the
machines of Lawrence Malstaf and the interactive environmental
installations by Pors & Rao; in the sound installations by Manas and
Moori and Thomson & Craighead; in the exploration of the dividing line
between matter and the dematerialization of the media undertaken by
the Korean Kim Jongku, and in John Gerrard’s 3D animations. They
reproduce at the speed of a virus in the works of Joan Leandre, who
upends the hyperreal interfaces that filter our rapport with reality,
while they lurk in UBERMORGEN.COM’s media hacking activities, which
uses low-tech tools to bring the giants of e-commerce to their knees.
For ten years Expanded Box has invested in this new current, the
novelty of which, we should reiterate, lies not so much in the media
that these works use, but in the culture they reflect and in the idea
of art that they open the way for.
---
Domenico Quaranta
mob. +39 340 2392478
email. qrndnc at yahoo.it
home. vicolo San Giorgio 18 - 25122 brescia (BS)
web. http://www.domenicoquaranta.net/
"Computers are incredibly fast, accurate and stupid. Human beings are
incredibly slow, inaccurate and brilliant. Together they are powerful
beyond imagination." Albert Einstein
More information about the AHA
mailing list