INTRODUCTION
For the past fifteen years, increasing numbers of artists around
the world are working in collaborative mode with telecommunications.
In their 'works', which we shall refer to as 'events', images and
graphics are not created as the ultimate goal or the final product,
as it is common in the fine arts. Employing computers, video, modems
and other devices, these artists use visuals as part of a much larger
interactive, bi-directional communication context. Images and graphics
are created not simply to be transmitted by an artist from one point
to another, but to spark a multidirectional visual dialogue with
other artists and participants in remote locations. This visual
dialogue assumes that images will be changed and transformed throughout
the process as much as speech gets interrupted, complemented, altered
and reconfigured in a spontaneous face-to-face conversation. Once
an event is over, images and graphics stand not as the "result",
but as documentation of the process of visual dialogue promoted
by the participants.
This unique ongoing experimentation with images and graphics develops
and expands the notion of visual thinking by relying primarily on
the exchange and manipulation of visual materials as a means of
communication. The art events created by telematic or telecommunications
artists take place as a movement that animates and sets off balance
networks structured with relatively accessible interactive media
such as telephone, facsimile (fax), personal computers, email,
and slow-scan television (SSTV). More rarely, radio, live television,
videophones, satellites and other less accessible means of communication
come into play. But to identify the media employed in these 'events'
is not enough. Instead, one must do away with prejudices that cast
off these media from the realm of "legitimate" artistic media and
investigate these events as equally legitimate artistic enterprises.
This essay partially surveys the history of the field and discusses
art events that were either motivated by or conceived specially
for telecommunications media. The essay attempts to show the transition,
from the early stages, when radio provides writers and artists with
a new spatiotemporal paradigm, to a second stage, in which telecommunications
media, including computer networks, become more accessible to individuals
and artists start to create events, sometimes of global proportions,
in which the communication itself becomes the work.
Telecommunications art on the whole is, perhaps, a culmination
of the process of dematerialization of the art object epitomized
by Duchamp and pursued by artists associated with the conceptual
art movement, such as Joseph Kosuth. If now the object is totally
eliminated and the artists are absent as well, the aesthetic debate
finds itself beyond action as form, beyond idea as art. It founds
itself in the relationships and interactions between members of
a network.
ART AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS
One must try to understand the cultural dimensions of new forms
of communication as they emerge in innovative art works which will
not be experienced or enjoyed as unidirectional messages. The complexity
of the contemporary social scene permeated by electronic media,
where the flux of information becomes the very fabric of reality,
calls for a reevaluation of traditional aesthetics and opens the
field for new developments. In other words, to address the aesthetics
of telecommunications is to see how it affected and affects more
traditional arts. It is also to investigate at what extent the context
for a new art is created by the merger of computers and telecommunications.
The new material which artists will be dealing with more and more
must be identified, then, in the intersection between the new electronic
processes of visual and linguistic virtualization brought irreversibly
by telecommunications and the personal computer (word processing,
graphic programs, animation programs, fax/modems, satellites, teleconferencing,
etc) and the residual forms that resulted from the process of dematerialization
of the art object, from Duchamp to conceptual art (language, video,
electronic displays, printing techniques, happenings, mail art,
etc). This new art is collaborative and interactive and abolishes
the state of unidirectionality traditionally characteristic of literature
and art. Its elements are text, sound, image and, eventually, virtual
touch based on force-feedback devices. These elements are out of
balance; they are signs which are already shifting as gestures,
as eye contact, as transfigurations of perpetually unfulfilled meaning.
What is commuted is changed, re-changed, ex-changed. One must explore
this new art in its own terms, i.e., understanding its proper context
(the information society at the dawn of the twenty-first century)
and the emerging theories (poststructuralism, chaos theory, culture
studies) that inform its questioning of notions largely taken for
granted such as subject, object, space, time, culture and human
communication. The forum where this new art operates is not the
materially stable pictorial space of painting nor the Euclidean
space of sculptural form; it is the electronic virtual space of
telematics where signs are afloat, where interactivity destroys
the contemplative notion of beholder or connoisseur to replace it
by the experiential notion of user or participant. The aesthetics
of telecommunications operates the necessary move from pictorial
representation to communicational experience.
Two of the most interesting new forms of communication that seem
to do away with the old addresser-addressee model proposed by Shannon
and Weaver [1] and reinforced by Jakobson [2] are electronic mail
(email) and conference calling. In email a user can post up a
message and let it adrift in electronic space, without necessarily
sending it to a specific addressee. Then another user, or several
other users at the same time, can access this message and answer
it, or change it, or add a comment or incorporate this message into
a larger and new context -- in a process that has no end. The closed
message as identity of the subject is potentially dissolved and
lost in the signifying vortex of the network. If real-time is not
crucial for email, the same cannot be said about conference calling,
where three or more people engage in exchanges that don't have to
be limited to voice.[3] If the linear model goes as far as allowing
for addresser to become addressee when the poles are reverted, this
new multidirectional and interconnected model melts the boundaries
that used to separate sender and receiver. It configures a space
with no linear poles in which discussion replaces alternate monologues,
a space with nodes that point in several directions where everybody
is simultaneously (and not alternately) both addresser and addressee.
This is not a pictorial or volumetric space, but an aporetic space
of information in flux, a disseminated hyperspace that does away
with the topological rigidity of the linear model. It shares the
properties of non-linear systems, such as found in hypermedia or
in the statistical self-similarity of fractals, as opposed to the
embellished linear surfaces of postmodern painting. It is here,
possibly, that artists can intervene critically and suggest a redefinition
of the framework and the role of telematics, exhibiting that antagonistic
forces mutually constitute each other. What we used to call true
and real is and has always been reciprocally and dynamically, in
its play of differences, constituted by what we used to call false
and unreal. Cultural values are also questioned, since the structures
that privileged one culture over the others are conceptually challenged,
bringing cultural differences to the forefront. Artists can also
show, by working with the new media, what role the new media play
in forming or preserving stable structures that form the self, that
model communication, and, ultimately, that create social relations
(including relations of authority and power).
In like manner, artist and audience are also constructed in this
play of differences. If the mass-produced printed book would generate
both the notions of author and audience as we know them today, associating
control over the distribution of printed information to power, the
disseminated play of meaning of telematic networks potentially dissolves
both without fully establishing the integrated, harmonized, aural
global village dreamed of by McLuhan. If telecommunication is that
which brings people closer, it also is that which keeps them apart.
If telematics is that which makes information accessible to everyone
at any moment regardless of geographic frontiers, it also is that
which makes certain kinds of data generated by particular groups
in certain formats accessible to people involved with specific institutions.
That which brings people closer is also what keeps them away, that
which asks is also that which affirms certain values implicit in
the framing of the question. If there is no end to this play, to
this motion, there must be awareness of its context -- but then
again awareness is not removed from this motion through which it
is also configured.
To the linear model of communication, which privileges the artist
as the codifier of messages (paintings, sculptures, texts, photographs),
telematics opposes a multidirectional model of communication, one
where the artist is creator of contexts, facilitator of interactions.
If in the first case messages have physical and semiological integrity
and are open only to the extent they allow for different interpretations,
in the second case it is not mere semantical ambivalence that characterizes
the significational openness. The openness of the second case is
that which strives to neutralize closed systems of meaning and provide
the former viewer (now transformed into user, participant, or network
member) with the same manipulation tools and codes at the artist's
disposal so that the meaning can be negotiated between both. This
is not a simple inversion of poles, as proposed by Enzensberger
[4], but an attempt to acknowledge and operate within a signification
process that is dynamic, destabilized and multivocal, within a signification
process not based on the opposition artist/audience but on the differences
and identities they share. Messages are not "works" but a part of
larger communicational contexts, and can be changed, altered and
manipulated virtually by anybody.
One of the problematic issues here is that the dissolution of the
artist in the user and vice-versa would take away from artists their
privileged position as senders or addressers, because there is no
more message or work of art as such. It is clear that most artists
are not prepared to or interested in giving up this hierarchy because
it undermines the practice of art as a profitable activity and the
social distinction associated with notions such as skill, craft,
individuality, artistic genius, inspiration and personality. The
artist, after all, is someone who sees himself or herself as somebody
who should be heard, as somebody who has something important to
say, something important to transmit to society [5]. On the other
hand, one can ask at what extent artists that create telecommunication
events don't restore the same hierarchy they seem to negate by presenting
themselves as the organizers or directors or creators of the events
they promote -- in other words, as the central figure from which
meaning irradiates. As it seems, while a television director works
in collaborative fashion with tens or hundreds of people without
ever giving up the responsibility for the outcome of the work, the
artist (context-creator) that produces telecommunication events
sets a network without fully controlling the flux of signs through
it. The artist working with telecommunication media gives up his
or her responsibility for the "work", to present the event as that
which restores or tries to restore the responsibility (in Baudrillard's
sense) of the media. [6]
I must observe that certain traces of apparently uncritical enthusiasm
for this change in the processes and issues of art are identifiable
not only in the present essay and in other texts of mine on the
subject [7], but also in the writings of other artists that address
the aesthetics of communications at large, and of telecommunications
or telematics in particular, including Bruce Breland [8], Roy Ascott
[9], Karen O'Rourke [10], Eric Gidney [11] and Fred Forest [12].
Artists are now endowed with new instruments with which they reflect
on contemporary issues, such as cultural relativism, scientific
indeterminacy, the political economy of the information age, literary
deconstruction and decentralization of knowledge; artists are now
able to respond to these issues with the same material (hardware)
and immaterial (software) means that other social spheres employ
in their activities, in their communion and isolation. If actual
walls are falling (Berlin Wall, Iron Curtain), and so are metaphorical
walls (telematic space, virtual reality, telepresence), one can
not simply overlook or overestimate these historical and technical
achievements. It is not only with shear enthusiasm for new tools
that the artist will work with communication technologies, but also
with a critical, skeptical approach concerning the logic of mediation
they entail. This means not ignoring that utopias of ubiquitous
electronically mediated communication necessarily exclude those
cultures and countries that, usually for political and economic
reasons, don't have the same or compatible technologies and therefore
cannot participate in any global exchange.[13]
Let's suppose that in a not so distant future Jaron Lanier's dream
of "post-symbolic" communication [14] becomes possible and that
the cost per minute in a cyberspace matrix is comparable to the
normal cost of a phone call. This hypothetical situation could be
a viable approach to the problem of linguistic barriers (including
language impairment), but it would be no different from other cases
of economic segregation, given that even basic telephone technology
is full of serious problems in most developing countries. Perhaps
exactly because of these problems, and not despite them, artists
are using today's techniques to discuss today's issues. If telecommunications
art will not simply neglect the contradictions inherited in the
media and in other technological monopolies present in late capitalist
societies, I still like to think that perhaps freer forms of communication
can emerge out of new interactive artistic practices that make the
process of symbolic exchange the very realm of its experience.
DISEMBODIED VOICES
An assessment of the parallel development of telecommunications
media and new art forms throughout the twentieth-century reveals
an interesting transition: one first sees the impact of new media
on much older forms, such as radio influencing theater; later, it
is possible to detect more experimental uses of these media. At
last, artists master the new electronic media and explore their
interactive and communicational potential. In this perspective,
radio is the first electronic mass communications medium used by
artists.
In the late 1920's commercialization of air waves was in its infancy.
Radio was a new medium that captured the imagination of the listeners
with an auditory space capable of evoking mental images with no
spatiotemporal limits. A remote and undetected source of sound dissociated
from optical images, radio opened listeners to their own mindscapes,
enveloping them in an acoustic space that could provide both socialization
and private experiences. Radio was the first true mass medium, capable
of remotely addressing millions at once, as opposed to cinema, for
example, which was only available to a local audience.
In 1928 German film maker Walter Ruttmann (1887-1941) was invited
by the Berlin Broadcasting System to create a piece for radio. Ruttman
had already achieved international recognition for his abstract
animated films, such as Opus I, II, III and IV, which pioneered
the genre and anticipated computer animation by half a century.
His experimental documentary "Berlin, Symphony of a Great City"
(1927) also was acclaimed worldwide, and inspired a whole generation
of film makers who then created filmic "city symphonies". In addition
to his contribution to film making, Ruttman's innovative work for
radio would open the air waves to the aesthetic of the avant-garde,
challenging the standardization of programing imposed by commercial
imperatives.
In order to create the commissioned piece, Ruttman was given access
to what was one of the best recording systems for film in the world,
the "Triergon" process. Coming from the world of cinema, Ruttman
decided to create "Weekend", a movie without images, a discontinuous
narrative based on the mental images projected by the sounds alone.
He employed the sound track in the reel as he would have employed
the frame to record images. "Weekend" lasts about fifteen minutes
and creates an aural atmosphere that portrays workers leaving the
city and going to the countryside after a working day. If at first
sounds produced by saws, cars and trains are predominant, later
sounds of birds chirping and children speaking will appear more
often. As he had done with "Symphony of a Great City", Ruttman edited
this pictureless film in experimental fashion: splicing the reel
and with it the sound track, repeating certain sounds, reorganizing
the sequence and duration of sounds. He edited sound like one edits
film.
"Weekend" as a sound montage, conceived for a recording medium
and for radio transmission, opened new venues and anticipated the
aesthetics of movements such as Concrete Music and of artists such
as John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen. If Ruttman defined his abstract
films as "optical music", one would not hesitate to describe "Weekend"
as the first "acoustic film" created for radio.
As it became more popular, radio inspired and attracted professionals
from different backgrounds, including artists, performers, writers
and members of the avant-garde, such as the Italian Futurists. Since
the very beginning of Futurism, in 1909, Marinetti and his supporters
promoted the surpassing of traditional forms and the invention of
new ones at the same time that they celebrated technological militarization
and war. Marinetti collaborated closely with Mussolini's regime.
In 1929 Marinetti became a member of the Italian Academy, founded
by Mussolini, and in 1939 he served in a commission organized by
the fascist regime to censor undesired books, including those written
by Jewish authors. In 1935 he parted as a volunteer to the war in
Ethiopia, and in 1942 he parted, again as a volunteer, to the Russian
front.
The Futurists' last cry for a new art form came in September-October
of 1933, with the "Manifesto Della Radio" or "La Radia", signed
by Marinetti and Pino Masnata, and published both in "Gazzetta del
Popolo", Torino, September 22, and in their own periodical entitled
"Futurismo", Rome, October 1 -- although in the last one only Marinetti's
name appears [15]. The manifesto was drafted two years after Masnata
wrote the libretto for the radio opera "Tum Tum Lullaby ( or Wanda's
Heart)".
In the manifesto, they proposed that radio be freed from artistic
and literary tradition and that the art of radio begins where theater
and movies stop. Clearly, their project for an art of sounds and
silences evolved from Russolo's art of noises and, like Russolo,
they tried to expand the spectrum of sources the artist can use
in radio. Marinetti and Masnata proposed the reception, amplification
and transfiguration of vibrations emitted by living beings and matter.
This proposal was furthered by the mixture of concrete and abstract
noises and "the singing" of inanimate objects such as flowers and
diamonds. They claimed that the radio artist ("radiasta") would
create words-in-freedom ("parole in libertà"), making a phonetic
transposition of the absolute typographic liberty explored by Futurist
writers in the visual composition of their poems. But even if the
radio artist would not air words-in-freedom, his broadcasts still
must be in the parolibero style (derived from our words-in-freedom)
that already circulates in avant-garde novels and in the newspapers;
a style typically fast, dashing, simultaneous and synthetic.
Futurist radio could employ isolated words and repeat verbs in
the infinitive. It could explore the "music" of gastronomy, gymnastics
and lovemaking, as well as use simultaneously sounds, noises, harmonies,
clusters and silences to compose gradations of crescendo and diminuendo.
It could make the interference between stations a part of the work,
or create "geometric" constructions of silence. At last, Futurist
radio, by addressing the masses, would eliminate the concept and
the prestige of the specialized public, which always had "a deforming
and denigrating influence". On November 24, 1933, Fortunato Depero
and Marinetti made the first futurist transmissions over Radio Milano
[16].
In 1941, Marinetti published an anthology of Futurist theater with
a long title -- "The futurist theater synthetic (dynamic-illogical-autonomous-simultaneous-visionistic)
surprising aeroradiotelevisual music-hall radiophonic (without criticisms
but with Misurazioni)" [17] -- in which he compiled nine of Masnata's
and five of his own radio works ( "radiophonic synthesis").
Throughout the 1930's radio not only became technically reliable
but tunable, allowing the listener to choose among several programming
options. Radio could now receive short, medium and long waves from
considerable distances. Whether enjoyed for entertainment or hailed
as tool for political propaganda, radio became a domestic convergence
point. Listening to radio became a generalized habit in the 1930's,
when the world was at the verge of another global conflict.
In October 30, 1938, the Sunday program "The Mercury Theater in
The Air" directed by 23-year old Orson Welles and aired by Columbia
Broadcasting System, in New Jersey, always at 8 PM, would present
another adaptation of a literary text -- this time to celebrate
Halloween. Writer Howard Koch adapted the novel chosen by Orson
Welles, "The War of The Worlds" (1898) by Herbert George Wells (1866-1946),
updating the story and transposing the action to a virtually unknown
but real place, Grovers Mill, in New Jersey. The choice was accidental
but convenient, since it was close to the Princeton Observatory,
where Koch placed the fictitious Astronomy authority Prof. Pierson.
More importantly, Koch structured the story -- apparently following
a suggestion by Mercury Theater producer John Houseman -- intercalating
music and news, so that it seemed that the music was being interrupted
every now and then because of strange events and news flashes that
reported them live.
In Orson Welles dramatic voice, listeners became aware, little
by little, that the initial explosions observed on the surface of
Mars turned out to be disturbances caused by unidentified flying
objects that landed in Grovers Mill. Next, the monstrous Martian
invaders started to use their "heat ray" and project its "parallel
beam" against everything surrounding them, burning people alive
and destroying cars, houses, cities. Despite several announcements
during the program that it was fictitious, the news format of the
broadcast caught casual listeners by surprise. At the end, when
Prof. Pierson read his diary and revealed that the Martians had
been defeated by terrestrial microorganisms -- it was too late.
With nervous voices, Mercury Theater actors and actresses depicted
the landing of Martian war machines, the fire ignited by the deadly
rays, and the panic of witnesses. The public reacted with anguish
and despair. Nobody died but several people got injured, miscarriages
occurred, houses were left behind without a second thought, roads
were caught in huge traffic jams and policemen and firemen were
mobilized against the invisible menace. In New York City, many residents
loaded their cars and drove away from New Jersey. Calls from the
East overloaded the telephone lines in the Southwestern United States
and in Newark, New Jersey, hundreds of doctors and nurses called
hospitals to volunteer their services. In Concrete, Washington,
an accidental blackout happened exactly at the point in the transmission
when the Martians were taking control over the country's power system.
In the South, people sought refuge in local churches and in Pennsylvania
a woman was saved from suicide by the timely return home of her
husband. Angry listeners filled lawsuits against Welles and CBS,
without major consequences. Welles's contract made him not responsible
for consequences of any of the program's broadcasts, and CBS could
not be severely penalized since there was no previous similar case
to base an evaluation of the incident on.
Welles' simulated Martian invasion revealed, for the first time,
the true power of radio. It exhibited the unique ability of radio
to play with the breath of speech and the plastic sonority of its
special effects to excite the imagination of the listener. It showed
how the technical reliability of the medium built its credibility,
giving veracity to news transmitted through it. It explored unique
temporal rhythms, mixing real-time (the transmission lasted about
one hour) and dramatized time (Prof. Pierson tells us at the end
that the whole event happened in a few days). The silence between
the cuts (from music to news and vice-versa) was not simply an absence
of sound, as in a musical pause; it was presented to the listener
as the actual waiting time to link the reporter at the scene of
the landing to the crew in the studio. Perhaps, even more significant
was the fact that during the transmission the panic felt by thousand
of listeners was very real. The invasion was an event that happened
in the medium of radio and this medium was already so much part
of the lives of the listeners, it was so transparent and unquestionably
reliable, that the transmission was not experienced as a representation
or enactment. It was "hyperreal" in Baudrillard's sense of the word
, an experience in which signs not grounded in reality are so much
real that they become more real than the real.[18] Welles made explicit
the pseudo-transparency of the mass media by unveiling the mechanisms
by which the media tries to make itself a clear window to truth,
the way it pretends to ignore its own mediation and the influence
it has on the collective unconsciousness of society. No doubt, Welles
attracted the rage of lawmakers with a propensity to censorship.
Radio and electronic media would never be the same after the simulated
invasion from Mars.
TELEPHONE PICTURES
The telephone, the automobile, the airplane and, of course, radio,
were for the avant-garde artists of the first decades of this century
a symbol of modern life, in which technology could extend human
perception and capabilities. The dadaists, however, deviated from
the general enthusiasm for scientific rationalism and criticized
technology's destructive power. In 1920, in the "Dada-Almanac",
edited in Berlin by Richard Huelsenbeck, they published the irreverent
proposal that a painter could now order pictures by telephone and
have them made by a cabinetmaker. This idea appeared in the "Almanac"
as a pun and a provocation. Constructivist Hungarian artist Laszlo
Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946) was living in Berlin at the time, but it
is uncertain whether he read it or heard about it. What is certain
is that the soon-to-be member of the Bauhaus believed that intellectual
motivations were as valid as emotional ones in creating art and
decided to prove it to himself. Years later, the artist wrote, In
1922 I ordered by telephone from a sign factory five paintings in
porcelain enamel. I had the factory's color chart before me and
I sketched my paintings on graph paper. At the other end of the
telephone the factory supervisor had the same kind of paper, divided
into squares. He took down the dictated shapes in the correct position.
(It was like playing chess by correspondence.) One of the pictures
was delivered in three different sizes, so that I could study the
subtle differences in the color relations caused by the enlargement
and reduction.[19]
With the three telephone pictures described above, the artist was
taking his Constructivist ideas several steps further. First, he
had to determine precisely the position of forms in the picture
plane with the minute squares in the graph paper as the grid through
which the pictorial elements structured themselves. This process
of pixelation in a sense anticipated the methods of computer art.
In order to explain the composition over the phone, Moholy had to
convert the art work from a physical entity to a description of
the object, establishing a relationship of semiotic equivalence.
This procedure antedates concerns set forth by conceptual art in
the 1960's. Next, Moholy transmitted the pictorial data making the
process of transmission a significant part of the overall experience.
The transmission dramatized the idea that the modern artist can
be subjectively distant, he or she can be personally removed from
the work. It expanded the notion that the art object doesn't have
to be the direct result of the hand or the craft of the artist.
Moholy's decision to call a sign factory, capable of providing industrial
finishing and scientific precision, instead of, say, an amateur
painter, attests to his motifs. Furthermore, the multiplication
of the final object in three variations destroyed the notion of
the "original" work, pointing towards the new artforms that emerge
in the age of mechanical reproduction. Unlike Monet's sequential
paintings, the three similar telephone pictures are not a series.
They are copies without an original. Another interesting aspect
of the work is that scale, a fundamental aspect of any art piece,
becomes relative and secondary. The work becomes volatized, being
able to be embodied in different sizes. Needless to say, relative
scale is a characteristic of computer art, where the work exists
in the virtual space of the screen and can be embodied in a small
print and in a mural of gigantic proportions.
Despite all the interesting ideas it announces, the case of the
telephone pictures is controversial. Moholy's first wife, Lucia,
with whom he was living at the time, states that in fact he ordered
them in person. In her account of the experience, she recalls that
he was so enthusiastic when the enamel paintings were delivered
that he exclaimed: "I might even have done it over the phone!" [20].
The third personal record of the event, and as far as I know there
are only three, comes from Sybil Moholy-Nagy, the artist's second
wife:
He had to prove to himself the supra-individualism of the Constructivist
concept, the existence of objective visual values, independent of
the artist's inspiration and his specific peinture. He dictated
his paintings to the foreman of a sign factory, using a color chart
and an order blank of graph paper to specify the location of form
elements and their exact hue. The transmitted sketch was executed
in three different sizes to demonstrate through modifications of
density and space relations the importance of structure and its
varying emotional impact. [21]
We are left with the question, usually set aside by commentators,
of whether Moholy actually employed the telephone or not. Although
apparently irrelevant, since the three works were actually painted
by an employee of a sign factory according to the artist's specifications
and were named "Telephone Pictures" by Moholy-Nagy himself, this
question cannot be totally disregarded or answered. Lucia seems
to remember the event clearly, but the artist's account, in the
absence of proofs that state otherwise, would have to be preponderant.
One tends to assume they could have been ordered over the phone
because Moholy was an enthusiast of new technologies in general
and of telecommunications in particular. In the book "Painting,
Photography, Film" [22], originally published in 1925, he reproduced
two "wireless telegraphed photographs" and a sequence of two images
he described as examples of "telegraphed cinema" -- all by Prof.
A. Korn. In the same book, Moholy seems to conclude this chapter
by launching an early call for new art forms to emerge out of the
age of telecommunications:
Men still kill one another, they have not yet understood how they
live, why they live; politicians fail to observe that the earth
is an entity, yet television has been invented: the 'Far Seer' --
tomorrow we shall be able to look into the heart of our fellow man,
be everywhere and yet be alone. (...) With the development of photo-telegraphy,
which enables reproductions and accurate illustrations to be made
instantaneously, even philosophical works will presumably use the
same means -- though on a higher plane -- as the present day American
magazines. [23]
With Moholy-Nagy's three "telephone pictures", which were shown
in his first one-man show, in 1924, at the gallery Der Sturm, in
Berlin, we saw the artist acknowledging the conceptualization power
of the telephone exchange. This first experience was recognized
by The Museum of Contemporary Art, in Chicago, as a forerunner of
the conceptual art of the 1960's with the November 1-December 14,
1969 exhibit "Art by Telephone". Thirty-six artists were asked to
place a phone call to the Museum, or to answer the Museum's call,
and then to instruct Museum staff about what their contribution
to the show would be. The Museum then produced the pieces and displayed
them. A record-catalogue was produced with recordings of the phone
engagements between artists and Museum. The Director of the Museum,
Jan van der Marck, sustained that no group exhibition had tested
the aesthetic possibilities of remote-control creation:
Making the telephone ancillary to creation and employing it as
a link between mind and hand has never been attempted in any formal
fashion. [24]
"Art by telephone" was not meant as a telecommunications art event.
It was a group exhibition of works produced by an unusual method:
telephone descriptions followed by curators' own implementations.
The artist was to be, as in the case of Moholy, physically absent
from the process. Marck saw this as an expansion of the syncretism
between language, performance and visual arts characteristic of
the decade. Conceptual art set the framework for the emergence of
telecommunications art by emphasizing that cosa mentale that Duchamp
had already defended against the purely visual result of retinal
painting. Marck wrote that the participants want to get away from
the interpretation of art as specific, handcrafted, precious object.
They value process over product and experience over possession.
They are more concerned about time and place than about space and
form. They are fascinated with the object quality of words and the
literary connotation of images. They reject illusion, subjectivity,
formalist treatment and a hierarchy of values in art. [25]
This exhibit's pioneering status in the development of the aesthetics
of telecommunications was counterbalanced by many artist's rather
shy response to the challenge of making creative use of the telephone.
The majority of the participants never worked with communications
or telecommunications before, but what is noticeable is that their
response to this unique opportunity was still bound by the notion
that the work of art is embodied in tangible matter -- even if matter
without durable substance. Most artists used the telephone in an
ordinary way, providing instructions for the making of objects and
installations; only a few dared to transform an actual communication
experience in the work itself. The most notable exceptions are Stan
VanDerBeek, Joseph Kosuth, James Lee Byars and Robert Huot.
Huot's interactive proposal was the most unusual if not the most
literal. It potentially involved all visitors of the museum and
attempted to generate unexpected first meetings by employing chance
and anonymity. Twenty-six cities in America were chosen, each starting
with a letter of the alphabet, and twenty-six men named Arthur were
selected, one in each city. Each Arthur's last name was the first
listing under the initial letter of the city (Arthur Bacon, in Baltimore,
for instance). The Museum displayed a list of all cities and names,
and invited visitors to call and ask for "Art". The work was the
unexpected conversation between "Art" and the visitor, and its development
totally up to them. Huot's piece, no matter if intended as a pun
on the title of the show, presents the artist as the creator of
a context -- not a passive experience. It disregards pictorial representation,
gives up control over the work and takes advantage of the real-time
and interactive qualities of the telephone. The piece was meant
to spark relationships, and by doing so anticipated much of the
telecommunications work of the next two decades.
VISUAL TELEPHONICS AND BEYOND
For all the social, political and cultural implications of the
telephone, or more precisely, the dialogic structuring of the telephone,
one is compelled to observe that little critical attention has been
paid to it. Historical, technical and quantitative sociological
studies can shed little light on the deeper problematics of the
telephone, which is adjacent to linguistics, semiology, philosophy
and art. Avital Ronell has brought to the fore a long-distance philosophical
call that is as unprecedented as it is welcome. Letting her own
discourse oscillate between orality and writing in the connections
and reroutings of a metaphorical switchboard, Ronell's book [26]
has provided a new philosophical insight, a multi-party line between
Martin Heidegger, Sigmund Freud, Jacques Derrida, and, of course,
Alexander Graham Bell. Ronell's gesture, albeit on another plane,
is similar to that of those artists that since the late 1970's have
found in the telephone an incomparable source for experimentation.
Why the telephone?
In some ways it [the telephone] was the cleanest way to reach the
regime of any number of metaphysical certitudes. It destabilizes
the identity of self and other, subject and thing, it abolishes
the originariness of site; it undermines the authority of the Book
and constantly menaces the existence of literature. It is itself
unsure of its identity as object, thing, piece of equipment, perlocutionary
intensity or artwork (the beginnings of telephony argue for its
place as artwork); it offers itself as instrument of the destinal
alarm, and the disconnecting force of the telephone enables us to
establish something like the maternal superego. [27]
The beginnings of telephony argued for the artistic merits of the
telephone based on its capacity of transmitting sound over long
distances, i.e., based on its resemblance to what we know today
as radio. It would be possible, Bell and other pioneers hoped, to
listen to operas, news, concerts and plays over the phone. In Bell's
earliest lectures and performances, when the two-wayness of the
medium was still a technical obstacle, Watson would play the organ
and sing over the phone to entertain the audience and demonstrate
the possibilities of the new device. Several decades later, if business
over the telephone multiplied transactions, its use in the coziness
of the household provoked mixed reactions. John Brooks points out
[28] that H. G. Wells, in his "Experiment in Autobiography" (1934),
complained about the invasion of privacy spawned by the telephone.
Wells expressed his desire for a one-way telephone, so that when
we wanted news we could ask for it, and when we were not in a state
to receive and digest news, we should not have it forced upon us.[29]
Wells was conjuring an image of a future all-news radio station,
the creation of which, as McLuhan has noticed, would later result
from television's impact on radio. More importantly, Wells was reacting
to the intrusion of that "destinal alarm" that Ronell refers to,
to that "disconnecting force" of the telephone that is so disturbing
and attractive, so unsettling and arresting. When Wells stresses
that the telephone provides news even when he does not desire it,
he promotes notice of that projective trait of the telephone, which
is the launching of speech -- and speech alone -- in the direction
of the other in constant demand for immediate readiness. This demand
takes place in the linguistic domain and is properly answered by
a question which is at the same time a dubious answer: "yes?"
Perhaps what is unique about ordinary telephony is that in its
circuitry only spoken language circulates. As Robert Hopper has
suggested [30], the telephone emphasizes the linearity of signs
by splitting sound off from all other senses, by isolating the vocal
element of communication from its natural congruity with the facial
and the gestural. By cutting the aaudibleout of its interrelation
with the visual and the tactile, and by separating interlocutors
from the speech community, the telephone abstracts communication
processes and reinforces Western phonocentrism [31], now translated
into an outreaching telephonocentrism. It is to destabilize this
phonocentrism, and subsequently to contribute in undoing hierarchies
and centralization of meaning, knowledge and experience, that theorists
like Ronell and telecommunications artists invest their calls. In
the twentieth-century, what Derrida calls phonocentrism can be traced
back to Saussure, and Hopper cautiously finds Saussure bound to
the telephone. Hopper supports his argument with evidence that Saussure
lived in Paris when the city saw the boom of telephony. But more
than that, he reminds us that the telephone was invented by a speech
teacher of the deaf (Bell) and he stresses the acute resemblance
of Saussure's speaking circuit to telephonic communication.[32]
In the almost scientific vocal isolation of telephony and in the
presence of absent speakers, speech speaks loudly of its linear
structure and offers itself for theoretical (and artistic) investigation.
Being this entity which excludes all that is different from vocal
immediacy, the telephone speaks volumes of its platonic metaphysical
framework. But when zeroing in on several particulars of telematic
experience, one instantiates new insights on the telephonic structure
that contribute to a possible deconstruction of that framework.
Perhaps the most relevant aspect of the new telephonic syntax is
its recent technical absorption of the graphic element. It is now
technically possible not only to talk but to write over the phone
(email), to print over the phone (fax), to produce and record sound
and video (answering machine, slow-scan TV, videophone) over the
phone. As we have seen, it is also very likely that in the future,
fiber optics will give us access to telecyberspace. The telephone
is becoming the medium par excellence of that "enlarged and radicalized"
writing that signals Derrida, but contrarily to what one would otherwise
hypothesize, the more the telephone becomes speechless the more
central its role becomes in our lives. It is clear that the telephone
is slowly but continuously ceasing to owe its existence exclusively
to orality, but the cultural implications of this new aspect of
contemporary life remains to be further elaborated as an aesthetic
experience.
If the artist can have a unique encounter with technology because
he or she is an expert aware of the changes in sense perception,
as McLuhan purported [33], then it is the artist who will instigate
the discovery of new realms of experience beyond ordinary cognition.
Today a small number of artists inflated by an spirit of genuine
artistic inquiry are turning their back on the art market and are
committing themselves to creating telecommunications events in the
placeless place of networking.
Starting in 1982, after the pioneering telecommunication activities
of Bill Bartlett, Stan VanDerBeek and Liza Bear, Bruce Breland,
Matt Wrbican and other members of the Pittsburgh-based Dax group
(which now has an extension in Bellingham, Washington), have worked
consistently with fax and slow-scan TV as artistic media. Dax has
created or participated in telecommunications events in which telephone
lines are saturated with signals that flow in multiple directions
carrying graphic information. These interactions often include other
media as well (dance, computer music, etc), span over several time
zones, are geographically dispersed and establish varied kinds of
relationships between participants. Bruce Breland, Director of the
group, wrote that the concept of interactive systems has erased
the old boundaries of regionalism or nationalistic art. Telematics
has created the possibility of a new setting for interactive participation
between individuals and groups. Telematics provides a means for
instantaneous and immediate dissemination of information granting
the individual a choice between simple retrieval or intricate collaborative
art events. [34]
One of their first activities was participation in "The World in
24 hours" (1982), a global network organized by Robert Adrian for
Ars EElectronica in Austria, which linked sixteen cities on three
continents for a day and a night. Three years later, they stretched
the notion of worldwide interaction with "The Ultimate Contact",
a slow-scan TV piece created over FM radio in collaboration with
the space shuttle Challenger, in orbit around the Earth. The Dax
group also participated in larger networks realized in acknowledged
art institutions, such as the "Ubiqua" (1986) telecommunications
lab at the 42nd Biennale de Venezia. In it, they participated with
text (IP Sharp), slow-scan TV, and fax. More recently, they were
the first to collaborate with African artists in a telecommunications
event. On July 1990, they created "Dax Dakar d'Accord", a slow-scan
TV exchange with artists in Pittsburgh and Dakar, Senegal, as part
of a Senegalese five-year commemoration of the African Diaspora,
the "Goree-Almadies Memorial".[35]. Participants from Dakar included
Breland, Wrbican, Bruce Taylor, Mor Gueye (glass paintings), Serigne
Saliou Mbacke, De C.A.S.A. (sand paintings), Les Ambassadeurs (dance
and music), Le Ballet UnitZ¥ Africaine (dance and music), and
Fanta Mbacke Kouyate performing "Goree Song", which makes reference
to Goree Island in Dakar Harbour, holding and embarkation place
for the slave trade that took place over a four-hundred year period.
In Brazil, or perhaps I should say, in and out of Brazil, artists
such as Mario Ramiro, Gilbertto Prado (a member of French Art Reseaux),
Paulo Bruscky and Carlos Fadon have worked with telecommunications
since the early or mid 1980's. The events created by these artists,
some of whom have occasionally worked together, encompassed exchanges
both on a national and international scale. Mario Ramiro, now living
in Germany, is also a sculptor who works with zero-gravity and infrared
radiation. He has initiated and participated in a number of telecommunications
events with fax, slow-scan TV, videotext, live television broadcasts
and radio. He has also written extensively on the subject. Paulo
Bruscky, from Recife, well known for his work in xerography and
mail art, is one of the few Brazilian artists to have been awarded
a Guggenheim fellowship. His early work in telecommunications involved
experiments with telex and fax. Carlos Fadon, who lived in Chicago
and now is back in São Paulo, is a photographer and computer
artist whose work is part of several international collections.
One of his most original slow-scan TV pieces [36] is "Natureza Morta
ao Vivo" ("Still Life/Alive"), which proposes that once one artist
(A) sends an image to another (B), the image received becomes the
background for a still life created live. The artist (B) places
objects in front of the electronic image and the combination of
both object and image is captured as a video still which is now
sent back to the artist (A). This artist now uses this new image
as the background for a new composition with new objects and sends
it to the artist (A). This process is repeated with no terminus,
so that the generation of a still life remains a work-in-progress
through which a visual dialogue takes place.
In Paris, France, the Art Reseaux group, formed by Karen O'Rourke,
Gilbertto Prado, Christophe Le François and others, has been
developing elaborate projects such as O'Rourke's "City Portraits"
[37], which call for participants in a global network to travel
in imaginary cities by means of exchange of fax images. The project
usually involves the initial creation of a pair of images, the entrance
and the exit, which other artists then take as the extremes of the
route they will explore in the metamorphosis of images exchanged
over the telephone line. Artists create entrances and exits using
images of the cities they live in, by manipulating other images
to form synthetic landscapes or both, blending aspects of direct
and imaginary experiences of the urban environment. Gilbertto Prado
has been working on the "Connect" project, which involves at least
two sites and two fax machines in each site. Artists in each site
are asked not to cut the roll of thermal paper in the machine when
fax images start to appear. Instead, they are asked to feed that
roll into another fax machine and interfere in the images in the
process. A loop is then formed, connecting not only the artists
but the machines themselves. This new configuration forms a circle
in electronic space, linking in an imaginary topology cities that
can be as far apart as Paris and Chicago. As an example of possible
systems of interaction beyond linear models, Prado designed a circular
diagram in which the hands (and not the mouths or the ears of the
interlocutors) are the organs used for communication.
Le François' most recent project is "Infest", in which artists
are invited to investigate aesthetically that new aspect of contemporary
life which is the deterioration of images and documents due to contamination
and infection by computer viruses. During the exchanges, images
suffer manipulations that attempt to destroy and reconstruct them
(infection/disinfection), pointing to the new condition of electronic
decay in the world of digital epidemiology.
As the metaphors of human existence continue to intermingle with
those of cybernetic existence, designers learn how to cope with
issues of interfacing and artists compare remote communication to
face-to-face interaction. Acknowledging the place of telephony in
art, Karen O'Rourke reflected on the nature of fax exchanges as
an artistic practice:
Most of us today have taken not painting (nor even photography)
as a starting point for our images, but the telephone itself. We
use it not only to send images but to receive them as well. This
nearly instantaneous feedback transforms the nature of the messages
we send, just as the presence of a live audience inflects the way
in which actors interpret their roles or musicians their scores.
[38]
Traditionally, as in the sign/idea relationship, representation
(painting, sculpture) is that which takes place as absence (the
sign is that which evokes the object in its absence). Likewise,
experience (happening, performance) is that which takes place as
presence (one only experiences something when this something is
present in the field of perception). In telecommunications art,
presence and absence are engaged in a long-distance call that upsets
the poles of representation and experience. The telephone is in
constant displacement; it is logocentric but its phonetic space,
now in congruity with inscription systems (fax, email etc) signifies
in the absence more typically associated with writing (absence of
sender, absence of receiver). The telephone momentarily displaces
presence and absence to instantiate experience not as pure presence,
but, as Derrida wrote, "chains of differential marks"[39].
CONCLUSION
The new aesthetic outlined in the previous pages certainly escapes
from the problematic rubric of fine arts. The roles of artists and
audience become intertwined, the exhibition qua forum where physical
objects engage the perception of the viewer loses its central position,
the very notion of meaning and representation in the visual arts
-- associated with the presence of the artist and stable semio-linguistic
conventions -- is revised and neutralized by the experiential setting
of communications.
Having evolved from early experiments pursued by artists associated
with the movement of conceptual art, where language and media were
first investigated programmatically as artistic realms, telecommunications
art provides a new context for the postmodern debate.
Our traditional notions about symbolic exchanges have been relativized
by new technologies, from answering machines to cellular telephony,
from cash stations to voice-interface computers, from surveillance
systems to satellites, from radio to wireless modems, from broadcast
networks to email networks, from telegraphy to free-space communications.
Nothing in these promoters of social intercourse authorizes neither
shear optimism nor bleak neglect; they call for a disengagement
from the concept of communication as transmission of a message,
as expression of oneself's consciousness, as correspondent of a
pre-defined meaning.
The experimental use of telecommunications by artists points to
a new cultural problematics and to a new art. How to describe, for
example, the encounter now possible between two or more people in
the space of the image in a videophone call? If two people can talk
at the same time on the phone, if their voices can meet and overlap,
what to say about the new experience of telemeeting in the reciprocal
space of the image? What to say about all the telecommunication
models [40] that don't account for the multi-party interwoven fabric
of planetary networks? After minimal and conceptual art, does it
suffice to return to the decorative elements of parody and pastiche
in painting? And the hybridization of media, which now compress
maximum information-processing capabilities in minimum space? How
to deal with the new hypermedia that will unite in one apparatus
telephone, television, answering machine, video disk, sound recorder,
computer, fax/email, videophone, word processing and much more?
How can there be a receiver or a transmitter as positive values
if it is only in the connecting act, if it is only in the crisscrossings
of telephonic exchanges that such positions temporarily constitute
themselves? Contemporary artists must dare work with the material
and immaterial means of our time and address the pervasive influence
of new technologies in every aspect of our lives, even if that implies
to interact from afar, to remain out of sight, at-a-distance from
the art market and its accomplices. I quote Derrida [41], now in
conclusive mode:
One never sees a new art, one thinks one sees it; but a "new art",
as people say a little loosely, may be recognized by the fact that
it is not recognized, one would say that it cannot be seen because
one lacks not only a ready discourse which organizes the experience
of this art itself and is working even on our optical apparatus,
our most elementary vision. And yet, if this "new art" arises, it
is because within the vague terrain of the implicit, something is
already enveloped -- and developing.
REFERENCES AND NOTES
1 - Claude E. Shannon and Warren Weaver, The Mathematical Theory
of Communication (Urbana: The University of Illinois Press, 1949).
2 - Roman Jakobson, "Linguistics and Poetics", Style in Language
(New York: MIT Press, 1960), Thomas Sebeok, org., pp. 353-356.
3 - Two examples based on personal experience: a) In 1989, Carlos
Fadon and I (Chicago), Bruce Breland and Matt Wrbican (Pittsburgh)
and Dana Moser (Boston) collaborated in "Three Cities", a slow-scan
exchange operated through three-way calling; b) In 1990, Fadon and
I suggested to Bruce Breland the creation of an international telecommunication
event to be called "Impromptu", in which artists would try to engage
in conversations with tele-media (fax, SSTV, etc) the same improvised
way they do when talking face-to-face. "Earth Day" was going to
be celebrated soon, and Bruce suggested we expand the idea to encompass
the ecological context and make it "Earth Day Impromptu". Fadon
and I agreed, and we started to work with Bruce and the Dax group,
and Irene Faiguenboim, in organizing it. Later, Bruce's experience
with large networks proved crucial: working with other Dax members,
he made possible a very large SSTV conference call with several
artists in different countries, which was, together with the fax
and videophone network, part of the "Earth Day Impromptu".
4 - Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "Constituents of a Theory of the
Media", Video Culture (New York: Visual Studies Workshop Press,
1986), John Hanhardt, ed., p. 104.
5 - In Artists' use of interactive telephone-based communication
systems from 1977-1984 (unpublished master thesis submitted to City
Art Institute, Sidney College of Advanced Education), 1986, p. 18,
Eric Gidney gives an account of pioneer artist Bill Bartlett's telecommunication
events and also of his disappointment with other artist's response:
"Bartlett was dismayed at the rapacity of many North American artists,
who were willing to collaborate only insofar as it furthered their
own careers. He found that some artists would simply refuse to correspond
after a project was completed. He felt let down, exploited and "burned
out". Assaulted by serious doubts, he decided to withdraw from any
involvement in telecommunications work." Gidney also summarizes
the telecommunication work of pioneer artist Liza Bear, and quotes
her (p. 21): "A hierarchical structure is not conceptually well-suited
and does not create the best ambiance for communication by artists.
This [medium] is only successful in regions where artists and video
people already have a good track record of working together, sharing
ideas and preparing material".
6 - Jean Baudrillard, "Requiem for the Media", Video Culture (New
York: Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1986), John Hanhardt, ed.,
p. 129. Baudrillard formulates the problem of lack of response (or
irresponsibility) of the media with clarity: "The totality of the
existing architecture of the media founds itself on this latter
definition: they are what always prevents response, making all processes
of exchange impossible (except in the various forms of response
simulation, themselves integrated in the transmission process, thus
leaving the unilateral nature of the communication intact). This
is the real abstraction of the media. And the system of social control
and power is rooted in it." In order to restore the possibility
of response (or responsibility) in the current configuration of
the telecommunications media it would be necessary to provoke the
destruction of the existing structure of the media. And this seems
to be, as Baudrillard rushes to point out, the only possible strategy,
at least on a theoretical level, because to take power over media
or to replace its content with another content is to preserve the
monopoly of speech.
7 - See: Kac, E., "Arte pelo telefone", O Globo, September 15,
1987, Rio de Janeiro; "O arco-íris de Paik", O Globo, July 10, 1988,
Rio de Janeiro; "Parallels between telematics and holography as
art forms", in Navigating in the Telematic Sea, Bruce Breland, ed.,
New Observations, 76, New York, May-June 1990, p. 7; Kac, E., "Ornitorrinco:
Exploring Telepresence and Remote Sensing", in Connectivity: Art
and Interactive Telecommunications, Roy Ascott and Carl Eugene Loeffler,
eds., Leonardo, Vol. 24, N.2, 1991, p. 233; Kac, E., "On the notion
of art as a visual dialogue", in Art Reseaux, Karen O'Rourke, ed.,
UniversitZ¥ de Paris I, PanthZ¥on-Sorbonne, Paris,1992,
pp. 20-23.
8 - Art Com (an online magazine forum), Tim Anderson and Wendy
Plesniak, eds., Number 40, Vol. 10, August 1990, issue dedicated
to the Dax Group.
9 - Ascott, R., "Art and Telematics", in Art Telecommunications,
Heidi Grundmann, ed., The Western Front, Vancouver, Canada (Shakespeare
Company, Vienna, Austria), 1984, pp. 25-58.
10 - O'Rourke, K., "Notes on Fax-Art", in Navigating in the Telematic
Sea, Bruce Breland, ed., New Observations, 76, New York, May-June
1990, pp. 24-25.
11 - Gidney, E., "The Artist's use of telecommunications: a review",
Leonardo, Vol. 16, N. 4, 1983, pp. 311-315.
12 - Forest, F., "Communication Esthetics, Interactive Participation
and Artistic Systems of Communication and Expression", in Designing
the Immaterial Society, Design Issues special issue, Marco Diani,
ed., Vol. IV, Ns. 1 & 2, University of Illinois, Chicago, pp. 97-115.
13 - Robert Adrian X addressed this issue when he observed ("Communicating",
in Art Telecommunications, Heidi Grundmann, ed., The Western Front,
Vancouver, Canada (Shakespeare Company, Vienna, Austria), 1984,
pp. 76-80): "Nobody in eastern Europe can get access to telefacsimile
equipment or computer timesharing equipment... and the situation
is much grimmer in Africa and most of Asia and Latin America. If
these parts of the world are to be considered for inclusion in artists'
telecommunications projects it has to be at the level of ACCESSIBLE
electronic technology... the telephone or short wave radio."
14 - In October 28, 1991, Jaron Lanier lectured at the auditorium
of The School of The Art Institute of Chicago. At that occasion
I had the opportunity to ask him what he meant by this often-quoted
and seldom-explained phrase ["post-symbolic communication"]. Lanier
explained that one direction he envisions for virtual reality is
for it to be taken over by telephone companies, so that timesharing
in cyberspace becomes possible. In this setting, it would be possible
for people in distant locations, wearing datasuits, to meet in cyberspace.
These people would be able to exercise visual thinking on a regular
basis and communicate by other means different than spoken words;
they would be able to express an idea by simply making that idea
visible in cyberspace, or by manipulating their own databody or
by manipulating their interlocutors' databodies [I'm calling "databody"
the human body of a VR user as seen by the user once immersed in
cyberspace]. This kind of communication, achieved by a still symbolic
but perhaps more direct use of visual signs, is what Lanier called
"post-symbolic communication". His "Reality Built for Two", or "RB2",
is a step in that direction, and we can expect videophone services
to provide support for it as well.
15 - Luciano Caruso, Manifesti Futuristi (Firenzi: Spes-Salimbeni,
1980), pp. 255-256.
16 - Pontus Hulten, org., Futurism & Futurisms (Venice and New
York: Palazzo Grassi and Abbeville Press, 1986), p. 546.
17 - Fillipo Marinetti, Il teatro futurista sintetico (dinamico-alogico-autonomo-simultaneo-visionico)
a sorpresa aeroradiotelevisivo caffZ¥ concerto radiofonico (senza
critiche ma con Misurazioni) (Naples: Clet, 1941). Some words in
this title were neologisms coined by Marinetti and allow for multiple
interpretations. My choices in the translation of the title are
but some of the possible solutions.
18 - Jean Baudrillard, Simulations (New York: Semiotext(e), 1983)
p 54. Telecommunication media now efface the distinction between
themselves and what used to be perceived as something apart, totally
different from and independent of themselves, something we used
to call the "real". Baudrillard calls this situation "hyperreal",
or "hyperreality". This lack of distinction between sign (or form
or medium) and referent (or content or real) as stable entities
is by the same token a step further away from McLuhan and a step
closer to the new literary criticism as epitomized by Derrida. In
what is likely to be his most celebrated essay, "The Precession
of Simulacra", he once again acknowledges McLuhan's perception that
in the electronic age the media are no longer identifiable as opposed
to its content. But Baudrillard goes further saying that: "There
is no longer any medium in the literal sense: it is now intangible,
diffuse and diffracted in the real, and it can no longer even be
said that the latter is distorted by it. "
19 - Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, The New Vision and Abstract of an Artist
(New York: Wittenborn, 1947), p. 79.
20 - Kisztina Passuth, Moholy-Nagy (New York: Thames and Hudson,
1985), p. 33.
21 - Sybil Moholy-Nagy, Moholy-Nagy; Experiment in Totality (Massachusetts:
MIT Press, 1969), p XV.
22 - Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Painting, Photography, Film (Massachusetts:
MIT Press, 1987).
23 - Moholy-Nagy [Painting, Photography, Film], pp. 38-39.
24 - Art by Telephone, record-catalogue of the show, Museum of
Contemporary Art, Chicago, 1969.
25 - Art by Telephone, op. cit.
26 - Avital Ronell, The Telephone Book; Technology, Schizophrenia,
Electric Speech (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989).
27 - Ronell, op. cit., p. 9.
28 - John Brooks, "The First and Only Century of Telephone Literature",
in The Social Impact of the Telephone, Ithiel de Sola Pool, ed.,
(Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1977), p. 220.
29 - Quoted by Brooks, op. cit., p. 220.
30 - Robert Hopper, "Telephone Speaking and the Rediscovery of Conversation",
in Communication and the Culture of Technology, Martin J. Medhurst,
Alberto Gonzalez and Tarla Rai Peterson, eds., (Pullman: Washington
State University, 1990), p. 221.
31 - The history of Western civilization, the history of our philosophy,
is one of what Derrida calls "metaphysics of presence". It is a
history of the privilege of the spoken word which is thought as
the immediate, direct expression of consciousness, as the presence
or manifestation of consciousness to itself. In a communication
event, for example, the signifier seems to become transparent as
if allowing the concept to make itself present as what it is. Derrida
shows that this reasoning is not only present in Plato (only spoken
language delivers truth) and Aristotle (spoken words as symbols
of mental experience), but in Descartes (to be is to think, or to
pronounce this proposition in one self's mind), Rousseau (condemnation
of writing as destruction of presence and as disease of speech),
Hegel (the ear perceiving the manifestation of the ideal activity
of the soul), Husserl (meaning as present to consciousness at the
instant of speaking), Heidegger (the ambiguity of the "voice of
being" which is not heard), and virtually in any instance of the
development of the philosophy of the West. The rationale and implications
of this logocentrism/phonocentrism are not obvious and one must
research its functioning. Derrida explains that language is impregnated
by and with these notions; therefore, in every proposition or system
of semiotic investigation metaphysical assumptions coexist with
their own criticism, all affirmations of logocentrism also show
another side that undermine them. See Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology
(Baltimore and London: John Hopkins University Press, 1976); also
Jacques Derrida, Positions (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1981).
32 - What Hopper does not account for is the fact that, in his discussion
of linguistic intercourse, Saussure only employs examples of face-to-
face exchanges, eliminating telephonic intercourse. Saussure (Course
in General Linguistics (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966), p. 206): "Whereas
provincialism makes men sedentary, intercourse obliges them to move
about. Intercourse brings passers-by from other localities into
a village, displaces a part of the population whenever there is
a festival or fair, unites men from different provinces in the army,
etc."
33 - Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media (New York: McGraw-Hill,
1964) p. 18.
34 - Breland [New Observations], p.10.
35 - For a complete list, see Art Com, Number 40, Vol. 10, August
1990.
36 - Carlos Fadon, "Still Life/Alive", in Connectivity: Art and
Interactive Telecommunications, Roy Ascott and Carl Eugene Loeffler,
eds., Leonardo, Vol. 24, N.2, 1991, p. 235.
37 - See Connectivity: Art and Interactive Telecommunications, p.
233.
38 - O'Rourke, "Notes on Fax-Art", op. cit., p. 24.
39 - Jacques Derrida, Limited Inc (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University
Press, 1988), p. 10.
40 - For a summary of communication models, see Denis McQuail and
Sven Windahl, Communication Models for the Study of Mass Communications
(London and New York: Longman, 1981).
41 - Jacques Derrida, "Videor", in Passages de L'Image (Barcelona:
Caixa de Pensions, 1991), p. 176. "Passages de L'Image" was a travelling
exhibition of media arts (video, holography, digital imaging, etc)
organized by the MusZ¥e National D'Art Moderne, Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris.
http://www.ekac.org/Telecom.Paper.Siggrap.html
Originally published in SiSIGGRAPHisual Proceedings, John Grimes
and Gray Lorig, Editors (New York: ACM, 1992), pp. 47-57. Republished
in English and German in Zero -- The Art of Being Everywhere, Robert
Adrian X and Gerfried Stocker, Editors (Graz, Austria: Steirische
Kulturinitiative, 1993), pp. 24-32, 40-48, 62-69, 75-92. Also republished
in English and Hungarian in the art magazine Árnyékkötôk,
N. 15, Vol. 6, Budapest, Hungary; and in Portuguese in the book
Comunicação na Era Pósmoderna, Monica Rector
and Eduardo Neiva (editors), Editora Vozes, Rio de Janeiro, 1998,
pp. 175-199. This paper discusses the history and theory of pre-Internet
telecommunications art, from early avant-garde radio and Moholy-Nagy's
Telephone Pictures to recent international collaborative works.
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