ARTBASE (1)
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BIO
The McElroys are a husband and wife collaborative artist, technology, and business team who bring significant artistic, technology and community development skills to Corporate Performance Artists. Joseph, is a graduate of Computer Science from Duke University and a former team leader at IBM. He has been a CEO of several companies, and has been responsible for raising $2 million to fund a startup company called EveryDayPrint.com, which while part of the dot-com boom and bust, he managed to bring to profitability and which still survives to this day.
Donna was an operations manager and PR specialist in the firms they have started together. She has recently been credited by several business leaders in the Bronx as being "top spokesperson for the Bronx." She is active in many community development projects, such as participating on the Board of the Bruckner Arts and Antique District, and working to promote many Bronx activities through an online newsletter called Cupcake Kaleidoscope.
Joseph was the leader of the Open Source Sig for the New York Software Industry Association. And was track co-chair for Open Source at the 2001 New York Software Industry Summit. He was on the advisory board for PostgreSql, Inc - the leading Open Source Database and has had articles published by Lutris Technologies and Open Magazine on Open Source business models and technology solutions. He is a database expert with extensive Fortune 500 experience. Among other awards, he won an IBM Division Award for Technical Excellence.
From magazine "Open" issue September 2001 - "The McElroys kick open the doors of old business models and capitalize on what they believe." The McElroys have achieved re-known as Open Source visionaries with interviews by Interactive Week, Infoworld, Fortune Technology, Open magazine, and others. Joseph and Donna make no claims of divine insight, but in review by Lewis Lacock, it is said, "that this dynamic duo of art are the closest things we have to true shamans today". They are doing their best to pursue the knowledge to support such claims someday.
HIGHLIGHTS
* Achieved reputation as Open Source visionarys with interviews by Interactive Week, Infoworld, Fortune Technology, Open magazine among others.
* National Columnist on Money Matters for Gather.com.
* Judge for the Advanced Technical Categories of the Emmys.
* Successfully raised $2 million funding for startup.
* Successfully built and sold two technology businesses.
* First Entry into the Multimedia wing of the Museum of Computer Art.
* Artwork collected by the Library at Cornell University.
* Artwork in the collection of Rhizome.org.
* Developed first ever Exhibition Catalog completely on CD Rom. Done for Alternative Museum. Reviewed by New York Times.
* Selected to attend first ever Summer Institute for Performance Art at The Kitchen in NYC.
* IBM Division Award for Technical Excellence.
* Various academic, mathematic and scholarship awards. Attended Duke University on a full scholarship in mathematics.
* Poetry published in various journals. Art exhibited in museum shows.
* Certificate of Artistic Excellence from Congressman Jose Serrano.
* Recognized by Bronx Borough President Aldofo Carrion for contributions to the community.
Donna was an operations manager and PR specialist in the firms they have started together. She has recently been credited by several business leaders in the Bronx as being "top spokesperson for the Bronx." She is active in many community development projects, such as participating on the Board of the Bruckner Arts and Antique District, and working to promote many Bronx activities through an online newsletter called Cupcake Kaleidoscope.
Joseph was the leader of the Open Source Sig for the New York Software Industry Association. And was track co-chair for Open Source at the 2001 New York Software Industry Summit. He was on the advisory board for PostgreSql, Inc - the leading Open Source Database and has had articles published by Lutris Technologies and Open Magazine on Open Source business models and technology solutions. He is a database expert with extensive Fortune 500 experience. Among other awards, he won an IBM Division Award for Technical Excellence.
From magazine "Open" issue September 2001 - "The McElroys kick open the doors of old business models and capitalize on what they believe." The McElroys have achieved re-known as Open Source visionaries with interviews by Interactive Week, Infoworld, Fortune Technology, Open magazine, and others. Joseph and Donna make no claims of divine insight, but in review by Lewis Lacock, it is said, "that this dynamic duo of art are the closest things we have to true shamans today". They are doing their best to pursue the knowledge to support such claims someday.
HIGHLIGHTS
* Achieved reputation as Open Source visionarys with interviews by Interactive Week, Infoworld, Fortune Technology, Open magazine among others.
* National Columnist on Money Matters for Gather.com.
* Judge for the Advanced Technical Categories of the Emmys.
* Successfully raised $2 million funding for startup.
* Successfully built and sold two technology businesses.
* First Entry into the Multimedia wing of the Museum of Computer Art.
* Artwork collected by the Library at Cornell University.
* Artwork in the collection of Rhizome.org.
* Developed first ever Exhibition Catalog completely on CD Rom. Done for Alternative Museum. Reviewed by New York Times.
* Selected to attend first ever Summer Institute for Performance Art at The Kitchen in NYC.
* IBM Division Award for Technical Excellence.
* Various academic, mathematic and scholarship awards. Attended Duke University on a full scholarship in mathematics.
* Poetry published in various journals. Art exhibited in museum shows.
* Certificate of Artistic Excellence from Congressman Jose Serrano.
* Recognized by Bronx Borough President Aldofo Carrion for contributions to the community.
Re: Re: Re: Dia article in NYTimes Mag
> one big reason is economics.
>
There is a huge cultural base used to consuming writing and paintings as
creative content. Not so with Art in Technology (note my use of branding :),
it will take a dedicated effort to create that cultural base. Though the online
games market is helping quite a bit.
>
> another reason is glitz and glamor.
>
> In the nyc art world it's easy to find cheap labor because people so
> much want to be part of that world (same for the publishing world,
> fashion, etc). unfortunately net/web/new media art doesn't have the
> same cultural muscle.
The economies of the gallary/institution will never support Art in Technology
in a glitzy fashion. To married to the physical object. And they have no
reason to change.
>
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting "t.whid" <twhid@mteww.com>:
> one big reason is economics.
>
> the film industry is a multi-billion dollar one. the new media art
> world? ha, not even multi-million.
>
> and if you expand the definition by saying that it could lead to jobs
> in the software or web industry my response would be that people who
> would be interested in those types of resume items would prefer to
> build relationships in those industries and not in the rarified new
> media art world.
>
> another reason is glitz and glamor.
>
> In the nyc art world it's easy to find cheap labor because people so
> much want to be part of that world (same for the publishing world,
> fashion, etc). unfortunately net/web/new media art doesn't have the
> same cultural muscle.
>
> hopefully it will in the near future as you say.
>
> >>
> >> re: independent film, a good comparison but the system in place there
> >> works much differently than the open source software model. an
> >> independent director can get free labor, but those folks get to build
> >> resumes and connections into the film industry. a net/web/new media
> >> artist can't offer anything like that.
> >>
> >Dont see why not, at least in the near future. Ivan
>
> --
> <twhid>
> http://www.mteww.com
> </twhid>
> + ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gniht ym tup
> -> post: list@rhizome.org
> -> questions: info@rhizome.org
> -> subscribe/unsubscribe: http://rhizome.org/preferences/subscribe.rhiz
> -> give: http://rhizome.org/support
> +
> Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the
> Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php
>
There is a huge cultural base used to consuming writing and paintings as
creative content. Not so with Art in Technology (note my use of branding :),
it will take a dedicated effort to create that cultural base. Though the online
games market is helping quite a bit.
>
> another reason is glitz and glamor.
>
> In the nyc art world it's easy to find cheap labor because people so
> much want to be part of that world (same for the publishing world,
> fashion, etc). unfortunately net/web/new media art doesn't have the
> same cultural muscle.
The economies of the gallary/institution will never support Art in Technology
in a glitzy fashion. To married to the physical object. And they have no
reason to change.
>
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting "t.whid" <twhid@mteww.com>:
> one big reason is economics.
>
> the film industry is a multi-billion dollar one. the new media art
> world? ha, not even multi-million.
>
> and if you expand the definition by saying that it could lead to jobs
> in the software or web industry my response would be that people who
> would be interested in those types of resume items would prefer to
> build relationships in those industries and not in the rarified new
> media art world.
>
> another reason is glitz and glamor.
>
> In the nyc art world it's easy to find cheap labor because people so
> much want to be part of that world (same for the publishing world,
> fashion, etc). unfortunately net/web/new media art doesn't have the
> same cultural muscle.
>
> hopefully it will in the near future as you say.
>
> >>
> >> re: independent film, a good comparison but the system in place there
> >> works much differently than the open source software model. an
> >> independent director can get free labor, but those folks get to build
> >> resumes and connections into the film industry. a net/web/new media
> >> artist can't offer anything like that.
> >>
> >Dont see why not, at least in the near future. Ivan
>
> --
> <twhid>
> http://www.mteww.com
> </twhid>
> + ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gniht ym tup
> -> post: list@rhizome.org
> -> questions: info@rhizome.org
> -> subscribe/unsubscribe: http://rhizome.org/preferences/subscribe.rhiz
> -> give: http://rhizome.org/support
> +
> Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the
> Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php
Re: Re: Re: Dia article in NYTimes Mag
Quoting "t.whid" <twhid@mteww.com>:
> i see yer point, but then one is just collaborating on software
> applications at that point, no? one is collaborating on tools and
> parts to build a work and not on a work. as an analogy, it's as if a
> painter got some dedicated crafts people to weave some linen and
> grind some paint for her.
Not only that but painters can work on each others paintings. I believe that
Van Dyke used to paint the animals on Ruben's paintings, did he not? An artist
can recognize what they are good at (in Rubens case - composition and painting
people) and not (painting animals) and get a peer (or assistant) to do the bad
part for them. We don't have to be good at everything to be a good artist.
>
> i was imagining something where the technical aspects of a piece
> aren't so easily separated from the subject and content. once these
> technical aspects get intertwined more closely into a work (like
> needing a game engine to render shadows in some specific way unique
> to an artist's game) than you will find many fewer people willing to
> give away their labor for free.
There is a skill to convincing people to working for free, but it is entirable
possible and is probably the basis for every successful enterprise, independent
film project, and non-profit. One has to calculate the value one has available
(expertise, contacts, vision, reputation, etc) and demonstrate to a prospective
free laborer how they will benefit. One has to be sure to deliver on the
promises or the word gets around. The biggest hurdle to getting someone to
work for free is asking them.
>
> there are some open source game engines out there, but how do they
> compete against quake or unreal? i'm no expert, but probably not very
> well.
Probably because nobody has decided to make it their mission to make one. Or,
more likely, every individual wants to control the one they are working on. The
keep to getting a group to work on a project like that is to allow some of the
control to belong to each part of the group. I do know that there are several
game engines out there, some fairly sophisticated that have gotten stalled
along the way. Just needs an impetus of dedicated persons to move them
forward.
>
> we shall see. John Ippolito is working on a project that looks to
> 'open source' contemporary art production (with an emphasis on
> net/web/new media). it may be just crazy enough to work ;-)
do you mean creative commons?
>
> >
>
> re: independent film, a good comparison but the system in place there
> works much differently than the open source software model. an
> independent director can get free labor, but those folks get to build
> resumes and connections into the film industry. a net/web/new media
> artist can't offer anything like that.
Sure they can. MTEWW is an example of an ideal setup to get volunteers to help
progress a vision. We set up Corporate Performance Artist
(www.corporatepa.com) to attract a community of artists dedicated to creative
projects. Already have 7 artists working with us on performances and
technology. We are busy producing Art in Technology education programs using
the cult of the corporate performance artist landscape as a base (we already
have acceptance in educational programs and we just started in January).
Essentially, as an artist we produce content. We need to see the creative ways
to leverage that content. As a technology based artist, there is a Huge
untapped audience eager for what we produce. The gallery/institution system
will not support us nor recognize our value - though we do not have to abandon
them. Just break out of the paradigm of the superstar spectacle producer to
get our finacial rewards. Us technology geeks are not particularly suited to
being flamboyant or charismatic stage performers. And playing the dedicated
scientist role will only get us used and abused, since there are no huge
government grants for the artist-scientist.
>
> >
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
> i see yer point, but then one is just collaborating on software
> applications at that point, no? one is collaborating on tools and
> parts to build a work and not on a work. as an analogy, it's as if a
> painter got some dedicated crafts people to weave some linen and
> grind some paint for her.
Not only that but painters can work on each others paintings. I believe that
Van Dyke used to paint the animals on Ruben's paintings, did he not? An artist
can recognize what they are good at (in Rubens case - composition and painting
people) and not (painting animals) and get a peer (or assistant) to do the bad
part for them. We don't have to be good at everything to be a good artist.
>
> i was imagining something where the technical aspects of a piece
> aren't so easily separated from the subject and content. once these
> technical aspects get intertwined more closely into a work (like
> needing a game engine to render shadows in some specific way unique
> to an artist's game) than you will find many fewer people willing to
> give away their labor for free.
There is a skill to convincing people to working for free, but it is entirable
possible and is probably the basis for every successful enterprise, independent
film project, and non-profit. One has to calculate the value one has available
(expertise, contacts, vision, reputation, etc) and demonstrate to a prospective
free laborer how they will benefit. One has to be sure to deliver on the
promises or the word gets around. The biggest hurdle to getting someone to
work for free is asking them.
>
> there are some open source game engines out there, but how do they
> compete against quake or unreal? i'm no expert, but probably not very
> well.
Probably because nobody has decided to make it their mission to make one. Or,
more likely, every individual wants to control the one they are working on. The
keep to getting a group to work on a project like that is to allow some of the
control to belong to each part of the group. I do know that there are several
game engines out there, some fairly sophisticated that have gotten stalled
along the way. Just needs an impetus of dedicated persons to move them
forward.
>
> we shall see. John Ippolito is working on a project that looks to
> 'open source' contemporary art production (with an emphasis on
> net/web/new media). it may be just crazy enough to work ;-)
do you mean creative commons?
>
> >
>
> re: independent film, a good comparison but the system in place there
> works much differently than the open source software model. an
> independent director can get free labor, but those folks get to build
> resumes and connections into the film industry. a net/web/new media
> artist can't offer anything like that.
Sure they can. MTEWW is an example of an ideal setup to get volunteers to help
progress a vision. We set up Corporate Performance Artist
(www.corporatepa.com) to attract a community of artists dedicated to creative
projects. Already have 7 artists working with us on performances and
technology. We are busy producing Art in Technology education programs using
the cult of the corporate performance artist landscape as a base (we already
have acceptance in educational programs and we just started in January).
Essentially, as an artist we produce content. We need to see the creative ways
to leverage that content. As a technology based artist, there is a Huge
untapped audience eager for what we produce. The gallery/institution system
will not support us nor recognize our value - though we do not have to abandon
them. Just break out of the paradigm of the superstar spectacle producer to
get our finacial rewards. Us technology geeks are not particularly suited to
being flamboyant or charismatic stage performers. And playing the dedicated
scientist role will only get us used and abused, since there are no huge
government grants for the artist-scientist.
>
> >
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Re: [thingist] Ethics and Art
Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
>
> Oh totally, this whole ethics thing could be total horseshit. I seriously
> have no clue, but it seems to articulate the way I feel about stuff pretty
> well. Of course I wouldn't subscribe to any completely binary structure or
> structure that has no opting out, but this one seems to work to explain what
> I mean by responsibility as opposed to the accusation of morality, which
> strikes me as a very god-fearing term.
This is a particulary valid question. But to answer it you must reach a
consensus on what is the purpose of art (as opposed to the species and genus of
human activity). Business is easy - the company increases the capital owned by
the shareholders, thus any activity (such as crooked books or pilfering cash)
that reduces the capital value (other than normal decision making processes) is
unethical. Opposed, it is quite ethical (within his profession) for a theif to
steal but unethical for him to rat out his compatriots, because the purpose is
to acquire capital by illegal means without getting caught.
In this reqard, your question of "what is the artist responsible for" must be
preceeded by the question "what is the purpose of art" , or because that
question is too broad, it might be satisfactory to categorize known art, and
say "what is the purpose of art within a defined context" With this in mind,
if either of my war peices were meant to be considered decorative art, then
they could indeed be compared to the lampshades made of skin, and I would have
to admit to being unethical. I beleive it would also be unethical for a
viewer, who should also bear ethical responsibility, to place this work within
the context of decorative art.
My intentions for this work were to cause an evaluation of personal response
and responsibility with regard to marketing, propoganda, and acts of war. I am
trying to influence the ethics of the viewer. I believe this lies within an
acceptable context and the domain of valid purposes of art.
Is the work ethical? Much like an accountant would pass a new technique past
the eyes of her professional peers before using it, I passed my work before the
artists on the artists mailing lists to which I am subscribed. Regardless of
whether the work is unethical, I have done nothing unethical as I am following
the accepted practices of a professional.
As to whether the work is ethical, the opinion is greatly varied. Thus I am
left only to my personal judgement as the final arbitrar, unless someone
quickly finds a convincing arguement within the context I have defined. So
far, I am inclined to increase the strength of the indicator of my intent, and
then release it.
> Also, the ethics of anti war art are based upon certain assumptions on thier
> own, which are not as hard to define as those in straight up "art," because
> anti war art presupposes the ethical framework of "war is bad." This being
> said, at the very least, anti war art should not end up declaring war or
> glorifying war, especially if within that ethical framework you have a
> critique of the media's manipulation of the dead. In your work in
> particular, you said you made the piece in order to put the images in a
> situation which shocked you. This implies, and I am probably going to be
> wrong, since I am asking _you_ the question, but to me it implies that there
> was an ethical framework wherein images "ought" to retain thier power.
> Unfortunately, your piece violently rejects that framework by stripping the
> images of thier power by putting them in a situation where they are
> trivialized [disco music, dancing girls, etc.]
These peices are not making the moral judgment that "war is bad", but that "war
is bad without a conscious decision made by an informed population and totally
in the interest of self-defense as opposed to finanical gain after all efforts
to avoid war have been made" . I said that my piece is a declaration of war
(non-violent in a physical sense) against the prevailing blind acceptance of a
neoconservative agenda. Thus I cannot state that I am "against war" in a
general sense. I do agree, that ethically, I believe that images "ought" to
retain their power. However, I disagree that they are stripped of their power
in the situation I placed them, but instead were increased.
joseph
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
>
> Oh totally, this whole ethics thing could be total horseshit. I seriously
> have no clue, but it seems to articulate the way I feel about stuff pretty
> well. Of course I wouldn't subscribe to any completely binary structure or
> structure that has no opting out, but this one seems to work to explain what
> I mean by responsibility as opposed to the accusation of morality, which
> strikes me as a very god-fearing term.
>
> I'm always nervous when a system exists where the opposite proves the rule
> [ie, rejecting ethical frameworks is an ethical framework] but I don't know
> if that is actual fallacy or just looks like one.
>
> But to answer your- question? Or to respond to your reaction, I guess- I
> would venture to say that the ethics of our current modus operandi- in
> regards to the arts- stems largely from the desire to avoid the mistakes
> that led to the rise of fascism/communism and pretty much to avoid the whole
> idea of totalitarianism control over art, which I would guess [and I have no
> real knowledge, by the way- I am just a pocket sociologist, as is the case
> with most artists, unfortunately] is a reaction also to McCarthyism and even
> so far back as prosecution of artists by the church of Europe [and the rest
> of the world for that matter] and "continentally", a puritanical society of
> early America. It is also designed to respect the freedoms of individual
> expression as an extension of individual freedom, which is an American
> Ethical Framework [or so it claims- a derailment and lack of ethical
> integrity within that ethical framework has led up to plenty of oppression
> and restrictions in the name of "individual freedom"- it may be closer to
> the truth to say we are within an intellectual framework of "individual
> freedoms to the rich and white land owners" but this is a decision for which
> we are all responsible.] Of course, as you say, any cultural ethical
> framework will be the result of cultural conditioning- in fact, "cultural
> conditioning" is almost, but not entirely, synonymous with the integration
> of an ethical framework to an individual born into that culture.
>
> By the way, my thesis was not dependant on the assumption that lampshades
> made from skin were on par with photographs of the dead- and I said as much
> within it. But I maybe didn't clarify: The idea was that the attitudes both
> "artisans" had towards the responsibility of those skins/photographs was
> inherently similar in that one was used for decoration, the other for
> entertainment, both at the expense of dehumanization of an individual [which
> is against the the aforementioned ethical framework of individual freedom.]
>
> Also, the ethics of anti war art are based upon certain assumptions on thier
> own, which are not as hard to define as those in straight up "art," because
> anti war art presupposes the ethical framework of "war is bad." This being
> said, at the very least, anti war art should not end up declaring war or
> glorifying war, especially if within that ethical framework you have a
> critique of the media's manipulation of the dead. In your work in
> particular, you said you made the piece in order to put the images in a
> situation which shocked you. This implies, and I am probably going to be
> wrong, since I am asking _you_ the question, but to me it implies that there
> was an ethical framework wherein images "ought" to retain thier power.
> Unfortunately, your piece violently rejects that framework by stripping the
> images of thier power by putting them in a situation where they are
> trivialized [disco music, dancing girls, etc.]
>
> If you would like to subscribe to the opposing framework- that the art
> itself is a reflection of an idea that the images should be stripped of
> thier power, then please refer to the my lines concerning the intent of
> those using Jewish Skins as Lampshades and the Intent of those using Images
> of the dead- to strip the dead of thier power in order to best facilitate
> the propaganda of the ruling class.
>
> Of course, these are only some ethical frameworks from which to choose from-
> and in fact, I assume that you did not chose one to work in at all. And, as
> a result, you have made a piece that is, in my opinion, sloppy and
> forgettable (w/exception to its exploitative nature), regardless of how much
> I like or dislike you personally.
>
> Cheers,
> -e.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> PS: For anyone keeping score, we are once again seeing 2 out of 3 for
> Josephs regular pattern:
>
> 1. Declare any calls on his "fallibility" as attacks.
> 2. React to critiques and comments which are unfavorable to him with
> personal insults: "Rally around Eryk's flag everybody and give him the
> ethical power he so desperately craves", "Hysterical Ranting."
> 3. Avoid Responsibility for those comments and his own work through
> rationalization, rationalization, rationalization: "Ethics in art are much
> more difficult to define, since no obvious destruction exists, and is easily
> sidetracked by the hysterical ranting of boys comparing pictures of the dead
> to the lampshades made from their skins."
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "joseph (yes=no & yes<>no) " <joseph@electrichands.com>
> To: <thingist@bbs.thing.net>; "Eryk Salvaggio" <eryk@maine.rr.com>
> Cc: <list@rhizome.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2003 2:12 AM
> Subject: Re: [thingist] Ethics and Art
>
>
> > Ethics in business are based upon certain assumptions like lets not
> destroy
> > shareholder value by faulty accounting. Ethics in biology is lets not
> destroy
> > the world with faulty virii.
> >
> > Ethics in art are much more difficult to define, since no obvious
> destruction
> > exists, and is easily sidetracked by the hysterical ranting of boys
> comparing
> > pictures of the dead to the lampshades made from their skins. The basis
> for
> > your "intellectual reasoning" is still assumptions, made with cultural and
> > moral conditioning well intact. Rally around Eryk's flag everybody and
> give him
> > the ethical power he so desperately craves.
> >
> >
> > joseph & donna
> > www.electrichands.com
> > joseph franklyn mcelroy
> > corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
> >
> > go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
> > call me 646 279 2309
> >
> > SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
> > CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
> >
> > >
> > > I want to clarify my position re: Morality and Art, which have been
> called
> > > into question after my comments regarding Joseph McElroys exploitative
> war
> > > piece. What I have to say below, out of respect to dead horses
> everywhere,
> > > will have little to do with that work in particular and more to do with
> what
> > > I see as a disturbing hypocrisy in the "new media community" vis a vis
> the
> > > ongoing war in Iraq.
> > >
> > > I don't see myself coming from a "high moral" standpoint, so much as a
> > > simple ethical one. My generalized question- not about Josephs piece per
> se,
> > > which was critiqued based on ethics specifically because of the artist
> in
> > > questions purported "teaching ability" in the field of ethics and
> > > enlightenment- but in your generalized area of arts at large:
> > >
> > > All ethics reside on a framework, which is not moralistic by any means.
> You
> > > cannot say "war is bad" [an ethical idea] and not have a foundation for
> it.
> > > You cannot say "propaganda is bad" [another ethical standpoint] and not
> have
> > > a foundation for it. And when we apply these ethics haphazardly we begin
> to
> > > see our sloppiness has very real consequences. If the moral climate is
> void-
> > > and I believe "morality" is subjective to each individual, and stems
> from
> > > the idea of a higher authority, which means that they do not need to be
> > > "reasoned". Ethics are community-defined and based on intellectual
> reasoning
> > > and a responsibility for the results of that reasoning. Again- morality
> is
> > > not an issue. The issue at hand is, what are artists responsible for? If
> it
> > > is to be "against the war" then work that aims to achieve that should be
> > > held to that standard. If the ethical climate is that the war should not
> be
> > > used for entertainment purposes, then why stand by idly and allow the
> dead
> > > to be used for the purpose of entertainment?
> > >
> > > While certainly "everything can be allowed" within the framework of art;
> > > (and the framework of anything at all) and with the understanding that I
> am
> > > not confusing morality with ethics, why is one disallowed from having a
> > > reaction to a piece of art based on an ethical approach? I understand
> with
> > > morality- morality is subjective, changing over time and locations, and
> can
> > > be liquid. But don't confuse ethics and morality. In fact, saying
> > > "moralizing is fascist" is a result of an ethical decision. The idea in
> > > America that is in vogue is that of individual rights and freedoms vs
> the
> > > safety the populace- this is an "ethical" question.
> > >
> > > If we are to say then that we favor the rights of artists because
> ethically
> > > it is what we have decided on as a cultural value, then we are saying
> that
> > > from an ethical standpoint.
> > >
> > > One has brought up the idea that fascism was against the freedom of
> artistic
> > > expression, and so we can say that the foundation of this ethical
> concept of
> > > artistic freedom is based on a rejection of fascist ideologies as well
> as an
> > > embracing of individual freedoms. Unless one wants to say "Artists
> should be
> > > free because they make art and art should have no limits because it is
> art",
> > > which is not a valid reason intellectually.
> > >
> > > So if we are to reject fascism, there are two things I would bring up:
> One-
> > > and I warn you, this is potentially inflammatory, and I will get to the
> > > second much later- is the notion of using Jewish and Homosexual Skins
> for
> > > lampshades. The Jews/Homosexuals were "war dead", after all. The Nazis
> were
> > > simply using their war dead for decoration- much as Josephs piece did.
> Also,
> > > the Jews in question were already dead- "the dead are dead", as was
> pointed
> > > out in regards to the Iraqi war dead- "they cannot be exploited any more
> > > than they can be taxed, enslaved, or otherwise oppressed." With this I
> > > fundamentally disagree.
> > >
> > > Obviously there are differences between the two ideas.While we have with
> the
> > > Nazis a "literal" use of the war dead in artistry- which makes it so
> > > abhorrent, there is, in works which use the war dead, a "figurative"
> use. I
> > > know this example is inflammatory, but consider the idea that our art
> now is
> > > less about decoration (craft) and more about "entertainment". I would go
> so
> > > far as to say that the work is "fascist in ideology." And not to stand
> on
> > > Josephs piece in particular- which it doesn't deserve- I would say that
> any
> > > work that "exploits" the images of the dead is accomplishing the same
> task
> > > as a literal exploitation of the dead.
> > >
> > > We live in a media saturated world. Images are how we see it, images are
> > > what the world is, for most people- westerners especially. To capture
> the
> > > essence of a human these days, a photograph may be what we go with, when
> > > skin is unavailable. And while pieces which use images of the war dead
> are
> > > not "directly responsible" for the deaths, neither were the Nazi lamp
> > > makers- they simply used what was given to them. Both types of "art"
> exist
> > > because of the exploitation of these deaths- they steal power from the
> > > dignity of dead.
> > >
> > > Someone may ask the obvious question, then, of what about Holocaust art-
> one
> > > piece in particular is a work whereas concentration camps were made out
> of
> > > legos. That's ethically fine; and it differs from the use of skin for
> > > lampshades pretty drastically. At the same time, it makes a pop cultural
> > > reference to genocide- but does not exploit the dead directly, in the
> way
> > > that images of the suffering do. For that matter, the Lego piece was
> also, I
> > > believe, an attempt by a young American Jew to connect to the Holocaust.
> But
> > > what of the artists who use images of Hitler and the Holocaust as
> > > entertainment that does not commit the (apparent) sin of "moralizing"
> and/or
> > > "educating." Can anyone name a piece with real power that doesn't
> subscribe
> > > to either of those values? I can: "Triumph of the Will." [In fact- the
> only
> > > culturally redeeming thing about this film- aside from aesthetics- is
> the
> > > educational value, so even this is void.]
> > >
> > > Ruling classes- the class of people who are victorious over another-
> have a
> > > long history of exploitation of the class they have conquered. So go the
> > > spoils of war. I live in Maine, which used to be Micmac Indian
> Territory,
> > > and if you look at the gift shops you see the mockery of native American
> > > culture on display everywhere. Fake Sacred Indian Headdress with
> feathers
> > > dyed with neon orange and green, rubber Indian drums and war hammers.
> The
> > > fact that we committed genocide on these people is not only ignored, but
> the
> > > entire culture we displaced is replaced by Kitsch and sold on the mass
> > > market- ironic or not, this is exploitation.
> > >
> > > Currently, we are involved with a war in Iraq which is devastating the
> lives
> > > of millions of people in the country. What I see on these mailing lists,
> > > constantly as of late, is an open call to protest and a declaration that
> we
> > > must "do something." In fact, I am called hopeless and resigned for my
> > > stance that "doing something" would involve an actual direct involvement
> > > with the political process, such as the stance taken by Rachel Corrie or
> any
> > > of the human shield volunteers, but of course one does not have to be as
> > > extreme as that- volunteer at OxFam, donate administrative time to a
> local
> > > chapter of a red cross, or whatever. I do not believe that making
> statements
> > > on mailing lists affects much change, nor do I believe that many artists
> are
> > > of the caliber capable of commenting on the war as powerfully and
> directly
> > > as an event like this merits. If you are offended by this idea, you need
> to
> > > take a look at what war is, and what art is. While I would love a world
> > > where even casually interested artists could make works of art that
> truly
> > > stood up to war, this is simply not the case. It is the exception, not
> the
> > > rule, that a piece of art can capture war. The highlight being comparing
> > > McElroys work to "Guernica."
> > >
> > > We then see art made about the war. And what we see is a very basic
> > > manipulation of emotions associated with death and sexuality- this works
> for
> > > much of what I will call "a long tradition of attempted antiwar art".
> What I
> > > find appalling is that we have a blatant hypocrisy between the
> motivation of
> > > art-makers in regards to the Bush Administrations use of war dead on CNN
> or
> > > on Al-Jazeera for political purposes, and then a welcome greeting to a
> work
> > > of "art" utilizing those same images as a point of "protest". People on
> > > these lists complain about the abuse of the dead, of the people who are
> gung
> > > ho for war, complaints about the use of war as entertainment, and then
> we
> > > are faced with a piece that was designed to "shock someone" and it is
> > > supported because the statement is made by an "artist" as opposed to
> Peter
> > > Jennings.
> > >
> > > The result- which stems solely from a lack of ethical integrity- is work
> > > which borders on, if not exemplifies, a kitsch response to this useless
> war.
> > > I had said before that Kitsch is what happens when art is made out of
> > > narcissism, where the work is loved because it was made, and not loved
> > > because it stands up on its own. This is the "ethical climate" of the
> > > net.art community as it stands- protest, debate, argue and accuse, then
> > > create art that is guilty of the same thing people are arguing against
> so
> > > vehemently. This would be avoided if artists looked at ethical integrity
> and
> > > attempted to make work that kept that integrity intact- this would mean
> that
> > > no artist would resort to the cheap tricks they deplore when it is used
> in
> > > propaganda- such as linking sex with murder, cheapening the faces of
> victims
> > > of the war, or rendering the war to the level of reality TV.
> > >
> > > I do not believe it is the role of art to "teach" nor do I believe it is
> the
> > > role of art to "moralize"- although in the "anything goes" approach
> defended
> > > by most artists/critics I've been talking to, I don't see why "anything"
> > > does not include "moralization" or "education." But I will put that
> aside.
> > >
> > > I said before that the idea that "moralization in art is bad" stems from
> an
> > > argument against fascism, but contradicts itself? Here is the second
> > > example: If the ethical climate is "against fascism", then we have to
> > > understand that fascism is not necessarily the limitation of personal
> > > freedom, but can be the allowance of personal freedom- and luxury- at
> the
> > > expense of the freedom of others. In my guidebook, exploitation of dead
> > > soldiers against their will- and the will of their families- for the use
> of
> > > entertainment by people who make up the ruling party of war invaders is
> a
> > > modern, post modern equivalent to the use of dead Jews for furniture.
> Yes-
> > > it is different when you are using images of the dead as opposed to the
> dead
> > > themselves, but this is not the thread on which this argument hangs.
> > >
> > > Another argument that comes from freedom is frequently used to denounce
> the
> > > need for a moral framework, and this is the notion that since anarchy is
> the
> > > opposite of fascism, one must indeed subscribe to total personal and/or
> > > theoretical anarchy in order to best retaliate against authoritarian
> > > control. What this fails to address is the entire issue of personal
> > > responsibility that we are so quick to denounce in the civilian german
> > > population- "How could you let that happen?" The answer is not ethical
> > > frameworks, but rather, a framework in which some people were more
> valuable
> > > than others, where the "others" were so valueless that they can be
> worked to
> > > death in order to provide the leisure class with leisure and
> entertainment.
> > > And decorations. In fact, this has little to do with the loss of freedom
> or
> > > the prescence of freedom- it has to do with an overvalued idea of to
> what
> > > extent that freedom should be sought.
> > >
> > > So I have no problem with people doing what they want responsibly with
> their
> > > "freedom", nor is my complaint about the exploitation of war dead based
> on
> > > moral grounds. I simply do not understand the hypocrisy of people who
> are
> > > "against the war" and against the bush admins "use of Iraq for oil" and
> yet
> > > passive when artists use the war in Iraq for poorly constructed,
> > > irresponsible propaganda. This war is serious business- we are an
> invading
> > > power occupying a territory that is not responsible for any direct
> threat
> > > against us. If we as artists are to then make art casually while
> decrying
> > > the lack of serious involvement of the "other people" who "allowed this
> to
> > > happen" then we are not taking the war seriously. And that is fine, if
> we
> > > remove ourselves from the ethical framework that this war is
> illegitimate
> > > and should not be permitted to go on. Myself, I am silent in regards to
> art
> > > in this war- no ascii Baghdads, no film clips of nightvision invasions-
> > > because I do not believe in my own abilities at this point to do any
> justice
> > > to what is happening at this point in history.
> > >
> > > In the end, of course, war is war- kill if you wish, rape, pillage,
> argue
> > > and destroy, this is what humans do, myself included- nothing much
> "matters"
> > > in the end, everything simply is what it is, and there is no actual
> > > "responsibility." What I am advocating is not a moral condemnation of
> this
> > > fact, but the establishment of an ethical constraint to these behaviors
> > > turning the world into anarchy and our art from being fascist. This is
> the
> > > same exact place that the rejection of morality and art comes from in
> the
> > > first place. And if you are against "ethics," then you are by definition
> > > purely apathetic- to war, to starvation, to politics. And that is itself
> an
> > > ethical choice. If that is your bag, then fine- but you give up your
> right
> > > to complain. If you want to be against this war, that is an ethical
> > > decision, and as an artist one must take that ethical framework
> seriously in
> > > regards not only to posts which spew venom against the war, war
> coverage,
> > > George Bush and Wolf Blitzer, but also to take the framework seriously
> in
> > > regards to one's own view of the world and how we act within it.
> > >
> > > If you don't make art about the war then you don't have to worry about
> it.
> > > Plenty of artists ignore political issues that are too overwhelming for
> > > them. I am currently in that camp. This is a simple matter of honesty-
> this
> > > war is bigger than my abilities as an artist. I am not ashamed of that.
> > >
> > > Plenty of artists choose other topics for their work. Make art about
> ideas,
> > > social issues, make art about art, whatever you want to do. I mean what
> > > usually happens when I talk like this is that people who have no
> interest in
> > > making art about social issues or war or humanity feel like I am
> pressuring
> > > them to "take moral responsibility" for their art, which is not the case
> at
> > > all. I don't have time to sit here and tell other people what to do.
> What I
> > > am saying is- if you are making statements, believe in the statements
> you
> > > make, and stand by them, or else you are just spewing statements
> everywhere.
> > > This is hardly a dictatorial argument, nor do I really find it to be
> self
> > > righteous- it's a fact. If you make a statement and then contradict it,
> you
> > > are contradicting your statement! I mean, seriously, what the fuck,
> right?
> > > This has nothing to do with "morality."
> > >
> > > If one wants to make anti-war art, choose to work within the ethical
> > > construct, or choose not to- it doesn't matter. Throw out the idea of
> > > ethical integrity and you leave your work to flounder in an imprecise
> > > articulation of nothing in particular. It's not like it's going to stop
> your
> > > career.
> > >
> > > "Self Righteously" Yours,
> > > -e.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: "Peter von Brandenburg" <blackhawk@thing.net>
> > > To: <thingist@bbs.thing.net>
> > > Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 4:13 PM
> > > Subject: Re: [thingist] Starship Troopers
> > >
> > >
> > > > J+: Akh, maybe I *will* watch it again after all. See, the closest I
> got
> > > was an
> > > > *extremely* oblique critique of h/wood, as if PV were saying, "you
> fucking
> > > morons, you
> > > > wouldn't know a good film or intelligent directorial if you sat on
> one, so
> > > here: I'm
> > > > going to give you exactly what you want & deserve". But even if I
> grant
> > > him that, it
> > > > still didn't come together for me. I wonder what Keith &/or Fred
> thought
> > > of it. So
> > > > let's go back to the orig point & where I would be tempted to apply
> Eryk's
> > > Puritanism
> > > > -- if most of the viewers (in this country anyway) saw the film & only
> > > grokked that it
> > > > glorified fascism (what *we* see as fascism but they do not) then what
> is
> > > the overall
> > > > "msg" the film conveys? Or is this just another twist on the old
> > > anti-elitist line,
> > > > that the pleasure of a highly trained & well-educated privileged few
> > > (people who
> > > > partake of high culture) is not worth the debasement of the majority
> of
> > > the consumers
> > > > of the culture-product in Q? best, -- B.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > John Klima wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > see previous post, and here perhaps is the dif of time: i said to
> myself
> > > "he's *got*
> > > > > to be joking" and left it at that (hmm, i said the same thing about
> > > shrub, and it
> > > > > turned out he wasn't. perhaps p.v. wasn't joking either. no,no, he
> must
> > > have been
> > > > > joking. he must have.).
> > > > >
> > > > > once said, the rest of the movie was just fabulous, it was like
> watching
> > > a real
> > > > > artifact from the future.
> > > >
> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > > t h i n g i s t
> > > > message by Peter von Brandenburg <blackhawk@thing.net>
> > > > archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> > > > info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> > > > and write "info thingist" in the message body
> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > >
> > >
> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > t h i n g i s t
> > > message by "Eryk Salvaggio" <eryk@maine.rr.com>
> > > archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> > > info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> > > and write "info thingist" in the message body
> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Oh totally, this whole ethics thing could be total horseshit. I seriously
> have no clue, but it seems to articulate the way I feel about stuff pretty
> well. Of course I wouldn't subscribe to any completely binary structure or
> structure that has no opting out, but this one seems to work to explain what
> I mean by responsibility as opposed to the accusation of morality, which
> strikes me as a very god-fearing term.
This is a particulary valid question. But to answer it you must reach a
consensus on what is the purpose of art (as opposed to the species and genus of
human activity). Business is easy - the company increases the capital owned by
the shareholders, thus any activity (such as crooked books or pilfering cash)
that reduces the capital value (other than normal decision making processes) is
unethical. Opposed, it is quite ethical (within his profession) for a theif to
steal but unethical for him to rat out his compatriots, because the purpose is
to acquire capital by illegal means without getting caught.
In this reqard, your question of "what is the artist responsible for" must be
preceeded by the question "what is the purpose of art" , or because that
question is too broad, it might be satisfactory to categorize known art, and
say "what is the purpose of art within a defined context" With this in mind,
if either of my war peices were meant to be considered decorative art, then
they could indeed be compared to the lampshades made of skin, and I would have
to admit to being unethical. I beleive it would also be unethical for a
viewer, who should also bear ethical responsibility, to place this work within
the context of decorative art.
My intentions for this work were to cause an evaluation of personal response
and responsibility with regard to marketing, propoganda, and acts of war. I am
trying to influence the ethics of the viewer. I believe this lies within an
acceptable context and the domain of valid purposes of art.
Is the work ethical? Much like an accountant would pass a new technique past
the eyes of her professional peers before using it, I passed my work before the
artists on the artists mailing lists to which I am subscribed. Regardless of
whether the work is unethical, I have done nothing unethical as I am following
the accepted practices of a professional.
As to whether the work is ethical, the opinion is greatly varied. Thus I am
left only to my personal judgement as the final arbitrar, unless someone
quickly finds a convincing arguement within the context I have defined. So
far, I am inclined to increase the strength of the indicator of my intent, and
then release it.
> Also, the ethics of anti war art are based upon certain assumptions on thier
> own, which are not as hard to define as those in straight up "art," because
> anti war art presupposes the ethical framework of "war is bad." This being
> said, at the very least, anti war art should not end up declaring war or
> glorifying war, especially if within that ethical framework you have a
> critique of the media's manipulation of the dead. In your work in
> particular, you said you made the piece in order to put the images in a
> situation which shocked you. This implies, and I am probably going to be
> wrong, since I am asking _you_ the question, but to me it implies that there
> was an ethical framework wherein images "ought" to retain thier power.
> Unfortunately, your piece violently rejects that framework by stripping the
> images of thier power by putting them in a situation where they are
> trivialized [disco music, dancing girls, etc.]
These peices are not making the moral judgment that "war is bad", but that "war
is bad without a conscious decision made by an informed population and totally
in the interest of self-defense as opposed to finanical gain after all efforts
to avoid war have been made" . I said that my piece is a declaration of war
(non-violent in a physical sense) against the prevailing blind acceptance of a
neoconservative agenda. Thus I cannot state that I am "against war" in a
general sense. I do agree, that ethically, I believe that images "ought" to
retain their power. However, I disagree that they are stripped of their power
in the situation I placed them, but instead were increased.
joseph
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
call me 646 279 2309
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Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
>
> Oh totally, this whole ethics thing could be total horseshit. I seriously
> have no clue, but it seems to articulate the way I feel about stuff pretty
> well. Of course I wouldn't subscribe to any completely binary structure or
> structure that has no opting out, but this one seems to work to explain what
> I mean by responsibility as opposed to the accusation of morality, which
> strikes me as a very god-fearing term.
>
> I'm always nervous when a system exists where the opposite proves the rule
> [ie, rejecting ethical frameworks is an ethical framework] but I don't know
> if that is actual fallacy or just looks like one.
>
> But to answer your- question? Or to respond to your reaction, I guess- I
> would venture to say that the ethics of our current modus operandi- in
> regards to the arts- stems largely from the desire to avoid the mistakes
> that led to the rise of fascism/communism and pretty much to avoid the whole
> idea of totalitarianism control over art, which I would guess [and I have no
> real knowledge, by the way- I am just a pocket sociologist, as is the case
> with most artists, unfortunately] is a reaction also to McCarthyism and even
> so far back as prosecution of artists by the church of Europe [and the rest
> of the world for that matter] and "continentally", a puritanical society of
> early America. It is also designed to respect the freedoms of individual
> expression as an extension of individual freedom, which is an American
> Ethical Framework [or so it claims- a derailment and lack of ethical
> integrity within that ethical framework has led up to plenty of oppression
> and restrictions in the name of "individual freedom"- it may be closer to
> the truth to say we are within an intellectual framework of "individual
> freedoms to the rich and white land owners" but this is a decision for which
> we are all responsible.] Of course, as you say, any cultural ethical
> framework will be the result of cultural conditioning- in fact, "cultural
> conditioning" is almost, but not entirely, synonymous with the integration
> of an ethical framework to an individual born into that culture.
>
> By the way, my thesis was not dependant on the assumption that lampshades
> made from skin were on par with photographs of the dead- and I said as much
> within it. But I maybe didn't clarify: The idea was that the attitudes both
> "artisans" had towards the responsibility of those skins/photographs was
> inherently similar in that one was used for decoration, the other for
> entertainment, both at the expense of dehumanization of an individual [which
> is against the the aforementioned ethical framework of individual freedom.]
>
> Also, the ethics of anti war art are based upon certain assumptions on thier
> own, which are not as hard to define as those in straight up "art," because
> anti war art presupposes the ethical framework of "war is bad." This being
> said, at the very least, anti war art should not end up declaring war or
> glorifying war, especially if within that ethical framework you have a
> critique of the media's manipulation of the dead. In your work in
> particular, you said you made the piece in order to put the images in a
> situation which shocked you. This implies, and I am probably going to be
> wrong, since I am asking _you_ the question, but to me it implies that there
> was an ethical framework wherein images "ought" to retain thier power.
> Unfortunately, your piece violently rejects that framework by stripping the
> images of thier power by putting them in a situation where they are
> trivialized [disco music, dancing girls, etc.]
>
> If you would like to subscribe to the opposing framework- that the art
> itself is a reflection of an idea that the images should be stripped of
> thier power, then please refer to the my lines concerning the intent of
> those using Jewish Skins as Lampshades and the Intent of those using Images
> of the dead- to strip the dead of thier power in order to best facilitate
> the propaganda of the ruling class.
>
> Of course, these are only some ethical frameworks from which to choose from-
> and in fact, I assume that you did not chose one to work in at all. And, as
> a result, you have made a piece that is, in my opinion, sloppy and
> forgettable (w/exception to its exploitative nature), regardless of how much
> I like or dislike you personally.
>
> Cheers,
> -e.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> PS: For anyone keeping score, we are once again seeing 2 out of 3 for
> Josephs regular pattern:
>
> 1. Declare any calls on his "fallibility" as attacks.
> 2. React to critiques and comments which are unfavorable to him with
> personal insults: "Rally around Eryk's flag everybody and give him the
> ethical power he so desperately craves", "Hysterical Ranting."
> 3. Avoid Responsibility for those comments and his own work through
> rationalization, rationalization, rationalization: "Ethics in art are much
> more difficult to define, since no obvious destruction exists, and is easily
> sidetracked by the hysterical ranting of boys comparing pictures of the dead
> to the lampshades made from their skins."
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "joseph (yes=no & yes<>no) " <joseph@electrichands.com>
> To: <thingist@bbs.thing.net>; "Eryk Salvaggio" <eryk@maine.rr.com>
> Cc: <list@rhizome.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2003 2:12 AM
> Subject: Re: [thingist] Ethics and Art
>
>
> > Ethics in business are based upon certain assumptions like lets not
> destroy
> > shareholder value by faulty accounting. Ethics in biology is lets not
> destroy
> > the world with faulty virii.
> >
> > Ethics in art are much more difficult to define, since no obvious
> destruction
> > exists, and is easily sidetracked by the hysterical ranting of boys
> comparing
> > pictures of the dead to the lampshades made from their skins. The basis
> for
> > your "intellectual reasoning" is still assumptions, made with cultural and
> > moral conditioning well intact. Rally around Eryk's flag everybody and
> give him
> > the ethical power he so desperately craves.
> >
> >
> > joseph & donna
> > www.electrichands.com
> > joseph franklyn mcelroy
> > corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
> >
> > go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
> > call me 646 279 2309
> >
> > SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
> > CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
> >
> > >
> > > I want to clarify my position re: Morality and Art, which have been
> called
> > > into question after my comments regarding Joseph McElroys exploitative
> war
> > > piece. What I have to say below, out of respect to dead horses
> everywhere,
> > > will have little to do with that work in particular and more to do with
> what
> > > I see as a disturbing hypocrisy in the "new media community" vis a vis
> the
> > > ongoing war in Iraq.
> > >
> > > I don't see myself coming from a "high moral" standpoint, so much as a
> > > simple ethical one. My generalized question- not about Josephs piece per
> se,
> > > which was critiqued based on ethics specifically because of the artist
> in
> > > questions purported "teaching ability" in the field of ethics and
> > > enlightenment- but in your generalized area of arts at large:
> > >
> > > All ethics reside on a framework, which is not moralistic by any means.
> You
> > > cannot say "war is bad" [an ethical idea] and not have a foundation for
> it.
> > > You cannot say "propaganda is bad" [another ethical standpoint] and not
> have
> > > a foundation for it. And when we apply these ethics haphazardly we begin
> to
> > > see our sloppiness has very real consequences. If the moral climate is
> void-
> > > and I believe "morality" is subjective to each individual, and stems
> from
> > > the idea of a higher authority, which means that they do not need to be
> > > "reasoned". Ethics are community-defined and based on intellectual
> reasoning
> > > and a responsibility for the results of that reasoning. Again- morality
> is
> > > not an issue. The issue at hand is, what are artists responsible for? If
> it
> > > is to be "against the war" then work that aims to achieve that should be
> > > held to that standard. If the ethical climate is that the war should not
> be
> > > used for entertainment purposes, then why stand by idly and allow the
> dead
> > > to be used for the purpose of entertainment?
> > >
> > > While certainly "everything can be allowed" within the framework of art;
> > > (and the framework of anything at all) and with the understanding that I
> am
> > > not confusing morality with ethics, why is one disallowed from having a
> > > reaction to a piece of art based on an ethical approach? I understand
> with
> > > morality- morality is subjective, changing over time and locations, and
> can
> > > be liquid. But don't confuse ethics and morality. In fact, saying
> > > "moralizing is fascist" is a result of an ethical decision. The idea in
> > > America that is in vogue is that of individual rights and freedoms vs
> the
> > > safety the populace- this is an "ethical" question.
> > >
> > > If we are to say then that we favor the rights of artists because
> ethically
> > > it is what we have decided on as a cultural value, then we are saying
> that
> > > from an ethical standpoint.
> > >
> > > One has brought up the idea that fascism was against the freedom of
> artistic
> > > expression, and so we can say that the foundation of this ethical
> concept of
> > > artistic freedom is based on a rejection of fascist ideologies as well
> as an
> > > embracing of individual freedoms. Unless one wants to say "Artists
> should be
> > > free because they make art and art should have no limits because it is
> art",
> > > which is not a valid reason intellectually.
> > >
> > > So if we are to reject fascism, there are two things I would bring up:
> One-
> > > and I warn you, this is potentially inflammatory, and I will get to the
> > > second much later- is the notion of using Jewish and Homosexual Skins
> for
> > > lampshades. The Jews/Homosexuals were "war dead", after all. The Nazis
> were
> > > simply using their war dead for decoration- much as Josephs piece did.
> Also,
> > > the Jews in question were already dead- "the dead are dead", as was
> pointed
> > > out in regards to the Iraqi war dead- "they cannot be exploited any more
> > > than they can be taxed, enslaved, or otherwise oppressed." With this I
> > > fundamentally disagree.
> > >
> > > Obviously there are differences between the two ideas.While we have with
> the
> > > Nazis a "literal" use of the war dead in artistry- which makes it so
> > > abhorrent, there is, in works which use the war dead, a "figurative"
> use. I
> > > know this example is inflammatory, but consider the idea that our art
> now is
> > > less about decoration (craft) and more about "entertainment". I would go
> so
> > > far as to say that the work is "fascist in ideology." And not to stand
> on
> > > Josephs piece in particular- which it doesn't deserve- I would say that
> any
> > > work that "exploits" the images of the dead is accomplishing the same
> task
> > > as a literal exploitation of the dead.
> > >
> > > We live in a media saturated world. Images are how we see it, images are
> > > what the world is, for most people- westerners especially. To capture
> the
> > > essence of a human these days, a photograph may be what we go with, when
> > > skin is unavailable. And while pieces which use images of the war dead
> are
> > > not "directly responsible" for the deaths, neither were the Nazi lamp
> > > makers- they simply used what was given to them. Both types of "art"
> exist
> > > because of the exploitation of these deaths- they steal power from the
> > > dignity of dead.
> > >
> > > Someone may ask the obvious question, then, of what about Holocaust art-
> one
> > > piece in particular is a work whereas concentration camps were made out
> of
> > > legos. That's ethically fine; and it differs from the use of skin for
> > > lampshades pretty drastically. At the same time, it makes a pop cultural
> > > reference to genocide- but does not exploit the dead directly, in the
> way
> > > that images of the suffering do. For that matter, the Lego piece was
> also, I
> > > believe, an attempt by a young American Jew to connect to the Holocaust.
> But
> > > what of the artists who use images of Hitler and the Holocaust as
> > > entertainment that does not commit the (apparent) sin of "moralizing"
> and/or
> > > "educating." Can anyone name a piece with real power that doesn't
> subscribe
> > > to either of those values? I can: "Triumph of the Will." [In fact- the
> only
> > > culturally redeeming thing about this film- aside from aesthetics- is
> the
> > > educational value, so even this is void.]
> > >
> > > Ruling classes- the class of people who are victorious over another-
> have a
> > > long history of exploitation of the class they have conquered. So go the
> > > spoils of war. I live in Maine, which used to be Micmac Indian
> Territory,
> > > and if you look at the gift shops you see the mockery of native American
> > > culture on display everywhere. Fake Sacred Indian Headdress with
> feathers
> > > dyed with neon orange and green, rubber Indian drums and war hammers.
> The
> > > fact that we committed genocide on these people is not only ignored, but
> the
> > > entire culture we displaced is replaced by Kitsch and sold on the mass
> > > market- ironic or not, this is exploitation.
> > >
> > > Currently, we are involved with a war in Iraq which is devastating the
> lives
> > > of millions of people in the country. What I see on these mailing lists,
> > > constantly as of late, is an open call to protest and a declaration that
> we
> > > must "do something." In fact, I am called hopeless and resigned for my
> > > stance that "doing something" would involve an actual direct involvement
> > > with the political process, such as the stance taken by Rachel Corrie or
> any
> > > of the human shield volunteers, but of course one does not have to be as
> > > extreme as that- volunteer at OxFam, donate administrative time to a
> local
> > > chapter of a red cross, or whatever. I do not believe that making
> statements
> > > on mailing lists affects much change, nor do I believe that many artists
> are
> > > of the caliber capable of commenting on the war as powerfully and
> directly
> > > as an event like this merits. If you are offended by this idea, you need
> to
> > > take a look at what war is, and what art is. While I would love a world
> > > where even casually interested artists could make works of art that
> truly
> > > stood up to war, this is simply not the case. It is the exception, not
> the
> > > rule, that a piece of art can capture war. The highlight being comparing
> > > McElroys work to "Guernica."
> > >
> > > We then see art made about the war. And what we see is a very basic
> > > manipulation of emotions associated with death and sexuality- this works
> for
> > > much of what I will call "a long tradition of attempted antiwar art".
> What I
> > > find appalling is that we have a blatant hypocrisy between the
> motivation of
> > > art-makers in regards to the Bush Administrations use of war dead on CNN
> or
> > > on Al-Jazeera for political purposes, and then a welcome greeting to a
> work
> > > of "art" utilizing those same images as a point of "protest". People on
> > > these lists complain about the abuse of the dead, of the people who are
> gung
> > > ho for war, complaints about the use of war as entertainment, and then
> we
> > > are faced with a piece that was designed to "shock someone" and it is
> > > supported because the statement is made by an "artist" as opposed to
> Peter
> > > Jennings.
> > >
> > > The result- which stems solely from a lack of ethical integrity- is work
> > > which borders on, if not exemplifies, a kitsch response to this useless
> war.
> > > I had said before that Kitsch is what happens when art is made out of
> > > narcissism, where the work is loved because it was made, and not loved
> > > because it stands up on its own. This is the "ethical climate" of the
> > > net.art community as it stands- protest, debate, argue and accuse, then
> > > create art that is guilty of the same thing people are arguing against
> so
> > > vehemently. This would be avoided if artists looked at ethical integrity
> and
> > > attempted to make work that kept that integrity intact- this would mean
> that
> > > no artist would resort to the cheap tricks they deplore when it is used
> in
> > > propaganda- such as linking sex with murder, cheapening the faces of
> victims
> > > of the war, or rendering the war to the level of reality TV.
> > >
> > > I do not believe it is the role of art to "teach" nor do I believe it is
> the
> > > role of art to "moralize"- although in the "anything goes" approach
> defended
> > > by most artists/critics I've been talking to, I don't see why "anything"
> > > does not include "moralization" or "education." But I will put that
> aside.
> > >
> > > I said before that the idea that "moralization in art is bad" stems from
> an
> > > argument against fascism, but contradicts itself? Here is the second
> > > example: If the ethical climate is "against fascism", then we have to
> > > understand that fascism is not necessarily the limitation of personal
> > > freedom, but can be the allowance of personal freedom- and luxury- at
> the
> > > expense of the freedom of others. In my guidebook, exploitation of dead
> > > soldiers against their will- and the will of their families- for the use
> of
> > > entertainment by people who make up the ruling party of war invaders is
> a
> > > modern, post modern equivalent to the use of dead Jews for furniture.
> Yes-
> > > it is different when you are using images of the dead as opposed to the
> dead
> > > themselves, but this is not the thread on which this argument hangs.
> > >
> > > Another argument that comes from freedom is frequently used to denounce
> the
> > > need for a moral framework, and this is the notion that since anarchy is
> the
> > > opposite of fascism, one must indeed subscribe to total personal and/or
> > > theoretical anarchy in order to best retaliate against authoritarian
> > > control. What this fails to address is the entire issue of personal
> > > responsibility that we are so quick to denounce in the civilian german
> > > population- "How could you let that happen?" The answer is not ethical
> > > frameworks, but rather, a framework in which some people were more
> valuable
> > > than others, where the "others" were so valueless that they can be
> worked to
> > > death in order to provide the leisure class with leisure and
> entertainment.
> > > And decorations. In fact, this has little to do with the loss of freedom
> or
> > > the prescence of freedom- it has to do with an overvalued idea of to
> what
> > > extent that freedom should be sought.
> > >
> > > So I have no problem with people doing what they want responsibly with
> their
> > > "freedom", nor is my complaint about the exploitation of war dead based
> on
> > > moral grounds. I simply do not understand the hypocrisy of people who
> are
> > > "against the war" and against the bush admins "use of Iraq for oil" and
> yet
> > > passive when artists use the war in Iraq for poorly constructed,
> > > irresponsible propaganda. This war is serious business- we are an
> invading
> > > power occupying a territory that is not responsible for any direct
> threat
> > > against us. If we as artists are to then make art casually while
> decrying
> > > the lack of serious involvement of the "other people" who "allowed this
> to
> > > happen" then we are not taking the war seriously. And that is fine, if
> we
> > > remove ourselves from the ethical framework that this war is
> illegitimate
> > > and should not be permitted to go on. Myself, I am silent in regards to
> art
> > > in this war- no ascii Baghdads, no film clips of nightvision invasions-
> > > because I do not believe in my own abilities at this point to do any
> justice
> > > to what is happening at this point in history.
> > >
> > > In the end, of course, war is war- kill if you wish, rape, pillage,
> argue
> > > and destroy, this is what humans do, myself included- nothing much
> "matters"
> > > in the end, everything simply is what it is, and there is no actual
> > > "responsibility." What I am advocating is not a moral condemnation of
> this
> > > fact, but the establishment of an ethical constraint to these behaviors
> > > turning the world into anarchy and our art from being fascist. This is
> the
> > > same exact place that the rejection of morality and art comes from in
> the
> > > first place. And if you are against "ethics," then you are by definition
> > > purely apathetic- to war, to starvation, to politics. And that is itself
> an
> > > ethical choice. If that is your bag, then fine- but you give up your
> right
> > > to complain. If you want to be against this war, that is an ethical
> > > decision, and as an artist one must take that ethical framework
> seriously in
> > > regards not only to posts which spew venom against the war, war
> coverage,
> > > George Bush and Wolf Blitzer, but also to take the framework seriously
> in
> > > regards to one's own view of the world and how we act within it.
> > >
> > > If you don't make art about the war then you don't have to worry about
> it.
> > > Plenty of artists ignore political issues that are too overwhelming for
> > > them. I am currently in that camp. This is a simple matter of honesty-
> this
> > > war is bigger than my abilities as an artist. I am not ashamed of that.
> > >
> > > Plenty of artists choose other topics for their work. Make art about
> ideas,
> > > social issues, make art about art, whatever you want to do. I mean what
> > > usually happens when I talk like this is that people who have no
> interest in
> > > making art about social issues or war or humanity feel like I am
> pressuring
> > > them to "take moral responsibility" for their art, which is not the case
> at
> > > all. I don't have time to sit here and tell other people what to do.
> What I
> > > am saying is- if you are making statements, believe in the statements
> you
> > > make, and stand by them, or else you are just spewing statements
> everywhere.
> > > This is hardly a dictatorial argument, nor do I really find it to be
> self
> > > righteous- it's a fact. If you make a statement and then contradict it,
> you
> > > are contradicting your statement! I mean, seriously, what the fuck,
> right?
> > > This has nothing to do with "morality."
> > >
> > > If one wants to make anti-war art, choose to work within the ethical
> > > construct, or choose not to- it doesn't matter. Throw out the idea of
> > > ethical integrity and you leave your work to flounder in an imprecise
> > > articulation of nothing in particular. It's not like it's going to stop
> your
> > > career.
> > >
> > > "Self Righteously" Yours,
> > > -e.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: "Peter von Brandenburg" <blackhawk@thing.net>
> > > To: <thingist@bbs.thing.net>
> > > Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 4:13 PM
> > > Subject: Re: [thingist] Starship Troopers
> > >
> > >
> > > > J+: Akh, maybe I *will* watch it again after all. See, the closest I
> got
> > > was an
> > > > *extremely* oblique critique of h/wood, as if PV were saying, "you
> fucking
> > > morons, you
> > > > wouldn't know a good film or intelligent directorial if you sat on
> one, so
> > > here: I'm
> > > > going to give you exactly what you want & deserve". But even if I
> grant
> > > him that, it
> > > > still didn't come together for me. I wonder what Keith &/or Fred
> thought
> > > of it. So
> > > > let's go back to the orig point & where I would be tempted to apply
> Eryk's
> > > Puritanism
> > > > -- if most of the viewers (in this country anyway) saw the film & only
> > > grokked that it
> > > > glorified fascism (what *we* see as fascism but they do not) then what
> is
> > > the overall
> > > > "msg" the film conveys? Or is this just another twist on the old
> > > anti-elitist line,
> > > > that the pleasure of a highly trained & well-educated privileged few
> > > (people who
> > > > partake of high culture) is not worth the debasement of the majority
> of
> > > the consumers
> > > > of the culture-product in Q? best, -- B.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > John Klima wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > see previous post, and here perhaps is the dif of time: i said to
> myself
> > > "he's *got*
> > > > > to be joking" and left it at that (hmm, i said the same thing about
> > > shrub, and it
> > > > > turned out he wasn't. perhaps p.v. wasn't joking either. no,no, he
> must
> > > have been
> > > > > joking. he must have.).
> > > > >
> > > > > once said, the rest of the movie was just fabulous, it was like
> watching
> > > a real
> > > > > artifact from the future.
> > > >
> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > > t h i n g i s t
> > > > message by Peter von Brandenburg <blackhawk@thing.net>
> > > > archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> > > > info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> > > > and write "info thingist" in the message body
> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > >
> > >
> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > t h i n g i s t
> > > message by "Eryk Salvaggio" <eryk@maine.rr.com>
> > > archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> > > info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> > > and write "info thingist" in the message body
> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: Re: Re: Dia article in NYTimes Mag
T.whid wrote
> > > > that competes with the industrial world on a technical level.
> I don't think that the open source model of software engineering is going to
> work for artwork.One doesn't have this sort of certainty when it comes to
> making art and who wants to freely follow a tyrant that wants everyone to toe
> the line re: subject and content of an artwork.
Note the key term I was responding to was - technical level - like there are
many disparant and individual uses for a database, but a group can get togethor
to make the database engine. On the subject of content, I might point to
independent movies that regulary compete with the big boys and are made by
teams of people on very small budgets (comparatively speaking). Once you have
the engines, it doesn't really take that big of team to build dynamite content.
Yes, you need some sort of directing vision, but no, it does not preclude each
individual from the team from having a rewarding and creative experience.
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting "t.whid" <twhid@mteww.com>:
> > > >
> > > > OK, that's what I was thinking. This goes back a bit to my
> > google/net
> > > > art masterpiece post. It's practically impossible to make
> > something
> > > > that competes with the industrial world on a technical level.
> > > >
> >
> > The Open Source model, such as Linux has proven capable of competing
> > on the
> > technical level. You need to get a few dozens or hundreds of net.art
> > programmers to cooperate.
> >
>
> I don't think that the open source model of software engineering is going to
> work for artwork. the purposes of an artwork aren't usually as easily defined
> as a software project. you can argue about how best to implement a web
> server, but everyone is in agreement that what you're building is a web
> server. One doesn't have this sort of certainty when it comes to making art
> and who wants to freely follow a tyrant that wants everyone to toe the line
> re: subject and content of an artwork. an artwork is less objective and it's
> goals aren't as quantifiable as software programs built to perform certain
> tasks. it's easy for meritricious code to bubble to the top on the strength
> of it's logic, it just works better. obviously these sorts of distinctions
> are harder to make when it comes to creating a piece of a whole in an
> artwork.
>
>
> having said that, there are artworks which are massively collaborative that
> are interesting, but they're a genre, they all end up being very similar: the
> collaborative story, the collaborative sentence, etc. the only way these
> collaborations work is to make them very open and unfocused, the subject is
> always partially the collaboration.
>
> but who knows? maybe an open source 'toy story' or 'doom 3' is possible? it
> has yet to appear.
>
> + ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gniht ym tup
> -> post: list@rhizome.org
> -> questions: info@rhizome.org
> -> subscribe/unsubscribe: http://rhizome.org/preferences/subscribe.rhiz
> -> give: http://rhizome.org/support
> +
> Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the
> Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php
> > > > that competes with the industrial world on a technical level.
> I don't think that the open source model of software engineering is going to
> work for artwork.One doesn't have this sort of certainty when it comes to
> making art and who wants to freely follow a tyrant that wants everyone to toe
> the line re: subject and content of an artwork.
Note the key term I was responding to was - technical level - like there are
many disparant and individual uses for a database, but a group can get togethor
to make the database engine. On the subject of content, I might point to
independent movies that regulary compete with the big boys and are made by
teams of people on very small budgets (comparatively speaking). Once you have
the engines, it doesn't really take that big of team to build dynamite content.
Yes, you need some sort of directing vision, but no, it does not preclude each
individual from the team from having a rewarding and creative experience.
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting "t.whid" <twhid@mteww.com>:
> > > >
> > > > OK, that's what I was thinking. This goes back a bit to my
> > google/net
> > > > art masterpiece post. It's practically impossible to make
> > something
> > > > that competes with the industrial world on a technical level.
> > > >
> >
> > The Open Source model, such as Linux has proven capable of competing
> > on the
> > technical level. You need to get a few dozens or hundreds of net.art
> > programmers to cooperate.
> >
>
> I don't think that the open source model of software engineering is going to
> work for artwork. the purposes of an artwork aren't usually as easily defined
> as a software project. you can argue about how best to implement a web
> server, but everyone is in agreement that what you're building is a web
> server. One doesn't have this sort of certainty when it comes to making art
> and who wants to freely follow a tyrant that wants everyone to toe the line
> re: subject and content of an artwork. an artwork is less objective and it's
> goals aren't as quantifiable as software programs built to perform certain
> tasks. it's easy for meritricious code to bubble to the top on the strength
> of it's logic, it just works better. obviously these sorts of distinctions
> are harder to make when it comes to creating a piece of a whole in an
> artwork.
>
>
> having said that, there are artworks which are massively collaborative that
> are interesting, but they're a genre, they all end up being very similar: the
> collaborative story, the collaborative sentence, etc. the only way these
> collaborations work is to make them very open and unfocused, the subject is
> always partially the collaboration.
>
> but who knows? maybe an open source 'toy story' or 'doom 3' is possible? it
> has yet to appear.
>
> + ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gniht ym tup
> -> post: list@rhizome.org
> -> questions: info@rhizome.org
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> -> give: http://rhizome.org/support
> +
> Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the
> Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php
Re: [thingist] Ethics and Art
Ethics in business are based upon certain assumptions like lets not destroy
shareholder value by faulty accounting. Ethics in biology is lets not destroy
the world with faulty virii.
Ethics in art are much more difficult to define, since no obvious destruction
exists, and is easily sidetracked by the hysterical ranting of boys comparing
pictures of the dead to the lampshades made from their skins. The basis for
your "intellectual reasoning" is still assumptions, made with cultural and
moral conditioning well intact. Rally around Eryk's flag everybody and give him
the ethical power he so desperately craves.
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
>
> I want to clarify my position re: Morality and Art, which have been called
> into question after my comments regarding Joseph McElroys exploitative war
> piece. What I have to say below, out of respect to dead horses everywhere,
> will have little to do with that work in particular and more to do with what
> I see as a disturbing hypocrisy in the "new media community" vis a vis the
> ongoing war in Iraq.
>
> I don't see myself coming from a "high moral" standpoint, so much as a
> simple ethical one. My generalized question- not about Josephs piece per se,
> which was critiqued based on ethics specifically because of the artist in
> questions purported "teaching ability" in the field of ethics and
> enlightenment- but in your generalized area of arts at large:
>
> All ethics reside on a framework, which is not moralistic by any means. You
> cannot say "war is bad" [an ethical idea] and not have a foundation for it.
> You cannot say "propaganda is bad" [another ethical standpoint] and not have
> a foundation for it. And when we apply these ethics haphazardly we begin to
> see our sloppiness has very real consequences. If the moral climate is void-
> and I believe "morality" is subjective to each individual, and stems from
> the idea of a higher authority, which means that they do not need to be
> "reasoned". Ethics are community-defined and based on intellectual reasoning
> and a responsibility for the results of that reasoning. Again- morality is
> not an issue. The issue at hand is, what are artists responsible for? If it
> is to be "against the war" then work that aims to achieve that should be
> held to that standard. If the ethical climate is that the war should not be
> used for entertainment purposes, then why stand by idly and allow the dead
> to be used for the purpose of entertainment?
>
> While certainly "everything can be allowed" within the framework of art;
> (and the framework of anything at all) and with the understanding that I am
> not confusing morality with ethics, why is one disallowed from having a
> reaction to a piece of art based on an ethical approach? I understand with
> morality- morality is subjective, changing over time and locations, and can
> be liquid. But don't confuse ethics and morality. In fact, saying
> "moralizing is fascist" is a result of an ethical decision. The idea in
> America that is in vogue is that of individual rights and freedoms vs the
> safety the populace- this is an "ethical" question.
>
> If we are to say then that we favor the rights of artists because ethically
> it is what we have decided on as a cultural value, then we are saying that
> from an ethical standpoint.
>
> One has brought up the idea that fascism was against the freedom of artistic
> expression, and so we can say that the foundation of this ethical concept of
> artistic freedom is based on a rejection of fascist ideologies as well as an
> embracing of individual freedoms. Unless one wants to say "Artists should be
> free because they make art and art should have no limits because it is art",
> which is not a valid reason intellectually.
>
> So if we are to reject fascism, there are two things I would bring up: One-
> and I warn you, this is potentially inflammatory, and I will get to the
> second much later- is the notion of using Jewish and Homosexual Skins for
> lampshades. The Jews/Homosexuals were "war dead", after all. The Nazis were
> simply using their war dead for decoration- much as Josephs piece did. Also,
> the Jews in question were already dead- "the dead are dead", as was pointed
> out in regards to the Iraqi war dead- "they cannot be exploited any more
> than they can be taxed, enslaved, or otherwise oppressed." With this I
> fundamentally disagree.
>
> Obviously there are differences between the two ideas.While we have with the
> Nazis a "literal" use of the war dead in artistry- which makes it so
> abhorrent, there is, in works which use the war dead, a "figurative" use. I
> know this example is inflammatory, but consider the idea that our art now is
> less about decoration (craft) and more about "entertainment". I would go so
> far as to say that the work is "fascist in ideology." And not to stand on
> Josephs piece in particular- which it doesn't deserve- I would say that any
> work that "exploits" the images of the dead is accomplishing the same task
> as a literal exploitation of the dead.
>
> We live in a media saturated world. Images are how we see it, images are
> what the world is, for most people- westerners especially. To capture the
> essence of a human these days, a photograph may be what we go with, when
> skin is unavailable. And while pieces which use images of the war dead are
> not "directly responsible" for the deaths, neither were the Nazi lamp
> makers- they simply used what was given to them. Both types of "art" exist
> because of the exploitation of these deaths- they steal power from the
> dignity of dead.
>
> Someone may ask the obvious question, then, of what about Holocaust art- one
> piece in particular is a work whereas concentration camps were made out of
> legos. That's ethically fine; and it differs from the use of skin for
> lampshades pretty drastically. At the same time, it makes a pop cultural
> reference to genocide- but does not exploit the dead directly, in the way
> that images of the suffering do. For that matter, the Lego piece was also, I
> believe, an attempt by a young American Jew to connect to the Holocaust. But
> what of the artists who use images of Hitler and the Holocaust as
> entertainment that does not commit the (apparent) sin of "moralizing" and/or
> "educating." Can anyone name a piece with real power that doesn't subscribe
> to either of those values? I can: "Triumph of the Will." [In fact- the only
> culturally redeeming thing about this film- aside from aesthetics- is the
> educational value, so even this is void.]
>
> Ruling classes- the class of people who are victorious over another- have a
> long history of exploitation of the class they have conquered. So go the
> spoils of war. I live in Maine, which used to be Micmac Indian Territory,
> and if you look at the gift shops you see the mockery of native American
> culture on display everywhere. Fake Sacred Indian Headdress with feathers
> dyed with neon orange and green, rubber Indian drums and war hammers. The
> fact that we committed genocide on these people is not only ignored, but the
> entire culture we displaced is replaced by Kitsch and sold on the mass
> market- ironic or not, this is exploitation.
>
> Currently, we are involved with a war in Iraq which is devastating the lives
> of millions of people in the country. What I see on these mailing lists,
> constantly as of late, is an open call to protest and a declaration that we
> must "do something." In fact, I am called hopeless and resigned for my
> stance that "doing something" would involve an actual direct involvement
> with the political process, such as the stance taken by Rachel Corrie or any
> of the human shield volunteers, but of course one does not have to be as
> extreme as that- volunteer at OxFam, donate administrative time to a local
> chapter of a red cross, or whatever. I do not believe that making statements
> on mailing lists affects much change, nor do I believe that many artists are
> of the caliber capable of commenting on the war as powerfully and directly
> as an event like this merits. If you are offended by this idea, you need to
> take a look at what war is, and what art is. While I would love a world
> where even casually interested artists could make works of art that truly
> stood up to war, this is simply not the case. It is the exception, not the
> rule, that a piece of art can capture war. The highlight being comparing
> McElroys work to "Guernica."
>
> We then see art made about the war. And what we see is a very basic
> manipulation of emotions associated with death and sexuality- this works for
> much of what I will call "a long tradition of attempted antiwar art". What I
> find appalling is that we have a blatant hypocrisy between the motivation of
> art-makers in regards to the Bush Administrations use of war dead on CNN or
> on Al-Jazeera for political purposes, and then a welcome greeting to a work
> of "art" utilizing those same images as a point of "protest". People on
> these lists complain about the abuse of the dead, of the people who are gung
> ho for war, complaints about the use of war as entertainment, and then we
> are faced with a piece that was designed to "shock someone" and it is
> supported because the statement is made by an "artist" as opposed to Peter
> Jennings.
>
> The result- which stems solely from a lack of ethical integrity- is work
> which borders on, if not exemplifies, a kitsch response to this useless war.
> I had said before that Kitsch is what happens when art is made out of
> narcissism, where the work is loved because it was made, and not loved
> because it stands up on its own. This is the "ethical climate" of the
> net.art community as it stands- protest, debate, argue and accuse, then
> create art that is guilty of the same thing people are arguing against so
> vehemently. This would be avoided if artists looked at ethical integrity and
> attempted to make work that kept that integrity intact- this would mean that
> no artist would resort to the cheap tricks they deplore when it is used in
> propaganda- such as linking sex with murder, cheapening the faces of victims
> of the war, or rendering the war to the level of reality TV.
>
> I do not believe it is the role of art to "teach" nor do I believe it is the
> role of art to "moralize"- although in the "anything goes" approach defended
> by most artists/critics I've been talking to, I don't see why "anything"
> does not include "moralization" or "education." But I will put that aside.
>
> I said before that the idea that "moralization in art is bad" stems from an
> argument against fascism, but contradicts itself? Here is the second
> example: If the ethical climate is "against fascism", then we have to
> understand that fascism is not necessarily the limitation of personal
> freedom, but can be the allowance of personal freedom- and luxury- at the
> expense of the freedom of others. In my guidebook, exploitation of dead
> soldiers against their will- and the will of their families- for the use of
> entertainment by people who make up the ruling party of war invaders is a
> modern, post modern equivalent to the use of dead Jews for furniture. Yes-
> it is different when you are using images of the dead as opposed to the dead
> themselves, but this is not the thread on which this argument hangs.
>
> Another argument that comes from freedom is frequently used to denounce the
> need for a moral framework, and this is the notion that since anarchy is the
> opposite of fascism, one must indeed subscribe to total personal and/or
> theoretical anarchy in order to best retaliate against authoritarian
> control. What this fails to address is the entire issue of personal
> responsibility that we are so quick to denounce in the civilian german
> population- "How could you let that happen?" The answer is not ethical
> frameworks, but rather, a framework in which some people were more valuable
> than others, where the "others" were so valueless that they can be worked to
> death in order to provide the leisure class with leisure and entertainment.
> And decorations. In fact, this has little to do with the loss of freedom or
> the prescence of freedom- it has to do with an overvalued idea of to what
> extent that freedom should be sought.
>
> So I have no problem with people doing what they want responsibly with their
> "freedom", nor is my complaint about the exploitation of war dead based on
> moral grounds. I simply do not understand the hypocrisy of people who are
> "against the war" and against the bush admins "use of Iraq for oil" and yet
> passive when artists use the war in Iraq for poorly constructed,
> irresponsible propaganda. This war is serious business- we are an invading
> power occupying a territory that is not responsible for any direct threat
> against us. If we as artists are to then make art casually while decrying
> the lack of serious involvement of the "other people" who "allowed this to
> happen" then we are not taking the war seriously. And that is fine, if we
> remove ourselves from the ethical framework that this war is illegitimate
> and should not be permitted to go on. Myself, I am silent in regards to art
> in this war- no ascii Baghdads, no film clips of nightvision invasions-
> because I do not believe in my own abilities at this point to do any justice
> to what is happening at this point in history.
>
> In the end, of course, war is war- kill if you wish, rape, pillage, argue
> and destroy, this is what humans do, myself included- nothing much "matters"
> in the end, everything simply is what it is, and there is no actual
> "responsibility." What I am advocating is not a moral condemnation of this
> fact, but the establishment of an ethical constraint to these behaviors
> turning the world into anarchy and our art from being fascist. This is the
> same exact place that the rejection of morality and art comes from in the
> first place. And if you are against "ethics," then you are by definition
> purely apathetic- to war, to starvation, to politics. And that is itself an
> ethical choice. If that is your bag, then fine- but you give up your right
> to complain. If you want to be against this war, that is an ethical
> decision, and as an artist one must take that ethical framework seriously in
> regards not only to posts which spew venom against the war, war coverage,
> George Bush and Wolf Blitzer, but also to take the framework seriously in
> regards to one's own view of the world and how we act within it.
>
> If you don't make art about the war then you don't have to worry about it.
> Plenty of artists ignore political issues that are too overwhelming for
> them. I am currently in that camp. This is a simple matter of honesty- this
> war is bigger than my abilities as an artist. I am not ashamed of that.
>
> Plenty of artists choose other topics for their work. Make art about ideas,
> social issues, make art about art, whatever you want to do. I mean what
> usually happens when I talk like this is that people who have no interest in
> making art about social issues or war or humanity feel like I am pressuring
> them to "take moral responsibility" for their art, which is not the case at
> all. I don't have time to sit here and tell other people what to do. What I
> am saying is- if you are making statements, believe in the statements you
> make, and stand by them, or else you are just spewing statements everywhere.
> This is hardly a dictatorial argument, nor do I really find it to be self
> righteous- it's a fact. If you make a statement and then contradict it, you
> are contradicting your statement! I mean, seriously, what the fuck, right?
> This has nothing to do with "morality."
>
> If one wants to make anti-war art, choose to work within the ethical
> construct, or choose not to- it doesn't matter. Throw out the idea of
> ethical integrity and you leave your work to flounder in an imprecise
> articulation of nothing in particular. It's not like it's going to stop your
> career.
>
> "Self Righteously" Yours,
> -e.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Peter von Brandenburg" <blackhawk@thing.net>
> To: <thingist@bbs.thing.net>
> Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 4:13 PM
> Subject: Re: [thingist] Starship Troopers
>
>
> > J+: Akh, maybe I *will* watch it again after all. See, the closest I got
> was an
> > *extremely* oblique critique of h/wood, as if PV were saying, "you fucking
> morons, you
> > wouldn't know a good film or intelligent directorial if you sat on one, so
> here: I'm
> > going to give you exactly what you want & deserve". But even if I grant
> him that, it
> > still didn't come together for me. I wonder what Keith &/or Fred thought
> of it. So
> > let's go back to the orig point & where I would be tempted to apply Eryk's
> Puritanism
> > -- if most of the viewers (in this country anyway) saw the film & only
> grokked that it
> > glorified fascism (what *we* see as fascism but they do not) then what is
> the overall
> > "msg" the film conveys? Or is this just another twist on the old
> anti-elitist line,
> > that the pleasure of a highly trained & well-educated privileged few
> (people who
> > partake of high culture) is not worth the debasement of the majority of
> the consumers
> > of the culture-product in Q? best, -- B.
> >
> >
> > John Klima wrote:
> >
> > > see previous post, and here perhaps is the dif of time: i said to myself
> "he's *got*
> > > to be joking" and left it at that (hmm, i said the same thing about
> shrub, and it
> > > turned out he wasn't. perhaps p.v. wasn't joking either. no,no, he must
> have been
> > > joking. he must have.).
> > >
> > > once said, the rest of the movie was just fabulous, it was like watching
> a real
> > > artifact from the future.
> >
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > t h i n g i s t
> > message by Peter von Brandenburg <blackhawk@thing.net>
> > archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> > info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> > and write "info thingist" in the message body
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> t h i n g i s t
> message by "Eryk Salvaggio" <eryk@maine.rr.com>
> archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> and write "info thingist" in the message body
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
shareholder value by faulty accounting. Ethics in biology is lets not destroy
the world with faulty virii.
Ethics in art are much more difficult to define, since no obvious destruction
exists, and is easily sidetracked by the hysterical ranting of boys comparing
pictures of the dead to the lampshades made from their skins. The basis for
your "intellectual reasoning" is still assumptions, made with cultural and
moral conditioning well intact. Rally around Eryk's flag everybody and give him
the ethical power he so desperately craves.
joseph & donna
www.electrichands.com
joseph franklyn mcelroy
corporate performance artist www.corporatepa.com
go shopping -> http://www.electrichands.com/shopindex.htm
call me 646 279 2309
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER CUPCAKEKALEIDOSCOPE - send email to
CupcakeKleidoscope-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Quoting Eryk Salvaggio <eryk@maine.rr.com>:
>
> I want to clarify my position re: Morality and Art, which have been called
> into question after my comments regarding Joseph McElroys exploitative war
> piece. What I have to say below, out of respect to dead horses everywhere,
> will have little to do with that work in particular and more to do with what
> I see as a disturbing hypocrisy in the "new media community" vis a vis the
> ongoing war in Iraq.
>
> I don't see myself coming from a "high moral" standpoint, so much as a
> simple ethical one. My generalized question- not about Josephs piece per se,
> which was critiqued based on ethics specifically because of the artist in
> questions purported "teaching ability" in the field of ethics and
> enlightenment- but in your generalized area of arts at large:
>
> All ethics reside on a framework, which is not moralistic by any means. You
> cannot say "war is bad" [an ethical idea] and not have a foundation for it.
> You cannot say "propaganda is bad" [another ethical standpoint] and not have
> a foundation for it. And when we apply these ethics haphazardly we begin to
> see our sloppiness has very real consequences. If the moral climate is void-
> and I believe "morality" is subjective to each individual, and stems from
> the idea of a higher authority, which means that they do not need to be
> "reasoned". Ethics are community-defined and based on intellectual reasoning
> and a responsibility for the results of that reasoning. Again- morality is
> not an issue. The issue at hand is, what are artists responsible for? If it
> is to be "against the war" then work that aims to achieve that should be
> held to that standard. If the ethical climate is that the war should not be
> used for entertainment purposes, then why stand by idly and allow the dead
> to be used for the purpose of entertainment?
>
> While certainly "everything can be allowed" within the framework of art;
> (and the framework of anything at all) and with the understanding that I am
> not confusing morality with ethics, why is one disallowed from having a
> reaction to a piece of art based on an ethical approach? I understand with
> morality- morality is subjective, changing over time and locations, and can
> be liquid. But don't confuse ethics and morality. In fact, saying
> "moralizing is fascist" is a result of an ethical decision. The idea in
> America that is in vogue is that of individual rights and freedoms vs the
> safety the populace- this is an "ethical" question.
>
> If we are to say then that we favor the rights of artists because ethically
> it is what we have decided on as a cultural value, then we are saying that
> from an ethical standpoint.
>
> One has brought up the idea that fascism was against the freedom of artistic
> expression, and so we can say that the foundation of this ethical concept of
> artistic freedom is based on a rejection of fascist ideologies as well as an
> embracing of individual freedoms. Unless one wants to say "Artists should be
> free because they make art and art should have no limits because it is art",
> which is not a valid reason intellectually.
>
> So if we are to reject fascism, there are two things I would bring up: One-
> and I warn you, this is potentially inflammatory, and I will get to the
> second much later- is the notion of using Jewish and Homosexual Skins for
> lampshades. The Jews/Homosexuals were "war dead", after all. The Nazis were
> simply using their war dead for decoration- much as Josephs piece did. Also,
> the Jews in question were already dead- "the dead are dead", as was pointed
> out in regards to the Iraqi war dead- "they cannot be exploited any more
> than they can be taxed, enslaved, or otherwise oppressed." With this I
> fundamentally disagree.
>
> Obviously there are differences between the two ideas.While we have with the
> Nazis a "literal" use of the war dead in artistry- which makes it so
> abhorrent, there is, in works which use the war dead, a "figurative" use. I
> know this example is inflammatory, but consider the idea that our art now is
> less about decoration (craft) and more about "entertainment". I would go so
> far as to say that the work is "fascist in ideology." And not to stand on
> Josephs piece in particular- which it doesn't deserve- I would say that any
> work that "exploits" the images of the dead is accomplishing the same task
> as a literal exploitation of the dead.
>
> We live in a media saturated world. Images are how we see it, images are
> what the world is, for most people- westerners especially. To capture the
> essence of a human these days, a photograph may be what we go with, when
> skin is unavailable. And while pieces which use images of the war dead are
> not "directly responsible" for the deaths, neither were the Nazi lamp
> makers- they simply used what was given to them. Both types of "art" exist
> because of the exploitation of these deaths- they steal power from the
> dignity of dead.
>
> Someone may ask the obvious question, then, of what about Holocaust art- one
> piece in particular is a work whereas concentration camps were made out of
> legos. That's ethically fine; and it differs from the use of skin for
> lampshades pretty drastically. At the same time, it makes a pop cultural
> reference to genocide- but does not exploit the dead directly, in the way
> that images of the suffering do. For that matter, the Lego piece was also, I
> believe, an attempt by a young American Jew to connect to the Holocaust. But
> what of the artists who use images of Hitler and the Holocaust as
> entertainment that does not commit the (apparent) sin of "moralizing" and/or
> "educating." Can anyone name a piece with real power that doesn't subscribe
> to either of those values? I can: "Triumph of the Will." [In fact- the only
> culturally redeeming thing about this film- aside from aesthetics- is the
> educational value, so even this is void.]
>
> Ruling classes- the class of people who are victorious over another- have a
> long history of exploitation of the class they have conquered. So go the
> spoils of war. I live in Maine, which used to be Micmac Indian Territory,
> and if you look at the gift shops you see the mockery of native American
> culture on display everywhere. Fake Sacred Indian Headdress with feathers
> dyed with neon orange and green, rubber Indian drums and war hammers. The
> fact that we committed genocide on these people is not only ignored, but the
> entire culture we displaced is replaced by Kitsch and sold on the mass
> market- ironic or not, this is exploitation.
>
> Currently, we are involved with a war in Iraq which is devastating the lives
> of millions of people in the country. What I see on these mailing lists,
> constantly as of late, is an open call to protest and a declaration that we
> must "do something." In fact, I am called hopeless and resigned for my
> stance that "doing something" would involve an actual direct involvement
> with the political process, such as the stance taken by Rachel Corrie or any
> of the human shield volunteers, but of course one does not have to be as
> extreme as that- volunteer at OxFam, donate administrative time to a local
> chapter of a red cross, or whatever. I do not believe that making statements
> on mailing lists affects much change, nor do I believe that many artists are
> of the caliber capable of commenting on the war as powerfully and directly
> as an event like this merits. If you are offended by this idea, you need to
> take a look at what war is, and what art is. While I would love a world
> where even casually interested artists could make works of art that truly
> stood up to war, this is simply not the case. It is the exception, not the
> rule, that a piece of art can capture war. The highlight being comparing
> McElroys work to "Guernica."
>
> We then see art made about the war. And what we see is a very basic
> manipulation of emotions associated with death and sexuality- this works for
> much of what I will call "a long tradition of attempted antiwar art". What I
> find appalling is that we have a blatant hypocrisy between the motivation of
> art-makers in regards to the Bush Administrations use of war dead on CNN or
> on Al-Jazeera for political purposes, and then a welcome greeting to a work
> of "art" utilizing those same images as a point of "protest". People on
> these lists complain about the abuse of the dead, of the people who are gung
> ho for war, complaints about the use of war as entertainment, and then we
> are faced with a piece that was designed to "shock someone" and it is
> supported because the statement is made by an "artist" as opposed to Peter
> Jennings.
>
> The result- which stems solely from a lack of ethical integrity- is work
> which borders on, if not exemplifies, a kitsch response to this useless war.
> I had said before that Kitsch is what happens when art is made out of
> narcissism, where the work is loved because it was made, and not loved
> because it stands up on its own. This is the "ethical climate" of the
> net.art community as it stands- protest, debate, argue and accuse, then
> create art that is guilty of the same thing people are arguing against so
> vehemently. This would be avoided if artists looked at ethical integrity and
> attempted to make work that kept that integrity intact- this would mean that
> no artist would resort to the cheap tricks they deplore when it is used in
> propaganda- such as linking sex with murder, cheapening the faces of victims
> of the war, or rendering the war to the level of reality TV.
>
> I do not believe it is the role of art to "teach" nor do I believe it is the
> role of art to "moralize"- although in the "anything goes" approach defended
> by most artists/critics I've been talking to, I don't see why "anything"
> does not include "moralization" or "education." But I will put that aside.
>
> I said before that the idea that "moralization in art is bad" stems from an
> argument against fascism, but contradicts itself? Here is the second
> example: If the ethical climate is "against fascism", then we have to
> understand that fascism is not necessarily the limitation of personal
> freedom, but can be the allowance of personal freedom- and luxury- at the
> expense of the freedom of others. In my guidebook, exploitation of dead
> soldiers against their will- and the will of their families- for the use of
> entertainment by people who make up the ruling party of war invaders is a
> modern, post modern equivalent to the use of dead Jews for furniture. Yes-
> it is different when you are using images of the dead as opposed to the dead
> themselves, but this is not the thread on which this argument hangs.
>
> Another argument that comes from freedom is frequently used to denounce the
> need for a moral framework, and this is the notion that since anarchy is the
> opposite of fascism, one must indeed subscribe to total personal and/or
> theoretical anarchy in order to best retaliate against authoritarian
> control. What this fails to address is the entire issue of personal
> responsibility that we are so quick to denounce in the civilian german
> population- "How could you let that happen?" The answer is not ethical
> frameworks, but rather, a framework in which some people were more valuable
> than others, where the "others" were so valueless that they can be worked to
> death in order to provide the leisure class with leisure and entertainment.
> And decorations. In fact, this has little to do with the loss of freedom or
> the prescence of freedom- it has to do with an overvalued idea of to what
> extent that freedom should be sought.
>
> So I have no problem with people doing what they want responsibly with their
> "freedom", nor is my complaint about the exploitation of war dead based on
> moral grounds. I simply do not understand the hypocrisy of people who are
> "against the war" and against the bush admins "use of Iraq for oil" and yet
> passive when artists use the war in Iraq for poorly constructed,
> irresponsible propaganda. This war is serious business- we are an invading
> power occupying a territory that is not responsible for any direct threat
> against us. If we as artists are to then make art casually while decrying
> the lack of serious involvement of the "other people" who "allowed this to
> happen" then we are not taking the war seriously. And that is fine, if we
> remove ourselves from the ethical framework that this war is illegitimate
> and should not be permitted to go on. Myself, I am silent in regards to art
> in this war- no ascii Baghdads, no film clips of nightvision invasions-
> because I do not believe in my own abilities at this point to do any justice
> to what is happening at this point in history.
>
> In the end, of course, war is war- kill if you wish, rape, pillage, argue
> and destroy, this is what humans do, myself included- nothing much "matters"
> in the end, everything simply is what it is, and there is no actual
> "responsibility." What I am advocating is not a moral condemnation of this
> fact, but the establishment of an ethical constraint to these behaviors
> turning the world into anarchy and our art from being fascist. This is the
> same exact place that the rejection of morality and art comes from in the
> first place. And if you are against "ethics," then you are by definition
> purely apathetic- to war, to starvation, to politics. And that is itself an
> ethical choice. If that is your bag, then fine- but you give up your right
> to complain. If you want to be against this war, that is an ethical
> decision, and as an artist one must take that ethical framework seriously in
> regards not only to posts which spew venom against the war, war coverage,
> George Bush and Wolf Blitzer, but also to take the framework seriously in
> regards to one's own view of the world and how we act within it.
>
> If you don't make art about the war then you don't have to worry about it.
> Plenty of artists ignore political issues that are too overwhelming for
> them. I am currently in that camp. This is a simple matter of honesty- this
> war is bigger than my abilities as an artist. I am not ashamed of that.
>
> Plenty of artists choose other topics for their work. Make art about ideas,
> social issues, make art about art, whatever you want to do. I mean what
> usually happens when I talk like this is that people who have no interest in
> making art about social issues or war or humanity feel like I am pressuring
> them to "take moral responsibility" for their art, which is not the case at
> all. I don't have time to sit here and tell other people what to do. What I
> am saying is- if you are making statements, believe in the statements you
> make, and stand by them, or else you are just spewing statements everywhere.
> This is hardly a dictatorial argument, nor do I really find it to be self
> righteous- it's a fact. If you make a statement and then contradict it, you
> are contradicting your statement! I mean, seriously, what the fuck, right?
> This has nothing to do with "morality."
>
> If one wants to make anti-war art, choose to work within the ethical
> construct, or choose not to- it doesn't matter. Throw out the idea of
> ethical integrity and you leave your work to flounder in an imprecise
> articulation of nothing in particular. It's not like it's going to stop your
> career.
>
> "Self Righteously" Yours,
> -e.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Peter von Brandenburg" <blackhawk@thing.net>
> To: <thingist@bbs.thing.net>
> Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 4:13 PM
> Subject: Re: [thingist] Starship Troopers
>
>
> > J+: Akh, maybe I *will* watch it again after all. See, the closest I got
> was an
> > *extremely* oblique critique of h/wood, as if PV were saying, "you fucking
> morons, you
> > wouldn't know a good film or intelligent directorial if you sat on one, so
> here: I'm
> > going to give you exactly what you want & deserve". But even if I grant
> him that, it
> > still didn't come together for me. I wonder what Keith &/or Fred thought
> of it. So
> > let's go back to the orig point & where I would be tempted to apply Eryk's
> Puritanism
> > -- if most of the viewers (in this country anyway) saw the film & only
> grokked that it
> > glorified fascism (what *we* see as fascism but they do not) then what is
> the overall
> > "msg" the film conveys? Or is this just another twist on the old
> anti-elitist line,
> > that the pleasure of a highly trained & well-educated privileged few
> (people who
> > partake of high culture) is not worth the debasement of the majority of
> the consumers
> > of the culture-product in Q? best, -- B.
> >
> >
> > John Klima wrote:
> >
> > > see previous post, and here perhaps is the dif of time: i said to myself
> "he's *got*
> > > to be joking" and left it at that (hmm, i said the same thing about
> shrub, and it
> > > turned out he wasn't. perhaps p.v. wasn't joking either. no,no, he must
> have been
> > > joking. he must have.).
> > >
> > > once said, the rest of the movie was just fabulous, it was like watching
> a real
> > > artifact from the future.
> >
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> > t h i n g i s t
> > message by Peter von Brandenburg <blackhawk@thing.net>
> > archive at http://bbs.thing.net
> > info: send email to majordomo@bbs.thing.net
> > and write "info thingist" in the message body
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> t h i n g i s t
> message by "Eryk Salvaggio" <eryk@maine.rr.com>
> archive at http://bbs.thing.net
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