Reflections on the Impossibility of Material Continuation
Version
Published
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Have you ever considered, or been challenged by, the recent artistic media based on film, video and computer code, the so-called non-traditional media? Certainly—you might say—these media are, in a sense, nothing really new, since they are already a part of our increasingly mediatized culture. Indubitably, digital media cast their shadow on every aspect of modern life; they both form our culture and are being formed by it. Changeable by nature, digital media question established views considering what an artwork is, or might be, and what is being exhibited and preserved, as well as what enters the realm of cultural memory, and in which configuration. Being in the process of continuous reformulation and in and re-scription, these artworks move between formats and platforms, seemingly unconcerned with the gravity of their physical carriage—media as vehicles, as it were, of the concept, a floating synthesis of an artist’s mind and of all those engaged in the work’s genesis. But beware: the future of ever-expanding digital memory comes upon us, an immortalization gesture of sorts, directed against forgetting and oblivion. The digital cloud, multi-nodal, networked system of intra and internet, web-based mobile platforms, increasingly participatory applications, peer-to-peer formats that lack any representational content, have already commenced generating a multiplicity of mutable versions, variations, and clones. They lack reference to any of the familiar object-based (or objectified) strategies that for decades formed theories of traditional conservation. Imagine, then, the unfulfilled dreams of these stewards of heritage that attend to materialist ideologies by wishing to conserve artworks as physical objects.
Subjects
AM Museums (General). Collectors and collecting (General)
N Visual arts (General) For photography, see TR
NX Arts in general
Publisher DOI
Journal
The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists
ISSN
1532-3978
Volume
17
Issue
1
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Submitter
Hölling, Hanna Barbara
Citation apa
Hölling, H. B. (2017). Reflections on the Impossibility of Material Continuation. In The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists (Vol. 17, Issue 1). University of Minnesota Press. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.19851
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