"The inmates have escaped again and flooded the world with another
wind egg. Called ‘altermodernism’, a term as ugly as its definition, we
are now to be persuaded that a new improved artistic sentimentality has
burst upon the scene. Some people really do have far too much free
time.
Coined by Nicolas Bourriaud, who is occupying space at the Tate in
London, we should not be surprised, given his past association with
Flash Art. Perhaps the term will take a clue from the magazine and be
merely a flash in the pan; but oh dear, perhaps that itself will be
evidence of altermodernism? Such self-referential nonsense is hardly
helpful and perhaps premature. But Bourriaud seems to be in the
business of naming, having brought us relationism, too, but someone’s
got to do it. (Relational art is perhaps just the art ones finds
juxtaposed in, wait for it, art galleries, where people and artists
relate, but perhaps not….).
My view is that the term describes the breathless arguments put
forward by those advocating globalisation, better defined through
economics than culture. Despite this, we will continue to live in small
worlds, and with the recession we are now enjoying thanks in part to
globalisation, enjoy a new localism, live more compactly, more locally.
In that respect, his argument for creolisation is misguided; the
counterargument from NB would be that I am simply trapped in my own
binary world, but I’ve worked in too many cultures to fall for that.
But we must recognise that some global context is emerging as people
connect to each other through the simplifying technologies of YouTube,
and Facebook; these may lead more to superficiality, than depth and in
the end be less emotionally satisfying.
Perhaps the faddism that seems to characterise Bourriaud’s thinking
reflects a surface grasp of the world, seen from a helicopter, rather
than lived in its earthy reality? Certainly the works assembled to
illustrate altermodernism were superficial and vacuous, art for the
Twitter generation?
NB has said: “It is an idea that was actually the core of Relational
Aesthetics already, the Marxist idea that there is no stable “essence”
of humankind, which is nothing but the transitory result of what human
beings do at a certain moment of history. I think this might be the
cornerstone of all my writings, in a way.”
That does seem to be his point."
Found here"
http://www.skythunder.net/?p=80
"
What follows after post-modernism: ultra-modern
art?
I would say ars gratia ex-artis, this is
to be the state of my "outer art". ?Por que? !Por que no!
It seems that I am an anti-talent to drawings
and paintings in a traditional manner. I even disregard this kind
of art, which cas easily be replaced by mechanical reproduction.
Therefore, I gathered nearly a quarter of my "anti-art"
art-work done in Turkey, USA (here I got in touch with the straight art,
in bright basic colors - yelow for the sun, blue for the sky, red for the
fire, and black for the night, somehow naive, of Navajo, Zuni, Apache,
Hopi, and Pima Indian tribes), and Mexico, between 1988-2000, in a paradoxist
way:
- painting for the non-painting's
sake;
- not drawings, but our
every day's scribblings;
- painting overlapping another
painting;
- found art in the wasting
basket of the art;
- fine ugly art;
- para-art and contra-art;
- art without art;
- scientific art.
All of the above procedures become, after a period
of maybe shocking time, 'normal' (please read 'traditional') art.
Which later would be classified, in their turn, as supernuated. And
again they come back to life with a "neo" prefix art, because art is cyclic.
Let's catch the paradoxism in art - an avante-garde
movement I set up in 1980's, which is focusing on contradictions (art +
antiart/nonart), heterogenity (art + science), innovation (new species
of art). Or savoir faire un chef-de-non-oeuvre, which paraphrases
a French maxim: to know how to make the unmakable. Or ars celare
non-artem, which runs counter a Latin adage.
Let's revolt against petrified "classicized" art,
and fight for a New Art World Order. And I would like to end with a
Navaho language greeting, to see you next time, H`A GOON`EH"
Found here:
http://fs.gallup.unm.edu//ultra-modernism.html
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