|
Loading... Database Aesthetics: Art in the Age of Information Overflow (Electronic…by Victoria Vesna
LibraryThing recommendationsNone. Member recommendationsLoading...
won't like
will probably not like
will probably like
will like
will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. 0.020 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0816641196, Paperback)Database Aesthetics examines the database as cultural and aesthetic form, explaining how artists have participated in network culture by creating data art. The essays in this collection look at how an aesthetic emerges when artists use the vast amounts of available information as their medium. Here, the ways information is ordered and organized become artistic choices, and artists have an essential role in influencing and critiquing the digitization of daily life. Contributors: Sharon Daniel, U of California, Santa Cruz; Steve Deitz, Carleton College; Lynn Hershman Leeson, U of California, Davis; George Legrady, U of California, Santa Barbara; Eduardo Kac, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; Norman Klein, California Institute of the Arts; John Klima; Lev Manovich, U of California, San Diego; Robert F. Nideffer, U of California, Irvine; Nancy Paterson, Ontario College of Art and Design; Christiane Paul, School of Visual Arts in New York; Marko Peljhan, U of California, Santa Barbara; Warren Sack, U of California, Santa Cruz; Bill Seaman, Rhode Island School of Design; Grahame Weinbren, School of Visual Arts, New York. Victoria Vesna is a media artist, and professor and chair of the Department of Design and Media Arts at the University of California, Los Angeles. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
Abebooks |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The text includes Lev Manovich's seminal essay "Database as Symbolic Form" from The Language of New Media. Norman M. Klein and Bill Seaman's contributions both contain engaging responses to Manovich's discussion about the future of narrative. Klein's essay "Waiting For the World To Explode" contains a particularly juicy passage which lays bare the shortcomings of the database as a tool for traditional storytelling:Data are also filled with an unmistakable absence. Data cannot "conclude" a story; they cannot deliver a "suspense" ending, like a murder mystery - not in the traditional way (and I am not convinced that interactively choosing your own adventure solves this problem, even with high-resolution effects). Data are part of a process without an arc that requires a dramatic ending. Instead, they proceed by insinuation, by involution - towards a beginning, towards an aporia (the road without a name). That kind of journey can be extremely charming, like "a making-of" that is so massive that it does not even require a movie.While the tone of Klein's observations is pessimistic, it does quite adequately describe the obsession with taxonomy evident in work such as George Legrady's Pocket Full of Memories, a key project mentioned numerous times throughout the text.
In addition to several important reference texts which draw on literary, filmic and photographic schools of thought, Database Aesthetics also contains a few lucid survey texts which catalog impressive swaths of multidisiplinary work. These include Steve Dietz's "The Database Imaginary: Memory_Archive_Database v 4.0" (which is available on his website) and Christine Paul's "The Database As System and Cultural Form" which glides through a number of my favourite net art & visualization projects including 0100101110101101.org's Life_Sharing, Bradford Paley's TextArc and The Secret Life of Numbers (produced by Golan Levin, Martin Wattenberg, Jonathan Feinberg, Shelly Wynecoop, David Elashoff and David Becker).
Database Aesthetics also reminded me about two projects that I have not thought about for several years, Nancy Paterson's Stock Market Skirt (pictured above) and John Klima's ecosystm. Given my continued interest in Meta-Markets, it is quite timely to revisit these early financial data driven projects which, respectively, automate skirt length in relation to the market index and animate simulated ecologies based off real-time stock information.
While I only really touched on about half of the excellent content within Database Aesthetics, I hope it is clear that the text has made quite an impression on me. It works as a (recent) historical text, archiving and contextualizing an impressive array of work but perhaps more importantly it serves as a definitive reference through which to interpret much of the visualization and software art being produced today.
Review originally published on Serial Consign (