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In re:location
a group of Nova Scotia
artists explore the affect of "location"
on awareness, identity, and communication in
the context of digital culture. For this project
(which included the production of the work as
well its exhibition) we engaged artists whose
existing practice explored notions of shifting
identity, cultural displacement and infrastructural
dynamics inherent to communications technologies.
This included artists who question internal
cognitive processes where digital representation
plays a role in the construction of memory,
perception, comprehension, and other sensibilities
susceptible to the affects of technological
dislocations.
Communications technology bridges gaps, informs
and connects us all regardless of linguistic,
cultural and geographic differences and this
implicates us in the construction of the "global
village". Our desire is to erase distance,
to eliminate delay, to bring people closer together
and among other things, to collect and facilitate
the development of ideas. This desire is met
by corporations with the design and production
of an ever-increasing variety of communications
technologies. Even as we ponder the problematics
of "historical notions of progress"
our role in the face of technological progress
is normally to change, to adapt, and to appreciate
each new convenience. But adapting to interactive
media means spending more time communicating
through keyboards, screens, hard drives, modems,
computing, networks, and interactive software.
As individuals we choose a level of discontent
andmost make attempts to reject the technological
to various degrees .
The need to understand and
negotiate this tension is a contemporary reality.
When we use new technologies, the brain/keyboard
[real/virtual] connection disguises a significant
loss: the immediate presence of the person,
another body, in our exchange
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of the physical for
the virtual. The sensual world becomes mediated
by the machine and is therefore absent. The
communication of the text takes primacy over
the subtle and unspoken messages of the group
at dinner, the intonation of the voice at close
proximity, the physical presence of the author
of that text. The disembodiment of the text
is complete as its authorship in the context
of digital reproduction is suspect. In a digital
text what signs ensure the authenticity of the
origin? We know we are more open to manipulation,
to fraud. Information
such as; where we are located geographically,
where we are from historically, and how we identify
culturally, does not "describe" for
us now as it did in former times. Collective
memory is an exercise in data retrieval. We
feel dislocation.
"Through
their work, the artists explore how technologically
based communica-tion can give us an incomplete
sense of the world; for example we may not know
the place of origin of an email, or anything
about the person reading the news to us on the
radio.
(Phlis McGregor, CBC arts reporter).
In a hyper-mediated
culture [e-mail, answering machines, search
engines, 24 hour news, on-line entertainment]
the connecting flow of life becomes diverted
into a set of strategies for engagement. New
technologies allow us to occupy and own separate
spaces yet maintain a sense of connectedness.
It is often our desire to maintain physical
isolation yet ehannce our environment with interactive
technologies. Patterns of manufacturing which
are mapped over consumer desires offer clear
evidence: we are not going back; we want more
interactivity.
In the context of these issues, the re:location
exhibition features artists who use new media
technologies to make personal expression with
interactive technologies. From the humble fax
machine to interactive rooms, these works situate
the technology as the place of art making and
explore the problematics of technological progress.
Often ironic in its execution, the art is not
'shown' by the computer but is 'enacted' by
the computer - visitor exchange. The work is
transmitted, interactive, digital, and only
possible because of the technology that presents
it.
New technologies offer new modes of expression
and this newness becomes evident when we first
encounter a piece. A first reaction may be "What
do I do?". The exploration of finding out
what to do; whether it be to work the program
with a mouse, move around the room, or to touch
the machine, causes the art to function. There
are no instructions.
These artists consider the
dislocations they personally experience in the
face of digital culture using a variety of creative
arrangements of equipment such as screens, cameras,
projection, sound, space and the digital spaces
of computer animation, digital video and the
web. Interacting with this work reveals the
acclimatization we have already adopted in order
to simply "be" in a society that is
increasingly technologically dependent. It is
our reading of the play between form and content
that reveals what the work is "about".
These works re-position the viewer giving us
time to pause and question what we are buying
into and to notice what others in this society
may be experiencing.
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