We live in a world where there is more and more information, and less and less meaning.
~ Jean Baudrillard

In the era of Atari and Apple monochrome computers, the layperson was limited to simple data processing and a nice game of Pong. For the more engaged end user, technology possessed a winsome quality. Virtual environments were once considered new media and presented innovative approaches at understanding and connecting with the world. Within these environments, language was a key component in establishing such venues for social networking. The worlds of Massively Multiplayer Online [Game] (MMO), Multi-User Shared Hack (MUSH), and Multi-User Dungeon (MUD)s explored methods of intersecting game play, creativity, and technology that offered an enriched virtual experience. Contemporaneously, the image reigns and the sense of sight is predominant in mainstream applications. Ironically, in today’s art world, many of the physical artworks one’s sees and experiences are derived from concept and involve far less retinal sensation. With mainstream technology aimed more towards convenience, individuals continue to hold onto deep seeded beliefs of what art ought to be, which entails an adherence to art’s physical reality (i.e., visiting a museum or a gallery). For the hybrid artist/technologists, the Ars Virtua exhibition, look art, returns to language as a means of exploring how art, technology, and philosophy interface to create highly conceptual and thought provoking work.

Artists Thomas Asmuth, Alejandro Duque, and Christopher Poff re-purposed programming language and older computational methods to provide a nostalgic look at previously used platforms. Gaming and simulated environments are constantly evolving and highly sophisticated. Yet, the foundational language remains the same. Looking at Sol Lewitt’s work as a source of inspiration, Asmuth created portraits using American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) language along with photo processing. Language plays an integral role with the end user’s experience and immersion within a simulated environment.

Similarly, Duque’s work reflects how one builds within a Multi-Shared Hallucination or Hack (MUSH). His virtual environment allows users to create stories based on their command choice. Christopher Poff’s work, Art.Meaning (AM), necessitates a participatory discourse on the philosophy of art with a similar multi-user interface. The game requires commands be entered into the game environment to run subsequent text. Sample text from the Art.Meaning (AM) manifesto appears as follows:
Prior to this moment, the Art didn’t exist. Certainly, there was the work produced by the Artist, either physical or virtual (or even performative, conceivably), but that, in and of itself, wasn’t the Art. The Art only achieves existence once the Audience (in the context of this particular Gallery space, you) observes the work put forth by the Artist. Only in this act, does Art exist. Think of it as the butterfly that emerges from the cocoon that the Artist has spun.


look art | Review
Published:

look art | Review

Exhibition review written for ZERO1: Arts and Technology Network blog

Published:

Creative Fields