Categories
Art & Culture

My Art+Tech Columns This Year

Nelly Ben Hayoun, Disaster Playground, 2014, installation view
Nelly Ben Hayoun, Disaster Playground, 2014, installation view

I’ve been writing for Akimbo’s Art+Tech blog for some time now. The discipline of a (more-or-less) monthly column is a nice, gentle pressure to look for interesting things around me, and come up with some coherent thoughts on them. Since writing a monthly column I also now have immense respect for newspaper columnists who have to crank out a column a week, especially within a narrow subject area — it is really tough to keep it fresh. Anyway for your reading pleasure, here is a handy list of links to the columns I wrote in 2014:

Nelly Ben Hayoun’s Disaster Playground
Archilab at the FRAC Centre in Orleans, France
Quadriennale Dusseldorf
The Digital Collectible
Going, Going, Gone! Digital Art Up for Auction
Cooking in the Age of Information
The Value of Nothing
The Big Future of Data
A Call to Arms for Craft in the Age of Tech

Last but not least, my yearly summary of the big topics and issues.

Categories
Meta

Blog purgatory

I know that there is simply no way I will ever complete all of the draft posts I have sitting in my blog database. It’s pure blog purgatory, where I toy with some of these posts once every few months, but they never reach a postable state. In fact, most of these drafts are just titles, with no body to them at all, or body text consisting of one line to remind me what the post should be about. This paucity of text combined with the passage of time (every day a small sip of the water of Lethe), makes the probability that these posts will ever be completed quite low. The titles of these unfinished posts confront me each time I open my blog software as a series of blazing headlines demanding attention. The last time I looked at them all, it occurred to me they might be worth sharing in and of themselves – and so, here they are:

  • Aggrandization of the oppositional
  • Smallweb Part Two
  • What’s in a name?
  • Dust
  • Hyperbole
  • Why this blog is not very interesting anymore
  • Supermodel taking a shit

Whew! There, I feel better, after sharing that with you.
Who knows – maybe someday, some of them will get written, now that I’ve outed how much is in the queue.

Categories
Asides

Why have a blog?

Towards the end of the podcasting workshop at the Electron Club this past Wednesday, someone turned to me, looked me in the eye and said, “Why have a blog? Or make podcasts?” There was silence for a second or two, during which I debated a flippant answer or a serious one.

In the end I supplied a real answer that consisted of examples from my own experiences and those of my friends, mostly to do with the pleasures of sharing expertise, and maintaining contact with a broad range of people at a distance.

But it is these very simple questions that prompt some thinking after the initial answer is supplied. I could have gone on to mention the way blogs enable you to track development of ideas, development of writing style, and shifts in areas of interest. This creation of a personal archive, and archives authored by others where I can observe these evolutions, have been some of the most interesting and valuable aspects of blogging for me.

And yet, of course, there are potentially many negative aspects too, and so the rewards must be balanced against the possible pitfalls: crazy anonymous trolls, spam, falling into a feedback loop of narcissism, chasing the tail of endless software upgrades, internalised pressure to post frequently, et cetera.

Theorist Geert Lovink has some thoughts on the negative aspects of blogging too, that are very chewy food for thought. To shamelessly pluck a few great quotes from the longer piece:

“…blogs are witnessing and documenting the diminishing power of mainstream media, but they have consciously not replaced its ideology with an alternative. Users are tired of top-down communication and yet have nowhere else to go.”

“We’re operating in a post-deconstruction world in which blogs offer a never-ending stream of confessions, a cosmos of micro-opinions attempting to interpret events beyond the well-known twentieth-century categories. The nihilist impulse emerges as a response to the increasing levels of complexity within interconnected topics.”

“…existing information is simply reproduced and in a public act of internalization.”

“We do not hear enough about the tension between the individual self and the “community”, “swarms”, and “mobs” that are supposed to be part of the online environment. What we instead see happening on the software side are daily improvements of ever more sophisticated (quantitive) measuring and manipulation tools (in terms of inbound linking, traffic, climbing higher on the Google ladder, etc.). Isn’t the document that stands out the one that is not embedded in existing contexts? Doesn’t the truth lie in the unlinkable?”

I disagree with some of the points Lovink makes. A great swathe of the blogosphere is a misspelled, chatty commentary on the latest headlines, that as Lovink notes, offers no original research or analysis. However, I think there is not such a dearth of sites producing original, thoughtful content. There are several research blogs I refer to consistently that offer more analysis than I can summon the courage to stay on top of reading.

I came across (through some random series of clicks) a very sad Livejournal where the author was completely aware that no one read her thoughts, and so she poured out some very angsty stuff – probably because she thought no one was listening and so it doesn’t matter, right? Her Livejournal led me to ask, if you blog and no one reads it, does it matter? Why put it out there? There are plenty of splogs, half-hearted Livejournals, and link-list blogs that are also unread and will probably stay that way. But as Lovink says, the document that stands out is the one that is not embedded in existing contexts – and along with the banal, there are also some real gems which are surely on no one’s blogroll.

So why have a blog?

(Update on 23/02/07: Seth Godin has just posted something on this topic, and asks some interesting questions in a very succinct post. His punchline is that bloggers ought to be “respectful and clear”.)