Abstract-
Daniel Palmer
(full
paper) http://hdl.handle.net/10002/445
Media Art and Its Critics in the Australian Context
This paper explores the critical reception of media art in Australia over
the past three decades, with a view to encouraging more situated critical
histories and historically aware critical practices. I give particular
emphasis to the responses to key electronic and media art exhibitions
by non-specialist critics, writing in newspapers and art journals.
Starting with so-called ‘experimental video’ in the 1970s,
I explore critical coverage of such seminal events as ‘Some Recent
Australian Videotapes’ at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in
1980, curated by Bernice Murphy and Stephen Jones; ‘The Australian
Video Festival’ in 1986; the ‘Third International Symposium
on Electronic Art’ in 1992; various exhibitions held by Experimenta
since the 1990s; ‘ConVerge: Where Art and Science Meet’, the
2002 Adelaide Biennale of Art; ‘2004: Australian Culture Now’,
a collaboration between the National Gallery of Victoria and the Australian
Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI), and the biennial Anne Landa Award
at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
While this survey reveals an ‘anti-science’ bias, to some
extent it also challenges the conception that Australian art critics have
ignored or dismissed media art on conservative aesthetic grounds. As such,
I draw out some consequences of a too-confident avant-gardism on the part
of the new media art community, including a collective fascination with
the newness of ‘new media’ art.
Another key theme to emerge from this local history is the hybrid role
of the video interface. I argue that video art helped to enable the development
of ‘new media art’ in the late 1980s, and can be seen as part
of a broader shift, with performance art, from the representational tradition
of visual art to one engaged in the more presentational modes –
incorporating the sense of the viewer participating in the space of the
object, images or action. The current position of Australian video art
as a bridge between media art and mainstream contemporary art raises the
complex issue of how national media art histories relate to broader national
and international art contexts. More fundamentally, the survey shows the
acute impact of media art’s global networks on local artistic and
critical practices.
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