Edward Shanken on Thu, 16 May 2013 09:20:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> What if a work of net.art sold for $34 million? |
My aim is to place in tension two different sets of values: those of the commercial art world (CAW) and those of telematic art (TA). To this end, my question proposes a scenario in which a work of art that does not satisfy CAW's basic conventions (e.g. as Florian notes, ease of exchange, signature, etc.) rises to the top of the heap in terms of market value. One might argue, following Stallabrass (nod to Matthias Kampmann<https://www.facebook.com/matthias.kampmann.75>'s Fb comment), that any artworld in which an artwork - be it an abstract painting or a telematic network - attains values in the tens of millions of dollars reifies neoliberal ideology and its inherent commodity (and luxury) fetishism. In the first Fb response, Caroline Seck Langill shrewdly suggested that "the money would be distributed like the artwork." And why not? There are economies in which the creation and hording/multiplying of wealth for its own sake is not valued as highly as sharing, gifting, and ritual expending. Yves Klein understood that over 50 years ago in his brilliant challenge to CAW "Immaterial Pictorial Sensitivity Zones." This work could only be acquired through an exchange of gold (cast in the sea by the artist), for which s/he attained a certificate of authenticity, which was valid only when burned. Returning to ease of exchange, signature, etc., the basic conventions of CAW are not neutral qualities or formal characteristics. Rather, they embody deeply held ideological commitments, just as the basic conventions of Ascott's TA embody deeply held ideological commitments. So what are the implications if these worlds collide and CAW ends up valuing most highly (and putting its money where its mouth is) a work that challenges CAW's traditional values? If, as Langill intimates, CAW embraces Ascott's "La Plissure" and its ideology of distributed authorship, it would be logically consistent for CAWs actors to express those commitments by distributing the economic wealth generated by the sale of the work. But let's say CAW embraces Ascott but retains its capitalistic imperatives. Althusser might argue that any critical value of telematic art would be evacuated once it becomes interpellated by the hegemonic forces of the CAM. At the same time, by gaining the sort of public recognition that comes with great market success, Ascott commands a much larger stage (to say nothing of financial resources and cultural/political power) from which to infect CAM with ideas that undermine its economic system. One final thought (for now). In terms of art's use value, defined as the cultural capital accrued by a CAW collector today, a Richter painting has a great deal to offer. The appreciation in price of Richter's work also suggests that it has great investment value, hence the high price tag, i.e. its exchange value. I'm no economist but an artwork is not like a standard commodity in the sense that it has potentially significant value in terms of its contribution to the history of art and to the larger history of ideas (histories that are perpetually reconstructed and retold from various, ever changing future perspectives). Let's call that its posterity value. The history of western art from contrapposto to conceptual art celebrates innovation and embraces work that challenges the status quo. I suspect that a Richter painting has little posterity value, compared to Ascott's "Plissure" . In other words, at some point in the future, Ascott will be generally recognized as having made a more valuable contribution to the history of art and visual culture than Richter. The disparity between use value and posterity value, and between posterity value and exchange value, is at issue. Over time, as posterity value is established and renegotiated from various present perspectives, it becomes closely aligned with exchange value. Jaromil Rojo pointed out that "The sword is double edged, investments in art aren't good just because they move market value *today*. Actually, they might be epic fails as well - and that's what is happening all over - as we speak - to several big capitals."Jaromil's point is insightful here, because I think $33 million for a Richter is destined to be an epic fail when the correction between posterity value and exchange value takes place - not because the art market is overvalued but because from the perspective of the future, it will be seen to have valued the wrong things. Ed Shanken www.artexetra.com On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 10:34 AM, Florian Cramer <flrncrmr@gmail.com> wrote: > On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 8:24 AM, Edward Shanken > <rotorelief@gmail.com >wrote: > > > What would the world be like if Roy Ascott's "La Plissure du > Texte" (1983) > sold at auction for $34.2 million instead of Gerhard > RIchter's ?Abstraktes > Bild?? In what sort of world (and artworld) > would that be possible? <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org