Geert Lovink on Wed, 23 Mar 2005 04:18:53 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-nl] Radiodays in De Appel = Artistic Amnesia or Arrogance?(Modified by Tjebbe van Tijen) |
For three decades this town - Amsterdam - has developed and sustained a free radio practice, starting with the Vrije Maagd (free virgin) from the occupied headquarters of the university in 1969 and the Radio Sirene and Radio Mokum a few years later related to the neighbourhood actions in the Nieuwmarktbuurt, evolving from radio as a mobilizing and coordinating tool in political action to a diverse mix of cultural and political content. Just from the top of my head station names come to my mind like WHS Radio, Papatoe, Rabotnik, RVZ Radio, Radio Twist, Vrouwenradio, Vrije Keizer, Radio GOT, Radio Kankantri, Staatsradio and one of the most prolific and enduring stations: Radio 100. Some of these initiatives also took part in the relative short period of free television... Many of these stations were experimenting with what radio could be when freed from the burden of broadcast tradition and commercial interest. Most of these initiatives stayed on the air for many years by the daily creative and supportive input of hundreds of volunteers and listeners, thus creating a creative realm where the distinction between radio producer and radio consumer often faded... Official radio and television soon discovered these free ranging media laboratories and started to pick fresh talents from their core groups to inject new energy in their sclerosised structures. Instead of being supported, most of these initiatives have been chased, persecuted and criminalized by local and state authorities. Freedom of expression for broadcast media have been curtailed from the very beginning, constitutional rights do hardly go beyond the culprit and the printing press. For a decade or so some halfhearted 'open channel' options were given under the tutelage of a non-elected foundation (SALTO), but it all ended in a debacle when frequencies were auctioned and sold and slowly most of these free initiatives were pushed out of the aether while some manage to survive as streaming radio on the Internet. Now when I read the announcement of "radiodays in De Apple" as posted on the nettime-nl list by Geert Lovink, the only - unintended - trace of this rich history with a sad ending is the email address of the moderator of this list Menno Grootveld: rabotnik@xs4all.nl --- RABOTNIK being once one of the pioneers of "Dutch "Radio Art" . On the impressive name list of persons, groups and organizations I hardly recognize anything that links back to the aforementioned local history. Have all those people involved died the moment they have been pushed out of free radio space? Could their pioneering work at least not be mentioned in a few words, some kind of homage to their courage and endurance? Why is it not mentioned as a necessary part of such a manifestation? What makes the curators of De Appel dance on 'the grave of free radio history' as if nothing creative in the field of radio ever happened in this town called Amsterdam? Was all of it below their standards of what can be classified by the word "Art"? Or, do they simply not know? Did they never check? (say just google "free radio" + Amsterdam to get 11.600 hits or "pirate radio" + Amsterdam good for 12.200 hits)? Did they never search some libraries (30 books of secondary literature on pirate radio at the University Library Amsterdam) ... or did they not think about the option to search the collection of the International Institute of Social History... just the simplest possible search with the word "radio" from the search option at their home page gives 1896 matches in 664 files ( http://www.iisg.nl ) with hits like "Vrije Keyser Radio archief; or "Etters in de ether" (mischiefs in the aether, a sublime documentary overview by Cor Gout of 20 years Dutch free radio made in 1992); or the Staatsradio, Radio X and Papatoe audo archive deposited in 1993; the archive of the magazine "de Zender" (the emitter) of the eighties donated by Eef Vermij; a dossier with leaflets from the period 1989-1991 when Radio 100 was taken "from the air" and went back again; several cassettes from the early radio work of Willem de Ridder; the archives of the Next 5 Minutes conferences on tactical media in Amsterdam in the nineties, orthe archives of Europe Against the Current manifestation in 1989 with many free radio initiatives.... When I understand it well the manifestation is a kind of 'school work' or more nicely said "curatorial training program"... but as the student curators maybe do not know those things (they might not even have been born when free radio was raging in this town, or too young, or from another part of the planet) there must be someone around who is from this town, who knows something about its fuzzy and convivial history to put the students on the right track... how else can these curators 'in-spe' learn something. Nothing of that all seems to have happened! Is this blotting out of the local context historical amnesia or professional arrogance? When will the well established cultural institutions that support this manifestation recognize their failure in the past in supporting local media talents? When will the authorities that cleansed free radio space apologize for the injustice they have done? Tjebbe van Tijen 23/4/2005 > 1 - 30 april 2005 > > RADIODAYS > > Opening Friday, April 1, 2005, 15:00 - 20:00, concert and afterparty > at 21:00 www.radiodays.org (digital press release and images available > to download) > > RADIODAYS is 26 days of live radio broadcast from De Appel, both on > 107,4 FM in the area of Amsterdam as well as via web-stream on > www.radiodays.org. The project is intended as a platform for > contemporary art and life: sound-based artworks, storytelling, music, > interviews or media-intervention. As an aural experience, as an > exhibition connecting distant places, confront opinions, and challenge > relations between participants and audience. What happens when > observers become listeners? > > There are several reasons for using radio instead of a gallery space. > Radio offers a creative resistance to the retinal spectacle that > surrounds us. Radio is also a strong tool for connecting people and > bridging distances. Comparing with visual media, the radio space is > more capable of challenging the capitalist sphere of interest, which > is largely based on the visual spectacle. Closing ones eyes could > therefore be seen as an act of civil disobedience. > > A singing exhibition, a city walk, a ghost talk about phantoms, a > radio play, a sound performance or a sound track of a video... from > Saâdane Afif to Artur Zmijewski - more than sixty international > artists are invited to make the RADIODAYS programme happen. Artists, > art critics, curators, musicians and DJs will come to De Appel to > discuss, to perform or to broadcast a new work. > > Through April, every day (except on Mondays) the audience is invited > to come to De Appel from 4 pm to 9 pm. The visitors can take part in a > discussion, listen to a talk or a DJ set in the radio studio designed > by the French artist Laurent Grasso (with the collaboration of Pascal > Grasso) - or read a book on the subjects of the RADIODAYS programme in > the archive created by Association Apsolutno. > > Since some visual artists are invited to create a sound based work > for the first time, the project reflects on the relationship between > visuality and non-visuality and wants to stimulate the listener's > imagination. Broadcasted live from inside De Appel, the project aims > to materialize an audience at different places: a live audience at De > Appel, but also the listener at home, in the car, on the mobile phone, > wherever a radio is at hand. > > Participating artists are a.o. Saâdane Afif; AGF; Michiel Alberts; > Dave Allen; Apsolutno; Justin Beal; James Beckett; Otto Berchem; > Davide Bertocchi; Rachel Berwick; Johanna Billing; Christophe Boutin & > Eric Débris; Lise Brenner / Colin McLean; Joris Brouwers; Maria Barnas > & Nathalie Bruys; Susanne Bürner; Mircea Cantor; Jeremiah Day; Jeremy > Deller; Simona Denicolai & Ivo Provoost; Angela Detanico & Raphael > Lain; the doorman of Salon the Fleures, NY; Bojan Fajfric; Klaas van > Gorkum; Grasso and Grasso; Krist Gruythuysen; Hiekelien van den Herik > & Bauke van der Wal; Judith Hopf / Frauke Gust; Raul Keller; Zoran > Kesic; Karooshi; Suchan Kinoshita; Ki wa; Germaine Koh; Thorsten > Lauschmann; Jean-Yves Leloup & Jopo Stereo; Dominique Leroy; Gabriel > Lester; LIGNA; Andres Lġo; Su Mei Tse; Lucy McKenzie / Paulina > Olowska; Oswaldo Macia; Meta Haven; Montaron; Jonas Ohlsson; Boris > Ondreicka; On Kawara; Artis Orbus; Kate Pocrass; Oda Projesi; Jakob > Proyer; Radiobio; Nienke Rooijakker; Julika Rudelius; SUB; Fia Stina > Sandlund; Peggy Sue; Samon Takahashi; Rirkrit Tiravanija; Rasa > Todosijevic; Caecilia Tripp; Gabriela Vanga; Richard Widerberg; Jun > Yang; Arthur Zmijewski. > > RADIODAYS is a collaborative project with a.o. the Music Conservatory > of Amsterdam, Das Arts, , WORMradio, Dispatch, B92, gelbe MUSIK / > Ursula Block, Vacarme, Version, Radio Radio / Mel Brimfield & Dave > Greenfield, Künstlerhaus Bethanien, WPS1, ARC / Musee d'art moderne de > la Ville de Paris, Avanto Festival, Radioartemobile, ubu.com, Radio > Monalisa, LACE, WHW. > > A radio project by the Curatorial Training Programme 2004/2005 > > The participants of the Curatorial Training Programme 2004/2005 are > Rael Artel, Kathrin Jentjens, Claire Staebler, Jelena Vesic, Huib van > der Werf, Veronica Wiman. > > RADIODAYS is supported by Ministry of Education, Culture and Science; > Municipality of Amsterdam; Mondriaan Foundation; The Prince Bernhard > Cultural Foundation; Goethe-Institut, Amsterdam; Institut Français des > Pays-Bas / Antenne de La Haye; De Waag Society; Steim; Maison > Descartes, Amsterdam; Center for Contemporary Arts, Estonia; Apple > Centre MacHouse, Amsterdam. > > For more information, please contact press@deappel.nl or visit > www.radiodays.org ______________________________________________________ * Verspreid via nettime-nl. 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