Barbara Borcic: VIDEODOKUMENT. Video Art in Slovenia 1969-1998Presentation of 'VIDEODOKUMENT. Video Art in Slovenia 1969-1998' conceived and edited by Barbara Borcic. It presents a comprehensive overview of thirty years of video art in Slovenia. This documentation, archival and research project has been developed by SCCA-Ljubljana between 1994 and 2003. |
Wulf Herzogenrath: 40jahrevideokunst.de [only in German, sorry]Auch wenn der Begriff ›Videokunst‹ keine Rolle mehr zu spielen scheint – die künstlerische Praxis mit Video als Tape, Installation oder Projektion ist so allgegenwärtig, dass die Frage im Raum steht, was zu diesem Erfolg geführt hat, der sich auch am Interesse der Kunst- und Medienhochschulen, der Museen und der Kunstvermittler im Ausland wie den Goethe-Instituten ablesen lässt. Dieses Interesse allerorten an einem Zugang nicht nur zu aktuellen, sondern auch zu historisch zentralen Werken trifft auf eine große Leerstelle – die meisten Werke sind nur temporär in Ausstellungen oder auf Festivals erlebbar. Ein bleibender historischer Überblick zu Produktionen in Deutschland lag bis dato ebenfalls nicht vor. |
Chris Hill: Exercising the ArchiveSurveying the First Decade, a 17-hour collection of video art and alternative media from 1968-80 (U.S.), was completed in the mid-1990s, a moment in time that in retrospect can be seen as the cusp where mediamaking retooled, shifting from analog to digital. The jolts and spasms of remembering and forgetting that were precipitated by these technological and attentional changes would carry major implications for artists' working processes, distribution strategies, and audiences' interactions; they would haunt media curators' engagements with newly emerging sensibilities about and accessibility to image archives, past and future. How might the video art projects from the 1970s and almost abandoned video archives in which I was immersed in the mid-1990s be read, accessed, or valued by future artists and curators? While researching Surveying I encountered Robert Morris' eloquent meditation in Notes on Sculpture, part 4 (1969) about the fading possibility of comprehending a work from the "past" on its own terms. Surveying addressed an earlier cultural shift in artists' imagining and working with moving image media and the electronic image. The emergence of portable video technology and new telecommunications forms (like cable TV) of the late 1960s and 70s were received through cultural and social contexts that sought to reconstruct communications models and claimed the exploration of consciousness and especially, in media arts, time-based attention as fundamental cultural terrain. Some part of my curatorial project in 1996 inevitably urged attentional frameworks from different historical moments into dialogue with each other. |

































