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Wikipedia

Internet art

Internet art (also known as net art) is a form of new media art distributed via the Internet. This form of art circumvents the traditional dominance of the physical gallery and museum system. In many cases, the viewer is drawn into some kind of interaction with the work of art. Artists working in this manner are sometimes referred to as net artists.

"Simple Net Art Diagram", a 1997 work by Michael Sarff and Tim Whidden

Net artists may use specific social or cultural internet traditions to produce their art outside of the technical structure of the internet. Internet art is often — but not always — interactive, participatory, and multimedia-based. Internet art can be used to spread a message, either political or social, using human interactions.

The term Internet art typically does not refer to art that has been simply digitized and uploaded to be viewable over the Internet, such as in an online gallery.[1] Rather, this genre relies intrinsically on the Internet to exist as a whole, taking advantage of such aspects as an interactive interface and connectivity to multiple social and economic cultures and micro-cultures, not only web-based works.

New media theorist and curator Jon Ippolito defined "Ten Myths of Internet Art" in 2002.[1] He cites the above stipulations, as well as defining it as distinct from commercial web design, and touching on issues of permanence, archivability, and collecting in a fluid medium.

History and context

Internet art is rooted in disparate artistic traditions and movements, ranging from Dada to Situationism, conceptual art, Fluxus, video art, kinetic art, performance art, telematic art and happenings.[2]

In 1974, Canadian artist Vera Frenkel worked with the Bell Canada Teleconferencing Studios to produce the work String Games: Improvisations for Inter-City Video, the first artwork in Canada to use telecommunications technologies.[3]

An early telematic artwork was Roy Ascott's work, La Plissure du Texte,[4] performed in collaboration created for an exhibition at the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris in 1983.

In 1985, Eduardo Kac created the animated videotex poem Reabracadabra for the Minitel system.[5]

Media art institutions such as Ars Electronica Festival in Linz, or the Paris-based IRCAM (a research center for electronic music), would also support or present early networked art. In 1996, Helen Thorington founded Turbulence.org, an online platform for commissioning and exhibiting net art, and hosting multi location networked performances. in 1991 Wolfgang Staehle founded the important experimental platform such as The Thing. in 1994 entrepreneur John Borthwick and curator Benjamin Weil produced artworks online by Doug Aitken, Jenny Holzer and others on Adaweb and In 1997 MIT's List Visual Arts Center hosted "PORT: Navigating Digital Culture," which included internet art in a gallery space and "time-based Internet projects."[6] Artists in the show included Cary Peppermint, Prema Murthy, Ricardo Dominguez, Helen Thorington, and Adrianne Wortzel.

Also in 1997 internet art was exhibited at documenta X (directed by Catherine David), with curator Simon Lamunière. The 10 projects presented simultaneously in Kassel and online were those of Matt Mullican, Antoni Muntadas, Holger Friese, Heath Bunting, Felix Stefan Huber & Philip Pocock, Herve Graumann, Jodi, Martin Kippenberger and Carsten Höller among others.

In 2000 the Whitney Museum of American Art included net art in their Biennial exhibit.[7] It was the first time that internet art had been included as a special category in the Biennial, and it marked one of the earliest examples of the inclusion of internet art in a museum setting. Internet artists included Mark Amerika, Fakeshop, Ken Goldberg, etoy and ®™ark.

With the rise of search engines as a gateway to accessing the web in the late 1990s, many net artists turned their attention to related themes. The 2001 'Data Dynamics' exhibit at the Whitney Museum featured 'Netomat' (Maciej Wisniewski) and 'Apartment' - a Turbulence.org commission - (Marek Walczak and Martin Wattenberg), which used search queries as raw material. Mary Flanagan's ' The Perpetual Bed' received attention for its use of 3D nonlinear narrative space, or what she called "navigable narratives."[8][9] Her 2001 piece titled 'Collection' shown in the Whitney Biennial displayed items amassed from hard drives around the world in a computational collective unconscious.'[10] Golan Levin's 'The Secret Lives of Numbers' (2000) - also a Turbulence.org commission - visualized the "popularity" of the numbers 1 to 1,000,000 as measured by Alta Vista search results. Such works pointed to alternative interfaces and questioned the dominant role of search engines in controlling access to the net.

Nevertheless, the Internet is not reducible to the web, nor to search engines. Besides these unicast (point to point) applications,suggesting the existence of reference points, there is also a multicast (multipoint and uncentered) internet that has been explored by very few artistic experiences, such as the Poietic Generator. Internet art has, according to Juliff and Cox, suffered under the privileging of the user interface inherent within computer art. They argue that Internet is not synonymous with a specific user and specific interface, but rather a dynamic structure that encompasses coding and the artist's intention.[11]

At the same period, original attempts to establish a physical relation between what happened on the web and what would be exhibited in museums were developed by MUDAM Musée d’Art Contemporain du Luxembourg and most of all by MIXM. At the time, and before platforms like Second Life where Cao Fei developed her RMB City, contemporary artists like Peter Kogler, Heimo Zobernig, Nedko Solakov or Robin Rimbaud aka Scanner realized works online that could be seen in art museums specifically as installations and not just on a computer screen showing internet art. In Solakov’s work for example, one could interact online with objects that were in the exhibition space of the Centre d'Art Contemporain Genève. In Heimo Zobernig’s work, one could physically move a wall to reveal a space in the MAMCO containing a 3d online rendering of the same space.

The emergence of social networking platforms in the mid-2000s facilitated a transformative shift in the distribution of internet art. Early online communities were organized around specific "topical hierarchies",[12] whereas social networking platforms consist of egocentric networks, with the "individual at the center of their own community".[12] Artistic communities on the Internet underwent a similar transition in the mid-2000s, shifting from Surf Clubs, "15 to 30 person groups whose members contributed to an ongoing visual-conceptual conversation through the use of digital media"[13] and whose membership was restricted to a select group of individuals, to image-based social networking platforms, like Flickr, which permit access to any individual with an e-mail address. Internet artists make extensive use of the networked capabilities of social networking platforms, and are rhizomatic in their organization, in that "production of meaning is externally contingent on a network of other artists' content".[13]

Post-Internet

 
Post-Internet movements are responsible for Internet-centric microgenres and subcultures such as vaporwave[14]

Post-Internet is a loose descriptor[14] for works of art that are derived from the Internet as well as the internet's effects on aesthetics, culture and society.[15] It is a broad term with many associations and has been heavily criticized.[14]

The term emerged during the mid-2000s and was coined by Internet artist Marisa Olson in 2008. [16] Discussions about Internet art by Marisa Olson, Gene McHugh, and Artie Vierkant (the latter notable for his Image Objects, a series of deep blue monochrome prints) brought the term to a mainstream consciousness.[17] Between the 2000s and 2010s, post-Internet artists were largely the domain of millennials operating on web platforms such as Tumblr and MySpace or working in social media video and post-narrative formats such as YouTube, Vevo, or memes.

According to a 2015 article in The New Yorker, the term describes "the practices of artists who ... unlike those of previous generations, [employ] the Web [as] just another medium, like painting or sculpture. Their artworks move fluidly between spaces, appearing sometimes on a screen, other times in a gallery."[18] In the early 2010s, post-Internet was popularly associated with the musician Grimes, visual artists like Cory Arcangel, Artie Vierkant, Petra Cortrght, Ryan Trecartin and Lizzie Fitch, and Kalup Linzy, and social practice dissensus collectives like DIS and K-HOLE.[19] The movement catapulted a number of hybrid microgenres and subcultures such as bloghouse, bro dubstep, seapunk, electroclash, and vaporwave.[14]

Tools

Art historian Rachel Greene identified six forms of internet art that existed from 1993 to 1996: email, audio, video, graphics, animation and websites.[20] These mailing lists allowed for organization which was carried over to face-to-face meetings that facilitated more nuanced conversations, less burdened from miscommunication.

Since the mid-2000s, many artists have used Google's search engine and other services for inspiration and materials. New Google services breed new artistic possibilities.[21] Beginning in 2008, Jon Rafman collected images from Google Street View for his project called The Nine Eyes of Google Street View.[22][21] Another ongoing net art project is I'm Google by Dina Kelberman which organizes pictures and videos from Google and YouTube around a theme in a grid form that expands as you scroll.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ippolito, Jon (2002-10-01). "Ten Myths of Internet Art". Leonardo. 35 (5): 485–498. doi:10.1162/002409402320774312. ISSN 0024-094X. S2CID 57564573.
  2. ^ Chandler, Annmarie; Neumark, Norie (2005). At a Distance: Precursors to Art and Activism on the Internet. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-03328-3.
  3. ^ Langill, Caroline (2009). "Electronic media in 1974". Shifting Polarities. Montreal: The Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art, Science, and Technology. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
  4. ^ White, Norman T. "Plissure du Texte". The NorMill. Retrieved September 21, 2010. (Unedited transcript including organizational discussion.)
  5. ^ "NET ART ANTHOLOGY: Reabracadabra". NET ART ANTHOLOGY: Reabracadabra. 2016-10-27. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  6. ^ "Port Home".
  7. ^ The Whitney Biennial 2000. See also "Now Anyone Can Be in the Whitney Biennial" in The New York Times (March 23, 2000), and "The Whitney Speaks: It Is Art" in Wired Magazine (March 23, 2000).
  8. ^ Klink, Patrick (1999). . UB Today. Buffalo: The University at Buffalo. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 21, 2011.
  9. ^ Flanagan, Mary (2000). "navigating the narrative in space: gender and spatiality in virtual worlds". Art Journal. New York: The College Art Association. Retrieved December 21, 2011.
  10. ^ Cotter, Holland (2002). "Never Mind the Art Police, These Six Matter". The New York Times. New York. Retrieved December 21, 2011.
  11. ^ Toby Juliff, Travis Cox (2015). "The post-display condition of contemporary computer art" (PDF). EMaj. 8.
  12. ^ a b Boyd, D. M.; N. B. Ellison (2007). "Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship". Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication. 13 (1): 210–230. doi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.2007.00393.x. S2CID 52810295. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  13. ^ a b Schneider, B. . 491. Archived from the original on 7 July 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d Amarca, Nico (March 1, 2016). "From Bucket Hats to Pokémon: Breaking Down Yung Lean's Style". High Snobiety. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  15. ^ Wallace, Ian (March 18, 2014). "What Is Post-Internet Art? Understanding the Revolutionary New Art Movement". Artspace.
  16. ^ "Interview with Marisa Olson". 28 March 2008.
  17. ^ Connor, Michael (November 1, 2013). "What's Postinternet Got to do with Net Art?". Rhizome.
  18. ^ Goldsmith, Kenneth (2015-03-10). "Post-Internet Poetry Comes of Age". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2016-09-14.
  19. ^ Snapes, Laura (February 19, 2020). "Pop star, producer or pariah? The conflicted brilliance of Grimes". The Guardian.
  20. ^ Moss, Cecelia Laurel (2015). Expanded Internet Art and the Informational Milieu. Ann Arbor. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-339-32982-6.</5-Arts Net> In the 1990s, email based mailing lists provided net artists with a community for online discourse that broke boundaries between critical and generative dialogues. The email format allowed instant expression, however limited to text and simple graphic based communication, with an international scope.<5-arts net>Greene, Rachel. (2004). Internet art. New York, N.Y.: Thames & Hudson. pp. 73–74. ISBN 0-500-20376-8. OCLC 56809770.
  21. ^ a b c Christou, Elisavet (2018-07-01). "Internet Art, Google and Artistic Practice". Electronic Workshops in Computing. doi:10.14236/ewic/EVA2018.23. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  22. ^ "NET ART ANTHOLOGY: Nine Eyes of Google Street View". NET ART ANTHOLOGY: Nine Eyes of Google Street View. 2016-10-27. Retrieved 2020-11-16.

Bibliography

  • Kate Armstrong, Jeremy Bailey & Faisal Anwar on Net Art in Canadian Art Magazine [1][permanent dead link]
  • Weibel, Peter and Gerbel, Karl (1995). Welcome in the Net World , @rs electronica 95 Linz. Wien New York: Springer Verlag. ISBN 3-211-82709-9
  • Fred Forest 1998,¨Pour un art actuel, l'art à l'heure d'Internet" l'Harmattan, Paris
  • Baranski Sandrine, La musique en réseau, une musique de la complexité ? Éditions universitaires européennes, mai 2010
  • Barreto, Ricardo and Perissinotto, Paula. . Archived from the original on 29 September 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  • Baumgärtel, Tilman (2001). net.art 2.0 – Neue Materialien zur Netzkunst / New Materials towards Net art. Nürnberg: Verlag für moderne Kunst. ISBN 3-933096-66-9.
  • Wilson, Stephen (2001). Information Arts: Intersections of Art, Science and Technology. Cambridge, Massachusetts : MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-23209-X.
  • Caterina Davinio 2002. Tecno-Poesia e realtà virtuali / Techno-Poetry and Virtual Realities, Sometti, Mantua (IT) Collection: Archivio della poesia del 900. Mantua Municipality. With English translation. ISBN 88-88091-85-8
  • Stallabrass, Julian (2003). "Internet Art: the online clash of culture and commerce". Tate Publishing. ISBN 1-85437-345-5, ISBN 978-1-85437-345-8.
  • Christine Buci-Glucksmann, "L’art à l’époque virtuel", in Frontières esthétiques de l’art, Arts 8, Paris: L’Harmattan, 2004
  • Greene, Rachel (2004). "Internet Art". Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-20376-8, ISBN 978-0-500-20376-7.
  • Corby, Tom (2006). "Network Art: Practices and Positions". Routledge, ISBN 0-415-36479-5.
  • WB05 e-symposium published as ISEA Newsletter #102 - ISSN 1488-3635 #102 [2]
  • Juliff, Toby & Cox, Travis. 'The Post-display condition of contemporary computer art.' eMaj #8 (April 2015) https://emajartjournal.files.wordpress.com/2012/11/cox-and-juliff_the-post-display-condition-of-contemporary-computer-art.pdf
  • Ascott, R.2003. Telematic Embrace: visionary theories of art, technology and consciousness. (Edward A. Shanken, ed.) Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Roy Ascott 2002. Technoetic Arts (Editor and Korean translation: YI, Won-Kon), (Media & Art Series no. 6, Institute of Media Art, Yonsei University). Yonsei: Yonsei University Press
  • Ascott, R. 1998. Art & Telematics: toward the Construction of New Aesthetics. (Japanese trans. E. Fujihara). A. Takada & Y. Yamashita eds. Tokyo: NTT Publishing Co.,Ltd.
  • Fred Forest 2008. Art et Internet, Paris Editions Cercle D'Art / Imaginaire Mode d'Emploi
  • Thomas Dreher: IASLonline Lessons/Lektionen in NetArt.
  • Thomas Dreher: History of Computer Art, chap.VI: Net Art: Networks, Participation, Hypertext
  • Monoskop (2010). Overview of 'surf clubs' phenomenon. [3]
  • Art in the Era of the Internet, PBS Report
  • (in Spanish) Martín Prada, Juan, Prácticas artísticas e Internet en la época de las redes sociales, Editorial AKAL, Madrid, 2012, ISBN 978-84-460-3517-6
  • Bosma, Josephine (2011) "Nettitudes - Let's Talk Net Art" [4] NAI Publishers, ISBN 978-90-5662-800-0
  • Schneider, B. (2011, January 6). From Clubs to Affinity: The Decentralization of Art on the Internet « 491. 491. Retrieved March 3, 2011, from
  • Boyd, D. M.; Ellison, N. B. (2007). "Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship". Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication. 13 (1): 210–230. doi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.2007.00393.x. S2CID 52810295.
  • Moss, Ceci. (2008). Thoughts on “New Media Artists v. Artists with Computers". Rhizome Journal. http://rhizome.org/editorial/2008/dec/3/thoughts-on-quotnew-media-artists-vs-artists-with-/
  • Greene, Rachel. (2000) A History of Internet Art. Artforum, vol. 38.
  • Bookchin, Natalie & Alexei Shulgin (1994-5). Introduction to net.art. Rhizome. http://rhizome.org/artbase/artwork/48530/.
  • Atkins, Robert. (1995). The Art World (and I) Go Online. Art in America 83/2.
  • Houghton, B. (2002). The Internet & art: A guidebook for artists. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-089374-9.
  • Bosma, J. (2011). Nettitudes: Let's talk net art. Rotterdam: Nai Publishers. ISBN 978-90-5662-800-0.
  • Daniels, D., & Reisinger, G. (2009). Net pioneers 1.0: Contextualizing early net-based art. Berlin: Sternberg Press. ISBN 978-1-933128-71-9.

External links

  • netartnet.net an online-gallery listing and directory of internet art
  • > ¿netart or notart? < netart latino database
  • "Post-Internet Materialism". metropolism.com. Retrieved 2015-03-15. An interview with Martijn Hendriks & Katja Novitskova
  • "The New Aesthetic and its Politics"
  • "Finally, a Semi-Definitive Definition of Post-Internet Art". Art F City. 14 October 2014.

internet, also, known, form, media, distributed, internet, this, form, circumvents, traditional, dominance, physical, gallery, museum, system, many, cases, viewer, drawn, into, some, kind, interaction, with, work, artists, working, this, manner, sometimes, ref. Internet art also known as net art is a form of new media art distributed via the Internet This form of art circumvents the traditional dominance of the physical gallery and museum system In many cases the viewer is drawn into some kind of interaction with the work of art Artists working in this manner are sometimes referred to as net artists Simple Net Art Diagram a 1997 work by Michael Sarff and Tim Whidden Net artists may use specific social or cultural internet traditions to produce their art outside of the technical structure of the internet Internet art is often but not always interactive participatory and multimedia based Internet art can be used to spread a message either political or social using human interactions The term Internet art typically does not refer to art that has been simply digitized and uploaded to be viewable over the Internet such as in an online gallery 1 Rather this genre relies intrinsically on the Internet to exist as a whole taking advantage of such aspects as an interactive interface and connectivity to multiple social and economic cultures and micro cultures not only web based works New media theorist and curator Jon Ippolito defined Ten Myths of Internet Art in 2002 1 He cites the above stipulations as well as defining it as distinct from commercial web design and touching on issues of permanence archivability and collecting in a fluid medium Contents 1 History and context 1 1 Post Internet 2 Tools 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory and context EditInternet art is rooted in disparate artistic traditions and movements ranging from Dada to Situationism conceptual art Fluxus video art kinetic art performance art telematic art and happenings 2 In 1974 Canadian artist Vera Frenkel worked with the Bell Canada Teleconferencing Studios to produce the work String Games Improvisations for Inter City Video the first artwork in Canada to use telecommunications technologies 3 An early telematic artwork was Roy Ascott s work La Plissure du Texte 4 performed in collaboration created for an exhibition at the Musee d Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris in 1983 In 1985 Eduardo Kac created the animated videotex poem Reabracadabra for the Minitel system 5 Media art institutions such as Ars Electronica Festival in Linz or the Paris based IRCAM a research center for electronic music would also support or present early networked art In 1996 Helen Thorington founded Turbulence org an online platform for commissioning and exhibiting net art and hosting multi location networked performances in 1991 Wolfgang Staehle founded the important experimental platform such as The Thing in 1994 entrepreneur John Borthwick and curator Benjamin Weil produced artworks online by Doug Aitken Jenny Holzer and others on Adaweb and In 1997 MIT s List Visual Arts Center hosted PORT Navigating Digital Culture which included internet art in a gallery space and time based Internet projects 6 Artists in the show included Cary Peppermint Prema Murthy Ricardo Dominguez Helen Thorington and Adrianne Wortzel Also in 1997 internet art was exhibited at documenta X directed by Catherine David with curator Simon Lamuniere The 10 projects presented simultaneously in Kassel and online were those of Matt Mullican Antoni Muntadas Holger Friese Heath Bunting Felix Stefan Huber amp Philip Pocock Herve Graumann Jodi Martin Kippenberger and Carsten Holler among others In 2000 the Whitney Museum of American Art included net art in their Biennial exhibit 7 It was the first time that internet art had been included as a special category in the Biennial and it marked one of the earliest examples of the inclusion of internet art in a museum setting Internet artists included Mark Amerika Fakeshop Ken Goldberg etoy and ark With the rise of search engines as a gateway to accessing the web in the late 1990s many net artists turned their attention to related themes The 2001 Data Dynamics exhibit at the Whitney Museum featured Netomat Maciej Wisniewski and Apartment a Turbulence org commission Marek Walczak and Martin Wattenberg which used search queries as raw material Mary Flanagan s The Perpetual Bed received attention for its use of 3D nonlinear narrative space or what she called navigable narratives 8 9 Her 2001 piece titled Collection shown in the Whitney Biennial displayed items amassed from hard drives around the world in a computational collective unconscious 10 Golan Levin s The Secret Lives of Numbers 2000 also a Turbulence org commission visualized the popularity of the numbers 1 to 1 000 000 as measured by Alta Vista search results Such works pointed to alternative interfaces and questioned the dominant role of search engines in controlling access to the net Nevertheless the Internet is not reducible to the web nor to search engines Besides these unicast point to point applications suggesting the existence of reference points there is also a multicast multipoint and uncentered internet that has been explored by very few artistic experiences such as the Poietic Generator Internet art has according to Juliff and Cox suffered under the privileging of the user interface inherent within computer art They argue that Internet is not synonymous with a specific user and specific interface but rather a dynamic structure that encompasses coding and the artist s intention 11 At the same period original attempts to establish a physical relation between what happened on the web and what would be exhibited in museums were developed by MUDAM Musee d Art Contemporain du Luxembourg and most of all by MIXM At the time and before platforms like Second Life where Cao Fei developed her RMB City contemporary artists like Peter Kogler Heimo Zobernig Nedko Solakov or Robin Rimbaud aka Scanner realized works online that could be seen in art museums specifically as installations and not just on a computer screen showing internet art In Solakov s work for example one could interact online with objects that were in the exhibition space of the Centre d Art Contemporain Geneve In Heimo Zobernig s work one could physically move a wall to reveal a space in the MAMCO containing a 3d online rendering of the same space The emergence of social networking platforms in the mid 2000s facilitated a transformative shift in the distribution of internet art Early online communities were organized around specific topical hierarchies 12 whereas social networking platforms consist of egocentric networks with the individual at the center of their own community 12 Artistic communities on the Internet underwent a similar transition in the mid 2000s shifting from Surf Clubs 15 to 30 person groups whose members contributed to an ongoing visual conceptual conversation through the use of digital media 13 and whose membership was restricted to a select group of individuals to image based social networking platforms like Flickr which permit access to any individual with an e mail address Internet artists make extensive use of the networked capabilities of social networking platforms and are rhizomatic in their organization in that production of meaning is externally contingent on a network of other artists content 13 Post Internet Edit Main article Post Internet Post Internet movements are responsible for Internet centric microgenres and subcultures such as vaporwave 14 Post Internet is a loose descriptor 14 for works of art that are derived from the Internet as well as the internet s effects on aesthetics culture and society 15 It is a broad term with many associations and has been heavily criticized 14 The term emerged during the mid 2000s and was coined by Internet artist Marisa Olson in 2008 16 Discussions about Internet art by Marisa Olson Gene McHugh and Artie Vierkant the latter notable for his Image Objects a series of deep blue monochrome prints brought the term to a mainstream consciousness 17 Between the 2000s and 2010s post Internet artists were largely the domain of millennials operating on web platforms such as Tumblr and MySpace or working in social media video and post narrative formats such as YouTube Vevo or memes According to a 2015 article in The New Yorker the term describes the practices of artists who unlike those of previous generations employ the Web as just another medium like painting or sculpture Their artworks move fluidly between spaces appearing sometimes on a screen other times in a gallery 18 In the early 2010s post Internet was popularly associated with the musician Grimes visual artists like Cory Arcangel Artie Vierkant Petra Cortrght Ryan Trecartin and Lizzie Fitch and Kalup Linzy and social practice dissensus collectives like DIS and K HOLE 19 The movement catapulted a number of hybrid microgenres and subcultures such as bloghouse bro dubstep seapunk electroclash and vaporwave 14 Tools EditArt historian Rachel Greene identified six forms of internet art that existed from 1993 to 1996 email audio video graphics animation and websites 20 These mailing lists allowed for organization which was carried over to face to face meetings that facilitated more nuanced conversations less burdened from miscommunication Since the mid 2000s many artists have used Google s search engine and other services for inspiration and materials New Google services breed new artistic possibilities 21 Beginning in 2008 Jon Rafman collected images from Google Street View for his project called The Nine Eyes of Google Street View 22 21 Another ongoing net art project is I m Google by Dina Kelberman which organizes pictures and videos from Google and YouTube around a theme in a grid form that expands as you scroll 21 See also EditArt sales Artmedia ASCII art Cyberculture Cyberformance Digital art Electronic literature Email art Fax art Fractal art Homestuck Hypertext fiction Internet aesthetic Net art Net poetry Online exhibition SITO Surfing club Telematic art Virtual artReferences Edit a b Ippolito Jon 2002 10 01 Ten Myths of Internet Art Leonardo 35 5 485 498 doi 10 1162 002409402320774312 ISSN 0024 094X S2CID 57564573 Chandler Annmarie Neumark Norie 2005 At a Distance Precursors to Art and Activism on the Internet Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 0 262 03328 3 Langill Caroline 2009 Electronic media in 1974 Shifting Polarities Montreal The Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art Science and Technology Retrieved September 21 2010 White Norman T Plissure du Texte The NorMill Retrieved September 21 2010 Unedited transcript including organizational discussion NET ART ANTHOLOGY Reabracadabra NET ART ANTHOLOGY Reabracadabra 2016 10 27 Retrieved 2020 12 26 Port Home The Whitney Biennial 2000 See also Now Anyone Can Be in the Whitney Biennial in The New York Times March 23 2000 and The Whitney Speaks It Is Art in Wired Magazine March 23 2000 Klink Patrick 1999 Daring Digital Artist UB Today Buffalo The University at Buffalo Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 21 2011 Flanagan Mary 2000 navigating the narrative in space gender and spatiality in virtual worlds Art Journal New York The College Art Association Retrieved December 21 2011 Cotter Holland 2002 Never Mind the Art Police These Six Matter The New York Times New York Retrieved December 21 2011 Toby Juliff Travis Cox 2015 The post display condition of contemporary computer art PDF EMaj 8 a b Boyd D M N B Ellison 2007 Social Network Sites Definition History and Scholarship Journal of Computer Mediated Communication 13 1 210 230 doi 10 1111 j 1083 6101 2007 00393 x S2CID 52810295 Retrieved 20 November 2012 a b Schneider B From Clubs to Affinity The Decentralization of Art on the Internet 491 Archived from the original on 7 July 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2012 a b c d Amarca Nico March 1 2016 From Bucket Hats to Pokemon Breaking Down Yung Lean s Style High Snobiety Retrieved May 24 2020 Wallace Ian March 18 2014 What Is Post Internet Art Understanding the Revolutionary New Art Movement Artspace Interview with Marisa Olson 28 March 2008 Connor Michael November 1 2013 What s Postinternet Got to do with Net Art Rhizome Goldsmith Kenneth 2015 03 10 Post Internet Poetry Comes of Age The New Yorker Retrieved 2016 09 14 Snapes Laura February 19 2020 Pop star producer or pariah The conflicted brilliance of Grimes The Guardian Moss Cecelia Laurel 2015 Expanded Internet Art and the Informational Milieu Ann Arbor p 1 ISBN 978 1 339 32982 6 lt 5 Arts Net gt In the 1990s email based mailing lists provided net artists with a community for online discourse that broke boundaries between critical and generative dialogues The email format allowed instant expression however limited to text and simple graphic based communication with an international scope lt 5 arts net gt Greene Rachel 2004 Internet art New York N Y Thames amp Hudson pp 73 74 ISBN 0 500 20376 8 OCLC 56809770 a b c Christou Elisavet 2018 07 01 Internet Art Google and Artistic Practice Electronic Workshops in Computing doi 10 14236 ewic EVA2018 23 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help NET ART ANTHOLOGY Nine Eyes of Google Street View NET ART ANTHOLOGY Nine Eyes of Google Street View 2016 10 27 Retrieved 2020 11 16 Bibliography EditKate Armstrong Jeremy Bailey amp Faisal Anwar on Net Art in Canadian Art Magazine 1 permanent dead link Weibel Peter and Gerbel Karl 1995 Welcome in the Net World rs electronica 95 Linz Wien New York Springer Verlag ISBN 3 211 82709 9 Fred Forest 1998 Pour un art actuel l art a l heure d Internet l Harmattan Paris Baranski Sandrine La musique en reseau une musique de la complexite Editions universitaires europeennes mai 2010 Barreto Ricardo and Perissinotto Paula the culture of immanence Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Baumgartel Tilman 2001 net art 2 0 Neue Materialien zur Netzkunst New Materials towards Net art Nurnberg Verlag fur moderne Kunst ISBN 3 933096 66 9 Wilson Stephen 2001 Information Arts Intersections of Art Science and Technology Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 0 262 23209 X Caterina Davinio 2002 Tecno Poesia e realta virtuali Techno Poetry and Virtual Realities Sometti Mantua IT Collection Archivio della poesia del 900 Mantua Municipality With English translation ISBN 88 88091 85 8 Stallabrass Julian 2003 Internet Art the online clash of culture and commerce Tate Publishing ISBN 1 85437 345 5 ISBN 978 1 85437 345 8 Christine Buci Glucksmann L art a l epoque virtuel in Frontieres esthetiques de l art Arts 8 Paris L Harmattan 2004 Greene Rachel 2004 Internet Art Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 20376 8 ISBN 978 0 500 20376 7 Corby Tom 2006 Network Art Practices and Positions Routledge ISBN 0 415 36479 5 WB05 e symposium published as ISEA Newsletter 102 ISSN 1488 3635 102 2 Juliff Toby amp Cox Travis The Post display condition of contemporary computer art eMaj 8 April 2015 https emajartjournal files wordpress com 2012 11 cox and juliff the post display condition of contemporary computer art pdf Ascott R 2003 Telematic Embrace visionary theories of art technology and consciousness Edward A Shanken ed Berkeley University of California Press Roy Ascott 2002 Technoetic Arts Editor and Korean translation YI Won Kon Media amp Art Series no 6 Institute of Media Art Yonsei University Yonsei Yonsei University Press Ascott R 1998 Art amp Telematics toward the Construction of New Aesthetics Japanese trans E Fujihara A Takada amp Y Yamashita eds Tokyo NTT Publishing Co Ltd Fred Forest 2008 Art et Internet Paris Editions Cercle D Art Imaginaire Mode d Emploi Thomas Dreher IASLonline Lessons Lektionen in NetArt Thomas Dreher History of Computer Art chap VI Net Art Networks Participation Hypertext Monoskop 2010 Overview of surf clubs phenomenon 3 Art in the Era of the Internet PBS Report in Spanish Martin Prada Juan Practicas artisticas e Internet en la epoca de las redes sociales Editorial AKAL Madrid 2012 ISBN 978 84 460 3517 6 Bosma Josephine 2011 Nettitudes Let s Talk Net Art 4 NAI Publishers ISBN 978 90 5662 800 0 Schneider B 2011 January 6 From Clubs to Affinity The Decentralization of Art on the Internet 491 491 Retrieved March 3 2011 from https web archive org web 20120707101824 http fourninetyone com 2011 01 06 fromclubstoaffinity Boyd D M Ellison N B 2007 Social Network Sites Definition History and Scholarship Journal of Computer Mediated Communication 13 1 210 230 doi 10 1111 j 1083 6101 2007 00393 x S2CID 52810295 Moss Ceci 2008 Thoughts on New Media Artists v Artists with Computers Rhizome Journal http rhizome org editorial 2008 dec 3 thoughts on quotnew media artists vs artists with Greene Rachel 2000 A History of Internet Art Artforum vol 38 Bookchin Natalie amp Alexei Shulgin 1994 5 Introduction to net art Rhizome http rhizome org artbase artwork 48530 Atkins Robert 1995 The Art World and I Go Online Art in America 83 2 Houghton B 2002 The Internet amp art A guidebook for artists Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 089374 9 Bosma J 2011 Nettitudes Let s talk net art Rotterdam Nai Publishers ISBN 978 90 5662 800 0 Daniels D amp Reisinger G 2009 Net pioneers 1 0 Contextualizing early net based art Berlin Sternberg Press ISBN 978 1 933128 71 9 External links Editnetartnet net an online gallery listing and directory of internet art gt netart or notart lt netart latino database Post Internet Materialism metropolism com Retrieved 2015 03 15 An interview with Martijn Hendriks amp Katja Novitskova The New Aesthetic and its Politics Finally a Semi Definitive Definition of Post Internet Art Art F City 14 October 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Internet art amp oldid 1142139146, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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