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March 2011
- 184 participants
- 222 discussions
30 марта Оl апреля
>
Внимание изменения! Нововведения в таможенном законодательстве: новые формы таможенных деклараций и новый порядок декларирования, контроля и корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров с 01 января 2011 года
<
\Моск. код/ ЧЧ54095 и 445_ЧО95
Образование Таможенного союза и единой таможенной территории привело к значительным изменениям в таможенном законодательстве. С 1 июля 2010 года вступил в силу Таможенный кодекс Таможенного союза.
С 01 января 2011 года на единой таможенной территории таможенного союза вступают в силу:
* новые формы бланков декларации на товары (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧257 от 20 мая 2010 года) и транзитной декларации (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧ 289 от 18 июня 2010 года)
* инструкция о порядке заполнения декларации на товары (утвержденная в окончательной редакции решением Комиссии таможенного союза ╧379 от 20 сентября 2010 года)
* инструкция о порядке заполнения транзитной декларации (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧289 от 18 июня 2010 года)
* новые классификаторы, используемые для заполнения таможенных деклараций (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧378 от 20 сентября 2010 года)
* новый порядок декларирования таможенной стоимости и новые формы бланков декларации таможенной стоимости (ДТС и ДТС-1) и корректировки таможенной стоимости и таможенных платежей (КТС) (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧ 376 от 20.09.2010 года)
Цель:
* ознакомить участников ВЭД с особенностями заполнения новых форм деклараций, изменениями в классификаторах, используемых для заполнения таможенных деклараций.
* подготовить участников ВЭД к практической работе в условиях действия новых нормативно-правовых документов таможенного союза, регламентирующих вопросы определения, декларирования, контроля и корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров
* обсудить проблемы правоприменительной практики по вопросам таможенной стоимости, в том числе дать ответы на вопросы участников ВЭД по актуальным проблемам определения и контроля таможенной стоимости товаров
Программа:
1. Новая форма таможенной декларации: особенности заполнения
* Изменения в порядке заполнения декларации на товары (ДТ) при декларировании товаров, ввозимых (ввезенных) на таможенную территорию Таможенного союза
* Особенности заполнения новой формы декларации на товары, вывозимые с таможенной территории Таможенного союза
* Порядок внесения изменений и (или) дополнений в сведения, заявленные в декларации на товары, до и после выпуска товаров
* Особенности заполнения графы 47 "Исчисление платежей"
2. Классификаторы и перечни нормативно-справочной информации, используемые для заПолнения таможенных деклараций Основные изменения.
3. Транзитная декларация: новая форма и правила ее заполнения.
4. Особенности электронного и интернет декларирования.
5. Законодательство Таможенного союза по вопросам таможенной стоимости товаров
* Таможенный кодекс Таможенного союза
* Соглашение по определению таможенной стоимости товаров, перемещаемых через таможенную границу Таможенного союза;
* Решения Комиссии таможенного союза по вопросам таможенной стоимости товаров:
* порядок декларирования таможенной стоимости товаров
* порядок контроля таможенной стоимости товаров
* порядок корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров
* новые формы бланков декларации (ДТС и ДТС-1) и корректировки таможенной стоимости (КТС).
6. Практические проблемы заявления, контроля и корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров
* решения, принимаемые таможенными органами в ходе таможенного контроля
* дополнительная проверка заявленной таможенной стоимости товаров
* корректировка таможенной стоимости товаров
* порядок обжалования в арбитражных судах решений таможенных органов по вопросам корректировки таможенной стоимости
По вопpоcам подробной информации и pегucтаpацuu обpащайтеcь по тел: +7 (код Москвы) 7922i*22 \\// 792/2|/2.2
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Легально и быстро! Шенгенские Визы! От 3 раб.дней! Без личного присутствия!
by Beverley Allen 30 Mar '11
by Beverley Allen 30 Mar '11
30 Mar '11
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ПРИГЛАШЕНИЯ для иностранцев, страхование на даты поездки, ПЕРЕВОДЫ документов.
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Многопрофильная консалтинговая компания г. Москвы, с 2001 года занимающаяся профессиональной деятельностью в области ведения бухгалтерского и налогового учета предлагает:
Бухгалтерские услуги:
* составление нулевой отчетности от 1000 рублей за комплект;
* бухгалтерское сопровождение от 5000 рублей в месяц;
* подготовка и заполнение декларации по налогу на доходы физических лиц 3-НДФЛ
от 500 рублей;
* восстановление бухгалтерского и налогового учета;
* постановка налогового учета;
* налоговый консалтинг;
Услуги в области налогообложения:
* сопровождение налоговых проверок;
* налоговые споры;
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* подготовка пакета документов в ИФНС по возмещению НДС;
Качество подтверждено, ответственность застрахована.
Мы предоставляем скидки на аудиторские, юридические и обучающие услуги при заключении договора на постановку, ведение или восстановление бухгалтерского и (или) налогового учета.
Подробная информация по телефону: 8 (495) 725 - 04 √ 59
Адрес: м. Бауманская, ул. Бауманская, д.6, бизнес центр ╚Виктория Плаза╩
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30 Mar '11
Четвертое апреля
Методы оптимизации расходов на выплату белой зарплаты: как выжить после замены ЕСН страховыми взносами
+7 (код Москвы) 7*9-2_2-1.2.2 <<>> 74_29l-98
Цель:
Ставка обязательных страховых взносов с зарплаты с 2011 года составляет 34% почти для всех плательщиков (включая субъектов УСН и ЕНВД). При этом регрессивная шкала ЕСН заменена отменой уплаты взносов с суммы дохода свыше 463 тыс. рублей, но доступно это будет только для высокооплачиваемых сотрудников. Если вспомнить про 13% НДФЛ и НДС, который тоже косвенно является налогом на зарплату, то многие предприниматели и руководители видят только один путь √ назад, к "черным" схемам.
Курс посвящен поиску путей выживания компаний в новой ситуации при условии легальности всех выплат доходов физическим лицам. Участники узнают, как можно и как нельзя оптимизировать "зарплатные" налоги с учетом будущих изменений законодательства, судебной практики и тенденций развития правоприменительной практики.
Программа:
1. Обзор изменений законодательства, связанных с повышением ставки страховых взносов Сколько и каких налогов и взносов платят предприятия и ИП на общей системе налогообложения и спецрежимах в 2011 гг. Какие схемы стали невыгодными; у каких налогоплательщиков положение даже улучшилось.
2. Понятие и принципы налогового планирования: платить налоги, но не переплачивать. "Черные", "серые" и "белые" схемы. Классификация методов оптимизации налогообложения доходов физических лиц.
3. Использование специальных налоговых режимов:
* в каком случае выплата зарплаты на спецрежимах сохраняет актуальность в 2011 г.;
* дивидендные схемы √ замена выплаты зарплате на "упрощенке"? Нюансы, рекомендации. Выплата квартальных дивидендов ежемесячно частями. Выплаты из прибыли в АО, ООО, производственном кооперативе ("народном предприятии"). Расчет эффективности,
* договоры с предпринимателем: возмездного оказания услуг, выполнения работ, агентский, транспортные услуги, механизм трансфертных цен, штрафные санкции, аренда и пр. Расчет эффективности,
* дарение физлицом наличных денег, заработанных в качестве предпринимателя: легальная альтернатива обналичиванию, дающая безналоговый доход? Выбор банков, проблемы, связанные с кассовой дисциплиной и политикой ЦБ. Текущая ситуация с обложением таких доходов НДФЛ.
4. Условия применения всех схем: Непритворный характер заключаемых сделок. Экономическая целесообразность расходов ("деловая цель", "легенда", отсутствие дублирующихся функций). Грамотное обоснование цен и документальное оформление расходов. Неаффилированность, прямые и косвенные признаки аффилированности, ее негативные последствия и когда она допустима; "искусственное дробление бизнеса с целью уклонения от уплаты налогов" (подход "как к ЮКОСу"); "деловые цели", обосновывающие деление бизнеса. Самостоятельность низконалоговых субъектов.
5. Использование вспомогательных организаций:
* "инвалидные" организации и их филиалы, актуальность;
* страховые компании. Страхование жизни работников и ДМС за счет предприятия.
6. Использование иностранных (низконалоговых) компаний. Корпоративные или личные пластиковые карты иностранных банков. Перевод на них или на карты российских банков зарплат, гонораров и иных легальных доходов от нерезидентов.
7. Как компенсировать "выпадение" отчислений в Пенсионный фонд на накопительную часть пенсии, в ФСС и ФОМС при применении налоговых схем, не предусматривающих выплату зарплаты.
8. Использование процентных займов от физлиц. Расчет эффективности.
9. Специальные методы. Все виды компенсаций (за несвоевременную выплату заработной платы, за использование личного имущества, за разъездной характер работы, "золотые парашюты" и др.). Выплата арендной платы. Закуп у физлиц ТМЦ. Суточные. Обучение сотрудников с заключением ученического договора, как способ налогового планирования.
10. Потребительское кредитование, компенсация процентов по ипотечным кредитам и другие эффективные способы замены заработной платы безналоговыми источниками материальной выгоды,
11. Создание недоимки по налогам с ФОТ на фирме, не обремененной активами √ пример "серой" схемы (как нельзя "оптимизировать"!),
12. Способы подтверждения источников крупных расходов физлиц и когда это необходимо.
13. Ответы на вопросы. По желанию √ индивидуальное экспресс-моделирование схем налогового планирования для компаний-участниц семинара.
По вопpоcам подробной информации и pегucтаpацuu обpащайтеcь по тел: 8 Моск. код: 4Ч5*З968 ; ЧЧ5/3_9.6_8
1
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тридцатое марта - первое апреля
>
Внимание изменения! Нововведения в таможенном законодательстве: новые формы таможенных деклараций и новый порядок декларирования, контроля и корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров с 01 января 2011 года
<
(код Москвы) 7.9_2-2-1_2/2 и 792_21*2.2
Образование Таможенного союза и единой таможенной территории привело к значительным изменениям в таможенном законодательстве. С 1 июля 2010 года вступил в силу Таможенный кодекс Таможенного союза.
С 01 января 2011 года на единой таможенной территории таможенного союза вступают в силу:
* новые формы бланков декларации на товары (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧257 от 20 мая 2010 года) и транзитной декларации (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧ 289 от 18 июня 2010 года)
* инструкция о порядке заполнения декларации на товары (утвержденная в окончательной редакции решением Комиссии таможенного союза ╧379 от 20 сентября 2010 года)
* инструкция о порядке заполнения транзитной декларации (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧289 от 18 июня 2010 года)
* новые классификаторы, используемые для заполнения таможенных деклараций (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧378 от 20 сентября 2010 года)
* новый порядок декларирования таможенной стоимости и новые формы бланков декларации таможенной стоимости (ДТС и ДТС-1) и корректировки таможенной стоимости и таможенных платежей (КТС) (решение Комиссии таможенного союза ╧ 376 от 20.09.2010 года)
Цель:
* ознакомить участников ВЭД с особенностями заполнения новых форм деклараций, изменениями в классификаторах, используемых для заполнения таможенных деклараций.
* подготовить участников ВЭД к практической работе в условиях действия новых нормативно-правовых документов таможенного союза, регламентирующих вопросы определения, декларирования, контроля и корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров
* обсудить проблемы правоприменительной практики по вопросам таможенной стоимости, в том числе дать ответы на вопросы участников ВЭД по актуальным проблемам определения и контроля таможенной стоимости товаров
Программа:
1. Новая форма таможенной декларации: особенности заполнения
* Изменения в порядке заполнения декларации на товары (ДТ) при декларировании товаров, ввозимых (ввезенных) на таможенную территорию Таможенного союза
* Особенности заполнения новой формы декларации на товары, вывозимые с таможенной территории Таможенного союза
* Порядок внесения изменений и (или) дополнений в сведения, заявленные в декларации на товары, до и после выпуска товаров
* Особенности заполнения графы 47 "Исчисление платежей"
2. Классификаторы и перечни нормативно-справочной информации, используемые для заПолнения таможенных деклараций Основные изменения.
3. Транзитная декларация: новая форма и правила ее заполнения.
4. Особенности электронного и интернет декларирования.
5. Законодательство Таможенного союза по вопросам таможенной стоимости товаров
* Таможенный кодекс Таможенного союза
* Соглашение по определению таможенной стоимости товаров, перемещаемых через таможенную границу Таможенного союза;
* Решения Комиссии таможенного союза по вопросам таможенной стоимости товаров:
* порядок декларирования таможенной стоимости товаров
* порядок контроля таможенной стоимости товаров
* порядок корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров
* новые формы бланков декларации (ДТС и ДТС-1) и корректировки таможенной стоимости (КТС).
6. Практические проблемы заявления, контроля и корректировки таможенной стоимости товаров
* решения, принимаемые таможенными органами в ходе таможенного контроля
* дополнительная проверка заявленной таможенной стоимости товаров
* корректировка таможенной стоимости товаров
* порядок обжалования в арбитражных судах решений таможенных органов по вопросам корректировки таможенной стоимости
Информацию можно получить по телефонам: 8 Моск. код:/4_Ч*5/З*2_.6-6 : ЧЧ54О5З
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тридцатое марта
Тема: Затратные механизмы в налоговых схемах для оптимизации НДС и налога на прибыль
+7 (код Москвы) 792*2I*22 <<<>>> 742_9I98
Цель:
Курс посвящен изучению затратых механизмов с точки зрения их использования в схемах планирования по налогу на прибыль и (в той степени, в которой это возможно) НДС. В качестве затратных механизмов подробно рассматриваются различные услуги и работы, аренда (лизинг), лицензионные платежи (роялти), проценты по любым долговым обязательствам, штрафные санкции и др. Участники получат краткие индивидуальные консультации по тематике данного курса.
Программа:
1. Понятие и принципы налогового планирования: платить налоги, но не переплачивать. Как можно и как нельзя оптимизировать налоги с учетом будущих изменений законодательства, судебной практики и тенденций развития правоприменения. "Черные","серые" и "белые" схемы.
2. Кто может быть участником "затратных" схем:
* субъекты специальных налоговых режимов – ЕНВД и УСН, в т.ч. патентная система, а также субъекты УСН из "низконалоговых" регионов, где введена минимальная ставка единого налога при объекте "доходы минус расходы" (5%) на все или почти на все виды деятельности, а также простое товарищество с их участием,
* зарубежные офшоры или связанные с ними компании-нерезиденты из респектабельных юрисдикций,
* экзотические варианты: ИП на общей системе, физлица (при условии несистематичности извлечения дохода), "инвалидные" структуры, убыточные предприятия и фирмы, имеющие переплату НДС,
Незаконные варианты: "недобросовестные налогоплательщики" и контактирующие с ними риск-структуры ("белая" - "серая" - "черная" фирмы). Примеры "серых" схем с применением затратных механизмов (как нельзя "оптимизировать"!). Как не стать "недобросовестным".
3. Варианты затратных механизмов:
* нефиктивные услуги, работы,
* выплата процентов по долговым обязательствам. Включение процентов в расходы в любом размере,
* платежи за использование и обслуживание объектов основных средств и нематериальных активов, в т.ч. франчайзинговые,
* штрафные санкции, возмещение убытков, включая демередж и прочий простой,
* платежи за увеличенный срок и/или объем гарантийных обязательств,
* плата за залог или поручительство, делькредере.
4. Виды приемлимых услуг и работ:
* различные работы по договору подряда (субподряда);
* посреднические услуги по закупке или реализации товаров, а также связанные с закупкой и реализацией;
* услуги управленческого характера: по передаче полномочий единоличного исполнительного органа, содействие в привлечении и возврате финансирования, плата за предоставление залога или поручительства, коллекторские, факторинг;
* логистические: автотранспортные, экспедиторские, по техническому обслуживанию автотранспорта, погрузочно-разгрузочные работы, пакетирование, переупаковка, складская обработка товаров, (складское) хранение, а также все это в комплексе;
* связанные с основными средствами: услуги по их содержанию, эксплуатации и техническому обслуживанию.
Распространенные "плохие" варианты "виртуальных" услуг и работ (информационные, консультационные, маркетинговые, рекламные, ремонт...). Когда они все же допустимы.
5. Минимизация рисков "затратных" схем. "Явные признаки налоговой схемы" и как их избегать. Отсутствие фикции. Наличие деловых целей, "легенда", отсутствие дублирующихся функций. Грамотное обоснование расходов и цен. Неаффилированность, прямые и косвенные признаки аффилированности, ее негативные последствия и когда она допустима; "искусственное дробление бизнеса с целью уклонения от уплаты налогов" (подход "как к ЮКОСу"); деловые цели, обосновывающие деление бизнеса. Самостоятельность участников "затратных" схем.
6. Иностранные низконалоговые компании в "затратных" схемах: проценты, роялти, аренда, услуги в России и за ее пределами и т.п. Выбор низконалоговых юрисдикций.
7. Ответы на вопросы. По желанию и при наличии возможности – индивидуальное экспресс-моделирование схем налогового планирования для компаний-участниц семинара.
По вопpоcам pегucтаpацuu обpащайтеcь по тел: Московский код; 4Ч53266 : ЧЧ5_4О95
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----- Forwarded message from Florian Weimer <fweimer(a)bfk.de> -----
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 28 Mar 2011 14:36:35 -0700
From: el(a)riseup.net
To: nettime <nettime-l(a)kein.org>
Subject: <nettime> cyberpunk is dead
Resent-Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 08:51:20 +0200
Resent-From: nettime(a)kein.org
Resent-To: Nettime <nettime-l(a)kein.org>
notes on the development of the so-called social web and the role of
cyberpunks inside this process
http://el.blogsport.de/2011/03/28/cyberpunk-is-dead/
The weakness of cyberpunk was its virtuality, being a complex of
imagery mostly used by writers in fiction, by bloggers in egomany and
by journalists in, well, journalism. What was missing, is a
cyberpunk realism, in the sense of an aesthetics that relates to and
occupies something else than the realms of literature. From this
viewpoint, real existing cyberpunk was the adaption of cyberpunk as a
shiny static representation for what was left of the dynamic of
electronic pioneers, the early computer hackers, and their process of
dissolving their avant-guard status in time and into mass. Comparable
to the punks that were the mass reproduction of the avantgarde
activists before them. The name of this historic forerunner of punk
referred to here, was the Situationist International, a 1950s and 60s
avantgarde group (Read their texts and Greil Marcus history book).
Just like the situationists worked at the fissure between literature
and street, the early real-existing cyberpunks worked at the fissure
of literature and cyberspace. The cyberpunk literature served its
purpose to provide aesthetic naratives some time ago, and in the
ensuing process the real-existing groups that were trying to adapt
these clichis turned into clichis for others to adapt to. A virtual
movement.
What constitutes the weakness of the aesthetic force, results in the
weakness as a material force: Cyberpunk made its way on the market of
despiritualized ideas, as the shopping good for the masses. Ever tried
to squat something in Secondlife, like offline punks would do?
Technically impossible. In the process to solve this dilemma,
cyberpunk had to give up integral parts to be able to work on social
topics without a realism and therefore without a political strategy.
Which led to a certain aligning with the social and economical facts
in the process of trying to gain a social impact through the cyberpunk
models. Wondering why Wikileaks doesnt have a wiki anymore? Because
cypherpunk (with ph in this case, refering to those fractions of
cyberpunk that focuse on encryption) was either mass movement or
political tactics of an avant-guard. In deciding to focus on political
manouvres, an open publishing model is not fitting anymore. Contrary
to this, CHAN-culture (imageboards, fast communication channels) and
the ANON-meme (crowd orientated cyber actions) try different ways in
waging real mass-based cyberwars, they reach this point by being more
punk again, punk as in: deviant subculture that parents are afraid of.
Still inside this historic #fail of cyberpunk, there were hacker
groups and cyberpunk collectives not only representing the literary
images of cyberpunk, but trying to do cyberpunk realism. In the sense
of picking up the punk culture and porting it to the cyberspace.
Working with images and text in the new media, taking it back to the
roots of post-war pre-punk movements, creating free tools, cultural
gifts and mixed artworks, like all the minds from Guy Debord (and many
before), to John Lyndon, to Allen Ginsberg, to Wau Holland, had shown
the way. But working with punk attitude in the 90s and the Zeros
proofs to be a delicate business. Now we can see the last phase of
cyberpunk, the virus has spread, it has dissolved into one of its more
justified aims: the dissolution in non-elitist mass approaches. If you
search today for crazy netpunks, doing the mix with images, ideas and
slogans, fighting cyberwars against scientology and other creepy
institutions, you dont come to the avantgarde collectives, you go the
chans.
These collectives had been reaching out to you, flooding you with
texts, movies, songs, images, a vast wave of media. Working all the
time under fake identities to give away anticommodities of a little
countercultureindustry. With that fulfilling the idealist idea of the
free and useful citizens. Only through the nature of these efforts
being collective and collaborative, this theater of autonomy could be
kept running, serving as a good example to all little self-managed
projects out there that with a little circle of friends you can reach
everything you can imagine. Nothing else though. So when the
participants got tired of the shooting in the dark acceleration these
collective products had taken, all the releases, all the
administration, all the fuzz, it went down the spiral of
individualization: moving to a aggregation of solo blogs, then moving
on to the short notes of twitter, a medium only to well fitting for
the self-advertisement. After the autonomous text production of the
last two decades, we face a shift to short notes and images. The DIY
music scene remains a bit unaffected by this, since the hope to become
a money earning musician is still a more powerful cultureindustrial
meme than the one of a writer actually getting paid. The recent
shifting from myspace to facebook shows although, that
everyone-is-an-artist wasnt a powerful enough idea. It had to be
self-representation, mini-blogging, star-cult, focus on images and
other spectacular media instead of text: The hyperindividualist
self-representation platform of facebook suited the masses best.
For large parts, this big network is filled with representations of
static faces. Faces, that are amongst our most subliminal ways of
communicating, become our fastest and most plain way of making a
statement. Update profile picture, comment, like, like back, update
again. The collectivization of communication (lat. communicare = do
sth. together) failed, in fact this means the failure of mass art.
Todays market of representations means that we exchange images that
are valued by statements without consequence, statements whose only
value is the one of attention, something we have learned from the
advertising process, which has become the key process of culture. This
cultural praxis fails to find a history of the human faces. The faces
tried to break the boundaries of word and image, they were processes
of conscious creation of speaking images for the feelings that words
fail to describe. The times of boredom that everyone wanders now,
through images that dont form related stories anymore, are a result
of loosing our dream of creating non-static post-representative
playful expressions. To associate the fragile idea of friendship still
with the formalized and online media based networks of friends is
the dramatic deception that covers this loss. It was the fragile
nature of friendship itself that was lost, that what made
communication between friends comfortable. The need to be near to
others and to be free on ones own at the same time, was dissolved into
the mode of being present to each other only through distance. The
tools of social media cover up the failure of the social itself.
Giving up the idea of the possibility of social relations in which one
can give each other the comfort of being together and granting all
freedom the same time, is a failure whose results may be not so easy
to cover. This is not a judgment about the idea of mass communication
per se, but about the idea and modes of social media networks.
Coming back to the crews for once: the game of creating a strong
collective representation that immediately represents itself was
programmed to fail in a society that only uses representations to mark
the value of exchangeability. The punk image of a cybergang that
somehow evades the mainstream norms and holds up the, now
conservative, ideas of elite and underground was the joke that had to
choke itself. It was working with the idea of an everchanging
collective project that would remain the same all the time in order to
avoid to spoil the fans. This planned contradiction of the ultimate
hype was not scandalous anymore when the whole web turned to the
noncontradictive targeted creation of hypes. What these groups had
caricatured since decades was only about to become the online model of
creating static ideas that represent dynamic change. The cybergangs
were constructed never to end, because as a project, a channel, it was
not aiming for something and therefore it couldnt fail. Other media
collectives of today, opposed to this, want to start because they
realize that pictured dynamics has to be the key feature of a
successful industrial media product.
So from this learning process we gain the perspective of boringness.
Being a progressive participant of cyberspace today is not about being
elite and surfing the most underground hubs. Its about surfing on the
top of it all, on the big normal junkyard of human creation and
picking up the inspirations together. Its also about reading a book
again, following an authors thought through 400 pages instead of 140
letters. And also in the same sense: doing a website again, a static
thing that waits for hundreds to come by, just like a book in the
library, instead of giving daily updates to attract some other
thousands that need their daily fix of info. Some books still are more
actual than the daily news reports (when these were still existing,
now the news must be updated all the time). And maybe the lost dreams
in these books need an actualisation through a website, instead of
just a quotation in the fast streams of actualities. Its about
refusing the entertainment, its about finding enlightment in thought
processes themselves and not in what forms they have been given for
representation. Its about picking up something dead and giving it
life instead of living the perpetual death of the bubble of statements.
The non-conformism of today is a real challenge: To deal with
something beyond the instantaneous satisfaction of a pseudodynamic
static image. The progressive illustrations, thoughts, projects and
processes will need you to stumble over them, to search for them, to
look closely or even stare at them (not like you stared at the TV
since 50 years ago, at youtube since 5 years ago). It needs you to
stop worrying about the central hub, website or plattform that you
feel like home in. It needs you to stop worrying about any rss-feeds
that you only used to feed your identity out of angst in this process
of identification, representation and individualisation. Not to learn
even more exiting ways of being alone you can easily find those in
the entertainment industry but to pick up again the idea of
communication. Surf around, take off from time to time and play with
what and whom you might find.
# 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://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
# archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime(a)kein.org
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I found this treasure while trying to identify the specific video art
workshop I was attending in 1968-1970, when I left to make exclusive use
of my neighbors portapak (sony BW reel/reel on a backpack frame). It's
interesting in how the theories of the video arts community at the time
saw the commercialization and democratization of video production much as
we saw the creation of networks, protocols, and the all-mighty liberating
cryptographic superstructure which would free us all. In both cases I
believe we have become slaves to our saviours, albeit with an improvement
of the general welfare.
Enjoy.
//Alif
--
"Never belong to any party, always oppose privileged classes and public
plunderers, never lack sympathy with the poor, always remain devoted to
the public welfare, never be satisfied with merely printing news, always
be drastically independent, never be afraid to attack wrong, whether by
predatory plutocracy or predatory poverty."
Joseph Pulitzer, 1907 Speech
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?hl=en&client=firefox-a&rls=org…
This is Google's cache of http://www.vdb.org/resources/chrishill.html. It
is a snapshot of the page as it appeared on Mar 9, 2011 17:49:26 GMT. The
current page could have changed in the meantime. Learn more
Text-only version
These search terms are highlighted: 1968 video arts new york These terms
only appear in links pointing to this page: workshop
Attention! Production! Audience.
Performing Video in the First Decade, 1968-1980
by Chris Hill
1. A radical communications paradigm for participatory democracy
The argument was not only about producing new form for new content, it was
also about changing the nature of the relationship between reader and
literary text, between spectator and spectacle, and the changing of this
relationship was itself premised upon new ways of thinking about the
relationship between art (or more generally 'representation') and
reality...the adequacy or effectiveness of the devices employed depends
entirely upon the historical moment or "conjecture" within which they are
manifest. .Sylvia Harvey 1
a. Cultural Agency and new technology
Artists and social activists declared video a cultural praxis in the
United States in the late '60s, a period of radical assertions fueled by a
decade of civil rights confrontations, controversy surrounding U.S.
involvement in Vietnam, and the rise of a new youth culture intent on
consciousness expansion. Within a charged atmosphere of personal and
social change and political confrontation, the production of culture was
understood to be a necessary step in the development of a reinvigorated
participatory democracy. The first issue of Radical Software (1970), a
tabloid published by the New York media collective Raindance Corporation,
asserted that video making and other "information software design" were
radical cultural tools and proposed that, "Unless we design and implement
alternate information structures which transcend and reconfigure the
existing ones, our alternate systems and life styles will be no more than
products of the existing process." 2
The video art and communications projects nurtured by this radical climate
were fused into a cultural "movement" by the introduction to the U.S.
market of the relatively affordable ($1500) and light weight half-inch
open reel portapak in 1967-1968. In the half decade before the arrival of
this mobile video production unit, art about television or its technology
had entered the cultural imaginary through Fluxus artists' modified TV
sets that challenged bourgeois televisual sensibilities, and art and
technology exhibitions at major galleries. Speculation by the influential
Canadian media theorist Marshall McLuhan on the parallel evolution of
communications media and structures of consciousness fueled utopian
conjecturing about a new information-based society. McLuhan's writing had
particular impact on the post-war generation that grew up with television.
In 1968 artists and social activists welcomed the new attentional terrain
offered by the unintimidating, real-time video medium and the possibility
of developing an accessible democratic communication system as an
alternative to commercial television.
Unified by cultural imperatives for a more open and egalitarian way of
living as well as by the pragmatic need to pool equipment.portapaks,
microphones, and a growing assortment of independently engineered tools.a
number of artists, activists, and electronic tool designers formed working
collectives. Woody Vasulka described video in 1969-1970 as, "A very free
medium, and the community was very young, naive, new, strong, cooperative,
no animosities, kind of a welcoming tribe. So we ganged together west
coast, east coast, Canadian west and east coasts, and we created overnight
a spiritual community." 3
Even before the appearance of the portapak in the late '60s, sculptors,
experimental filmmakers, painters, performers, musicians, and dancers had
begun to seriously challenge long-held concepts about the formal
separation of specific art disciplines and interpretive discourses. Some
would eventually include video in their interdisciplinary investigations.
Starting in the late 50s, Happenings expanded paintings into interactive
environments, engaging those aspects of art which, "Consciously intended
to replace habit with the spirit of exploration and experiment." 4 By the
late '60s some members of the counterculture involved with the absorbing
psychedelic underground of music, experimental film, theater, and light
shows found video to be a provocative new moving image and installation
medium. Sculptors who had been working within the emerging vocabulary of
post-minimalism found video to be a medium with which they could
foreground the phenomenology of perceptual or conceptual process over the
aesthetic object or product. Artists participating in the "high" art
gallery and museum spaces as well as those positioned in the clubs,
concerts and mass cultural scenes found reasons to explore the new moving
image and sync sound medium.
The manifestos and commentary by those caught up in the early video
movement of 1968-1973 reflected an optimism stemming from the belief that
real social change was possible; they expressed a commitment to cultural
change that bordered on the ecstatic. During this heady period political
theorists, artists, and activists delivered powerful arguments for a
participatory democracy. The possibility of working for radical social
change was conflated with the task of personal change and with imperatives
to explore one's consciousness through music, art, drugs, encounter
groups, spirituality, sexuality, and countercultural lifestyles. The
valorization of "process" and "an almost religious return to experience"
was shared by both political and cultural radicals of the late '60s, even
though their agendas and strategies varied considerably. 5 Much of the
enthusiasm expressed about the "process" available to artists and
audiences through the new portable video technology centered on instant
replay and immediate "feedback" of one's experience.
The social and cultural challenges of the '60s were, "A disruption of late
capitalist ideology, political hegemony, and the bourgeois dream of
unproblematic production." 6 The decade opened with the beginning of the
civil disobedience phase of the civil rights movement and the formation of
the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which organized
interracial Freedom Rides to integrate restaurants and restrooms in the
South in 1961. According to Todd Gitlin, sociologist and '60s activist,
"The [civil rights] movement's rise and fall, its transmutations from
southern nonviolence to black power, its insistence on the
self-determination of the insulted and injured, was the template for every
other movement of the decade." 7
Influenced by SNCC's egalitarianism, where middle class and poor struggled
together, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in 1962 issued the Port
Huron Statement which called for a "participatory democracy" based on
"love and community in decisions shaping private lives." This New Left
asserted that necessary social change would come about only by replacing
institutions of control, not by reforming them. 8 The civil rights
movement, SDS, the growing anti-war movement, and community organizing
around urban poverty provided activist models that would challenge the
generation coming of age in the mid-'60s to interrogate institutionalized
authority, national priorities, and conventional expectations of personal
satisfaction and class privilege. On college campuses teach-ins,
information sharing, and local organizing around issues of housing,
health, and legal rights offered practicums for a radically revised
education for living. By 1968, 50% of the population was under 25, and
across the country young people were swept up in the intoxication of the
expanding and celebratory counterculture, its music, and its libertarian
lifestyle choices. Although deep divisions between political radicals and
lifestyle radicals remained throughout the decade, the country experienced
a profound transformation of cultural relations in their wake.
As part of the progressive dialogue on college campuses between 1968 and
1973, tracts by writers like Herbert Marcuse were broadly circulated and
discussed. They described the media as a "consciousness industry"
responsible for the alienation of the individual, the commodification of
culture, and the centralized control of communications technologies. In
his widely read books, One-Dimensional Man (1964) and An Essay on
Liberation (1969), Herbert Marcuse identified a relationship between the
consciousness of the individual and the political, asserting that "radical
change in consciousness is the beginning, the first step in changing
social existence: the emergence of a new Subject." This new citizen, aware
of and actively dealing with "tragedy and romance, archetypal dreams and
anxieties" would be less susceptible to "technical solutions" offered
through contemporary society's homogeneous "happy consciousness." 9
Marcuse's utopian ideas supported other mandates for consciousness
expansion and change and validated the role that personal agency should
play in accomplishing social change.
By 1969, through confrontation and consciousness raising.the sharing and
study of personal experience and history.blacks and women declared
themselves new historical "subjects." Strategizing around separatism and
alliances, their liberation movements developed solidarity with other U.S.
and international movements as global awareness permeated their public
discourse. The gay rights movement, born after the 1969 Stonewall
confrontation, and the American Indian Movement (AIM) also asserted
political and cultural identities through public actions and networking
during the early 19'70s. These new movements focused both on histories of
economic exploitation and systemic cultural domination. The Port Huron
Statement had demanded a less alienated society and claimed a definitive
subjectivity for the generation coming of age in the '60s; these new
movements also sought profound transformation in both socioeconomic and
cultural relations.
Although the New Left and the anti-war movement in the late '60s had close
ties with progressive documentary filmmakers, such as the film collective
Newsreel, their information was disseminated by an extensive underground
press.10 The Left learned to regard the mainstream media, including
commercial television, with distrust. Planning for the 1968 anti-war
protests in Chicago during the Democratic National Convention did include
strategizing around national press coverage, but it was fringe groups like
the Yippies that specifically sought confrontation with and coverage by
commercial media. Forays into network broadcasting, such as the Videofreex
collaboration with CBS on the aborted 1969 Subject to Change project
revealed the industry's contradictory aspirations for new broadcast
programming and reinforced alternative video makers' wariness of corporate
television.
By the early '70s video theorists writing in Radical Software along with
Marxist critics Todd Gitlin and German socialist Hans Magnus Enzensberger
outlined arguments for an alternative, independent electronic media
practice. In 1970, building on ideas developed earlier by Bertolt Brecht
about the corporate structure of radio communications, Enzensberger
critiqued the asymmetry between media producers/transmitters and media
consumers/receivers. The radio and television industries had centralized
and controlled access to the production, programming, and transmission of
media, and limited those individual receivers to participation as
consumers. However there was nothing inherent in the technology that could
not support a more reciprocal communications system such as, for example,
the telephone. Enzensberger concluded that new portable video technology
set the stage for redressing this contradiction:
For the first time in history the media are making possible mass
participation in a social and socialized productive process, the practical
means of which are in the hands of the masses themselves. Such a use of
them would bring the communications media, which up to now have not
deserved the name, into their own. In its present form, equipment like
television or film does not serve communication but prevents it. It allows
no reciprocal action between transmitter and receiver; technically
speaking, it reduces feedback to the lowest point compatible to the
system. 11
Such political analysis was generally overshadowed at the time by the
popular views of media theorist Marshall McLuhan, whose books on the
history of communications technologies were widely discussed by the
national media. McLuhan wrote in Understanding Media (1964) that human
history was a succession of technological extensions of human
communication and perception where each new medium subsumed the previous
technology, sometimes as an art form. Through the inherent speed and
immediacy of electronic video technology, television had become an
extension of the human nervous system. His notion of television's
"flowing, unified perceptual events" bringing about changes in
consciousness spoke directly to the contemporary psychedelic drug
experience as well as to artists experimenting with new electronic
visualizations. His aphorism "the medium is the message" suggested that
consciousness change was brought about primarily through formal changes in
communications technologies rather than the specific content delivered by
those media, which resonated with the concentrated formalist
investigations practiced in the contemporary arts.
Although McLuhan's and others' prescriptions for technological utopia
appeared poetic to many, he popularized the notion of television, a "high
participation" as a generational marker and as a potentially liberatory
information tool in the hands of the first generation that had grown up
with it. McLuhan did not address ways of restructuring a more democratic
telecommunications system, but he inspired others to apply his ideas to
using the new video medium.
The belief that new technologies would inspire and generate the foundation
for a new society was underwritten in part by the American post-war
investment in the grand cultural imperative of science, which had brought
about the international green revolution in agriculture and the space
race. Americans had landed on the moon in 1969, in the "biggest show in
broadcast history." 12 The rational spirit of science resonated in a
series of art and technology exhibitions at major museums. Critic Susan
Sontag articulated this "new sensibility" in the arts:
What gives literature its preeminence is its heavy burden of 'content,'
both reportage and moral judgment...But the model arts of our time are
actually those with much less content, and a much cooler mode of moral
judgment - like music, films, dance, architecture, painting, sculpture.
The practice of these arts.all of which draw profusely, naturally, and
without embarrassment, upon science and technology.are the locus of the
new sensibility. In fact there can be no divorce between science and
technology, on the one hand, and art, on the other, any more than there
can be a divorce between art and the forms of social life. 13
Enthusiasm about new technologies.computers and the information-based
society they might anticipate, and theorizing on human evolution,
cybernetics, human perception, ecology, and transformable
environments.appeared at a time when post-war economic growth generated
confidence and society seemed to be capable of radical change. Through the
writing of McLuhan, Norbert Wiener, Buckminster Fuller, Gregory Bateson
and others 14 the intersection of information and systems theory with
biological models provided intellectual references about communications
and human potential for a generation that had grown up with the increasing
availability of powerful and expressive personal tools.cars, televisions,
transistor radios, 35mm and 8mm movie cameras, electronic musical
instruments, and now video cameras. The mixed metaphors of science,
biology, and revolution, dubbed "cyber-scat" by critic David Antin 15 are
evident in Michael Shamberg's description of "Media-America":
It may be that unless we re-design our television structure, our own
capacity to survive as a species may be diminished. For if the character
of our culture is defined by its dominant communications medium, and that
medium is an overly centralized, low-variety system, then we will succumb
to those biologically unviable characteristics. Fortunately
techno-evolution has spawned new video modes like portable videotape,
cable television, and videocassettes which promise to restore a
media-ecological balance to TV. 16
b. Early video collectives and access to cable and public broadcast TV
The video collectives that formed between 1968-1971 embraced the new
portable video technology and assumptions about the need for cultural and
social change that could include humanely reconfigured technologies. The
individual groups were bonded by the practical need to share technical
resources, and to collaborate on the many tasks required for productions.
Some of the video collectives functioned as communes, with members living
together as well as working regularly with video. Parry Teasdale, a member
of the Videofreex, recalled "the video medium ...was part of the concept
of enjoyment as well as experimentation, as well as art, as well as
politics, all those things." 17 Philip Mallory Jones described his
involvement with the Ithaca video community, initially as a member of a
video-producing commune:
"For me it was a two way thing. There was the individual vision and the
individual maker working with a set of tools to do something. The tools
were something I could get access to one way or another, without a lot of
money. The other concern was the serious business of making revolution.
These things were not separated. These things were a part of everybody
else's concern too." 18
The expansion of these various collectives into an informal national
network of producers with common interests can be traced through the
"Feedback" sections of the early issues of Radical Software, published by
the New York City collective Raindance. The masthead from the first issue
articulates the broad aspirations of the editors' proposed cultural
intervention: "Videotape can be to television what writing is to language.
And television, in turn, has subsumed written language as the globe's
dominant communications medium. Soon accessible VTR [video tape recorder]
systems and videocassettes (even before CATV [cable antenna television]
opens up) will make alternate networks a reality." 19
Manifestos about making video with portapaks and practical user
information were made available through publications like Radical Software
(1970-1976) which reported on video-making initiatives in art, education,
psychotherapies, and community building. Hands-on technical guides like
Spaghetti City Video Manual (1973) and Independent Video (1974)
demystified the technology, encouraging independent problem-solving and
self-sufficiency with video tools. These publications were critical in
promoting a vision of radicalized personal communications, providing an
education for the unsophisticated and curious, and identifying a network
of fellow enthusiasts. Their pragmatic approach to the present and
sometimes utopian visions for the future were shared by others who
examined and challenged the delivery of basic institutional
systems.education, communications, government, health.and envisioned new
grassroots configurations which often centered on new or reconfigured
technologies. The first edition of the widely referenced Whole Earth
Catalog (1969) begins with a section on "understanding whole systems,"
including communications, featuring descriptions of Super-8 filmmaking and
audio synthesizer construction and describing the role that accessing and
understanding tools might play in a new society:
"So far, remotely driven power and glory.as via government, big business,
formal education, church--has succeeded to the point where gross defects
obscure actual gains. In response to this dilemma and to these gains, a
realm of intimate, personal power is developing.power of the individual to
conduct his own education, find his own inspiration, shape his own
environment, and share adventure with whoever is interested. Tools that
aid this process are sought and promoted by the Whole Earth Catalog." 20
Most of the early video collectives developed projects which articulated
production and reception as essential structural components of their
telecommunications visions, reflecting a pragmatic need for new exhibition
venues that would accommodate video makers' aspirations as well as the
period's recognition of the politicization of culture. Specific audience
feedback structures were envisioned which exercised portable video's
capacity to render real time documentations of everyday events, perceptual
investigations, and experimental tech performances. These structural
concerns combined with the imprecision of early video editing initially
overshadowed the production of a singular tape. The work of the early
collectives reveals their acknowledgement of video as social
relations.managing or guiding the attention of viewers, directly engaging
viewers in some aspect of the expressive, performative or production
process, and educating audiences as new users. The often-stated goal of
radicalized communications was further reflected in the early collectives'
strategies for the distribution of information they produced. Tape
libraries, tape exchanges, and mobile services were established, the print
media.journals and books.were considered important adjunct communications
"software," experimental video labs and theaters accommodated interactive
screenings, and transmission using low power broadcast, cable television,
and public broadcast television was explored.
The diverse "cultural data banks" inventoried in the early issues of
Radical Software were maps of the counter cultural imagination of the
time, such as: "Dick Gregory speaking at San Jose State College 11/69" by
Electric Eye; Eric Siegel's tapes made with his Psychedelevision color
video synthesizer; "a tour of el barrio by a Minister of the Young Lord's
Party" and "Gay Liberation Day" by People's Video Theater.21 Enzensberger
recognized the radical potential of video data banks to be a
"memory-in-readiness" for a changing society, and contrasted it with
class-based notions of intellectual "heritage."22 These pioneering
recordings were documentations of the counterculture, by the
counterculture. Like home movies, they were a collection of personal
experiences, but unlike those private records, these tapes were
contributions to an information bank from which anyone could draw, where
no one person was specifically credited with having produced the tape. The
contents of the video libraries posted in Radical Software were not
commodities for sale, but participated in an alternative cultural economy
that valued information exchange for imaging a new society.
The cultural exchange performed through the production/reception
configurations of early collectives' projects varied according to specific
agendas and sites of operation. In New York, Raindance Corporation was the
video movement's self-described research and development organization.
Raindance also was responsible for Radical Software (1970-74), the chief
networking tool and theoretical organ, Guerrilla Television (1971) by
Michael Shamberg, and Video Art: An Anthology (1976), edited by Ira
Schneider and Beryl Korot.
People's Video Theater was founded by Ken Marsh, an artist working with
light shows, and Elliot Glass, a language teacher videotaping his
students' conversations in Spanish-speaking neighborhoods in New York.
They videotaped interviews and events on the streets of New York during
the day and invited interviewees to their loft "theater" in the evening
for screenings and further discussions as part of "activating the
information flow."23 PVT's interactions took the form of community
"mediations" where points of view on a particular issue would be
researched and recorded, then played back for politicians, community
leaders, and neighborhood people as part of the negotiating process. Ken
Marsh regarded video production at the time as an aspect of citizenship.
"The rhetoric that we subscribed to was that 'the people are the
information'... Everybody could do it and everybody should do it. That was
the mandate-pick it up, it's there. Like the power to vote-vote, take
responsibility. Make it and see it."24
Video Free America documented the West Coast counterculture-including
Buckminster Fuller's World Games in Washington state and a yoga festival
in Golden Gate Park-and these tapes were screened to audiences at their
production and exhibition facility in San Francisco. After shooting a
frisbee competition as a parody of television sports coverage, Arthur
Ginsberg had the idea of examining the porn industry, which developed into
an ongoing video veriti installation on love, marriage, and living with
media, Carel and Ferd, a countercultural precursor of the controversial
PBS documentary series An American Family.
In 1972, the Videofreex, a New York City collective, moved to the
Catskills, renamed themselves Media Bus, and began broadcasting live and
recorded programming each week over a low power, pirate TV station to
their tiny community in Lanesville, New York. Visitors interested in using
their editing system or viewing tapes from their extensive library were
welcomed at their communal home, Maple Tree Farm. Media Bus travelled
around New York state giving workshops in live and recorded video
production for artists, educators, and civic officials.
Another seminal group formed around experimental filmmaker and dancer
Shirley Clarke; her T.P. Video Space Troupe (NY) produced interactive
exercises and events using video, dance, and performance, which served as
a video training model. One of Clarke's exercises, with local social
service projects and screened their sometimes controversial a sunrise
project, concluded when participants reconvened at her Chelsea Hotel
rooftop apartment at sunrise to replay the evening's portapak
documentation of New York's nightlife. A little further west, the Ithaca
video commune collaborated programming in bars and bookstores, generating
discussion about local and national issues as well as educating local
audiences to the possibilities of portable video. Philip Mallory Jones and
others eventually initiated the Ithaca Video Festival, the first touring
video festival (1974-1984) and an important showcase for early video art
and documentary.
At Antioch College in Ohio an active national tape exchange was maintained
by students through their Community Media Center. At the Antioch Free
Library people were welcome to borrow tapes or add their own tapes to the
collection. Through the college's alternating semesters of work and school
and its new program in communications, media students became actively
involved in planning and establishing public access cable operations all
over the country.
Alongside the inspiration of the portapak, the burgeoning cable television
industry was heralded as a promising technological development by artists
writing in Radical Software, as well as community activists, and urban
policy planners. Portable video technology could introduce
non-professional people to production, and cable television companies
which contracted with individual municipalities could use their local
systems to disseminate citizen-generated and community-responsive
programming. Public access provisions were understood as incentives to
potential municipal clients by cable companies, anxious to expand into new
markets in the early '70s, and as a negotiated resource in exchange for
the companies receiving access to municipal infrastructures (utility
poles, right-of-way to lay cable) by public policy planners and community
media activists. Citizens' access to cable TV could begin to develop the
media voices for those largely unrepresented by commercial television, as
well as encourage cultural consumers to become cultural producers.
In a 1970 issue of The Nation, Ralph Lee Smith chronicled the competition
among broadcast TV, cable TV, and the telephone companies for a "wired
nation." Smith cited post-war federal commitment to building the
interstate highway system as a precedent for mandating similar planning in
the public interest for the development of an "electronic highway" in the
'70s. Smith's prescient article concluded:
"It is hard to assign a dollar value to many or most of the educational,
cultural, recreational, social and political benefits that the nation
would receive from a national communications highway. It is easier to
assert the negative-that the nation probably cannot afford not to build
it...It cannot be assumed that all the social effects of the cable will be
good. For example...the cable will make it less and less necessary for the
more affluent population of the suburbs to enter the city, either for work
or recreation. Lack of concern and alienation could easily deepen, with
effects that could cancel the benefits of community expression that the
cable will bring to inner-city neighborhoods. At the very least, such
dangerous possibilities must be foreseen, and the educational potential of
the cable itself must be strongly marshaled to meet them..."25
The "benefits of community expression" cited by Smith are echoed in
"Minority Cable Report," written for Televisions magazine. Roger Newell
argued for minorities' stake in the cable business and community projects
that would keep the public informed and also "operationally involved." He
pointed out that in the findings of the 1968 National Advisory Commission
on Civil Disorder (the Kerner Commission), "Blacks interviewed by
investigators for the commission felt that the media could not be trusted
to present the true story of conditions that led to the riots."
Furthermore, "proponents of the use of cable in minority communities saw
it as the clear alternative to commercial broadcasting ... Cable gives us
a second-and perhaps last-chance to determine whether television can be
used to teach, to inspire, to change humans' lives for the better. The
task will be demanding and expensive."26
The movement to develop public access to cable in the United States
initially centered around New York University's Alternative Media Center
(AMC) and George Stoney, who had directed the Canadian National Film
Board's Challenge for Change from 1968-1970, a project which encouraged
"community animation" by training people to use media to represent
themselves and local issues to government agencies. Dorothy Henaut and
Bonnie Klein describe the investment of citizens participating in
Challenge for Change in the first issue of Radical Software:
"Half-inch video allows complete control of the media by the people of a
community. They can use the camera to view themselves and their
neighborhood with a new and more perceptive eye; they can do interviews
and ask the questions more pertinent to them; they can record discussions;
they can edit tapes designed to carry a particular message to a particular
audience-an audience they have chosen and invited themselves." 27
Stoney worked with other video activists taking portapaks into New York
City neighborhoods, strategizing with city officials, federal regulators
and cable companies, and speaking out at public hearings about the need to
establish diversity of programming voices in order to prevent cable from
becoming a copy of commercial broadcasting. In 1970 Stoney and Red Burns
founded the Alternate Media Center at New York University with support
from the Markle Foundation and, shortly thereafter, the National Endowment
for the Arts, to train organizers to work with interested community
groups, cable companies, and city governments to develop public access to
cable TV around the country. Descriptions of tapes made by Alternate Media
Center interns in Washington Heights, one of the first neighborhoods in
Manhattan to be cabled, indicate their commitment to process-oriented
productions and the viability of community participation in cable
television:
Tape 190: Black Response to Riots 9/25/71. Cabled: Teleprompter, Sept 14,
16, 18. Because of an article in the NY Times about Dominican and black
gangs fighting, Joel went up to 164th St. and Amsterdam Ave. to see if
videotape could be used in any way to help in this situation possibly by
using tape to get information to both sides, possibly putting this
information on public access to bring the communities' attention to this
incident. It was the first time Joel had gone out alone, so he gave the
mike to the people because he had no partner to take sound. At the
beginning, Joel asked questions, but then the people just started relating
to each other and totally ignored Joel. He felt they really wanted to get
something out and had a strong need to speak. He played the tape back for
the people through the camera and they dug it...The stereotyped image of a
Black voice is destroyed by the information on the tape showing the
difference of views. People talk to each other as well as to the camera.
28
In 1972 the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), under the leadership
of Nicholas Johnson, issued regulations which required every cable system
with 3,500 or more subscribers to originate local programming and to
provide one dedicated, non-commercial public access channel, available
without charge at all times on a first-come, first-served,
non-discriminatory basis to carry that programming. At that time the cable
industry had a 7% penetration of U.S. households. This legislation
provided the groundwork from which citizens, municipalities, or cable
companies could initiate public access programming, and establish
equipment and training resource centers all over the country.
Cable access facilities typically supported local production by providing
consumer video equipment, training, and programming access to cable
channels; they were funded primarily by mandated fees paid by cable
companies to cities. In 1976 former AMC interns established the National
Federation for Local Cable Programmers (NFLCP), an umbrella organization
whose newsletters and conferences generated communication and ongoing
education within the growing number of centers. The NFLCP continued to
support citizens, municipalities and cable companies interested in
initiating public access to cable facilities around the country, and their
legislative and grass roots advocacy impacted significantly on national
communications legislation throughout the decade. By 1986 there were over
1,200 public access facilities in the United States, actively supporting
productions and programming by the public on cable TV. 29
Although cable could reach potentially large television audiences, not all
communities were cabled. And because cable companies charged viewers, many
households chose not to subscribe. Local public television stations were
also potential distribution outlets for video producers. The stand-alone
time base corrector appeared on the market in 1973; by stabilizing the
signal of 1/2" open reel tapes, it effectively ended technological
objections to broadcasting portable video. As video began to replace film
for news productions, independents using portable video equipment began
calling for more diversity in points of view, challenging existing union
policies as well as programming policies. Video groups began working with
local PBS stations-Portable Channel with WXXI in Rochester (New York) and
University Community Video with KTCA in Minneapolis-to produce news and
documentaries specifically for local broadcast audiences. Technical
developments-portability, color video, 3/4" U-matic cassette format, CMX
computer video editing-all enhanced video production throughout the decade
while raising a complex of issues around independents' access to new
technologies and broadcast TV's audiences.
Public libraries were pioneers of community video activity-extending their
mission by loaning out portapaks, collecting and screening tapes, and
advocating for public access to cable. Public libraries in Port
Washington, the Cattaraugus-Chautauqua Public Library in Jamestown, and
Donnell Library in New York City, became notable sites for videotape
production and dissemination. Port Washington Public Library's video
director Walter Dale asked the questions: "Could the library maintain in
the area of video those qualities it fought for in print; namely, the
right to read all views and expressions? Could the library become a true
catalyst for the free market place of visual as well as printed
expressions?" 30 To Dale, the answer was yes.
Reflecting back on the formative period (1968-1973) both technological
utopians and social historians testified to an inspired engagement with
the possibilities of a new society. Hans Magnus Enzensberger commented on
1968, when "... utopian thinking seemed to meet the material conditions
for its own realization. Liberation had ceased to be a mere wishful
thought. It appeared to be a real possibility." 31 Videofreex member Parry
Teasdale recalled the imperative to make a commitment: "Without
understanding the dynamics of the war in Vietnam and what that did to
society; I don't think you can understand video ... it spawned the
technology and it created the necessary groundwork for an adversarial
relationship within the society that defined sides so clearly that people
could choose and choose righteously to be a part of something." 32 Ralph
Lee Smith looked back on his first encounter with advocates for public
access cable TV: "Those people were.applying not just technology but
appropriate technology. That is to say they were adopting enough of the
technology, at a level of expression which was just adequate to do the job
and no more, to achieve what they wanted to achieve...They were way ahead
of their time." 33 Woody Vasulka recalled a time when many welcomed, "A
new society that would be based on a new model ... a drive for personal
enlightenment ... the possibility of transcendence through image as an
actual machine-made evocation ... Some thought of this as a healing
process or ... a restructuring of one's consciousness." 34
Despite the limits to change eventually encountered by the early video
practitioners, widespread questioning of fundamental ideological and
lifestyle choices did inspire the invention of experimental community
structures and economies founded on the use value of media production.
Such emphatic commitments focused a radical subjectivity which identified
itself as an alternative to the "alienated" and spiritually bankrupt
bureaucratic mainstream. Collectives and networked individuals invented
new cultural forms and nourished an energy which focused, invigorated, and
sustained productive social scenes. Existing institutions-television
networks, museums, schools, libraries-were challenged to respond to the
interests and needs of their audiences, markets, and users. Optimistic
about the role the new media technology could play in a new society, these
early video tribes committed themselves to the performance of a radically
de-centralized and potentially more democratic electronic communication
practice. This alternative vision of decentralized media culture(s) was
funded starting in the early '70s as not-for-profit artists projects,
artist-run spaces, video access centers, and public access cable
facilities by federal, state and local arts councils, private foundations,
public television and cable companies.
c. Invisible histories- reconstructing a picture of decentralized media
practice
Few of the tapes from the immense body of work produced by these early
collectives and access projects have been restored and are available
today. Most open reel tapes from this period are in desperate need of
preservation. Archivist Roger House recently described "Inside Bed-Stuy,"
one of the first black-produced community access shows (1968) as revealing
"a community in the midst of trying to speak to itself, articulate its
needs, appreciate its creativity, and urge its residents to rise to the
challenges of the times." He commented on "how healthy it was to see
average people of all ages, in splendid plainness of speech and
appearance, speaking out on the Vietnam war, unemployment, urban blight,
black capitalism, and black power." 35 Much research is needed to
identify, recover, and evaluate a comprehensive history of the alternative
video culture from this period.
Videotaped documentation of community "process" set out to establish a
media vocabulary for a new way of speaking in American society. Why have
so many of these tapes been relegated to the back shelves of social and
educational institutions and producers' attics? Part of the answer lies in
the social and institutional dynamics of any cultural scene. Almost any
cultural production, whether destined for a museum or a living room via
public access cable, depends on intersecting social and institutional
systems that construct the motivation for the work's production, and the
distribution or exhibition vehicle which connects it with an audience, all
contributing to its value and meaning. In working to establish a
decentralized media practice that had more to do with practice and process
than product, especially in the early '70s, producers consciously
positioned themselves on the cultural margins. Many of these early
initiatives were undertaken by members of minority groups or
geographically isolated communities, which had never established cultural
currency outside their local scenes.
Many of these early communications projects were intended to be
narrow-casted to specific audiences, and conceived essentially to
intersect with locally constructed social and cultural territory. Are
these challenges to existing limitations imposed by class, race, age, and
gender less legible today? Contemporary viewers may require a context
explaining the previous generation.s commitment to process, lack of
narrative closure, and rough editing.
Cultural theorist Fredric Jameson claimed at the end of the '70s:
"Authentic cultural creation is dependent for its existence on authentic
collective life, on the vitality of the 'organic' social group in whatever
form...[The] only authentic cultural production today has seemed to be
that which can draw on the collective experience of marginal pockets of
the social life of the world system...and this production is possible only
to the degree to which these forms of collective life or collective
solidarity have not yet been fully penetrated by the market and by the
commodity system." 36
Jameson cites women's literature, black literature, and British working
class rock as examples of this authentic collective life, but the
alternative video scenes efforts to realize a new citizen-based,
locally-responsive media culture across the United States at the time
would also qualify.
2. Video art practice and its interpretive strategies
"A few years ago Jonas Mekas closed a review of a show of videotapes with
an aphorism to the effect that film is an art but video is a god. I
coupled the remark, somehow, with another, of Ezra Pound's; that he
understood religion to be "just one more unsuccessful attempt to
popularize art." Recently though I have sensed a determination on the part
of video artists to get down to the work of inventing their art, and
corroborating their faith in good works...A large part of that work of
invention is, I take it, to understand what video is." .Hollis Frampton 37
"Perceptual and structural changes...have to go with relevance rather than
forms. And the sense of a new relevance is the aspect that quickly fades.
Once a perceptual change is made, one does not look at it but uses it to
see the world. It is only visible at the point of recognition of the
change. After that, we are changed by it but have also absorbed it. The
impossibility of reclaiming the volitivity of perceptual change leaves art
historical explanations to pick the bones of dead forms. In this sense,
all art dies with time and is impermanent whether it continues to exist as
an object or not." .Robert Morris 38
a. Post-minimalist perceptual relevance
Although they often remarked on the pleasure of working in aesthetic
territory that was open to new gestures and a new critical vocabulary, the
first artists to explore new video technology in the late '60s were
educated through minimalism's measured structures and procedures and
shared late modernism's investment of the "real" in the materials of art
making. The mid-'60s saw a shift if not a crisis in contemporary modern
art predicated on a radical reassessment of aesthetic foundations and a
politicized evaluation of the institutional delivery system for art.
Critic Clement Greenberg's reigning tenets of post-war modernism argued
that art was, "An escape from ideas, which were infecting the arts with
the ideological struggles of society," and that, in contemporary art, "A
new and greater emphasis upon form...involved the assertion of the arts as
independent vocations, disciplines, and crafts, absolutely autonomous, and
entitled to respect for their own sakes..." 39 This description of an art
object, whose integrity was specific to a discipline and which was
intended to be appreciated in isolation from the complex social and
cultural contexts of its making, had begun to be challenged in the late
'50s. The multi-disciplinary, participatory nature of Happenings, the
invasion of mass media via parody in Pop Art, and the aberrant humor of
"intermedia" Fluxus projects fractured audience expectations of what had
been considered normative conditions for art making. While many modernist
artists began the '70s by investigating the "essential" properties of
video, by the end of the decade the confluence of "high" and "low" art
forms, the performance of radical subjectivities, and shifting attitudes
toward cinema, television and narrative would set in motion competing
cultural agendas for video-makers.
By the mid-'60s painters, sculptors, filmmakers, musicians, and dancers
were not only embracing interdisciplinary work but also contributing
important critical perspectives, articulating their own working
assumptions in major art journals like Artforum. Fluxus artist Dick
Higgins argued in 1965 for the "populism" and "dialogue" of "intermedia"
and against "the concept of the pure medium, the painting or precious
object of any kind." 40 Conceptual art, articulated by artists like Sol
LeWitt, minimized the importance of objecthood altogether in the aesthetic
exercise. Participating in this debate critic Michael Fried wrote in 1967
that, "In previous [modern] art what is to be had from the work is located
strictly within it," and the art object should occupy a privileged
meditative space. He objected to the "degenerative theatricality" of new
process-oriented works of art that acknowledged the viewer and were
"concerned with the actual circumstances in which the beholder encounters
work." 41 However other critics, such as Annette Michelson, heralded
post-minimalism for acknowledging "temporality as the condition or medium
of human cognition and aesthetic experience." 42 And Lizzie Borden pointed
out that the value of considering the perceptual phenomenology of an art
event "underline[d] its actual way of working with the viewer" which
amounted to the "liberation of the art object from the idealization of
critical theory." 43
Sculptor, performer, and sometime video-maker Robert Morris traced the
shift from his early minimalist project of describing objecthood to a
post-minimalist articulation of the new "landscape" of material and
perceptual processes:
"What was relevant to the '60s was the necessity of reconstituting the
object as art. Objects were an obvious first step away from illusionism,
allusion and metaphor... [However] object making has now given way to an
attention to substance...substances in many states-from chunks, to
particles, to slime, to whatever...Alongside this approach is chance,
contingency, indeterminacy-in short, the entire area of process...This
reclamation of process refocuses art as an energy driving to change
perception...What is revealed is that art itself is an activity of change,
of disorientation and shift, of violent discontinuity and mutability, of
the willingness for confusion even in the service of discovering new
perceptual modes." 44
This attention to the process of working with specific materials and art
making as a way of changing perception itself constituted "a dialectic
between structure and meaning which is...sensitive to its own needs in its
realization." 45 This phenomenological dialogue was articulated through an
essentially formal vocabulary that attempted to focus precise attention on
fundamental structures and procedures involved in producing work, more
akin to science than poetics. Experimental filmmaker Paul Sharits
described the critical vocabulary brought to bear on non-narrative film of
the '60s, a way of speaking about work which was adopted by the early
video makers:
It is noteworthy that during the 1950s and 1960s a relatively successful
vocabulary ("formalism") was employed by critics of painting and
sculpture. It was a mode which by-passed the artists' intentions,
dismissed "poetic" interpretations, and focused on apt descriptions of the
art object; the aim was a certain discrete "objectivity." 46
Experimental film, like sculpture and painting, had been grounded in
modernism's materials-based formal vocabulary and was strictly
anti-illusionist (vis a vis the Hollywood narrative), and video makers
would assume this bias for their camera-based medium as well. Filmmaker
Malcolm LeGrice commented on experimental film's investment in the
descriptive reality of physical materials and viewers' perception in 1977:
"The historical development of abstract and formal cinema ... seeks to be
'realist' in the material sense. It does not imitate or represent reality,
nor create spurious illusions of times, places and lives which engage the
spectator in a vicarious substitute for his own reality." 47
Artists and critics were re-examining fundamental assumptions about modern
art which for decades had been isolated within a personal contemplative
moment and removed from popular culture and mass media. Hermine Freed
remarked:
"Just when pure formalism had run its course; just when it became
politically embarrassing to make objects, but ludicrous to make nothing;
just when many artists were doing performance work but had nowhere to
perform, or felt the need to keep a record of their performance;...just
when it became clear that TV communicates more information to more people
than large walls do; just when we understood that in order to define space
it is necessary to encompass time, just when many established ideas in
other disciplines were being questioned and new models were proposed, just
then the portapak became available." 48
b. Immediacy, process, feedback
In step with late modernism's imperative to explore the essential
properties of materials, video makers were initially rhapsodic about the
inherent properties of the medium, such as immediacy and real time
feedback. Compared to film, videotape was inexpensive, immediate, and
recyclable like audiotape. Editing videotape between 1968-1971 was
primitive; aesthetic strategies and narrative constructions that relied on
precise editing emerged only with the development of more sophisticated
editing equipment and eventually access programs available through media
art centers, TV labs, and public access centers. During this early period,
the simultaneous recording and exhibition of events in "real time" or the
real time "synthesis" of images using analog electronic instruments
dictated the structure of the work. Early tapes using these time-based
instruments foregrounded duration itself, along with the mapping of
attention over time, and relationships between space/time and sound/time.
Critic David Antin discussed at length early video makers' calculated
denial of the attentional framework, or "money metric," of television. 49
Joanna Gill, writing for the Rockefeller Foundation in 1975, described
these early video works as "information/perception pieces," projects
determined to expand the limits of viewers' ability to perceive themselves
in video-mediated environments. 50
The mapping of perceptual, social and/or technological "processes" was
valorized above the tape as an art "product." Early video projects often
took the form of installations-configuring cameras, monitors, and/or
recording decks with immediate or delayed playback, a common adaptation of
an open reel tape recorder accomplished by creating a tape loop between
the record and playback heads on one or more decks. Wipe Cycle, a
multi-monitor installation by Ira Schneider and Frank Gillette, part of
Howard Wise's historic 1969 exhibition TV as a Creative Medium, featured
an 8-second tape loop whereby people entering the gallery encountered
delayed images of their own arrival played back to them on a bank of
monitors. The artists described the installation as an "information
strobe" in which "the most important thing was the notion of information
presentation, and the notion of the integration of the audience into the
information." 51 Antin, writing about this installation said that "what is
attempted is the conversion (liberation) of an audience (receiver) into an
actor (transmitter)." 52
Other artists pursued these ideas throughout the decade. Dan Graham, for
example, structured "consciousness projections" which featured technical
and human feedback and delay systems in which the audience could explore
its apprehension of present and past time, subjective and objective
information. Graham wrote:
"Video is a present time medium. Its image can be simultaneous with its
perception by/of its audience (it can be the image of its audience
perceiving).video feeds back indigenous data in the immediate,
present-time environment or connects parallel time/space continua. 53
Through the use of videotape feedback and tape delay the performer and the
audience, the perceiver and his process of perception, are linked, or
co-identified. The difference between intention and actual behaviour is
fed back on the monitor and immediately influences the observer's future
intentions and behaviour. By linking perception of exterior behaviour and
its interior, mental perception, an observer's 'self', like a topological
moebius strip, can be apparently without 'inside' or 'outside.'" 54
Video artists exploited the phenomenon of video "feedback," a specific
artifact of video tools, accomplished by pointing a video camera at a
monitor which produces an infinite tunnelling or mirroring effect. Besides
being an easily produced and mesmerizing psychedelic effect, feedback
expressed an essential concept in information systems theory. The feedback
effect was a powerful metaphor for the ability of a self-monitoring
information system to function as an organic or self-regulating physical
system. It was invoked by artists in investigations of duration,
information exchange and modification, the phenomenology of self and the
everyday, and relationships with audiences. Strategies using information
feedback were also employed by community activists interested in models of
participatory social mediation and political advocacy where citizens could
represent themselves and deliver their messages as a kind of extended
dialogue with public officials on video, the image currency of the time.
The portability and unity of image and sound represented by the portapak
meant that the video cameraperson could approach documentation in terms of
his or her ability to enter into a relational process with a constantly
evolving situation. Bob Devine commented on how the attention of the
cameraperson constructed the event:
"There are qualities which distinguish the sort of tape in which resonance
or receptivity predominates. The takes tend to be unbroken. The point of
view has the unity of a single continuous interactive perspective. The
camera moves through and among; it does not define space with fronts,
backs, sides or even frame-edges, but instead "occupies" the interior of
the space and presents a structural awareness of that interior. The camera
is distractible; it reacts, is drawn through attention to particular
features or interactions. The tape represents a record of the focus of
receptive attention in the taping context. Attention is edited in
real-time." 55
c. The electronic material of video and the development of tools
Artists working directly with the technologically charged environment of
this time-based medium generated a discourse celebrating the particular
processes of electronic image-construction. The video camera transforms
light and sound information into the video and audio signals as waveform,
frequency and voltage, which can be displayed on a cathode ray tube-a
television monitor-or magnetically encoded and stored on videotape. Woody
and Steina Vasulka articulated their video project in 1975 as primarily a
"didactic" one, an inquiry into developing a "vocabulary" of electronic
procedures unique to the construction of a "time/energy object." 56 Other
artists also dedicated aesthetic and scientific research into interfaced
electronic tools, anticipating what would be the television industry's
eventual menu of "special effects." In the early 1970s, artists invented
this imaging as a fundamental electronic lexicon, long before it became a
pre-programmed stylistic embellishment.
By 1978, Woody Vasulka had broadened his discussion of electronic image
vocabulary to include digital as well as analog codes.
"I want to point to the primary level of codes, notably the binary code
operation, as a principle of imaging and image processing. This may
require accepting and incorporating this primitive structure (the binary
code) into our views of literacy, in the form of binary language, in order
to maintain communication with the primary materials at all levels and
from any distance. The dramatic moment of the transformation into a binary
code of energy events in time, as they may be derived from light, or the
molecular communication of sound, or from a force field, gravity, or other
physical initiation, has to be realized, in order to appreciate the power
of the organization and transformation of a code." 57
Throughout this period, artists, usually in conjunction with independent
engineers, modified and invented video "instruments" or imaging tools,
making possible the construction of new video and audio systems shaped by
their individual aesthetic agendas. Throughout the late '60s, Experiments
in Art and Technology (EAT) celebrated collaborations between visual and
sound artists and scientists in a number of exhibitions, seeking to
integrate new ideas in technology with contemporary culture. Labs and
studios designed specifically to explore electronic imaging and facilitate
collaborations between video artists and engineers included the National
Center for Experiments in Television at KQED in San Francisco, the
Television Lab at WNET in New York, the Experimental Television Center in
Binghamton and later Owego, New York, the studios at the University of
Illinois at Chicago Circle, and the School of the Art Institute of
Chicago. 58
One aesthetic and technical issue carried over from music and experimental
film that provoked the interest of early video makers was the structural
relationship between electronic sound and image production. Nam June
Paik's experimentation with the electromagnetic parameters of television
and instrument design were extensions of his earlier activity in
avant-garde music. Paik's 1963 Fluxus modifications of television sets
with powerful magnets and his TV bra for cellist Charlotte Moorman were
ironic gestures, exposing television's electronic materiality and toying
with audience expectations around the TV set as an everyday site for
Americans. meditation and cultural reception. He had earlier attacked and
compromised pianos as American icons of German culture. In 1969 with
engineer Shuya Abe, Paik pioneered the construction of the Paik-Abe video
synthesizer, an instrument which enabled an artist to add color to the
standard black and white video image. In the production of video, both
sound and image are determined by the same fundamental analog electronic
processes. Modular audio synthesizers, developed in the early '60s by
Robert Moog and Don Buchla, were models for much of the video synthesizer
development. Video artists' explorations into the physical materiality
underlying visual, aural, and cognitive phenomena and into the fundamental
structuring of sound and image through mathematical algorithms and machine
systems, occupied common territory with aesthetic inquiries in music,
experimental film, and sculpture at this time.
d. Video and performance and its audience
If video was celebrated by late '60s artists for its immediacy and ability
to function within or capture a sense of real time, so too was performance
art a "situation" or gesture which invigorated the present. Both video
making and performance supported the investigation of the everyday, the
vernacular, the conditions of active perception and information gathering
in various settings. Portable video, with its immediate playback, as well
as performance, foregrounded the producer/performer and his or her
negotiation of a theatrical moment, and could be resituated in the streets
or the studio, removed from a gallery setting. Both video and performance
raised questions about the function of art at a time when modernism's
validation of the transcendent aesthetic experience was challenged by
artists. Barbara Rose commenting on the politics of art in 1969 observed:
"The real change is not in forms of art, but in the function of art and
the role of the artist in society, which poses an absolute threat to the
existence of critical authority." 59
Performance art posited the aesthetic gesture in the body of the artist,
with his or her personal tools, in the present tense, and video could
function as one of those personal tools or as a recording instrument for
documenting the situation. The subjectivity of the artist and/or the
expectations of the audience could be investigated through performance.
Vito Acconci, whose early work as a poet involved words and the page as
space, remarked that his involvement with performance was a shift away
from the material to understanding the self as an instrument and "an agent
which attends to it, the world, out there." 60
Performance art had often functioned historically as a transgressive
gesture. With its postwar experimental roots in the aleatory music of John
Cage, who advocated the listener's focused "learning" so that "the hearing
of the piece is his own action," 61 and in paradoxical Fluxus events,
which embraced boredom in combination with excitement to "enrich the
experiential world of our spectators, our co-conspirators," 62 performance
art in the '60s and '70s undermined audiences' cultural habits and
expectations. It also shared with multi-media happenings, "In a real, not
an ideological way, a protest against museum conceptions of art-preserved
and cherished." 63 Performance art clearly participated in an economic
critique of the art establishment's investments in objects through its
refusal to be commodified. Video installations, performance
documentations, and process-oriented recordings at the time, shared with
performance art an accommodation of chance events. As unedited
documentation of live events, with grainy black and white images of
unknown stability, video also had questionable archival, and therefore
investment, value within the art market.
Performance assumes a relationship with a local audience, which shares to
some degree in the risk-taking or experimental nature of performance work.
Writer and artist Liza Bear cited the "heightened awareness of audience as
an intrinsic element of the whole performing situation." 64 Vito Acconci's
work in particular functioned as a kind of encyclopedic study of
relationships constructed between the performer and his/her audience
through the video monitor. His repertoire of entertaining, erotic, and
threatening overtures catalogued the narcissism, seduction, and
risk-taking in personal theater and its proto-narrative gestures by
directly engaging the viewer in the construction of attentional needs. By
exposing his intentions within his performances, he begged the audience's
consideration of their own intentions and unstated assumptions. Acconci
has written about the intimacy involved with video performance and its
"fertile ground for relationship." 65
At the same time that artists were venturing structural studies of video
performance and measures of intimacy, feminists drew on the intimacy of
shared life and art experiences generated through conscious-raising groups
and women-centered cultural scenes. Concentrating on the body as a
performance vehicle as well as critiquing its representation in mass media
and art history, feminist artists such as Hermine Freed, Joan Jonas,
Martha Rosler, and Linda Montano, among others, used video and performance
to assert and focus female presence and raise issues of gender and
subjectivity in art. The invigorated confidence of women as performers and
producers, their ambivalence about being the object of desire before the
lens or audience, and their politicized relationship to audiences and
institutional venues developed into a vital and complex discourse through
video and other camera-based media like photography and film. Having
attended the second Women's Video Festival in New York, reviewer Pat
Sullivan offered her experience as audience member: "The striking feature
of the festival was the revival of communal viewing...Being puzzled or
amused or even angered by the responses of the other viewers forced me to
search on the screen or in my mind for the origins of my own reactions."
66
Tthe video project's relationship to its audience was assumed to be a
structural aspect of work that expressed a range of radical subjective
assertions. The early feminist insight that both cultural production and
viewer reception were constructed according to gender was eventually
extended to other "differences" such as class, race, and ethnicity.
Community media activists worked to transform citizens from passive
television consumers into active video producers who would reveal specific
local agendas. Artists investigated the phenomenology of viewers'
attention in a variety of performative situations which included
installations of electronic instruments as well as personal gestures. And
the counter-cultural "longing for group experiences that would transcend
the limits of the individual ego...a craving for a sort of public love, a
communal self-determination," 67 was reflected in part by viewers'
openness to the experience of duration through largely unedited veriti
video documentation.
The investigation of phenomenological and social relations mediated by
video also inevitably introduced television, a paradoxically intimate and
remote technology located in the home. Television's intimacy with audience
was taken up in diverse west coast work by William Wegman, Ilene Segalove,
Ant Farm and T.R. Uthco. In The Eternal Frame (1976) Ant Farm and
T.R.Uthco re-enacted the media spectacle of the Kennedy assassination and
revealed "inscribed audiences," 68 members of the general public who had
originally witnessed television's public channeling of the horror and
intimate details of the Kennedy assassination and who now inadvertently
found themselves in the middle of public performances recorded in the
streets of Dallas and San Francisco. The comments of those audiences
confirmed the pseudo-familiality of the events; the audiences became
un-alienated partners in an ironic disassembling of the authority of the
news media.
The tourists standing in Dealey Plaza in 1976 may have been unwitting
cultural collaborators, but, like the New York audiences for video and
performance events, they were assumed to be important receivers of video
by this first generation of video artists. Liza Bear, writing about
performance in Avalanche in 1974, stated: "Part of content was an
articulation of ... the audience's knowledge, beliefs, expectations of the
artist in question ... and it was a consciousness of the audience as
people who've come to see a particular artists' work, as people who know
or work within the art context, and also, in some cases, a consciousness
of the limitations of that context." 69 Critic Peggy Gale concluded that
by "shifting away from the marketplace and the production of a precious
object ... the role of the audience was redefined to play a part in the
completion of the work through their response and feedback: the video
model of simultaneous record and presentation, objectification and
immediacy, was in effect reiterated." 70
e. Video and the construction of "reality"
Artists explored the immediacy and performative possibilities of video,
producing work that legitimized new political and cultural assertions
about subjective, lived experience and extended to audiences a considered
and responsive function. These critical intimacies and ideological
realities as they were mapped out through the video art and alternative
media culture, however, were largely antithetical to the commodified
"reality" portrayed through mass culture. Although the spectacle of
television appealed to the intimate wants and desires of its audience or
market, as Enzensberger elaborated, the relationship proffered through
television inevitably resulted in a false intimacy: "Consumption as
spectacle contains the promise that want will disappear. The deceptive,
brutal, and obscene features of this festival derive from the fact that
there can be no question of a real fulfillment of its promise...Trickery
on such a scale is only conceivable if based on mass need." 71
Viewers' expectations of video art were complicated by their experiences
living with television. That experience was described clearly at the end
of the decade by Dan Graham:
"TV gains much of its effect from the fact that it appears to depict a
world which is immediately and fully present. The viewer assumes that the
TV image is both immediate and contiguous as to time with the shared
social time and parallel "real world" of its perceivers-even when that may
not be the case. This physical immediacy produces in the viewer(s) a sense
of psychological intimacy where people on TV and events appear to directly
address him or her." 72
The capacity of camera-based work to signify truthfulness, to claim to
witness or represent reality, results in its legibility to many viewers as
an "essential" and confirming realism. The documentary form, which
introduces images and sounds as evidence, was embraced by many women and
other previously marginalized producers working with video in the '70s, in
part because seeing new images of self was undeniably powerful and
evidenced the production of a new version of the real. At the same time,
documentary representation was challenged by women and others as
inevitably a product of a specifically focused lens and ideology, with
edited inclusions, omissions, and censorships. 73
Contending ideas about the phenomenological, political, and subjective
constructions of reality dominated cultural debate at the end of decade.
New developments in narrative film theory, feminist theory, and the
semiotics of image-making repositioned late '70s and early '80s art making
within an emerging discourse that focused on the construction of
subjectivity through the signifying practices of mass media, in which
ideology was transacted through commodified and reproducible images. These
cultural shifts, generally regarded as postmodern, forced a re-evaluation
of critical strategies for artists in creating video "texts."
In the early '70s video makers articulated their opposition to
television's codes and one-way distribution system, evident in assertions
such as "VT is not TV," and exhibitions at new artists' centers titled "No
TV," "Alternative TV," "Process TV," and "Natural TV." 74 The independent
network at the end of the decade included media collectives, artists-run
media centers, public access organizations, and artist collaborations with
public television, and remained a vital alternative to corporate
television, however marginalized those cultural scenes. Whether
intentionally oppositional or mainstream, video artists, public access
producers, and independent documentarians worked with technologies and
cultural codes shared in part by the dominant communications media that in
the United States, though not in all countries, was primarily a commercial
venture. Independent work intended for television would inevitably be
evaluated in terms of its marketing value, which would shadow its other
intentions or merits. In the late '70s video artists and independent
producers negotiated the contradictory possibilities of broadcast
television's great visibility and potential censorship. David Antin
pointed out that an artist's videotape ended, not when it was time for a
commercial, but when the artist's intention was accomplished. 75
A decade of producing work, exploring relationships with audiences, and
nurturing a viable alternative media infrastructure developed into a video
cultural discourse which framed the capacity of a videotape to represent
its maker's access to production technologies, to reveal its maker's
strategies for approximating or constructing the "real," and to engage a
performative interaction with an anticipated audience. Alternative video
makers were able to map out diverse intentions as they developed modes of
address specific to different audiences-the art world, public television,
local community media. The video maker's various strategies-attentional,
representational, formal, performative-for articulating an art or
communications event remained a choice, and always measured the critical
distance between the dominant language of commercial media and the video
maker's independent voice.
3. Emergence of public funding
"Artists with electronic skill have transformed old TV sets into the
dazzling 'light machines' that have appeared in galleries and museums, and
some have developed video colorizers and synthesizers which permit
electronic "painting." A relative few have penetrated the engineers'
citadels of broadcast television to create experimental videotapes with
the full palette of the switching consoles. A larger number, working since
1967 with half-inch portable video systems from Japan, have explored the
potential of videotape to reach out and open circuits of communication
within a variety of small communities-giving substance to attitudes and
concerns which monolithic broadcast television has ignored to a point of
near obliteration ... This new area of Council [NYSCA] involvement
suggests the extraordinary potential of the medium still to be explored as
we go forward into tomorrow's wired nation.".Russell Connor 76
a. From collectives and community media to video access centers, public
access centers, and public television labs
In the decade following the introduction of the portapak, video art and
documentary practice developed within an alternative media infrastructure
nurtured by the parallel growth of public arts funding. Early video makers
had found that keeping up with the quickly evolving, high-end consumer
tools of electronic media was expensive, even when resources were shared.
Early video arts funding supported proposals by artists and collectives,
and developed by the mid-'70s into funding programs for both individual
artists and a nationwide system of regional media arts centers, some of
which had evolved out of the early collectives.
By the late 1960s public funding for experimental and documentary film had
been established through the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the
New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA). Gerd Stern, an artist and
early NYSCA staff consultant, outlined the rationale for NYSCA's early
commitment to the new medium of video art as "a societal shift away from
stockpiling a product ... [T]he Council had always maintained a very open
attitude toward new art forms and a willingness to experiment, to take
chances, to recognize the difficulties of arriving at tight value
judgments in new situations where the standards were still nascent,
embryonic." 77
Funding of not-for-profit cultural organizations and artists was promoted
by public policy planners to encourage cultural research and design that
would invigorate the marketplace and enhance the quality of life in a
democracy. Some artists argued that public funding for the arts would
force individuals to become institutionalized and could co-opt or blunt
the edge of cultural dissent and creativity. Others countered that public
funding would maintain a publicly accessible platform for discussion of
cultural values which would contribute alternatives to a marketplace of
ideas dominated by art collecting and the interests of commercial media. A
more thorough tracking of the dialogue, initiatives, policies, and the
negotiations between the funding institutions, legislative and judicial
bodies, commercial interests, not-for-profit arts organizations, public
access supporters, and artists' peer panel participation during this early
period would be an important contribution to understanding the development
of independent video, but must be developed elsewhere.
Artists in the late 60.s challenged the dominant aesthetics of modernist
high culture and the economic assumptions of the art world establishment.
Demonstrations at major museums protested the lack of support for living
artists and called for a general reassessment of the business of art
making and art dealing. A manifesto by the Art Workers Coalition in 1970
declared: "Artworks are a cultural heritage that belongs to the people. No
minority has the right to control them." Their demands challenged, among
other conditions, the make-up of museum boards of directors, inattention
to the work of minorities, and a lack of information about active local
artists. 78 Although many galleries and museums supported new work and
were responsive to criticism from working artists, the very existence of
artist-run cooperatives and media and performance laboratories indicated
the existing system was not adequately meeting the shifting needs and
interests of a new generation of artists.
The late '60s saw the development of new structures to support the
production and funding of video art. Some of the first experimental sites
for "television art" were at educational television stations (soon to
become "public television"): KQED in San Francisco, WGBH in Boston, and
WNET in New York. Both KQED and WGBH received Rockefeller Foundation
support in 1967 to establish experimental workshops, each taking different
directions. Firmly committed to process-oriented research, the San
Francisco project set up a studio for video instrumentation design as well
as interdisciplinary (poetry, video, music, dance) television art
projects. This became the National Center for Experiments in Television
(NCET) in 1969. The Rockefeller Foundation also supported research in the
development of media programs at the university level, and educators were
invited to observe the electronic arts research happening at the NCET.
WGBH's New Television Workshop produced a series of innovative programs in
the late '60s, including the critically acclaimed The Medium is the Medium
(1969), a television art magazine of early video experimentation.
The Television Laboratory at WNET was established in 1972 with support
from the Rockefeller Foundation, NYSCA, and the NEA. Between 1974 and
1984, WNET's residency program provided access to state-of-the-art
broadcast video technology for five to eight artists each year. The
station showcased a range of independent documentary and video art to its
large New York market through series such as the "Video and Television
Review" ("VTR") (1975-1976), hosted by artist/curator Russell Connor.
Although the TV labs clearly represented a rare window for technical and
programmatic experimentation within broadcast television, public
television ultimately did not sustain its support for media art research
and equipment access, nor did it continue to provide adequate outlets for
independent work.
An accessible funding structure for the media arts emerged in the late
.60s. NYSCA had been established in 1960 and was the nation's first
government agency for support of the arts, mandated to respond to the art
needs of New York City, the epicenter of the post-war international art
world. Art was business, especially in New York, and the 1972 NYSCA annual
report noted that the tourist trade as well as "two major industries of
New York City-fashion and communications-are there ... because only there
can be found the ideas and energy on which they depend." 79 Governor
Nelson Rockefeller, in supporting NYSCA's expansion, could claim in 1971
that more than 75 million attendances were reported at New York State arts
events in the previous year. Between 1969 and 1970, NYSCA's overall budget
increased almost ten fold from $2.3 million in 1969-1970 to $20.2 million
in 1970-1971. This same period saw NYSCA film and television expenditures
grow from $45,000 to almost $1.6 million, with over $500,000 going to new
video projects. The NEA, established by Congress in 1965, initiated its
Public Media Program in 1967 and by 1971 was spending $1.26 million on
film and television art. By the end of the decade the NEA was spending
$8.4 million on media arts (film and video) and committed to supporting a
network of regional media arts centers.
NYSCA's early and substantial funding for video was critical in the start
up of diverse projects throughout New York State. Many video collectives
as well as museums and libraries received support in 1970-71, NYSCA's
first year of media funding. The list revealed a broad range of
initiatives and included, in New York City: Shirley Clarke's T.P. Video
Space Troupe, People's Video Theater, Raindance, Global Village, Media
Equipment Resource Center (MERC), and the Artists' TV Lab at WNET; in
Brooklyn: Operation Discovery, a cable program on the cultural life of the
Bedford-Stuyvestant neighborhood; in Ithaca: Collaborations of Art,
Science, and Technology (CAST); on Long Island: Port Washington Public
Library; in Rochester: the Videofreex at the Rochester Museum of Science
and the Visual Studies Workshop; and in Binghamton: Community Center for
Television.
Often building on the existing media collectives, new media centers and
multi-disciplinary artist-run spaces were required to be incorporated as
not-for-profit organizations. Expanding on the collectives' communications
paradigm, these emerging sites of alternative cultural activity typically
offered production facilities, training workshops, and active exhibition
programs that positioned video within a critical environment of other
disciplines that often included experimental, documentary, and narrative
films, music, performance, photography, and the visual arts. Screenings by
visiting artists were common and were often accompanied by discussions
with local audiences about the work and news about the growing field. Many
media centers and museums published their own bulletins, catalogs, regular
program notes, and posters. This ephemeral material, in combination with
contemporaneous periodicals, catalogs, and critical journals, offers a
vivid picture of alternative media activity during this first decade.
A respected video art and alternative media discourse was disseminated by
publications such as Radical Software, Afterimage, Vidicon, and
Televisions. Avalanche, Art News, and other arts magazines featured
special issues on video. The National Federation of Local Cable
Programmers published The NFLCP Newsletter, which was succeeded by
Community Television Review in 1979. The Independent began publication by
the Association of Independent Video and Filmmakers (AIVF) in 1976, and
Video 80 started publication in 1980 in San Francisco. Sightlines,
published by the Educational Film Library Association, regularly reviewed
independent videotapes. Video distributors such as Electronic Arts
Intermix, Castelli-Sonnabend, Anna Canepa, Video Data Bank, Third World
Newsreel, California Newsreel, Art Com, and Women Make Movies were
critical in building and sustaining informational conduits among artists,
exhibitors, curators, and educators.
Exhibitions at galleries and museums in the late '60s and early
'70s-including the Howard Wise and Castelli Galleries (New York City), the
DeSaisset Museum (Santa Clara, California), and the University Art Museum
(Berkeley, California)-helped to legitimize video art within established
art institutions. Especially important was the founding of video
departments at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern
Art, the Everson Museum, and the Long Beach Museum of Art, whose curators
regularly positioned video art within highly visible contemporary
exhibitions, such as the Whitney Biennials.
At a 1983 conference of the National Alliance of Media Arts Centers
(NAMAC), a three-year-old organization which claimed 80 institutional
members, speakers asserted that media arts centers had "now become a
significant presence in our culture." NAMAC's chairman, Ron Green,
identified the "cultural lack" that media arts centers addressed:
"Blacks and women may have realized that lack inherent in the images of
them that has been perpetrated by the media art of the film and television
industry, but American society did not ... Democracy was understood [by
our forefathers] to require universal education, specifically the ability
of all citizens to read and write in order not only to assimilate the
issues on which they would vote, but also to contribute to the formulation
and presentation of those issues through writing. Since much, if not most,
of our information two centuries later is presented through the media
instead of writing, and since the media are not accessible to most of us
(nor even to most of our best media artists), this requirement of our
political system is not being met." 80
Artists, independent documentarians, and public access activists were
joined by curators, programmers, distributors, and librarians who
continued to support media culture on many fronts. By the middle of the
'70s the alternative media network featured overlapping but largely
independent organizations, funding infrastructures, and audiences. These
projects may have shared basic assumptions about the importance of media
arts and distribution systems, but were testing and reconfiguring
different identities and survival strategies. The vision and work that
extended the alternative media arts infrastructure throughout the '70s
would be faced with an ongoing struggle for legitimacy and survival
requiring public visibility and support. Green addressed the field:
"The biggest problem we are having in seeing the future stems from scale
illiteracy. Through hard work, innovation, and persistence we have made a
field where there was none ... There can be little doubt that the price of
genuine cultural pluralism in this country is in the billions of dollars.
... Britain recently began providing large financing to genuinely
independent, even avant-garde, media artists under the new BBC fourth
channel ... It is common knowledge that our American public
telecommunications system never had a chance; it has always been
ludicrously under-financed. How can we who promote the independent media
arts ever have expected a system with enormous capital and personnel
expenses, and impossibly weak financial structures, to be seriously
concerned about cultural pluralism? To expect that is a manifestation of
our illiteracy of scale." 81
As regional media arts centers expanded primarily through public and
private arts funding, the cable industry was growing. Public access
facilities proliferated around the country, and both the local benefits
and the economic and political costs of public access continued to be
challenged. In developing public access facilities through cable franchise
agreements, media activists inevitably found themselves up against the
pragmatic need to work with established power structures-city governments,
cable companies, and the state and federal regulators. Cable channels
remained a public forum for speech protected by the First Amendment not
available on broadcast channels, 82 and access operators supported the
education of a diverse community of users. However, access organizations
occasionally found their political and financial support threatened by
providing uncensored access to large local audiences. They found their
goals of first-come, first-served access positioned precariously between
potential critics of free speech on cable and their constituencies-between
city officials and their voters, and between cable companies and their
paying customers.
These tensions were also played out in the courts, where federal
regulators contended that they must arbitrate between "social engineering"
by public access advocates and protecting a "free market" for the
expanding cable industry. In 1972 the FCC had established access
requirements for the cable industry, which many cable operators had
promoted. At this time access provisions served the enlightened
self-interest of the cable industry which needed to garner the support of
municipalities and the public as it faced competition from the broadcast
industry. The subscription-based cable industry was portrayed as a threat
to free television by the broadcasters. By the late '70s, however, the
cable industry challenged the financial burden of complying with access
provisions in the courts. In 1979 the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the
cable industry, stating that the FCC did not have the statutory authority
to require cable companies to support public access. In what would remain
a shifting regulatory landscape, public access organizations joined forces
with the National League of Cities to lobby Congress for new
communications legislation under consideration at the end of the decade.
The Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 mandated that cable companies
support public access channels, prohibited cable operators from asserting
editorial control over access producers, and declared that public access
regulations "serve a most significant and compelling government
interest-promotion of the basic underlying values of the First Amendment
itself." 83
Although many media producers in the early '70s believed that their work
functioned in opposition to television, by mid-decade documentarians
challenged the absence of independent points of view on broadcast TV. AIVF
had formed in 1974 to advocate for more public funding for independent
film and video makers. In 1976, 15 independent video production groups
lobbied the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), arguing that
independents should have more funding and equipment access through public
television. In 1977 and 1978 AIVF testified at the second Carnegie
Commission, charged with evaluating the first decade of public television.
AIVF also testified before the Congressional Subcommittee on
Communications, examining public television in its revision of the
Communications Act. Even though the 1967 Public Broadcasting Act had
specified that high quality programs be obtained from "diverse sources,"
AIVF charged:
"Public television at this time does not reflect the rich diversity of
American social, cultural, and political issues. The reliance on in-house
staff productions and British imports has limited both the subjects and
the substance offered. In a society which relies heavily on electronic
media for information, independent video and filmmakers are being denied
the full exercise of their constitutional rights, and the public is denied
access to the diverse viewpoints and vigorous debate which are intrinsic
to informed self-government." 84
The 1978 Public Telecommunications Financing Act authorized specific
appropriations for independents, although the distribution of those monies
would continue to be contentious. A Public Trust, the 1979 report of the
second Carnegie Commission on public television, also mandated programming
diversity and financial support for independents: "Americans have the
capacity to rebuild their local communities, their regions, and indeed
their country, with tools no more formidable than transistors and
television tubes..." 85 These recommendations would not be interpreted and
actualized, however, until after the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980,
which proved to be a period of shrinking government support for public
television.
By the end of the '70s, new satellite technology also contributed to the
vision of yet another kind of independent network. Communications Update,
for example, a Manhattan public access cable series started up by Liza
Bear in 1979, produced informative programs on the World Administrative
Radio Conference (WARC). WARC is an international UNESCO conference held
every 20 years to determine policies for the allocation of access to the
electromagnetic spectrum and the management of telecommunications
satellites. Anticipating the confluence of cable, telephone, and digital
information services, artists, independent producers, and public policy
planners continued to raise questions about access to new and existing
telecommunications technologies. 86
Independents' relationships with television would continue to raise
fundamental questions. For video art or documentary work to reach a
commercial television market, would access to broadcast technology be
necessary to make that work competitive? Throughout the '70s public and
private funders pumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into industrial
grade and occasionally broadcast quality equipment for regional media
centers. Technology for video was evolving rapidly, and it was clear that
this need for regular retooling would not abate. If independent work
aspired to television's mass audiences, could additional support be
expected from public television or even commercial television for ongoing
equipment upgrades? How could artists afford the time to experiment in an
editing suite and/or exercise the kind of control over post-production
decisions if sophisticated tools were only available with professional
editing assistance? What was the relationship between broadcast
television's special effects technology and the independently-designed
tools that had been invented by pioneering engineers and artists? These
questions confronted individual artists and funders in consultation with
peer panels, who, in determining which projects should receive funding,
inevitably debated issues ranging from the structures of access to new
technologies to promising and exhausted expressive cultural forms.
By the late '70s a media arts infrastructure in collaboration with public
and private funders had expanded the production and exhibition
opportunities for emerging artists, foregrounding new art forms and
becoming a critical factor in the development of new audiences for this
work, but not without significant resistance. Mapping the trajectory of
public support for the arts, David Trend quoted a 1981 Heritage Foundation
document written during the Reagan administration that accused the NEA of
having grown "more concerned with the politically calculated goals of
social policy than with the arts it was created to support. To accomplish
goals of social intervention and change ... the Endowment...serve(s)
audiences rather than art, vocal constituencies rather than individually
motivated artistic impulses." 87 A struggle, which would eventually be
described as a cultural war, was underway for the legitimacy and survival
of an independent media arts practice and infrastructure, one that by the
early 80s was more alternative than oppositional, and was described
accommodatingly by NAMAC as a "counterculture ... only in comparison to
the mass media." 88
How could an alternative media cultural practice be validated by a
delivery system that depended on legislators for appropriations and
reviewers for mainstream visibility by the end of the decade? Martha
Rosler, who has written extensively about the cultural delivery system
during this period, remarked that "video's marginality produces shrunken
or absent critical apparatuses ... This leaves the theorizing to people
with other vested interests." 89 Peer Bode, who worked in an artist-run
access center, reflected on the late '70s:
"The people who then wrote about media gradually were not practitioners
but actually came to observe video from other disciplines. At this point
the understanding of the value of issues around labor and production were
lost ... Various making communities and language communities [recognize]
that written language still has a real legitimizing power within the
culture, and the commercial publications that ended up as a forum for
writers were often not interested in those projects which were not
commercially based. As any writer will tell you, within the art magazines,
one could only represent what happened in those not-for-profit alternative
art centers to a very small extent because the publications survived on a
commercial advertising base." 90
By the end of the decade independent video art and documentary making had
been integrated into academia through art, media art, and communications
departments that had given tenure to early video practitioners. Though the
production of independent media continued through university programs,
media art centers, and public access centers, the '80s also saw cultural
theory take up the study of the dominant genres of narrative filmmaking
and television, emphasizing a critical ideological reading of popular
culture as seen in its internationally disseminated products, Hollywood
cinema and television. Such writing acknowledged the insights of
independent video and filmmakers occasionally, but rarely the alternative
media institutional infrastructure that supported their independent
cultural production, nor the encoding of challenging that production
system through an art work's invention of signifying practices. 91 With
the growth of cultural theory as an academic discipline, an oppositional
or ambivalent posture to the dominant media often took the form of
critical writing rather than critical media production.
b.Conclusion
Video was spawned at an historical moment when personal and communal
experimentation and institutional invention made sense within a widely
embraced vision of a radically changing society. Inspired by the
availability of the portapak, a personal media tool, and emerging at a
time when culture was widely acknowledged as political terrain, video
makers performed initiatives which sought to radically reconfigure local
art and communications structures, invigorating their respective
communities' capacities for informational and participatory feedback.
Communications production and reception were re-inscribed in contemporary
culture by early video independents as social relations, which could be
negotiated by ordinary people and art scenes as well as by media
corporations and advertisers. Video makers' work queried the dimensions
and structures of the television's address-how far, to whom, how
expensive, does it feedback, with what images does it create, engage,
transform, misrepresent, and censor? Artists and independent producers
integrated production, exhibition, distribution, transmission, audience
feedback, and media education into their work, and they invited the
cultural participation of individuals as artists, critics, scientists,
citizens, and educators, creating a vital alternative infrastructure.
In a period that advocated for expanded consciousness and a critical
reassessment of institutionalized authority, artists engaged various
attentional constructs using information fed back from a newly accessible
electronic time-based medium and experimented with the fundamental
structures of a new image language available through electronic materials.
Women producers asserted a gendered subjectivity, and both women and men
transgressed viewers' assumptions primarily through performance-based
work. Artists enlisted video in an expansive documentary exploration of
the vernacular, the everyday, as well as investigations of dominant social
institutions. A negotiation of attentional terrain with viewers, the
sharing of authority in the work through ongoing efforts to develop
structures that would guarantee broad access to production, and the
recognition of audience as subjective participant in the work and social
partner in sustaining cultural scenes characterized the performance of
video art and communications projects throughout its first decade.
A fundamental speaking point of this first generation of video artists was
that to engage a critical relationship with a televisual society you must
primarily participate televisually. Their art, performance, and
documentary projects are available today as tapes, which deserve
conservation and study as part of an extensive moving image "literature,"
as do the alternative stages and scenes supported by the surviving
independent media infrastructure.
Video art and alternative media production was developed by artists in the
late '60s and early '70s as a public dialogue about new cultural forms and
access to communications technology distributed through a proliferation of
new sites for exchange. The revisiting of that period through an
historical survey is, in part, an effort to link the cultural insights and
strategies of portable video's first decade with the present conditions
for producing media culture. Attention to the video projects of the late
'60s and '70s, those surveyed in this project and others yet to be
rediscovered, is timely in view of the advent of international media
hardware and software expansion and new decentralized multi-media
networks. The democratic use of these tools can only be realized with
considerable efforts toward widespread media literacy, a necessary
extension of basic reading and writing skills.
Such an education for media cultural fluency must encompass access to and
experience with production tools and an understanding of the interpretive
structures of moving image media "literatures"-video, film, sound, digital
multi-media, radio, cinema, television, internet-that have been produced
to date. It is necessary to beware of the emancipatory claims of new
technologies, as well as the liberal notion that access to production
alone will bring about critical participation in view of the capacity of
the mass media to assimilate new cultural forms. However, the early '70s
participatory affirmation of an alternative media practice bears
amplification at the present time in order to reconsider the efforts of
that earlier generation to initiate new forms of cultural exchange, and to
share the authority of technologically intensive cultural production with
diverse audiences and local communities. In supporting the production of a
vital, multi-vocal, and accessible contemporary media culture, artists and
educators must continue to question-what were the cultural issues
negotiated by past bodies of work, who has training and access to
increasingly sophisticated tools, and how can diverse audiences approach
the work produced-and on a much broader scale than has been accomplished
to date.
1. Sylvia Harvey, May '68 and Film Culture. London: British Film
Institute, 1978, p. 56.
2. Beryl Korot and Phyllis Gershuny, editors, "Table of Contents," Radical
Software, 1:1, 1970, p. 1.
3. Chris Hill, "Interview with Woody Vasulka,"The Squealer, Summer 1995,
p. 6.
4. Allan Kaprow, Assemblages, Environments and Happenings. New York:
Abrams, 1966. [Excerpted in Charles Harrigan and Paul Wood, editors, Art
in Theory. Cambridge: Blackwell, 1992, p. 708.]
5. Sohnya Sayres, Anders Stephanson, Stanley Aronowitz, and Fredric
Jameson, editors,The '60s Without Apology. Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 1984, p. 20.
6. Ibid, p. 2.
7. Todd Gitlin, The Sixties. New York: Bantam Books, 1987, p. xv.
8. Students for a Democratic Society, "Port Huron Statement," The Sixties
Papers, edited by Judith Albert and Stewart Albert. New York: Praeger,
1984, p. 181.
9. Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man. Boston: Beacon Press, 1964, p.
251.
10. See Michael Renov, "Early Newsreel: The Construction of a Political
Imaginary for the New Left," Afterimage, 10:10, February 1987, pp.
12-15; distribution catalogs from Third World Newsreel and California
Newsreel; for a history of the underground press see David Armstrong, A
Trumpet to Arms. Los Angeles: J.P. Tarcher, 1981.
11 . Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "Constituents of a Theory of the Media,"
Video Culture, edited by John Hanhardt. Rochester, New York: Visual
Studies Workshop Press, 1986, p. 98. See also Todd Gitlin. "16 Notes on
Television," Tri-Quarterly Review, Nos. 23/24, Winter-Spring 1972, pp.
325-366.
12 . "Time Scan," Televisions , 4:2, Summer 1976, p. 7.
13 . Susan Sontag, "On Culture and the New Sensibility," Against
Interpretation.. New York: Dell Publishing, 1966, p. 299.
14 . See Norbert Wiener, Cybernetics, or Control and Communication in the
Animal and the Machine. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1948; Buckminster
Fuller, Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth. New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1969; Gregory Bateson, Steps To an Ecology of Mind. New York:
Ballantine Books, 1972.
15 . David Antin, "Video: The Distinctive Features of the Medium," Video
Art, edited by Susanne Delahanty. Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary
Art, 1975, p. 57.
16 . Michael Shamberg and Raindance Corporation, Guerrilla Television..
New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1971, p. 9.
17 . Parry Teasdale, Unpublished interview with author, May 1995.
18 . Philip Mallory Jones, Unpublished interview with author, July 1995.
19. Beryl Korot and Phylis Gershuny, editors, "Masthead," Radical
Software, 1:1, 1970, p.1.
20. Portola Institute, The Whole Earth Catalog. San Francisco: 1969, p. 1.
21. Beryl Korot and Phyllis Gershuny, editors, "Cultural Data Banks,"
Radical Software, 1:2, 1970, p. 19.
22. Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "Constituents of a Theory of the Media," p.
105.
23. Ken Marsh, "Alternatives for Alternative Media-PeopleUs Video
TheaterUs Handbook," Radical Software, 1:2, 1970, p. 18.
24. Ken Marsh and Elliot Glass, Unpublished interview with author, June
1992.
25. Ralph Lee Smith, "The Wired Nation," The Nation, 210:19, May 18, 1970,
p. 606.
26. Roger Newell, "Minority Cable Report," Televisions, 6:3, November
1978, p. 10.
27. Dorothy Heneaut and Bonnie Klein, "Challenge for Change," Radical
Software, 1:1, 1970, p. 11.
28. Alternate Media Center, Alternate Media Center at NewYork University
School of the Arts, Summer 1972, p. 11.
29. "1986," Community Television Review, 9:2, Summer 1986, p. 59.
30. Walter A. Dale, "The Port Washington Experiment," Film Library
Quarterly, Summer 1972, p. 23.
31. Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "Television and the Politics of Liberation,"
The New Television: A Public/Private Art, edited by Douglas Davis and
Alison Simmons. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1977, p. 263.
32. Parry Teasdale, Unpublished interview with author, May 1995.
33. "Ralph Lee Smith Meets Access," Community Television Review, 9:2,
Summer, 1986, p. 22.
34. Chris Hill, "Interview with Woody Vasulka," The Squealer, Summer 1995,
p. 7.
35. Roger House, "Bed-Stuy Voices from the Neighborhood," Afterimage,
19:1, Summer 1991, p. 3.
36. Fredric Jameson, "Reification and Utopia in Mass Culture," Signatures
of the Visible. New York: Routledge, 1992, p. 23.
37. Hollis Frampton, "The Withering Away of the State of the Art,"
Artforum, December 1974, p. 50.
38. Robert Morris, "Notes on Sculpture, Part 4: Beyond Objects," Artforum,
7:8, April 1969, p. 53.
39. Clement Greenberg, "Towards a Newer Laocoon," Collected Essays and
Criticism, Vol. I: Perception and Judgments, 1939-44, edited by John
O'Brian. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986, p. 28.
40. Dick Higgins, "Intermedia," foew+ombyhnw. New York: Something Else
Press, 1969, p. 15.
41. Michael Fried, "Art and Objecthood," Artforum, Summer 1967, p. 44.
42. Annette Michelson, "Robert Morris: An Aesthetic of Transgression,"
Robert Morris. Baltimore: Garamond/Pridemark Press and Corcoran Gallery of
Art, 1969, p. 23.
43. Lizzie Borden, "The New Dialectic,"Artforum, April 1974, p. 44.
44. Morris, Robert, "Notes on Sculpture, Part 4: Beyond Objects," p. 54.
45. Dick Higgins, "Structural Researches," foew+ombyhnw. New York:
Something Else Press, 1969, p. 149.
46. Paul Sharits, "A Cinematics Model for Film Studies in Higher
Education," Film Culture , No. 65-66, 1978, p. 49.
47. Malcolm LeGrice, Abstract Film and Beyond. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1977,
p. 152.
48. Hermine Freed, "Where Do We Come From? Where Are We? Where Are We
Going?" Video Art, edited by Beryl Korot and Ira Schneider. New York:
Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1976, p. 210.
49. Antin, David, "Video: The Distinctive Features of the Medium," p. 60.
50. Joanna Gill, "Video, The State of the Art," New York: Rockefeller
Foundation, June 1975. Reprinted in Eigenwelt des Apparate-welt: Pioneers
of Electronic Arts, edited by David Dunn, Steina and Woody Vasulka. Linz:
Ars Electronica, 1992, p. 64.
51. Jud Yalkut, "Interview with Frank Gillette and Ira Schneider," Radical
Software, 1:1, 1970, p. 9.
52. David Antin, "Video: The Distinctive Features of the Medium," p. 60.
53. Dan Graham, "Film and Video: Video as Present Time,"
Video/Architecture/Television.. Halifax: Nova Scotia School of Art and
Design Press, 1979, p. 62.
54. Dan Graham, "Feedback," p. 69.
55. Bob Devine, "The Long Take as Body Envelope," Phos, 1:1, March 1978,
p. 6.
56. Woody Vasulka and Scott Nygren, "Didactic Video: Organizational Models
of the Electronic Image," Afterimage, 3:4, October 1975, p. 9.
57. Woody Vasulka, "A Syntax of Binary Images," Afterimage, 6:1-2, Summer
1978, p. 20.
58. For a thorough source on artists working with engineers see the
exhibition catalog of early instruments and tapes organized by the
Vasulkas, Eigenwelt Der Apparate-Welt: Pioneers of Electronic Art, edited
by David Dunn and Steina and Woody Vasulka. Linz, Austria: Ars
Electronica, 1992.
59. Barbara Rose, "Problems of Criticism V: The Politics of Art, Part,
II," Artforum, 7:5, January 1969, p. 50.
60. Vito Acconci, Lecture at Albright-Knox Art Gallery recorded by
Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, Buffalo, New York, June 1995.
61. Susan Sontag, "On Culture and the New Sensibility," p. 300.
62. Dick Higgins, "Boredom and Danger," foew+ombyhnw. New York: Something
Else Press, 1969, p. 123.
63. Roselee Goldberg, Performance: Live Art 1909 to Present. New York:
Harry Abrams, 1979, p. 81.
64. Liza Bear, Avalanche, 1:1, May-June 1974, p. 1.
65. Vito Acconci, "10 Point Plan for Video," Video Art, edited by Beryl
Korot and Ira Schneider. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1976, p.
8.
66. Pat Sullivan, "WomenUs Video Festival," [No publisher] 1973.
67. Todd Gitlin, The Sixties, p. xix.
68. Patricia Mellencamp, Indiscretions. Bloomington: University of Indiana
Press, p. 58.
69. Liza Bear, Avalanche, p. 1.
70. Peggy Gale, "A History in 4 Moments," Mirror Machine, edited by Janine
Marchessault.Toronto: YYZ Books, 1995, p. 56.
71. Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "Constituents of a Theory of the Media," p.
109. See also Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle. Detroit: Red and Black
Books, 1977.
72. Dan Graham, "Film and Video: Video as Present Time," p. 63.
73. See Martha Gever, "Feminist Video-Early Projects," Afterimage, 11:1-2,
Summer 1983; Julia LeSage,"The Political Aesthetics of the Feminist
Documentary Film," Quarterly Review of Film Studies, 3:4, Fall 1978; Allan
Sekula. "Dismantling Modernism," Photography Against the Grain. Halifax:
Press of Nova Soctia School of Art and Design, 1984; Laura Mulvey, "Visual
Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, Screen, Autumn 1975.
74. Michael Shamberg and Raindance Corporation, Guerrilla Television., p.
89.
75. David Antin, "The Distinctive Features of the Medium," p. 3.
76. Russell Connor, "TV/Media," NYSCA Annual Report 1971-1972. New York:
New York State Council on the Arts, 1972, p. 23.
77. Gerd Stern, "Support of Television Arts by Public Funding," The New
Television: A Public/ Private Art. edited by Douglas Davis and Alison
Simmons. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1977, p. 144.
78. Lucy Lippard, "Art Workers Coalition: not a history," Studio
International, November 1970, p. 171.
79. Eric Larabee, "The Arts and Government in New York State," NYSCA
Annual Report 1971-1972, New York: New York State Council on the Arts,
1972, p. 23.
80. Ronald Green, "The Media Arts in Transition," The Media Arts In
Transition, edited by Bill Horrigan. Minneapolis: The Walker Arts Center,
1983, p. 9.
81. Ibid, p. 9.
82. To date, speech on cable systems, including public access channels, is
protected by the First Amendment because viewers must exercise choice in
accessing cable (they cannot receive cable without paying for it); speech
on broadcast channels is limited because anyone (children, etc.) can
access the broadcast programs by simply turning on a TV set. See L. Brown,
"Free Expression is an Unwelcome Rider on the Runaway Technology Train,"
Community Television Review, Summer-Fall 1980.
83. Susan Bednarczyk, "NFLCP: The Way It Was," Community Television
Review, 9:2, Summer 1986, p.44.
84. John J. O'Connor, "The Outsiders Want a Bigger Piece of the Pie," New
York Times, March 26, 1978.
85. Deirdre Boyle, Subject to Change: Guerrilla Television, Revisited. New
York: Oxford Press, 1996.
86. Nolan Bowie, "Parting Shots: An Expanded Agenda," The Social Impact of
Television, A Research Agenda for the 1980s. Aspen Colorado: The Aspen
Institute, October 1980.
87. David Trend, "Rethinking Media Activism," Socialist Review, 23:2,
February 1993, p. 7.
88. Ronald Green, "The Media Arts in Transition," p. 9.
89. Martha Rosler, "Shedding the Utopian Moment," Illuminating Video,
edited by Doug Hall and Sally Jo Fifer. San Francisco: Aperture, 1990, p.
49.
90. Chris Hill, "Interview with Peer Bode," The Squealer, September 1996,
p. 4.
91. Patricia Mellencamp, Indiscretions, p. 205.
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