Art Dirt Redux – 3 months out
I had been toying with the idea of a podcast when Robbin Murphy came
back into New York to start upgrading The Thing’s web portal
http://post.thing.net. Rob & I and Adrianne Wortzel were doing Art
Dirt in the 90’s out of Pseudo as a webcast. Rob & I thought it
would be interesting to do an “on location” Art Dirt podcast. Thus the
name Art Dirt Redux. The original Art Dirt was a round table talk show
that began as one of the first audio webcasts and later was upgraded to
streaming video. Pseudo’s head Josh Harris was a visionary and had the
idea of setting up a media outlet using the internet that would compete
with broadcast and cable TV. The programs on pseudo were structured
like mass media programs with commercial breaks.
For Art Dirt Redux there are no such restrictions. What is beginning to
emerge is an interesting sequence for a media communication model. We
start by finding an event that engages our interest as artists. This
might be a walk around to galleries or an artist’s performance or a
presentation. The first sequence starts from email communication and
proceeds to a real life event.
After the first sound sampling I began to get my footing and sense the
direction of the actual finished podcast. What occurred to me while
editing the sound recordings was that one’s memory of any sequence of
events in time is not linear but rather presents itself in the mind’s
eye as a chunk that has notable events in sharp focus as remembered
highlights or incidental occurrences of meaning. The method of linear
narrative favored by mass media is not actually true to reality. Indeed
the necessity to communicate a message may dictate a linear recounting
within time based media but I feel it’s only part of the picture. What
seems to me to be more in keeping with both reality and our remembrance
is an immersive situation, which has as much non-differentiated
sensation and information as it does clear narrative. As I began to
edit the sound samples I began to shift around the sounds and the
narrative oftentimes layering them and reordering the sequences in time
so that both a diachronous and a synchronous time was established for
the unfolding of the memory. What occurs for the listener is a sequence
whose meaning shifts from narration to immersion and back. This creates
a sense where the listener can choose to listen intently to glean
meaning or de-focus their attention to feel the totality of the sound.
Much of what I’m doing in post-production can be considered sound
editing no-no’s. I sometimes remove all the pauses that occur naturally
when a person speaks so that the speakers voice, usually Rob or myself,
have a speeded up disjunctive quality. The words are understandable but
not presented naturally. Other times I’ll layer several clips that are
mixed down to a single clip. The overlapping waveforms create a muddy
sound that is partially obscured. One has to listen to the background
voices to gain meaning. At other points I’ll use a speaker’s voice to
convey an emotion such as when Rob speaks in a soothing and
knowledgeable way about an artist’s work. This conveys his personality
without the narrative meaning. It would be similar in sensation to
listening to a group of people conversing in another room through a
wall. You can tell the emotion of the conversation without knowing the
specific content.
I had remarked to Rob that our position vis-à-vis each other in the
podcasts convey the feeling of me as a bit naïve asking dumb questions
while Rob answers these in a simple knowing tone. This places me as a
surrogate for the listener who is a curious interrogator. The
listener’s mind is asking, what is this? What’s going on? What am I
listening to?
The podcast is in itself an odd exercise. My intention is to place
myself in a situation and view it in an objective manner via a
recording device. In post production the assembling of the information
is subjective in nature. What occurs between Rob and I in the course of
our meanderings is closer to a philosophical or aesthetic discourse
based upon what we are looking at and our points of view. This points
out the Heisenbergian principal of indeterminacy in that an event can
only be observed as a trajectory or a specific occurrence that can be
located without knowing what came before or what will come after. The
observer changes the event. What occurs in the actual event when Rob
and I or myself alone engage in a sequence is quite similar to early
conceptual art works such as Robert Smithson’s site-non-site work or
any of a number of conceptual artist’s who placed themselves in
situations and deemed the act in and of itself as an artwork.
In 1974 I began a series of “writing drawings” that were in a bound
ledger. I wrote in mirror writing. This was simple for me because I was
left-handed. I could draw the pen across the paper as most right-handed
people do. It may be noted that Da Vinci who also used mirror writing
was left-handed. In any case, on some of the pages I would write a
daily musing over the writing of the day before in a different color
ink. As the week progressed the meaning would become more obscure. Two
things occurred to me as I made these drawings; one that memory and
thought were cumulative and layered and the other that the memory of
writing, the physical act was in the hand. The bound journal was lost
in one of my moves from one studio to another. Perhaps a metaphor for
the whole process.
I point this out to suggest that our world of memory and perception,
the world we construct every day, the subjective reality is rather
arbitrary. It’s one of many possibilities.
Since Art Dirt Redux is a “net.art” project it operates within the
parameters of the global information matrix. Part of that matrix allows
for the transparency of visitors to ones site. Since it’s launch in
April Art Dirt Redux has gained over 300 subscribers to it’s podcast.
The majority of subscribers are in the U.S. but there are a surprising
number of return visitors from overseas; among the countries, China,
United Arab Emirates, Argentina, France, Sweden, Spain, Portugal, Italy
and the UK.
What are these far flung subscribers listening to in a language not
their own? It is not for a mass media art report because the podcast is
not that. Perhaps they listen for the soundscape.
![video art [PAM] logo](http://www.perpetualartmachine.com/templates/corp/images/video_art_pam_33.jpg)









