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[PAM] Interviewed on Furtherfield.org |
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Written by Perpetual Art Machine
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Saturday, 31 May 2008 |
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You Can't Stay Here PAM!
by Eliza Fernbach for Furtherfield.org
December 2007.
Online Video Portal Streams Artists into community and exhibition.
www.furtherfield.org
[PAM] Live and in Person
Participation lies at the heart of
the online video portal [PAM]. In fact the site has generated such
response that the best way to communicate with the PAM founders is to
find them in person. They are a visible, engaged group on the New York
Art scene; Lee Wells, a curator and Artist in his own right, was
introduced to Christopher Borkowski, a digital artist and IT specialist
at the Guggenheim by Raphaele Shirley, whose credentials include
working for Nam June Paik. Artist Aaron Miller had already been
collaborating with Borkowski following on their with Scope Art fair on
the horizon, [PAM] was born in December 2005 two months after an
impromptu brainstorming session at Shirley's studio.
'With [PAM] we sought an interactive and inclusive means of
bringing artists and their audience into the curatorial process. Says
Wells, 'We figured out a simple way to present it in a non-hierarchal
fashion. [PAM] is more of an educational tool than anything else.'
Arguably [PAM] is more than just instructional. [PAM] is an online
smorgasbord of video creation and a real time installation that is
reviving the sense of community in an art world where dollars seem to
be overtaking sensibility. Like the commercial behemoth, Youtube, [PAM]
was created with open source software but its start up cost was less
than $500.00. The [PAM] founders essentially hacked a system that would
have necessitated hundreds of thousands of dollars for a commercial
venture. The result is a dizzying array of one thousand video artworks
by artists in over eighty countries.
In [PAM] we trust
Trust and collaboration ensure [PAM]
evolves smoothly. 'Alexis Hubshman and the Scope Art Fair made us
realize that [PAM] wasn't a one time gig.' Says Wells 'Alexis is our
partner and one of our most trusted advisors.' Wells and his partners
are quick to acknowledge other influences: 'I have been lucky enough to
learn from a lot of great people. Kerry James Marshall, Phyllis
Bramson, Julia Fish, I-igo Manglano-Ovalle, Steve Campbell, Stewart
Home, God and the Stars, Hannah Higgins, Critical Art Ensemble and
Miroslaw Rogala to name a few.' Wells also cites a wide range of
co-operative inspiration; art portals such as Rhizome.org,
Furtherfield.org and organizations like the Coyote Arts Festival in
Chicago as well as The United Nations. Raphaele Shirley references her
experience assisting Nam June Paik at the Guggenheim as groundwork for
the sort of interpersonal and technical work that [PAM] has required.
'On a conceptual level we are walking in his footsteps so it is a great
joy to be able to reference him and review what he originally predicted
for the age of technology.'
[PAM] comes to life
TELECULTURE a show curated by Wells at PACE University Gallery in New
York in December, showcased a selection of [PAM] artists. At the
opening photographer Eric Payson paid tribute to both PAM and PACE as
vital new elements of the video art scene. His haunting transparencies
(Ghostplay, 2007), rich in sociological observation, (the NFL as a
metaphor for slavery) were as dynamic as the moving pictures in the
show. Of these, the four-channel video (SisterCity, 2007) by newcomer
Jennifer Jones was technologically ambitious and psychologically
challenging. Jillian McDonald, Co-Director of the Gallery and
practicing new media artist singled out Taras Hrabowsky's Amalgamide
Tide (2006) as a highlight. A projection careening down a wall
overlooking the main staircase, the CGI video was a year in the making,
the work depicts thousands of human figures; tossing, floating and
whirling in patterns of weather systems that Hrabowsky has mapped them
into. Mesmerizing and disturbing, it is uncanny in its decorative and
political balance.
Making [PAM] pay
Now that [PAM] is established and thriving,
the founders must face the inevitable- a reconciliation with the Art
Market. Alongside plans for the site to become a vehicle for art sales,
developments include shifting the focus of the website to engage
artists in commentary as well as providing exhibition information.
Says, Chris Borkowski 'We would like to find a way to sustain the
organization and put money into the hands of the artists involved. At
the end of the day artists have to make a living.'
[PAM]'s Progeny
Interpersonal and professional alliances
that [PAM] has already fostered bode well for its future. In two short
years the project has gone from studio imaginings to real-time
exhibits, generating new work and opportunities for established as well
emerging video artists Bethany Fancher, a [PAM] member and sculptor,
new to the video world was included in the TELECULTURE show and is
already at work on new video pieces. She is also planning a work that
will incorporate a horseback trip across the United States. Mew Media
Pioneer G.H. Hovagimyan whose work spans decades of the New York
Alternative scene, has played an active role in supporting the project.
His piece, New Orleans Rant2,
a wry punk commentary on the tragedy in that city, also challenges the
worldwide membership of [PAM] to keep moving forward. His rant You can't stay here
is a call to perpetual action. Lee Wells has great hopes for the
creature he and his collaborators have brought into being, '[PAM] is
designed to be adapting to technology as it changes. She is two years
old in December. We are hoping she will have children one day.'
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 31 May 2008 )
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