Net Pioneers 1.0: Contextualizing Early Net-based Art

Front Cover
Dieter Daniels, Gunther Reisinger
Sternberg Press, 2009 - Art - 239 pages

"Net art is seen as an archaeology of the future, drawing on the past (especially of modernism) and producing a complex interaction of unrealized past potential and Utopian futures..."

--Julian Stallabrass

Net Pioneers 1.0 discusses media art history with a new, interdisciplinary look at the historical, social, and economic dynamics of our contemporary, networked society.

The hype around Net-based art began in the early 1990s, before the Internet had become a commodity. It developed in skeptical parallel to the rise and decline of the new economy. But why does this chapter of art history appear to end so suddenly? Is it that the idea of Net-based art involving itself in a revolutionary spirit in a networked society failed? One might equally well argue that it was far too successful simply to become another media-art genre. Looking today at the social, aesthetic, and conceptual approaches of the early 1990s presented in this book, it is clear that most of them have in fact come true, if in ways other than intended.

The contributions cover a wide variety of topics, ranging from art-scholarly methodological debate (Bentkowska-Kafel, Kuni), source-critical analysis (Reisinger), archiving, exhibition, and analytical practice (Ernst, London, Paul, Sakrowski) to media-philosophical aspects (Ries) and technical and artistic innovations (Daniels).

Co-published with the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute Media.Art.Research

Contributors

Anna Bentkowska-Kafel, Wolfgang Ernst, Verena Kuni, Barbara London, Christiane Paul, Robert Sakrowski, Marc Ries, Julian Stallabrass

From inside the book

Contents

HISTORICAL SETTINGS
15
THE DISCOVERY OF PURE
65
ARCHIVING AND PRESERVATION
81
Copyright

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