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culture map >>
Andy Deck
A visualization of proportion, disproportion,
direction, and indirection in the content and no content
of the World Wide Web.
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[Interview] Silvia
Razgova: What is the most attractive aspect of
net.art and cyber space for you?
Andy Deck: It has always been the immediacy of
the audience. In other words, the work I'm making
for the Internet is easily accessible via browsers.
The filter-like editorial apparatus of mass media
and gallery art can be circumvented by sending
email announcements. Other people find my work
through search engines. This immediacy has deteriorated
some since the early days of the Web, when it
seemed that people began viewing my work simply
because I submitted my URL to AltaVista. There's
much more competition now. But I still have a
sense of independence that feels healthy. I don't
need to cater my work to a particular curator
or editor in order to publish.
SR : Do you get many e-mails reacting to your
activism pages? What are some of the reactions?
AD : I would say that relatively few people initiate
a direct political dialogue concerning the content
of my site. That is not to say that it doesn't
happen now and again, but the incidence of that
kind of response is roughly the same as the number
of people who seek interviews or who want to show
my projects as part of group Net.art shows. This
may mean that people do not sense my personal
identity the various issue-oriented pages I write.
I don't put my name and email address on each
page that I create, and more often than not, it
would require research for someone to ascertain
who wrote content of the pages on Artcontext.
In other situations, as in the context of Commission
Control, the feedback is structured by the work
itself. In other words, the project solicits feedback.
In that case, the feedback has been consistent
with the overall tone of the work -- deriding
the hypocrisy and violence of the NATO "solution"
to the Kosovo situation. So I would say that the
amount and kind of feedback is largely a function
of the interface design. If the interface effectively
encourages and solicits feedback, and provides
thematic context, the response has been strong
and insightful. Otherwise, it has been limited
and erratic.
SR : What is the best alternative title for "U.S.
News and World Report" that has been submitted
to your site?
AD : With respect to this page, I don't think
anyone has ever suggested an alternative. The
gesture of calling for alternative titles was
more satirical than sincere. The document to which
you are referring is an example of a kind of activist
work that I do to vent my spleen. My assumption
is that, if I jot these thoughts down, they will
likely attract a certain amount of attention via
search engines. And in any event, the act of writing
down my thoughts may prove cathartic.
SR : Do you (and if so till which level) differentiate
your writings and reports from the field and art
work? Can you talk a little about informative
art?
AD : (That's a good question, in part because
I can't give a simple answer.) Sometimes, I am
direct about criticizing the policies of my government,
either using essays or artworks that embody politically
charged themes. Other times the 'activist' component
of a piece of Net.art is built into the codes
so that it is perceptible only through meditation
on the conceptual nature of the communication
that it enables. There is a danger, I think, that
people might interpret this plastic research into
interactive systems (Open Studio, Icontext, Glyphiti,
etc.) as following only from traditions of Minimalism
and Conceptualism. On the contrary, I see these
two modes of activity as complementary in the
sense that they each approach the problem inherent
in our contemporary mass media. Whereas the collaborative
interactive works demonstrate unused potential
for public creativity (authorship, intellectual
productivity, expression); the more thematic,
"political" pieces are exercising a
kind of freedom of expression that is available
to citizens in the West. Regarding Informative
Art, the term is intended to describe an art form
that has as part of it's intent the dissemination
of information. In the case of Commission Control,
most of the informative content comes from articles
and authors who have been associated with the
piece via hyper-links. The purpose of Informative
Art is to create a form of activity that opens
onto aesthetic and political reflection in equal
measures. The prevailing systems of communication
(think culture as well as information) are propagating
dominant, mostly mercenary, messages. At times
I feel an ethical responsibility, based on ongoing
research into politics, foreign policy, and such,
to take a position that is public. I do this with
art activism. While some people criticize this
type of work as propaganda, I feel much more comfortable
producing activist art than I would remaining
silent in order to conform to their supposedly
apolitical aesthetic ideals.
SR : How did the collaboration with Joe Dellinger
first occur? Did you know him in the real world
before or was this only a cyber space encounter?
AD : No, I have known Joe for years, and in talking
to him I knew that he shared my distaste for militaristic
bent of American foreign policy in Yugoslavia.
SR : You discuss "Linux evangelism"
- do you view Linux as a sort of activism? If
Linux is the future of operating systems, what
steps do you think Microsoft will take to prevent
its widespread acceptance?
AD : Yes. Transparency and open standards are
much better bases for developing the communication
infrastructure. Linux is just a well known example
of these values in action. It's not a question
of which steps Microsoft *will* take. They've
been actively squelching competition for years.
To give one prominent and disturbing example of
their ongoing scheming, I direct your attention
to the Palladium project. With it, Microsoft seeks
to continue its assault on Open Source software
by using provisions of the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act. In a nutshell, Microsoft allies
itself with the entertainment industry, and ties
its copyright protection schemes to decoder chips
in the computer's hardware. In order to feature
commercial media content, the Linux operating
system would then have to use commercially licensed
decoder software that could not be distributed
freely under the GNU Public License. The intent
is to force Linux to incorporate more and more
software components that are not Open Source,
at which point, the whole Linux initiative would
cease to be free ($$) and transparent -- just
like Microsoft's systems.
SR : When discussing the U.S.'s "Plan Columbia"
on your site, you discuss DynCorp's use of Monsanto's
"Round-Up Ultra" pesticide to fumigate
cocoa fields, and you compare this pesticide to
Agent Orange used in Vietnam. Are there documented
cases of harm to humans in surrounding areas?
AD : I don't think it's particularly clear what
the long term health impact will be, because adequate
studies have not been conducted. But more obvious
are the effects on crops other than cocoa, which
have a definite consequence on the lives of poor
people living in these huge regions. Since Glysophate
is a defoliant that kills legal crops, the whole
spraying campaign is a very drastic ecological
shock to the food chain as well as the drug industry,
which, incidently, has shown little sign of slowing
down since the U.S. began pouring money into Colombia
in the 1990s.
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