It’s been months since Bruce Sterling delivered his endnote talk at SXSW, and 
there have been furious conversations about The New Aesthetic.  If we take the 
replies by Watz et al on the Thecreatorsproject blog as an indication, there is 
a bit of dismissal of the idea from my interpretation.  However, I am still 
drunk on the kool-aid, but why?  I still believe that a cultural chord was 
struck that is a result of extant developments in contemporary digital art of 
the 2000’s that lead right to The New Aesthetic blog, or something like it.  
Where I and others argue that The New Aesthetic might be a non-movement, I 
would like to re-imagine that it is actually indicative of other cultural 
phenomena and New Media proto-movements.  These have to do with issues of 
curation, precedents in New Media “movements”, and the shape of culture in New 
Media society.  Where I think Bridle et al might have done a disservice to the 
idea of NA is through a partial superficiality in the case of a subject, while 
ephemeral, is not superficial at all.

Why? It is for the reason that in the current day and age, ephemerality is 
often mistaken for superficiality.   Net.culture by default is mercuric, and 
technoculture is typified by the fact that things like the iPad and tablets 
have become nearly ubiquitous within two years of the technology’s emergence.  
This is reflected in online culture, through the torrent (pun intended) of 
images spilling through social media like blogs, Facebook, image boards, and 
tumblrs like The New Aesthetic.  Love or hate it, what Bridle describes with 
some inarticulation is a phenomenology of this torrent of images as an 
aesthetic and their generation by technology.

“I’ll just leave this here” Machine Vision, New Forms of Curation, and The New 
Aesthetic

What do I mean by this?  There are two aspects of NA that are germane to 
describing it – the machine eye and a particular form of human curation.  The 
first is well documented by Bridle and the comments on thecreatorsproject – 
there are several flavors of machine creation or acquisition of images.  As 
mentioned elsewhere, this includes surveillance, drone images, intentional 
corruption of digital media (“glitch”), and generative images, to name a few.  
I would also like to add the phenomena encountered through the use of search 
engines to correlate images, which can be considered as a form of meta-vision. 
All of these have been aptly described as sets of practices that are more akin 
to driving a nail as culture continues to fly in a ballistic arc than taking a 
definitive all-encompassing stance.  The second has to do with mass curation in 
social media, a subject that has been the subject of recent books.  But there 
is an intersection of two key elements, which I will pin together next.

Models of these forms of social curation include Facebook, “surfing clubs”, and 
even imageboards like 4chan.org.  While considering 4chan and its reputation as 
being the home of the memetic dregs of the Internet, it also represents one of 
the purest forms of net.curation, and that is the curation of anonymity.  “I’ll 
just leave this here” is a common comment posted by 4chan denizens who post 
images, but two things are manifest when this occurs. First, something is being 
left, and that thing was chosen as being intrinsically of some interest or 
provocation, thus implying intent of interest or value and therefore creates a 
curatorial gesture, even if it is banal.  Human selection is not random, 
despite claims to randomness. This is evident in New Media art projects called 
“Internet Surfing Clubs”, which are predecessors to the NA tumblr, and so on.

The Curatorial model that the NA tumblr seems to be based on, albeit singularly 
rather than group, lies in collectives like Nastynets and Double Happiness. 
These are/were “Internet Surfing Clubs”, which drew from New Media art 
phenomena like Dirtstyle, early Glitch, and Digital Minimalism.  These take 
memes, 8-bit graphics, “blingy” graphics (a hallmark of Dirtstyle) and document 
them in an endless blogroll, typifying the stated torrent of various images.  
The curatorial practice of the found varies from Nastynets archiving of memetic 
and glitchy graphics to Cory Arcangel’s exhibition of a “found” Photoshop 
preset in the “Younger than Jesus” exhibition at the New Museum.  In addition, 
Nastynets’ blogroll was also featured in the Sundance Festival’s New Horizons 
exhibition in 2009. This sets up a recent precedent for Bridle, and also shows 
the rapid, fluid nature of social curation as a model for the first decade of 
the 2000’s.  Another key point to consider is that when considering 4chan, 
Youtube, Nastynets, and so on, curation is not dead.  Curation has furcated and 
multiplied, varying from the more traditional sorts to purely anonymous, “like” 
and thread-based curation, which is of a radically different form from extant 
models.  Perhaps the “Let me just…” model of curation is divergent enough from 
the conventional that is sets up a cultural dissonance.

Nastynets, Double Happiness, Dirtstyle and others have purported to locate 
themselves as movements (the first two as “surfing clubs”, and the latter as a 
movement in itself), and are precedents for The New Aesthetic as a movement, 
although a movement that documents an ephemerality. This is in line with Marius 
Watz’ issue with “The Problem With Perpetual Newness” that echoes concerns with 
the use of “new” in a movement, including New Media and the Neue Sachlichtheit 
(New Objectivity), the latter of which is over 80 years old of as of this 
writing.  New as a quality and new as a designator are often in dissonance with 
one another, and n this writer’s opinion are a result of a conflation rather 
than a misnomer.  It’s a problem to call something “New” with the understanding 
that what one is describing is eventually going to be “New” for perpetuity.

Lastly, there seems to be a problem with the idea of NA as a movement that 
curatorially follows the model of “Let me just leave this here…”  Historically, 
movements like Futurism or Surrealism are thought of as weighty, 
manifesto-laden projects that engage in radical social agendas.  Surfing Clubs, 
Dirtstyle, and The New Aesthetic look comparatively frivolous. I think that the 
comparison between the First and what I have called the Third-Wave Avant Garde 
of New Media (the Second Wave being Pop, AbEx, et al) do not reveal 
inconsequentiality but the shape of culture.

The differences between the fin de siècle and fin de millennium are 
fundamental, as are those between the 50’s and 60’s and the 2000’s.  What is 
being compared is the monolithic aesthetics of High Modernism, shifting to the 
shattering of those protocols by people like Hamilton and Warhol. This 
progresses to where there is almost a cultural plethora of brief movements and 
groups that pop up and evaporate.   Vast concurrences and pluralities in 
net.culture and the hit-and-run aspect of its nature, begging us to refer once 
again to the difference from the monolithic nature of the museum to the 
rhizomatic nature of the Web, mainly reflects the shape of culture in the age 
of The New Aesthetic. It is ephemeral, or provides assaults/streams of images 
in the hundreds or thousands at a time.  But there is something  worth 
considering.

The New Aesthetic did not come out of the blue, as Watz put so well.  It is the 
result of a series of cultural shifts and artistic projects that have been 
codified in Bridle, et al’s project.  As I have said before, net/techno culture 
is developing so quickly at the turn of the millennium it has an inherently 
ephemeral nature, and “movements” as such represent that, as movements reflect 
the cultural contexts of their time.  Therefore, while much of the commentary 
regarding The New Aesthetic hits the mark, I feel that there is also much more 
to it than, “Let me just put this here…”  However, the nature of movements are 
far less monumental, as even things like Relationalism (Borriaud) and Superflat 
(Murakami) seem like projects.   Movements like Surfing Clubs and Dirtstyle  
merely exhibit an ephemerality that are indicative of the cultural context of 
the technological acceleration of the time.

I think that is why I am still interested in The New Aesthetic. Perhaps I 
should remain curious for the conceptual year after the Sterling address to 
reflect the year that Bridle managed his blog.  It seems oddly appropriate.
_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
NetBehaviour@netbehaviour.org
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to