The art of connection - rethinking art in a networked world
Abstract
This thesis examines how elements of the contemporary art world
can be seen to
adapt in relation to an increasingly networked twenty-first
century world. Recognising
the advent of the World Wide Web as a point of paradigmatic
disruption the text
develops a selection of theoretical ideas. These ideas reflect
that the cultural
landscape is shifting to be evermore network orientated. The
concept of a networked
world, a cultural space defined by hyper-links, is projected onto
the development of
two forms of exhibition—the monumental commission and the
mega-exhibition. By
viewing these two case studies the thesis demonstrates ways in
which key art world
structures may be reconsidered within a dynamic twenty-first
century world.
The first case study, Shock and Awe, analyses the monumental
commission as a
conduit for networking—a site designed to produce a specific
sociability. This section
considers the development of the Unilever commissions at the Tate
Modern’s Turbine
Hall. Five monumental artworks are evaluated for the way they can
be seen to operate
as socialising media.
The second case study, Mega-Forma, explores the development of
four mega exhibitions
by two separate curators across the last 15 years. Mega-Forma
observes
that these exhibitions have redirected their energy and become
focused on
redistributing cultural agency in a decentralised twenty-first
century. These exhibitions
are recognised as developing into a larger sort of
gesamtkunstwerk, an all-embracing
art form. The roles of the curators will be seen to shift from a
mere arranger of things
to a reprogrammer of cultural relations, a cultural auteur—an
architect of experience.
Ultimately the thesis will underscore some ways in which we might
reconceptualise the
way the art world operates in the twenty-first century.
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