turbulence.org, an online network “commissioning and supporting net art” has called for proposals for a web publication discussing recent art projects made possible by computers and networked connectivity. Importantly, the published contributions, being online, will be available for further discussion and additions, which is entirely appropriate given the subject matter.
I figured my blogging-as-art projects might make a useful practice-based contribution to this publication, and to that end, here is my proposal. (You can view others’ proposals here.)
Lucas Ihlein
Abstract:
Blogging as Art: a Framework for the Intensification of Lived Experience
In 2006, I carried out an art and blogging project designed to intensify the intimacy of my connection to my local neighbourhood. I made a strict rule: For two months, I would not leave the boundaries of Petersham, the suburb where I live in Sydney’s inner-west. Each morning I wrote a blog entry about the events of the previous day. The blog, Bilateral Petersham (http://thesham.info), developed a large and loyal community of readers and became a powerful tool for framing, participating in, and reflecting on everyday life in my local community.
Bilateral Petersham is one of a series of “blogging as art†projects engaging with different communities which I have undertaken since 2005. In my practice, my starting point is always the inherent aesthetic qualities of everyday conversations and interactions (including those which occur online). Blogging creates a framework in which attention is focused on, and in, these conversations. Dialogue with online correspondents generates a proliferation of new opportunities for encounters in “the real world”. These encounters in turn become the material for tomorrow’s blog postings, which go beyond diaristic reporting or ethnographic record. The blog – an ever-evolving work in progress – is simultaneously a genuine component of “real life†and an extended literary drama.
To demonstrate the dramatic and aesthetic potential of blogging as a dialogical mode of art making, this chapter will examine a series of postings from my blogs. In one particular entry from Bilateral Petersham, “An Easterly Dilemma“, I am confronted with a compelling request to break my own rule and leave Petersham for a family event. This dilemma is opened up to my blog readership, initiating a heated discussion on the ethical tensions between art and life, and prompting an online brainstorming of strategies for future action.
Keywords:
blogging, attention, experience, drama, interaction, art, communicative exchange, relationality.
Three networked writing samples:
“An Easter-ly Dilemma“, from Bilateral Petersham.
Cold Turkey, from Bilateral Blog. Having completed several blogging art projects, I am contemplating withdrawing from the internet for a period of one year. This blog entry, “Cold Turkey”, is a discussion of the practicalities and ethics of this “net-death”.
At the Cemetery, from Bon Scott Blog. This entry from the Bon Scott Blog is a good example of the way blogging operates to focus and intensify a series of ordinary/extraordinary encounters. In this post, I tell the story of my day at the Fremantle Cemetery on the anniversary of Bon’s death.
Short CV and biography of Lucas Ihlein.
Hi Lucas,
Sounds an interesting project, and your proposal looks great too. Yet, I must confess, the main reason for rocking up here today, is so I can say “wow! wow! whoop! whoop! huzzah!” about your involvement with ‘There Goes the Neighbourhood’! I’d give my best set of underpants to be involved in a project like that. Maybe I will be too, one day – when I’m more grown up! Actually, I’d give my best set to see and hear the project in action. I hope you will post about your experiences when you get underway with the work. Congratulations!
Hi Mel, thanks! Yep, I will blog about The Neighbourhood – specifically the re-enactment of the Kaprow piece, which should be fun! Wish you could be in Sydney for it!
FYI
Found this site today and thought of your networked projects:
Institute for Distributed Creativity (iDC)
http://www.distributedcreativity.org/
Also [a book]:
The Art of Free Cooperation (Paperback)
by Trebor Scholz (Editor), Geert Lovink (Editor)
http://www.collectivate.net/
Institute for Distributed Creativity (iDC) is sadly out of date – looks like it’s not been updated in some time – I always forget to check these things