Wikipedia Art/Wikipedia Heart – David Kent Watson


Wikipedia Heart (2009, 36MB, 3:12 min)


Wikipedia Art (2009, 15.3MB, 1:32 min)

Being two songs by David Kent Watson inspired by the Scott Kildall/Nathaniel Stern
Wikipedia Art project, which has engendered some huffing & puffing amongst the humourless & imaginatively challenged.
The songs are neat – skillfully made, performed and recorded, & beneath the surface whimsy
there’s some depth ( in particular “Heart” seems to found a whole new hybrid discipline of
epistemological meditation through popular song).

This is in keeping with the whole WA project which unlike so many art projects which claim
to investigate something ( & usually my heart sinks when I see the word) actually does
and very effectively too.
Not only that (and I would expect this from anything involving Stern, whose work in whatever medium
or genre, is always touched with poetry) there’s a wonderfully twisted lyricism* to the WA project, which is very difficult to sum up in the usually one line required for much second rate conceptualism -the Duchamp epigone crew- which is possibly why it seems to have mostly drawn responses ranging from surly to mystified and back to grumpy in discussion in places like Art Fag City and Rhizome.
Now, generously & mischievously, Kildall & Stern have thrown the whole thing open for remixing, which is where these songs appear**.
The remixes in turn form an ongoing contribution to the padiglione internet of the current Venice Biennale -here’s the open call for contributions so what are you waiting for?!

And of course, coming back full circle to David Kent Watson, clearly one to watch. Bravo.

* & I use the term precisely & advisedly, not simply as a term of general approbation.
What I mean is this: it’s the very not-rightness, surface clumsiness
of the WA project that makes it resonate so much. This is what those who want their
art laid out like the ABC or like wonder pills, miss. It’s the failure, or refusal, of glibness,
the stimulus to real thought, that spawns the poetry of it.
Even the language the Wikipedia serf-bureaucrats use as they flounder blindly, hilariously and painfully
seems to have been dusted with a kind of magic satire brush.

** D.o.I – I have a couple of things in there also.

Pussy Weevil – Marina Zurkow and Julian Bleeker

weevil
Pussy Weevil (2003, 4.5MB, 1 min.)

Pussy Weevil is a screen-based 2D animated
character, that responds to the viewer

Smile Project by Jason Van Anden

smileproject
Smile Project (2003 ongoing, 12MB, 7:14 min.)

Neil and Iona are sculptures that dynamically interrelate
with each other and their audience, expressing themselves with
body language, facial expressions and strangely compelling sounds.

Jason Van Anden and The Smile Project.

Sorry I’m Late


Tomas Mankovsky – Sorry I’m Late (2009, 24.9MB, 3:11)

Lovely short film Sorry I’m Late.
Fun and engaging and very well done.
My only criticism: I know it’s important to
include proper credits, but must they be as
long as the piece itself?

New Friends – David Shrigley


David Shrigley – New Friends (2009, 4.5MB, 1:00)

From David Shrigley
Because who doesn’t like new friends?

The USA. Be Proud.

hillbilly
Hillbilly USA (2005, 7MB, 1:41 min.)

A beautifully executed found object hillbilly
masterpiece. From – Borders Perrin Norrander

Lew Baldwin

Know Your Meme – Single Serving Sites

singleservingsites
Single Serving Sites (2008, 30MB, 4:44 min.)

The Rocketboom Institute for Internet Studies presents its findings
on Single Serving Sites

Ramon and Pedro – Brazil


Ramon and Pedro – Brazil (200?, 31.8MB, 2:50)

From “two directors behind one camera is better
than two cameras into one director’s behind” duo
Ramon and Pedro.
Via Partizan.

Movies with Grandma Joy


Movies with Grandma Joy (2008, 27.3MB, 5:39)

“Grandma is serious about going to the movies.
She hates to miss the previews and she watches all of the credits.”

From the absolutely charming vlog,
Movies with Grandma Joy

Dan Osborne – Mariah Carey/Boyz II Men


Mariah Carey/Boyz II Men(2009, 86MB, 4:49min)

Splendid bit of drôlerie from Dan Osborne, whose work
we’ve featured here before and certainly will again.
It’s funny, sure, but as with a good deal of Osborne’s work it
treads an interesting line between funny bone and heartstring.
Oh..alright..maybe heartstring is a bit strong but there’s a
certain, and a rather touching, melancholy lurking here.

Also – what is it about Mariah Carey and art video on the net?