
Keynote
dialogue

A
public dialogue between Max
Wyman
(left) and Hank Bull at the CCA
's
National Policy Conference, November
28th, 2002 .
Max
Wyman : I would like to start off with a quote
from Life of Pi , the most recent Booker prize
winner, by Canadian author Yann Martel. Midway through
the introduction, Martel writes: "If we citizens
do not support our artists, then we sacrifice our imagination
on the altar of crude reality and we end up believing
in nothing and having worthless dreams." It's a
good thing to hang onto, I think, as we talk here for
the next couple of days about these issues that confront
us all.
I
think we have no planned outcome from the discussions
we will have. We are not to create a document or manifesto
out of these two days. Nonetheless, I do think we can
move the conversation ahead quite usefully. What we
need out this conference is a blend of vision and practically.
We
all know that we have to work on the politicians, and
it was wonderful to hear the Alberta Minister for Community
Development, Mr. Gene Zwozdesky, so tuned in to the
issues. However, we have to convince the politicians
that there are other arguments than the economic ones
to make on behalf of the arts.
Politicians
tend to be linked to what I call "the immediate
long term" because they can't look very far ahead.
But we have to. More than ever, we're in the
situation where we're being forced to look to the future
and to know where we are going, because things are moving
so fast.
In
the initial note about the conference, the CCA described
the function of this event as: "how to advance
cultural policy in order to keep up with the changing
nature of arts practices across Canada ." Although
that is what we are going to talk about, we can't do
that in a vacuum. Arts practice exists in society, and
I'd like to spend a minute putting what we are doing
in that broader context.
It
seems to me that the human race is at a time of great
moral and ethical challenge. We have to deal with social
and scientific advances that are fraught with danger
as well as with possibility. We're under intensifying
pressure to come up with innovative responses to some
of the most profound dilemmas that mankind has ever
faced. We're are already managing global health threats
badly; we're unable to protect human rights; we have
little control over the international flow of capital;
we're nowhere near curing the world's environmental
ills. Meanwhile, advances in scientific research that
lead us to an era of tremendous opportunity (like stem
cell research, human cloning, robotics, promise of extended
life) force us to examine our moral priorities as human
beings.
Based
on the simple notion of access alone (access to machines),
the new technologies risk creating a society of "haves"
and "have-nots". And everywhere we're seeing
the new manifestations of exclusion: xenophobia, distrust
of the other, an unwillingness to share, a closing of
borders. As society comes to terms with these challenges
and opportunities, decision-making will, of necessity,
be based less and less on short term political opportunities,
and more and more on long term, moral and ethical choices.
It's a process in which the aware and informed individual
is going to play an unprecedented role.
The
social and economic structures of the new Canada will
be all about innovation and imagination, and that comes
from the individual. It will also be about ways to find
the solution, both human and humane, to problems we
don't even know exist yet. Reason alone isn't going
to do that. Engagement with art synthesizes the rational
and the emotional, the imaginative and the intuitive.
It releases the visionary impulse to bring a new imaginative
dimension to problem solving. It is vital that the arts
and culture are front and centre when the new techno-social
contract is drawn up. A diverse and imaginative cultural
expression, one that asserts the primacy of the human
and the humane in the face of the dehumanizing forces
of the modern world, is a fundamental component of the
dreams and ideals of Canada . The need to foster the
imagination and to bridge the ingenuity gap in ways
that allow us to grasp both the challenges and the opportunities
that these new dimensions of the human society offer,
is going to become a priority for anyone and for any
government. Nurturing the imagination, which is what
you, the artists, do, means taking full advantage of
the benefits of engagement with artistic creativity.
That means nurturing a sense of within the audience
and educating for uncertainty (education for uncertainty
seems to be a valuable function of what art does these
days). It lets people know that it's ok not to know
for sure. I've spent my life as a critic and as soon
as I find answers to questions that have been bothering
me about art, the artist changes the goalpost, and I
have to start looking again.
We're
in a world of shifting sands, and we have to let people
know that uncertainty is okay. Art will do that. We're
at a point in life where we can't know things for sure:
art helps us to recognize and be comfortable with that.
So encouraging engagement with creativity is a central
core of what art has to do. It's going to displace reason
as the prime source of answers. That means giving back
the arts to everybody. Art is a universal franchise,
but we've somehow built an awareness within society
that art belongs to a small walled off group. We have
this imaginary ivory tower in which art exists. It doesn't
belong there. We must democratize art, demystify it,
and give it back to the people who own it. If we do
that, people will become fearless and then we'll move
the arts back to the centre of the social agenda along
with health and education which is where it should be.
Culture,
education and health are the three pillars of society.
While health is a necessity for life, culture, the arts
and all our expressive heritage are the reason for living.
They are at the centre of our lives, the catalyst for
our imagination, the prompter of our dreams.
It
isn't easy when we look at what's happening in terms
of the changes technology is wreaking on the arts, and
we wonder where we're going. I believe that fundamental
changes are going to happen to arts delivery and arts
practice in the next 20 years. I'm looking 20 years
ahead, but we could be looking further. We can't even
begin to conceive of what delivery is going to be like
in 20 years time. Already things are changing by the
month in terms of what you can get in your house. A
real time, three-dimensional holographic presentation
of a string quartet in your kitchen may sound like creative
fiction, but it's not. It's coming. And we've got to
be ready for it. I think very few people are, very few
arts organization are able to get beyond the moment
to look to the future. What we can do here is to help
move in that direction. This is what I'll ask Hank to
talk about, and I'd like to ask him to join me now.
Hank
Bull is a wonderful inspirational figure in Vancouver
. He's been an essential part of the Western Front Society
for close to 30 years. The Western Front Society has
been at the forefront, at the outer edge of what's happening
in media arts generally. Hank himself has been involved
in the new technology and the new uses of the technology
for longer than most of us have known about the technology.
He's a veteran innovator.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MW: Hank, what do you think the CCA meant by
the title of the conference: When is Now?
Hank
Bull : Well Max, Now is us, in this room.
Right now. That's what it is. And that's kind of an
exiting idea in itself. But I also would like to say
that Now is a place. Now is not
just time; Now is space. And I'd like to acknowledge
the space that we're in, this room, but also this city,
Edmonton . I also would like to acknowledge the nations
who have lived here: the Cree Nations, the Assiniboine
, Black Foot, and other Nations, and thank them for
letting us be here. I would also like to point out that
I am proud to say that I was born in Alberta , in Calgary
. Je suis très content de dire que je suis
canadien, et cet événement est un phénom
P ne typiquement canadien, et il est essentiel. This
is a really Canadian event. There are not many countries
in the world where you would find an event like this.
That's also about " Now ", and what
we can do as Canadians that most people in the world
can't do.
Now
is really a very fragile and fearful time. Max
has done a really good job of setting some of the key
questions in motion. It is a time of fear, not to say
a time of terror, and of great uncertainty. Every day
we read about that in the paper. Yesterday for example,
you could read when you cross the border to the US ,
a camera will take your picture, recognize your facial
features and be able to call up all the phone calls
you've made over the last ten years -not to mention
all the purchases you've made. We're looking at a very
frightening commodification of the individual's imagination
in a real "1984" scenario. So when we talk
about the opportunities of the Internet, it has to be
taken in that context.
But
not to jump too far ahead, Now is also about
our conversation, and it's about relationships with
people. Max and I are going to jam for a bit, but I
would invite the hecklers in the room to please jump
in.
MW: We talk about the "avant-garde",
but hasn't it always been there?
HB
: Well, you know, I've always thought that our practice
was post-avant garde. Avant garde is really
a moment in modernism. It was something that happened
in the early part of the twentieth century. Everything
that we call art, or that we call art today, that we
fund and consume and go to as audiences, is really a
manneristic variation on the very deep change or paradigm
shift that took place about 100 years ago when the ways
of looking at the world and the way art inscribed itself
as the way we see the world, changed in a huge way,
with cubism, Dada, Duchamp, and with all of the practices
of the avant garde. The avant garde was really knocked
out by the second world war. What happened af ter that
was not really avant garde any more. It was a recuperation,
to try to bring it back, and recently we can say an
acceleration of those modernist values to a kind of
vertiginous wave.
MW: Does it always have to exist in conflict
with society at large? Do we always have to " épater
les bourgeois "?
HB
: No. What do I mean by "post-avant garde"?
It means spreading art into society. In some ways the
art world is losing sight of what is happening with
art nowadays. Post-avant garde means no more masterpieces,
no more Picassos. It means networks of collaborations
and things bubbling up all over the place. It also means
changes in the way art is delivered. It's not simply
a matter of getting used to a new delivery system, it's
getting used to a new delivery system every week. Now
is happening on your cell phone. The thing that
used to be a delivery system, the record player for
example, is now turning into a musical instrument. So
the people that were listening to the records are now
playing with the turntables and becoming the musicians.
This hothouse environment is that instability that you,
Max, were referring to.
MW: How do we equip artists and arts organizations to
deal with that? Is it a matter of a mental change?
HB
: To make the art of the future is clearly not digitizing
our collections of paintings. That's a classic example
of what McLuhan called "rear-view mirrorism,"
where the new technology uses the old technology as
its content. For example, when the printed press came
along, bibles were printed. It took another 200 years
before the novel emerged. The same thing happened with
film. The first that happened is that the novel became
the content of film. We're really on the threshold now
of discovering what really is going to be possible with
new technologies and new delivery systems. What we have
to do is enable that research.
MW: Absolutely. I have this vision of what's happening
now with technology on the same sort of curve as music.
If you think of western music beginning with plain chant
in medieval times and ending with Stravinsky, we're
probably at plain chant in terms of the technologies
curve of development. When so many things are changing
"by the day," like you say, what do we do
with that?
HB
: You want to dance on the curl of the wave. If you
were into illuminated manuscripts in the 1500s, you
were in trouble. It's a matter of really trying to do
something with the new technologies that you can't do
with anything else. The musical performance this morning
by Raylene Campbell was a perfect example of that. It's
very easy to imagine that musical performance being
distributed live over the Internet, and perhaps engaging
with other performers in other cities, also live, in
a kind of random exchange. In fact, that is the kind
of musical event that is happening more and more using
this new media.
MW: Let's talk about that interaction. We're seeing
more and more artists working with scientists. It's
like a new renaissance; it hasn't happened this intensely,
I think, since the renaissance. Artists are running
with scientists in terms of crossing their imaginations.
HB
: I think that is true. A lot of disciplinary boundaries
are breaking down. Not only are artists working with
scientists, but they are also working with farmers,
homeless people, or in hospitals. The idea of an artist
in a residency in a hospital or a scientific research
lab is turning out to be a productive, very fruitful
type of engagement.
MW: Take Judith Marcuse's company as an
example. It put on a suicide show which was actually
saving kids. I remember reading a letter from a girl
who had written: "I was going to kill myself. I
saw your show. I decided not to." Art is a social
act.
HB
: I think it is true that art is a social act. It's
about taking art out of these old institutional confines
and out of the old kind of connaisseurship of the excellence
of arts, and bringing arts into the daily life of the
community and the world. I was going to say a word about
life in the broad sense of it, but I don't want to sound
utopian because I don't think that we are in an utopian
moment right now.
Not
only are we looking at these surveillance systems and
this enormous concentration of power and control using
electronic technologies, we're seeing the same sort
of thing happening with life forms. These enormous banks
of information being collected, and that have been collected,
in quasi-private hands and all the genetic information,
not only about humans but also plants and animals, are
increasingly privately owned. The first patent on an
animal was granted in 1981. The idea that you can create
life forms and patent them, life forms that until now
perhaps unimaginable, is a terrifying idea. And that
is about culture. Because culture is also a life form.
Culture
is what happens in cheese or wine. These things are
made with real culture, in a petrie dish with real living
culture, and it can often take 100 hundred years to
develop. Really good blue cheese doesn't happen overnight.
The process is now accelerated tremendously and actually
divorced from the soil and the land. This is a very
dangerous situation. [So as it becomes commodified and
part of this "pensée unique" of globalisation,
where everything has a price tag and everything becomes
reduced to a horizontal plane of equality, that becomes
a sphere around the world, where any resistance against
that becomes terrorism, and the most extreme resistance
are the resistance of cultures that are extremely different
from ours and are abhorrent to ours, but in a sense
are a reflection of our own frustration of living in
a world where there is no more difference any more,
no more outside. So the enemy becomes inside. Osama
Bin Laden is not part of them, he's part of us. There's
this internal viral thing that's fomenting. The role
the artist can play is that of a creative subverter
of systems of meaning and control, to go mess with the
codes, to destroy old meanings and look for new ones.
MW:
Isn't that what's happening with the interaction of
art, science and new technology? That new means of communicating
and destroying the codes are occurring all the time.
HB
: Absolutely. I think we're on the search.
I think there's hope for democracy, and artists are
a big part of that hope. There's hope for the UN. There's
hope that the nation state does have a role to play
in the future. But, you really don't feel right now
that change is going to come from there. Change is going
to come from the street, from below.
MW:
Is that why cultural diversity is so important? You've
just talked about the steam roller effect of gobalization:
isn't cultural diversity at many levels a way to save
the planet?
HB
: For me, it's the most interesting
subject. You can think of cultural diversity in terms
of bio-diversity, in terms of what used to be called
multiculturalism, and also in terms of the ability of
nation states to cr af t and define their own cultural
policies. There are various ways of looking at cultural
diversity.
One
of the questions that is posed in the keynote introduction
in the programme is "who will be making the art
of the future", and I think that one thing you
can say for sure is that most of the people who will
be making the art of the future will not be white people.
It's worth thinking about that, a lot. It's worth trying
to engage that and be part of that. I come from a city
where over a third of the people are non-white, mostly
from Asian populations. That is not reflected when you
listen to the CBC or when you visit the museum. However,
that is where the art of the future is coming from.
That is where the change is coming from, and the change
is happening very quickly. And that's a hopeful thing.
Trying to figure out the way that works of collaboration
and communication between informed individuals can actually
create a meaningful democracy for the planet in the
future, means getting out there and being curious and
generous about other people and engaging that very diverse
world. It's interesting when you think about the situation
vis-a-vis Iraq. Who's on board? It's the US, the UK,
Canada, and Australia: the English speaking world. What
we're talking about is the terrorism of the English
language on the rest of the world. That also has to
be considered.
MW: We've got to recognize the demographic
shift that is occurring. I live in the same city as
you, Hank, and it's quite clear. We're living in a very
different Vancouver than the one 30 years ago. Tie that,
Hank, to this idea of new democracy of access which
accompanies the new technology.
HB
: You know, one has to be careful about the notion of
"democracy of access." It's very easy to be
a technological utopian, to believe that the new technology
is going to put publishing power in the hands of everybody
and we'll be out there communicating in this wonderful
new democratic world. Yeah! That's partly true, but
it's also true that we're now seeing an unprecedented
concentration of power and control that is enabled by
the same technology. What happens is that you have these
two movements growing in opposite directions at the
same time. One is towards more control, towards "1984,"
and the other towards more diffusion and more democracy.
It's not a hopeless situation. If you look at the history
of the computer, the desktop computer, the WWW , none
of those were corporate strategies. IBM thought the
idea of the desktop was insane and that no one would
be interested in typing on a typewriter and have it
appear on a TV set. It was thought of as a crazy idea!
Video games, which now are a bigger industry than Hollywood,
were created by hackers working af ter hours. The WWW
was invented by a college student. The power of the
individual to transform and make a difference is really
key.
In
the context of the CCA this is not to be forgotten.
There has been a great pressure on the CCA over the
years to represent the so-called cultural industries,
to represent the corporate decision-making bodies within
the arts. I'm happy to see though that the individual
creator is the centrepiece. That's very important. It
is the individual dancer, the individual poet, who are
the engines of the whole thing.
MW: Ok, but what does this democracy of
access mean to notions of excellence. Who judges? Should
people judge?
HB
: Well, sometimes you have to judge. My teacher had
a wonderful theorem that he called the principle of
equivalence. He said: "in the unfolding of the
universe over all times, all these are things that come
up and down, there are three things that are equivalent
in this huge creative process: either a thing is well-made,
or it's badly made, or it's not made." He'd then
proceed to extrapolate this into a whole system of dealing
with the world. But it is not about those kinds of decisions.
Sometimes you have to judge. If you're a critic or on
a jury...
MW: Will there be a the role for a judge or critic
if everyone has access to creativity and everyone is
an artist?
HB
: I think so, yes. Artists are the ones who should judge.
In other words, we should have jury by peers. That should
be part of a new federal cultural policy. That should
be a basic principle along with arms length. Why? Because
the artists are the ones who are really engaged in the
most sustained and critical reflexion on what is the
meaning of communication, politics, technology, perception.
Artists are the ones who studied the history of all
that. They are the ones who think deeply about it and
have come up with the most provocative engagement about
it.
I
give you one example. I run a centre in Vancouver, The
Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian
Art (Centre A), and we just gave an exhibition to an
artist called Mo Sa'lemy. He's brilliant. He teaches
Web design and has a very fast mind. Right now, he runs
a shop called Database , which is very successful
and very cool. It is one of these little shops that,
when you walk in, you can't tell what it is. They've
got dj turntables you can rent, Internet access, they
sell clothes by local fashion designers, jewellery,
paintings, and they have a little art gallery in the
back. They're beside another store that's a combination
hair design, florist and cast iron furniture. This is
the way it's going. It's very creative. You could say
that's exiting; that's the art of the future. Well,
no. Mo did a show for us at the Centre A which was all
images of Ayatollah Khomeni, which he presented in a
very dead pan way without taking a position. It provoked
really intense debate and strong audience participation
both for and against the images. Mo said to me: "you
know this is it. This what I should be doing with my
life", and I have to agree. I think Database
is really cool, but actually to take something
and push it to a level that has nothing to do with commerce,
that is a pure intellectual pursuit, is really what
art can do. And it's extremely important to our future
as a nation. I like your three pillars idea: culture,
health and education. The more you think about it, they
blend into one. Don't they?
MW: They sure do. Let's come back to my blue skying
of about where we might go technologically. If we see
an increasing sophistication of delivery systems, what
would that mean to the centralisation of art production
or museum and gallery access?
HB
: Well, two things: decentralization and centralization.
What it means first of all if you are designing your
web site is interactivity. The Web site is not just
a showcase where you present your works to the world.
The Web site is a forum where people that visit the
Web site can actually contribute to the discourse and
the construction of meaning. That's the creative use
of media. This is not a new idea. Berthol Brecht was
the first person who put it out in his essay in radio.
Radio is right now just a means of distribution of information
but communication has to be two ways. The wonderful
thing about the telephone, and it's extension the Internet,
is that it enables two-way, and multi-way, communication.
That's the way to make it work.
Centralization:
will you see it? Yes you will. Why? Because of Jack
Valenti and the distributors of American films among
others. American films and media are the U.S.' biggest
exports. The United States wants the culture sector
to be on table of any trade negotiation. There is a
huge pressure out there for culture to be regarded as
just another product and to be opened up to free market
competition. When that happens, when the pressure to
make that happen is inexorable - it's like privatizing
health it's the same kind of pressure- when or if that
happens, then suddenly the British Arts Council will
be regarded as unfair competition as well as the CBC,
and the various other forms of state sponsored culture.
It's very important to oppose that. There is a tremendous
trend towards the centralization of the delivery of
culture. And it's one that is not favouring creativity;
it's one that's favouring the same old thing. There
wasn't an original thing that came out of Hollywood
in years. All they've got is something they know how
to make money with, and they don't want anyone else
to come up with any other ideas. They want to keep control
over the movie theatres and the distribution networks,
and they are doing this more and more and more.
I
suppose the good news in all of this is while we hear
that governments are losing and corporations are taking
over, in recent months, it seems like the opposite.
Corporations don't seem to be capable of taking care
of their own internal af fairs, let alone running the
world. They're collapsing. Mega mergers may not be a
good thing. You've got these guys on boards of directors
that don't have a clue about the widgets they manufacture
or how to run the business. So it's a volatile situation
and I believe enough in human creativity and ingenuity
that I don't think that attempts to centralise it and
control it will ever succeed.
MW: You mention radio and the fact that it is today
a one-way communication system. You mention that it
began as an interactive medium. Do you believe that
interactivity is going to be a more important role for
arts organisations in the future?
HB
: Oh yes. Yes. I think so.
MW: Because they are the delivery system at the moment.
HB
: Yes, but the accepted knowledge now about museums
and museums studies is that they are no longer storehouses
of treasures. That's a colonialist old fashion model.
More and more museums are places where people meet and
where people participate in what goes on in museum.
I think that interactivity is very important.
From the floor: Do you think that continual change in
hardware and software there's an immerging issue about
that data extinction? It's beginning to appear that
if you commit to new media, you have ten to twenty years
access only to whatever it is that you have done. In
addition, the emergence of email is going to be a nightmare
for future biographers. When the head of Kodak digital
says that if I have a digital image that I care about
then I would output it to film because digital is not
permanent and I feel that the issue of data extinction
is going to be influencing what occurs in the arts dramatically.
HB
: Yes, that is definitely true. But I went to a copyright
workshop once where the lawyer said: "yeah, sure!
Information wants to be free, but don't underestimate
the capability of lawyers and judges to make sure that
it isn't." Here you've got a system being headlined
in the newspaper that is going to listen to your phone
call made five years ago. In that case, there doesn't
seem to be much problem in preserving the digital information.
It can be done. Let me talk outside the box for a moment
here. Don't forget that the silicon chip is ceramic.
So how about inscribing all the digital stuff in bone
china. That'll preserve it good!
The
other way to look at it is to say that's there is a
lot of stuff that won't get preserved in all of this.
But isn't it a little bit like a totem pole in Haida
Gwaii? You build the thing, it sits in the forest, it
composts, and it goes back into the system. Then you
reinvent it, and you do it all over again. Culture evolves
in that way. I'm in favour of preservation. In fact,
the preservation of our electronic heritage needs to
be part of a coherent policy. Such policies that have
been executed in France, Germany and the U.S., quite
successfully. We're at the brink of it in Canada. We
really need to address that, and I think there are ways
to do so.
MW: I wanted to wind this down by going back to where
we began. When is Now. The future is here. We are there
now. Should we be scared or thrown or both or what?
HB
: We should be both. I would say that the key thing
here: Now is a time share. In other words,
Now is about relationship. That's happening
all over the place. For example, I just bought some
new accounting software. I'm talking to the supplier
on the 1-800 number and they say, "oh, the software
is free." I answer, "great!" Then they
add, "it's just going to cost you $29 a month for
the service contract." You don't buy a product
anymore, you buy a relationship with a supplier. It's
about relationship, about sharing the use of whatever
it is your permanent collection consists. The future
is really about relationships and about individuals
working with each other.
MW: And is that how we deal both with the challenges
and the opportunities of what's coming?
HB
: I think so.
MW: How would you characterize these relationships?
What qualities do you need for them? Generosity, Openess?
HB
: Yes, I have a tri-city system: curiosity, generosity,
and felicity. Three "city". Curiosity is very
important; it is important to be curious about what's
outside of your world and to find out about it. Generosity
is about using the talents you have and the genius each
of us has and share them . Felicity is to proceed with
joy in spite of the challenges.
MW: Hank, thank you. If we can get that message across
to the world, we'd have it sold. Thank you.
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