Art Is Activism
Current mergers and confrontations between artists and activists often include
heated debates on the value, use, productivity and meaning of each, as terms and
as activities. The problem with naming and drawing lines clearly deliniating each
activity is that it can specialize, isolate and make more digestable a diverse
range of productive activities. It may be more useful to look at the name game
itself as a performance piece or an activist's action that varies depending on
where one is viewing the "work".
On the Internet and alongside this theater of naming, a new kind of street performance
has emerged. One recent example is the on-line collective action responding to
the City of Rome's banning of a series of web pages hosted by the The
Thing, Rome, an Italian art server, this past October. In response to the
censorship, which included the removal of a book by Luther
Blisset
and an interview
with artist Francesca Da Rimini, AKA doll yoko, protest e-mails were sent
to the Roman city officials. This action was followed by a number of public requests
by renowned
artists and critics to buy the in-boxes
of the recipients of the protest mail, arguing that the actions constituted a
body of net art worthy of archiving and collecting. Simultaneously, The Thing
Rome announced a first international competition
of Net.protest, NO
PROTEST NO PROFIT, a call for collective net protest/action/art for which
the winners would be awarded small prizes from an international panel of expert
judges.