Skip to main content
  • Editions
    • International
    • China
    • France
    • India
    • Australia
    • United Kingdom
    • Hong Kong
    • Canada
    • Brazil
    • Germany
    • Russia
  • Magazines
    • Art+Auction

      Modern Painters

  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Photo Galleries
  • Blouin Art Sales Index
  • Gallery Guide
  • Art Sites
  • Boutique
  • Log in

    Not a member?

    Sign up

    Log in

    |Forgot your password?
    OR
    Sign up
  • Sign up
Home
  • Visual Arts
    • Visual Arts Home
    • Contemporary Art
    • Old Masters/Renaissance
    • Impressionism & Modern Art
    • Ancient Arts & Antiques
    • Traditional Arts
    • Museums
    • Reviews
    • Columnists
    • Features
  • Performing Arts
    • Performing Arts Home
    • Film
    • Music
    • Theater & Dance
  • Architecture & Design
    • Architecture & Design Home
    • Design
    • Architecture
  • Artists
  • ART PRICES
  • Market News
    • Market News Home
    • Art Fairs
    • Auctions
    • Collecting
    • Galleries
    • Databank
    • Art & Crime
    • ART PRICES
    • Columnists
  • Style & Society
    • Style Home
    • ART Parties/Scene
    • Fashion
    • Food & Wine
    • Jewelry & Watches
    • Autos & Boats
  • Events
  • Travel
  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Slideshows
  • Newsletter Sign Up
  • Homepage RSS
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • foursquare
  • tumblr

Search form

International Edition
May 24, 2012 Last Updated: 1:02:PM EDT

On "Link Rot" and Other Scourges of Digital Art Conservation (And Some Strategies to Counter Them)

Undefined

On "Link Rot" and Other Scourges of Digital Art Conservation (And Some Strategies to Counter Them)

  • Email
  • Print
  • Save
  • Tweet
  • Pin It
Courtesy of F.A.T. Lab's
F.A.T. Lab's "Occupy the Internet" is a viral piece of Internet protest art.
by Kyle Chayka
Published: October 19, 2011

One of the problems, but also one of the attractions, of using new technology to make art is that there are often few precedents for what the results should look like. This frontier quality makes for an exciting, dynamic field, but it can also lead to tough questions with lasting consequences. For instance, how can we be sure that something asephemeral and finicky as Internet art is still viewable a decade from now, let alone 500 years in the future?  

Last Wednesday, in the basement theater of the New Museum, the new medianonprofit and blog Rhizome gave a presentation on ArtBase,its continuously growing, intensively-curated online archive of Internet art meant to "keep the field of Internet art available for artists, curators, and viewers," according to the organization's Ben Fino-Radin. ArtBase's collection currently holds 2,483 objects dating from 1993 to the present, with the highest concentration of works made in 2001. Artists can submit their own pieces via Rhizome's Web site, after agreeing to a contract that allows Rhizome to host their work (more on that later).

Many of the objects archived in Rhizome's collection are only represented by brief descriptions, or a photograph or screen capture of the art object, rather than an exact working replica of the piece itself. As Fino-Radin explained, Internet art faces many problems that make it difficult to archive — which is why ArtBase exists in the first place.

THE PROBLEMS WITH INTERNET ART

The term "link rot" refers to the impermanence of location on the Internet. Many of the earlier pieces in ArtBase's collection were tethered tohyperlinks that artists emailed to the Web site's curators, and as the artistsstopped maintaining their domain name or ceased paying for hosting, those links stopped working, and the work they connect to was lost.

Not unlike Dan Flavin works, which pose challenges for conservators because the proper light bulbs aren't made any more, Internet art often depends on a very specific technological environment to fully function. Obsolete technology, or the changing capabilities of the Internet, can "break" online artworks. Fino-Radin told the story of one online work that took advantage of a dial-up connection's slow loading speeds to create something that appeared over a length of time. With broadband, that aspect is now gone.

Lack of documentation means that many early Internet art pieces are difficult, if not impossible, to recreate, even if the original files and source code are still available. Without the artist's direct presence or extensive guidance, some works of Internet art can neverbe repaired to their original state.

SOME WORKING SOLUTIONS

Share This Story

  • Tweet This

  • Post to Stumble Upon
  • Email to a Friend

ArtBase is combating these problems by formulating best-practice strategies for today's artists, and working to restore older Internet art by any means possible. Now, pieces submitted to ArtBase as "Archival Copies" must be fully hosted on Rhizome's own servers, fighting link rot and making sure the original files are accessible. Artists must also fill out a media questionnaire about the work and how it functions, providing useful metadata and helping future conservators.

For earlier pieces, the favored conservation strategy is good old-fashioned elbow grease, as Fino-Radin put it. Conservators working with curators, programming consultants, and any tools at their disposal"repair the works manually," digging into their code and figuring out how to restore outdated file formats. Once a work is deconstructed, emulation — or the creation of digital environments that mimic the qualities of older environments — can be used to present a working version of an artwork.

QUESTIONS REMAIN

Yet the guardians and conservators of Internet art can still get overzealous, committing the virtual equivalent of cutting the surface of a painting off its wooden support. Like when an Anselm Kiefer loses its straw, how a work degrades — breaks, or wears down, online — could be part of the piece itself, a process that the artist values. Another question is howmuch archiving is good archiving? "If we have a record of the artist's intent," Fino-Radin said, "altering what they've done for the sake of open access can be controversial."

Conserving digital art is an evolving practice with many fundamental issues yet to be resolved. What is hopeful about projects like ArtBase is that they attempt to come to grips with these issues before the permanent disappearance of even more artworks and digital art history.

 

~ ~ ~   DOWNLOADING  ~ ~~
 

OCCUPY _______: Internet art collective F.A.T. ("free art and technology") Labs has released "Occupy the Internet,"a bit of code that, when added to a Web site's HTML, causes a random assortment of classic Internet-meme GIF animations holding Occupy Wall Street signs to pop up at the bottom of your Web browser. A good number of sites have been occupied already, with plenty more to come. The animations include: Batman holding "lost my job, foundan occupation"; the "Peanut Butter & Jelly Time" dancing banana with "America wake up!"; a moonwalking pixelated Michael Jackson with "debt is slavery"; and an air-humping stormtrooper with "Wall Street is our street." The project retains a tongue-in-cheek, mocking quality, but one senses that it's also a sincere gesture of support for the "Occupy" movement.

– INTERNET AS WILDERNESS:
The same evening as Rhizome's ArtBase talk, contemporary art blog Hyperallergic hosted a conversation with EcoArtTech, the artist duo of Leila Nadir and CaryPeppermint. The pair's work, mingling nature with technology by breaking down the barrier between the real and the virtual, seems particularly timely. What I found most intriguing was Nadir and Peppermint's discussion of the idea of "wilderness" and "wildness" as itrelates to the Internet. Natural wilderness is organic, uncontrolled, and uncontrollable — what could its online equivalent be? Caverns of lost Geocities pages? An epic virtual tangle of unused and decaying Tumblrs?

Net Work is a weekly column exploring the state of contemporary new media art and its practitioners by ARTINFO Assistant Editor Kyle Chayka. Follow Kyle on Twitter at @chaykakor email him at kchayka@artinfo.com.      

Like what you see?

Sign up for our DAILY NEWSLETTER and get our best stories delivered to your inbox.

Go to top ↑
Visual Arts, New Media
Share:
  • Tweet
  • Email to a Friend

Comments

0 Comments
+ Add Yours
Log in or register to post comments
Oldest first Newest first

RELATED ARTICLES

Want Fetching Art? Australian Entrepreneur Launches Artfido.com
Bonhams Australia Present Six Auctions of Amazing Art and Antiques from May 27 to 29
Sale of the Week: Australian Artist John Firth-Smith at Christie's May 29 London Interiors Sale
Australian Galleries Clean Up at Art HK 2012 (Saturday Update)
A Guide to Australian Galleries at Art HK 2012

Most Popular

Viral Fashion: How the Facebook Wedding Dress Turned Priscilla Chan Into an Unlikely Style Star
The ARTINFO Bookshelf: 40 Books That Every Artist Should Own, Part II
K8 Hardy Ripped Fashion a New One at Her Riotous Whitney Biennial Runway Show
"When You Interrupt Us, You Have to Deal With Us": Murray Moss Invites You to Intrude at His Midtown Lab
Reagan's Blood, Bieber's Hair, Ally McBeal's PJs: 10 Freakish Items From PFCAuctions's Current Online Sale
The ARTINFO Bookshelf: 40 Books That Every Artist Should Own, Part I
Are We in an Anish Kapoor Bubble? Two Barbara Gladstone Shows Point to the Affirmative

Popular on Social Media

  • "I Don't Like the Term Installation": Daniel Buren on His Grand Palais-Filling Monumenta Show
  • Is Antony Gormley Plotting His Own Foundation in Norfolk?
  • Garage Sale at 11 West 53rd Street! MoMA Curator Sabine Breitwieser on Crowdsourcing Junk for Martha Rosler
  • What If Your Prized Painting Turns Out to Be Nazi Loot? The Niche Market for Art Title Insurance
  • Sale of the Week, May 27-June 2: Christie's Week-Long Hong Kong Auctions Cater to Every Taste
  • Allen Jones, Table (detail), 1969
    Allen Jones's Soft Porn Sculptures Spice Up Sotheby's Gunter Sachs Evening Sale, but Warhol Dominates
  • "When You Interrupt Us, You Have to Deal With Us": Murray Moss Invites You to Intrude at His Midtown Lab
  • K8 Hardy Ripped Fashion a New One at Her Riotous Whitney Biennial Runway Show
  • Viral Fashion: How the Facebook Wedding Dress Turned Priscilla Chan Into an Unlikely Style Star
  • Bonhams Australia Present Six Auctions of Amazing Art and Antiques from May 27 to 29

GO TO:

Home page

Editorial

  • Visual Arts
  • Performing Arts
  • Architecture & Design
  • Artists
  • ART PRICES
  • Market News
  • Style & Society
  • Events
  • Travel
  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Slideshows

Products

  • Magazines
  • Gallery Guide
  • Blouin Art Sales Index
  • Somogy
  • Art Sites
  • Art Jobs

Louise Blouin Media

  • About Us
  • Subscriptions
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Louise Blouin Foundation
  • RSS
Copyright © 2012 All rights reserved. Use of the site constitutes agreement with our Privacy Policy and User Agreement.