Guggenheim To Showcase YouTube Videos 66
dward90 writes "The Guggenheim Museum in New York has begun a program to submit YouTube videos to be declared High Art. From PCW: 'Are your YouTube videos so good they deserve to be in a museum? Thanks to a partnership between Google and the Guggenheim Museum in New York you stand, at least, a remote chance. The search giant and one of the most famed museums in the world for modern and contemporary art are collaborating on a new project called YouTube Play: A Biennial of Creative Video. The project will showcase up to 20 video works submitted to YouTube at the Guggenheim in New York on October 21, and online at YouTube.com/Play.'"
In case you can't find the YouTube exhibit... (Score:5, Funny)
i can haz cheezburger (Score:1, Funny)
What's next, lol cats?
I've got a better video (Score:2)
http://www.theonion.com/video/youtube-contest-challenges-users-to-make-a-good-vi,14288/ [theonion.com]
Of course Youtube videos can be high art (Score:5, Insightful)
Our society has already accepted that video is a legitimate form of artistic expression, and there are movies that are considered high art. Youtube is just a distribution medium, so if video can be high art so can Youtube video.
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Absolutely. The "can x be art?" angle these sorts of stories pull is inane. "Yes" is the answer.
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In traditional media outlets, the production of video is wholly choreographed by professionals with typically years of experience and education.
I don't think the question is "Can video be art?", but more succinctly "Can amateur video be considered high art?"
Undoubtedly the answer is yes. But if you browse youtube, I think you'll find it takes quite a lot of searching to find really well made video that could be considered high art. The only one I can think of off the top of my head, I can't even find right
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But if you browse youtube, I think you'll find it takes quite a lot of searching to find really well made video that could be considered high art.
Sooo, pretty much the same as any medium then?
[As an aside, I've never understood the whining by the MPAA that "youtube is all our stuff! (waaahhh)". The best stuff on youtube, by far, is original work, much of it by amateurs (something which no doubt makes the MPAA's blood run cold...).]
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Don't tell that to Roger Ebert [slashdot.org]
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It's art when an elite, serious-sounding group with an aura of superiority decides it counts as art ... sucks for you if you're the artist and have already died. They just couldn't be *bothered*.
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See, thats where the twist lies. Youtube has grown to be more than just a medium. It's an entire sub culture of the internet. I think where they are going with this is,
"is your youtube video considered High Art and manages to get half a million views in a weekend? "
I think thats what they are getting at. Calling it "Viral Art" just doesn't sound right, I guess. Any video that is considered art could be uploaded to Youtube and thus becomes Youtube Art, therefor nullifying the whole idea. I think what they ar
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The other question is whether youtube videos play any better at the Guggenheim than they do on your PC at home, i.e. do we really need a Guggenheim any more? Artists love exploring those kids of questions so I'm sure it is part of the purpose of the exhibit.
It's about time (Score:3, Insightful)
Why Youtube? (Score:4, Interesting)
Isn't Vimeo more art-oriented than Youtube? A very large amount of videos on Vimeo can seriously be classified as visual art.
Re:Why Youtube? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Because Google doesn't own Vimeo. This is a partnership between Google and the Guggenheim Museum.
It should be rebranded as Googleheim Museum then
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It depends [wikipedia.org]
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African tribal masks.
Inuit totem polls.
Any fairy tale you can think of.
Ring around the Rosie.
Swedish Dala horses
the subset of graffiti that qualifies as art
Illuminated bibles
Buddha statues
Obviously I can't name folk artists (almost by definition), but a if I ask you to think about a culture (especially a non-western one), chances are you're going to picture their folk art and architecture.
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You're mostly right, but I'm not sure that helps your original point, that the cultural values of the underclasses don't survive.
No, there aren't widely known exemplars of folk art, but that's basically axiomatic. However, the thousands of Buddha statues, and shinto shrines, the countless cave painting, embroidery and lace samplers, etc, etc. are examples of the underclasses values and arts surviving.
As for fairy tales, and epic poems, the author is almost universally some unknown traveling bard, not Aesop
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Two points, first, of course the upper classes act as gatekeepers for culture. The history of human civilization is uneducated masses looking up to their social superiors. Second, it's not
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riddley_Walker [wikipedia.org]
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The cowboy was essentially the colonial culture twice distilled. Where the colonies were founded by only those peop
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For a higher consistent caliber of a similar kind of media and form, check out the Whitney. Maybe they'll do a deal with Vimeo.
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Are you taking a shot at the museum or it's architecture? Say what you will about the way the museum is run, but Frank Lloyd Wright's genius cannot be questioned. His building is the best piece of artwork in the Guggenheim collection.
Desperately trying to stay relevant (Score:2)
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One mans art is another mans ruined block of stone or smeared oil mess on canvas. I don't doubt that some videos by people you otherwise wouldn't consider artists can be viewed as such but I'm at a loss as to why we would want to pay an admission to see videos you can see at home, or on your phone.
This isn't art that was hand crafted and could potentially be more beautiful in person.
Oh well, whatever sells tickets I guess.
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You pay for the curation of the videos. Anyone can go watch random YouTube videos. Anyone can curate their own show for their friends. Heck, you can probably even put together a playlist and share it through whatever medium you want. It all comes down to the curation though.
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Early Submissions... (Score:2, Informative)
* Dramatic Chipmunk [youtube.com]
* "Chocolate Rain" Original Song by Tay Zonday [youtube.com]
* Numa Numa [youtube.com]
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In other news (Score:2)
Google makes major financial contribution to the Guggenheim museum.
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Ah, the googleheim musem... has a nice ring to it...
I will submit (Score:2, Interesting)
Not trying to be modern at all, but that's the only video my i7 Debian laptop can play (unless the Guggenheim has joined the HTML5 Beta...).
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The greatness of art (Score:2)
Ponder this as you view the art of Youtube.
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I see what you did there.
Why bother w/ YouTube? (Score:2)
I doubt the artists were under contract with Google. Let them have their day without it being coopted by Google marketing.
Platform matters? (Score:2)
Anything completely digital... (Score:2)
I have a hard time accepting the "digital arts" as "high art". Art in itself is the use of human abilities to describe human experience (perceived or imagined). Once you accept enough computer capability into the practice, you blur, or even jump over, the line separating computer and human design. Digital video and computer animation skip right over that line as far as I am concerned. The computers involved do such a massive majority of the work that all the human as to do is *design*. While those designs m
fuck modern art (Score:1, Interesting)
Fuck modern art and all the bullshit hipsters that go along with it. Have fun with your shitty tattoos in 15 years when no one cares about your shitty, uninsightful youtube rant. /hate
No... (Score:2)
The right place for it (Score:1)
An artist must be of their time. (Score:1)
The fine art world is bunk, they've been exploring the same things since the abstract expressionists came out, there hasn't been a movement since postmodernism.
The new media are here.
Galleries no longer decide what is seen, they're merely a showcase now. Having your video played in the Guggenheim is inferior in every way to posting it on Youtube, and they know that... and they'