New Platforms for Art in the Current Environment
We have entered a paradigm shift in socializing. Always prepared to adapt, the art world is
trained for moments like this. Making do, building bridges, and the like are all points of
movement that serve its ultimate goal; getting people in front of an artist’s work. Informality
spoke with Social Distance Gallery, Remote Collaboration, and Young Space (yngspc), three
separately distinct groups based in the Midwest taking viewers out of the physical gallery and
placing them in front of the screen. Places like Kansas City, Missouri, Cincinnati, Ohio, and
northeastern Wisconsin, see these innovative ideas occurring in this realm more and more.
These endeavors are not only free but well-positioned to flex their creativity without being
bound by a high-dollar revenue stream that many coastal galleries and institutions rely upon.
The physical gallery space is being called into question. Certainly not on the chopping block
– the in-person experience will not be eliminated, at least not yet. However, we need to
acknowledge that this platform is the artist DIY of the future, and that is where the art world’s
ability to adapt is put into praxis. At this very moment, while much of the globe is selfisolating,
people are making time for art online. Instead of ensuring the striving artist remains
tasked with shouldering the burden of doing it themselves, a need for better public arts
funding has never been more relevant.
Artists now separated from the spaces and institutions that display their work, have to alter
drastically the way their practice unfolds. End of semester shows for BFA, and MFA students
are either postponed or canceled. During this temporary crisis, numerous online platforms for
viewing exhibitions have sprung up, creating a new standard for how we are going to reexperience
art going forward.
Arguably, Instagram’s platform performs as a virtual docent, although their policies on nudity
strain the limits of artistic freedoms. But more intentional structure for virtual exhibitions
ultimately has been encouraging. We are here to highlight a few of these efforts by people
who are seeking to provide a platform for artists and help those artists navigate this
alteration.
Benjamin Cook, artist and adjunct professor at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, started Social
Distance Gallery for his graduating students at the start of March. In an email exchange with
Informality, Cook told a familiar story; “The usual end of semester shows were canceled, and
students were rightfully upset.”
Cook thought it would be interesting to use his studio practice of image-making and
dissemination to address the issues of his student’s canceled shows. Says Cook, “by further
exploring how images of physical works are experienced, a new form of presentation is
possible. Students collaborating on final thesis projects include choreographers, dancers,
and directors that are working together.” As long as it’s a BFA or MFA thesis show, Cook will
accept it.
The work gets posted as it comes into Instagram. “Students work with their colleagues to
gather all of the information and send it together. Some students have solo shows, though.”
Cook’s posting regiment is an easy-to-follow pattern. He succeeds in creating “a bracket of
color to indicate a single show, positioning student work to allow for three images. With IG
handle, name, title, medium, size, and date posted in the caption, then the next student’s
show is displayed, with colors matching title blocks.
“I see the project as existing in a specific time—the engagement, community building,
visuals, etc. Whether classified as performance, dissemination art, social practice, relational
aesthetics, or a host of other categorizing terms doesn’t seem necessary to me. I’ll let others
decide that if they want to.”
Informality asked how the digital and physical experiences relate to one another on a
platform that has its limitations. The internet can reach a lot of people who couldn’t otherwise
be there. Still, it does also flatten, or distances, the experience. “The limitations of a digital
platform only exist concerning a technical default,” says Cook, “in this case, a gallery.”
Questions of democratization online are raised. Informality founder, Melaney Mitchell, points
out, we are witnessing a “collapsing (of) the class/access system of the art world.”
“Viewing a work of art in any setting is an experience. Those experiences can have many
forms. A lot of the art I see is through a screen. It is a specific experience that differs from a
physical one but still creates emotional and intellectual reactions. If I see a work in a gallery,
after already having seen it online (setting a default), It is the gallery that is limited.”
Cook continues, “I cannot share the work with my friend unless they are there next to me. I
cannot take the work off of the wall or floor and bring it home with me to view in a setting I
am more comfortable in (unless I buy it). I cannot expect people from other parts of the world
to know that it exists. (One cannot) say that a digital version of a work is better. I believe that
framing the dialog in terms of what is lost, sets up a hierarchy which does not reflect reality.”
The reactions are positive. Cook says hundreds of students, faculty, viewers, and even a
local politician have reached out to voice their support. There is a shared feeling of
excitement among students; they will be able to share their work after all.
Lastly, says Cook, “I do not see my role in this as a curator, and I am not here to judge what
is a right or wrong way to present a work. As my previous response would indicate, I think a
lot about the documentation of work. I believe any artist today needs to consider that and
make the decision for themselves.”
In comparison, though a similar endeavor to Cook’s, Kate Mothes began Young Space
(yngspc). Currently based in Wisconsin, this idea was born during her graduate schooling at
the Edinburgh College of Art at the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland, circa 2014. What
began as an Instagram account to share the work she was experiencing all around her, has
now developed into yngspc.com, a submissions-based interview platform showcasing work
by artists and students.
As her project grew exponentially over the years, there has been plenty of adaptation to the
original idea. Mothes is focusing on using this platform to help students find “space” for their
BFA and MFA exhibitions by working with several united student groups and university art
programs. Having been following @yngspc on Instagram for quite some time, far before the
limitations brought on by this pandemic, it was no surprise she was executing a similar idea.
“I’ve always been interested in the experimental nature of art, and that period–longer for
some than for others–of just trying to ‘figure it out’ is so interesting, and I wanted to keep that
spirit in everything the platform does or is involved in.”
Yngspc is sort of the umbrella term for a multifaceted practice that relies on the virtual
connectivity the internet can provide. “I think of Young Space as more of a dialogue, or a ‘call
and response’ than necessarily any sort of established model, plan, or program.”
As a platform that focuses on giving space for its artists’ and writers’ voices, In light of the
efforts of Informality as an online-only platform, this resonates with yngspc efforts to create a
flexible platform for its collaborators, if you will. Mothes’ on and offline work has generated a
platform where she is more than a curator. She would call herself a “facilitator.” It has been
essential for her to “think of the project taking [her] places, not the other way around so that
it’s always responsive to the community of artists and art workers.”
The prospects are positive, especially when an artist can be adaptable in the endless stream
of artwork, finding its way from physical to numerous digital places. Making space for art is
crucial, but it is equally important to understand the relationship between the two, as projects
like these straddle the line defining “place.” Mothes points out that the internet is the very
reason this is possible.
Says Mothes, “The accessibility element is crucial: online shows don’t require artists to ship
work, therefore opening up the possibility of showing huge installations from Japan or South
Africa or Alaska without having to move a single thing. It also allows everyone with an
internet connection to ‘visit,’ no matter where they are.”
There is a unique negotiation involved, not only portraying the work but the layout of the
exhibition as well. Mothes states, “Unsurprisingly, 2D work shows well online,” and this is
even more true for the new genre of post analog painters. But seriously, it makes sense to
register a flat surface against a flat-screen. There is undoubtedly a challenge with showing
anything else. Still, Mothes says that these new platforms “are also often pushing new
boundaries and are perhaps the most exciting when it comes to thinking about how the
internet can facilitate contemporary art practices and exhibitions. I think we’re ultimately
limited by this understanding of exhibitions presented in rooms, and we tend to present
online exhibitions in the same way, somehow within a container–a webpage or website, an
Instagram account, a virtually simulated gallery space, etc.” And, to speak to the issue of
algorithms, Mothes continues; “popularity shouldn’t be confused with good art–just because
something doesn’t get a lot of likes and comments doesn’t mean it’s not smart, moving
artwork.”
Mothes has also had a positively overwhelming response to yngspc so far and is meeting
virtually with schools primarily in the US and Canada to assist educators in students to find
innovative ways to share crucially essential bodies of work. “For me, it’s more about
providing resources and sharing in the community.” Mothes created a spreadsheet of
information and resources that are available virtually right now. In this spreadsheet, there is
also a link to a form for anyone to add their initiatives.
David Alpert is an “arturator” based in Kansas City who runs Reality Club, an identity he
developed, with a mission “to work together with open minds and compassion to explore
reality through the arts.” This idea originated as a response to an open call in 2018 at the
now-closed Open House Space. He unfolded this idea into the event of a spacetime variety
show and has since collaborated with several artists and organizations to make music with
various cross-disciplinary programs that include inquiries around meteorology, constellations,
and the local landscape.
Until recently, [they] had a few regularly occurring programs: a film series at Stray Cat Film
Center, a reading group, and a series of rare book tours.” The project in the discussion is
Remote Collaboration, which will take place in the Reality Club Library, a room in Alpert’s
apartment He says it is “kind of all over the place, but it includes a collection of artists’ books
and a collection of exhibition catalogs.” Remote Collaboration is the first exhibition to take
place in this makeshift space.
It is vital to know, Alpert says, that his inspiration derives from Hans Ulrich Obrist’s show,
Hôtel Carlton Palace, Chambre 763, and, more specifically, Andreas Slominski’s work in that
show. In 1993, Obrist curated that show in the hotel room for the month he was living there.
Slominski sent Obrist instructions via fax every day. To maintain this element of collaboration
throughout the exhibition, Alpert says he thinks of himself “as a tool for the artist. Not a
simple tool like a hammer, but more like a biological computer…You can give [him]
instructions that are as specific or as vague as you choose, and the results will vary
accordingly.”
Most importantly here, this project is “a direct response to the constraints of the current
pandemic.” Alpert affirms, these limitations are not new, and now they have found another
way in which to be so limiting. The specificness of these constraints the pandemic has
presented an opportunity for this mess of projects, and fuels Alpert’s interest in responding to
and working within constraints. Though frightening, he says, “Remote Collaboration might be
an attempt to understand [the] current situation better. I’m not sure.” If there is one thing we
can be sure of, it is the uncertainty that has sprung to the forefront of all public-facing
professional practices where standards are now in flux.
How will Remote Collaboration deal with this shift of mediums, and space, and of
representing the details of the work? Alpert shares that “how each work presented will be
idiosyncratic to that work. For JC Franco’s work, I created an altar per his directions, and I
recorded a performance that he directed. I then shared that on the exhibition website.
Currently, the altar is set up as an installation in the library.”
So, though no one can physically visit for at least a month, this is an opportunity for that
innovation, both Cook and Mothes share as essential to negotiating these projects. Alpert
continues, “I am interested in how the work changes from the artist’s directions to my attempt
to follow them, and finally into the “final” work…If the artist has created a drawing, painting,
sculpture, etc., they cannot send me that work directly, and they can’t install the work. They
have to reform that work into something that they can carry. I then have to translate what
they sent in to work again, and I have to install it and share it.”
The saturation point of all this streaming content has yet to be determined. Our base viewing
habits are being challenged. The online platform continues to be ripe with potential for
ongoing weirdness and innovation and on a far more level playing field. In contrast, anyone
with internet connectivity has a seat at the table. The critical discourse will continue to thrive
here, separating the tight from the trite. Artist Justin Beachler, whose work invests heavily in
the digital influence on cultural aesthetic trends, says, “The pandemic might get internet
artists out of the galleries and back onto the internet where they belong.”
If the massive amounts of communication between organizers, curators, artists, and writers
right this second could be quantified or visualized in one place, it would probably blow a fuse.
This surge is overwhelming, a mix of hope and fright. The pressure for an artist to participate
in online programs could be daunting. Yet, many of those artists might beg for the
connectivity that could be substituted by the internet. Pursuing this practice for the sake of
remaining adaptable, the unpredictability of the art world, stacked against the volatility of the
world at large, it is essential organizers continue to listen to the needs of artists of all
demographics and the best way to portray the work. Authorship and its relationship with the
internet can be complicated, but thankfully it makes it at least a bit easier to communicate
from anywhere. So, go forth and participate, share, check-in on your introverts and
extroverts, make art, buy art within your means, write about art, stay at home, and wash your
hands.