Rhizomatic Remediation: Adaptation in a Web-Based Art Praxis During Time(s) of Crises

Authors

  • Noah Travis Phillips University of Denver, Denver, United States of America Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51191/issn.2637-1898.2020.3.5.58

Keywords:

posthuman, postinternet, anthropocene, crises, remediation, digital exhibitions, rhizomatic, adaptation

Abstract

Willingness and the ability to adapt is vital in time(s) of crises. Remediation provides one novel and useful example of adaptation in contemporary digital art. This study explores the personal experiences of an art practice moving to virtual exhibition spaces, both by choice and as a response to multiple simultaneous crises (pandemic, environmental, racial, and democractic). This research reflects on three distinct examples of individual, subjective experiences of art making and exhibiting during this sudden shift. Each example highlights different approaches and possibilities, and examines similarities and contrasts in scales (local, national. and international) as well as more specific forms of remediation and relocation. Key findings include the different forms of remediation (different ways the art is translated for digital presentation) as well as the value of postinternet aesthetics, posthuman metamorphosis, and the nonsite. These themes help narrate these experiences and reflect more on these scenarios in ways that might be useful to other artists, curators, creative thinkers and practitioners. A suggestion is made that these groups would benefit from recognizing the value of rhizomatic (multi-centered, interrelated, and inclusive) approaches that include active remediation and adaptation.

Author Biography

  • Noah Travis Phillips, University of Denver, Denver, United States of America

    Noah Travis Phillips is an interdisciplinary artist, scholar, and educator; (BA, Naropa University, Fine Art and Environmental Studies; MFA, University of Denver, Emergent Digital Practices). Their research and creative interests integrate personal mythology, the anthropocene and the posthuman, engaging appropriation and digital/analog collage and montage strategies with the assistance of algorithmic systems. They create adaptable and multicentered artworks incorporating 2D / 3D digital fabrication, videos, books, performance, and the internet. Phillips is Visiting Teaching Assistant Professor in Emergent Digital Practices at University of Denver. They live and work in Boulder, Colorado. They can be found online at noahtravisphillips.com.

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Published

15.12.2020

How to Cite

Rhizomatic Remediation: Adaptation in a Web-Based Art Praxis During Time(s) of Crises. (2020). INSAM Journal of Contemporary Music, Art and Technology, 5, 58-73. https://doi.org/10.51191/issn.2637-1898.2020.3.5.58