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DIVA at Škuc
Gallery
A study exhibition of DIVA Station, a
physical and web archive of video art
May 28– June 20, 2009
You are kindly invited to attend a talk,
presentation and discussion accompanying the opening of the
exhibition in Škuc Gallery on Thursday, 28 May, at 7 pm,
followed by a viewing of material from DIVA Station
digital video archive at 21.00.
OPENING EVENT
Thursday, 28 May at 19.00
- Andreas Spiegl: Geography of the
Media
- Presentation of DIVA Station and the
GAMA international platform
Concept of the exhibition:
Zemira Alajbegović, Barbara Borčić, Miha
Colner, Dušan Dovč, Ida Hiršenfelder, Neven Korda
Curator: Barbara
Borčić
ACCOMPANYING PROGRAMME
Škuc Gallery
Tuesday, 9 June at 20.00
- Borko Radešček: TELEKINO. Vasko
Pregelj – Found and Restored Films,
screening with commentary
Thursday, 11 June at 19.00
- Guided tour through the exhibition
Saturday, 20 June after 20.00
(Museum Night)
- Guided tour through the exhibition
- Screening and an event at the conclusion of
a production workshop on 'new video'
Project Room SCCA, Metelkova 6, Ljubljana
Monday, 1 June at 20.00
Emir Muratović:
Seducing the Gaze, presentation of a series of
TV programmes on contemporary Slovenian art: Vadim Fiškin,
Sašo Sedlaček, Damijan Kracina, Marko A. Kovačič, Marija
Mojca Pungerčar, Polona Tratnik, Uršula Berlot, Son:Da (TV
Slovenia, 2009)
A study exhibition entitled DIVA at Škuc
Gallery showcases the DIVA Station archive of
SCCA-Ljubljana, presenting it as a 'live archive'. It
includes an educational programme, practical demonstrations,
theoretical contributions, representative video works,
curatorial selections and international collaboration, and
also presents theoretical, practical and artistic aspects of
audio-visual archives of contemporary art.
DIVA Station
is a physical and web archive of video art which has been
developing since 2005, and is one of SCCA projects, which
seek to research, document and archive video/media art:
Videodokument, Videospotting, Internet
Portfolio, Artservis Collection and e-archive.
DIVA Station is a partner in the GAMA (Gateway to
Archives of Media Art) international internet platform,
which brings together European video/media archives to make
them more visible and easily accessible.
The exhibition gives an insight into various
archiving processes, the development of video equipment and
changes in the use of technological tools. Video works and
curated video programmes from DIVA Station can be
seen at screenings and in a viewing room, where every
visitor can view their own selection. To make their choice
easier, we have prepared several sections which present the
DIVA Station in all its thematic and structural
diversity, including overviews of individual artists, music
videos, Škuc-Forum video production, Videospotting (curated
selections), video and television, SCCA exhibition projects,
and international video.
Below, we will present the role of the video
archive and the problems that the archive establishes when
connecting to the contemporary technological and computer
tools; but first let us take a look at what the object of a
video archive actually is. At DIVA Station
(Digital Video Archive) the answer seems simple. We
focus on collecting video material in three categories: art
video, video documentation of art events, and video
documentation of theoretical discussions and other sources
which refer to contemporary art and provide a context for
the examination of (in our case) video works. Still, this
does not answer the question of what the object of a video
archive is.
First, let us address the contradiction
between digitation and the notion of an archive, as an
archive is primarily supposed to store originals and not
'copies'; however, this is not possible with numerous media
carriers, as there are very few devices remaining which can
read them, and only the most experienced experts know how to
operate them. Moreover – which is the most worrying factor –
the devices are becoming unusable or even defunct. Since
their emergence in the 1960s, there have been many technical
improvements of the carriers and recording standards, often
not due to the quest for higher quality, but because of
market logic. In the last forty years, there have been over
30 formats, the most well-known including U-matic, BetaSP,
Video8, VHS, DVD and MiniDV. The composition of the carrier,
reliability and stability of their parts vary greatly – but,
contrary to the general belief, the magnetic tapes should
not disintegrate sooner than in thirty years if stored
correctly. Unreliability has reached a critical point with
digital carriers like the DVD, which is not only unstable,
but due to compression, provides relatively low quality of
information. Because the carriers are unstable, we are faced
with a contradiction that the information can only be
preserved by copying. So the core object of a video archive
is the art content, not so much the original 'master' in its
physical form as an object. Some archives, which have on
their disposal the appropriate air-conditioned spaces and
sufficient funding, are able to also focus on storing master
copies, but unfortunately, this is not the case with SCCA –
Ljubljana.
Our video archive is based on facsimiles –
precise copies of the highest possible quality of video
works. In this regard, we should therefore first consider
what does the process of digitation actually mean. Digital
archiving does not mean that information is copied and
compressed in DVD format or kept on a hard disk. These two
methods are only supportive side effects which serve to
satisfy the need for an archive to be available to the
professional and wider public. The primary purpose of an
archive is the storage of an artistic content as an
important segment of tangible and intangible mobile heritage
and historic memory. Considering the technology that is
available to us, facsimiles of a video works can be stored
in the most reliable way on MiniDV, DigiBeta and D5 format.
We have opted for the most accessible – MiniDV, which
requires a recording on hard disk in DV PAL codec. By
following these guidelines, we are able to partly overcome
the contradiction between the notion of the archive and
digitation, as we ensure that the digitised version is a
true facsimile of a video work.
The collecting of material for DIVA
Station is based on a documentary, archival and research
project on video art in Slovenia Videodokument: Video Art
in Slovenia 1969–1998, which was developed at SCCA-Ljubljana
between 1994 and 1999, and was followed by numerous
curatorial selections of the gathered material, introduced
under the common title of Videospotting. There were
also research and exhibition projects: What Is Going on
Concerning Audiovisual Archives? (2005) and in What
Is to Be Done with Audiovisual Archives? (2007) and
numerous consultations and talks with artists, curators and
other experts and international collaborators who are
directly confronted with the issue of storing video art and
establishing video archives.
DIVA Station
is based on collecting video documentation within a wider
national context, and includes artists who work in Slovenia
and/or abroad. Here, it needs to be noted that any attempt
to build an overall archive is based on the criteria of
discrimination and interpretation, which are the result of
criticality, that inevitable leads to the incompleteness of
the archives. Archives significantly contribute to
historical cultural consciousness; however, they are in all
respects conditioned by ideological assumptions and laws of
(affirmative) discrimination. They fail to present
historical events or objects in their entirety, but are
based on 'cultural' relations, which can be clearly
identified through an analysis. Despite this incompleteness
and the need for continuous upgrading and improvement of the
archives, the procedures for the treatment of the materials
need to be clearly defined by a typology of terminology,
which creates a cartography of conceptual frameworks within
which a video art work (in our case), or some other
audio-visual material is discussed. This system provides
quite straightforward tools for mitigating the
contradictions which are inevitable when the system of an
archive encounters various artistic approaches. This
typology for discussing video materials has been defined in
collaboration with the partners of the GAMA platform by
classifying vocabulary entries into three categories: art
work, events and sources. The art work category is divided
into different types: art video, documentary video, art
film, experimental video, one-minute video, music video,
video installation, interactive art, television art,
fiction, animation, video performance, dance video, travel
video, computer graphics, sound and hybrid art. These
entries should include all areas of media art production. In
discussing an individual art video, it should be taken into
consideration that art works often include more than one
type. The category of events is divided into workshops,
discussions, festivals, concerts, performances (footage of
performances which were not specifically edited or created
by an artist, even though they feature an art work),
lectures, presentations, exhibitions, screenings and
seminars. Documents, articles, catalogues, interviews,
essays and books are classified as sources.
In addition to detailed description of the
art work with the data about author, the production year,
the producer, the setting, the co-workers (music, editing,
programming, camera...) and the technical description of any
possible damage or other characteristics of the primary
material, special attention is drawn to the style of writing
a short synopsis of an art video. The synopsis on the
Internet interface of DIVA Station forms an index of
words which enable a more precise search for art works and
connects them according to the content. Therefore, the
hierarchy of description in the synopsis is set first and
foremost by the visual art parameters and media
characteristics, while the description of the narration of
the work is adjusted to the demands of a particular work or
the artist. The entry is also linked to other internet sites
that would already feature a certain art work.
For a short time, at the beginnings of video
art and its subsequent admittance to the television media
carried with it the very optimistic prospect that the
accessibility of video would enable complete democracy of
the media. These idealistic expectations had not been
realised, but they did foretell the emergence of a new media
– the Internet, where the illusion of democracy is almost
convincing. This brings us back to the notion of
'accessibility', which has sparked passionate debates and a
sort of 'archive fever' about the preservation of media art
in the last decade. The issue of accessibility and knowledge
dissemination (in this case, knowledge about video art in
Slovenia) is questionable not only due to technical demands;
it is problematic also from the perspective of copyright.
Here we do not refer to copyright law, but the artist's
right to be acquainted with and to have influence on the
context, interpretation and ways of presentation of their
work. Therefore, the task of the archival institution is not
only the systematisation of the documentation in databases,
and preservation of art works and knowledge dissemination.
It also needs to establish effective communication channels
between artists and other creators of audio-visual archives
and audiences. Presenting the video art archives on the web
portal does not enable complete control, which at first
seems like a drawback. At the SCCA, Centre for Contemporary
Arts – Ljubljana we are convinced that this tool will open
up video art interpretation, since registration on the
portal allows artists and professional audiences (after
editorial review) to add texts and web links, which will
increase the knowledge about video art and it's context.
Ida Hiršenfelder
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Producer
SCCA, Center for Contemporary Arts –
Ljubljana
http://www.scca-ljubljana.si
Co-producer:
Škuc Gallery
Exhibition design and set-up:
Damijan Kracina
Web archive programming:
Borut Savski
Web archive design:
Ajdin Bašić
Collaborators of DIVA station and the
exhibition:
Igor Grom, Damijan Kracina, Janez Krmelj, Zdene Kuzmič, Miha
Vipotnik (advisers); Luka Dekleva, Neven Korda, Luka Prinčič,
Borut Savski (workshop); Vuk Ćosić, Peter Tomaž Dobrila, Ana
Nuša Dragan, Heike Helfert, Martin Horvat, Jasna Hribernik,
Rene Rusjan, Duba Sambolec, Sašo Sedlaček, Saša Šavel, Igor
Španjol, Apolonija Šušteršič, Melita Zajc, Samo Zorc, Gaby
Wijers (discussions participants); Boris Garb, Ana Grobler,
Mateja Rot, Hana S. Vodeb (project group); Sara Femec, Nika
Gričar, Michel Mochor, Špela Škulj (volunteers); Metod Novak
(programming support)
Acknowledgment:
Alenka Gregorič, Tevž Logar, Joško Pajer, Atila Boštjančič (Škuc
Gallery staff), Kinodvor, GAMA and partners’ archives
Škuc Gallery program is funded by
Ministry of Culture of the Republic
of Slovenia and Cultural
Department of the City of Ljubljana.
For further information contact Dušan Dovč
on
production.manager@scca-ljubljana.si or + 386 1 431 8385
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