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Introduction
Introduction
0:33
Introduction
0:33
The history of monetization in New Media
The history of monetization in New Media
1:30
The history of monetization in New Media
1:30
Repurposing commercial technology
Repurposing commercial technology
6:24
Repurposing commercial technology
6:24
Disruption
Disruption
9:11
Disruption
9:11
Public Value
Public Value
13:05
Public Value
13:05
Hype Cycles
Hype Cycles
15:48
Hype Cycles
15:48
Ownership
Ownership
18:34
Ownership
18:34
YouTube
YouTube
21:23
YouTube
21:23
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript​.
0:01
you know next time you can do a podcast sorry
0:16
[Music]
0:32
hi uh I’m Ryan Steck the artistic director of art engine I’m here with
Introduction
0:38
famous New Media artist Jeremy Bailey or perhaps there’s less AR involved in today so I should just say Jeremy Bailey
0:45
uh Jeremy’s practice is uh full of a blend of performance and Technology I
0:52
consider him a leader in the Canadian context of what we once called
0:58
he also recently founded uar a commercial platform for augmented
1:04
reality sculpture and is the head of experience at freshbooks a human of many
1:10
hats welcome to Arden and Jeremy nice to see you how you doing great yeah great to be here yeah thanks
1:16
for pointing out that we’re both wearing hats it’s perfect I like yours and I’m a
1:24
little less augmented yeah a little less famous today um but yeah really happy to be here and excited to talk about this
The history of monetization in New Media
1:30
we we’ve been uh doing a number of conversations around the the wrap-up of
1:37
this phase of the digital economies lab and you’ve been working with us to help shape the program but of course this
1:43
incredible moment of uh the nft hype has sort of breaking into the mainstream and
1:48
we thought it was interesting to have a conversation and talk about some of the intersections with the work that we’ve
1:55
been doing but it’s a sort of start and frame this conversation could you help us put some of this current hype moment
2:03
in context and talk a bit about what other kinds of experiments in
2:09
monetization have been undertaken in the history of New Media and what kind of insights emerge from that
2:15
yeah so I think the you know the first there are like several contexts to unpack the first context it’s worth
2:21
noting is not like that recent we are within like you know at least a half
2:26
decade or decade of artists experimenting with the blockchain and with crypto and it was almost cliche
2:32
just a few years ago for an artist to express themselves with like a token like for this exhibition I’ve made my
2:38
own token it’s called J jar token or you know famous New Media artist token yeah um and and there’s some artists that
2:45
actually did it well um so I don’t want to like trash on like like an era of experimentation what’s
2:51
different I think right now is we’re seeing what’s pretty normal in New Media which is like to try something really early on
2:57
um go mainstream I think if you look at it in a broader perspective of New Media in general there are several interesting
3:04
insights historically I would say the first one is to to go back to the kind
3:09
of beginning of New Media which different people would place at different position places but I kind of put it
3:14
um in the late 1960s early 1970s when video art first emerged and specifically
3:20
you know artists were that were working with video early on were counteracting
3:26
monetization and they used to know that there were a few reasons for that the first was a lot of the more fluxus
3:31
artists uh artists like namjoon Pike Yoko Ono who were coming out of a period
3:37
where they had they they had a Manifesto declaring you know that art had become over commodified and so it was a
3:44
movement to release art from you know commodification and make art experiential sounds kind of familiar
3:50
actually to the internet era right where everything’s an experience and experiences have been monetized but it was actually did it was the act the
3:57
action was to make art free and accessible to everyone
4:03
um and there were things like happenings and so on which were like large get-togethers or parties almost if you
4:08
think about it where people would you know basically sense together or have experiences that couldn’t be recreated
4:14
in documentation you know artists like Chris Burton even talked about it like you can’t commodify this performance it
4:19
exists for this period of time then never again then video comes along and I think um a lot of artists started to
4:25
experiment with that um and they and also counter uh or react counter-reacting to a history of of
4:33
commercial media right like 50 years of Television had been about Commerce Leave it to Beaver The Brady Bunch whatever
4:39
and you know pleasing The Advertiser um you know and you had artists like Richard Sarah at that time making videos
4:45
like television delivers people where they were right really describing the audience as a commodity being delivered
4:52
by television to advertisers and so that history is very interesting
4:57
and you know artists even made their own tools um but they were not at all interested in selling right they’re
5:02
interested similar you know just kind of basically and making the media available
5:08
um and that begin you know and so begins kind of the era of personal media which is a lot of what we consider the history
5:14
of New Media so as we progress you know through the 1980s and 90s and New Media becomes associated with newer
5:21
Technologies specifically computer and digital technologies that were emerging at the time but don’t forget like for a
5:27
long time it’s just like video synthesizers and analog stuff right but there’s this kind of moment obviously in
5:32
the 90s where things get a lot faster and there’s the flip to the internet as well and then I think the history that
5:39
we’re talking about today you know really begins Because the Internet is you know a next wave technology
5:47
and artists that we would Now call Net artists start to experiment in that realm what I think is interesting is
5:53
again these artists were they weren’t actually um they weren’t actually trying to
5:59
produce a counter narrative they were producing a net new narrative and corporations were catching up to them
6:05
right so you had AOL and companies almost advertising like this is the place where you will get to express
6:10
yourself like an artist and people were looking for the niches or edges of uh of
6:17
Human Experience you know the same way they might have done in in person in the 1960s but now in this Global Village of
6:23
the internet do you do you see it I mean in as
Repurposing commercial technology
6:28
um repurposing of commercial technology like I I um I associate the history of media art
6:36
as one that is um almost a parasitic nature of artists
6:41
sort of taking I mean right from the most iconic piece of the protopac is the production of a a an object and a tool
6:51
from a massive Global corporation that artists um then try to figure out how to
6:57
not necessarily produce a counter narrative as you were saying like that but but try to somehow write a new story
7:04
within that and that this could have continues to evolve do you think that the the era of netard and the one that
7:10
we’re now is these tools are they at a granular level more
7:16
um it isn’t just this sort of binary relationship there really really is building tools and something that isn’t
7:22
just about you know repurposing a commercial industrial thing yeah no I
7:28
think that’s super interesting like so the portapac obviously was Sony’s first consumer video camera and at that time
7:34
the most um the best-selling consumer electronics device in history
7:39
um but it was marketed to everyone like you can look at ads from that era and it’s like businessman and tree shooting video of baby birds but you know part of
7:47
that time people had to shoot on you know eight millimeter film get it processed it was a whole hassle so it
7:53
was a revolution like in in a in a mass media commercial context and they made
7:58
money from it and then the artists you’re right like did reappropriate that technology and I I think of what
8:03
happened right after that which is artists like Nam June Pike um working with others which started to
8:09
design their own video tools like video synthesizers and then that was true you
8:15
know that’s been true New Media forever a lot of New Media artists have open source tools or
8:20
um you know especially in the creative coding Community you have long you know time Legacy stuff like Casey race and
8:27
working on uh processing which you know then others have worked on in regards to
8:32
p5.js but you know or open Frameworks which was a creative coding platform that allowed a lot of the you know kind
8:40
of experiments that I did early on to happen um I think that’s also true though this
8:45
era with the crypto currency stuff that I mentioned earlier where or blockchain experiments where artists actually you
8:52
know artists like I remember my friend Billy renkamp like years ago was like Jeremy like this is how the blockchain
8:57
is gonna like change everything and and here’s what it means philosophically like they would like they positioned it
9:03
ideologically and that ideology has definitely been soaked up by like a larger Community but artists were at the
9:10
Forefront early on yeah I wonder if we can if we could talk a bit about this moment of the
Disruption
9:17
um of disruption in the in the in the current cliche use of the word disruption like it it feels to me
9:26
um very similar to other sort of Silicon Valley disruptions that there’s really at this moment instead of there being
9:34
um some profound reforming of the way we organize things it’s really a kind of
9:40
concentrated uh concentrated bit of power that is creaked open but really
9:45
it’s really moved from one small group to another and and the hype here is really
9:51
um yes it may be you know puts a tiny crack in some of the sort of dealer art
9:58
traditional like high-end art uh High Finance world but but it doesn’t really
10:03
transform power structures or transform even the general space of artists lives yeah like you’re
10:11
making your event like Tesla is no better than GM or whatever in terms of like I mean at the end of the day
10:16
they’re just transplanting consumer to a new bucket and the powerful stay in
10:22
power or it’s just to you know just change the faces on the on the about us page basically yeah
10:28
it feels like that is that does it feel like that from to you sometimes I mean I
10:34
don’t feel like that necessarily all the time about every single thing but it’s it’s a kind of creeping feeling that
10:40
sometimes gets in the way of trying to get to some of the more interesting things that might be happening yeah I mean I think it’s worth while
10:47
noting that you know even if we were to go back to the 1960s you know attention economy dictated that I’ve named a few
10:54
names like I rattled off a couple names at the outset and that those names actually stayed in power for the next 50
11:01
or 60 years so the our world has been very good historically at canonizing and but the tool for Canon has primarily
11:09
been the written word which I’ve always found particularly interesting like that’s how art has established its value
11:16
historically um and there have been a few Gatekeepers you know back early on it would have
11:21
been like your Clement Greenberg or something like that people would argue that the internet actually like allowed you know a vast democratization of who
11:30
people paid attention to as legitimate artists right um
11:35
of media as well like yeah changed the experience of it because the prime not
11:41
only the primary sort of canonization but really to this day the primary experience of many artworks is through
11:48
the written word like we we read about artworks far more than we ever get
11:54
access to them yeah and I and I mentioned you know the kind of the attention economy because even within
11:59
the platforms you know algorithms are programming themselves to like put the thing in front of you that they think you’re gonna most like but the algorithm
12:06
needs variables and one of the varias will be with some with something someone like you also liked right
12:13
um or who are some credible sources we could anchor to that would you know kind of legitimize that this is you know
12:18
worth your your time but if you you know take the polar opposite position where
12:24
everything is available at all time you’re kind of in this Fifth Element moment where you know images are just like flickering in front of you there’s
12:29
no way you could possibly quote unquote consume the breadth of media
12:35
um and so I don’t know if we’ve you know there’s a psychological wall that we don’t often talk about in in this space which is
12:41
like the number of names and the and the themes of a movement that you know like there might be in a in any given art
12:47
movement like people presenting you know 100 different views on on on you know
12:53
our takes right and then we choose one and we say that’s what that was all about right ybas it was you know it was
12:58
all about money and sex or something like that we just like like that’s it yeah more nuanced summarize it into that
Public Value
13:05
point in that uh I think in terms of like you know one of the uh another
13:12
um sort of let’s say critical or sort of cynical feeling that rises up uh around this moment uh and the expansion uh into
13:21
the popular imagination of of the cryptocurrencies and and the way nft has
13:26
kind of uh as a concept has really like brought that forward is it it feels like
13:33
this kind of granular monetization uh of and privatization of the net you
13:40
know like that everything becomes a kind of um possible to ascribe ownership to I
13:47
wonder how you um have been thinking about the idea of public value in this moment because your your practice has
13:54
really you know you’ve been uh involved in all kinds of scales of work a lot of
13:59
public institutions and and very much about community and your practice as well in the last few years
14:06
um how do you think about public value in this in this moment well I think like
14:11
you like if we like almost like blur the line between both questions we wouldn’t feel uncomfortable if a lot of people
14:18
who don’t didn’t normally make a lot of money were suddenly making a lot of money if the power if the pyramid got
14:24
turned upside down if it was like women of color were making millions of dollars in nfts you’d be pretty excited I think
14:31
right you’d be championing this as like a major win yeah I think you know one of
14:39
the reasons it’s uncomfortable is that that we’re not necessarily seeing that you know there are exceptions for sure
14:45
though um and there are some communities I think like the hen Community which is an nft Community that’s zero carbon and
14:51
open source where people are coming together around the ridge original internet ideals the idea the ideals of
14:58
like sharing cooperation you know like helping each other and it’s less
15:03
fiduciary and like or less about the finance of that exercise right like
15:09
um I think that’s one of the perverted things right as soon as capital it touches an artwork we start to change
15:15
the value system by which we evaluate that work right now we’re evaluating it based on how much it’s sold for instead
15:21
of its value of you know content uh if you will to use like a term that actually has been commodified right but
15:29
like content by any other word would be like something that pushes culture forward right or that that if we go back
15:36
to the 1970s you know appropriates the language of Television to forward the culture such
15:43
that women you know are no longer relegated to cooking show hosts or something like that right is it possible
Hype Cycles
15:49
for us to um have do you think it’s possible to have some of the the these kind of
15:56
interesting gains without these kind of massive hype Cycles like I think of something like you know what Pokemon go
16:02
did for AR uh and the way that changed um the you know not just the popular
16:08
imagination but a willingness to try something in this domain but of course there’s all kinds of you know commercial
16:16
noise that comes with that in the sort of tail end of it but it is it possible
16:22
to have that without this kind of massive commercial hype it’s almost obvious that like there’s a first mover
16:28
advantage in terms of the again the attention economy like if I’m there first and there’s nothing else to look
16:33
at you get a certain amount of value just from being there first but that’s been true for generation of media right
16:39
including the first Mo like apps on the app store for your iPhone or something right like you would download I don’t
16:45
know what crappy apps you had on your first period but they how often do you even visit the App Store now you were
16:51
just curious to figure out what’s this all about yeah um and that behavior you know among
16:56
early adopters is actually counter-intuitive to like you know like larger audience Behavior there’s this
17:02
concept um Jeffrey Moore an economist introduced it was like this idea of you
17:08
know early adopters and this this point every startup gets to where they have to cross a Chasm you know getting into the
17:14
mainstream is actually extremely difficult because the values that the early adopter has novelty you know being
17:20
there first like similar to like uncovering a band all those things
17:25
um don’t actually translate to like the broader you know mainstream audience
17:30
What’s called the majority in Jeffrey Moore’s model um and then there’s a group after that called laggards and they’re definitely
17:36
like they they will never they will never convert right but the majority requires the early adopters to say this
17:43
is interesting um and you know maybe you should try it out and there’s an earlier majority that gets involved and then after that point
17:51
though the early adopters are no longer interested they’ve moved on to the next kind of thing right and yeah there’s
17:57
Gartner’s hype cycle that also explains you know you get this peak of hype driven by you know the hysteria of those
18:02
early adopters and then there’s the trough of disillusionment it’s called in the in Gartner’s hype cycle
18:09
um and then there’s this like steady incline toward um hope and some sort of like practical
18:15
application that is actually beneficial to society um but I think that it’s natural it’s
18:21
natural because we’re just trying to figure out the media again like Marshall mcluhan might have said you know we’re
18:26
looking in the rear view meter to try and figure out or project what speed is really going to mean
18:31
building a new vocabulary do you think some of that in relation to ownership is
Ownership
18:37
that like um is that part of the long tail and part of the problem that we’re that is
18:43
like a bit of the the because is this sort of conundrum that is being
18:49
being continued to work on it’s not like a lot of the hype press was like there’s never been a way to ascribe ownership to
18:56
a digital file before yeah as if the entire legal profession didn’t exist but
19:01
um but nonetheless there are there are uh interesting you know aspects of of
19:08
the way to think about and evolutions of that yeah is that is that the wrong
19:14
Focus though is that like does that sort of just reproduce that review mirror
19:19
effect that you’re that you were just talking about that were basically um trying to in the end recreate
19:25
intellectual property that existed prior to yeah or like or figure out how to create
19:32
property within the digital realm when it you know was never designed for that um and I think like when you’re asking
19:38
for context there are lots of examples including you know Rafael rosendal a collaborator of mine who created website
19:44
contracts but people who are trying to monetize or did you know create some kind of uh digital form of an artist
19:51
certificate that would apparently have value and the reason for that was just that there were a lot of digital artists
19:57
a lot of net artists who were poor you know who were not like were told who
20:02
couldn’t dealers would say I can’t sell your work like if it doesn’t plug in you know you’re not going to be able to it’s
20:09
not sorry if it plugs in you it doesn’t sell right that would be the kind of right the normal thing
20:14
um and you know this didn’t really kind of over time this argument didn’t really make
20:20
sense when people saw the internet economy become the primary economy you know like that there’s like it was
20:26
almost like a tension built up I feel like over the last 20 years because I know I felt it too and tried to
20:32
introduce this topic numerous times in different art circles where I’d say like hey how come like artists are not
20:38
benefiting from this you know massive macroeconomic Trend how come it seems
20:44
like artists are getting left behind and in fact you know artists were mostly contributing their value for free I
20:50
think what was different is instead of for free to each other like you know as a communal or cooperative activity often
20:57
do platforms that were then as Richard Sarah would have said were delivering those artists as product advertisers and
21:05
then you get to the era of like the content producer and I think that it’s worth being resentful about that because
21:10
we have like 20 years of Labor that was essentially funneled into those companies you YouTube Just Google you
21:18
know Facebook um yeah and Instagram you know which is Instagram and all those companies Snap I’ve thought a lot about it in terms of
YouTube
21:25
YouTube when you look at that history of YouTube and um there’s the user created content but
21:31
even their relationship to piracy that was so like imagine if they had had to
21:37
actually follow real true copyright laws uh how difficult it would have been and
21:43
still to this day kind of impossible yeah but it is a massive graveyard of uh you know artist labor that’s what I
21:49
would refer to it as and at some point you know they’re they’re hopefully is some kind of I
21:57
don’t know I mean it also trained audiences to believe that this is something that they should expect for
22:02
free and the present day you know very few artists contribute to those economies or are have started to stop or
22:09
look for Alternatives and what you’re seeing is those that are there are like dying of stress right because the
22:14
algorithms require continuous uploads daily uploads and you know it’s not sustainable so there’s a new generation
22:21
of startups there’s this thing called the creative economy that Kickstarter was the first to identify that are
22:28
trying to figure out hey can we establish models that help Finance our
22:35
you know create they’re just using the term creators these days right in the creative economy but I think artists fit
22:40
in there and artists does you know certainly I haven’t seen very many galleries jump in front of that and say like hey actually we’d like to get
22:46
involved in helping artists live sustainable lives um and so we’re happy to present the
22:53
work but how it gets made but but for any investment there’s got
22:58
to be a return right so I think that that’s also a reason to be you know suspicious and another reason why
23:04
artists should be again like you know building their own tools and I think getting out in front of it understanding
23:11
the Technologies and potentially um you know cooperating to create Alternatives which they are doing and
23:17
that’s why I’m encouraged I think there’s two there’s two narratives going on right now um one is of cooperation and the other
23:24
is yes a further capitalization for sure well I think that there is something to be said for the sort of long tail of
23:32
um of the of the nft moment in the popular imagination of like really uh
23:38
ownership was possible before but it has really driven home the idea that these
23:44
uh that there are creators who make things and and that maybe they should be
23:49
paid and that this you know sort of um even the sort of you know hyperbolic
23:56
way that some of the popular press might report on it of like you know the trying to use outrageous language that
24:02
someone’s paying for a you know a cat gif or something like that as as if you know that’s the same same art uh you
24:10
know a blue painting I can’t imagine playing et cetera going back you know a century
24:16
but there is this idea that that these are things that are made by creators of
24:23
one kind or another and that the next phase of figuring out like oh okay everything shouldn’t be free necessarily
24:30
or if things should be free for Access how does one get how do they get made
24:35
like you know writers were the first to experience this you know the internet made writing free first because it was
24:42
the cheapest Media to distribute yeah and you know and most writers today that
24:47
are are not writing for a corporation are building out their own subscriber bases right they’re doing the sub stack
24:54
thing they’re building a newsletter right there or they’ve become like embedded in you know companies as like
25:00
copywriters or whatever right um but certainly like every media and every Creator is going
25:08
through that same narrative in their head like if I continue to give this away for free when does it actually pay
25:13
off right yeah and to your point earlier it does pay off for a very slim you know group of people who kind of transcend
25:19
that Fame yeah barrier and then from my experience talking to friends and and
25:25
being in similar contexts at different times what it allows you to do is like not to do your art like do some like you
25:31
know commercial deal or like get this interesting project or get like ultimately a commission right like
25:36
that’s what we’re all seeking it’s like to get that big commission which is back
25:41
to the patronage model of like you know pre-victorian era kind of art making but do you think like in this moment
NFT Platforms
25:49
um we’re seeing a few more things that um feel a little less like winner take
25:55
all kind of structures which is so yeah America’s done such a great job of exporting that kind of approach and
26:03
you’re seeing do you feel like we’re seeing more of that yeah we are so like first of all the of the nft platforms
26:08
you’ve probably heard of some of the big ones right um your foundations your Nifty gateways
26:14
you know ones owned by the Winklevoss twins famously of Facebook so it seems like uh oh don’t touch that but
26:20
meanwhile there are several that have been started by artists uh there’s feral file
26:26
um started by um Casey Reese who I mentioned there’s Folia or maybe it’s the reverse that he
26:32
sort of fully I can remember um then there’s like the hick and nunk one the hen for short that I mentioned
26:38
and that’s open source um and they’re building like a gallery model inside of that where you can build Galleries and
26:44
there are even like um exhibitions that have happened that specifically highlight
26:50
um you know underrepresented artists it’s actually kind of encouraging it reminds me of like you know in your
26:56
local city like the neighborhood context and I know geography does play into this I think you might remember an era and
27:02
even in media of the film festival or something where a small community came together to support one another in my
27:10
own experience in for example the hen Community was like Hey get on this platform and like hey let us help you
27:15
figure out how to use it and then like you can use my template and people were trading with me in a way that you know
27:21
was really quite refreshing on the flip side obviously there are these huge like auctions that Christie’s has got
27:27
involved with in Sotheby’s that always is going to exist though they’re always going to try and capitalize on hype
27:32
right if we can talk a bit more about the geography aspect because I think you know that
Local Contexts
27:38
um there’s this uh like a long sort of subtext and sometimes overt about a
27:45
Bounder or a borderless world uh you know that’s bound up in Internet culture
27:50
and uh and and and digital um digital culture as well that there’s like this this rhetoric of sort of
27:59
global globalness but local contexts are so
28:04
specific and important um you know how do you how do you understand for you that that those
28:11
relationships between uh local communities like City geographies but
28:17
maybe also local artistic communities and stuff like that yeah I mean I think like
28:23
I’ve been a part of the internet or like internet art community of tea and there are many communities actually within
28:28
that for a long time and there is this sort of digital Nomad thing that goes with it and honestly like that wasn’t my
28:36
decision like I remember feeling like my local community rejected what I was doing because they didn’t understand it
28:42
um there are some exceptions to that rule like Berlin you know quote unquote like certain cities like stepped in and said like we are the internet or
28:49
something for internet um just to be candid about it but on the flip side
28:55
um I’ve been working with a bunch of uh toronto-based artists for my uar you
29:00
know thing which you you know you said I founded this big thing it’s just a Shopify store right that I like made function for sculpture in augmented
29:07
reality but you know I was like oh let me make it local let me try doing a local show and then um you know and I’ll
29:15
it’ll feel like because that’ll like transcend this it does feel like people don’t connect to what’s going on on the
29:21
internet and it doesn’t really have that local connection because I think local connections still matter I mean I’ve experienced that in Toronto right where
29:27
like my work unless it had some kind of local context just was like meaningless it was like out in the internet either
29:32
and um so I’m in the process of like planning and trying to figure out what that means personally so I’m I’m I think
29:39
it’s a topic of Interest I did a try and approach a local gallery to show you
29:44
know that shows New Media to show these works and they they decided they didn’t want to
29:50
um which I was like curious because I was like you know all it’s completely digital so you actually don’t have to show anything right you have to say
29:57
you’re showing it like yeah just say it just um but there seems to be this um one of
30:04
the tensions I’ve encountered in my career as an internet artist is a tension between like the walls of the
30:09
gallery like Thou shalt not pass and you know the the kind of more uh fluid
30:16
boundaries of the internet and for me it’s really important to um recognize that the internet is a social or
30:23
relational aesthetic it’s not you know like we’re what is it Web 2.0 introduced that concept
30:29
um and that’s not that dissimilar from the way Geographic networks function too and I think um
30:35
they just they just haven’t mixed well uh for some for whatever reason um to me as we’ve seen internet culture
Digital Culture
30:42
grow or more it’s not that’s that’s even a kind of um a poor term as we’ve seen the space
30:48
of digital Technologies in our everyday lives there has been such a multiplicity of cultures there is no more an internet
30:53
culture or digital culture it is so entangled in the everyday life and so
31:01
then that means there’s all these transportable places uh and new spaces
31:06
where artists should be involved like it should be able to be um and not borderless in the sense of
31:13
the way we used to think about that in that globalization but but the way that there can be I think you’re right
31:21
it’s often difficult to contain and that’s why I think of it very similar to the fluxus right where it’s like the art
31:28
happens kind of here instead of here on the wall right it’s happening kind of in the head and I’ve made a lot of artworks
31:34
that were you know just designed to be distributed that way and when I was creating works for YouTube I always
31:40
imagined them as a component of the algorithm or part of the Stream
31:46
um because that was the context right but that is very difficult to grasp in a physical sense Yeah you mentioned
31:53
something interesting or you know you’re sort of uh being reductive about your your AR project thing it’s just a
31:59
Shopify store but that touches on the idea of uh of this kind of ubiquitous nature of
32:06
these Technologies and how the tools can be picked up um and the sort of back-end elements or
32:13
cobbled together for pieces to do um what are quite unique and interesting ideas without having to build this whole
32:20
thing up and maybe is that do you think one of the you know maybe wider lessons
32:25
of the moment to try to get uh local communities to sort of you know if they
32:31
see the nft hype and try to understand it to think that that if that opens up into a world of a plethora of digital
32:38
technologies that can allow you to make something that’s interesting and valuable for your community
32:44
yeah yeah I think um that’s the Porta pack moment right like you pick up the camera like in the 1969 you pick you
32:51
know your your namjoo Pike you go to the Macy’s department store you pick up a video camera you get in a cab you get
32:57
stuck in traffic because the Pope’s there you record the pope going by and you show it in a gallery in SoHo later
33:03
that night you call it video art right but if you didn’t go to Macy’s and pick it up or try or record the pope or if
33:09
you didn’t experience have that experience you didn’t really participate in a cultural movement I think I think
33:15
the fear you know the fear I have is that by having an allergy to anything new we reject the possibility of
33:21
progress and you know to a certain extent we say you know I was talking to someone who works in the quote-unquote
33:26
Arts you know like Opera ballet and they’re like kind of a thinker in that space and they’re saying that whole
33:33
realm of uh of making now considers itself a an elite group of people who exist
33:40
solely to protect something that would otherwise not exist so they exist at a
33:47
point in time 300 years ago and their job is as stewards of this like rare vase or artifact right
33:53
and they’re just like they’re almost like a time capsule um but that is also they also have the position that the audience can’t
34:00
possibly understand the value of that artifact and so Their audience numbers
34:05
have been falling over time and but it they’re they actually consider themselves in direct conflict with their
34:12
audience which I find really interesting as an internet artist where you almost have the opposite problem where it’s
34:17
like I want more audience more more right like I need more likes
34:23
um if you had that attitude on the internet right like I don’t know how you would value the work differently but maybe that is there’s something in the
34:29
middle between like we reject the concept of an audience and we are just a vessel of history and
34:37
um you know we must Ascend into the realm of like tchotchkes and you know
34:42
like what I wonder if we uh maybe divert a little bit to that to that like sort
Digital Adaptation
34:50
of um Canadian scene uh uh discussion because I know that you were part of
34:57
um putting that digital strategy fund uh you know kind of gave some advice and counsel about that whole process and now
35:05
we’re obviously we’ve had quite a bump in the road over the last year and a half but uh you know as you’ve sort of
35:11
seen some of these projects uh unfold and met people both probably formally and informally been on tons of panels
35:17
I’m sure uh how are you seeing that sort of digital adaptation
35:22
happen across the country in the different context well it’s interesting the person I mentioned though I didn’t
35:28
give them their name I should it’s uh David Max but he he wrote a paper on the
35:34
topic uh and he received two of the two grants from that that fund and
35:39
um he was he basically um he has a really interesting point of view maybe I shouldn’t just steal
35:45
someone else’s point of view but you know there are several crises that have we’re experiencing currently like
35:51
climate change is one um you know uh race racial Injustice is
35:57
another the pandemic is a third right um and and then the digital digitization
36:03
is potentially kind of another another one in the expropriation of of capital but anyway he was saying like
36:09
all of these can you can look at them separately and the art world can be like up in arms
36:15
about the crisis we’re facing like oh my God like this is wrong and that’s wrong or you could consider them all actually
36:20
symptoms of the same problem which is that we’re upholding assist an unjust an
36:26
unjust system oh sorry I didn’t even mention like reconciliation right indigenous uh uh the indigenous rights
36:32
crisis so all of these things are actually conflated and the Arts are ignoring their responsibility to
36:39
actually Advance on these major events instead of sort of like instead what
36:46
we’re seeing quite often is like well I can’t participate like it’s all it’s on the internet I can’t possibly practice
36:51
and actually the internet might be one of the answers to the problem if we were to embrace it as like a technology that
36:58
might allow us to investigate what our you know um like issues that require
37:03
participation like none of these issues can be solved in a corner yeah they require actually activism and
37:10
participation to to fully reconcile yeah I think that’s a really interesting perspective sorry yeah no it just I mean
Climate Crisis
37:16
particularly that’s I find it’s very resonant with some of the discussions we’ve been having here particularly with
37:22
something like climate change I think is a great example of um the climate crisis uh it’s clear that
37:31
scientific facts more scientific facts will not transform action right if
37:37
there’s one thing we’ve learned from the last I mean I was an environmental activist in the 90s you know and it the
37:44
the story has not changed and so uh you know here at Art engine we’ve been reflecting about that like well then
37:51
there’s a crisis what is the artist’s role in responding to the crisis and
37:57
clearly um you know there is a major gaps in what
38:02
um work needs to be done through all kinds of sectors and the knowledge is known about the crisis
38:10
participating in in rethinking and restructuring and imagining a different
38:15
way but that’s the thing I think that’s the key word like if I was gonna like hashtag this thing would be hashtag
38:20
participate you know but like if you don’t participate you know you you don’t
38:25
you don’t actually get to be a part of the happening and the happening is where we arrive at the new experience that
38:31
we’ve never had before yeah I think a rejection of it is dangerous because you leave it in the hands of the few that
38:38
might not necessarily be in a the right place to make a good decision socially because it is so macro in scale like
38:46
it’s not gonna it’s not like we’re gonna fall back on something else like it’s not like the Arts and Crafts movements
38:51
just ahead of us and we’re going to start whittling wood it’s just not going to happen that way you know yeah I think
38:57
it’s a really interesting that’s like how do we participate and and how do you think about participation in a very
39:04
complex technological world right where where participation in the early 20th century well in the early 20th century
39:11
it was already too complex right like for you to participate in politics in a way that was conceived when you know
39:18
community and localness was perhaps the extent of your affecting world and now
39:25
it’s it’s so huge so I think really artists need to be part of the laboratory of thinking about how do we
39:33
participate in discussions that have ramifications Global ramifications in
39:39
all of those Wicked problems that you’ve been that you’ve been talking about as we sort of maybe touch back on the
The Technological Moment
39:46
question of um of this technological moment and the kind of the the sort of blockchain
39:54
contractual sort of obsession that’s happening right now what do you think
40:01
can emerge from there for people what do you think is the most interesting thing to sort of come out at this moment or
40:07
where should we um where should we try and Foster like more interesting activity there it’s
40:14
it’s really happening fast and ways that I can’t ignore are somewhat exciting and even if it reproduces a certain amount
40:21
of power there are a certain displacement of power that’s very exciting to me and as an example A
40:26
friend of mine recently went to work at a company it’s not his name in the company it’s called rally and they exist
40:32
at to help creators create their own coins and their own like basically their own their own economies around their
40:39
practice where people who participate in their practice can increase the value of their
40:44
participation it’s it’s kind of bizarre but the actual organization is based in Silicon Valley but
40:51
is decentralized and those the creators actually vote on the progress of the company and all the decisions that get
40:58
made right so you know by any other kind of lay I would never have imagined that 10 years ago that there would be
41:04
companies that start up and they’re like our model is going to be cooperation from day one like right and we’re going to let the customers like vote on our
41:10
most important issues kind of thing people still get paid don’t get me wrong and there’s like they’re also you know
41:16
uh taking a cut but the fact that it’s a you know decentralized distributed uh
41:22
model of decision making from day one as a company it was really interesting is really interesting to me similarly there are artist cooperatives like I’ve
41:28
mentioned a few and artists run you know startups where the artists are
41:34
generating better splits like 90 10 or you know 85 15 for the Arts and not only
41:41
that building in royalties for the secondary Market which we know is where most of the excess value is created
41:48
right so I I’ve been working um with a group group in Berlin to launch a platform we’re working towards
41:54
a prototype in the fall and we we brought a summer school of individuals together and it’s really amazing to see
42:00
who’s joined the summer school by the way it’s like people from startups artists all kinds of people that
42:05
um you know one of the things that we hit early on in terms of like well which technology what technology should we use
42:11
um was like the idea of well you know a value Exchange in the secondary tertiary
42:16
and you know like whatever how you know how does value propagate over time and I
42:22
think the blockchain like we keep coming back to it we can’t think of another technology that’s
42:27
better at automating the practice of being accountable to the original
42:33
Creator um and of course there are legal precedents for this right but I don’t
42:39
know if you’ve ever had to chase down your copyright because I’ve had stuff as an artist it is really expensive and and
42:48
really inaccessible to an artist so if we could even automate the legal layer of protecting your creative copy uh
42:55
right in some manner I think that represents tremendous value now I know there’s a lot of fault in the current
43:02
implementation of a lot of these platforms that they don’t actually protect your copyright at all because someone could just steal the thing and
43:07
and you’re still not legally protected but um you know I see this as like
43:13
stairs you know on a staircase toward you know an ideology and the ideology is
43:19
Right which is like attribution to the artist you know over time matters
Decentralization
43:24
yeah I think that the the the the key moment in there and I really liked
43:30
hearing what you were saying about decentralization there because I have this skepticism where
43:36
um oftentimes within the that techno infrastructure decentralization is is is
43:42
kind of what they really mean is an anti-state anti-regulation idea like how to get the
43:50
the stage and go around sort of Regulation or or take regulation out of
43:56
a kind of governmental uh uh yeah so we assume that’s shady right but it’s but
44:02
you know what’s interesting is there is that you know um The Case of the you know the fuel pipeline getting hacked
44:08
right the um the ransomware attack right and they they were paid in Bitcoin but they all
44:15
of that bitcoin’s since been recovered by the government right and the you know the interesting thing when you were when
44:20
you read about it was the government was like yeah it’s a public Ledger we could see all the transactions yeah between
44:27
the hackers and you know where they were moving the money yeah so I think one of
44:33
the things we have to be careful for is like the assumption that the existing system was built to be fair you know
44:39
what specifically when the banking sector um excluded you know vast majority of
44:44
the American black population as an example um in terms of getting a mortgage right
44:50
the whole geographies were held off limits and that was built into the system right and supported um and then
44:56
we backed that system up after 2008 during the Wall Street Crash right and we allowed a whole generation of people
45:03
to default on student loans and to go bankrupt on medical debt but we bet you
45:09
know but we ran to rescue this system that we think is so great so I you know in terms of like yeah sure like
45:17
maybe I’m going long on this kind of thing but like it’s easy to be like oh look like all the like Wall Street Bros
45:22
are building this new thing it’s just that there are artists there too and I think you know if you’re not aware of
45:29
that you should be that there are artists actually behind the scenes yeah I think that’s really special yeah and I think
Moments of Revolution
45:35
it’s the it it’s the uh maybe it’s my age as well get I getting older and the
45:41
anxiety of of these moments of change that on one hand I can uh hey I can see
45:47
the potential for change and I see where those things are happening but so many times uh moments of Revolution are
45:54
moments of opportunity for the ultra powerful and Ultra capitalists right how do we
45:59
um how do we try to like amplify um the most interesting parts of it we
46:05
have to participate like you have to be a you have to be a CO co-owner of this like future
46:11
um but you know yeah otherwise I think you’re right there’s going to be a bunch of millionaires that um you know maybe some of them we like
46:18
it’s a lot to rely on like let’s just trust they do the right thing right
46:23
I mean you know the nice thing is a bunch of these systems are built on cooperation from the outset knowing that
46:29
that’s you know like a tendency um and then some of them aren’t so we’ll
46:34
see what shakes out I’m really on the side of like the Cooperative this future and you know
46:40
the idea that the technology is commodified to the extent that you can pull it off the shelf like nuts and
46:46
bolts and you know that’s what I’m doing and that’s what others are doing now we’re not actually like inventing it we’re just like oh yeah I’ll take one of
46:52
those I’ll take one of those like piece it together you know well this has been a really uh fascinating uh conversation
Outro
46:59
uh I really appreciate you taking the time maybe before we go uh do you have
47:04
is there something you’re working on right now that you’re sort of headed to is like is is uar sort of is that like a
47:12
a kind of a baby that you’re really working on like trying to get trying to trying to pull it into its next phases
47:19
well it was created as an artwork for exhibition which anyone could you know that’s why I was I kind of downplayed it because that’s what it was created for
47:24
but then uh what I’m doing now is I’m working with other artists I mentioned a bunch of toronto-based ones but what I’m
47:30
trying to do is transform it from like it’s the Jeremy Bailey show to supporting other artists and I’m
47:35
actually helping them build artworks and figure out how to sell them um and so expect like we’ll do like some
47:42
kind of a little launch later this summer and I’ll flip the site into being all about them instead of about me and
47:49
then next fall I’m working towards this more open augmented reality platform
47:54
where anyone will be able to sell augmented reality artworks online augmented reality will always be just
48:01
like a bizarrely hilarious you know and hilarious media for me because it’s like always going to be Out Of Reach I
48:07
guarantee you this like will be like 75 years old talking about it’s going to be like future state that
48:14
never arrives but um gonna have some fun with that I think this fall um so stay tuned to that and generally
48:20
my whole thing right now is to try and train other artists on on these tools and and the stuff so that’s the
48:25
privilege of I think talking with you today is like if we could just get more it’s the access problem it’s like cable
48:31
access but now we have like you know um hardest Finance access like
48:37
I want to teach people how to do their taxes that’s great uh Jeremy Bailey tax tutor
48:45
on the way yeah I should have I should have disclosed they work at an accounting
48:50
software all right
48:56
thanks Ryan well thanks again uh it’s always a pleasure to talk to you yeah
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