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While groups tending to argue politically frequently included non-specialists in their productions, working on local themes and organizing themselves independently, the artistic concepts were always carried by the aim to expose the machine of illusion and suggestion that television is. This was the case for initiatives as diverse as the American feminist group Guerrilla Girls, the critical New York network television Paper Tiger TV, or the Leipzig-based pirate broadcaster Kanal X, which was conceived in spring 1990 by the artist Ingo Günther for the citizens' movement " New Forum." In terms of Berlin, Mike Steiner's Video Gallery should be named here; as part of the Berlin Cable Pilot Project, it regularly broadcast programs from 1985 to 1990, featuring and treating video art much in the tradition of Gerry Schum.


Katharina Sieverding: Reproduction, 1976
©Deutsche Bank Collection

Against the background of the rapid technological development of private television and the internet, it almost seems inevitable that the media utopias for a "better television" should fail. While there were further attempts made throughout the 90s to work alternatively in the field of television, and entire art television broadcasters were born such as Hallo TV in Berlin or Van Gogh TV's Piazza virtuale - which was broadcast throughout Europe during documenta IX in 1992 for 100 days via four satellites - due to a wide diversion of interests, the liaison between art and television was always a highly delicate affair. The digital revolution of the 90s not only blurred the boundaries between television, film, and video, but also contributed to establishing a new media pop culture that lent some humor to the deconstructive strategies of early television art. If Charlotte Moorman's invitation to the legendary Johnny Carson Show in 1967 still constituted a provocation of bourgeois taste in art and fed, as did Nam June Paik's appearance on "Bio's Bahnhof" in the 1980s, from the image of the enfant terrible, the fronts have long since grown closer. What seems scandalous today are less the artists themselves than the concepts of certain TV makers who now operate with the taboo-breaking methods already tested by the avant-garde.



Nam June Paik performing worldwide via satelite transmission
at the opening of documenta VI, Kassel 1977
©Archiv Wulf Herzogenrath / Verlag der Kunst

Thus, in view of the omnipresence of reality TV, the utopian designs of play-along television come across as the archaic remains of a lost cultural epoch. It is part of the irony of history that current outgrowths of the TV industry such as " Big Brother," " I'm a Celebrity - get me out of here!" or " Star Search" have ultimately fulfilled what the avant-garde of the 1970s were seeking when they demanded that the private be made public. In the Big Brother container, Valie Export's symbolic transferal of the family everyday onto the television screen has become reality. The exhibitionism of the would-be stars, which surpass all boundaries of embarrassment, turns the critically motivated self-expression trips of the performance generation into a sheer lust for spectacle, fed by an insatiable voyeurism on the part of the viewer. Ultimately, it's this component that secures viewer ratings, calculating as it does the natural drives into its equation. This gives rise to the question as to whether the call for more publicity in early video art didn't necessarily lead to the dead end that mass compatibility ultimately became. Perhaps art actually needs the elitist niche of the museum after all, in order to create free space for thought?

In the meantime, television has also taken art's place regarding formal innovation. Music has conquered the image media. This is why it's hardly surprising that the expensively produced MTV clips by directors such as Chris Cunningham or Spike Jonze can now be obtained as DVD editions, or, in the case of Cunningham, are being honored by exhibitions in art museums.



Chris Cunningham:
Aphex Twins "Windowlicker", video stills, 1998/99

On the other hand, both formally and in the choice of their subjects, artists today orient themselves along the dictates of the mass-media advertising and consumerist world. Ultimately, what's fascinating about the current situation is the fact that the categories of art and commerce, enlightenment and entertainment, elite and popular have gotten mixed up to such a degree. The viewer has to decide for him or herself what's good and what's bad - and perhaps it's this, after all, that constitutes a late victory of "Participation TV."

Translation: Andrea Scrima

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