Categories: News

The Art Angle Podcast: Why Digital Art Lives Fast and Dies Young

Welcome to the Art Angle, a podcast from Artnet News that delves into the places where the art world meets the real world, bringing each week’s biggest story down to earth. Join us every week for an in-depth look at what matters most in museums, the art market, and much more, with input from our own writers and editors, as well as artists, curators, and other top experts in the field.

Today we’re going to be talking about a relatively new and novel career within art, one you might not have thought of because it didn’t even really exist until recently. And that is… the conservator of new media art.

Anyone who has been to a museum recently will know that contemporary art comes in a dizzying array of forms, an artist today is as likely to be working with computer code or cutting together video in Adobe Premiere Pro as they are to be toiling in front of the easel. At least since the 1960s, artists who want to stay relevant have felt the need to explore the latest technology, even as simply what counts as the latest technology changes at a faster and faster pace.

This churn of experiments with art and technology is now old enough that it has its own history, which is where the field of new media conservation comes in. Artnet News reporter Jo Lawson-Tancred recently wrote a feature exploring the field and talking to a variety of key figures within it. A particularly fascinating aspect of the subject is how what seem like literally technical questions open onto much bigger debates about what art even is and what it even means to preserve it.

You’d think that art from our near past would be easier to grapple with. It is one of the symptoms of the sped up nature of our times that it might actually pose more challenges than art from the more remote past. Jo’s essay even seems to suggest that the problem is only getting more intense even as this whole new specialist field develops to deal with it. This week on the podcast, Artnet’s Ben Davis speaks to Jo about the current state of digital art conservation, and what challenges the future may hold.

admin

Recent Posts

You Just Bought a Painting at Art Basel. Now What?

Art Basel is known as one of the premier events in the art world, bringing…

3 days ago

SHARON WALTERS Seeing Ourselves,9th May – 4th July, 2024

Sharon Walters: Seeing OurselvesSolo exhibition at HackelBury Fine Art, London9th May – 4th July 2024…

1 week ago

Get to Know the Artists in the 2024 Whitney Biennial

The Whitney Biennial is a highly anticipated event in the art world, showcasing the most…

1 week ago

From Ukrainian Dreamer to Parisian Maestro: The Artistic Odyssey of Vassil Khmeluk

'Anyone who looks at Vassil Khmeluk' s paintings perceives them as a miraculous balm that…

1 week ago

A pure symbiosis “PERFECT STORM” by Fridriks and Kaláb flourishes with beautiful art and personal endeavors

Venturing into unknown territory, artists Katrin Fridriks and Jan Kaláb took a chance on one…

3 weeks ago

Pushing the Boundaries of Artistic Expression with Twilight’s Tapestry: Traces of Time and Color

Pushing the boundaries of artistic expression, visionary artist Melissa Herrington’s large-scale, abstract paintings blur the boundaries between mediums,…

3 weeks ago