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Monday, March 29, 2010

Hahahahahahahahaha

Posted by on Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 11:44 AM

Over the weekend in Portland, New Museum director Richard Flood said he "just found out about blogs three months ago."

"The Internet is still a ghetto," he added.

Unlike the art world?

Wow.

 

Comments (14) RSS

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Rich Jensen 1
Time to take the New out of his museum and dust it off a little.
Posted by Rich Jensen http://www.souciant.com on March 29, 2010 at 11:58 AM
schmacky 2
How old is Richard? No excuse for anyone under the age of 40 making this statement (actually, there's no excuse period).
Posted by schmacky on March 29, 2010 at 12:04 PM
Will in Seattle 3
He probably thinks that Jazz is the music of rebels too.

Cool, daddio!
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on March 29, 2010 at 12:37 PM
Geni 4
We actually had an administrator here - who is in charge of web content - explaining to us that she'd like to have a sort of electronic newsletter. When we said, "Oh, you mean a blog?" she was completely baffled. "What's a blog?"

She's about 32.
Posted by Geni on March 29, 2010 at 12:55 PM
attitude devant 5
Oh, he's just pissed because everyone's been calling him out on his apalling ethics in mounting the Koons show. He can't bear the idea of all of us peons having a voice in the art world without belonging to his little club.
Posted by attitude devant on March 29, 2010 at 12:57 PM
Fnarf 6
Well, turnabout is fair play. I just found out about the New Museum today. In this blog post.
Posted by Fnarf http://www.facebook.com/fnarf on March 29, 2010 at 12:59 PM
aardvark 7
sounds like a record industry exec. some old fart with alot of institutional power. can we get to the end of cultural empires already
Posted by aardvark on March 29, 2010 at 1:05 PM
john t 8
This guy must not even pay attention to his own museum's exhibitions. I saw the Younger Than Jesus exhibition last year and there was a room with, among other media, computers displaying blogs. One of the stars of the show, Ryan Trecartin, is about as internet-immersed as any artist working today.
Posted by john t on March 29, 2010 at 3:07 PM
HuskyQuaker 9
Remember kids, we live in one of the more computer savvy regions of the country. It really does make a big cultural difference.
Posted by HuskyQuaker on March 29, 2010 at 11:57 PM
10
@Husky: our cultural tendency to be tech-savvy has little to do with blogging though, and I'm fairly confident quite a lot of the country caught up to us on that long ago.

What an insult to add to injury. He's just made himself and the culture of the Institution more evidently elitist than before, keenly pointing out the disparity between the way the academic/commercial art world thinks/talks about art and the way the rest of us do.

Those who do write on credible thoughtful blogs are aware that this is a self-correcting system of interlinked conversations where people can and will let you know you are wrong. And most of us have cross referenced and cross-posted/conversed with blogs in other cities; so the prairie dog notion is ridiculous.

People like Flood need to realise/come to terms with/admit the tone of criticism is changing, and so are people's attitudes towards dusty institutional attitudes. If we want art to survive, that world is going to have to bend.
Posted by sharonArnold http://dimensionsvariable.org on March 30, 2010 at 8:48 AM
11
my lack of coffee and bad writing as a result is "ghetto"....
Posted by sharonArnold http://dimensionsvariable.org on March 30, 2010 at 8:49 AM
HuskyQuaker 12
Question to Sharon: Do you think you would spend the same amount of time blogging/reading blogs, if you lived in NYC and could get face-time with any art world elite you wanted, whenever you wanted? Also, do you regularly read more than a dozen blogs? That is a small number compared to what's out there. If you are choosing which blogs you consider to be the best, then maybe the "ghetto" comment holds true. I am not sure how much blogs are actually changing the discourse. We are having the same conversations we always do in galleries, museums, at openings, and in studios.
Posted by HuskyQuaker on March 30, 2010 at 6:47 PM
13
@Husky: When I lived in New York (roughly six years, five years ago), yes I did - though at the time there were admittedly fewer! And as I mentioned in another conversation yesterday, 90% of anything is crap so I don't really understand the point of the statement.

Blogs are changing the conversation by virtue of being there and being available to anyone and everyone, regardless of location (ie Seattle/NY, galleries/living room), background or level of education. I believe this to be expressly important and valuable!
Posted by sharonArnold http://dimensionsvariable.org on March 31, 2010 at 6:49 PM
gettingtoknowyoubetter 14
yow. alas, this says more about Richard Flood than it does about the validity of art blogs.
Posted by gettingtoknowyoubetter http://gettingtoknowyoubetter.wordpress.com/ on March 31, 2010 at 8:11 PM

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