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New art practices in the field of political decision-making: a process report from projektgruppe.


With this article, the collaborative projektgruppe of Hamburg Hamburg, city, Germany
Hamburg (häm`brkh), officially Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg (Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg), city (1994 pop.
, Germany, would like to offer an insight into the group's collective practice. A major part of the group's activities includes the editing and publishing of the Journal for Northeast Issues. In 2002, this English-language magazine was established to question culturally relevant concepts of spaces. In particular, it puts the dominant developments of living spaces--of cities, neighborhoods, streets, and buildings--up for debate in the arts. From this point of departure, location-specific issues from diverse social, political, and cultural contexts find room in the journal, and local experiences can thus be shared within a more general framework. Contributions to the journal often also demonstrate new strategies of artistic comment, intervention, or counteractivity in relation to spatial developments.

The art initiative KiP, or Kunstler informieren Politiker (Artists inform politicians), is linked with projektgruppe and the Journal for Northeast Issues in several ways. Two members of the magazine's editorial board, Christoph Rauch and Monika Wucher, actively participated in the initiative. Similarly, KiP participants Doro Carl, Michel Chevalier Michel Chevalier (January 13, 1806—November 18, 1879) was a French engineer, statesman, economist and free market liberal. Biography
Born in Limoges, Chevalier studied at the École Polytechnique, obtaining an engineering degree at the Paris
, Ole Frahm, Jokinen, Petra Lange-Berndt, and Jo Zahn, as well as the initiator and organizer, Cornelia Sollfrank, contributed to projektgruppe's recent Northeast Issues Meeting by offering major topics for debate. (1) The initiative was inspired by a drastic urban development in Hamburg called HafenCity, a masterplan for restructuring former industrial areas, like others found in many globalized cities. In the case of Hamburg, a large part of the old port area, 155 hectares of urban space, makes up the main focus of the city's current urban development politics. Art and culture are asked to play a supporting role supporting role nsecond rôle m

supporting role nruolo non protagonista 
 in serving this enterprise. The master plan includes planned offices for 40,000 people in Hamburg's HafenCity, a concert hall, several programs of art in public space, and a maritime museum A maritime museum (sometimes nautical museum) is a museum specializing in the display of objects relating to ships and travel on seas and lakes. A naval museum focuses on navies and military use of the sea. . Against this backdrop, and with the museum project in mind, the KiP initiative launched an innovative and effective activist strategy.

Under the banner "Artists inform politicians," more than one hundred artists and cultural workers have united in Hamburg. They have set out to inform the city's politicians, as well as the public, about the proceedings connected to the International Maritime Museum in Hamburg's new prestigious district. The initiative argued that before the city government granted the museum project equally sizable funds and property (a prominent location in the HafenCity development area), the members of the city parliament had been largely ignorant of the concept of the future museum. Nevertheless, all members voted for its creation with abstentions from a few who cited concerns about the further financing of the new cultural landmark. KiP adopted a specific procedure in order to cope with this paradigmatic See paradigm.  political problem and to influence the political decision-making standards from an arts-and-culture point of view.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The International Maritime Museum will be a private museum, run by the Peter Tamm Foundation and its decisive head Peter Tamm, longstanding chairman of the board of the Axel Springer Axel Springer (May 2, 1912, Altona, Hamburg - September 22, 1985, West Berlin), was a German journalist and the founder and owner of the Axel Springer AG publishing company.

Springer was born as Axel Cäsar Springer in Hamburg, where his father worked as publisher.
 media group. Axel Springer is one of the biggest European newspaper publishing companies, publishing magazines and newspapers in more than thirty countries. To establish the museum, a private-public partnership has been agreed upon Adj. 1. agreed upon - constituted or contracted by stipulation or agreement; "stipulatory obligations"
stipulatory

noncontroversial, uncontroversial - not likely to arouse controversy
 between the city of Hamburg and the Peter Tamm Foundation; Tamm's private collection of naval objects (model ships, ship design plans, nautical nau·ti·cal  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of ships, shipping, sailors, or navigation on a body of water.



[From Latin nauticus, from Greek nautikos, from
 instruments, maps, uniforms, weapons, paintings, etc.) will form the cadre (company) CADRE - The US software engineering vendor which merged with Bachman Information Systems to form Cayenne Software in July 1996.  of the new museum, and his foundation has full and final authority over the presentation.

The agreement did create some cause for worry, not only because the city of Hamburg provides the 12,000-square-meter historic warehouse for free and finances the private museum enterprise with an extra 30 million euros, but also because of the collector's possibly right-wing reputation. (2) Tamm gained prestige in the late 1960s and early 1970s working on campaigns against the political left, which developed the sales of the media group, and enhanced his own influential position. Later, he started buying up small publishing houses known for right-wing and militaristic mil·i·ta·rism  
n.
1. Glorification of the ideals of a professional military class.

2. Predominance of the armed forces in the administration or policy of the state.

3.
 literature.

Despite others' worries, the basis for the decision of the city government was neither a convincing museum concept, nor the quality of the collection (which is highly contested among experts). Tamm still holds positions on a number of supervisory boards Supervisory board

The board of directors that represents stakeholders in the governance of the corporation.
, which explains his large network of friends and partners throughout all political parties and within the mass media. In addition to Tamm's extended networks, another push factor for the museum was the mere size of the collection, which seems to perfectly match the requirements for a prestigious cultural project in HafenCity.

In August 2005, the initiative "Tamm-Tamm: Kunstler informieren Politiker" came into play. Its basic idea was the following: each of the 121 members of the Hamburg city parliament could be "adopted" by an artist or cultural worker with the aim to open up a discussion about the planned museum. In a personal dialogue, the artists intended to ask their "godchildren"--the politicians--about the individual reasons for their vote. The goal was also to find out to what extent the politicians were informed about the issues they decided on; thus, the critique consequently addressed the politically responsible decision makers.

The artists began their attempts to get in touch with the politicians by writing a personal letter and requesting an interview. Many of the artists also approached their politician with a little gift, the booklet "Tamm-Tamm," which for the first time provided striking information about the collector and his maritime collection. (3) The responses to the artists' requests could hardly be more diverse. While most members of the Christian Democratic Party This is a list of Christian Democratic parties, i.e. political parties that are part of the Christian Democratic movement and advocate policies based on the principles of Christian Democracy.  collectively refused to meet with the artists and had a spokesman send a representative answer, members of both the Social Democratic Party and the Green Party demonstrated more goodwill. Each approach and each encounter, if it happened, was different, depending on the individual attitude of the artist and their particular godparent god·par·ent  
n.
A godfather or a godmother.


godparent
Noun

a person who promises at a person's baptism to look after his or her religious upbringing

Noun 1.
 relationship.

Each KiP participant was free to set their own focus regarding reasoning and aesthetic realizations. The focuses ranged from painting, photography, audio and video material, drawing, collage collage (kəläzh`, kō–) [Fr.,=pasting], technique in art consisting of cutting and pasting natural or manufactured materials to a painted or unpainted surface—hence, a work of art in this medium. , and a variety of text, including a documentation of the media echo, in the form of thirty newspaper articles. The diversity and the lively discourse, which has been created by the members of KiP, resulted from the particularly open format of the initative. There was no need to agree on a common denominator common denominator
n.
1. Mathematics A quantity into which all the denominators of a set of fractions may be divided without a remainder.

2. A commonly shared theme or trait.
. Many of the participating artists did not even know each other personally, and no energy was wasted on internal fights.

The godparent strategy had the potential to make a great impact only because it was backed by the use of electronic communication media. KiP's informational core was, and still is, the common Web site www.tamm-tamm.info, where all contributions are publicly accessible. This publication platform on the Internet and its coordination through a mailing list An automated e-mail system on the Internet, which is maintained by subject matter. There are thousands of such lists that reach millions of individuals and businesses. New users generally subscribe by sending an e-mail with the word "subscribe" in it and subsequently receive all new  prove the power of small-scale and do-it-yourself media, which in the case of KiP were even able to jolt media tycoons like Tamm.

Which understanding of art and politics does this project open up? Given the individualism that the art system demands, as well as the related competitive pressure and de-solidarization that are signs of our times, one can be rightly astonished a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 by the fact that over one hundred artists of different generations and work approaches came together in a collective action that expresses their dismay at local cultural policy. To this extent, the project bore its first unlikely fruit.

One reason for this might be the roles that were assigned in a simple arrangement, and were thus easy to grasp. Conceptually, the project did not invent any new material but organized, instead, available resources in a way that brings into focus realities and their inherent potentials. Artists who have been endowed en·dow  
tr.v. en·dowed, en·dow·ing, en·dows
1. To provide with property, income, or a source of income.

2.
a.
 with specific knowledge and concepts are here considered as specialists of a wide field of activities concerning urban culture, museum policy, history, preservation, and mediation of objects and collections; even more, cultural and political education, cultural representation of the city, culture financing concepts, etc. Through the initiative, democracy--for once--was taken seriously. The action was presented as a process of collecting knowledge and exchanging arguments. In the deliberate construction of speech as a one-to-one situation, KiP challenged politicians to prove their willingness to explain their decisions to experts (at best), or at least to respond to inquiries. In practice, however, many politicians resorted to evasions and general responses by official spokesmen in order to spare themselves the embarrassment of having had no idea of what one was deciding.

Since then, the atmosphere in the city parliament and the offices of the cultural authorities has become a bit more jittery. The most recent public session concerning the museum was under police protection and was so well attended that even the press had trouble making it into the chambers. The first critical utterances from members of parliament could be heard when, in response to a question about what the museum's concept was, a Tamm Foundation spokesperson said, "Just let yourself be surprised!" The public and their political representatives know better now; a concept for the presentation of the Tamm collection is eagerly awaited. At this writing, however, there are no signs that anything is on the way.

On the public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most  front, one measure of the protest action's success may be the fact that the Springer springer

a North American term commonly used to describe heifers close to term with their first calf.
 Press Empire has decided to fight back. In back-to-back coverage, two of their newspapers tried to make a storm out of the fact that one KiP participant, a filmmaker, is a former member of the now defunct Red Army Faction Noun 1. Red Army Faction - a Marxist and Maoist terrorist organization in Germany; a network of underground guerillas who committed acts of violence in the service of the class struggle; a successor to the Baader-Meinhof Gang; became one of Europe's most feared , a left-wing terrorist organization. Exposing the evils of public protest, they also pointed an accusing finger at the teachers' union, which had supported the project. Obviously helpless, these players had to grab yesterday's targets to fight a new form of protest. But by doing so, Springer and Tamm only proved, once again, how anchored they are in the past.

RAHEL PUFFERT studied cultural theory and works as a freelance art mediator and author. She is a member of the Culture & Social Movements This is a partial list of social movements.
  • Abahlali baseMjondolo - South African shack dwellers' movement
  • Animal rights movement
  • Anti-consumerism
  • Anti-war movement
  • Anti-globalization movement
  • Brights movement
  • Civil rights movement
 Archive (www.archiv.glizz.net). CORNELIA SOLLFRANK is an artist, cyberfeminist, and activist in cultural policies. MONIKA WUCHER is an art historian and ethnologist eth·nol·o·gy  
n.
1. The science that analyzes and compares human cultures, as in social structure, language, religion, and technology; cultural anthropology.

2.
. See also www.projektgruppe.org.

NOTES

1. The international conference took place in Hamburg, May 25-28, 2006, under the title "Urban Contact Zone: sharing ideas--using places." The proceedings will be published in the Journal for Northeast Issues no. 5.

2. A detailed and critical presentation of the collector Peter Tamm, his background and his collection, is provided by Friedrich Mowe, Tamm-Tamm, Eine Anregung zur offentlichen Diskussion uber das Tamm-Museum (A suggestion to the public discussion over the Tamm Museum), (Hamburg: GNN GNN - Global Network Navigator , 2005).

3. Ibid. The title of the booklet also serves as a motto for the KiP initiative. Tamm-Tamm is an onomatopoeia onomatopoeia (ŏn'əmăt'əpē`ə) [Gr.,=word-making], in language, the representation of a sound by an imitation thereof; e.g., the cat mews. Poets often convey the meaning of a verse through its very sound.  suggesting not only the collector's name, but also the German word "Tamtam" that means "ballyhoo bal·ly·hoo  
n. pl. bal·ly·hoos
1. Sensational or clamorous advertising or publicity.

2. Noisy shouting or uproar.

tr.v.
" or "hoopla hoop·la  
n. Informal
1.
a. Boisterous, jovial commotion or excitement.

b. Extravagant publicity: The new sedan was introduced to the public with much hoopla.

2.
."
COPYRIGHT 2006 Visual Studies Workshop
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Title Annotation:art & activism
Author:Wucher, Monika
Publication:Afterimage
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Sep 1, 2006
Words:1809
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