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Reconfiguring the system: RTMark and Agricola de Cologne.


The 1990s were a fabulous time for opportunists, visionaries, and entrepreneurs. With the advent of the Internet and the World Wide Web, the potential to communicate with a global audience, with relatively little expense. appealed to many. While a number of people wanted to get in on a piece of the action by creating a start-up or at least investing in one, there were some artists, visionaries, and activists who saw the Web as a democratizing force--an opportunity to give the "little guy" a voice and find a global audience for their special interests.

A widely known art activist group that began using the Internet as its tool of communication in the 1990s is the anonymous collective named RTMark (also known as [R]TMARK, and pronounced "art-mark"). The group uses the Internet and the Web as a platform to raise awareness of social and corporate injustices, to build community, and ultimately to foster change. The group's Web site acts as a clearinghouse for tactical media Tactical media can be defined as the appropriation of mass media in order to oppose and criticize a target which often occupies a certain position of power. This modern form of activism can be recognized by its use of current technology and its ‘hit-and-run tactics’  projects. The RTMark site (www.rtmark.com) touts, "Since 1996, the RTMark brand has accrued value by providing key services to artists, activists and the intellectual community. The RTMark system supports the incubation of cutting-edge cultural ventures, while providing a unique opportunity for private investors to sponsor these activities." (1)

One of the most notable projects that RTMark has engaged in is the Yes Men's World Trade Organization (WTO See World Trade Organization. ) parody site, www.gatt.org. The site, launched in early 2000, looks almost identical to the WTO's official site but has been modified to generate critical discourse about the policies and proposals of the WTO. The site spawned invitations to attend conferences by visitors who thought that they were conferring with the actual WTO, which the Yes Men accepted. The resulting outcome can be seen in the documentary The Yes Men (2003) by Dan Ollman, Sarah Price, and Chris Smith Chris Smith is the name of:

In politics:
  • Chris Smith, Baron Smith of Finsbury (born 1951), former British Member of Parliament and government minister
  • Chris Smith (US politician) (born 1953), member of Congress from New Jersey
In sports:
    , who follow the activists' antics antics
    Noun, pl

    absurd acts or postures [Italian antico something grotesque (from fantastic carvings found in ruins of ancient Rome)]

    antics
    plural noun
     as they act as spokesmen for the WTO.

    I recently met with "Max Kauffman," one of the RTMark members who joined RTMark six months after its founding in 1996. Kauffman, like other members, prefers to remain anonymous and goes by this pseudonym pseudonym (s`dənĭm) [Gr.,=false name], name assumed, particularly by writers, to conceal identity. A writer's pseudonym is also referred to as a nom de plume (pen name). . Initially, Kauffman became interested in the idea of art as an activist tool after being frustrated frus·trate  
    tr.v. frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing, frus·trates
    1.
    a. To prevent from accomplishing a purpose or fulfilling a desire; thwart:
     by his experiences as an employee of a multinational corporation multinational corporation, business enterprise with manufacturing, sales, or service subsidiaries in one or more foreign countries, also known as a transnational or international corporation. These corporations originated early in the 20th cent. . Kauffman was concerned with the increasingly materialistic ma·te·ri·al·ism  
    n.
    1. Philosophy The theory that physical matter is the only reality and that everything, including thought, feeling, mind, and will, can be explained in terms of matter and physical phenomena.

    2.
     culture and growing margin between people and profit. According to according to
    prep.
    1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

    2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

    3.
     Kauffman, RTMark was built by a network of artists, classmates Classmates can refer to either:
    • Classmates.com, a social networking website.
    • Classmates (film), a 2006 Malayalam blockbuster directed by Lal Jose, starring Prithviraj, Jayasurya, Indragith, Sunil, Jagathy, Kavya Madhavan, Balachandra Menon, ...
    , and activists who found one another at the rise of the Internet in the mid-1990s.

    Despite the eclectic projects, RTMark's tactics are clear. Kauffman asserts, "We come from the tradition of Jonathan Swift and A Modest Proposal [1729]--the idea of couching sharp social commentary in the guise of satire." (2) An important project RTMark completed in 1999 was aiding an Austrian art group, etoy, in a lawsuit filed by eToys.com over the use of the domain name www.etoy.com. EToys claimed the Web site www.etoy.com was hurting their sales. Linked by the Internet community, which made the debate international news, an outpouring of support helped etoy get their domain back, and the arts organization is still in existence today. The Internet helped RTMark achieve its goal of promoting and aiding activists' projects. As Kauffman says, "RTMark is a clearinghouse for ideas of resistance to corporate abuses of power. I don't think RTMark could have existed without the rise of network culture." (3)

    [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

    In Cologne, Germany, Agricola de Cologne uses the Internet to create thematic social sculptures. By linking to other artists and curatorial projects, de Cologne builds community with like-minded thinkers. As a result, he has created what he describes as, "a dynamic network including countless projects, artists, curators, institutions, and organizations; without them, my work would not exist." (4) He began as a painter, moved into installation, and then shifted his production exclusively to the Internet at the beginning of 2000. De Cologne introduced a collective approach to his art production as an artist/curator/director with such projects as "A Virtual Memorial" (2000) and "Le Musee di-visioniste" (2000), both a part of his NewMediaArtProjectNetwork (http://nmartproject.net/). He describes the NewMediaArtProjectNetwork as "a gigantic dynamic artwork consisting of subordinated networking constructions as projects and subprojects." (5)

    Much of de Cologne's work is a result of concern for what happened during the Nazi regime and World War II. In 1995, at the commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the end of WWII WWII
    abbr.
    World War II


    WWII World War Two
    , he began a project that reflects the past and present and contributes to the German reconciliation with the Jews and the people of Poland. The resulting project, "1000 years 50 years and still so terribly young" (1995), which he asserts "relates to the historical Nazi ideology of Hitler and its neo-fascist manifestations nowadays," (6) was a successful show that was included in ten Polish museums, among them the state museums of Auschwitz and Majdanek. Building on the concepts of this exhibition, which pre-dates his Internet work, de Cologne completed another installation, "A Living Memorial--Memorial Project Against the Forgetting, Racism, Xenophobia Xenophobia


    Boxer Rebellion

    Chinese rising aimed at ousting foreign interlopers (1900). [Chinese Hist.
     and Anti-Semitism" (1995), which was shown in the Czech Republic Czech Republic, Czech Česká Republika (2005 est. pop. 10,241,000), republic, 29,677 sq mi (78,864 sq km), central Europe. It is bordered by Slovakia on the east, Austria on the south, Germany on the west, and Poland on the north. , Germany, and Poland.

    De Cologne became concerned with this subject because it was absent from much of his formal education. He writes,
      During the nine years in school, I never had any lesson about this
      historical period. People in 1950s Germany focused on other priorities
      such as reconstructing living structures and rebuilding a healthy
      economy. As for cultural concerns, there was no time and no money and
      no consciousness. People of my generation grew up without a
      significant understanding of the Holocaust. Of course, this does not
      mean that there were no publications about the period, or that the
      press did not report about trials connected with Nazi crimes etc., but
      most people closed their eyes and ears. I became aware of my history
      particularly by visiting the countries of Eastern Europe after
      1989. (7)
    


    "A Living Memorial" was a success, but it did not come without consequences: the installation was brutally vandalized three hours before the exhibition opening.

    A series of illnesses forced de Cologne to stop producing art until 1999 when he began focusing his attention on computer-based work and found Flash as a tool that "conforms to [his] ideas and kind of creative working." (8) During this time, he became entrenched en·trench   also in·trench
    v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es

    v.tr.
    1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending.

    2.
     in digital media, which he believed best complimented his way of thinking.

    On January 1, 2000, de Cologne published "A Virtual Memorial--Memorial Project Against the Forgetting and For Humanity" on the Web. At the time of this writing, there are currently six projects online and on view associated with "A Virtual Memorial": "Memorial for Victims of Terror"; "Memorial for Victims of Aids"; "Tsunami Memorial"; "Family Portrait; Women: Memory of Repression"; and "Memory of the Future." Even though his work embodies a type of German techno techno

    electronic dance music that first appeared in the U.S. in the 1980s and became globally popular in the 1990s. It originated with Detroit deejay-producers who, inspired by European electro-pop, underlaid dreamy synthesizer melodies with rapid electronic rhythms.
     aesthetic that may be off-putting to an American audience, his ideas in regard to collaboration fully utilize the Internet's networking capabilities for humanitarian purposes.

    Since the emergence of the Internet in the 1990s to the general public, artists and social activists have been afforded a new and inexpensive means to create community for social change. RTMark and de Cologne take two radically different philosophical approaches using Internet technology for humanistic hu·man·ist  
    n.
    1. A believer in the principles of humanism.

    2. One who is concerned with the interests and welfare of humans.

    3.
    a. A classical scholar.

    b. A student of the liberal arts.
     purposes, with RTMark using subversive tactics while de Cologne uses a community building approach. Both, however, are sensitive to the core.

    SETH Seth, in the Bible
    Seth, in the Bible, son of Adam and Eve, father of Enosh. In the chronology in the Gospel of St. Luke, Seth is an ancestor of Jesus. The Nag Hammadi codices preserve revelatory discourses ascribed to or allegedly emanating from Seth.
     THOMPSON is an educator, media artist, and writer based in Akron, Ohio Akron is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Summit County.GR6 The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio on the Cuyahoga River between Cleveland to the north and Canton to the south, approximately 60 miles (96 km) west of . He can be reached at seththompson@wigged wigged

    see peruke.
    .net.

    NOTES

    1. See www.rtmark.com/rtcom/success/newsroom.

    2. Author interview with "Max Kauffman" of RTMark, March 2006.

    3. Ibid.

    4. Author e-mail interview with Agricola de Cologne, March 2006.

    5. Author e-mail interview with Agricola de Cologne, 2002.

    6. Ibid.

    7. Ibid.

    8. Ibid.

    see

    A special supplement by RTMark can be found in the January/February 2002 (Volume 29, no. 5) issue of Afterimage afterimage /af·ter·im·age/ (af´ter-im?aj) a retinal impression remaining after cessation of the stimulus causing it.

    af·ter·im·age
    n.
    .
    COPYRIGHT 2006 Visual Studies Workshop
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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    Article Details
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    Title Annotation:art & activism
    Author:Thompson, Seth
    Publication:Afterimage
    Geographic Code:1CANA
    Date:Sep 1, 2006
    Words:1332
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