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What
is improvisation, and what does it have to do with digital media?
The
characteristics of digital media are usually considered in relation
to pre-digital media: digital photography is faster than chemical-based
photography, digital video is cheaper than film production, computer
manipulation of images is more sophisticated than hand-retouching
techniques.
It
may be, however, that this misses the point (and therefore the
potential) of digital media entirely. A bicycle, after all, is
not really a machine for faster walking, nor is a telephone really
a machine for more-distant talking. The real resonance and capability
inherent in new technologies is generally only discovered after
the initial “revolution” caused by these technologies
begins to fade. The automobile allowed people to drive fast –
but its real effect on our culture is seen in the reshaping of
our cities and the re-ordering of our society.
When
digital media comes to full fruition – when digital photography
is just “photography,” for example – we may
begin to understand that it lends itself to other strategies than
those that were primary at its beginnings. Art production in our
culture is currently dominated by a “compositional”
strategy: pre-visualize something, create it, consider it, refine
it into perfection. The speed, strength and depth that digital
media seems to offer, however, may free artists to develop other
methods to address ideas and issues that “composition”
cannot.
If one thinks of the model of the jazz player – continually
building skills, trying new and experimental ideas each night
and then reworking these the very next night -- vs. the classical
piano student, perfecting valuable but known material, one can
see that there may be room for alternative approaches, and that
these may prove central to what digital media can grow to be.
- ted.fisher : 9.28.02
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