Revolution - Jeffrey Shaw
05-04-2005
Europees project Preservation and Presentation of Installation Art
Installation project
In June 2004 the project 'Preservation and Presentation of Installation Art' officially started. In this project, which is taking place in the framework of the EU programme Culture 2000, a total of 30 museums and institutions in six European countries are working together to study the management and preservation of installations. The partners in the project are conducting research in the form of case studies. Thirty complex multimedia installations including works by Bill Viola, Jason Rhoades, Jeffrey Shaw and Nam June Paik have been selected. The installation project is one of the initiatives of the 'International Network for the Conservation of Contemporary Art' (INCCA), which since 2002 has served as a platform for the exchange of knowledge and information in the area of the management and preservation of contemporary art. ICN is the co-ordinator of INCCA and also the main co-ordinator of this new European project. Five co-organizers are involved in the organization and execution of the project and work with museums in the participating countries: the Tate Gallery in England, the Restaurierungszentrum Düsseldorf in Germany, the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst in Belgium, the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia in Spain and the Stichting Behoud Moderne Kunst in the Netherlands. By sharing their experiences, the partners are collaborating to develop guidelines for the preservation, re-installation and documentation of installation art. The results of the study and registrations of the installations will also be made accessible to the general public through the websites of the museums and institutions involved.
The Collections Department of ICN and the Netherlands Media Art Institute are jointly responsible for one of the case studies. At present the subject of this case study can be seen at the exhibition 'Moving Parts'. The ICN/Netherlands Media Art Institute team had already selected Shaw's 'Revolution' as a case study when a loan request reached us from Graz/Basel. 'Revolution' was chosen because the team believes it is an important work by an important multimedia artist, and it is one of the few works by Shaw in a public Dutch collection. Moreover, the team thinks this work is interesting because of its interactive character. Although the loan request presented us with practical and logistic problems (an exhibition deadline), the team was very pleased that there was still international museum interest in 'Revolution'. In consultation with the organizers of 'Moving Parts', the team decided to do everything in its power to get the installation back into exhibition condition. Before the results of the case study are presented in greater detail, first a short introduction to the artist and the art work is given below.
Jeffrey Shaw - Revolution
Jeffrey Shaw is generally regarded as a pioneer in the field of interactive art. His work should be understood in terms of a need to bridge the gap between art and life and to make the viewer a participant. He himself formulated this as follows: 'Art is essentially a conversation with the viewer, who is always reinterpreting and reconstructing the work of art.'(1) Shaw's mentality as an artist is based on views from the 1960s, when artists were trying to break through established museum conventions. By means of artistic experiments such as events, happenings and performances artists attempted to involve the public in art and even to make them participate. Of course the use of new, synthetic materials and new techniques (light and slide projections) were part and parcel of these experiments. Interactivity is the key to Jeffrey Shaw's oeuvre. In both his early works and his most recent creations, the involvement of the viewer is essential. The introduction of digital technology enabled Shaw to attain a higher degree of interactivity in his works. In the late 1970s Shaw started to use virtual, computer-generated projections. In the following period new developments emerged in rapid succession. In his position as artist and professor (Director of the Research Institute for Visual Art at the ZKM in Karlsruhe), Shaw is constantly examining and analysing new possibilities. Through the combination of art, technology and science, art can be experienced in a different way. Digital storage of information on a data carrier gives the work of art a different form; it is no longer tied to the traditional boundaries of a painting or a sculpture. Shaw's art works are databases of text, images and sound. These databases are continually reshaped through an interface and by the viewer using the interface. The machine-like exterior of his installations is also important. This exterior invites the viewer to take action, to perform some physical movement. 'Revolution' requires a specific physical effort on the part of the viewer.(2)
Revolution
2)'but for nearly all of the IMAGO installations, because the same type of monitor was used. Of about 30 monitors used for IMAGO, there are now a few left.'
Results of case study
The case studies in the framework of the installation project have three objectives:
- to document the installations (i.e. to make a detailed registration in words and pictures, which requires a trial installation of the work)
- to draft installation guidelines - instructions - which will make it possible for other people to reinstall the installations in the future
- to develop a plan of approach/strategy for the long-term conservation of installations
Documentation and registration
The re-installation of 'Revolution' revealed a number of practical and ethical problems. A comparison of the situations 'before and after' will show what we have learnt from the case study so far.
The various parts of 'Revolution' were divided between ICN and the Netherlands Media Art Institute. Apart from getting the parts together again, the team had to find out which elements still worked, what restoration was needed, and if any parts needed to be replaced. The existing registration and documentation, which were incomplete, were checked and assessed. The team also searched for any existing visual material from previous installations. All the components were taken to the Netherlands Media Art Institute, where a trial installation was made under technical supervision. While the installation was being set up, its re-documentation began immediately; all the components were registered in detail, photographs were made of them, and instructions for setting up the installation itself were drafted.
'Revolution' was registered at the ICN under inventory number K90043-A-E. In the original registration the following components were listed:
- A. Monitor 2730QM
- B. Frame with push bar
- C. Floor elements
- D. Turntable
- E. Laser disc player, computer, etc.
Obviously the registration of component E leaves something to be desired, and it was at that point that the most problems were expected. As well as this registration, the ICN also had two A4 sheets with a patch diagram and a summary in English of the technical data, a list of parts (described according to IMAGO's packaging units) and instructions.
Since the trial installation we have a list of components which consists of a description and a photograph of each component. A complete registration of the installation was also made according to the installation registration model designed by Netherlands Media Art Institute. Based on this model, registration includes not only a description and material specifications of each component, but also a description of the properties, function and meaning of that particular component. The video data were registered and documented. Instructions were drawn up describing the construction procedure step by step with photographs to illustrate it. These instructions are supported by a film version which shows the setting up and dismantling of the installation in accelerated motion. The new registration is based on 16 components instead of 5. However, a solution still has to be found for making and keeping this information accessible.
Long-term conservation
During the re-installation the team was confronted with several problems which could not be solved at once. Some matters will have to be examined more closely and a strategy worked out in consultation with the artist. We hope to complete this part of the case study in the autumn. However, there are already concrete results: thanks to the registration/documentation part of the case study, we now know which components are of crucial importance if the installation is to function properly, and a list has been made of the problems which may be expected. Here is a brief summary of the main problems:
- When the installation was used, it turned out that the revolutionary images were 'stuck': the images kept going back to the beginning, so that the viewer could not get much further than images of the French revolution. This problem severely detracted from the experience the artist intended the viewer to have, thus undermining the interactive character of the work of art. Fortunately cleaning the various parts (laser disc, laser disc player and tracking wheel) helped, and 'Revolution' now shows all the images again, at intervals of 2 degrees. A strategy should be thought out for the future, in case one of the parts mentioned can no longer be repaired.
- It turned out that there was a copy of the laser disc, so that there is a back-up of the video data. However, a problem for the future is that 'Revolution' is medium-specific in the sense that migrating the video data to a different data carrier would entail modifying hardware and software. The laser disc and the laser disc player are therefore crucial to the installation.
- The Eprom audio unit which is responsible for the installation's sound is custom-made and thus unique. The audio data have not yet been copied, so that the Eprom is also a crucial and vulnerable component of the installation. Although the Eprom is now still functioning well, as a precautionary measure an alternative should be devised for the migration of the audio data.
- The operating programme used for the installation still needs to be examined more closely with an eye to migration in the future (study of the source code).
- Finally, the life span of the monitor is a problem not only for 'Revolution', but for nearly all of the IMAGO installations, because the same type of monitor was used. Of about 30 monitors used for IMAGO, there are now three left. The possibility of replacing them will have to be looked at more closely.
Conclusion
Because media technologies become outdated so rapidly, museum professionals are not only being forced to think about strategies for the preservation and management of multimedia heritage, but also to think about ways to safeguard knowledge about the systems and programmes used: the digital heritage. Conducting a case study of a multimedia installation is complex, time-consuming and expensive. A simple list of components or a 'traditional' condition assessment is absolutely inadequate as a basis for the conservation of an installation for several decades. A re-installation is needed to gain insight into the viability of outdated installations. At an early stage, preferably when an installation is purchased, a strategy for long-term conservation should be developed. This would prevent curators, restorers and collection managers being confronted in the near future with a fait accompli rather than a conservation dilemma. For installation art which has been part of multimedia heritage for several years or decades, the clock is ticking. At present a large number of installations can probably be saved, but their 'use-by date' is rapidly approaching. Unfortunately, for a number of art works it will turn out that it is already too late: simple preservation will have proved fatal.
The problems outlined above are too big and too universal to be solved by individual museums working on their own. The realization that museums of modern art have joint problems and that it is of the utmost importance for them to share knowledge and information led to the European installation project. The fact that museums are working together at an international level to develop guidelines and strategies for the preservation and management of installation art is a revolution in itself. Completely in accordance with the installation in our case study, we are confident that this 'historic' development can no longer be turned back.