Enough With Dude-Centric Net Art Shows

by Paddy Johnson on April 17, 2012 · 241 comments

From the Dotcom jpg promo

I’m getting tired of seeing listings for dude-dominated digital art shows. Just to count what I’ve seen in the last month: The USB Show, at Paris’s Le Point Éphémère two weeks ago, invited one woman artist to participate out of 21; Astral Projection Abduction Fantasy, which ran from February 23rd to March 23rd in Dublin, included three women out of 29 artists; and the April 12th BYOB show, in Milan, only included 9 women out of 42 invited artists. These shows might as well be Lilith Fair, though, relative to the worst recent offender, Dotcom, a show organized by the anonymous collective BSNP at the Centre d’Art Bastille in France. That group show runs through June 10th and includes no women at all.

Dotcom artist Sterling Crispin has little patience for those who dare to complain. “The gender conversation is so boring” he lamented on a recent Facebook thread, before reflecting a little, “maybe I’m a man and so I have the privilege of saying that, but seriously, come on, let’s get post gender”. He then suggested that the artists who choose to complain only stigmatise themselves as “women artists” rather than solving the issue.

Crispin subsequently deleted the Facebook thread—one hopes because he realized his response was probably more harmful than saying nothing at all—but he remains in the show. To the best of my knowledge, no artists refused to participate, which, frankly, reflects just as poorly on the participants as it does on the curator. As artist and curator Sally McKay explains:

As a curator in the 21st century, if I put together a show with all one gender (especially a large group show) I have to know that the show is therefore going to be about gender, whether I like it or not. If I do it by accident, then I am missing a big piece of what it is to be a curator. If I do it on purpose, then I have to own it in the curatorial premise of the exhibition. As an artist, if I am curated into an exhibition of all-women then I ask the curator, “Why all women? I don’t identify specifically as a female artist…what is this show really about? Maybe it’s not really the right context for my work.”

It’s important for male artists to be similarly sensitive about how their work is contextualized. Unless you’re an artist specifically working in the “dude art” genre, it’s best not to have your work identified by such an easy trope. Better-known participating artists like Michael Manning, Constant Dullaart, and Travess Smalley, in particular, could and should have made a point about this.

When artist Lorna Mills asked Hugo Scibetta, an artist who helped put the show together, about the curatorial decisions, he responded defensively. “We choosed [sic] those pieces because of the artworks and not because of the people and their sex,” he told her over Facebook. “This reaction makes me feel like you’re a frustrated person, I hope you are not.”

This unwillingness to accept the responsibility of curation is not becoming. These shows tell a story about the participants of net art; that half of them are left out means that the show is worthless as a historical document. These aren’t exhibitions organized around a conceit so tightly bound that the curator only has a few artists to choose from, they’re large group shows centered on a loose premise. There’s no reason or excuse for the disparity.

Gender equality doesn’t sideline art; we know that from the work of any number of digital art curators who manage to include women. Lauren Cornell at Rhizome and Lindsay Howard of 319 Scholes both consistently produce smart, gender-balanced exhibitions, and that track record isn’t an accident. It’s the result of a kind of professionalism that not only demands curators carefully consider how the content of a show may be received, but possess the self-awareness to make sure that happens.

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  • http://www.postlinearity.com gregorylent

    how DO we get to beyond gender? what does that look like?

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

       It’s not about getting beyond gender, or even being sensitive to it,  it’s now about being alert.  In the real world, for the most part, the first thing we notice about someone is if they are male or female.

      • http://www.postlinearity.com gregorylent

        can we get to a point where gender makes no difference? if we notice them, then the answer seems, no.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

        it IS about getting beyond gender

        • guest

          how do you do that????????

  • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

    In fairness to Hugo, my initial comment about the show was very very rude. (much ruder than any response he could make) (trust me)

    That doesn’t change the weasel words about the organizers basing their choices on just the artworks.  I can easily demolish that argument, and I’m really tired of hearing that simple minded disingenuous non-defense.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

      sometimes rudeness and radicalism visibilizes you more than eloquent political correctness.  :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

    I wrote the curators a very sound letter. They did not reply. http://rrealcore.tumblr.com/post/20352582557/a-letter-of-consideration-to-the-curators-and 

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      I hope they reply in this post. It would be good to hear from them. Their response thus far has been unimpressive to say the least. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

    Thank you thank you thank you for covering this. I agree we as a community enable this kind of all-male show to happen, so if any of them really cared  reckon they don’t have to pander to curatorial paternalism after they find out about who the other artists are, and actually boycott or pull out of the show or at least write a response. Of course that wouldn’t happen though… it’s every woman artist for themselves!

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      I suspect these artists didn’t notice. It’s up to all of us to make sure these issues are fresh, so when this happens people do say something, but a little more proactive-ness wouldn’t hurt though. I have several male friends who won’t participate in shows like this and make it a point of knowing what the gender breakdown is. None of these artists work with digital mediums though.  

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

        I feel like every 3 years we’re going to have an outcry on ye old “gender distribution”, but what I really want to see is people writing about women, and women being in group+solo shows more,  and for people to actually being interested in those shows. We need a change of attitude really. The complaint of ghettoization goes hand in hand with the ongoing belief women-authored work or women as a group or category is not interesting. 

    • Rollin Leonard

      I like that your comment addresses the community — I’m guilty for not recognizing myself as part of it! I lodged a small complaint about the nearly all-male show I was in, but I didn’t pull out in solidarity. I was assuaged by the apologetic response and the promise of future shows being more balanced. Seems like the curator in this instance only needed to gently have their consciousness raised about the issue.

      I’m happy to see this featured in such a popular art news site, but Gaaawdddd I cringe at reading the quotes! Reminds me of all the words I’ve eaten.

    • http://www.facebook.com/glasspopcorn Will Neibergall

      “Curatorial paternalism”…what? it’d be one thing if oppression was actually happening. if we could say, with certainty, that female artists are being explicitly turned away from shows for their gender-focused work, THAT WOULD BE A  BAD THING. i have not seen any evidence provided by the author of this article or any commenters that this is happening, so it seems more “paternalistic” to be outwardly encouraging women to participate in new media art that they may not be interested in. seeing as art is a relatively ideology-free environment, it doesn’t make sense to me that a woman would find a problem getting shown if her work was as good as any male artist.

      • Will Brand

        “i have not seen any evidence provided by the author of this article or any commenters that this is happening, so it seems more “paternalistic” to be outwardly encouraging women to participate in new media art that they may not be interested in. ”

        Women aren’t interested in new media art? What about Rachel Greene, Christiane Paul, or Barbara London? Women curated the first shows of net art and continue to write most of the books about it. What about Lauren Cornell, Joanne McNeil, or (formerly) Ceci Moss, at Rhizome? Women are essential to the running of one of new media’s central nonprofits. What about Joan Heemskerk, of Jodi, or Olia Lialina? Female net artists were around at the beginning, just as much as they’re around now.

        Girls like net art. To be honest, that surprised the hell out of me when I first started looking into it, but it’s true. They don’t need any encouragement, and I don’t think that’s what’s happening here.

        “seeing as art is a relatively ideology-free environment, it doesn’t make sense to me that a woman would find a problem getting shown if her work was as good as any male artist.”

        This is the part where you make an assumption to prove your point without bothering to see if that assumption is true. Art’s anything but ideology-free, and its ideology has been unquestionably masculine for essentially its entire history up til, like, 1980. Maybe. So we should keep an eye on it to make sure it doesn’t go back to being ass-backwards.

        And yeah, it doesn’t make any sense that a woman would have a problem getting shown if her work were equal to a man’s. That’s why it’s weird that so many net art shows seem to have many more men than women; we wouldn’t expect that, given random chance and what we know about the number of female new media artists. So it’s worth asking why.

        • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

          I wrote this article about a year ago and I think I put quite a target on myself in terms of the very egalitarian young post-2.0 community, which was a spin off on Steve Dietz’ “Why are there no great net artists?” (yes we had this problem 20 years ago…) and Linda Nochlin’s “Why Are There No Great Women Artists?” (1974)  http://turbulence.org/blog/2011/06/14/why-are-there-no-great-women-net-artists/ it was originally on pooool.

          The community didn’t really react to it because I called people (artists and curators) out on the under/misrepresentation of women. Gatekeepers probably have less to lose than an artist who decides to adopt feminist ideology.

          There are obvious problems with forcefully tracing a comparative canonical history of women, but at that point I felt it was needed. 
          In terms of a “feminine aesthetic”, the problem is that we are constantly valuating women’s work up against men’s and seeing how it fits into a largely male-authored artistic canon instead of accepting it to be a normative genre like AbEx or minimalism. This would be a contentious assumption anyway because that assumes there is such thing as a feminine/feminist aesthetic (a social construction anyway). I guess there are female-perspectives that are less present in art.

        • Anonymous

          lol, i know women are interested in net art. they are extensively involved in it…not only does this not work in favor of your argument, but it’s not what i was saying. i feel like you definitely misread the argument i was trying to make. what i was saying is that we’re pressing curators to renounce the integrity of their project by going out of their way to include female net artists who may not fit with the general intention of their job.

          also, what i was saying the intention of art is to place people in an ideologically free environment with which various experiments with consciousness and emotion can occur. i’d hate to pull a term out of sterling’s bag but i feel that net art in particular is highly “post gender” in that a lot of its most notable work draws from queer theory and the abandonment of overly conventional concepts of gender. 

          also, net art shows are not as dominated by men as paddy points out. i think i’ve already posted on here a link to my post about it, where i noted a comment by nicholas o’brien highlighting the influence of a predominantly female group of curators and artists responsible for a lot of net art’s ‘image’ as it currently stands. sorry, but i honestly feel that paddy’s position has no legitimacy until someone gives us a reason to believe that curators are (perhaps unknowingly) making decisions based on sexism and patriarchy.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1275935211 Martha Mccollough

        seeing as art is a relatively ideology-free environment,

        Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!! Gasp! Oh God, so funny!

        • Anonymous

          i mean pre-fiat bro..when you walk into a gallery you aren’t supposed to have a PREDISPOSED ideology

          make a real argument and we’ll talk

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

        men have the vantage point of men, women have the vantage point of women. that being said, its important to try to not be myopic as a curator, its part of being a good curator and not a lazy curator. its an argument about human nature more than an argument about “net art”.. but i agree, this show doesnt seem like it was curated in a well rounded manner.

  • http://twitter.com/anntracy anntracy

    WTF?  only an idiot male artist would say that….

  • http://twitter.com/pixlpa Andrew Benson

     First, kudos to Paddy for taking up this subject.  Some amount of this pervasive misogyny in Net Art curation is an extension of that found within the specialized geek-cultures from which a lot of Net Art springs.  The fuzzy line between web developers, social media consultants, and curators, while democratizing, also means there are many entering into the dialogue who have little or no training in gender politics or even recent art history outside of the internet context.  To take an optimistic view, I hope that the larger audience for tech-based work forces online sexism into the light, and that there is a greater appreciation for these issues outside of the art dialog.

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      I like to think you don’t need training in gender politics to be aware of gender gaps (if that’s even what you can call this), but that may be optimistic on my part. Certainly, you’re right to identify the dominate place of misogyny in geek-culture as part of the problem. Really, it’s everywhere, but much more strongly centered amongst the nerds. Sadly. 

      • http://twitter.com/pixlpa Andrew Benson

         I’d like to believe you, but my experience shows me otherwise.  Like any form of systemic prejudice, it takes active education and awareness for it to be addressed.  You get negative and defensive reactions when you call these things out largely because the people involved don’t believe they are doing anything wrong, and don’t want to identify their own actions as being an expression of a prejudice they haven’t acknowledged.  There is massive systemic misogyny in the tech industry and technological education that goes all the way back to primary school, and is reflected in the spaces and tools people use, so people are simply living within a status quo.  Just like art provides an opportunity for us to have conversations about society that are uncomfortable difficult in other contexts, I hope that technology-based work, through introduction to a larger art community outside its safe white-male-dominated bubble, provides an opportunity to discuss and address the disparity of male-female representation within the tech context.

    • _mp_

      I think this analysis is pretty spot-on, particularly the point that much of this is symptomatic of mysogyny in computer cultures at large.  We see a similar conversation in fields like computer science (where there is a lot of talk and effort, at least in education, towards proselytization of females into a historically and culturally hostile discipline).

      The hope for a ‘greater appreciation for these issues outside of the art dialog’ is crucial.  Latent internet mysogyny of various flavors is a hugely and concretely visible issue, notably in online forums of the less ‘social network’ variety and gaming communities.

      As a sometimes-apathetic person with an inherent aversion to/low tolerance for one-liner ‘activist art’, I can appreciate that there is room (and a serious need) for thoughtful work that addresses this stuff in poignant ways.

    • http://www.facebook.com/glasspopcorn Will Neibergall

      provide one explicit occurance of “misogyny in net art curation” and we’ll talk

      • http://signepierce.com/ signasty

        “You get negative and defensive reactions when you call these things out largely because the people involved don’t believe they are doing anything wrong, and don’t want to identify their own actions as being an expression of a prejudice they haven’t acknowledged.”
        You are your own example, deal with it.

  • Questioning

    Are half of net artists women? What statistics prove this?
    Are all artists’ work described in this post of equal quality?From an art critical perspective, what about a show that features half women makes the show ‘better’ and how can one justify this notion without resorting to humanism as the end goal of art?  If a show is organized around a specific concept are curators more closely bound to finding people whose work fits that subject matter or finding a group who is equally represented among males and females?Is a blog post lamenting the lack of women in internet art shows as effective of a use of media as a post that points to a great, unknown female artist? To what degree do posts like this continue to divide artists according to gender binaries that have long been disputed?

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

      There are no statistics to prove half of “all” net artists are women but I don’t believe that’s a productive question. Because we exist and curators have the duty to do a little more research when they’re putting on survey shows of “emergent” (not populist! emergent!) forms of art.

      also, what you mentioned as curatorial methodology is a very traditional idea of:
      1) the curator-as-intellectual-aggregator who gathers artist to buttress their creative thesis
      2) a weak universalism to say that you are only taking into account whether the art is “Good”–you mean good according to male-authored art history which informs our current ideas of contemporaneity?

      • Questioning

        If the assertion that half of net artists are women isn’t true then how can one accurately say women are disproportionally under-represented? Do net art participants fall along exactly proportional lines of race, origin, and gender? Is the above question akin to asking that 1/3 of net art exhibitions in America feature Hispanic participants? What does it mean if there are more male net art participants than female? If that was the case then couldn’t one say that a show featuring equal numbers of males and females is a disproportionate under-representation of the male voice in net art? Should curators be made to uphold specific statistical measures of equality based on the gender breakdown of who is presently participating in the overall sphere of net art so to assure no one gender is inaccurately given exhibition opportunities? Where does one obtain this information and can you sign up as anything other than male or female? 

        • Zoe

          Exactly half of the American population is white gay men, which is why its been so easy for us to adopt and get married. 

          Though, I think the white straight male voice is underrepresented in my pants and thats not quite fair. 

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

        “curating” in the age of the internet is retarded why are u giving curators any respect as if they even matter? 

    • Will Brand

      I’ll go ahead and number these.

      1: “Are half of net artists women? What statistics prove this?”

      You and I both know that request for statistics is in bad faith. There isn’t a database of everyone who ever might be a net artist organized by gender, and there hasn’t been, and there won’t be.

      Women are all over the place in net art, though, and while they’re not quite 50%, they’re pretty close. On, say, Computers Club, 9 of 20 artists are female. In the artists index of Christiane Paul’s “Digital Art”, which I just tallied up, about a third of the names are female. In the illustration notes for Rachel Greene’s “Internet Art”, the ratio’s more like 40:60. Whatever the exact number, it’s a whole lot closer to 50% than these shows would have you believe.

      2: “If a show is organized around a specific concept are curators more closely bound to finding people whose work fits that subject matter or finding a group who is equally represented among males and females?”

      Quoting from the post you’re commenting on: ‘These aren’t exhibitions organized around a conceit so tightly bound that the curator only has a few artists to choose from, they’re large group shows centered on a loose premise.’ I think you rightly hear this issue raised much less often with regard to tight, thematic shows, and much more often with regard to Biennials and big group shows. I think that’s about right.

      3: “Are all artists’ work described in this post of equal quality?”

      Never, but exhibitions are very rarely organized around the idea of the works being particularly good.

      4: “From an art critical perspective, what about a show that features half women makes the show ‘better’ and how can one justify this notion without resorting to humanism as the end goal of art?”

      I think this is a reasonable question, and I think it’s probably been argued in depth somewhere. Can anyone think of where? 

      5: “Is a blog post lamenting the lack of women in internet art shows as effective of a use of media as a post that points to a great, unknown female artist?”

      Probably not, but there aren’t that many “great, unknown female artists” to go around. There are, however, a whole lot of great, well-known ones, who’ve been active in their field for years, so we wrote a post about how weird it is that they seem to be getting excluded from shows lately.

      6: “To what degree do posts like this continue to divide artists according to gender binaries that have long been disputed? ”

      What’s the actual argument here? That, by our own logic, plus some of yours, people involved in net art should attempt to build a continuum more reflective of a range of gender identities and hormonal mixtures, and attempt to show only groupings of artists which are evenly weighted along that scale? We’re just saying that a group of about 40% of the net art community happen to not be in any of these shows, when the one really obvious thing they have in common is that they’re women. When a similar statement can be made for transgender net artists, I trust someone (maybe even us) will make it. Right now, that doesn’t happen to be the issue.

  • Anonymous

    For the record, Lorna is “a frustrated person” some times…

    … and that is why she is an invaluable voice in netart.

    Nice coverage, Paddy!

  • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

    thanks for covering this issue Paddy.

    If anyone wants a look at gender issues amongst online youngsters beyond
    the artworld, try hanging out at shit reddit says
    (http://www.reddit.com/r/shitredditsays) for an hour or two…or don’t.
    it’s pretty bleak. Sometimes the comments are face-palm funny (I like
    Jackass and the Dudesons and I have a high tolerance for stupid-guy
    humour), but the overall picture that emerges is an exclusive,
    male-dominated culture of people who support one another in making
    supremely sexist remarks by accusing people who get upset of not being
    able to take a joke. The subreddit exists because some people decided to
    start calling out the crap and making fun of it…which is hopeful. But
    in the context of that particular battle-ground, the term post-gender
    is really laughable.

    • Rollin Leonard

      The culture on reddit is depressing! shitredditsays and twoxchromosomes are rather tiny compared to the rest of the enormous, loud mass.

  • Aureliano Segundo

    This post would have been better if it was about how good Emilie Gervais is doing, how much she shows, and how blinkingsite.com just got curated into the rhizome artbase.Which is not to say this post is bad. It just would have been better if it was about something positive.Criticism engenders antagonistic response. Positivity perpetuates positivity.

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

       I sing her praises far and wide, but I also invite her into projects…

      • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

        In fairness, I think Aureliano has curated her, and other women, as well. I’m all in favour of being the change you want to see, but sometimes some people also have to rock the boat a little. I appreciate the boat rockers- its not always an easy thing to do.

        • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

           Point taken.

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      Ha! Do I prove your point by pointing out that you’re criticizing a criticism blog for being critical? 

      The feedback is fine of course, and there’s certainly some merit to what you say, but sweeping the negative under the rug and lauding the good that remains isn’t a guarantee for a net positive outcome.  That’s not to say we don’t talk about what we like — we made a point of mentioning Lauren and Lindsay’s work because we think they deserves it — but we also think talking about problems is a good way to raise awareness about a problem specifically about the visibility you’re talking about. Why are there so many examples of women being excluded from shows they’re the most obvious choice for? I’d like to see if we, as a community, can work to do a better job about this. 

  • RM Vaughan

    There are parallels (inexact, natch) with queer art. Most exhibitions that include art by queers use the old porn adage, the one that used to be applied to women of colour: one queer is exotic, two is a ghetto. But, like I said, these parallels are inexact — race, gender, sexuality do not factor in society in the same ways.

    What intrigues me, however, is how curators who get caught with their blinders on always use the same reasoning: “my show is not about (fill in the blank — gender, race, sexuality, class)”. This is typically offered next to the refusal to acknowledge that an exhibition featuring all male artists (for instance) is inherently a show about maleness.

    Curators who create such shows could at the very least own their premises. It would be refreshing, for once, to go to yet another 99% male, mostly white, almost all hetero show and here the curator say, “Yeah, dammit, this is a straight white guy show!” I could then hate on without having to have this discussion, again, again, again, again.

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

       At the very least, could we have exhibitions
      titled: “Female Artists Did Not Fit the Vague Premise of this Show”.  I won’t
      argue if the curators are howlingly funny.

    • RM Vaughan

      “and hear the curator say”

      cripes, typing
      cripes

  • Franco

    Paddy, what are you doing to help other than complaining?

  • Anon
  • Donnadodsonartist

    I see it more like, isn’t the point of being curated into an exhibition is that it is an opportunity to be considered in a context that is favorable to your work. There fore, I agree that the job of the curator is to search high and wide for artist that fall into their context, and award this opportunity to the best artists. If you’re going to argue there are no women net artists at this level of their career, then I would argue they are more deserving of this opportunity than male artists and therefore the opportunity should be awarded to more women artists in this genre than male artists. If there are fewer female net artists, proportionately, then that should be stated in the curatorial statement, that for some reason the culture of net art is geeky males, or tomboy females, etc… since art is about cultural values…

  • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

    Making people aware of a problem is neither complaining or dismissible. 

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

      I think raising awareness is a good thing but this is such a niche to me I’m a little shocked, was that USB show really a keystone in a historically monumental cultural movement? Probably not as you said, if you really think the show is worthless as a historical document than just ignore it yeah? I’m not saying its okay but there are bigger fish to fry.
      Why not pick apart the Whitney BI or the New Museum TRI , have you gone gender hunting there yet? How about race? I think those are more dangerous places for inequality to be happening and without checking the numbers myself I can only guess its another disparity. I’m glad your fighting the good fight but maybe you’re aiming your gun in the wrong directions

      • The Voice of Reason

        That is a sophomoric assumption, Sterling.

        Take a look at the Triennial artists list. The approximate 1:1 gender ratio is clear even at a quick glance. Curated by a woman as well.

        Facts. They’re a great thing.

      • The Voice of Reason

        That is a sophomoric assumption, Sterling.

        Take a look at the Triennial artists list. The approximate 1:1 gender ratio is clear even at a quick glance. Curated by a woman as well.

        Facts. They’re a great thing.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

    LOL  WOW – Way to demonize me! Slow day in the news or what? You’re blogging about a facebook comment thread that was active for five minutes, this is crazy and reads as absolute gossip. I didn’t curate the show why don’t you focus on the curator.

    I’ll take the bullet after all this is raising awareness and generating some conversation, but come on.

    For the record I agree that its sexist and strange, and I’m a proponent of gender equality and would consider myself a feminist. But my facebook wall isn’t the most ideal place for people to raise their complaints about it and that was my objection in the first place. I’ve had this conversation with Lorna in the past and I think its best to email the curator, or as Jennifer did, publicly blog about it.

    You don’t need to go attacking the artists involved. Maybe I didn’t have patience for complaints, but leaving passive agressive comments on facebook toward all of the people who are included in the show doesn’t seem helpful, it just comes across as rude. Its not creating any real change and its not a solution.

    I’m more than happy to be involved in a conversation thats geared toward generating solutions. So whats the solution?

    Should I have dropped out of the exhibit because of gender inequality? Is that the bottom line here? 

    I didn’t actually notice it was an all male show, I thought several of the artists were women until someone brought it up and I had to go googling to find out. I honestly thought Emilio Gomariz was a woman until that conversation. As Lonna said “the first thing we notice about someone is if they are male or female.”  Maybe face to face,…but not on the Internet. I’m still not really sure if Francoise Gamma is a man or a woman, or multiple people.

    And I’ll stand by my statement, lets get post gender. 

    I really do think we need to get “post gender” and get beyond it. Do I avoid reading artfagcity because Paddy is a woman? Of course not. Would I not read artfagcity if Paddy was transgender or queer? Obviously not, and she could be for all I know, I don’t care. It shouldn’t matter what genitalia you have or who you want to have sex with or what color your skin is. 

    I agree with you all on the fundamental level of freedom and equality, I just don’t think getting aggressive with me on facebook and starting fights with me is a good way to reform institutional biases. 

    Its all negative energy. For the record I apologized to Lorna and tried to figure out some kind of solution. I was debating about it to begin with because its something I care about, if I didn’t care I would have just ignored it.

    Try to focus on what you can do to change things rather than just demonizing me, and focus on the curatorial team responsible for the show to begin with.

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

       For the record, you debated positions I’ve never taken. 

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

        I really felt like you were just starting a fight you didn’t want to finish and trolling for a reaction. You got a reaction from me and then bailed on a conversation that could have been fruitful so I deleted it. It was just negative energy to no end, and now I get to play the part of the white-male-devil when I support gender equality to begin with and was trying to find some solutions beyond bickering. 

        • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

          Sterling stop making absolutely false assertions
          about my positions on anything, anywhere and at any time.
           

        • Absis Minas

          Pointing out a discrepancy isn’t trolling for a reaction. Posting the brutish equivalent of “oh well bitches, u mad, now deal with it,” is.

          Aside from the fact that your shtick is clearly all about acting the part of oversensitive egomaniac, and grossly overexaggerating the criticisms other people play against you, no one (myself included) has ever tried to demonize you.

          Dear Sterling,

          Grow up.

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      Hey Sterling,

      The curators are quoted here too and obviously are offenders as the organizers of the show. You’re not the only one who caught flack here, though yes, you got more than other artists in the show because of a few poorly thought out comments you left on facebook. I get that that sucks, but there’s no reason it has to. Did you talk to the curators about why they chose all men? Did you tell them that made you uncomfortable? Based on your comments, I’m guessing that’s something you didn’t think to say because you didn’t notice that you were in a show of all men. 

      Now, if you were in a room with the 12 participating artists, I’m guessing you’d notice the gender problem immediately. That’s not exactly what happens when you see a list of artist names but since most people have gendered names it’s also hard not to notice. There are 13 artists in that show. No one thought to say to the curators, “Hey, did you notice there’s not any women in this show? I’m not comfortable with that.”

      Artists do not live at the whim of curators. Their career is built on how they contextualize their work and it’s their job to manage that. That means talking to curators when they don’t like the direction of a show and making sure their concerns are heard.  If that doesn’t happen, then yeah, you probably shouldn’t be in that show.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

        I did in fact contact the curator but it was after the show was already open. I was invited to this show 5 or 6 days before it opened, I was in the middle of several other deadlines and emailed them a file. I didn’t slow down to take a hard look at the lineup and like I said I honestly thought Emilio was a woman.

        I was told by another artist in the show that before the curation had finished the gender issue was raised, and several female artists were suggested to the curator, who then ignored them. Thats really a bad choice on their part. 

        But its bad “journalism” to go shitting on me like this as if I’m the one to blame, its incredibly irresponsible on your part

        • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

          Good to hear you contacted the curators. That’s acting responsibly. Care to share what they told you? 

          As for the rest, I’m sorry you didn’t come out smelling like roses here, but to respond by labeling the citation of actual quotes by actual participants in the show as bad or irresponsible journalism is to fundamentally misunderstand the profession. We do that so people’s own words represent their own beliefs. 

          I never said you’re the one to blame and I don’t think anyone who read this post will come away thinking that.  You were not however very sensitive to problem, and that position is neither unique or helpful. 

          • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_5M5LQRF2YI7VBW2MERDEU7REZA Danny D

            “As Lonna said “the first thing we notice about someone is if they are
            male or female.”  Maybe face to face,…but not on the Internet.”

            I’m on the fence about this whole thing, but I must say, that is a powerful observation. All these artists could actually be women, IDK any of them!

          • http://www.facebook.com/nathan.maxwell.cann Nathan Maxwell Cann

            “That’s acting responsibly.”

            What are you his Mother?

            You sure sit on a high horse lady for someone who trolls around Facebook for gossip.  You call yourself an art journalist?  How about discussing the actual art?  I don’t think a slythy tove trying make a buck on other people’s talent is the best role-model for women.  Stop playing the role of a victim and make a mark on the world other than a skidmark.

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            Hi Nathan,

            Thanks for your feedback. A few comments just so we can get a some things straight. 

            1. Trolling around Facebook for Gossip. Sterling seems very upset about this as do many of his colleagues, but fact of the matter is there’s no grounding for those complaints. Journalists often use Facebook as a source for stories. It’s a public space, and the statements people make there are cited by blogs and mainstream media all the time. If I used a quote from Facebook for a positive story, I doubt anyone would be complaining about the source. 

            2. Discussing the art. I’ve mentioned this elsewhere in the comment section, but this idea that we’re not talking about what really matters when we discuss representation is sorely misplaced. Art isn’t made in isolation somewhere only to be birthed into the wild by some daring curator or writer. It grows out of a community, and to think otherwise is to buy into a mythology of art that simply doesn’t exist in the real world. 

            3. Trying to make a buck. If Art Fag City staff made money on a per post basis, this post would make us less than $100 dollars. That revenue would be divided in two. The idea that the post was written for financial reasons is simply wrong. 

            4. Playing the victim. If I’ve been doing that I haven’t been doing a very good job — I didn’t mention myself in the blog or the comment section. 

          • http://www.facebook.com/nathan.maxwell.cann Nathan Maxwell Cann

            Hello Paddy.

            1. ‘Journalists often use Facebook as a source for stories.’   This says more about the sorry state of net journalism than it does the integrity of your work.
            2. ‘Art isn’t made in isolation somewhere only to be birthed into the wild by some daring curator or writer. It grows out of a community, and to think otherwise is to buy into a mythology of art that simply doesn’t exist in the real world.’ Agreed, so  please show me how the art exhibited in the show reinforce genders politics.  That may have been an interesting story.

            3. ‘The idea that the post was written for financial reasons is simply wrong. ‘  The proverbial buck.  Notoriety, social momentum, etc.  People in New York have all kind of motivation.  Of course, the idea you would write such drivel for personal kicks is sickening. 

            4.  Victimizing women.  Reinforcing the illusion of gender dichotomies instead of finding ways to work productively for equality.  I think your approach is more harmful than beneficial to a nart art feminist movement.  The attitude you have about this issue is “Shame on you, men!  You have all been very naughty boys!” Wonderfully empowering stuff.  When has complaining to the boys club about their sexist ways ever work in the history of gender politics?  Who is the ideal audience of this article, men or women?  Also, how about listing some gender-balanced curators of net-art that are not women?  Or was that on purpose?

            Of course, I’m just a “dude,” so what do I know?

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            1. The state of journalism is not defined by whether you think quoting facebook is fair. The New York Observer ran an entire feature on Jerry Saltz’s facebook page, with direct quotes, and I didn’t see anyone complain. If you don’t want to be quoted by a journalist, don’t send them a friend request. End of story. 

            2. If you’re asking for how the art in an all male show demonstrates that art is a reflection of male experiences, than you don’t agree with the statement as it was made in full. If you agree, there’s really no need for the explanation you demand. If you don’t, you’re saying that you believe male experience is no different than female experience and in order to have your mind changed you need to see how that so called difference in experience is expressed in art. 

            3. First I was trying to make a buck, now I’m doing this for social momentum. The post addresses a social issue and the numbers suggest quite a few people read it. That however, is unusual. Gender issues are often viewed as a tired topic in the fine art world, so if I were really doing this for the social capital I should have chosen a better topic. 

            Also, “People in New York have all kinds of motivation” suggests a provincialism I’m guessing you don’t really support. It suggests you think New Yorkers are different from you just because we live in New York.  

            4. First I was playing the victim, now I’m turning women into the victim.  As evidence you put quotes around things I never said, and would never say, all the while turning men into the victim. The point here is that we all benefit from a more equal representation of women in these shows, and when shows such as this one become top heavy with men, the participants can help ensure those numbers are better balanced. These conversations are meant to empower those participating in the art world to make their exhibiting experiences what they want them to be. 

          • Will Brand

            Hey Nathan! 

            Firstly, in re the question “You call yourself an art journalist?”, I’m not sure Paddy does. I’ve mostly heard her use “critic”. One way or another, though, she’s been writing about art for six or so years for a variety of major art publications, which I think is probably enough to earn the title. Basically, in the media, people base your title on what you’ve been doing in public full-time for years, and not the opinion of somebody on the internet who thinks you capitalize “mother”.

            (There’s also an “about” section at the top!)

            Also, these other points, in keeping with the previous numbering:

            1- You seem to have lost track of the fact that Sterling actually did post that comment. That’s never been disputed, by him or by anyone in these comments (that I’ve seen). That happened, in real life. If it had happened on Twitter, or in a spoken conversation, or in a hand-written letter, we would have said that, only it happened on Facebook. So it’s not much point attacking Paddy’s sources unless you have some contrary evidence. 

            2- Nobody’s raised the idea that these artists are making particularly sexist work. I don’t think there’s any basis for that question to begin with.

            Your question is analogous to asking which parts of a water fountain’s design make it racist. Water fountains and bus seats aren’t inherently racist. They’re actually almost entirely unable, as objects, to autonomously express racist attitudes and/or subjugate humans of any color. Nonetheless, they have been used as tools of discrimination. Life’s just like that. Sucks for the water fountain.

            3- I think Paddy handled this, but I’d just like to give you the chance to clarify exactly why her being offended at the lack of women in net art shows is “sickening” to you. Please, continue to let people know when their moral reactions are sickening, and then go ahead and wonder why you’re not more popular.

            4- To recap, the first part of your comment here is about “complaining to the boys club”, and then the second part is about how we only named female net art curators. The third part here, that helps connect things, is that most net art curators are women. 

            That explains a lot of why you had to make up some of the things you said, like that Paddy was complaining about boy curators in particular. If there’s a problem with net art curation, it’s hard to avoid the corollary that whatever’s going wrong, it’s probably in part a woman’s fault. This also has a lot to do with why Paddy’s closing uses “professionalism”, and related terms, rather than “sexism”. It’s not an issue of outright gender warfare, it’s an issue of compiling unexamined shows.

            (P.S. Putting comments like the ‘I’m just a “dude,” so what do I know?’ at the bottom is a punk move. Not only are you responding to purely imagined misandry, which is pretty bad, but you’re also typing out this little addendum specifically so you can feel justified when people don’t agree with you or engage with your specious arguments. Don’t give yourself such an easy out. Stick around and figure out if your ideas are worth arguing.)

        • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

          A funny set of complaints I see from many of your male colleagues: “I agree with the post but this was bad journalism”, “The article went about making it’s point badly”, “Why doesn’t she write more posts about women artists”? Even if the complaints had merit, it would still be a way of avoiding the real issues brought up in this post. The number of women included in these shows is far too few. 

          From you, I’ve read several frustrated complaints that run along the lines of “Where are the solutions?” as if one person will eventually find the key, and we’ll all be done. The fact of the matter is, we can’t provide a solution to anyone other than ourselves. So we can read this post and say, “Man, fuck her. I’m a feminist, but I’m not going to talk about this issue any more because it makes me feel like I’ve done something wrong”, and divert attention from the real issues, or we can forget that bullshit and say, “Hey, I’d like to participate in shows with more women in them, and I’m going to make that happen”. 

          The latter is much more empowering. 

    • http://twitter.com/pixlpa Andrew Benson

      Here’s the thing about this “post-gender” idea. I have to admit it is really getting under my skin. It’s a nice sentiment, but who gets to be post-gender in the post-gender world?  The plea to sweep difference under the rug reads as a privileged position, like “can’t you just get over it already, look at me I’m awesome”. When inequality exists, shutting another person up because you don’t want to feel guilty is a position of power.  Telling a woman that you are post-gender is saying “your experience of otherness isn’t valid to me so the conversation is over.” I don’t really believe this is what you actually feel or think, but you should know it’s how you are being read.  The fact remains that gender is a present issue in all areas of art and all professions, whether or not talking about it creates bad vibes or makes people uncomfortable.  Difference is important.  It’s a vital aspect of humanity that we are different.  There are a lot of differences that are beautiful, and we should acknowledge them and celebrate them.  Saying that you want everyone to be post-race or post-gender is basically saying you want to erase difference from the conversation, and that is a sort of equality that I find completely distasteful.  Without acknowledging the role that gender and power play in the world we can’t really approach an ideal of equality.  You can’t close your eyes and say “it’s okay, we’re all white straight males now post-unpleasantness” without pissing off the people who live with real and valid complaints IRL. 

    • Absis Minas

      $90 says you’re pitying Paddy for the “dark head space” she inhabits.

  • Anonymous

    Hmmm…I hit 43% in a general not-quite-net-art-centric screening without thinking about it. http://universalbackyardtheater.tumblr.com/post/21241195943/day-3-show-time. It not that hard folks.

  • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

    relevant! thanks for the link.

  • The_7th_Guest

    Think Questioning nailed it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/glasspopcorn Will Neibergall

    Obviously you don’t take the art very seriously if you find yourself standing in the middle of a show making calculations as to the gender makeup of the participants…

    • http://www.facebook.com/glasspopcorn Will Neibergall

      Also, I sincerely hope you realize that you are “queerizing” and making some repugnant assumptions about gender lines simply by demanding an expanded female presence in netart. You are saying “People feel, live and act differently if they have vaginas so they are just as important to new media art as men,” but this is assuming that A) recognizing that “vagina barrier” is something we have to tackle before we can enjoy new media art for being what it is, and B) transsexual/transgendered/gender neutral people are too “exotic”/queer to demand as readily as women, and the “best we can do” is to get the relatively heteronormative man/woman structure in art. The thing is, we can’t demand ANY person to diversify a field with their presence (especially something as spontaneous and voluntary as new media art) so what about we go back to the drawing board and just decide GOOD ART IS GOOD ART NO MATTER WHAT KIND OF CLOTHES SOMEONE LIKES TO WEAR AND WHAT THEY HAVE UNDER THEM

      • http://reeraw.tumblr.com/ reeraw

        i’m sry, but you lost me at “vagina barrier”.

      • http://anjamorgan.tumblr.com/ ANJA MORGAN

        ooooh snap! this is totally one of my favourite straw men arguments.  

        look, dude: recognizing other-ness and putting some forethought into the deliberate inclusion of othered persons or groups actually isn’t marginalizing to those othered persons or groups.  (almost especially because the othered experience of those persons IS in fact different than those in power, and that it’s often looked over or not included because it makes those in power uncomfortable or guilty.)

        being fetishy and tokenizing about it is crappy, as is “demanding” that folks participate for the sake of diversity, but if the only alternative to that to ignore the existence of patriarchal (and racist, and heteronormative, et al) structures and to suggest that they don’t exist, then i just give up. your “good art is good it doesn’t matter who made it” statement isn’t entirely invalid, but it’s worth questioning why the vast majority of what is accepted and celebrated as “good art” is made by, you know, straight white cisdudes.  which isn’t saying that whatever art they’re making ISN’T good. just — it’s not the only good art out there, and that’s insanely important to think about.

        • Anonymous

          patriarchal, racist and heteronormative structures do exist, we can agree on that..but in what ways do these structures permeate the world of net art? this is what i have been asking everyone, and no one seems to be able to warrant it. the responses i’ve gotten are, “you are just frustrated because you don’t want to acknowledge your support of patriarchy” (fallacious) and “there’s no need to QUANTIFY sexism” but what i’m saying is that there is absolutely no distinct concept anyone is referring to that i could quantify. how are curators operating under a patriarchal paradigm? are they not just picking the art that fits with their intention? seeing as the world of net art is filled with female influence, i don’t think it would be too repugnant to say so.

          “it’s not the only good art out there” – i totally agree, but i think the ‘good art’ that is being ignored is being ignored for reasons disassociated from gender

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=28124954 Jennifer Chan

      What you’re saying implies aesthetics and art is a universal language, as a product removed from contextual components of its authors. I argue not because those agreements of aesthetics are culturally specific. 

      Gender is just one way into looking at the way people treat each other as humans and that implicates a lot of other issues. Race is usually the first most  touchy topic and often people don’t think women’s issues are as important as racial or child abuse ones… but those discourses are not actually as separated as it seems. (Hence intersectionality being hot topic of feminism for the past 5 years or something.)

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

    this article is retarded.

    • Will Brand

      How?

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

        because its binary, simple and sensationalist without substance.

        • derp

          ryder ripps you are out of your element

          • http://twitter.com/PeteAJ Peter Jacobson

            This was obviously something people felt worth considering and substantive. Are there really this few women in this space? 

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            no there certainly arent, why doesnt this article show images of the MANY fantastic women who’s work involves technology – Sybil Prentice, Bea Fremderman, Rachel Lord, Alli Crawford, Kacie Kim, Bunny Rogers, Kaja Andersen, Frieda-raye Green.. to name a few artists whom are women making great stuff in this space.

  • Nicolas Sassoon

    One note: Hugo is a 20 yrs old student in 2nd year of art
    school and this was most likely his first experience in exhibition and
    curation. He didn’t make the final curatorial decisions, I know he proposed
    several female artists when the show was in its first stages because we talked
    about it at the time. Finally,
    he isn’t fluent in English, which probably didn’t help throughout the
    conversation with Lorna.

     

    I wasn’t aware of the final selection of artists until the
    day before the opening, and I’m pretty sure it’s the same for all the artists participating.
    Nevertheless I completely agree with the argument of this article.
     

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

       When I found out how young he was, as well as being a student, I felt like I throttled a puppy.

  • Will Brand

    Did he? What does it mean to “nail it”? Can one “nail it” while ending every sentence in a question mark? Is this “nailing it”? Is this an experiment in “nailing it” using only questions?

    • the7thguest

      1. Yes 2. to voice exactly what I was thinking as if one was hitting a nail into a wall 3.yes 4.no 5.don’t understand.  

      • _mp_

        brb registering the domain 4.no

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

    GUIDE TO MAKING A SUCCESSFUL ART MOVEMENT : FIND AND EQUAL AMOUNT OF MEN AND WOMEN, FIND AN EQUAL AMOUNT OF BLACKS AND WHITES, ALWAYS OK EVERYTHING THROUGH A COMMITTEE REGARDLESS OF IF YOU FEEL IN YOUR SOUL THAT ITS GOOD WORK, ONLY WORK WITH CURATORS WHO HAVE PROVEN THAT THEY READ THE BOOK “OUR BODIES OURSELVES”.

  • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

    I see the bro contingent has arrived

  • Username

    sassy

  • Miles Ross

    The real problem, one suspects, is the inherent inferiority of women and women artists.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

    writing a critique on a marginalized group within a marginalized group is destructive towards both groups. sterling is a man, yes, men are at an unfair advantage in this society, but sterling also barely gets by and isnt supported from his art, in fact, net art doesnt really support any of the young artists who you mentioned in this article. so attempting to make an argument about the unfair representation of women within a group that is already poorly represented is petty and a quibble that brings us all down with it, men and women alike.  lets please figure out how to make great things together and allow those great things to support our life on this earth instead of putting each other down within this community. paddy, your roll as an art critique should be to critique art, not polarize the members of marginalized communities. why dont you focus on writing art critique which offers the world some insight, to help a movement and form grow.

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      Net art is poorly represented, it’s true. That said, I don’t think poverty and unrepresentation within the larger field of fine art levels gender inequality issues.  Certainly, I don’t think our response should be not to discuss issues that matter, simply out of fear that differing opinions divide community.

      Difference is how we work problems out. We debate, we talk about issues that are important to us, and based on those conversations we respond in the way that we think will best benefit the profession we work with in. I get that you don’t think this conversation was useful. That’s your opinion, and I respect it. That said, I also 100 percent disagree with it. Every time a post about gender representation gets written in the field of art, someone complains about how we’re not talking about what actually matters; art. Well, that’s just bullshit. Art isn’t made in isolation somewhere only to be birthed into the wild by some daring curator or writer. Art, exhibitions, writing, it all grows out of a community so we damn well better we make ours is healthy. Personally, I think one of the best ways to do that is to make sure our shows represent the diversity of voices out there. When that’s not happening, it is our job, as a community, to talk about how we can fix those problems. I think there’s been some productive discussion here, and I’ve also received emails from participants tonight saying they intend to find better ways of addressing this issue going forward. Given all this, you’ll forgive me if I don’t think this post was that destructive after all. 

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

        you are not making our community healthy, u are making it petty and vapid.

        • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

          if u wish to make an art community healthy – critique the content of its art, not the community – after all isnt that why people are supposedly reading your blog.. to learn about art.. and discover new insights through critique? the argument you put forth is not an insight into art, its a sociological argument at best and one that can deduce very little considering the absurdly small sample of people you are using.

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            This blog has always been community centered, so that’s not going to change. I think we’re going to have to agree to disagree on this. 

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            thats fine, just one question, what is the contemporary role of a curator who is curating for the internet? i thought the thing that attracted us to the internet was the fact that everyone had a voice and it was more democratic. i thought we shared an opinion and were excited by the idea that the art world’s old system of patronage and appreciation could be destroyed through the internet, that the internet allowed for anyone with a computer and connection to have an audience for the things they make. if these are things that you believe in, and i assume that they are being as you are a blogger and not a writer for ARTFORUM or something of the like,,, if they are things that you believe in, then why must you introduce these old world notions of curators, as if the spaces they are curating are institutionalized. these are just people making things – everyone is just as free as the next person to make things and release them online.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            for the record, i feel the curation of USB is totally sexist and id go as far as to say its outright lazy.

          • http://twitter.com/PeteAJ Peter Jacobson

            Was net art supposed to be a complete level playing field? Internet meet the art world? We all have the ability to self produce but shows are curated. If we’re going to talk about net art shown as art, aren’t we inevitably talking about one person or a group of people picking and choosing? BYOBs are curated too. Otherwise someone could just fire up a computer in a corner and we can all go home.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            agreed

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            Centre d’Art Bastille is a publicly funded space, which makes it by definition an  institutional space. I don’t think one can ignore that reality just because we think the web is more democratic. 

            But that assumes I think the web is more democratic. I do not. More people are able to talk to each than ever before, but that doesn’t mean our voices are all equal. Far more people hear my voice than my friends (I have a blog), far fewer people read me than Jerry Saltz (he writes for NYMag). My experience of the web is not a democratic one. 

            This doesn’t mean that I don’t think the net is changing the art world — it certainly is — but we shouldn’t extrapolate from that, that it’s also changing gender biases so we don’t need to worry about them. 

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            fair enough.

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            Just so we have a record of Ryder’s original comment, this is what was said before he edited it, and was what I responded to: 

            if u wish to make an art community healthy – critique the content of its art, not the community – after all isnt that why people are supposedly reading your blog.. to learn about art.. and have discover new insights through critique? the argument you put forth is not an insight into art, its a sociological argument at best and one that can deduce very little considering the absurdly small sample of people you are using. 

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

        so then why dont you write about female net artists more? your blog is its own type of curation. 

    • Oxzqwh6cwq

      Is this post ironic or are you really this naive?

  • http://www.facebook.com/glasspopcorn Will Neibergall

    i’m sry, but u lost me at being condescending for no reason

    • derp

      sowwy, u lost me at ‘im 15′

      • http://www.facebook.com/glasspopcorn Will Neibergall

        lol.

        • J Remenchik

          i’m sorry, but she actually had a good point and her words didn’t strike me as condescending at all.

          • Anonymous

            how is making fun of me using jargon not condescending? if i would have phrased it in a longer way she would have called me precocious (not that im not already lol)

  • Username

    i demand a hand recount

  • jude

    I think what u meant to say is.. Enough with Net Art Shows

  • David Munoz

    why does it matter? there is a gross imbalance in the ratio of male to female cross-stitchers, but is that holding back their work?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2535851 George Michael Brower

    Fact: You’ve failed as a curator unless the artists in your show represent a perfectly balanced microcosm of all races, creeds and genders as they are proportioned on Earth at large.

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

       No, re-read:

      “As a curator in the 21st century, if I put together a show with all one
      gender (especially a large group show) I have to know that the show is
      therefore going to be about gender, whether I like it or not. If I do it
      by accident, then I am missing a big piece of what it is to be a
      curator. If I do it on purpose, then I have to own it in the curatorial
      premise of the exhibition.”

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2535851 George Michael Brower

        just extrapolatin’ girlfriend. i think its entirely possible (and has probably happened many times in the 21st century) that an art show was all men and wasn’t about gender

        • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2535851 George Michael Brower

          some of em probably turned out okay too

        • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

           But my sweet lover-boy, they were.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2535851 George Michael Brower

            c’mon … all of them? like all of them? it can’t just be that the artists who created the work most pertinent to your show all turned out to be from the same gender?

            i get the whole ‘art isn’t made in a vacuum’ bit, but underrepresentation of women in a fledgling scene does not equal misogyny and the author sort of eviscerates a lot of artists on inference. 

          • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

             Seriously, no not all.  However in a fledgling
            scene, most of us know about each others work, and if we don’t, the research
            isn’t so hard to do, (and fun if you like looking at art.)  So my first response
            is “How the fuck does a given curator planning a large group show manage not to notice all the women mining
            the same territory as men?”  What’s going on?  I know lots of curators who find
            this weird too.

             

            If you think about it, there is a real harm to a
            fledgling scene if it’s going to be dismissed as irrelevant “high 5 bro”
            culture, when in reality it isn’t.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            what if its a show of two people, who are both men.. is the show about men? what if they are two women? is it about women? what if its two black men? its it about black men now? if the answer is yes to any of the above questions one must wonder why you want to put gender and/or race as the central point of every art show. you say “because it cant be escaped” i say, “thats too bad”

          • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

             And what if it’s a show of two people both men that is billed as a survey of net art. (Somebody please make this happen!)

            Again seriously not at all, however if every two person show by any given institution or entity consistently was a two man show or consistently two woman show, would it escape your notice? Probably not.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            sorry i honestly dont see the world in this binary way, its unfortunate some people do

          • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

             Explain please.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            i dont always think about gender, esp. online.. i see an image before i see a face.. also ps LOL at this stupid box shape  http://plop.ws/140 

          • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

            respond to this comment so that I can giggle at your oppression by an even tinier box.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            I AM BEING MARGINALIZED!!!!!!

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

            waterfall

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

             http://plop.ws/148 

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

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          • Anonymous

            we have 2 go deeper

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2535851 George Michael Brower

            A hoop I shouldn’t have to jump through: I would say a two-men show billed as a survey of net art would not be unrepresentative, as I can say with some confidence that less than 50% of the people involved in net art are women.

            i think we all agree, that’s very bad.  any body of work suffers when only a few perspectives are represented.
            however most technical/engineering fields (industrial / corporate / artistic or otherwise) suffer from a disproportionate lack of women — those fields very often serve as the “gateway drug” of artists who explore technology. 

            these are larger issues that need to be rectified, the blame in this article is sorely misplaced.

          • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

             Except that we seem to disagree on a fundamental. I know that there are lots of women working in net art. Will Brand asserts this as well as Paul Slocum and Jennifer Chan among so many others. 

      • Sam Walker

        Saying that a show entirely consisting of one gender makes the show about gender seems sexist to me. It implies that the artworks themselves are imprinted so completely by the gender of the creator that males and females are incapable of producing the same type of work.

        • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

          No it doesn’t imply that. The reason it is about gender is because any exhibitions that are publicized happen in public and not in private, exclusive clubs – including shows that involve the internet.

          Your comment implies something which I don’t think you really mean, which is that it’s okay to only curate art by men because men’s work encompasses women’s work and therefore it’s not necessary to hear from women directly.

    • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

      No one has said or implied this. 

  • Guest

    A+ marketing. Would buy again.

  • Alexandra Gorczynski

    I noticed the show had no female artists which I thought was strange, but I didn’t feel I wasn’t chosen to participate because I’m female. I’ve never felt that way.  I’m perfectly happy with the amount of shows I’m in and the reception to my work DESPITE being female ( lol ) and if I’m not asked to be in a show Ive always assumed it’s because they didn’t feel my work fit or maybe they just don’t like my work at all or maybe they think i’m dumb, but not because i’m a woman.  I’m not saying gender inequality doesn’t exist, it always will, from both parties and in all areas of life. I just dont let it affect me.

  • http://twitter.com/nickcueva Nicholas Cueva

    Very good.

  • http://www.facebook.com/brianm02 Brian Metcalf

    HOLD UP
    Why has Mary Flanagan’s “Hyperbodies, Hyperknowledge: Women in Games, Women in Cyberpunk, and Strategies of Resistance” not been brought up yet?! omg my school work is actually relevant to things on the internet!

  • Zoe

    I’m a white female and I’m queer, of the middle class… should I go on. The fact of the matter is that these things about me don’t complicate the perception of what I do online unless otherwise openly noted. I don’t necessarily blame individual curators here for disparities as the entire history of art has tendencies toward representing a norm of white, straight maleness. When I was younger I was under the impression that Andy Warhol was a sexless sea cucumber, only to affirm later that historical representation in general, not just art history, often can ‘forget’ touchy ‘erroneous’ topics and erase queerness. These topics of difference/sameness enrich already apparent and dense art historical discussions as well as create new nuanced ones. When does an art show with queer artists become a show about queerness? Should it? When does a show with male artists become a show about art? When will it become imperative that we challenge normal dialogue? Perhaps ‘black lesbian art’ isn’t a hot topic, but thats our problem. 

    So, why was sex the only disparity assumed within this article? 

  • http://goatse.ru/ Admin

    cool thread

  • derp

    Why does gender exist on the Internet?

    • Zoe

      My favorite frog avatar wonders the exact same thing.

      • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

         Frog porn for starters. (looking for some myself)

    • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

      Porn for starters.

  • http://twitter.com/asugarhigh Faith Holland

    It’s really easy to make this an argument about quality, but the issue is actually about values.

    Whether or not women are specifically making net art about gender (certainly sometimes they are and there’s a solid tradition of feminist net art), it’s still an issue that surrounds the work.  For example: Petra Cortright, Jennifer Chan, Krystal South, etc.–work that can be explicitly about gender, but also tends to involve it whether or not its addressed directly.

    As has become painfully obvious from the responses on this blog as well as proliferating tweets, this conversation is deemed unacceptable by male net artists.  It’s retarded, it’s distracting from 420, exhibitions of all men will be launched in response, or of all women who are bangable (Art404: I could curate a huge show called “net art girls I have crushes on”).  So, if the same values expressed within this post “taint” the work of women net artists themselves (i.e. the work appears to be by a woman), of course they cannot be included in any show.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2535851 George Michael Brower

      you just left a celebratory comment on an article bemoaning lack of diversity in a scene by making a statement that essentially asserts that all male net artists are emotionally stunted pot smokers

      • http://twitter.com/asugarhigh Faith Holland

        I just pulled some quotes from Twitter.

  • http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/LornaMillsImageDump/ Lorna Mills

     Actually, I can’t complain about the amount of
    shows I get either, and I’ve never thought or claimed that I personally was
    rejected from a show due to my gender. (I can totally get why a curator wouldn’t
    want my stuff.)  Not a problem, however the weirdness of seeing so many art
    exhibitions lately with women totally missing cannot go unremarked. And it can’t
    be dismissed with the statement that we should all be post-unpleasantness.  (I stole that phrase from Andrew
    Benson)

  • Art ≠ Fairness

    soon every art show will be required to have “bad art” because it exits in the community and thus should not be made to feel “left out”

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

    are u post identity or just really this scared to sign in with your name?

    • Rene Abythe

      was thinking about this comment while driving to walgreens earlier

  • http://www.facebook.com/Nickdemarco Nick DeMarco

    Netart is so FUBU. We are lucky to be having any shows at all. It would be great to have lots of awesome girls and boys showing together, but 1:1 boy girl ratio doesn’t necessarily equal equality. This kind of a slap on the wrist to the curator belittles the whole thing. Also, who cares about netart.

    • Anonymous

      ^this

  • http://twitter.com/ArtistDominic ArtistDominic

    This is why Net Art will never work:

    1. if yall could just punch each other in the face, it would be over already.

    2. if yall could just hug it out bitch, it would be over already.

    -neither option can be facilitated with computers in the way.

  • Max

    Did I miss when you defined what “dude art” was? What do you propose is the nature of one gender working in digital media vs another anyway? Maybe it is the theme behind the show more than underrepresentation that should be criticized? Could these curators just have boring or half-witted ideas and that is why the same group of people are constantly being exhibited?

  • Anonymous

    forced political correctness kills creativity.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

      agreed.

      • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

        yes yes the terrible terrible force. Alas, if only young men on the internet were free to say whatever they want….

    • Max Blathe

      I don’t think any one is using pc language here… this environment is non-oppressive. 

    • http://anjamorgan.tumblr.com/ ANJA MORGAN

      but suggesting that diversity be recognized doesn’t.  nobody’s suggesting quotas or arbitrary requirements of what will absolve a show from being misogynist or racist or whatever here, just perhaps a bit of forethought and conversation. 

    • Anonymous

      and a lack of diversity and variation won’t?

    • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

      I’m on a creative roll here, let’s see… I want to curate a show of internet art…who shall I put in it? Don’t stifle me now! I want to come up with the best possible idea for a show! What? Women? Augh! …creativity….stifled….

      • Anonymous

         I don’t really know how to express myself the best way here… I’ve typed and deleted a few paragraphs that used analogies because I saw that each one could be easily misconstrued.

        But yes – an outside demand of quotas on something that should be put together with ONLY the art produced in mind (and please note that the art is genderless, ageless, and raceless) and not things like “not enough women ratio in this microcosm” makes the creativity and passion of the organizers do a nose dive.

        some of my favourite net art is created by women… but NOT because they are women and NOT because someone says I should like it because my personal tastes should be ratioed in a gender balanced way.

        • http://www.sallymckay.ca/ sally

          The internet fosters a lot of unreflective self-expression, and that’s truly a wonderful thing, but having to think about how your show might come across to other people besides yourself, in a context outside your immediate circles, is not exactly a big set back for most curators  – for a lot of people it’s actually kind of the whole entire point of curating. Being accountable for what you put out into the public sphere is challenging, and it should be.

        • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

          7/8 of my fav netartists are women.

          • http://anjamorgan.tumblr.com/ ANJA MORGAN

            “i have a lot of black friends”  “my cousin is a lesbian” “i really like art made by xyz type of Marginalized Persons” statements come off as an attempt to absolve ones’ self of some sort of vague guilt, which is actually not the point.

            if 7/8 of your favourite netartists are women then why are you so intent on shutting down what they think through snarky comments, or ignoring it/criticizing/invalidating it when women artists mention that they feel underrepresented or face more of a struggle in general than you do?

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            shut up

          • http://anjamorgan.tumblr.com/ ANJA MORGAN

            cute

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            u obviously havent read any of my comments, which agree with the post but suggest productive alternatives to bringing light to an issue as opposed to inflammatory posts which only polarize us and make everyone hate each other.

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            Yeah, but Ryder, you keep posting comments like, “This post is retarded” as if this proves the post was inflammatory. It’s to bad that, like you, so many have chosen to interprete this article as an assault on voiceless emerging artists. I don’t believe that and I think it’s a really disempowering spin to put on a story that asked for a response that could have been empowering and energizing.   Imagine what this conversation would have looked like if you or Sterling had said, “Wow, I really don’t like that gender breakdown. I’m going to make sure my next show looks different.” Instead, I’m fielding complaints that this post is polarizing, by a person who’s left a number of comments that are just that. 

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=114200075 Sterling Crispin

             I actually had basically said that Paddy, and encouraged people to contact the curator and took steps to resolve the problem before you felt the need to intervene. You’re the one who put a negative spin on this all and turned it into a shitstorm.

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            I’m sorry your feelings were hurt Sterling, but I don’t see this post as a bad thing. I think the article made fresh an enduring problem in the digital art scene. There’s a lot good that can come out of this. 

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            good for u, i have seen this post’s effect on the internet and now everyone is arguing and hating each other, but whatever, you can keep picking on kids if you dont have any bigger fish to fry.

          • http://www.artfagcity.com Paddy Johnson

            We all use the internet here Ryder. I’ve seen the same things you have and have gotten different versions of the shit Sterling is talking about. Debating isn’t a bad thing and the crazies always come out for passed around pieces. Chill out.

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            i toldulike4timesthat i agreewithyou. uneedto”chill out” andstopassumingwhat i thinkof thingsbecauseof mygender andnot mywords. i alreadysaidi agreewithyoubut wqishpeoplecouldtalkabout great femailnetartistsinsteadof talkingabout “sexist malenetartists”

          • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=34601449 Ryder Ripps

            wefewrerwpoir49uerwpojwfdop’q

  • http://twitter.com/JulianCD Julian C. Duron

    © This thread is officially Net Art — I appropriated this thread as art so it’s officially MY net art! Yayyy I own it!!!!!!!!!!!! Someone should put MY thread in an exhibition soon before net art is completely over. Be sure to put my name and medium (“Bullshit”) on the little white card next to the display.

    I suppose gender is the final frontier for human separations… When we transcend gender everyone will just shut the fuck up. I have an analysis… This whole thread is fucking gay. Fuck all of it… Except the couple of lines about transcending gender. You guys are like, totally onto something! That’s cute :) A sad thread for a genderless Earth (yes you). *When human is the embarrassment. Big sigh. I’m not a man. I’m not a woman. I am you.

  • http://twitter.com/JulianCD Julian C. Duron

    All anon commenters are living in fear… Come into the light. There is peace here.

    • Guest

      we’re not all on fb

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