ICC





Preface
Admission
Participation Artist's
Events




InterCommunication'96
Symposium report
Short speech summary

Monday,October 21,1996 13:00-16:00 [Finished] yurakucho Asahi Hall





Symposium report


Prior to the opening of its new facilities at Tokyo Opera City in April 1997, each year the NTT InterCommunication Center (ICC) has held a range of events focusing on the theme "Art and Technology." On October 21st (Monday), 600 people attended ICC's International Symposium (part six of NTT InterCommunication's series of annual events) at the Yurakucho Asahi Hal l to hear leading thinkers from the cutting edge of science and the arts exc hange views on the topic "Multimedia Society and the Transforming Culture : The Meeting of Science and Art."

Moderator Akira Asada opened the symposium by outlining the context and primary thrust of the symposium in the following terms: "The range of new electronic information technology that has made multimedia possible is not only bringing about rapid changes in the socioeconomic infrastructure of our world, it is also having a huge impact on our art and culture as well. Technology and art were once part and parcel of the same thing. Subsequently, they became sharply divided into the clear-cut world of technology and the more subjective world of the arts. The advent of multimedia technology, however, is once again reuniting these two worlds, albeit in a different form. For this reason, the object of the current symposium is not simply to present the views of technoart specialists but, rather, to call on a range of speakers both from technoscience and also from the arts to engage in a meaningful exchange of views on a wide variety of subjects."

At this point, each of the panelists was called on to make a short speech from the standpoint of their field of specialization. (For further details, refer to the short speech summary).

On completion of the short speeches the panelists joined together for a panel discussion. During the course of the discussion, Arata Isozaki posed the question: "To what extent does art space used for the exhibition of media art such as video installations and virtual installations necessitate changes in the essential nature and mechanisms of art galleries? What sort of changes is this bringing about in the very structure of our art galleries?" This provoked a lively exchange of views on the question of new style art galleries. First of all, Asada offered the following opinion: "From here on, new museums should be multilayered and compact single centers that incorporate the previously distinct functions of art galleries, museums, libraries, and databases. This sort of cultural center, which constitutes a venue for the collection, conversion, and dissemination of dense concentrations of information will be an essential feature of life in the 21st century. Projects such as ICC that have been designed to make this vision a reality are currently in progress around the world, and the notion of creating a communications system that will tie various centers into a single network is no longer a pipe dream." Roy Ascott responded with the comment: "Museum design could in the future almost be akin in its complexity to the designing of a human brain." Jeffrey Shaw, who is actually involved in the establishment of museums of this sort, pointed out in this connection: "The franchise approach, whereby various mechanisms, systems, and institutions are brought together at the outset, is the best way to get the concept stage of a project of this sort off the ground. However, the rationale underlying these museum construction projects, which are currently being pursued the world over, could well be out of date already with the result that it will not be enough simply to complete these projects as they stand now. Rather, we are in a situation in which we must be ready, whether we like it or not, to take account of conditions as we find them today and as they may be in the future."

During the second half of the discussion, Shigehiko Hasumi posed the following question: "Currently there is a strong tendency to present the term 'interactive' or the concept of 'interaction' as a key concept of 21st century art. Is it not the case, however, that interaction has been with us from the 19th century onwards in that the very act of reading or viewing works in media of every kind itself changes, converts, and/or otherwise directs the works in question? I should like to know, therefore, why the concept of interaction is thought to be so definitively new and such an essential feature of our lives as we face the 2 1st century." Asada responded: "I don't think that the sense of 'interactio n' as a new concept as so widespread." He went on to add: "In an interactive system of the so-called audience participation type, users simply select from a few preset menus. T he question being raised is whether it will be possible to move beyond that sort of interaction and achieve interactivity in a true sense." Next Shaw co mmented: "One of the main factors underlying the growing popularity of the t erm 'interactivity' has to do with the rapid advances being made in technolo gy. A host of new technologies are making it possible for users to reassemb le and restructure aural and visual data and in so doing to interact with su ch data in unprecedented ways. It is this huge difference that has opened up a new field of possibilities." Marvin Minsky went on to point out: "As art forms, there is interest not only in those things that provide the user with an experience but also in those things that present the user with new modes of thought. Surely, at bottom there is no need for us to enjoy precisely what the artist intended."

Winding up the symposium, Asada noted: "ICC will be opening in April of next year and early exhibits will include works by Jeffrey Shaw and an exhibition of Arata Isozaki's architectural plans. Future features w ill include a range of network events, live events, and symposiums of this sort. I should like to invite everyone present here today to play an active part in what we have planned for the future. Let's make the most of this interactive opportunity and take this trial dialogue down paths not even dreamed of by those who laid the original plans."

The present symposium was important because it welcomed opinions from expert s in different fields. It succeeded in approaching the question of multimedia from a fresh point of view, treating it not so much as an "industry concern" but rather as a matter of "cultural concern" for the 21st century. But this is only the start of the debate. From here on it is crucial that questions of this sort be discussed not only at ICC but in many different forums.