Media art
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/emoji/twitter.icon The current state of media art is like people showing each other their works and saying "Isn't it great?" to those who came to see media art. If we don't think about situations where we don't know who will come, like public art, there is no future. /emoji/twitter.icon This applies not only to media art, but also to installation and contemporary art in general. Due to the lack of content, contemporary and media art have become "content" themselves (competing for attendance, art festivals being praised, etc.). In the present day, it feels like there is no publicness in any work anymore. https://t.co/loaaJQP2rZ /emoji/twitter.icon The tricky thing about the "Black Box Exhibition" is that the artist Nakano Hitoyo received the Ars Electronica media art award, and the stakeholder of the organization that hosts the award includes Hakuhodo, so I am wary of media art. This includes people who are historically highly regarded. https://t.co/ftqgNGp0eD /emoji/twitter.icon I have made all seven lectures of the "Media Art History Lecture" that I gave last year available for free. Media Art History Lecture https://t.co/tMestNtYUp via @YouTube