Frank Popper

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Frank Popper
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Frank Popper in 2006
Born (1918-04-17) April 17, 1918 (age 106)
Prague, now Czech Republic
Citizenship Dual French and British citizenship
Alma mater University of Paris VIII
Known for Historian of art and technology

Frank Popper (born April 17, 1918[1]) is a historian of art and technology and Professor Emeritus of Aesthetics and the Science of Art at the University of Paris VIII. He has been decorated with the medal of the Légion d'honneur by the French Government.[2] He is author of the books: Origins and Development of Kinetic Art, Art, Action, and Participation, Art of the Electronic Age[3] and From Technological to Virtual Art.

Popper documents the historical record of the relationship between technology and participatory forms of art, especially between the late 1960s and the early 1990s.[4] Sharing his focus on art and technology are Jack Burnham (Beyond Modern Sculpture 1968) and Gene Youngblood (Expanded Cinema 1970). They show how art has become, in Frank Popper's terms, virtualized.[5]

Kinetic art

In his books Origins and Development of Kinetic Art and Art, Action and Participation, Popper showed how Kinetic Art played an important part in pioneering the unambiguous use of optical movement and in fashioning links between science, technology, art and the environment.[6] Popper has been a champion of the humanizing effects of such an interdisciplinary synthesis.

Key to his initial thinking and activities as an aesthetician, cultural theorist, curator, teacher, and art critic was his encounter in the early 1950s with the kinetic artist (and author of the book Constructivism), George Rickey. He subsequently encountered the artists Nicolas Schoffer and Frank Malina, whose works were based on first or second-hand scientific knowledge. Also Op Art in the early 1960s had a powerful effect on him. Indeed Op proved to be a strong predecessor to what he is calling Virtual Art in that Op Art called attention to the spectator's individual, constructive, and changing perceptions - and thus called upon the spectator to transfer the creative act increasingly upon him or herself. Op beckons forth a consideration of the enlargement of the audience's participatory role; both in regard to the perception of meaning and actual physical changes to the work of art. Popper also has had many personal encounters in Paris with Groupe de Recherche d’Art Visual, Carlos Cruz-Diez, Yaacov Agam, Jesus-Rafael Soto and Victor Vasarely which proved to have had a substantial impact on his view of art and art history.

Virtual art

Following this inclination he took interest in the works of Piotr Kowalski, Roy Ascott and many others working with the early concept of networking. These artists confirmed his interest in spectator participation, which brought him to the late 1980s and the 1990s when immersive virtual reality and digital art began to become established. Popper began to investigate a range of works emerging in this era, including that of Shawn Brixey, Ebon Fisher and Joseph Nechvatal. To explain and illustrate the emergence of a techno-aesthetic Popper stresses the panoramic and multi-generational reach of virtual art. As regards to virtual art, openness is stressed both from the point of view of the artists and their creativity and from that of the follow-up users in their reciprocating thoughts and actions. This commitment to the teeming openness found in virtual art can be traced to the theories of Umberto Eco and other aestheticians. Recently Eco has expressed a consideration of the computer as a spiritual tool.[5]

Popper uses the term, virtual art, in reference to all the art made with the technical media developed at the end of the 1980s (or a bit before, in some cases). These include human-machine interfaces such as visualization casks, stereoscopic spectacles and screens, generators of three-dimensional sound, data gloves, data clothes, position sensors, tactile and power feed-back systems, etc. All these technologies allowed immersion into the image and interaction with it. The impression of reality felt under these conditions was not only provided by vision and hearing, but also by the other bodily senses. This multiple sensing was so intensely experienced at times, that Popper could speak of it as an immersive virtual reality (VR).

File:Frank Popper 1.jpg
Frank Popper, 2008

In his book "From Technological to Virtual Art", Popper traces the development of immersive, interactive new media art from its historical antecedents through today's digital art, computer art, cybernetic art, multimedia and net art. Popper shows that contemporary virtual art is a further refinement of the technological art of the late twentieth century - and also a departure from it. What is new about this new media art, he argues, is its humanization of technology, its emphasis on interactivity, its philosophical investigation of the real and the virtual, and its multisensory nature.[7] He argues further that what distinguishes the artists who practice virtual art from traditional artists is their combined commitment to aesthetics and technology. Their "extra-artistic" goals - linked to their aesthetic intentions - concern not only science and society but also basic human needs and drives.

Definition

Defining virtual art broadly as art that allows us, through an interface with technology, to immerse ourselves in computer art and interact with it, Popper identifies an aesthetic-technological logic of creation that allows artistic expression through integration with technology. After describing artistic forerunners of virtual art from 1918 to 1983 - including art that used light, movement, and electronics - Popper looks at contemporary new media art forms and artists. He surveys works that are digital based but materialized, multimedia offline works, interactive digital installations, and multimedia online works (net art) by many artists. The biographical details included reinforce Popper's idea that technology is humanized by art.[8]

Virtual art, he argues, offers a new model for thinking about humanist values in a technological age. Virtual art, as Popper sees it, is more than just an injection of the usual aesthetic material into a new medium, but a deep investigation into the ontological, psychological and ecological significance of such technologies. The aesthetic-technological relationship produces an unprecedented artform.

Bibliography

  • Origins and Development of Kinetic Art, New York Graphic Society/Studio Vista, 1968
  • Kinetics, Arts Council of Great Britain, 1970
  • Art—Action and Participation, New York University Press, 1975
  • Die kinetische Kunst: Licht und Bewegung, Umweltkunst und Aktion, DuMont Schauberg, 1975
  • Le declin de l'objet, Chene, 1975
  • Art, action et participation: L'artiste et la creativite aujourd'hui, Klincksieck, 1985
  • Agam, Harry N Abrams, 1990
  • Art of the Electronic Age, Thames & Hudson, 1997
  • Reflexions sur l'exil, l'art et l'Europe: Entretiens avec Aline Dallier, Klincksieck, 1998
  • Arte, Accion Y Participacion: El Artista Y La Creatividad De Hoy, Akal Ediciones, 2006
  • Ecrire sur l'art : De l'art optique a l'art virtuel, L'Harmattan, 2007
  • From Technological to Virtual Art, Leonardo Books, MIT Press, 2007
  • Yvaral, (with Britta Vetter & Emma Healey), Robert Sandelson Ltd, 2007

Footnotes

  1. Art, action and participation by Frank Popper. National Library of Australia collection
  2. Présidence de la République
  3. Lieser, Wolf. Digital Art. Langenscheidt: h.f. ullmann. 2009 p. 283
  4. Christiane Paul, Digital Art, Thames & Hudson Ltd. p. 219
  5. 5.0 5.1 Joseph Nechvatal, Frank Popper and Virtualised Art, Tema Celeste Magazine: Winter 2004 issue #101, pp. 48–53
  6. Kristine Stiles & Peter Selz, Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art: A Sourcebook of Artists' Writings (Second Edition, Revised and Expanded by Kristine Stiles) University of California Press 2012, p. 450
  7. Margaret Boden, Mind As Machine, Oxford University Press, 2006, p. 1089
  8. Origins of Virtualism: An Interview with Frank Popper conducted by Joseph Nechvatal", CAA Art Journal, Spring 2004, pp. 62-77

References

  • Charlie Gere, Art, Time and Technology: Histories of the Disappearing Body (2005) Berg, p. 146
  • Christiane Paul, Digital Art, Thames & Hudson Ltd. p. 219
  • Naissance de l'art cinétique, Gauthier-Villars, Paris, 1967
  • Joseph Nechvatal, Frank Popper and Virtualised Art, Tema Celeste Magazine: Winter 2004 issue #101, pp. 48–53
  • Origins and Development of Kinetic Art, Studio Vista and New York Graphic Society, 1968
  • Roy Ascott "Behaviourist Art and the Cybernetic Vision", in Cybernetica, Vol. IX, No. 4, 1966; Vol. X, No. 1, 1967: 29.
  • L'Arte cinetica, Einaudi, Turin, 1970
  • Die Kinetische Kunst-Licht und Bewegung, Umweltkunst und Aktion, Dumont Schauberg, 1975
  • Le Déclin de l'objet, Le Chêne, 1975
  • Art, Action and Participation, Studio Vista and New York University Press, 1975
  • Yaacov Agam, monographie, Abrams, New York, 1976
  • Margaret Boden, Mind As Machine, Oxford University Press, 2006, p. 1089
  • Art, action et participation : l'artiste et la créativité aujourd'hui, Klincksieck, 1980
  • "Kunst zwischen Natur und Technologie. Ein Gespräch mit Frank Popper", Jürgen Claus, Treffpunkt Kunst. Keil Verlag Bonn 1982, pp. 19–22
  • "Künstler und sozialer Wandel, Gespräch mit Frank Popper", Jürgen Claus, ChippppKunst, Ullstein Materialien, Bd. 35232, pp. 116–120
  • Réflexions sur l'exil, l'art et l'Europe : Entretiens avec Aline Dallier, Klincksieck 1998
  • Origins of Virtualism: An Interview with Frank Popper conducted by Joseph Nechvatal", CAA Art Journal, Spring 2004, pp. 62-77
  • Lieser, Wolf. Digital Art. Langenscheidt: h.f. ullmann. 2009 p. 283
  • Kristine Stiles & Peter Selz, Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art: A Sourcebook of Artists' Writings (Second Edition, Revised and Expanded by Kristine Stiles) University of California Press 2012, p. 450
  • Jürgen Claus, "Frank Popper", in: "Liebe die Kunst. Eine Autobiografie in einundzwanzig Begegnungen", Kerber/ZKM, 2013, pp. 178–186, ISBN 978-3-86678-788-9

External links

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