TECHNE White Paper
TECHNE is a practice-based digital arts research initiative founded by Professor Mark Amerika, at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
A. General Introduction
B. Objective of the Study
C. Conceptual Framework and Preliminary Investigations
November 2002
A. General Introduction
The TECHNE initiative develops innovative approaches to the invention of new forms of knowledge generally considered to be both artistic and scholarly. The invention of these new forms of knowledge are oftentimes manifested as digital art projects distributed over the Internet and come into being as a result of TECHNE participants interacting with emerging and converging new media technologies that are becoming more easily accessible to the public at large.
The evolving forms of digital art being investigated through the TECHNE initiative attempt to bring value-added meaning to a democratic society at once operating in a free market economy of goods, services, information and ideas. Faculty, students and research associates affiliated with TECHNE utilize both highly specialized and easily accessible hardware and software consumer applications to push the boundaries of artistic, scholarly, and scientific inquiry into areas not yet discovered.
A significant transition is underway in the culture of information. Information is now being artistically designed to transmit a more visually stimulating, interactive, and immersive experience that will port the User (consumer, reader, viewer, etc.) into a highly manipulated, digital environment that is changing so fast it requires a focused, practice-based research agenda to even begin learning the new kinds of investigative tools and conceptual frameworks required to properly analyze digital art as an emergent phenomena in the new media economy.
B. Objective of the Study
The objective of this brief study is to develop an introduction to the conceptual framework for the TECHNE initiative and to generally outline some of the preliminary investigations already underway. These preliminary investigations are not the end-all be-all of the TECHNE initiative but rather serve as a conceptual marker pointing to the wider framework we wish to concern ourselves with. Only after having built a coherent conceptual framework can we even begin to successfully launch the research initiative in its proper context.
The choice of research subjects, defining the questions that need to be asked, and enabling the development of methods as well as metaphors to properly address the issues that need to be analyzed within a "digital arts" conceptual framework, are all part of the TECHNE initiative as it looks toward future investigations and anticipates research results.
Setting a practice-based research agenda in the digital arts is a complex, intuitive process that depends on developing reliable methods of judging what the most valuable lines of inquiry are. The advent of the Internet as both a research and development tool and globally distributed network of digital art, has created great opportunities for artists and scholars to potentially evolve alternative lines of inquiry that will have critical ramifications in our culture, particularly in areas that investigate the way we compose, publish, exhibit, distribute and network these emerging forms of knowledge in a technologically-driven consumer culture. With this in mind, we think the following conceptual framework should :
1. Create a set of parameters that enable us to both develop a long-term vision of the initiative as well as produce highly visible near-term results;
2. Provide enough flexibility so that we may invent progressive models of both digital arts practice and online publication/exhibition that highlight the ways in which the arts are now becoming more integrated into the information economy;
3. Anticipate the utilization of cross-media platforms to embed our research findings in and in so doing change the way artistic and scholarly work is communicated and assessed in the field.
C. Conceptual Framework and Preliminary Investigations
1. The Internet as Art Medium and Publication/Exhibition Context
By approaching the Internet as both a compositional and publication/exhibition medium, artist researchers in the TECHNE initiative are positioning themselves to conduct a network of digital art practices linked to other institutions who are similarly positioning themselves and their research agendas in various locations around the world. One of the main goals of TECHNE as an ongoing R&D platform focused on demonstrating the value of a practice-based research initiative is to have considerable influence on the way such initiatives and their findings are perceived and communicated as new forms of knowledge. It is generally assumed that these new forms of knowledge, packaged as interactive digital art, will alter the way we socially interact with each other as well as educate ourselves to perform in this dynamic, computer-mediated environment. The Internet is first and foremost a globally distributed network that enables various nodal points an opportunity to bring wider visibility to successful research discoveries made at various intervals throughout the creative process. These discoveries can be immediately published/exhibited on the Internet and under the right conditions, can attract a network of external links that will give the research work a more significant place in the attention-economy.
To this effect, we are positioning ourselves to take a leadership role as one of the first practice-based research initiatives at the state university level to reinvent arts education. TECHNE utilizes various new media technologies to create a more collaborative learning environment for students hoping to transfer their creative and critical skills-set into the new media economy. These students, looking to participate in a highly technologized, social process of self-motivated personal discovery and artistic invention, are now realizing that the creative process involves both online networking and real-time group collaboration.
TECHNE is being set up as a model unit to help students and other artist-researchers achieve these goals.
2. What Is TECHNE?
The name TECHNE comes from the Greek use of the term techne to mean both art and technology, especially as it relates to practice and application ("to make or do").TECHNE enables its faculty, students and research associates to utilize both highly specialized and easily accessible hardware and software applications to further demonstrate the value of building more interactive, digital art projects while critically analyzing their place in the world. Research projects are varied and investigate many contemporary subjects whose cultural implications bring to light the growing interdependency between the arts and sciences. The current environment of rapidly developing new media technologies enables committed researchers in both the arts and sciences to facilitate the discovery of new forms of knowledge.
Subjects explored in recent and current investigations in the TECHNE initiative include web publishing, digital narrative, PDA art, wireless networking, interactive cinema, artist ebooks, JAVA applet art, digital animation, telepresence, dynamic hypertext language, biotechnology art, online games, motion picture graphics, Internet radio and virtual concert performance, digital video installation, data visualization, surveillance technology, online art and the exhibition context, parapsychological and paranormal uses of telecommunications technology, GUI art, 3-D Multi-User Environments, the history of multi-media art in relation to both computer science and art practice, generative art, programming or code art, database aesthetics, and practice-based research as creative process.
Many of the digital art projects being researched at TECHNE require a team of student producers whose creative and critical skill-sets vary. By giving the students an opportunity to both share their creative and critical strengths in a collaborative work environment while simultaneously enabling them to learn new skills from their peer network, TECHNE breaks away from the "individual artist as genius" model generally associated with art and creative writing programs and focuses more on practice-based research and development skills that are more easily transferred to the rapidly transforming job market in both the high-tech industry and academia. Whereas TECHNE is not a graphic design factory that spews out scores of entry level computer design workers as a way to meet industry needs, the initiative does recognize that technically-proficient students with exceptional creative talent and critical decision making skills are likely to be more competitive once they graduate from our program. With this in mind, many of the creative research projects initiated at TECHNE are loosely tied to a collaborative, process-based learning (PBL) model that requires rigorous intellectual activity among the participants. Some recent examples of PBL projects investigated at TECHNE include:
:: how to create a multi-linear digital narrative that incorporates various media into its interactive structure (motion graphics, sound, text, advanced scripting languages, etc.)
:: how to exhibit multiple works of Internet art in an online environment as well as create an educational context that focuses on the creative, theoretical, and historical relevance of the curated art works by showing how they can be related to and/or differentiated from other, more traditional media such as painting, film, or novel writing
:: how to innovatively implement new media publishing and distribution technologies that challenge older economic models of print production with particular emphasis on reconfiguring our notion of the terms "writing" and"reading" as they relate to recent developments in such areas as portable Ebook readers, PDA readers, HTML, XML, PDF, Flash, Open Ebook Standard, and mp3 audio books
:: how to create customized user interfaces and back-end database programs that are focused on issues such as site navigation and program functionality in relation to the digital art work as both a new form of visual art as well as a near-future model of network distributed, interactive, "edu-tainment"
:: how to theoretically articulate, via both visual design skills and critical language skills, a justification for making work available online while taking into consideration the ease with which data becomes part of an open source networking environment that challenges standard notions of copyright and intellectual property
:: how to experiment with the Internet as a live and online open-platform performance space for creative expression and action investigating the interrelationships between digital design literacy, multi-media narrative, performance theory, and information architecure in the context of a global webcast
:: how to critically assess the new forms of knowledge being developed for the new media environment and how to begin developing robust, highly flexible, collaborative web sites that communicate our critical research findings to the Internet audience, particularly our national and international peer institutions whose evolving research agendas may complement our own
3. Art / Technology / Pedagogy
"The term 'intelligence amplification' seems applicable to our goal of augmenting the human intellect in that the entity to be produced will exhibit more of what can be called intelligence than an unaided human could; we will have amplified the intelligence of the human by organizing his intellectual capabilities into higher levels of synergistic structuring."
Douglas Engelbart, "Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework"
Augmenting the human intellect and its capacity to invent new forms of knowledge requires a more technologically sophisticated experiential learning environment. Part of the reason for launching the TECHNE initiative within the Department of Fine Arts at Â鶹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØis to provide this technologically sophisticated learning environment for both Graduate and Undergraduate Fine Arts students so that they can participate in a computer-supported, collaborative work space that prioritizes group networking and peer evaluation as a major part of the creative process.
Creating breakthrough digital art, design and performance requires a new approach to pedagogy and TECHNE is already applying these new process-based learning methods to its curriculum. Our aim is
:: to create a practice-based research initiative that augments the human intellect by providing faculty, students, and research associates with a customized learning environment equipped with the latest new media technologies
:: to prioritize the use of these new media technologies as tools to assist us in the invention of new forms of knowledge manifested as digital art
:: to use this customized learning environment to create innovative approaches to pedagogy
:: to facilitate the development of a "best practices" model for digital arts research and development within a higher education context
The TECHNE learning environment is partly facilitated by the ongoing development of an experimental digital arts lab that enables us to integrate the latest new media technology into the curriculum while foregrounding the use of easily accessible consumer hardware and software applications.
Our primary aim in building this technologically sophisticated creative lab space is to create a state-of-the-art R&D digital arts lab that will help us fulfill our research goals mentioned above as well as enable our students to begin developing a digital arts practice that will serve them well in all of their future pursuits, whether they be artistic, academic, commercial or non-profit.