Eva and Franco Mattes
|
|
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.
|
|
|
This article includes a list of references, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2010) |
Eva and Franco Mattes were born in Italy in 1976. Since meeting in Madrid in 1994, they have never separated, living a nomadic life throughout Europe and the United States. Neither of them received an art education; however, they are counted among the pioneers of the Net Art movement, and are renowned for their subversion of public media.
The couple first gained notoriety in 1998 by taking the domain name vaticano.org, in order to undermine the Catholic Church’s official website. They then went on a cloning spree, copying and remixing other artists’ works, e.g., Jodi.org. They also targeted “closed” websites, such as Hell.com, thereby turning private art into public art. They explained that people use websites interactively and follow what they are supposed to do.
The Mattes, on the other hand, viewed websites in a different way and decided that they can express themselves differently. By doing something that is not predicted by the author of the website, "the beholder becomes an artist and the artist becomes a beholder: a powerless witness of what happens to his work." From 1995–97, the pair toured the world’s most important museums and stole dozens of fragments from well-known works by artists such as Duchamp, Kandinsky, Beuys, and Rauschenberg.
The Mattes have manipulated video games, Internet technologies, feature films and street advertising to reveal truths concealed by contemporary society. They have created media facades believable enough to elicit embarrassing reactions from governments, the public, and the art world.[citation needed] In addition, they have orchestrated several unpredictable mass performances, staged outside art spaces, and involved unwitting audiences in scenarios that mingle truth and falsehood to the point of being indistinguishable.
The Mattes shocked the mainstream art world with the invention of Darko Maver, a reclusive radical artist, who achieved cult status and was featured in the Venice Biennale, before being exposed as pure fiction. This Serbian artist created by the two, presented very gruesome and realistic models of murder victims. He exposed the brutality of war in the Balkans to the world. Many of the photographs and models shown were reenactments of actual deaths found on the web. Their message to the world was: while artists are making shocking artwork, absorbed by the market, real violence is being perpetrated and ignored by a media-anesthetized world. Their off-the-wall performances—for which they have been sued multiple times—include affixing fake architectural heritage plaques (An Ordinary Building, 2006), rolling out a media campaign for a non-existent action movie (United We Stand, 2005) and even convincing the people of Vienna that Nike had purchased the city’s historic Karlsplatz and was about to rename it “Nikeplatz” (Nike Ground, 2003).
Eva and Franco first revealed their love for Second Life through their project "13 Most Beautiful Avatars". In an interview with Domenico Quaranta, they stated that the self-portraits of the 13 avatars were not meant to reveal "the way you 'are', but rather on the way you 'want to be'". The Mattes wanted to stress that our culture revolves around plagiarism. They followed up by saying that their project "13 Most Beautiful Avatars" was not a completely original piece. In fact, they stated that anyone who claims that their work is an original, should really "start doubting" their mental health, because practically everything in this world, not just art, is a reproduction or remix of something that has been released before.
Their art has been featured at the Venice Biennale (2001), the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2001), Manifesta, Frankfurt (2002) and in other venues worldwide, including the New Museum, New York (2005), Collection Lambert, Avignon (2006) and Performa, New York (2007 and 2009).[citation needed]
[edit] Works
- Plan C, 2010, a secretive project in Chernobyl
- My Generation, 2010, video collage on broken computer
- Freedom, 2010, online performance
- No Fun, 2010, online performance about hanging
- Bagless Canister Cyclonic Vacuum, 2009, outdoor billboard
- Traveling by Telephone, 2008, photos in videogames
- It's always six o'clock, 2008
- Synthetic Performances, 2007, art Performances inside videogames
- Portraits, 2006, series of portraits on canvas of Second Life's avatar
- An Ordinary Building, 2006, a fake architectural heritage sign
- United We Stand, 2005, advertisement campaign for a non existent movie
- Nike Ground, 2003, a fake Nike advertisement campaign
- Vopos, 2002, one year of satellite self-surveillance
- The K Thing, 2001
- Biennale.py (with Epidemic), 2001, a computer virus as a work of art
- Life Sharing, 2000–03, the artists' personal computer turned into an open server
- Copies, 1999, copies and remixes of popular Net Art websites
- Hybrids, 1998, online Net Art collages
- Vaticano.org, 1998, one of the first spoof websites
- Darko Maver, 1998, a made-up artist
- Stolen Pieces, 1995–97
[edit] References
- Quaranta, Domenico, Cattelan, Maurizio, Goldberg, RoseLee, Sterling, Bruce, Ming, Wu, Cavallucci, Fabio, Blais, Joline and Ippolito, Jon, Baumgärtel, Tilman (2009). Eva and Franco Mattes: 0100101110101101.ORG. Charta.
- Ippolito, Jon and Blais, Joline (2009). "New Media: Introduction". Innovators Shaping Our Creative Future. Thames & Hudson,
- Ippolito, Jon and Blais, Joline (2005). "At the Edge of Art". Thames & Hudson.
- Jana, Reena and Tribe, Mark (2006). New Media Art. Taschen.
- Greene, Rachel (2004). Internet Art. Thames & Hudson.
- Paul, Christiane (2003–2008). Digital Art. Thames & Hudson.
- Blake Gopnik (17 May 2010). "This work is a steal!". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/16/AR2010051603391.html.
[edit] External links
- 0100101110101101.org Homepage