FRED
FOREST AND THE ART OF THE COMMUNICATION
Frank POPPER
(Paris, January 1994 )
Professor of Aesthetics
and Sciences of the Art, University of Paris VIII.
It is probably daring
to answer straightaway to the question: "what is an artist ?".
However, I would take the liberty to make a suggestion: to
be an artist, itís choose and pursue, with a certain perseverance,
an aesthetic finality. It is this that makes that a man or
a woman becomes and remains artist. However, it is necessary
to underline that good number of artists defends themselves
to pursue an aesthetic goal under pretext that their creativeness
is of spontaneous nature and non calculated nor rationally
thought. This great objection that often comes back in the
mouth of the artists of all kinds is denied evidently by the
artists who use the new technologies, and notably by all of
them that produce some calculated pictures of synthesis. What
characterizes the technological art, indeed, it is the emergence
in this domain of a lot narrower relation between aesthetic
and technical factors and also the introduction of new notions
in aesthetics assimilated to categories as the dematerialization,
the simulation, the artificial intelligence, the environment,
the virtual reality and the interactivity. I would like to
add that the aesthetic categories touched by the artistic
creation at the end of the XXth century are of
a very high variety and that the different "systems"
elaborated by Étienne Souriau, Charles Lalo and Raymond
Bayer, among others, would deserve a reactualization that
takes into account the introduction of the new technologies
by the artists, in their artworks and in their processes of
creation.
To approach the main
theme of this communication, we will suppose that an artist
using the new technologies, it is the one that pursues not
only, consciously or unconsciously, an aesthetic finality
with a certain perseverance, but it is also the one that chooses
to make the beautiful part to the rational thought and to
the mathematical calculation. It is necessary to underline,
however, that among the artists using new technologies, it
is a good number of artists using them in a wild or indirect
manner. In this case, it is about, surely, an ironic critique,
or even stern, of the scientific thought and sometimes here
of a tentative to achieve metaphysical aims. If I chose to
concentrate me mainly on artists acquired to the aesthetic
values of the new technologies, it is that I believe myself
more close to them because of my previous works (on the kinetic
Art, the Environment and the Involvement of the public) but
it is also to tempt to clear more directly the aspects of
a deep mutation of the civilization that seem largely bound
to the arrival of these new technologies in all material and
spiritual spheres of our life and that touch, undoubtedly,
the artistic creation.
If there is any doubt
to have as for artist's statute among many practitioners,
we could bend on the case of "technological" artists who operates
to the confines of the actual artistic field. Fred Forest
is an example of them. He dedicates himself indeed to what
one can call the art of the communication and it is sure that
we are there enough far from the idea of the painter or the
sculptor of the past centuries. In the case of Fred Forest,
one could even say that the art came out of its field to enter
in the one of the media, or even of the advertisement. And
yet, an attentive analysis of the course and the activities
of Forest reveals us that it is always about a real artist,
his options and his behavior being those of a creator of new
values of aesthetic order, gotten by a work on the communication,
challenging work, certainly but nevertheless sensitive. This
step is not illustrated anymore by the production of tangible
objects and physically materialized but by the production
of systems of communication and various situations.
If one wants to seize
the sense of the relations between subjective factors and
social factors in the history of Fred Forest, it is necessary
to know that he was from 1954 to 1970, controller of the Postes
and Telecommunications in Algeria, what had to, we see it,
orient his artistic career that first of all took place in
the same way to this employ (he was then artist painter),
to end up in 1970 making clear him a decisive step. Of agent
of the Postes and Telecommunications, Fred Forest became indeed
a "artist" of the communication, inaugurating an inventive
and creative practice of the networks and of the human relations.
This existential transformation is not quite miraculous. It
was to replace in the context of 1968-70, at the time of the
anti-cultural movements that assimilated the life to the art
and that valorized the creativeness of each in the domain
of the daily. This existential transformation at Forest is
also bound to the new technology introduction in his step.
He is at this time among the first, otherwise the first, in
France, to use the video and the closed circuits of television.
In 1970, he achieves an audiovisual spectacle to the World
Fair of Osaka before intervening directly in the press and
others mass-media, almost everywhere in the world. His devices
of communication use the telephone, the radio, the television,
the telematics and the cable.
Among his numerous interventions,
I will mention the "Sociological Walk in Brooklyn", peripheral
district of São Paulo, to Brazil, in October 1973.
The artist publishes daily announcements in the local press
and to the radio, inviting all publics confounded to call
the MAC (Museum of Contemporary Art) to take rank and to enroll,
in order to do a walk in his company. In a way Fred Forest
proposed to the participants to move in the district, according
to a prepared in advance itinerary. To every stage, the group
visited different trades: the record-dealer, the greengrocer,
the shoemaker, the bank, the supermarket, the church and finallyÖ
a gallery of art. Fred Forest aimed thus to the investigating
of an urban zone identified through its different activities:
commercial, administrative, cultural. With the help of the
participants, he wanted to make the experience of the daily
reality, to reveal the internal relations and to create micro-events
of communication permitting the establishment of a circulation
of information by a direct intervention on the environment.
The artistic career of Fred Forest is also marked by his adhesion
to the Collective of Sociological Art, active until the end
of the years 70, then to the International Group of the Aesthetic
of the Communication. The one and the other of these movements
united the plasticians and theoreticians (sociologists and
beauticians) and gave them the possibility to appear individually
as artist practitioner after having tempted in common a theoretical
development.
Lately, Forest dedicated
himself to the production of works and environments on newspapers
to electronic diodes uniting two features of his step: the
one of the prompt interventions in the mass-media and the
one of the use of the advanced technologies. One of his last
works of this type, the " Bible pulled out from the sands
" that was titled to the origin the electronic Bible and the
Gulf War, made to appear simultaneously, a luminous parade
of quotations of the former Will and excerpts of articles
of newspapers telling the fights of the Gulf War. So were
juxtaposed, as in the painting of quotation, long enumeration
of military equipment and long genealogies pulled out from
the Bible. Forest wants thus to attract the attention on the
fact that history can repeat itself through similar speeches:
he evidently ridicules also the stereotyped declarations of
the politicians and the military leaders. All the interventions
of Fred Forest that fit in the socio-politic actuality are
of nature defiant and critical but they invite to pursue a
reflection, even though they irritate a little some by their
aggressiveness. They have at the end a function of questioning,
of communication, of interactivity, of relational, that confirms
the artistic objectives of Forest whose fiercely independent
character can be compensated thus by will to bind intense
relations with those that he meets around the events that
they provoke. This step conceals a whole aesthetic objective
range bound to the techniques of the communication: in particular
the dramatization of the physical presence from afar, the
telescoping of the immediate and the retarded, and also the
combination of the memory with real time. One could discover
again in the step of Forest multiple aesthetic aspects bound
to the question of the interactivity and the human relations.
At Fred Forest, as other
artists of the aesthetics of the communication, the introduction
of new technologies in their processes of creation and in
their works has for result to answer at a time their individual
ambitions, of psychological order, and to their desire of
social insertion. On the one hand, there is the stake to their
disposition of very effective tools that allows to the artists
a greater choice of shapes and of colors and encourage a better
control of the spatial and temporal parameters of the creation.
They are so placed in a situation where the exercise of their
power of creation is amplified, what can only reinforce their
artistic personality. On the other hand, it is sure that the
artists of new technologies withdraw a high satisfaction and
a good existential stimulant of the abstract information handling,
at a time mentally and manually (it is especially the case
in the art of the computer). The abstract data manipulation
cannot only lead to the virtual reality institution in a cybernetic
space but also to the realization of aims even more utopian
and metaphysical.
As for the influence
on the social level of the adoption by the artist of new technologies,
we saw in some cases what role they can play, for example
while opposing of fact to the artist's traditional solitude.
Good number of artists opted indeed for a team work in a perfected
laboratory that it was until now impossible to install and
to maintain oneself. However, insofar as we attend a more
and more widespread miniaturization of all technological devices
(and especially of the computer), it is not anymore as difficult
to procure themselves nor to install them at home, what could
really send back the artist to his initial isolation if we
didn't benefit otherwise from the development of the networks
of telecommunications.
In any case, it is obvious
that for the technological artists - as for all artists in
general - the auspicious mixture between lone creation and
collective creation, or between necessary solitude time at
the conception and time of confrontation with other creators
or with the public, represent a vital necessity. Maybe what
I find more successful among the technological artists, it
is the passage from one to the other of these modes and therefore
a very flexible coming and going between the psychological
and the sociological. Among the artists of the new technologies,
there is necessarily a bigger necessity to confront not only
his aesthetic options with those of the other actors of the
artistic stage but again to compare the state, from day to
day, of his own technical devices with the whole of the technological
domain in constant development.
To be artist, to feel
such, to be recognized like such depends therefore, as we
saw, not only of psychological and sociological factors but
also of aesthetic factors - which are closely overlapped with
the first. Thus, it is not necessary to underestimate the
fact that the pursuit of an aesthetic finality such the visualization
of the hidden phenomena in the universe, the enhancement of
new temporal and spatial aspects, or the establishment of
unpublished reports between artist/work/spectator by interactive
processes, from more and more numerous artists, everywhere
in the world, has as consequence the formation of a tendency
or a very definable artistic current that can be designated
under the term of technological art or techno-scientific art.
In conclusion, I will
limit myself to observe that the adhesion to a tendency or
to an artistic current anchored in the movement of the ideas
of the time, appears to me more than ever indispensable to
define himself and to be defined as artist; and in all state
of reason, Fred Forest is well one of them!
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