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<blockquote>&nbsp;
<center>
<p><img SRC="world_is_new.GIF" height=94 width=101>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=-2>L. Dunn, 1993</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282">_____________</font>
<p><font color="#006399"><font size=+2>Meme Breeders</font></font>
<br><font color="#006399"><font size=+1>Cultivating New Forms of Life in
the Media</font></font>
<br><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>___________</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Curated by Ebon Fisher</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+0>Akus Gallery,</font></font>
<br><font color="#008099"><font size=+0>Eastern Connecticut State University,</font></font>
<br><font color="#008099"><font size=+0>October 1996</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>MEME BREEDERS attempts to extract
a few nerves from a living culture and hang them together in a room. The
nerves in question are an assortment of posters, fanzines, albums, and
other communication devices produced by a new generation of cultural activists.
Their efforts go far beyond the making of pretty objects: their work extends
out into the media, out to the minds and bodies of the public. This practice
is a kind of media dance. If the dance is successful, the creators' images
and words will begin to replicate in society's webs of communication.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>In light of recent ecological theories
of culture, these artists may be some of the first to consciously manipulate
the media and the public in order to "breed" their creations. Although
it may not be the language shared by all the artists in the show, the replicating
entities represented here are what "cultural biologists" are beginning
to call "memes," or primitive media organisms.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>WIGGLE REPLACES ART</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>20th Century Western art theories
have usually bound culture to the large-brained, bipedal creatures who
manufactured it. Surrealism explored the realm of the human unconscious.
Expressionism passionately attempted to release the human psyche into form.
Pop art and minimalism flirted with serial processes of corporate mass
production. Multiculturalism and gender theories have both championed a
wider definition of the human. Threaded throughout this discourse has been
a critique of human systems of power. Even postmodernism, and good old
madness itself, can be construed as struggles with <i>human</i> power,
<i>human</i>
dreamspace, and <i>human</i> alienation. Many of these cultural theories
have included attempts to transcend the human, but their effect in practice
has been to reinforce a mainstream HUMANIST subplot running along the spine
of history.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Exit art, enter ecology. With the
recent emergence of ecological theories of culture and technology, the
human dream may be fragmenting and mutating into a multitude of very different
creatures. Culture may not be a simple collection of songs and sculptures,
but may grow in our minds like a host of alien species. From an objective
standpoint this poses a challenge to our humanist tradition. Subjectively,
it is delightfully obscene. A form of "hyperzoology" may be emerging. Collectively
shared media organisms replace the art object as the focus of aesthetic
attention. That which seems to wiggle becomes a new definition of beauty.</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>MEMES</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>The evolutionary biologist, Richard
Dawkins, coined the term "meme" in 1976, to launch a theory of culture
which built upon the enduring successes of Darwin's theory of evolution.
A meme, according to Dawkins, is a "unit of cultural transmission."1&nbsp;
It's a little memory nugget analogous to a gene. It replicates, not in
the strict genetic sense, but more loosely within the mental environment
of our species. In other words, a meme contains a "code" which replicates
in the minds of humans, alters behaviour, which further aids in the propagation
of the meme. Media, from gossip to literature to satellites, is the fertile
field that sustains these new lifeforms. Again, Dawkins:</font></font></center>

<blockquote>
<center><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>"Just as genes propagate themselves
in the gene pool by leaping from body to body via sperm or eggs, so memes
propagate themselves in the meme pool by leaping from brain to brain via
a process which, in the broad sense, can be called imitation." 2</font></font></center>
</blockquote>

<center><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Culture, for centuries the
province of poets, pundits, and priests, is now being colonized by zealous
biologists. Within the websites dedicated to memes now growing throughout
the internet, terms like "infection strategy" and "immuno-depressent" are
nudging out more literary terms like "propaganda" and "naivete." The realm
of cultural catfights, subjectivity, and sublime madness is being agitated
by the steely blue fingers of empiricism. Dawkins quotes his colleague,
N.K. Humphrey:</font></font></center>

<blockquote>
<center><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>"Memes should be regarded as
living structures, not just metaphorically, but technically. When you plant
a fertile meme in my mind you literally parasitize my brain, turning it
into a vehicle for the meme's propagation in just the way that a virus
may parasitize the genetic mechanism of a host cell." 3</font></font></center>
</blockquote>

<center><blink><font color="#008099"><font size=+2>DON'T BELIEVE THE HYPE</font></font></blink>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>But before we join the memetic feeding
frenzy, I suggest we reactivate Public Enemy's immunity meme, "Don't Believe
the Hype," to create some critical distance. In one sense intellectual
history can be seen as a series of ever-changing metaphors. The current
meme metaphor intrigues me, not for its accuracy, but its ability to foster
a deeper appreciation for a more organic kind of cultural production. It
allows us to replace the word "production" with the post-industrial word
"cultivation" or perhaps "breeding." The factory is replaced by the farm.
Crafting masterpieces is replaced by nurturing living media processes.
A warmer, more flexible, more decentralized, and more interactive culture
is implied.</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>THE MEME AS A NEW METAPHOR</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Although numerous countercultures
and bohemian circles have often stressed a wholistic view of culture --a
kind of ecological conflux of artist, audience, medium, and context --the
breeding principle tends to be more propagandistic and "hacker" in attitude.
The role of the artist is clearly that of pollinator. But it is, nevertheless,
an organic pollination, consisting of numerous and varied injections of
an image, sound, or gesture into the webs of culture. Often the work flexes
and adapts to its audience like an organism to its niche.</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><img SRC="whatstaringat.GIF" height=102 width=133>
<p><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Riot Grrrl Graphic
by Theresa</font></font></font>
<br><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Pittsburgh,
mid-1990's</font></font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>A NEW GENERATION</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>A considerable number of artists
are emerging who seem quite comfortable with this organic, weblike view
of cultural space. For one thing, they have grown up with the cross-marketing,
multimedia webs of our expanding consumer culture. They have also found
many points of entry amidst the increasing number of fanzines, magazines,
cable TV stations, the internet, and telephone machines. From the xerox
machine to the world wide web, do-it-yourself media has never been more
accessible. Kinkos Photocopy shops inadvertently sponsor tiny publishing
revolutions on a convenient 24-hour basis. There's even a magazine, Fact
Sheet 5, which is entirely dedicated to championing this do-it-yourself
culture.</font></font>
<p><blink><font color="#008099"><font size=+2>communicate::stimulate</font></font></blink>
<p><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Mindflux Symbiote,
1996</font></font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Furthermore, the new generation
of media artists have absorbed the lessons taught by earlier "breeders,"
including the Beatles, Abbie Hoffman, Andy Warhol, the activist group,
ACT UP, and Spike Lee. Consider the film title "Do the Right Thing." Mr.
Lee took an old soundbite out of hibernation and gave it a new life in
the streets and in the media. I just saw it bubble up again in a New York
Times article. Mr. Lee has been called a marketing genius by many people
in the press, but to me he represents a stellar meme breeder.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>MEME BREEDERS explores a number
of artists whose work has penetrated the media and the collective imagination.
What's important in this exhibit is not the actual t-shirts and posters
which are on display, but the way they have induced waves of responses
in the public mind. These works aren't always perfectly crafted gestures,
but then again, something which ultimately lives in the mind cannot be
crafted. It creeps around like a weed.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>GH HOVAGIMYAN's striking poster
for the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority which made use of
slang, advertising style, and an absurd-looking clown doll created a major
copyright controversy. Hovagimyan's image of the clown bore a vague resemblance
to "Bozo the Clown" whose copyright is owned by Larry Harmon. Harmon attempted
to sue the MTA for copyright infringement, prompting a brief outbreak of
memetic replication of the clown meme in the media. Hovagimyan's offending
image and many of the legal documents and publicity surrounding this event
will be on display.</font></font>
<p><img SRC="RiotGrrrlNYC.GIF" height=65 width=79>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>The RIOT GRRRLS are circulating
fanzines, t-shirts, and buttons with a freckled meme in pig tails. It she
just another funky white trash kind of gal? A random assemblage of human
features? Pippi Longstocking? How about a vast cultural apparition who
just won't go away because certain somebodies keep reproducing her image.
After countless dull storytelling sessions about pretty princes and princesses,
it was discovered that if you stick a surly, can-do girl with pigtails
in the story, your audience perks up. And now, if the quasi-feminist Riot
Grrrl movement has its way, the kid is going to kick around a good while
longer, along with a flock of other Grrrl memes.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>The name itself is a successful
meme -that freaky-cute triple-r growl has hooked a lot of people's attention,
and helped to jump the movement into the media almost a little too fast,
partly with the help of the mainstream magazine, Sassy, and bands such
as Bikini Kill, Huggy Bear, and Bratmobile. Many of the bands who helped
launch the movement have had to distance themselves at times in order to
keep their own meme creations from being drowned out by the Grrrl memes.
After a few encounters with some very sincere 15 year-old Riot Grrrls who
took over downtown Manhattan's Meow Mix club recently, it is clear to this
author that the movement is very deeply connected with an ancient meme-complex
known as civil rights.</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><img SRC="justsayno(C)W.GIF" height=88 width=67>
<p><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Mark Pawson,
late 1980's</font></font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Representing the anti-copyright
school of meme breeding are MARK PAWSON from London, and LLOYD DUNN from
Iowa City. Both artists have produced a variety of publications like Photostatic
and Yawn that represent the activities of an entire commmunity of media
cultivators. Dunn's perturbing trademark on the word plagiarism, and Pawson's
N&copy; design have replicated numerous times in the underground media.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>Shadow memes from India's Mahabarata
will make their soft presence felt on the gallery walls. A few of DAN MCQUIRE's
Balinese and Javanese shadow puppets will be presented along with McGuire's
own variations. These translucent, serpentine cut-outs are passed down
from generation to generation through a precise tracing of the originals,
not unlike genes themselves. McGuire has adapted these puppets to a North
American cultural niche by hybridizing the ancient designs with comic book
characters. Both generations of memes will be shown.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>NEGATIVLAND is one of the more audacious
meme breeders in this show. The band's apt name, and a handful of its slogans
and song titles, underwent an uncanny breeding explosion after a satirical
press release associated them with the suicide of a teenager. Later, a
parody of a U2 album cover brought them into a legal fray which spawned
another round of memetic propagation. The content of their music, and the
contorted methods by which it has been popularized, folds nicely together
into a large meme complex.</font></font>
<p><img SRC="mask_memed_mindflux.gif" BORDER=0 height=170 width=135>
<p><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Gasmask Meme
Pollinator</font></font></font>
<br><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Mindflux ,
1996</font></font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>MINDFLUX is a group of meme breeders
from Australia whose memetic "pollen" I first found unexpectedly in my
computer's hard drive. Mindflux actually wield the term "meme" as though
it confers a blessing or two on their operation. Very confidently they
describe their mission as such:</font></font></center>

<blockquote>
<center><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>1. Producing and observing
specific effects with engineered memetic agents. 2. Providing a conduit
thru which memes can reproduce in suitable environment. 3. Provide antigens
to malignant memetic parasitism.</font></font></center>
</blockquote>

<center>
<p><br><img SRC="natashaweb.jpg" BORDER=2 height=189 width=150>
<p><font face="Geneva"><font color="#008099"><font size=-2>Natasha Vita
More, Memetically Enhanced</font></font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>NATASHA VITA MORE's memes, like
those of Mindflux, are also consciously designed with meme theory in mind.
Her own lexicon of memes is inspired by her enthusiasm for "Extropian"
philosophies of continuous cultural and material increase. For example,
her response to the term "cool" - a dominant meme she believes has been
over-bred - is countered with the word "cryo" culled from the term cryogenic,
which is itself an element within the entire Extropian meme-complex.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>And finally we include samples of
media from the rap group, PUBLIC ENEMY, one of the most impressive group
of media artists in recent history. As early experimenters with turntables,
samplers, tapes, and signal processors, Public Enemy instigated many waves
of response to their music and stage performances. Memes they have fertilized
within the popular culture include such phrases as "Don't believe the hype,"
and "Fight the power." Each of these statements were teased into public
consciousness through a supple, interactive, rhythmic exchange between
performers and technology.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>All of these creators, in a variety
of ways, are helping to push the way towards an interactive, organic, and
post-humanist vision of culture. In this light, the public is welcome to
bring its own memetic agents to the show and post them on a reserved section
of the gallery. We look forward to your soundbytes, slant-eyed alien faces,
and Andre The Giant stickers.</font></font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+1>�Ebon Fisher, 1996</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+0>________________________________________________</font></font>
<br><font color="#178282"><font size=+0>1, 2, 3: Richard Dawkins, The Selfish
Gene, 1976, p. 192</font></font></center>

<blockquote>&nbsp;
<br>&nbsp;
<p><!--****************************************--><!--****PUT THIS AT BOTTOM OF EVERY PAGE****--><!--****************************************-->
<center><a href="media.html" target="_parent"><img SRC="=coilgentlyW=.gif" BORDER=0 height=59 width=109></a>
<p><font size=-1><a href="mailto:[email protected]">L I N K&nbsp;&nbsp;
M E</a></font>
<p><font size=-1>&copy;2004 Ebon Fisher</font></center>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>

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