Innovation The Brooklyn Rail – Brooklyn Rail

In recent years DAOs have been heralded as a powerful stimulus for reshaping how value systems for interdependence and cooperation manifest themselves in arts organizing. The book Radical Friends Decentralised Autonomous Organisations and the Arts consolidates five years of research into a toolkit for fierce thinking, as well as for new forms of radical care and connectivity that move beyond the established systems of centralized control in the art industry and wider financial networks. Over the course of the book, contributors engage in both past and emergent methodologies for building resilient and mutable systems for mutual aid. Just short of a year later, the two editors accept Charlottes challenge and look back at what is circulating, unsolved and ruminating still for them as friends, collaborators and practitioners in the field in this short self-interview:

Penny Rafferty: So, Ruth, what is the one word you would expunge from conversations about art and technology?

Ruth Catlow: Imagine if we could erase the word innovation! This word has been attaching itself to art and technology for decades, to secure funding and favor. But as a stand-alone signifier, it refuses to recognise or value, let alone delight-in, what already exists, instead demanding to see the next thing at all costs. And the cost might just be our survival. Ah Just imagine the plural planetary realities that might flourish if imagination was unshackled from innovation and partnered instead with care! What underused word would you most like to see become central in conversations about art and technology now?

Rafferty: Take for instance the word decentralization: we have already seen a fork that goes beyond the binary of centralization and its decentralized counterpart, but we hardly ever ask, are you working towards vertical decentralizationallowing voting power whilst still maintaining and embedding authority, guideline policies, controls, checks and social capitalor are you working towards horizontal decentralization, where members are socially and institutionally equal, with dissolvable power structures set in place? Greater understanding of the complexity of the world we operate insideecologically, financially, ethically and creativelyis needed. Springboarding from this, what do you think is still the most misunderstood part of our research to a wider audience?

Catlow: I think, in spite of the fact that our book offers a deep critique of technocapitalisms propensity to bore holes into, and so destabilize the foundations of crucial social infrastructure, our research is still mistaken for an exercise in blockchain-boosterism, rather than an earnest community claim to tools that can help shape lively infrastructures of translocal belonging. But Penny, What are you now most excited to add to the stack of Radical Friends?

Rafferty: When DAO ecosystems were nascent at best, I learned about the concept of micro-gridding, which sits contrary to the traditional, centralized macro-grids we typically operate under. Microgrids can actually disconnect from the centralized grid and operate autonomously, strengthen grid resilience, and help mitigate grid disturbances. They work towards a new distributed generation. For me, this was always the future of DAOs if they were to have a social, political and human impact; where scalability always falls short. As a direct consequence of the surge of DAOs and our research together, I can say I am extremely excited about adding a translocal networked tooling application to the stack, which maybe I can leak: we are already working on the blueprints for the Serpentine Galleries Blockchain Lab.

The rest is here:

Innovation The Brooklyn Rail - Brooklyn Rail

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