Jodi
JODI EYEBEAM An innocent visit to www.jodi.org brings immediate, alarming results: A hoard of mini browser windows, each completely black except for
Margaret Sundell / ARTFORUM
Sep 01, 2003

A harrowing encounter at a personal computer used to be the only way to experience JODI`S 1998 project
With "INSTALL.EXE," Paesmans and Heemskerk have handled the first presentation of their work in physical space with the utmost sensitivity. To their credit, they don`t attempt the impossible: to re-create, within a gallery context, an invasion of one`s personal computer (and by extension, the security of one`s home, office, or personal space). Instead, they`ve chosen to highlight an engagement with obsolescence-a less apparent but equally compelling aspect of their work. The show`s centerpiece is a new project composed of eight distinctly old-fashioned-looking `80s-era TVs sitting in a row on a long table. Each plays a slightly different modified version of the shooter game Jet Set Willy (chosen by the artists for the year in which its popularity peaked: symbolically charged 1984). In another savvy bit of exhibition design, the pair hung ethernet cables from the gallery`s twenty-foot ceiling. These can be used to play the exhibition`s eponymous software project (installed on laptops available at Eyebeam`s front desk), but most of the time they dangle forlornly as if abandoned. There`s an elegiac quality to this piece, and to the exhibit overall-one that rhymes perfectly with both Eyebeam`s cavernous gallery space and JODI`S long-standing challenge to the Utopian assumptions that permeate Internet discourse. Most Web art tends to operate in an imagined future tense, perpetually envisioning the "unrealized potential" of the Internet. JODI`S work, by contrast, makes up a far more complex and accurate reflection of the online world we actually inhabit. As the dreams of technology`s future rapidly dissolve into the ghosts of its past, they navigate a present that remains permanently unresolved.
-Margaret Sundell
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