A selection 
    of participative art on-line by Roberta Bosco and Stefano Caldana
    
    Internet was born to be a powerful tool of information exchange 
    and simultaneous 
    collaboration among people from different places in the world. Throughout 
    its development 
    those who have lost sight of this fundamental fact have failed or are destined 
    to do so. This is not 
    the case of digital artists who, from the beginnings of this new artistic 
    expression, have focused 
    their efforts and creativity on a participative, collaborative and interactive 
    direction.
    
    Digital Jam is a selection of 11 projects conceived for the 
    Internet that shows different 
    tendencies of artistic investigation, focused on the collaborative aspect 
    of the creative process 
    on-line in the course of the last 7 years.
    
    The participative experience in digital art has very deep roots going back 
    to Nam June Paik's 
    experiences at the beginning of the 70's. However, regarding net.art, one 
    of the first was American
    artist Douglas Davies with The World's First Collaborative Sentence, 
    a multimedia document 
    whose development and expansion depend on the audience who, since 1994, adds 
    text, sound, 
    images and video. That year, the artistic community sensitive to innovative 
    projects discovered to 
    have a means at their disposal, which shortened distances and changed completely 
    the concept 
    of work of art and copyright and, of course, began to use it. 
    
    We are not in favour of encyclopaedic selections, so we'd rather risk choosing 
    a series of 
    projects which, in our opinion, shows the numerous tendencies in the field 
    of artistic 
    collaboration on-line. Within the historic ones, we have chosen Davies 
    and Paul Vanouse 
    and their database of secrets and excluded undoubtedly interesting works, 
    such as The Most 
    Wanted Painting by Komar & Melamid and Please Change Belief 
    by Jenny Holzer. French artist Gregory Chatonsky and Americans 
    Marek Walczak and Martin Wattenberg take sides in the discussion 
    of digital art collections, and Eric Zimmerman explores the dynamics 
    of the interpersonal relations on-line with an addictive and evil game. Andy 
    Deck allows to perform a graphic jam session in real time, Hannes Niepold 
    suggests a collaborative net.comic in constant growth and Bernd Holzhausen 
    keeps on expanding his famous Icontown, a city made of pixel buildings 
    by thousands of icon-addicts. Thomax Kaulmann presents its already 
    historic Open Radio Archive Network Group and John Klima challenges 
    the usual model of interactivity and collaboration on the Internet with Glasbead. 
    Finally, No/E.html, a webring by Mexican artist Arcangel Costantini, 
    links with mythical works such as Desktop IS or Refresh by Russian 
    artist Alexey Shulgin, webrings of artists pages from all over the 
    world, which we have excluded because they have lost several intermediate 
    rings and they are immediately interrupted. 
    
    Digital Jam invites the observer/user to leave his/her passive role 
    in order to take part in first person in this creative jam session 
    on the Internet. 
     
    
  
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
  
    
  
  
  
      

 
 