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Post Internet: Notes on the Internet and Art 12.29.09 > 09.05.10

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Post Internet is a blog developed between December 2009 and September 2010 by the New York based art critic Gene McHugh, thanks to a grant of the Creative Capital - Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant Program. For almost a year, Gene McHugh kept filling this folder with his personal notes. Writing and posting became a daily, regular activity, that sometimes produced many posts a day, sometimes long (or very long) texts posted at a slower pace. However, Post Internet is not just a piece of beautiful criticism, as reading this book proves. It's also, in itself, a piece of Post Internet art in the shape of an art criticism blog. GENE MCHUGH is an art writer and curator based in Brooklyn. His writing has appeared in Artforum and Rhizome, and he was the recipient of the Creative Capital - Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant for his blog, Post Internet: http: //122909a.com/. McHugh is currently the Kress Fellow in Interpretive Technology at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

268 pages, Paperback

First published September 8, 2011

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Gene McHugh

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Sofia.
303 reviews
October 1, 2020
McHugh's reflections and commentary on the worlds within the internet pinpoints the intricate oddities that it houses; an infinite series of juxtapositions, contradtictions, contrasts, reflections, anad above all, brain scratching revelations about the evolution of the position of the Internet in our increasingly digital world. There were so many moments where I found myself vigorously nodding my head along, taking in the newly obvious analysis of even my own mundane actions online coming to these epiphanies about the epistemological stakes in this ethernet bound society. This collection is a great introduction to the foundations of conversations of art in the Age of the Internet.
Profile Image for Max.
17 reviews2 followers
September 2, 2016
I found his analysis of artworks to be overly reductive, but the last few entries on performance and the internet were enough to make reading the book worthwhile.


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