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Curatorial Statement
Elly Clarke

Welcome to Dragging the Archive – an online/onsite exhibition of materials from the early cyber years of Franklin Furnace Archive, 1996-2002, taking place across three floors of this landmarked Library at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Founded in 1976 in artist Martha Wilson’s living loft in Tribeca, Franklin Furnace Archive, housed now on this campus, continues to support the production, presentation, and preservation of what was once known as ‘ephemeral art’, which included artists’ books and live performance. In the mid 1990s, Franklin Furnace transferred its artists’ books collection to MoMA, sold its physical space, and Wilson made the decision to ‘go cyber’. This major shift from physical to ‘virtual’ ushered in a series of live ‘Netcast’ performances which were presented via Real Player over buffering, dial up networks, broadcast out of Pseudo Studios in lower Manhattan. In this way, Franklin Furnace became one of the first arts organizations (anywhere) to support live art on the world wide web. 

In 1998, 22-year-old Elly Clarke arrived from the UK as a student intern at Franklin Furnace, and began to bear witness to these new modes and methods of performance. Twenty-five years later, Clarke returns to the Archive to display fragments of what she (re)encountered during a research trip in 2019, and again just now in 2022-23. Clarke’s selections are exhibited alongside extracts from her personal diaries and letters from the 1990s. 

Installed in vitrines across three levels of this building, Dragging the Archive is an exhibition designed to be encountered in any order – (pro)posing a starting point for encounters and interactions with faxes, slides, videos and the heavy boxes in which these materials have been p/reserved. The ex:position is an invitation to the public: to discuss, respond, and reflect. And to be involved: by zooming in via QR codes to give greater clarity to fading faxes, the detail of the slides, the YES / NO / YES notes scribbled on the edges of a rejected proposal dug out of deep storage. You are also warmly invited to share your reactions to these objects via the specially built website, and onsite via the old-fashioned visitor’s book you’ll find on the second floor. 

In physics, drag is a force that pulls in two directions at once: forwards, and back; up, and down. It is also both a performance – with the possibility of transformation – and a burden, or resistance. Within the context of this archive, how to hold this tension? How to re:present evidence of a time, an event, a happening, a performance out of the physical and digital matter that remains?

Look out for posters advertising accompanying events taking place both onsite and online throughout the duration of the exhibition – and please do contribute your reactions, poems and prose in response to what you find. Share your thoughts on social media, tagging #DraggingTheArchive.

Exhibition Gallery

Dragging the Archive


More from Dragging The Archives

Dragging up the archives
Virtual Tour

Wed, Feb 1st, 2023 (3pm-4 pm)

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Dragging the Archive is curated by Elly Clarke. Exhibition identity is designed by Yunjia Yuan. Live at the Library VIII is presented with the support of Michael Asher Foundation; The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; The New York State Council on the Arts,  with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature; Pratt Institute; The Silicon Valley Community Foundation; and the Board of Directors, members, and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Click HERE for the press release.
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This Post Has 2 Comments

  1. Kate L

    As someone born after 2000, it’s quite interesting to see the shapes and forms of older technology and how artists reacted to the newer possibilities offered by the internet. In the past few years, the pandemic has caused a new wave of “going virtual,” and many institutes made the decision to transition online, willingly or not. I’m curious as to how does it feel to see this new wave of “going virtual” caused by the global pandemic having made that significant shift so many years ago.

  2. Harley Spiller

    thanks for your kind statement and curiosity both Kate L. From my perspective, it feels wonderful to see more people taking the leap into “unknown virtualness” – makes the Furnace’s decision back in the 90s seem even more prescient, and it feels good to know many others are moving more and more online. That said, it also makes me appreciate in person engagement more too! Further, as cycles come and go, it’s helpful to be able to look back at past situations to assess as we enter new worlds – for example, Franklin Furnace battled in the culture wars of the 1980s and 1990s and continues on its mission and it is important we continue sharing that history because, gasp, our society is once again engaged in culture wars. Harley Spiller, Ken Dewey Director, Franklin Furnace Archive, Inc.

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