----- Original Message ----- 
  
  
  Sent: Tuesday, November 06, 2001 
  09:03
  Subject: [Nettime-bold] BUSH ANNOUNCES US 
  DEPT. OF ART & TECHNOLOGY
  
  US Department of Art & 
  Technology
  Washington, 
  DC
  
  
  
Press Secretary
  For Immediate Release: 
  November 6, 2001
  
  PRESIDENT BUSH 
  ANNOUNCES EXECUTIVE ORDER
  US DEPARTMENT 
  OF ART & TECHNOLOGY
  NEW 
  ARTIST-BASED INITIATIVE
  
  I take great joy in making 
  this announcement. It's going to be one of the most important initiatives that 
  my administration not only discusses, but implements.
  This is a collection of some 
  of the finest America has got to offer -- artists who create with their 
  hearts, and in turn, have changed the communities in which they live for the 
  better. This is a great example of the strength and diversity and compassion 
  of our country.
  
  This is a diverse group, but 
  who share things in common. They provide more than aesthetic appeal to the 
  people of our country. They touch and change hearts.  And for this, 
  America is deeply appreciative, particularly in these times of 
  crisis.
  
  Everyone in this room knows 
  firsthand that there are still deep needs in society that are confronted by 
  America's artists who have brought technology into their work. Problems like 
  cyber-addiction and abandonment, pornographic violence, mental illness, loss 
  of identity through the mediation of reality, and now, the threat of terrorist 
  activity across the heartland. We are called by conscience to 
  respond.
  
As I said in my inaugural 
  address, compassion is the work of a nation, not just a government. It is more 
  than the calling of politicians; it is the calling of artists.  It is 
  artists who turn mean streets into good neighborhoods. It is artists who turn 
  cold cities into real communities.
  It is one of the great goals 
  of my administration to invigorate the spirit of involvement and cultural 
  engagement. We will encourage artist-based community programs without changing 
  their mission. We will help all in their work to change hearts while keeping a 
  commitment to freedom of expression.
  I approach this goal with some 
  basic principles: Government has important responsibilities to the social 
  condition and the spiritual growth of the individual. Yet when we see social 
  needs in America, my administration will look first to artist-based programs, 
  which have proven their power to transform lives. When artists provide insight 
  into the cultural impact of emerging new technologies, we will support 
  them.
  
  As long as there are cultural 
  needs, artist-based organizations should be able to compete for funding on an 
  equal basis, and in a manner that does not cause them to sacrifice their 
  mission. And we will make sure that help goes to large organizations and to 
  small ones as well. We value large organizations with generations of 
  experience. We also value community artists, who have only the scars of being 
  on the wrong side of the digital divide.
  
  Today I am turning these 
  principles into a legislative agenda.  I am sending to Congress a series 
  of ideas and proposals.  Today, in time of war, I want to raise the 
  priority and profile of these issues within my own administration. I want to 
  ensure that artists and artist-based organizations will always have a place at 
  the table in our deliberations.
  
  In a few moments, I will sign 
  an executive order. This order will create a new government agency, the United 
  States Department of Art and Technology. The Secretary of this office will 
  report directly to me and be charged with important responsibilities.  He 
  will oversee our initiatives on this issue. He will make sure our government, 
  where it works with the arts, is fair and supportive. And he will highlight 
  artists who have engaged technology in their work and are confronting issues 
  critical to our understanding of new technologies and their cultural 
  implications as national models so others can learn from them. For as British 
  artist Wyndham Lewis articulated  so well: "The artist is always engaged 
  in writing a detailed history of the future because he is the only person 
  aware of the nature of the present."
  
And now it is my honor to 
  sign the executive order. 
(Applause.)
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