The internet is for surfing, not printing.
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     \/__/         \/__/                                            
NET ART
ANTHOLOGY

Post Internet

Gene McHugh

2009 - 2010

A WordPress blog created by writer and curator Gene McHugh between December 2009 and September 2010, Post Internet was an exercise in art criticism as well as a performative work of art. The blog contended with many of the key issues of the early postinternet moment, in which artists contended with the internet’s increasingly profound effects on society at large and contemporary art in particular.

Post Internet embraced the network as form as well as subject matter. Through McHugh’s serial updates, punctuated by quotations and comments from readers, the blog engaged deeply with the internet’s increasingly significant effects on artistic creation and production, and on art criticism itself.

Gene McHugh, Post Internet, 2009–2010. Screenshot, 2018, Mozilla Firefox 63 on Linux.

Visit a reconstruction of Post Internet
Restored by Rhizome’s Digital Preservation team, led by Dragan Espenschied.

“...‘Internet’ became not a thing in the world to escape into, but rather the world one sought escape from...sigh...It became the place where business was conducted, and bills were paid. It became the place where people tracked you down.”

—Gene McHugh

Parked at 122909a.com (the numbers refer to the date of McHugh’s first post; the significance of the letter remains purposely obscured), Post Internet aimed to analyze and discuss the intersection of the art and internet worlds, with McHugh’s own thoughts punctuated by text fragments from other writers, artists, and theorists.

McHugh used the blog to think through the implications of the internet’s increasing ubiquity, which meant that even artists who did not intend to make work on or about the internet were compelled to engage with it. This shift, associated with the rise of smartphones and social media, is often referred to as the postinternet moment.

The project was shaped by dual material constraints: WordPress’s stark default format and the duration of a one-year grant from the Creative Capital Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers program.

Posts were separated by date and did not use titles, images, or links. When the grant expired, the blog ceased to be updated.

Gene McHugh, Post Internet, 2009–2010. Screenshot, 2018, Mozilla Firefox 63 on Linux.

Post Internet is not just a piece of beautiful criticism, as reading this book proves. It’s also, in itself, a piece of postinternet art in the shape of an art criticism blog.” —Domenico Quaranta

Post Internet exemplifies the blurred line between artistic production and its surrounding discourse that has long been associated with net art, from 1990s listserves to contemporary social media. It records the beginnings of a postinternet movement and initial efforts to develop a language around it, while embracing the network as both subject matter and form.

McHugh’s blog went offline somewhere at the end of 2015. In 2019, Rhizome restored the blog and made it available online again through Net Art Anthology, drawing edited texts from a 2011 Link Editions publication bsed on the blog and from Internet Archive. Link Editions will reissue the book to mark its inclusion in Net Art Anthology.