Facework and Embedded Fears

February 2, 2008

The Confidence Game

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(for the Transmediale panel on Embedding Fear)

There are some blogs that every dedicated Internet conspiracy theorist has to read – like Global Guerillas by defense consultant John Robb, an expert on so-called “4th generation warfare.” What kind of expertise is he selling? Here’s a statement from his book Brave New War: “The threshold necessary for small groups to conduct warfare has finally been reached, and we are only starting to feel its effects. Over time, perhaps in as little as twenty years, and as the leverage provided by technology increases, this threshold will finally reach its culmination – with the ability of one man to declare war on the world and win.”

John Robb is a merchant of fear. But his product sells for a reason. In the face of his absurd statement, I’d suggest that the illusions of individual omniscience, omnipresence and omnipotence, offered to each of us by abstract, impersonal information systems, have now found their perfect mirror: the all powerful terrorist. This marriage of heaven and hell could last a long long time. Our hyperindividualized world is all too well reflected in the mediated mirror of terrorism.

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DIFFERENTIAL GEOGRAPHY

January 26, 2008

Research and Rhythm in Artistic Representation

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The rhythmanalyst will not be obliged to leap from the inside to the outside of the bodies he observes; he should be able to succeed in listening to them together and allying them, by taking his own rhythms as a reference: by integrating the inside to the outside and vice-versa.

Henri Lefebvre, “Previsionary Portrait of the Rhythmanalyst”1

In an astonishing sequence from the video installation Corridor X, the scene shifts abruptly from a Eurovision control monitor to a make-up session under the eye of the cameras, then to a room full of TV reporters, then to a computer screen where someone is playing solitaire. We are in the official media center of the European Summit of Thessaloniki in June 2003. Outside, a huge demonstration has gathered in opposition to the European Union, to the war, to globalization. Inside, everything is ordered, ranked, segmented: politicians deliver speeches, translators pipe them into headphones, reporters clip out news bites for their stations. Security passes dangle from color-coded straps around each person’s neck, distinguishing name, access level, function. The gaze returns insistently to the control monitor, connected to four video feeds transmitted directly by cameramen outside. Feed number 4, which is going live on the air, shows the police in pursuit of black-clad anarchists; but an instant later we ourselves are thrust into the surging crowd of demonstrators, we feel their movement in our bodies, we are carried off in their flight.

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The North American “Community”

January 20, 2008

Watch out friends and neighbors!

NAFTA-Plus is Coming Down the Pipe

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The Nasco Corridor-Planning Project

 

I first heard the term “continental integration” in the spring of 2001, at the massive demonstrations against the Free Trade Area of the Americas summit in Quebec City. Later that same year, a man named Robert Pastor, a Washington-based academic who publishes in journals like Foreign Affairs, released a very well-argued book entitled Toward a North American Community: Lessons from the Old World for the New. The book came out just a few days before September 11, and it was ignored in the chaos. Further protest was severely repressed at the next FTAA meeting in Miami, but with the leftward turn in Latin America, the hemisphere-wide agreement had collapsed by the time of the 2004 summit in Argentina: crowds of Latin Americans cheered as Maradona threw the political football to Chávez, who pretty much walked away with the game. Bilateral free trade agreements became the favorite American plan for securing neoliberalism in the hemisphere. Shortly thereafter, the North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA) also began to take on a whole new face. During Bush’s second term, continental integration was going to come back with a vengeance – like a bizarre return of the European Community to its original place of inspiration, the United States.

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One World One Dream

January 8, 2008

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Flag image from the “Camouflage” series by Liu Bolin

text in Chinese

As early as 2007, the slogan of the Olympic Games was everywhere, on brochures, magazines, billboards, light boxes, LED tickers, neon signs, and of course, on the omnipresent urban video screens: One World, One Dream. With all the resources of state-controlled media, Beijing was preparing to claim its place in the pantheon of global cities. This time there would be no denial, no memory of the failed 1993 Olympics bid under the shadow of the “Tiananmen incident.” Already, the hallucinatory congestion of the skyscape makes the prophecy come true. There is only one possible world, only one possible dream: continuous buildings, endless highways, infinite urbanization, a city beyond the limits of the imagination. Huge urban blocks, surging arteries, expanding ring roads, metros, airports, refineries, power plants, bullet trains, a city that devours the countryside, scraping the mountains and the sky. A world city.

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Happy 2008

January 2, 2008

Year of Demokracy

Question: Will we get somewhere else by Dec. 31?

Hoping to see you there in peace my friends…

Field of Homespun Dreams

December 6, 2007

Brian Springer Unearths an American Obsession

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Why would an audacious underground filmmaker choose the year 2007 to release a highly personal work about the missing memoirs of a nineteenth-century rural anarchist woman and the compulsive diggings of a Korean war veteran obsessed with hidden treasure? Where’s the relation between this allegorical tale and the author’s earlier work with satellite TV? And what’s really buried beneath the tranquil fields of southern Missouri? These are the questions that come to mind upon viewing Brian Springer’s new film, The Disappointment: Or, the Force of Credulity.

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October 23, 2007

Face Value

Currencies of the Signature in Contemporary Art
Catalogue text for Worthless (Invaluable), Galerija Moderna, Ljubljana, 2000

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François Deck with Swiss francs (L’artiste et son double)
[This is a text from bygone days, but it might still be interesting for somebody…]

 

Even when it appears to have crystallized in an object—let’s say an artwork, or a commodity—value is always a term in a relationship, a term of measurement to overcome the uncertainties of an exchange. Value arises as a disputed measure when something is to be given, or more acutely, when something is to be taken away. It is a discourse, an emotion, a memory, a desire, or all of these at once, when they come into play around an impending division or change in the state of things. The question of value presses upon us with the force of a disquieting, disruptive gaze. Whereas money, in its classical forms, is largely an attempt to neutralize or eliminate the anxiety of value-relations, i.e. the face-to-face relations of society. It claims to achieve absolute equivalence between objects, and above all between people, with no remainder. As Lacan once put it, money is “le signifiant le plus annihilant qui soit,” the most annihilating signifier of them all.1 And yet everywhere, the mathematical fluidity of money is haloed with very personal questions, incessantly debated between the takers, the givers, even the spectators of monetary exchange. Money gives rise to a necessarily incarnate anxiety, seemingly conjured up by the very system designed to conjure it away.

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Forthcoming from Autonomedia:

September 13, 2007

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UNLEASHING THE COLLECTIVE PHANTOMS

Essays in Reverse Imagineering

These insurgent essays describe, prolong and critique some of the cultural and artistic projects that arose with the worldwide wave of protests around the turn of the millennium, against what the global South calls neoliberalism. Dissent and the refusal of a programmed existence continually return to the streets; but they also unfold in the imagination. Complex discourses and elaborate fictions weave their way through images, gestures and hilarious scenarios, hovering at the edges of reality and searching for whoever will give them voice. Museums, cinemas, books and theaters are temporary abodes for such things, and authors are only a convenience. But none of the wilder spirits ever really disappears. Time leaches away the graffiti of revolt, and the cynicism of power lays a new coat of paint. Still the collective phantoms return.

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FUTURE MAP

September 9, 2007

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We are living through a movement from an organic industrial society to a polymorphous information systemfrom all work to all play, a deadly game.

Donna Haraway, The Cyborg Manifesto


In his final book, published in 1964 at the height of the industrial boom under the title of God & Golem, Inc.
, the scientist Norbert Wiener asked a question: “Can God play a significant game with his own creature? Can any creator, even a limited one, play a significant game with his own creature?”1 The example he used was trivial: a computer program for playing checkers, written by A.L. Samuel of the IBM corporation. As for the definition of “significant,” it’s not very clear: but Wiener does observe that just as in the contest between God and Lucifer, the programmer may well lose the game.

He had reason to be nervous. During the war he had worked on electronic targeting mechanisms and had come to conceive the feedback loop as a model for every kind of purpose, whether of animals or machines. In December of 1944, acting jointly with his colleagues Howard Aiken and John von Neumann, he invited a select group of researchers to join a “Teleological Society” to study the intersections of neurology and engineering.2 The name made use of a term that had previously been reserved for the final causes of speculative philosophers and theologians. Soon after its first meeting, the Teleological Society transformed into the famous Macy Conferences on “Circular Causal and Feedback Mechanisms in Biological and Social Systems” – a title summed up as “Cybernetics” after Wiener had coined the word in 1947.

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SWARMACHINE

July 21, 2007

Activist Media Tomorrow*

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Milano, EuroMayday 2004: “The metropolis is a beast, let’s cultivate micropolitics for resistance”


What happened at the turn of the millennium, when a myriad of recording devices were hooked up to the Internet and the World Wide Web became an electronic prism refracting all the colors of a single anti-capitalist struggle? What kind of movement takes to the barricades with samba bands and videocams, tracing an embodied map through a maze of virtual hyperlinks and actual city streets? The organizational aesthetics of the networked movements was called “tactical media,” a concept that mixed the quick-and-dirty appropriation of consumer electronics with the subtle counter-cultural anthropology of Michel de Certeau. The idea was to evoke a new kind of popular subjectivity, constitutionally “under the radar,” impossible to identify, constantly shifting with the inventions of digital storytelling and the ruses of open-source practice. Too bad so much of this subversive process was frozen into a single seductive phrase.

In the neutralizing languages of academia and in the showrooms of the electronic arts festivals, “tactical media” has come to describe playful or satirical incursions into everyday consumer reality: the digital graffiti of the neoliberal city, the info-poetics of the postmodern multitudes. But in the early days there was something much more virulent at stake: grassroots impatience with old-left hierarchies, overflowing anger against governments and businesses, an urge to rethink the art of campaigning on the fly – all of which were at the center of the Next 5 Minutes gatherings in Amsterdam in the 1990s, before pouring out into the streets at the century’s turn. Only when the urgency subsided (or was repressed by the police) did the multiple inventions of daily media-life become aesthetics-as-usual, enjoyed by specialist consumers and supported by the state, for the benefit of the corporations. A decade after Seattle, we still don’t understand the role of decentralized media intervention as a catalyst for grassroots action at the global scale. The concept of “tactical media” should be abandoned for another one, closer to what really happened on the streets and on the screens, and richer with promises for the future.

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ESCAPE THE OVERCODE

July 20, 2007

Guattari’s Schizoanalytic Cartographies,
or the Pathic Core at the Heart of Cybernetics

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[The following will soon become a full-length text. Wish me luck! – BH]

Deleuze insisted that you have to seek out the problems to which concepts respond, if you want to understand their meaning and potential. These problems present themselves in the immediacy of social life – in aesthetics, therapeutics, politics, technics, etc. – but also at more abstract levels of articulation. In this text I will analyze cybernetics as a problem to which A Thousand Plateaus, and later, Cartographies schizoanalytiques, offer responses. In particular, I’ll examine Guattari’s attempt to create a “metamodelization” of the ways people join experimental assemblages in order to escape the behavioral patterning of cybernetic systems.

Cybernetics should be understood as the most broadly applied social science of the postwar period. This is due to its origins. Read the rest of this entry »

PEACE-FOR-WAR

July 20, 2007

Phases of Breadth and Depth in the World Economy

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[This is a hypothesis about the phase-structure of the world economy, written during the last Israel-Lebanon war and presented in Munich at the Dictionary of War event in July 2006. I intend to give some further development to the cybernetics part of the argument, which is where I might be able to make a contribution to Bichler and Nitzan’s impressive work. – BH]

The concept I’m going to present draws directly from the work of Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan. It describes the economic phases of “depth” and “breadth,” and correlates them with the first- and second-order cybernetics of control. It attempts to situate the functions of cultural-communicational labor within these economic phases. It questions those autonomist Marxists who thought it would be possible to transform a broadly expansionary phase of capitalism, like that of the ‘90s, into a qualitatively different society. It’s not a polemic, but seeks to open up a field of strategic debate. It doesn’t assert a future, but observes the unfolding of the present into the depths of violence, which has robbed resistance movements of their potential, again. The concept is Peace-for-War.

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Upcoming Events

July 18, 2007

Zagreb Continental Drift Seminar Nov. 27-31

Invitation

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Nuclear Power Plant near Yerevan, Armenia

A continent is a name for immensity without reserve: a mass of land so large you can never imagine the end of it, the ground of everything. Yet the questions we want to raise are intimate ones, which over the course of recent decades have crept their way into the thoughts and feelings of individuals, associations, cultural groups, professional or political formations and even nations, when they are faced with the emergence of a society beyond all borders, a non-place where the continents themselves begin to loose their moorings.

How to conceive of a world society? When and why do people begin to speak of it? Where to locate it, how to perceive it? For whom does it appear, whose interests does it serve or threaten? What are its origins, its laws and regularities, its chances of lasting till next year? Does it have a taste or a color, a wavelength or a rhythm? Above all, should I be part of it? Should we be part of it? How to take that decision – or assert that refusal?

In 1997, Ulrich Beck published a book in the form of a question: What is globalization? His answer: it is a world society without a world government, where outdated national institutions tend to dissolve between the twin extremes of transnational capital and hyperindividualism. Yet Beck is not a fatalist. Rejecting the belief in globalism as a fait accompli whose only agents are giant corporations, he suggested an examination of the transformational processes affecting communications, culture, economics, labor organization, civil associations and the ecology. He conceived world society as a “multiplicity without unity,” and believed its emergence could be measured by the degree to which distinct social groups become aware of and debate these transformations: their origins, causes, spatial distributions, effects and susceptibility to change and redirection. The political question would be this: “how, and to what extent, people and cultures around the world relate to one another in their differences, and to what extent this self-perception of world society is relevant to how they behave.”

So far, so good. Become aware of social change, and find the languages that can express it! But Beck still refers to self-perception “as staged by the national media.” We’re looking for something different: the consciousness of the present as expressed by artistic inventions, on “stages” ranging from museums, universities and theaters to social centers, hacklabs and cabarets, the Internet and the streets. Rather than relying on studies and scientific procedures, let’s see how these expressions of the present are debated in the forums, circuits, institutions, self-organized meetings and counter-public spheres that have proliferated across the planet in recent years. What’s elusive are ways to sound out multiplicity, solidarity and resistance, all of which don’t only arise in words. Form, image, concept, rhythm, experiment, intervention, rupture: these are aesthetic devices for touching the world, and taking part in a world conversation.

Throughout the twentieth century the visual languages of modernism offered a means of communication, culminating more recently in a massive overflow of biennials, traveling shows, exchange programs and markets – contested from below by an explosion of autonomous interventions, self-organized circuits and alternative modes of production. Since the end of hegemonic modernism in the 1960s the definition and value of art has been a subject of intense dispute, resulting in a focus on process rather than object, a shift towards activism and group experimentation. This questioning of frames and contexts has led to the inclusion of sociological, philosophical, economic, political and psychological concepts within the very contours of the works. But this whole development is deeply ambiguous. Even as artistic circles have extended their geographic and discursive reach and tended to morph into sites of generalized experimentation, public consciousness has retained the twentieth-century definition of art as the signifier of individualism, legitimating an endless range of formal innovations, of cultural and individual eccentricities. This proliferation of choices is exactly what allows for the increasingly deep integration of art to the market, not only as a luxury object or attribute of personal distinction, but also as the prime example of innovative, value-adding production processes in the risky environment of the information economy. The upshot being that art seems to mirror and internalize the global transformations, in their mix of multifarious complexity and one-dimensional standardization.

What to do? This project began in the USA in 2005, with a still-ongoing series of self-organized seminars held at 16 Beaver Streen in New York. The idea was to look at artworks and activist projects through a geopolitical and geocultural lens, in order to find some clues for future practices. We had to start with the sweeping transformations since 1989: the triumph of Anglo-American capitalism and the extension across the planet of a single technological, financial and organizational toolkit, permitting the unrestricted flow of goods, money and labor. Existing ideas could not help us much here. Postmodern theorists had been analyzing the globalization of capital since the early 1980s. They focused on the universalization of the commodity-form as an alienation from any traditional identity, yet also on the market’s capacity to mediate individual and cultural differences through the play of reception. For them, commodity and cultural aspiration are one and the same. But for people working in the wake of the financial crisis of 1997-98, the counter-globalization movement of 1999-2003, the second Intifada in Palestine and the unfinished wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the postmodern analytic is arrogant and unbelievably shallow. Beyond the surface agitation of the commodity-form and its endless variations, there are necessary revolts and radical contestations of the world order, underwritten by more ambiguous, long-term reactions to the unbearable pressures of hypercapitalism.

Already since the 1980s, but more intensely right now, we see large-scale political attempts to supplement or replace the violently deterritorializing dynamic of globalization by the installation of new territorial and cultural norms, which are often conservative or regressive, but which also point to the forgotten and unavoidable questions of solidarity, redistribution of the wealth, care for the natural and human ecology and respect for the others who share the common space of existence. Because of the ruptures of scale brought by the world-girding processes of globalization, the new territorial norms are conceived and manifested not only at a national but also at a regional or continental level, in the search for a new unit of social and economic organization that can stand up to the tremendous forces unleashed by contemporary capitalism. These regional blocs can be seen at varying stages of emergence in Europe, East Asia, Latin America, the Russian Federation and North America itself, or in more incomplete and tragic forms, in Africa and the Middle East. Their ambivalent relations to the Anglo-American imperial structures is the first aspect of the “continental drift” that we are investigating.

But what can the geopolitical lens reveal, when it’s a matter of artistic invention? As cultural producers caught up in transnational exchanges, we’re not going to deny the cultural realities of globalization; but we can’t find much interest in the claims of a total break with the past or a seamless integration to the market. What needs to be understood are the linguistic communities and complex regimes of translation within which the formation of cultural value is asserted and contested. At every scale (intimate, urban, national, continental) specific debates unfold, in relation to a field or continuum of gesture, but also to the ruptures that traverse it, renew it or render it obsolete. Although no one could keep up with developments all around the world, or even desire to do so, it has become obvious that much more attention needs to be paid to the circuits and scales in which an invention or a debate gains consistency. To believe that New York is still the hegemonic center of an “art world” in the singular, or that all the values that matter can be hammered on the block at a Sothebys auction, is both stupid and dangerous, as cultural clashes everywhere are proving. But the same holds for people who believe that critical formulas can simply be “applied,” without having to be put to the test each time: that is, dissolved and transformed through contact with speaking subjects. Across the planet, the renegotiation of the scales at which our societies are organized brings with it an intense debate about what art is, how it can be interpreted, what its places and uses should be and even who are its practitioners. And the same debates usually spill over into larger ones, about the forms, functions and possible uses of social institutions. To be part of a multiple but not integrated world society is to engage in these debates – or at least to have an inkling of their existence.

On one hand, we want to identify some of the places and channels in which significant discussions are unfolding, and to become more familiar with their vocabularies and protocols, their controversies, heresies and temporary resolutions, so as to help restore part of the complexity and depth that has been lost to the mesmerizing force of the commodity regime and its insistent visuality. The hypothesis is that by seeking articulations on a regional or continental scale, we might find circuits of translation and interchange that are able to address the global dynamics without falling back on preconceived national reflexes. On the other hand, we do not exactly dream of a world-in-blocs, whose last expression was the Cold War and whose historical forerunners in the twentieth century are the rival monetary and military blocs that formed in the crisis-years of the 1930s. The new discussions of solidarity and redistribution will never get anywhere except into unbearably suffocating fantasies of the national, ethnic or religious past, if they don’t find room for the most diverse forms of dissent, free play and hybridity, or cultural and continental bridging. What interests us above all are particular groups, who come to grips with their societies’ attempts at responding to the overall processes of transformation. Those who propose parallel paths, new openings, deeper and slower or, on the contrary, swifter and more incisive resolutions to the impasses where conflicts form and violence erupts without reason.

It’s clear that this kind of work cannot only be carried out theoretically. Nor can it be done on isolated stages. What we’re looking for, in New York and Zagreb for the moment, are places of encounter and exchange, of multiple expression and collective analysis, where specialized discourses can expose themselves to the disruptive or enigmatic complexities of art – but also of society and its intractable realities. The forms, rhythms, concepts and images that confront us on the international circuits and in the global markets do not seem adequate to world society. The definitions, values and uses of art still have to be created, at whatever scales you can touch with your senses.

Documetaphors

July 8, 2007

Public presentation 30.06.2007 Documenta Halle

Sureyyya Evren and Brian Holmes

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(click for enlargement)

Two writers/critics met through the tenuous links of the Documenta Magazines project. Maybe they had more in common than either expected. But under the circumstances it was hard to express the enthusiasm. By accident, a speaker in the lecture series canceled out, and suddenly they had a chance to formulate their opinions. The idea was to share perceptions transformed into metaphors. Time was short, but satire and humor leapt to their conclusions. Which haven’t changed in retrospect.

Here they are:

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Etcétera’s 10th Birthday!

July 6, 2007

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¡ Celebrated at Centro Cultural Recoleta in Buenos Aires !

“For us it’s really important that a critical-political language be accompanied or carried out with one foot on the barricades and the other in dreams.”

Etcétera presents

the Errorist International

Key Points:

  1. We are all Errorists.

  2. The basis of Errorist action is Error.

  3. Errorism is a mistaken philosophical position. Ritual of negation. Disorganized organization.

  4. Errorism’s field of action includes all practices tending toward the LIBERATION of human beings and of language.

  5. Failure as perfection, error as bull’s eye.

  6. Errorism: It Isn’t, and it Is. It gets nearer, it slips away. Self-creates and self-destroys. Lives up to its old and new forms. (sometimes without explanations, and who knows, maybe it’s totally banal).

Download the 10th anniversary blowout catalogue!

Articles by Marcelo Expósito, Mercedes Ezquiaga and video on Clarín!

And, best of all if you don’t speak Spanish: a slideshow of the exhibition!


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