Andreas Broeckmann on Thu, 3 Sep 1998 23:11:54 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> review Lab: Yearbook 1998 for Arts and Apparatuses, Cologne |
Lab: Yearbook 1998 for Arts and Apparatuses of the Academy of Media Art in Cologne What do you expect from the yearbook of an academic institution? It should give you an insight into the most interesting and innovative work that is being done by the academic staff, by students and related scholars, and it should reflect the wider fields of research and projects that are being covered in and around the school. A best-case scenario is that the book frustrates you, because you haven't been there to witness what happened, while, at the same time, relieving this frustration by giving you the feeling that at least you get an idea about what's going on there. The most recent edition of the annual publication of the Academy of Media Art in Cologne (Kunsthochschule fuer Medien, KHM), Lab: Yearbook 1998 for Arts and Apparatuses, achieves this. It represents the fortunate encounter of interesting content with good editorial work and successful, unobtrusive yet 'appetizing' design. The title, by the way, sounds as sympathetically quaint and under-hyped in German as it does in English. Entree: The cover and the introductory pages show photographs of a weaving project (by Valie Export and Ingrid Wiener) in progress. Then follow a piece about cooking and culinary culture by Georges Wenger, a Brazilian poem, stills from an experimental video project (Herwig Weiser), Jeanine Meerapfel's report about a Tango workshop in which students of the KHM learned a new approach to the presence and movement of bodies in space, and an anonymous film script for an unrealised science fiction movie. This takes us to page 33, from where the mix continuous, although the texts, images, ideas and emotions are quickly beginning to intertwine and form a meshwork that indicates the 'fabric' of discourses and artistic production conducted at the school. The Academy of Media Art is an education and research center which has a particular interest in combining the most recent digital and networking technologies with practical and theoretical work that deals with older media, including video, photography, holography, experimental film, and language. The history of media technologies, film and television studies are a continuing concern, and the work presented in the Yearbook shows the fruitful way in which these different fields are being developed side by side at the school. Contributions to the Yearbook from this research field include Nikolaj Izvolov's study about the 'needle screen animations' of Alexander Alexejew, a text by Renate Bauer about the poetic strategies of Raymond Roussel, excerpts from Gabor Body's Filmschool of 1976, and a text by Michael Erlhoff about the 'Optophon' patented by the German Dadaist Raoul Hausmann in the 1930s. In October 1997, the annual 'Digitale' Symposium organised by the KHM brought together artists and scholars from Tokyo, Sao Paulo and Moscow under the title 'Digitale Dialekte/Digital Dialects'. A reflection of this investigation into different mentalities and expressive strategies is also to be found in the Lab Yearbook which, beside the texts already mentioned, also includes several poems by the Brazilian poets Waly Salamao and Antonio Cicero, a report by the Brazilian Carlos Nader about his experiences and media theoretical considerations as a TV producer, and an illustrated vignette by Marcelo Tas about the intricacies of intercultural communication and mis/understanding. This is media theory and history not as a dry philological discipline, but as a sort of 'dribbling', that way of playing football (soccer) of which Brazilians are such masters. Two short remarks: The KHM's Music Department and the events it has organised are briefly referenced, though a broader contextualisation of the work that is being done between the image and the sound based disciplines is something that could be attempted in future editions of the Yearbook. Special mention should be made of a text by the Paris-based social scientist Maurizio Lazzarato who deals with Dziga Vertov's concept of the 'Camera Eye' as a 'war machine' in the sense of the strategic, deterritorialising tool that Guattari and Deleuze describe in 'Milles Plateaux'. Unlike previous editions of the Lab Yearbook, this year's volume contains no texts by either of the editors, Hans Ulrich Reck, Nils Roeller and Siegfried Zielinski. In some way this is a pity, and it indicates that there is, this time, less of a theoretical inclination in the contents of the book. Yet, they console us with a fine piece of editing that gives us, as an echo to the critical culinary theory at the beginning, three prose miniatures by John Berger about the tasty sensuality of peaches, melons and cherries. Thus fulfilling some of the promise given in the preface which says that language 'is not only expression and material. But also below and between, before and beyond signification, form and starting point of a moving practice, a model for the poetic movement in images, actions and thoughts. As a red thread through its texture, the Yearbook for Arts and Apparatuses offers Kairos-poetics of word-images as a grain against the chrono-cracy of understanding media merely as apparatuses.' PS: An obvious limitation of the book for an international readership is that almost all its texts are in German. Take it as proof of the fact that there are a lot of interesting discourses all over the world in languages other than English. Lab: Jahrbuch 1998 fuer Kuenste und Apparate. Ed. by Kunsthochschule fuer Medien Koeln. Cologne: Buchhandlung Walther Koenig, 1998. ISBN 3-88375-324-6 http://www.khm.de http://www.digitale.khm.de Andreas Broeckmann (1 September 1998) [Review for Leonardo Digital Review] --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl