Inke Arns on Tue, 8 Sep 1998 16:39:39 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Igor Markovic: Why One Evening... |
Dear Syndicalists, this text by Igor Markovic will be included in the next Syndicate reader. Best wishes, Inke ------------------------------------------------------ Why One Evening In Ljubljana Is Better Than Five Days Of a â??New Media" Festival in Zagreb? * Igor Markovic Media Scape 5, International New Media Festival Zagreb, Museum of Contemporary Art, 18 - 22 November 1997 CAE: Flesh Machine, lecture & performance Ljubljana; Kapelica Gallery 25 November 1997 1. Embryo of an uncertain future Critical Art Ensemble is a group of five to six media artists, theoreticians and activists mostly from Chicago, and is one of the best things that has happened in the past couple dozens of years in the art world. Their performances, along with their books (The Electronic Disturbance, Electronic Civil Disobedience), together with public appearances in all parts of the globe, are a significant breakthrough from the classical, old-fashioned and boring limited spaces in which most of the artists and â??art-theoreticiansâ?? wiggle helplessly into an almost tabooised sphere of electronic control and manipulation. They appear as a direct consequence of digital networking, globalisation processes, and everything which will be in a very near future simply an everyday fact. Their interventions into sacred spaces of authority present provocation pointed both to the dilapidated tradition of cultural policy of public sphere and to the futuristic presumptions of technology implications for generations intoxicated with â??virtualisationâ??. CAE usually work on a field of questioning possibilities of new body in virtual environments, and came to the conclusion that virtual body can not be economically reproduced, so it's meaningless for everyday labor division. The virtual body is a body of great potential. On this body we can reinscribe ourselves using whatever coding system we desire. We can try on new body configurations. We can experiment with immortality by going to places and doing things that would be impossible in the physical world. For the virtual body, nothing is fixed and everything is possible. Indeed, this is the reason why hackers wish to become disembodied consciousnesses flowing freely through cyberspace, willing the idea of their own bodies and environments. (â??Utopian Promises - Net Realitiesâ??, lecture at Interface 3) Now, turning frontally to the body very convincingly they argue that dreams about virtuality are nothing but a spectacular show for real action: development of biotechnology pointed to the real citizen's bodies in the service of transnational order. If virtual bodies are just a false promise, so useless on the market, what can be done, and what is done with the real bodies in the postindustrial age? Flesh Machine is their answer. It's unusual mixture is a melange of traditional lecture and classical performance, a bastard form which proves its value as being very successful and easy to understand, but also acting in accordance with the implementation of bastard technologies which we are witnessing. Such a bastard show is very hard to transpond on to paper, and it's hard to say what they were doing", unlike what one can do with classical performing arts, or lectures, in which it is not so hard to catch the basic topic, form and performing characteristics in a few sentences. The common denominator of the â??performing partâ?? was one possible answer to the question of the future of human reproduction, and what is going on with genetic experiments. The public was able to save the embryo which should be removed from it's criocontainer. Namely, to decide whether the embryo will be stored to fulfill future market needs, or removed to make space for â??betterâ?? embryos. And, voilà , they kill the embryo in a second. Also they present the BioCom CD-ROM, sexual education for the third millennium which teaches kids new in vitro fertilisation technology. And, voila, they make a baby in a second. Visitors were also given the opportunity to give a DNA sample, and store it for future market needs. The â??lecture partâ?? is a little bit easier to reproduce. The essence was thinking about new image technologies which enable body images to be fragmented, disassembled and again put together in a new way. New imaging technologies better allow body images to be disassembled and reframed. Interior body space can now be represented in whatever way best fulfills the needs of the market. For example, through sonographic imaging, uterine space can be represented as a part of the wholistic bio-system of the woman, or as an independent space belonging to the fetus. Thereby, media can be produced to reinforce whatever political position is the most advantageous. With this new imaging technology, the body can be fragmented and reconfigured to conform to the pancapitalist ideology of organic spatial order. (Telepolis) Rationalisation of reproductive processes already produce a massive market for body â??products (egg, sperm, embryos'). At this very moment, reproductive products and services are primarily a luxury market and products are not fully reliable. When we talk about technology, focus is mainly on new information and communication technologies. That only makes sense, from the market viewpoint, since new technologies offer, on the first look, a new utopian frontier for the public; however those who work every day with the complex new technologies,are very well aware that their primary function is to push market dynamics, which will intensify the working process. Organic systems - humans for example - in our technocracy can not stand on the top of that acceleration. It's too late for decelerating the economic machine of technoculture, and the only solution is in drastic body reconfigurations. One of the leading genetic scientists in the thirties, Frederick Osborne, believed that genetic engineering will be accepted as a part of normal everyday life. In an era of â??surplus economyâ?? and â??nucleus familyâ??, people will not only be willing to be a part of genetic manipulations, but they will also pay for them. Market competition, and richness as an ultimate measure of the quality of life, will force people to accept â??anythingâ?? which may help them to be â??more successfulâ?? on the market. Such a future still is not a present, and first attempts at voluntary participation in genetic researche are just isolated experiments. If such a scenario is good or bad, CAE do not explicitly show. Their performance/lecture is not an ultimative answer, rather just a viewpoint, presentation of possibilities, a warning; in other words an embryo of uncertain future. What we will do with that embryo - collect it and care for it in virtual cryotanks, or terminate it as a genetically incorrect - is still our choice. 2. Brats of a gloomy present Media Scape 5 is much easier to describe, one of the reasons is that there was no clear connection between different presented works, e.g. lack of straight concept of the festival in whole. Another missing link was the approach to the new media art. Everyday video screening, followed with not especially interesting conversations with the authors (usual more kind of technical workshop of how they were doing certain parts, and not why), was accomplished with an exhibition - very strange and diverse, the common point was only the use of technology. Unfortunately, despite to some well known names (Lawrence Wallen, Heiko Daxl, Marko Kosnik), the final product, offered to the public was something between play and experiment. Minimalism, present in some of the works, and particularly the mixing of different forms, were not founded in any kind of theory, as one should expect. Even if left aside the question of the engagement of an art work, which is one of the conditions for participation at any festival (â??pureâ?? art is not so fancy anymore), art without theoretical support (in this particular case it was natural to expect some traces of contemporary media theory) can not create a relevant artwork, no matter how it may be technically superior. But, what was offered to the Zagreb public was not even on technical level good, it's just a collection of average works. Not a single avoided the tendency towards the many kinds of social reflection, and not a single piece was anything but traditional artwork attempting to be beyond reality. Lost in artspace. Using a traditional, exceeded concept of art from the nineteenth century - the artists somehow isolated themselves from reality, created, and then returned to reality to show the work, which will be verified and become Art. With such a concept artists put themselves on a quasidistance from events, - exclude themselves from dynamics of reality. Transfer to passive position of cognition of finished history, and lose active position of taking part, responsibility, uncertainty, contingency, position which stand that mistake is legitimate. It's impossible to be beyond society, beyond criticized circumstances and state, beyond the same matter which is putting in question. CAE do not hide behind â??Artâ??. They are offering a clear and precise picture of their explorations and that is something nobody can stay indifferent to, in other words unmotivated for rethinking. Exhibits at MediaScape stick to the old line that art long time ago surrendered to good taste, which demand that words or images, even when they are allowed to disturb, never should destroy. Shock of pleasure, shock of the new, destructive and surprising, which art was traditionally producing, is removed from such works. Media Scape 5 is something like Babylon 5. Technically it's a good job for the usual gallery visitor in Zagreb (intellectual snob, in other words) cool, sexy, new, but the content (not to talk about the context) just does not exist. But it's a very important event. It disguises in a very transparent way the situation in Zagreb art scene, particularly in the field of new media. If we know that the only quotation of media theory in â??officialâ?? art circles (curators, art historians, scca stuff) was one from Being Digital, it's clear why Media Scape 5, as the only exhibition of new media art in Zagreb (excluding some individuals attempts like projects of Darko Fritz or Magdalena Pederin) is constructed like it was. The idea of belonging to any kind of unclear identities, expression of doubtness in the idea of â??progressâ??, or any kind of attempt for re-thinking of reality through the art work is not welcome. Is obsolete in the atmosphere predominating by vision of high culture as the Culture. Is that what should be offered to the public a nice, smooth vision of a lovely world with singing birds on every corner, works which by no means should make them think? After all how else should old-fashioned academic professors, self-proclaimed as a cultural elite survive? Asking questions was never accepted with sympathy in Zagreb. Under the shadow of a nationalistic government, even â??liberalâ?? artists and theoretician very often decide that it's much easier to accept conditions in which art should be a simulation of a politically promised better future. If this sounds like soc-realism, do not worry - it's precisely the same vocabulary, exactly the same denying of global processes, the same ignorance and same autoghettoisation. No good for art, no good for artists, no good for the audience, but the only way for established art-service structures to remain in power. In that sense the CAE message that we still can choose our future, and resist the (genetical engineering) manipulations of our own bodies was missed. The future, according to organisers of Media Scape, will be as gloomy as the present is. And the final message is after all a very simple one - do not churn, and everything will be fine. Tonight. Note * An earlier version of this text was published in Arkzin No. 100/1 i n k e . a r n s __________________________ b e r l i n ___ 49.(0)30.3136678 | inke@berlin.snafu.de | http://www.v2.nl/~arns/ offline 1-6 September 1998