Armin Medosch on Tue, 18 Mar 2014 09:24:01 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Fields - patterns of social, scientific, and technological transformations. |
Dear Nettimers, Being aware that this is not a list to send announcements to, I would like to share a few thoughts with you, written today specifically for this occasion. I would like to invite you to the exhibition Fields which will open at the Arsenals Exhibition Hall of the Latvian National Museum of Art May 15 - August 3, 2014. You can find the full announcement here: http://www.thenextlayer.org/fieldsexhibition Fields was from the start devised as a discoursive event. What I mean by that is that, as an exhibition, it had set itself a task. It asked as a research question "Which expanded fields of artistic practice offer new ideas for overcoming the crisis of the present and developing new models of a more sustainable and imaginative way of life." 30 years ago the second half of the sentence would simply have read "developing progressive forms of social change" or something like that. But anything that has 'progress' included has simply become impossible. It seems that the necessary critique of false universals of modernism now prevents us from conceptualising anything progressive at all. Yet the need for change is almost too obvious. In our press release we have written: The changing role of art in society is one where it does not just create a new aesthetics but gets involved in patterns of social, scientific, and technological transformations. Fields, jointly curated by Rasa Smite, Raitis Smits and Armin Medosch, presents an inquiry into patterns of renewal and transition. Those "patterns of renewal and transition" are the challenge that we have posed for ourselves with this exhibition. We live in a world where technological systems have acquired great importance. It is like society is hooked into them, like a life-support system. But at the same time those systems have become the problem, not the solution. If we look at energy, agriculture, transport, systems of production, it is clear that the ideology of limitless expansion is driving us straight into catastrophe. Everybody knows that, but while there are many initiatives, mainstream society seems to be blindly following its course, unable to change. In this situation new patterns are urgently needed, new ways of thinking, but not just that, new ways of interacting with the world, with technology, with nature. An ecological turn is overly due, but to achieve this seems almost utopian within current social relations. In this situation art can provide new models, new directions, but those are models, like in a mini-mundus world. Art gives Form to the imagination, Herbert Marcuse wrote. And this artistic imagination we are talking about in Fields is involved in the construction of a new society. Art produces projections of a different social reality, where the forces of nature are used in new and imaginative ways and in combination with social mechanisms which are maybe less dominated by power from above, more driven from a power from within, from our own desires and our own potential. Fields thus is about what Toni Negri called potenza constituente and about an ontological inquiry. As things currently stand those activities and propositions presented in Fields are quite marginal. However, the big hope is that despite all the forces that are focused on preventing any real change from happening, the power of the multitude would aggregate all those desires and suddenly acquire critical mass, This is one of the characteristics of network society. We don't need to ask permission to change the world, we don't need to look to the state or corporations to do it for us, we can start right now, through or own critical and constructive inquiries. And if that resonates with other people it can go viral, and you suddenly have a new movement (or at least a trending hash-tag). I admit we are terrible optimists, we still think we can change the world, or that at least we should try. So let me give you a few examples. On one hand we have work in the exhibition that is critical vis-a-vis the powers that be. However, even work that is coming more from a critical direction is sometimes subverting power in a deluge of laughter. Think of Hayley Newman's work for instance. She comes from a tradition of performance from the fine arts. She made herself a 'self-appointed artist-in-residency in the City of London', you know, the financial district where they run the algorithms that destroy the planet. So she printed a name card and walked into a bank branch and asked if she could do a bank rubbery. It is no misspelling, from 'to rub a bank', make a frottage, a technique where you put a paper over something and then rub it with a pen or piece of graphite/chalk so that the underlying form comes through. In that way, she has rubbed several dozens of banks and together they become a Histoire Economique, like a natural history of the banks in the City. That's how we will exhibit them, in vitrines, like dried plants in the natural history museum. The artist reminds us that those banks are also just social forms that come and go. Another work, Kayak Libre, by Manu Luksch, is offering a ride in a water taxi in exchange for a conversation. She calls it a temporal experimental infrastructure. Will it solve the transport problems of the world? Certainly not. But it allows you to explore the world in a new way, a very slow and contemplative way, and as such it formulates a critique of the notion of progress - a very gentle form of critique. Paris based artist duo HeHe is doing this work with disused railways, deploying strange new contraptions that can move on rails. To avoid asking the same rhetorical question twice, I can say straight away that they will also not solve pressing transport and energy issues. But what both those works do is catapult us into a different universe, giving form to imagination, where almost anything seems possible. And quite many works are of this more constructive type. For more examples I would like to refer you to the second part of the press release (see link above and also below) that has a lot of examples. To go back to the more general question, if you look at those examples, you may wonder, maybe we are stretching the envelope too far. This is a very heterogeneous show. But this stems from the notion of Fields. We asked which transdisciplinary combinations of Fields carry the greatest potentials for more sustainable and imaginative ways of life. And every work gives a different answer to that question. It is endless, the power of the imaginative mind to create and construct the world. It is also very political but in a very specific sense. To quote Marcuse again, 'political art' is a monstrous term. The art shown in Fields has very little to do with what would traditionally be conceived as political art. Political here is this power to construct and invent the world, every day, by so many people, from so many sources. That goes, without saying, also beyond the notion of art as we know it. It is the 'self-creation of man' in exchange with nature as young Marx put it. And that will never stop. That said, I hope to see many of you in Riga in May best Armin http://www.thenextlayer.org/fieldsexhibition # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org