Brian Holmes on Mon, 23 Feb 2015 22:35:22 +0100 (CET)


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<nettime> World of Matter


Greets everyone.

The exhibition "World of Matter" opened on February 20 in Montreal:
http://ellengallery.concordia.ca/en/expositions_worldofmatter.php

This exceptionally philosophical exhibition on global agriculture and extraction technologies is also a web platform, http://www.worldofmatter.net. In my view, the website represents a definitive breakthrough for open and free access to socially significant art.
Below is my review of the show as it was recently presented in New York. 
The illustrated and linked version of the review is here:
http://midwestcompass.org/something-that-has-to-do-with-life-itself

**********************

"Something that has to do with life itself"

A review of *World of Matter*

CUNY Graduate Center, New York, 9/1-11/1, 2014 / by Brian Holmes

How to face the natural crisis of global society? How to engage with the overwhelming material conditions of the Anthropocene? In the year 2014, awareness of human-induced global warming seemed to reach a kind of planetary tipping-point. Yet earlier experiences like the Fukushima meltdown, the BP oil spill or the flooding of New Orleans show that profound shocks to consciousness can be erased by dull, everyday reinforcements of the industrial norm. The point is to go beyond just reacting to the next inevitable blowout. If we want to break the cycle of disaster, public outcry and induced denial, then changes in our mental maps, or indeed, in our shared cosmologies, must be followed by transformations of our social institutions. Maybe it's not such a bad idea to begin exactly where World of Matter does, with the institutions of representation. At stake is the relation between the capacity to make images of worldly things and the capacity to remake an inhabitable world.
I would like to open this review with a philosophical proposal. The link 
between image and world is at the heart of what the philosopher 
Cornelius Castoriadis calls the "imaginary institution of society." For 
him, the radical imaginary is "the capacity to posit that which is not, 
to see in something that which is not there." But the question is not 
*whether* this is done, for all societies are so instituted. The 
question is *what* do we invent, how do we see the world? How do we 
institute a new territory, a new reality? If we could learn to perceive 
other things than the objects of our desires, other beings than 
ourselves alone, then the radical imagination could provide the missing 
key to a currently unthinkable planetary democracy. For Castoriadis, 
emancipation is the process whereby the collective self (autos) creates 
its own laws (nomos). This is done, not only through negociation over 
meaningful words, but also through the circulation of affective images. 
As he writes: "I call autonomous a society that not only knows 
explicitly that it has created its own laws but has instituted itself so 
as to free its radical imaginary and enable itself to alter its 
institutions through collective, self-reflective, and deliberate activity."
Today the societies of the so-called developed world have no such 
autonomy. We cannot even imagine the collectivity, let alone the laws or 
the norms that could resolve the natural crisis of global society. The 
very possibility of change remains invisible, like a spirit in a rock 
that you can't see. Yet that missing spirit may have everything to do 
with your own material survival. A foundational role awaits for artistic 
images at grips with the planetary real.
The exhibition and web platform World of Matter follows crisscrossed 
paths through a number of major processes whereby humans are 
transforming the land, the water and the atmosphere. For this ongoing 
visual research, a core group of some ten authors carries out 
documentary probes, cartographic renderings, scientific explorations and 
juridical analyses of worldly matters that include oil and mineral 
extraction, industrialized and organic agriculture, dams, water-works 
and fisheries. The results so far have been shown in Dortmund, Germany, 
and at the CUNY Graduate center in New York, with further showings 
coming up in Montreal and Minneapolis. The majority of the videos, 
photographs, maps and texts can be consulted at www.worldofmatter.net. 
They focus on human and non-human actors, at scales from macro to micro.
Let's start from the beginning: Ursula Biemann's Egyptian Chemistry, 
which opens the tightly packed exhibition in New York. We're greeted by 
a display of laboratory flasks and beakers, echoing a video image 
projected high against the back of the gallery, showing a white-coated 
scientist manipulating the same equipment. A tracery of the meandering 
Nile runs laterally along deep blue walls, guiding the eye toward a 
lower projection that shows casually dressed locals gathering water 
samples from the river bank. To the right, three small monitors hang in 
a row, head high, each with dangling headphones. The invitation is 
clear: it's time to take the plunge into complex narratives. At stake in 
each fragmentary sequence is the overwhelming agency of the river, whose 
bounteous and destructive floods have given rise to the water-management 
projects of successive "hydraulic civilizations." How does the Nile flow 
today?
With delicately chosen documentary clips informed by off-screen or 
full-face interviews, the videos tell of dam-building campaigns, 
irrigation technologies, peasant struggles in the countryside and 
scientific testing and modeling of the river's currents. The atmospheric 
physicist Carl Hodges describes utopian schemes to plant 
carbon-absorbing mangroves in seawater canals for the production of 
food, animal feed and biofuels. Standing ankle deep in the tide with his 
sport coat and jaunty leather hat, Hodges rejoins the long line of 
Faustian inventors and developers portrayed in Marshall Berman's 
scathingly critical book, All That Is Solid Melts Into Air. A scandalous 
sense of hubris gathers around those who want to change the very face of 
the earth, or in this case, to lay their own hand on the waters. Yet in 
the face of famines and penuries to come, one can also feel inspired by 
this visionary scientist.
Other modernization campaigns - like making the desert bloom with 
irrigation and antibiotics - do not look anywhere near so good. We see 
the tubes and wheels of an automated sprinkler rolling across parched 
soil like the skeleton of some silvery dinosaur. Eschewing pyramids or 
mummies and looking from the present to the future, Biemann evokes the 
processes of coevolution that have fashioned the Egyptian landscape. 
Inside a warehouse-like structure we see scale models of the flowing 
river and its associated control devices (dams, locks, hydroelectric 
power generators, etc). Fragmentary captions flash up on the screen: 
"Millennia of engineers / who measure and calculate / draw plans and 
build models." We are being asked to conceive how the mind articulates 
vast material transformations.
This show has it own very powerful philosophical debate, provided by 
thinkers like Michel Serres, Donna Haraway, Graham Harman, Timothy 
Morton, Jane Bennet and Bruno Latour. At the close of Ursula Biemann's 
series, in a 2012 video that is not on the website, Harman himself 
appears against the chemical background of tear gas floating into the 
compound of Cairo's American University where he teaches. The key 
concepts of Harman's object-oriented ontology are evoked in a few 
phrases. "All knowledge is oblique, all knowledge is an allusion," he 
says. In this ontology - which is also called "speculative realism" - 
objects inevitably withdraw from direct access. Things exist 
autonomously, on their own terms; they are irreducible to the vagaries 
of our perception. Yet by the same token, "any real relation 
automatically becomes a new object" - that is to say, a mental 
phenomenon, a thing for humans, or what Castoriadis might call a figment 
of the radical imaginary. "That's the political level," Harman explains, 
wiping his eyes against the tear gas. "But I would also say that I do 
not feel the need to ground everything in politics. This idea that the 
cash value of any political philosophy is its political virtues is in a 
way the last phase of correlationist philosophy."
Cash values aside, it's very hard to see how any valid philosophy could 
elude contemporary politics. But Biemann translates Harman's thinking 
into her own exploratory practice, attentive to the complex 
actor-networks that shape the Nile ecology. The point is to pay 
attention to the things themselves, to look outside the closure of 
specific cultural frames. Then we become aware of new agencies. As we 
read on the gallery wall: "Metachemistry is a planetary narration that 
alludes to the earth as a mighty chemical body where the crackling noise 
of the forming and breaking of molecular bonds can be heard at all 
times." So where does metachemistry touch political flesh?
Turn the corner for one answer. A giant Dymaxion map spreads out above a 
vitrine filled with texts and objects. On Buckminster Fuller's 
defamiliarizing cartography, Peter MÃrtenbÃck and Helge Mooshammer have 
located container ship bottlenecks, rare earth deposits, oil and 
immigration choke points - geographical sites where the limits to global 
growth become starkly evident. Each dot on the map warns of future 
crises. "It is here that we find the call for a new ecological 
understanding coalescing with the call for a new political economy," 
reads the wall text. Technoscience makes the molecular global. Case 
studies of disaster-prone environments are presented in the vitrines 
below, initiating us to a vertiginous telescoping of scales.
Take a few steps further: images of huge, highly rationalized fields 
spring into view. You're flying in the air, you're trapped inside an 
endless factory, you're gazing on night-dark furrows stippled with 
bright flocks like snow. Below these large projections, a line-up of 
four small monitors guides you though a planet planted in cotton. From 
Brazil to India to Texas to Burkina Faso, Uwe Martin conducts 
reportage-style interviews with peasants, so-called "conventional" 
farmers, agro-ecological researchers, organic pioneers and the food 
activist Vandana Shiva. Gradually you realize that this distant subject 
is really very close to your own skin. The global scale shrinks down to 
the shirt you are wearing. The planter Gilsen Pinesso recounts how he 
transferred GMO methods from Brazil to the rich black soil of the Sudan, 
where he was invited by a government minister. For ten uncomfortable 
minutes, a cotton-grower from the Global South looks us straight in the 
eye and talks pure corporate strategy. "The Sudanese farmers will take 
some time to internalize all this know-how, all this technology," he 
explains, predicting a ten-year lapse before they complete their 
rendezvous with capitalist destiny.
Those trained in the subtleties of contemporary art tend to shudder when 
they encounter this kind of blunt reportage. Rightly so: because it 
reveals, or even embodies, the banal and continuous violence that links 
us all into the contemporary division of labor.
In the past, vanguard political artists engaged their struggles by means 
of shocking divides, in symbolic portrayals of military conflicts, 
sexual rifts, labor hierarchies, commodity fetishes and excluded or 
self-assertive others. For them, ideology was understood in 
structuralist terms, as a violently deterministic relation between 
individual lives and fundamental symbolic categories. The role of the 
artist or theorist was to lift the veil of particulars and show these 
structures at work in your own life. At best, an existential 
breakthrough might open the floodgates of emancipation. The artists in 
World of Matter take a very different approach. They develop an 
ecological vision that includes human involvement at every turn. By 
focusing on concrete geographical relations such as the circulation of 
goods, technologies and scientific concepts, they trace out a metonymic 
skein that ultimately forces us to recognize ourselves as functioning 
parts of the global whole. The shock, if that's still the word, comes 
not from a split but a suture. We are all Gilsen Pinesso, but each with 
our particular specialties. The coherence of the global system is the 
radical imaginary of contemporary capitalism itself: a pervasive 
just-in-time economy whose ubiquitous flow-objects are not only at your 
fingertips, but also inside you, as world-pictures that you continually 
recreate and propagate through your professional activity. Ideology is 
neither a veil nor a pair of heavy chains, but an actively maintained 
connection between endless sequences of images. At the root (at the 
radical level) the capitalist world economy is a socially instituted 
fiction.
Yet reality, as Harman reminds us, remains distinct from all merely 
human correlations. The strength of World of Matter is to present 
itself, not as fully integrated single narrative, but as distinct and 
recombinable files, fragmentary testimonies from a hearing that is still 
in progress. Its strength to let the world break down into real 
complexity, so that "the crackling noise of the forming and breaking of 
molecular bonds can be heard at all times." So how does chemistry 
dissolve into materialist politics?
Sit down to Paulo Tavares' work: Non-Human Rights. Now you're in for a 
long and fascinating journey through the indigenous struggles of the 
1990s in Ecuador, leading up to the country's new 2008 Constitution 
which recognized the rights of nature, or better, of La Pachamama. 
Scenes of rural protesters and landscapes devastated by oil and mineral 
extraction alternate with quotations from the Michel Serres' 1900 book, 
The Natural Contract. Look at the settling ponds in the jungle, where 
Texaco pumped billions of gallons of toxic effluents from its wells. As 
indigenous activist Luis Macas recounts: "We're fighting for something 
that has to do with life itself." But that living reality is inseparable 
from a cultural idea. At the end of the video, Tavares addresses himself 
directly to the environmentalist Esperanza MartÃnez: "It is said that 
Modernity is that system in which there is one nature and various 
cultures, right? But what you are saying is different. There exist 
various different natures." "Yes," she replies. "Precisely as many as 
there are cultures."
A subtle tension runs throughout this project, between the 
anthropological claim that human groups create their own distinct worlds 
and the central philosophical claim of object-oriented ontology, which 
is that reality withdraws from any merely human correlation. This 
contradiction between the two approaches becomes explicit in Tavares' 
video, where the scenes of extractivist devastation are preceded by 
inter-titles evoking "object-oriented violence." Again this is a 
reference to Michel Serres, who forcefully shows how human beings make 
war on the rest of the living world. But it is also an attack on 
object-oriented thinking. The implication is that philosophy must never 
neglect its ecological context, lest it participate in unbearable 
atrocities.
Nonetheless, Graham Harman's philosophy is vindicated in this same work, 
although in terms he would probably not himself accept. For the "natural 
contract" of which it is question here springs into being through the 
recognition of hitherto ignored and discounted material things - rocks, 
trees, soil, air - which the indigenous people conceive as inseparable 
from "spirits of the forest." There is foundational potential in that 
which withdraws from Western instrumental rationality.
I began this review with the notion of the radical imaginary: a raw 
psychic representation of the world which is normed and stabilized by 
social institutions, but which can also break away, reconfigure itself 
and take new roots among the community of living beings - on the 
condition that social institutions are themselves transformed to match 
the new vision. For Castoriadis, that transformation begins when 
individuals and groups start to recognize that the only guarantee of 
their own autonomy, of their own emancipation and pathway to a good 
life, is to be found in common norms and laws that guarantee good living 
for others. What World of Matter tries to do - with some help from both 
Michel Serres and the speculative realists - is to extend this 
democratic process to non-humans.
Let's close with a short proposal by Mabe Bethonico, an 
artist-researcher from Belo Horizonte, Brazil. It's the "Museum of 
Public Concerns," improvised on the ground in the face of the 
privatization of cultural institutions by mining companies in the 
Brazilian state of Minas Gerais. The recipe for institutional autonomy 
is disarmingly simple: involve sociologists, media theorists, 
anthropologists and artists in the creation of a mobile museum that 
could present precisely those things that corporate culture skips over - 
notably the histories of oil and mineral extraction. Plans unfold on the 
video screen for a DIY display structure that looks eminently practical. 
Only such an activist approach can deal with "matters of public 
concern." Yet what else is World of Matter doing, on a website and in a 
university rather than out on the streets?
There may be an invitation here. Download the videos, put them on your 
bicycle or solar-powered vehicle, and show them to everyone you meet. 
Treat them just like material things that have to do with life itself. 
It's high time to make a break with our own normalized ways of creating 
and propagating world-pictures. Don't imagine the apocalypse, that's old 
hat. Just bring your radical imagination to focus on the end of global 
capitalism.

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