Thursday, November 5, 2009

acker/bataille remix, plus a goat.

I was nearly sixteen when I met Simone, a girl my own age, at the beach in X.

She took me home to her mother's, a tiny little box ordered out of a Sear's catalogue. It was against a town ordinance to have certain animals within city limits but they kept chickens and cows and goats out back. The chickens would fly over to the neighbor's yard to lay their eggs and shit shit shit.

We made love on the trampoline. It's harder than it looks. One of the goats watched.


He turned out to be a God.
Beware, beware.


At some point Simone started to cry before telling me that she loved me, kind of, and then that she had to pee. She pushed me off of her and ran into the dark. The goat followed.

It was the longest pee ever.

When she came back, riding the goat, they both possessed the same pair of twisted eyes. I told her I wanted her to suckmesuckmesuckme and she said nonono you want to tie me down you want to make me sick you want to get me pregnant. Baby disease. I don't want no goddamn baby.
She and the great Goat God with their matching eyes turned away from me forever and she went wherever He took her.

The doves cooed above. We had created the world in our own image.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

video work, awesomeness

Over the past couple weeks, I think the video remixes that intrigued me the most were Phil Solomon’s machinima films. The content of the work was extremely compelling. While Solomon made use of new media and technology he didn’t rely on its newness to make it interesting. While his choice of Grand Theft Auto wasn’t arbitrary and he used what the game had to offer to his advantage, they could have stood on their own as traditional films as well. For me, as someone who has not been exposed to a great deal of digital art, they were incredibly inspiring as an example of the potential and power of new media in terms of innovation, cultural relevance, and the ability to use everything in our environment in ways completely apart from its intended use. Obviously this last point can be seen as threatening to the original (as evidenced by the paperwork from the Yes Men’s lawsuit that Erin sent out) but it also invites rebuttal (the plaintiff claimed that their “acts are antithetical to public debate on important issues, because they prevent the public and the press from knowing the true position of the intellectual property owner…” Bullshit… I’d love to see the “intellectual property owner” remix the Yes Men but they’re undoubtedly too greedy and lazy.) I feel like a lot of the new media work that I have seen outside of this class has operated within the idea that because the media is new-ish, the work is innovative enough for the content to be secondary. As a result I rarely found myself relating to new media work so it’s nice to be exposed to new media art that is actually good, and furthermore, when it is, holy fuck is it good.

This reflects the conflict that David Fodel talked about in reference to the VJ producing art instead of just wallpaper. I was really impressed with the amount of critical discourse concerning VJ on Vague Terrain and VJ Theory because I think a lot of times it is dismissed as simply aesthetic supplement. In particular I enjoyed what Michael Betancourt said in “Wallpaper and/as Art” about engaging the work rather than consuming it. This audience engagement in relation to digital work recalls Walter Benjamin’s description of collective engagement as it relates to film and the destruction of the aura; it is interesting that Betancourt applies aura and capitalism to digital work in another essay, “The Aura of the Digital.”

Thursday, October 8, 2009

o p e n content

One of the main advantages to an open content approach is that it makes creation less about an individual monetary goal and more about expanding ideas to achieve a better, collective final product. Restricting rights results in isolation and fear, which ultimately limits the potential for creative consumption. Copyright law’s legal sanctions and labeling the reuse of material as immoral suppresses creative expression as artists struggle to create something entirely original. It prevents knowledge from building to its full ability. I have heard that humans, as a species, have succeeded in ways that other animals have not because we teach what we have learned to each other, allowing our ideas to be used, expanded on, and applied to a variety of environments and contexts. Furthermore, the use of others’ ideas and materials is inevitable, but when it is moralized against it becomes dangerous to admit. Less people get influential credit this way than if it was acceptable to appropriate and commonplace to think about where one gets his/her ideas rather than focusing on the independently innovative self. A slight transmutation of Jim Warren’s statement concerning software, that when it “is so inexpensive that it’s easier to pay for it then to duplicate it, then it won’t be ‘stolen,’” can be applied to creative works. When artists (and furthermore the people who represent them) become less concerned with profit and ‘originality’ and creative monopoly, the use of their work will no longer be considered theft.

On the other hand, while open content has great potential for developing creative thought it also possesses a danger of promoting stagnancy and rereregurgitation of the same ideas rather than remixing and expanding on these ideas. I think because of this there needs to be a reconfiguration of the whole system, where artists place themselves within this system, and what is valued within the artistic subculture. This probably means a separation from galleries and the traditional money-making outlets for artists, so that respect for the individual artist’s creativity is retained while allowing that creativity to be shared property. The internet provides a productive setting fir exposure, collaboration, and the gathering of free artistic material. Many artists are currently using it for this purpose but it is important that the old system does not get internalized within this digital space as it is in the mainstream economy.



Isabel Samaras is a good example of an artist who blatantly appropriates well-known images -- like many artists she remixes scenes from art history but she tends to replace the figures with ones from television. Aside from her more obvious stance about the omnipresent role of mass media I think her choice is interesting in that it allows for a discussion on what forms of art are allowed to be appropriated and what are not, based soley on if something happens to have copyright, which is determined by the time, place, and culture the work was created in. Before this class, I never thought of my own work in the same genre as appropriative work or remix but I've found that this is exactly what forms my process -- I take everything that surrounds me, including compositions, characters, patterns, images, etc. from past and present works of art and put it through my own filter, which is how I think I've attempted to communicate with others through individual experience.




Thursday, October 1, 2009

detournement ramblings.

Debord’s opening statement in his essay Methods of Detournement that “art can no longer be justified as a superior activity” really stood out to me because the current status of art is one that has troubled me for a long time. I think that it still is judged as such, that the Kantian sphere of aesthetics that has become the institution of “art” as separate from “life” still applies. It bothers me because art has become something that most people feel they don’t relate to. It seems that a lot of conceptual artists tried to merge the spheres by incorporating readymades and appropriation and abstract ideas and other aspects of “life” into their work, but they failed because these parts of life just became part of the “art” sphere once someone of proper authority (an artist) said they were – the spheres never merged, their separation actually became more distinct because suddenly there was a hierarchal difference between a snow shovel in a museum and a snow shovel in your garage. And I think artists liked that authority, to put themselves in a higher intellectual category. Many artists I feel are very defensive of their belief that not everyone can be an artist and think of detournement as a sort of threat. For me though, that in itself is not a dangerous idea at all. Of course it depends on how one defines “artist” and I’m certainly not here to make definitions… but for me, art is about expression of experience and communication with others and I think that’s something everyone is capable of and should engage in. Humans, as a species, are natural artists because we are creators and teachers and meaning-making-machines. The problem is the romanticized ideal of the artist as soooooo different and soooooo misunderstood and soooooo important. And I think Debord does have this pretentious air around him, that he is right and most people are just slavish imbeciles, but what I like about him is that he negates the idea of artistic genius. The artistic genius elevates themselves above everyone else and instead of relating to others they block themselves off. And then, what is the point besides the superficial image and status of “artist?” And furthermore, if everyone defines themselves as an artist based off of this concept, then nothing is being said. Even where something could be said, nothing is because they’ve closed themselves off from relating to anyone. It’s not that the individual shouldn’t matter but capitalistic structure and invisible hands when it comes to art doesn’t really work.

I think in a lot of ways the concept of individualist originality is naïve because our experiences are not original, they are reflections of occurrences created by history and culture. Shit doesn’t just happen. And if you’re striving to be original, you’re just denying this for your own gain, for the status of the artistic genius. I think Debord is right when he says we have to go beyond a notion of personal property in terms of creative production, especially when it comes to copyright. Once we experience something it becomes our reality, and sanctions that forbid us the right to use this material denies us the right to effectively express that experience. It’s dishonest. This is not to say that anything should be taken from its original source, replicated, and redistributed without any new meaning, because that’s dishonest too, not so much in terms of theft but everyone experiences an object differently. You have something new to bring to that work just because you are a different person than the one who originally made it. Plus otherwise it’s kinda fucking boring and stagnant. I also have always thought that the whole argument about “what is art” is pretty boring and stupid but on the other hand, if we have these terms “art” and “artist” that imply a differential status (which they always will as long as they have a distinctive nature from the rest of the world – language itself always carries status) I guess it does matter somewhat so I like that Situationist art doesn’t exist. I also liked Bourriaud’s mention of the potential of alternative narratives for constructed situations, where “postproduction artists do not make a distinction between their work and that of others, or between their own gestures and those of viewers.” His elaboration of a Duchamp quote I think is very important: “‘It is the viewers who make the paintings,’ Duchamp once said, an incomprehensible remark unless we connect it to his keen sense of an emerging culture of use, in which meaning is born of collaboration and negotiation between the artist and the one who comes to view the work. Why wouldn't the meaning of a work have as much to do with the use one makes of it as with the artist's intentions for it?” Remix becomes a mass collaboration not only between artists through the use and reuse of each others’ work but through viewers’ use and experience of the work, and how they understand it based on past experiences, and how it will impact future experience in other aspects of their lives. The viewer therefore becomes as integral to the work as the creator, I think anyway, and maybe that makes them artists, which is neat. The webspinna performance was a good example of this and a really enjoyable experience by using sounds provided to other people, reacting to the sounds other people had chosen, and the experience of the work as a whole, how familiar sounds became unfamiliar or completely changed when taken out of context.

Fuckin’ rad.

Okay, I’m done. Total ramble. Sorry.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

rhythm remix science remix

this is your life:

  • Michael Jackson’s Thriller
  • Bad cut-up video
  • Material Memory

But also:

prostitutes duchamp moca deleuze shit bellbottom jeans scarlett letter duality duality racial angela davis physics philosophers vector animal WU TANG! gospels christianity prosthetic sex reykjavik shit microwave entropic optometry (for your oh-so-jaded eyes) scientific basis realism psychological echo feng shui shit panthers du bois apollo sphinx party party party oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral oral and on and on.


But who controls the environment you grew up in?
Confusion tyrannizes.

loop loop loop,
reply reply reply,
poker-faced language.
Today we live in a society defined by restricted perspective, old hierarchies.

But now things come under question.

Everything comes out ready made, repetition, taken from the whole of nature. Environment collecting, registering coincidences. Shift your memories from their fragmented predecessors to a subjective truth. I don’t really cook, but I can mix and absorb feelings to forms, ripping through allegiance, transmute, make something consensual. Visualize it. Divorce the image from its arbitrage, its slogan, there is nothing that you have to say right now. Today, the voice you speak with is silent. It is simultaneously your own and not your own. Conventional discourse belongs to a machine, defining interpretation. So keep cranking out the drift recontexualizing to its primal pre-linguistic science fiction extensions jazz and blues and dematerialized jumping off from the original archive changing the system by changing the frequency reprocessing endlessly endlessly endlessly. Science fiction and theater are no more imaginary or foolish or blinding than realism and The Word. Visual automatic writing forms identity, makes sense of the incubation zombie reading the phonograph while carrying a lamb in plastic buckets.


Does this have external or social meaning beyond your own perception?


It is starting…but invention ultimately only goes so far,
individualism stops direction alteration thinking
contributions discoveries and it goes on and on
loop loop loop reply reply reply. Personal implosion
creates a consciousness but to move, to communicate
something directly relational? well The Word is Law but
representation is coordinated - it is experience - the
final hearse to solidify your worst fear of no new thoughts
but when an EXCHANGE of GLANCES meets admitting that
appropriation draws from relativism and dispels self not
collective mystery, a mix of past appropriation to be able
to understand and say THE WORD and rhyming preconceptions
that are THE WORD tells cinematic style stories always moving
moving moving. We have to flow between the pendulum swing if
we want new ways to say shit.Creating the word ‘shit’ was
a remix, a great part of history, lets remix it again.
Doubleshit shitflock dreamshit artshit doubleplusartshit
shitness gutenshit galsahxiyt shitstyemic, whatever you’re
into. Not everything all the time but peril gives way to
struggle gives way to uncertainty gives way to the
passionately tricksterish. A Victorian era biologist or
something found that a series of sounds gives way to
signifying, investigation, narratives, culture, thinking,
NOT that thinking gives way to culture and narrative and
investigation and signifying and sound. Our hardware/software
is a beautiful accident carried by an invisible vector, it
generates on its own, transmitting what does not have to be
a disease if you transmutate the sounds. And in the process
they remain our own but refer to everything and everyone else,
we create collective where everyone can contribute – if you
think of one you think of us all.
 
Just think: respectful synthesis, bats
flying through the night.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Blood and Guts in High School

Acker’s literary strategies of montage, appropriation, and use of several different literary forms (letters, poems, children’s stories, plays, etc. in addition to more traditional narrative) in Blood and Guts in High School immediately alerted me to a remix of the remix technique the dadaists used to assert the absurdity of their time. A large component of dada literature involved taking the format of texts they believed promoted nationalism and justification of war (i.e., journalism, Expressionism) and breaking it down into nonsense, thus depleting it of meaning. In doing so they replaced the authority of the original texts with their own. I think Acker employs this process to subvert the history of masculine literature as a whole. In response to the overtly sexist Sahih, Janey states, “For 2,000 years you’ve had the nerve to tell women who we are. We use your words; we eat your food. Every way we get money has to be a crime. We are plagiarists, liars, and criminals,” implying that the world is defined in masculine terms and so women are forced to exist and express themselves under those conditions. However, she executes this plagiarism extremely effectively, using their words to undermine them, challenging the concept of a solely masculine literary authority. In addition, based on the context, an unchanged plagiarized form can take on a whole new meaning. Acker seems to use Burroughs’ cut-up method throughout the book, but based on the relationship of this form to the story, it’s confused fragmentation translates to Janey’s state of mind and creates a sense of her perception.

I also think it’s important to address Georges Bataille’s role in terms of a pornographic, surrealist structure with a high concentration of “fucks” and “cunts.” Despite Story of the Eye’s explicit sexual description, I find it to be more about Bataille’s theory of heterology than sex itself. Heterology is essentially “the study of that which is different.” Specifically, Story of the Eye is about the dichotomy between spherical objects (eyes, eggs) and liquids (tears, urine, semen). Sex is important, however, because as Acker says, “We don't know what humans are like… It's not like people do everything they do for economic reasons. You've got to look at the imagination; you've got to look at sex.” The sexual content and “base” language functions more as an embrace of the disgusting and painful because “erotic pleasure is not only the negation of an agony that takes place at the same instant, but also a lubricious participation in that agony.” While Bataille’s novella is not necessarily about sex, however, I think Blood and Guts in High School is. It seems to me that Acker uses Bataille’s concept of heterology in reference to feminine sexuality, particularly in Janey’s desire to fuck and the painful consequences that sex brings. She both negates and participates in agony, and therefore the crudeness of Acker’s language is vital. I don’t believe, as one reviewer said, that Acker’s writing ability is impaired by her language choice. Without the pain that she borrows from Bataille, the complexities and double-standards behind female sexuality would be dishonest and turned into something superficial, making the book read more like an episode of Sex and the City. And the less Sex and the City in this world, the better.


For Bataille’s ramblings on the excessive and disgusting, here’s a pretty interesting essay on D.A.F. De Sade:
http://www.sauer-thompson.com/essays/BatailleUseValueSade.pdf


Also, I couldn’t find a link to a good dada poem that described what I discussed above, but here’s an example below:


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Year 1 of World Peace
Baader, Hausmann, Huelsenbeck, Tristan Tzara


Dada Statement
Hirsch Copper and Brass weaker than ever. Will Germany starve?
Then it must sign. Attractive young lady with 38:22:38 figure for
Herman Loeb. If Germany does not sign, then it will
probably sign. In a marketplace of unit values, prices
tend to fall. If Germany signs it will probably be
signing so as not to have to sign. Lovehalls.
Latenightextratheskywhizzingalong. From Viktorhahn. Lloyd
George thinks it was possible that Clemenceau is of the opinion
that Wilson believes Germany must sign, for she won’t be able
not to sign. As a result club dada declares itself in favour of
total freedom of the press-ure because the press-ure is the
cultural weapon
without which we would never learn that Germany really
will not sign simply in order to sign.
(Club dada, Dept. for Freedom of the Press, in so far as good form allows.)

The new age begins with the year of Chief Dada’s death Ad