Walking Up and Down the Street

My friend and former colleague Eric just showed me the new A9 yellow pages technology. Besides a map it offers a view of the storefront. By clicking the according button one can walk up and down the street.

When we used to work for the Berlin based company Gate5, one of the products we developed was a feature rich yellow pages web application. The company actually survived even though our yellow pages application never made it to the market.

We did not have anybody driving trucks with GPS and cameras. Nevertheless our map was much nicer (rendered from two different databases, one for the streets and one for actual shapes of houses). In a playful prototype of a community tool which used the same technology, it was possible to leave notes attached to buildings so they were visible for buddies or the public. The application had a very advanced system of filters and I remember a concept we called “local hero” that would motivate users to contribute in order to get good ratings and thus increase the relevance of their posts (and get free SMS as incentives – SMS were pretty much the currency we used). One could call the idea location based blogging (for shop owners the thought of getting tagged that way is probably about as appealing as graffiti on their store front – “business model” wasn’t our strong side at the time). Despite a very stylish user interface, we never managed to make it as simple as non location based blogging.

After I stopped working for the company I continued using the map application which was still running on a publicly accessible development server for a year, before they remembered to turn it off. Maybe I would consider to start walking up and down if Amazon had the system going for any of the cities I hang out and shop in.

Resembling Terror

At last year’s “Berlin Biennial For Contemporary Art” I eavesdropped two visitors who were reading the introduction text for the exhibition (no link – I havn’t found it on the net yet). One of them said he thought the text reminded him to the writings by RAF (Rote Armee Fraktion). From the way they talked about the text and the exhibition in general I concluded that they were not professional art people. That was probably why he could come up with this correct formal analysis of the text.

To me the resemblance is of course no surprise. Both, RAF and contemporary “knowledge producers” in the art system use political terminology and simulacra in order to reinforce and establish their own somewhat outdated systems (“bewaffneter Kampf” on one hand, art on the other hand).

At least terrorism has understood by now that politics has little sex appeal: The potential of religion is obviously much greater.

“Regarding Terror: The RAF-Exhibition” (1, 2, 3, 4) opens at KW Berlin(one of the exhibition spaces of the Biennial) on Saturday.

More about Art & Terror:

Art is not Terrorism

The art of terror

Art, Terror and Stockhausen

Critical Posing

Since the Klartext conference I have in my possession two issues of the newspaper style publication “Corrections and Clarifications” by Anita di Bianco (Download PDF). One dates from September 2001 (September 1 to be precise – I guess the exact day is of importance in this particular case), one from January 2005. I have no idea how many issues there have been between the two.

The paper contains nothing but corrections and clarifications published by english language newspapers. I must admit that I have not spent much time reading in them. My curiosity kept me going for 3 or 4 articles (clarifications) in each of the papers. I stopped because I got bored, not because my curiosity was satisfied.

In her presentation Anita di Bianco suggested, that it was very insightful to read the clarifications as they were showing a lack of understanding of other cultures, maybe even a lack of interest in them. She did not specify what kind of attitude she was able to identify through reading all those clarifications, but everybody seemed to understand all too well what she meant.

Frankly: I don’t think that di Bianco has read many of those clarifications herself. Doing that would be a completely brain dead. I can’t even think of a psychological or mental condition that would enable someone to enjoy reading them. Finding patterns in those corrections by reading them would clearly demand other social and cultural skills than one is likely to find amongst people who suffer from autism, yet it would demand certain talents that ONLY someone who suffers from autism is likely to have.

Is it a problem that neither artist nor audience have read much in “Corrections and Clarifications”?

Apparently they join in a conspiracy in order to manipulate the truth and fool themselves into believing that they see something which is not there and that what they see is same for them all. Art usually is exactly this kind of a religious conspiracy. It is about constituting what art is and it is about defining a social group (that of artists and people interested in art). So it seems like everything is the way it should be.

I don’t think so: It is fine as long as the topic of art are esthetics and formal conceptual reflections, but it has a rotten smell when art claims political significance. Di Bianco’s project is politically questionable because she does exactly what she seems to be criticizing: She is driven by stereotypes and is amplifying them by claiming something that she hasn’t researched. Worse than that, she (implicitly) suggests that research is not even needed as long as you have an opinion. Fox News couldn’t be worse.

If she was really interested in the implications of corrections and clarifications in english language newspapers, she would probably talk to linguists and psychologists in order to learn something about errors and mistakes. Then she would conceptualize a way to analyze the data she gets and would finally get together with a programer who could help her create the software she would need for the data mining. Her concept along with the results could be presented to a mature audience (as oposed to an audience that is not taken seriously). If not in an exhibition it could be published on the web, where more people would see it anyway. Better even: Just program a tool that allows people to research the clarifications themselves and discuss their results.

While di Bianco may think of this as being as absurd and boring as actually reading all the corrections and clarifications herself, I would love to see this kind of a project instead of all the posing that pretends to be critical, while being nothing but affirmation for a certain social group. Often contemporary art and critical practice is displayed as being in the proximity of science. No one seems to see the fundamental difference: It hardly ever affords open results.

One of the options when applying for “Künstlersozialkasse” (german health insurance subsidy for artists) is “experimental artist”. I don’t see much experimental art and when when I do, it is mostly not labeled “art” (nor “critical practice”). I have no idea how the current funding systems could be transformed in order to encourage truly experimental free practice: Imagine it turned out that no significant pattern can be found in the great number of clarifications. Such a result seems inexhibitable in the traditional exhibition spaces and would therefore be a disaster.

Klartext

I spent most of the weekend at Klartext Conference. Adriene Göhler who seemed more than one step ahead of the organizers on the topic opened it on Friday. A funny but hardly surprising detail she mentioned in her speech was that in 2004 about 150 funding applications handed in to “Hauptstadt Kultur Fond” started like this: “Im Jahr der EU-Osterweiterung”. This remark gives a good insight in the opportunistic thinking of so called critical artists, in times of professional fund hunting.

But funding seeking artists and cultural workers who position themselves in the proximity of activism are not alone in their belief that a boring idea with some political appeal is enough.
Listening to Hans Haacke, talking about his last minute research for the Rosa Luxemburg Memorial competition he was invited to shows the same attitude, only backed up by a big name who is beyond critique and obviously beyond auto critique.

Susanne von Falkenhausen, who did the interview with Haacke seemed like the perfect personification of the way society deals with a holy dinosaur like Haacke. In an arrogant and openly ignorant manner she started her interview with the pronouncing her suspicion that Haacke wasn’t at the right place at the Klartext Conference because he had always refused the pose of protest and worked as a “lonely warrior”. There is much to be said about the use of poses in art and I will certainly do so in the near future. However, von Falkenhausen used it to distinguish the serious artist Haacke from the naive protesters and fun guerillas who had gathered at the conference daring to call themselves artists.

Not being prepared, without apparent concept and clumsily moving around the technical terms that identify her as an art historian and that every fiber of her seemed to shout: You are a god and I am such good believer that I can see your godliness clearer than all those lost souls down there. Why do art historians of her age and women on protestant parish boards all look the same? It’s no surprise to me.

During the conference artists and artist groups presented their works and their way of working, which was in no case new but in most cases sympathetic. I liked the story (by Sezgin Boynik) about young people in Kosovo who mimicked western art after getting exposed to it and suddenly found themselves invited to international art shows. Pretty much the same as the YES MEN getting invited to business conferences without even intending so. Talking about the YES MEN – I missed them but everybody I talked to seemed to have liked their presentation. They are the stars of the movement.

My only addition is that the German satirical magazine TITANIC has been quite successful with similar interventions on a national level for a very long time and that they have managed to preserve their integrity namely by not becoming big stars in the territory of high culture. The YES MEN seem to live with the danger of becoming for critical art what U2 ended up being in rock music in the late 80s. Ask Bono how cool that was.

Another highlight was “Kamera Läuft”, a film by kpD (kleines postfordistisches Drama) that in a very entertaining way investigated the situation of precarious producers. Precarious producers are all the people who can not count on getting projects funded in the year of EU extention to the east. I did not request any funding last year but like most of the audience had little difficulties identifying with the precarious producers in the film.

Sunday afternoon there was a discussion panel without Catherine David. I did not hear an official explanation why she wasn’t there. I remember a series of events that Jörgen Svensson organized in Gothenburg in the 90s where he announced famous artists who then didn’t show up. He managed to address the problem of stars (and brands!) in alternative culture and at the same time was able to show the positive energy that a community seems to get from a belief in stars. The events were very nice gatherings with good discussions if I remember right.

Other than not Catherine David there were curators and directors of cultural institutions on the panel (Maria Lind/IASPIS, Shaheen Merali/Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Nina Möntmann NIFCA, Marion von Osten/curator of “Migration”, Simon Sheikh/Critical Studies Program Malmö). They presented their different exhibition projects in which they either try to establish a new perspective/new terminology (e.g. Black Atlantic by Shaheen Merali) or try to change the way institutions function (Maria Lind at the Kunstverein Munich). Both tasks to me seem important in order to encourage public discourse and in order to create spaces where thinking can be a bit more experimental than within the systems of conventional economy and media. I personally think that exhibitions and events at Haus der Kulturen der Welt are usually amongst the best in Berlin.

The showdown of Klartext took place at Volksbühne with Roger M. Buergel, Holger Kube Ventura, Chantal Mouffe, Jacques Rancière, Irit Rogoff. Moderator was Boris Buden, the title was “KünstlerInnen und KulturproduzentInnen als politische Subjekte. Opposition, Intervention, Partizipation, Emanzipation in Zeiten neoliberaler Globalisierung”.

Most interesting for me (and certainly most entertaining) were the talks by Jacques Rancière and Chantal Mouffe as they were with great accuracy about the very core of political and cultural practice. While Rancière looked at the fictional quality of politics, Chantal Mouffe was able specify what she thinks leads into dead ends:

1. Taking a moral position
2. Transgression

I can only enthusiastically agree. Fortunately transgression is not as popular amongst artists as it used to be, since main stream media went into that direction, but the moral thing seems to have become more important. Possibly that is because the ordinary visitor of art shows also needs his/her fix in that area as s/he is just a little too intelligent to be reached by religion (this theory does apply to Susanne von Falkenhausen, she must have chosen art over religion for some other reason).

Rancière pointed out that there is no duality between art and politics and that distinguishing strictly between them does not make sense, because politics permanently creates the narrative which then becomes the basis of discourse (just like art does), while Mouffe suggested that art and critical practice have the possibility and thus the power to invent and develop the symbols used in politics and public discourse. Together they declare and shape the territory of action for art and critical practice, without falling back to exclusive definitions.

Buergel’s demand that not only political, but also psychological investigation must be possible may seem like a step backwards for some. I think that the concept art makes sense only when it’s thought of as a singularity (something that is radically different than other areas of economic and functional activity). It is quite obvious that it can come close to this ideal only when given the freedom to point it’s spotlight anywhere. Something does not become art because of the topic it deals with nor because of the context it is placed in (those days are over), but because of not fitting in any other category. Therefore any artistic and critical practice claims the right to do things that don’t fit in any category, which is necessarily a bitter pill for any system (I know that I am a bit tautological here, but I guess you don’t get around it when justifying a singularity’s right of existence).

During a break on Saturday I visited a friend, Boris Riedel, who lives near the place of the conference. He showed me a video he had just finished, in which he interviews a graffiti artist and a young street artist (whose works contained political messages). It was not really surprising, but nevertheless remarkable that the graffiti artist did not have much respect for the street artist who uses templates designed with a computer. According to the graffiti guy no skill is needed to do that. The Graffiti artist, whose main interest is finding the most stylish way to spray his name (=tag), suspected street artists of generally being after getting into the gallery and museum system (making a face that expressed a mild version of disgust). At the same time the street artist, who was not as well spoken, seemed way more underground than the graffiti artist. I don’t need not to mention, that the graffiti guy’s demand for skill did not exactly place him on my team.

This video, which my friend has made as a final work for his education as an editor, was a very inspiring, almost revealing counterpoint to the discussions i was following this weekend. I could not have picked a better day to watch it.

On the topic:

Political Art

While I’m wondering what my new Weblog will be about, apparently the art world is wondering once more what art can, should or must be about. At least the protagonists of political art seem quite busy discussing political art as a phenomenon and as a trend. Of course a little bit of PR is place in times when (East German) painting is enjoying a revival as big and certainly as annoying as 80′s fashion and music (and despite the political emphasis of documenta 11).

Shortly before Christmas Kunstwerke/Berlin had organized a symposium “Re-politicization – The Return of the Political in Society and Culture”. I missed it. Between January 14 and 20 a conference along with workshops under the title “Klartext” will take place at Künstlerhaus Bethanien and Volksbühne (both Berlin). I will try not to miss it.

Last Fall I saw the “Shrinking Cities” Show at Kunstwerke (well designed and presented, very extensive, much information) and I saw a Show about Cyprus, “Out of the Shadows”, at the Witte de With in Rotterdam (reminded me of a mediocre student’s paper, presented with more space and more expensive equipment than what a student would ever get his hands on. The entertaining part was that I lost orientation after leaving the building and going back in order to see the second floor of the show – for five minutes my girlfriend and I were convinced that they actually did an exact copy of the first floor before we found out that we had ended up on the same floor as before. For a while I thought I had seen something as revolutionary as Duchamp’s fountain: a duplicate of a boring political art show – not even the great art clown Maurizio Cattelan I would expect to come up with a thing like that – of course the actual organizers, Catherine David and Peter Friedl, are not exactly famous for their clownery and it seems quite idiotic that we could believe in a duplicate for one second).

A friend of mine runs an association in the Netherlands that aims to get young people interested in politics. He was terribly excited about working with artists and using art in his projects.

There have always been good contacts between politicians (especially social democrats) and artists. Helmut Schmitt had a bunch of them over for coffee while being on the phone taking decisions concerning the storming of a hijacked Lufthansa plane in Mogadishu during Deutscher Herbst in the late 70s. A day later the RAF terrorists imprisoned in Stammheim killed themselves.

Later this month the much discussed show “Regarding Terror: The RAF. Exhibition” will open at Kunstwerke (partly financed through an Ebay auction with art donated by international artists).

To me this love affair between art and politics seems pretty desperate. Like both partners are looking for something that they don’t have themselves and (unreasonably) expect to get from the other one. The funny thing is that they both believe to have similar shortcomings and hence both hope to get a very similar kind of support from the other one.

Artists think they appear more serious and intellectual when the do political work – politicians hope for the same thing when they show themselves with artists. Both, politicians and artists feel that they are not as much in touch with society as they should be (both are probably right about that) and they seem to believe that by hanging out with each other or seeking proximity they can achieve greater relevance. I don’t want to reduce their motovion to a purely propagandistic one. I believe entering each others territory makes both, politicians and artist, feel more real.

To be fair one has to say that artists are more interested in entering political territory than in hanging out with actual politicians. Besides the awful lack of style and sex appeal of most politicians the biggest threat of showing oneself with a professional politicians is probably the risk of losing all credibility as a political artist.