Kevin Hamilton on Tue, 10 Jan 2006 18:18:33 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Brands and Identity in the Age of Neuroscience |
Though this Clockwork Orange stuff is not too surprising, it's been stuck in my brain for the last couple of days. I'm both encouraged and concerned about the article's implications. On the one hand, we might see here confirmation of some of the brightest hopes for art in the last century. The Soviet constructivists, for example, would have been all over this, honing in on the exact shapes and colors necessary for producing a better society - and without all the mystical mumbo-jumbo of the Theosophists. But of course the findings of this article also show how art can achieve the greatest of lies - see the current brand identities of any number of mega-corps. Neither the pessimistic or optimistic implications of the article are that new - many of us, I'm sure, have been looking at the relationship of formal aesthetic decisions to the creation of subjecthood and society. But perhaps the extension of our pursuits into organisms in just this way might shift our focus? When I look at agitprop, for example, I can see more and less-embodied approaches to stirring people to action. In my experience, overt attempts to effect reception at the biological level have ended up essentialist, not contextualized enough. I'm reminded of how phenomenologically-inclined artists are often the ones least likely to attend to the specificities of subjecthood. (Is anyone in whiteness studies working on the art of Robert Irwin? Would be interesting.) But perhaps there is ground to reclaim here - we get a lot of biological metaphors in net-art discourse, but not a lot of work that engages bodies. (I include myself in this implication - my work is as informed by structuralism and conceptualism as any.) Without resorting to essentialist appeals to the "visceral," can we make work that connects to and effects at a deeper biological level? I'm skeptical, but wondering if that's what it takes to compete with the branding agencies. I'd be curious to hear Paul's thoughts on posting the piece - did you post it as a caution or a hope? Thanks either way, Kevin Hamilton # 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: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net