Brian Holmes on Thu, 24 Jul 2008 03:50:41 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Review of Raunig's Art and Revolution |
It's nice to have some discussion of Gerald's book, and even if Florian's critique of Publixtheater Caravan is a bit of a cheap shot, still it's clearly stated and a good departure point: > Other Austrian artist collectives such as > ubermorgen.com and Monochrom, which are much more advanced in their > artistic means, media tactics, theoretical reflection and last not least > wittiness, don't lend themselves to Raunig's narrative because, despite > all their critical reflection of politics, they are not communists and > not politically revolutionary in his sense. > Like in Home's book, it's the typical example of fitting certain > practices into one's history because it fits the preconceived theory > rather than adjusting one's theory to practices challenging it. Is Publixtheater attractive because they're communists? Hmm, maybe not because Raunig is not particularly concerned with communism. Maybe instead they are interesting because they were there, I mean in Genoa and Strasbourg and other places, performing their acts and exposing their bodies to the test of what society offers to those who disagree with it? I had quite a long talk with one member of the caravan on the upper deck/cafe of their impressively designed multimedia bus at the Strasbourg No Border Camp, and it was pretty fascinating and frankly scary to hear about what the group had been through in that place from which I escaped unscathed, namely Genoa where the Italian cops got out of control or rather, obeyed their orders. What was so intriguing to me was the clear nervousness of this guy who was nonetheless on the spot again, doing yet more "illegal" and principled things in public after having seen what could happen as a result, to the tune of months in jail with no real charges, impoundment and loss of the earlier bus, abuse at the hands of the police, endless trial etc. Later after our talk I found their performances curious for the bizarre spectacle of this black and white double-decker bus with camels painted on it, parked in front of the train station where they also laid out the decor of a tropical vacation (plastic palm tree, blow-up blue wading pool) and had some guys dressed up strange and white-faced moving around acting like aliens come down to check out odd things happening here on earth, which I guess was supposed to be the deportation of the people who come from those tropical places where the others just went to take their vacation. Maybe I would have more complex things to say about the intricate media pranks of Ubermorgen and their sophisticated manipulation of the law, but I also have less to feel and remember, because even if I like some of the work we did not meet there in such moments that change your life and let you breathe differently forever after. A lot of Gerald's book is about revolutionary machines, or in other words, dissenting adventures that involve aesthetics and groups and equipment and atmospheres, and then another lot of it is about escaping structuralization, which is the time-honored tendency to separate life out into little boxes of purified and specialized experience which are ranked and ordered and administrated by someone who seems to have no particular significance or passion, other than it's his/her job and they do it. So the machines are not so much about ideology ("communism") as they are about experience, the implication of your whole self in situations where you can win or lose and no one else is really taking care of the outcome, except maybe to make sure the loss is painful. It's understandably disconcerting for artists when these hybrid machines take the place of and receive the attention traditionally given to more recognizable forms of art, but that happens for the simple reason that these machines actually do for activists what spectators always wanted art to do to them: namely they provide a chance to transform your existence, whereas art nowadays is usually caught in the little boxes I mentioned earlier. Maybe it changed the artist's life, but as far as everyone else can tell that is some kind of unfathomable secret. Now, what I'm trying to get at with the above is the idea that the revolutionary machine is able to open up zones of experimentation that are really interesting, passionate, transformative, and this takes all kinds of skills and knowledge and dexterity which are not going to stand out as particularly special if you put them up against a complicated set of brushstrokes inside a frame, but which do have the great merit of opening up a new possibility of how to live and act in public. So maybe the weird translation of Volx into Publix is actually one of those good translations that are better than the original. In any case, writing about such revolutionary machines is pretty rare; I also tried to do it, maybe just to clumsily illustrate my outdated communist ideology as Florian would have it, but I'm not so sure. As to the question of sophisticated forms, Gerard Paris-Clavel of Ne Pas Plier always used to say that the worst Sunday painter would be much more interesting if he would bring his canvas out into a demonstration and carry it with his own body. But this always made me wonder, what would the best genius painter look like out there in the demo waving around his or her historical breakthrough into the next avant-garde level of aesthetic possibility? They don't usually do it for simple reasons: because it took months to paint, and these days, water cannons are so numerous and so unpredictable. What I think does happen in reality is that there is another invisible concatenation of art and revolution, whereby the historical breakthrough is actually present in the minds and sensoria of people who were touched by it in a truly transformative way; and so they find themselves out in the street for a demonstration as naturally as they would be in a conference hall listening to the Henri Bergson of our time, or in a museum getting into the latest in painting, installation or whatever. The loss of an ability to see this kind of transversality between complex art and direct action is one sign of structuralized times, where the little boxes go so far as to become the secret ideal of artists and political activists alike. My only advice is to flee such boxes and go write something interesting in the book of your own active existence. best, Brian # 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://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org