Philosophy

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

TrailerWrap by Michael Hughes

Trailer1_2

Love this idea, though the economic model does not seem to work. Trailer parks exist to fill a gap in the market. Anyone who can afford to will buy a stick-built house. Not to mention the fact that trailers actually depreciate in value rather than appreciate. But this one does look good:

"To Hughes, trailer parks offer an architectural opportunity to address questions of affordable housing. And he believes that trailers simply make sense as high-density alternatives to suburban sprawl. But first, they need to be made into attractive living spaces. "This is refabricated housing," Hughes says. "What does it mean to have light pouring into your home, with nine-foot instead of seven-foot ceilings? We wanted to highlight what’s possible even on a small house."

Read the rest here

via

Trailer2

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

On Ugliness by Umberto Eco

UglybettyJust read a great review of Eco's "On Ugliness" in the Telegraph. I confess a weakness for Eco's essays and fiction, but Brian Dillon pulls no punches in his attempt to put Eco into historical place. Worth the read, made me want ot read him again:

"By the Romantic period, the grotesque and the sublime were established as aesthetic categories, and the decadents of the late 19th century loved nothing more than a deathly consumptive countenance. In the wake of 20th-century avant-gardes, unadulterated beauty looks saccharine, immature or kitsch. We seduce only with our faults, wrote Baudrillard. Or as Johnny Rotten put it: there's nothing so boring as a pretty face."

read the rest after the jump HERE

Friday, December 07, 2007

Proverbios y Cantares by Antonio Machado

Caribbeansea_sugimotoYour footsteps are the path, and nothing else;
there is no path, paths are made by walking.
Walking makes the path, and on looking back
We see a trail that never can be walked again.
Traveler, there is no path,
Only a wake in the sea.

- Antonio Machado
Proverbios y Cantares

via 

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Let's Get Lost @ NWFF Oct. 26 - Nov. 1, Seattle, WA

As long time Chet Baker fans, we can't wait to view this one:

OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, Fri - Thurs at 7 & 9:15pm

LET'S GET LOST

(Bruce Weber, USA, 1988, 35mm, 119 min)
In the 1950s, Chet Baker's jazz trumpeting, edgy, intimate crooning and pretty boy good looks epitomized West Coast "cool."When famed photographer Bruce Weber caught up with him three decades later, time and drug addiction had ravaged his life and angelic beauty with deep valleys and crevasses. LET'S GET LOST artfully intercuts gorgeous black and white footage of the gaunt latter-day Baker, with images of the young jazz trumpeter in iconic 1950s early television and film appearances and photographs by William Claxton. Shot by Weber and cinematographer Jeff Preiss during what would turn out to be Baker's final year, the film also includes interviews with friends, family, lovers and associates. This transfixing, bittersweet portrait of the jazz legend won the Critics' Prize at the Venice Film Festival and was nominated for an Academy Award. Nearly 20 years since its premiere and nearly 15 since it has been seen in any medium, we're pleased to present a brand new 35mm print of a recent restoration done by Weber himself.

"It's the music doc as film noir, with a vampirish city-of-night gleam that suits the subject and his darkly romantic sound."-Jim Ridley, THE VILLAGE VOICE





OCTOBER 26, Fri at 7 & 9:15pm
NOT AVAILABLE ON VIDEO

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Project7ten: NOW in Venice!

Project7ten Gonna miss this one, but let me know what y'all think...

Los Angelenos looking to continue their environmental education can head to Venice to take a tour of the recently completed LEED® Platinum certified Project7ten house, before it goes on sale to the highest bidder. Real estate developer Tom Schey (in conjunction with the A+D Museum’s “Enlightened Development” exhibition) is opening the doors of his environmentally conscious home to the public to raise awareness about simple everyday choices and green products that can lead to a healthier living environment. Throughout the month of October, locals and tourists alike are invited to tour the cutting-edge structure and catch a glimpse of the future of sustainable building—which in this case includes solar paneling, recycled materials and certified lumber for building, as well as reusable rain water irrigation systems, lower gas emissions, and more. Proceeds from the tours and the sale of the home will be donated to Healthy Child Healthy World, an organization dedicated to educating the public about environmental toxins that effect children’s health.

Project7ten
710 Milwood Avenue
Venice, CA
ph: 310.454.0290

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

La Révolution du Jour: Art, Memory, Form and Peter Schjeldahl

Huang_yong_ping_const_site_2_2007

Form is how memory works.

Peter Schjeldahl dropped the above mini-aphorism on us about three-quarters of the way through his Oct. 8th, article in The New Yorker, "All Together Now" which covered the 2007 Istanbul Biennial, among other things. Coincidentally, I've been thinking alot about memory too, mostly because I've recently gotten back in touch with some old friends who seem to have entirely memories of our childhood together and I'm not sure how this could be. After reading Schjeldal's article, I thought I'd try to get some of these thoughts down on paper and see what kind of connections I could find.

Sarcastically, the first thing I thought after reading Schjeldal's assertion was, whew! Now we don't have to worry about the hippocampus, basal ganglia or all those pesky neural pathways in the limbic system. Forget those cumbersome classifications like working memory, phonological memory [whatever that is], visual/spacial memory, procedural, declarative, and semantic memory. Olfactory sensations? Emotions? Nope. Form is it.[yep, I know about these obscure things because I'm on meds that influence these systems and I have an obsession with knowing how I'm 'knowing', if you know what I mean...]

Guernica Well okay, obviously he didn't meen it that way you're thinking, but I'm not so sure. Schjeldahl made the statement, with no apparent irony, in support of a remark by curator Okwui Enwezor that "contemporary art spaces risk becoming 'incubators of amnesia,' devoid of historical recall." In this context we have to conclude that Schjeldahl would like to see art spaces--and by extension art works--that are 'incubators of remembering,' and 'rife with historical recall.' As if David's The Death of Marat, or Picasso's Guernica were viable models to aspire to. Too much? Maybe, but Schjeldahl's statement certainly betrays a longing for a more engaged, even efficacious art. The notion is touching, nostalgic and powerful.

Lascaux After all, the history of the relationship between images and real things is one of continual distanciation; as EH Gombrich had it, "in primitive societies, the thing and its image were simply two different, that is, physically distinct, manifestations of the same energy or spirit. Hence, the supposed efficacy of images in propitiating and gaining control over powerful presences. Those powers, those presences were present in them."

In other words, the power to paint the bull was the power to kill the bull. In this sense, art did change the world, it gave man the ability [psychologically and therefore physically] to survive. It was as if we were literally in Plato's Cave; the shadows and the reality behind the shadows were one and the same. Not entirely unlike some video games...

After_walker_evans_sherrie_levineToday, it's a post-Postmodern, post-Simulacrum, post-Theory, post-[insert favorite enemy here] world, and art is made up of:

a vertigo of serial signs--shadowless, impossible to sublimate, immanent in their repetition--who can say where the reality of what they simulate resides? -J. Baudrillard

Art has evolved--like any other complex endeavor--mathematics, science, poetry--quite indifferenent to concerns outside itself, with its own lanquage, theories, factions, professionals, critics and fans.

And while it often takes everyday life as its subject, contemporary art does not address an everyday audience. When Sherrie Levine rephotographed Walker Evans work, did anyone outside the art world take notice, except to laugh, jeer or write dismissive articles in local newsletters? Which brings us again to the subject of language. Memory, history, politics and form are all of a piece, unified through language, naming and knowing. In other words, we've been hi-jacked once again by narrative.

RashomonNarrative, not form, is the stuff of memory. If the form we are talking about is visual, which one assumes given Schjeldahl's profession and the subject of his article, then his use of the term is an obvious set-up, and a good one at that. For if form is how memory works, it begs the question, do the blind have no memory? How would the lack of this one sensation eliminate a major aspect of cognition?

It doesn't, obviously, and Schjeldahl isn't implying that it does. I think he is implying something entirely different: synesthesia, or the union of the senses. Can we smell red? Can a sound taste bitter? Or in this case, can one see history ['see, that is history!], or more precisely, can memory be seen ['that is what I saw!'...Rashomon anyone?] both questions which have at their core the classic aesthetic nut, 'Can art change the world?'

Too big a jump? I don't think so, given the context of Schjeldahl's article. It's implied by the guilt-ridden invocation of the idea that artists somehow have a responsibility to keep people from forgetting...about political and social injustice and atrocities one assumes.

But that is not how art changes the world.

Piss_christ_serranoEvery 'outrageous' or 'blasphemous' or 'seditious' work of art is always already dismissed by the general public--the audience it most likely intended to arouse [Serrano's Piss Christ anyone?]--and counted on in advance on by the 'institution'--the very power it probably intended to denounce. Need evidence? The following list is in no particular order and is by no means complete: Constructivism, de Stijl, Bauhaus, Dada, La Révolution surréaliste, Situationists, The Personal as Political, Fluxus, Happennings, Futurism, Expressionism, Suprematism, and most of the art of the seventies...

Whether stated or implied, much of this art attempted to align itself with the la révolution  du jour. Of course, I'm just as guilty as the next. I'd like to believe that the practice I've given my life over to has some kind of importance beyond the limited influence of galleries and publications, friends and critics. I often play with these ideas in my work, developing projects that use the language of global aspiration and political ambition. The projects have been accused by some of signifying the inability of art to change the world. Conversely, they've been called flat-footed agit prop or propoganda; an ironic attempt to revive a 60's, grass-roots ethos.

But that is not how art changes the world.

For_pr_copy

So now after all this, how does art change the world? I don't really know, but I have a kind of working definition which is helping me in the studio and elsewhere. It goes something like:

  • It can let us know that we are not alone.
  • It can make us question assumtions we didn't know we had.
  • It can show us things in a different way.
  • It can stimulate our imaginations
  • It can be absolutely useless, and in so doing, be invaluable
  • It can make the world a better place by the simple fact of its existance.

I've strayed far from the subject of memory, true. But I think this post makes a kind of sense, because just as we need to believe we are doing something worthwhile, we need also memory, for as Saul Bellow said:

Memories keep the wolf of insignificance from the door.

(to be continued...)

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

L'embarras du Choix. Vauvenargues

Threegracesjumping21_4 La nécessité nous délivre de l'embarras du choix$.$
[Necessity delivers us from the difficulty of choice.]

--Vauvenargues

via Word of the Day

Monday, October 15, 2007

Stitch Room @ Vitra Design Museum

Stitch3 "At the intersection of green design, space-making, and textiles, the Bouroullec brothers’ Stitch Room is one part design genius, one part child-like playtime. Known for designs that cross the boundary between furniture and architecture, the creations of this design duo tend to emphasize possibilities, and their exploration of space in The Stitch Room is no exception. Using eco-friendly textiles from the ultra-green Danish company Kvadrat, the brothers have created organized, versatile spaces that can be transformed to almost any imaginable use."

(more…)

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Joan Didion and "Alienation from Self"

Alienation_from_self "If we do not respect ourselves … we are peculiarly in thrall to everyone we see, curiously determined to live out — since our self-image is untenable — their false notions of us. We flatter ourselves by thinking this compulsion to please others an attractive trait: a gist for imaginative empathy, evidence of our willingness to give. Of course I will play Francesca to your Paolo, Hellen Keller to anyone’s Annie Sullivan: no expectation is too misplaced, no role too ludicrous…

It is the phenomenon sometimes called “alienation from self.” In its advanced stages, we no longer answer the telephone, because someone might want something; that we could say no without drowning in self-reproach is an idea alien to this game. Every encounter demands too much, tears the nerves, drains the will, and the specter of something so small as an unanswered letter arouses such disproportionate guilt that answering it becomes out of the question. To assign unanswered letters their proper weight, to free us from the expectations of others, to give us back to ourselves — their lies the great, the singular power of self-respect. Without it, one eventually discovers the final turn of the screw: one runs away to find oneself, and finds no one at home."

--Joan Didion, Slouching Towards Bethlehem

via the excellent Maud Newton

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Andrew Mwenda: Let's take a new look at African aid

Do not miss this video: a REAL look at the politics of humanitarian aid to Africa. It will open your eyes. I remember presenting a similar--if more simplistic--paper in high school in the early eighties on the crisis in El Salvador. History has borne out the argument I think, but have a listen and judge for yourself:

http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/159

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  • My name is Daniel Flahiff and I'm the editor here at (incli)NATION a blog about art, architecture, music, technology and a few other things. Mostly Seattle, Los Angeles and NYC, but not exclusively. Artists, inventors, philosophers, engineers, conspiracy theorists, novelists, poets, and filmmakers. If you like what you read, subscribe!

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    (incli)NATION is: Daniel Flahiff, editor :: Dorothy D., Akira Rabelais, and Bryan Schultz...

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