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	<title>Transitory Art &#187; TEXTS</title>
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		<title>Some thoughts on transitory in a historical perspective</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/some-thoughts-on-transitory-in-a-historical-perspective/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 15:19:41 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Some thoughts on transitory in a historical perspective by Blaž Kosovel This contribution is not concerned with a specific artwork or even with the transitory art field. My purpose is to zoom out from art and focus on the sole word transitoriness. I will try to define it in relation to similar notions, I will [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p lang="en-US" style="text-align: left;" align="CENTER"><b>Some thoughts on transitory in a historical perspective</b></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><b>by <a href="http://transitoryart.org/blaz-kosovel/">Blaž Kosovel</a></b></span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">This contribution is not concerned with a specific artwork or even with the transitory art field. My purpose is to zoom out from art and focus on the sole word transitoriness. I will try to define it in relation to similar notions, I will show how it is related to our times and why it can be an appropriate description of today&#8217;s world condition.</span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">The root of the word transitory is </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>trans</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, which in Latin means across. All concepts with the prefix </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>trans</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> are in one way or another related to change. This is very important for the human condition, because human beings are always in relation to something else. There is no growth without change and exchange. To name just a few of these concepts, there is </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>transformation</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">: a change in form or appearance, usually without the possibility to come back. The transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly or the transformation of a flower into a fruit. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transgression </i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">is the overcoming of rules or limitations. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transmission </i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">means passing through of something; it can be information on a radio or a gear in a motor. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transcendence </i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">means overcoming physical existence or its limitations. Transcendence is a voyage out of the burden of nature. This is also true when nature becomes a burden. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Trance </i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">is related to it, a state of not being here by being in an altered state of mind. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transportation </i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">is the change of place, going from point A to point B; we know both the departure and the arrival place. It is a way to be in </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>transit</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, meaning »to go across«. Both transitory and transitional derive from transit, the difference between them being the importance of the departure and arrival. Is the notion of point A and B crucial or is our path of going across more important?</span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transitional</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> refers to transition, therefore to a process or a period of change. Transition is a time between two stable moments, from point A to point B. Nowadays, the term is also used for the so-called countries of transition, i.e. the countries transitioning from the communist societies to capitalist ones. The two points are clearly visible, and the transition ends when a country is fully on the next level. Transitional period is just something in between.</span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transitory</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, on the other hand, is something that is by nature bound to change, something impermanent. Thus, transitory is not just »something in between«, it is the most important thing. This is why we can say our life is transitory. </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">There are two other similar notions: transient and temporary. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transient</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> is something brief, short-lived, something that does not last long. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Temporary</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> relates to something that is impermanent as well, but in a strong relation to time (</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>tempus </i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">is time in Latin). Temporal used to be a synonym for secular, stressing our brief existence on Earth in opposition to the eternity of afterlife. In the same way, saying that life is transitional means that real life actually begins only with death. We can see the life of the soul as transitional if we believe that it does not die with the body. </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>Transitional</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> is therefore related to a distinct change between points A and B, and </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>temporary</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> is related to time as its most important variable. There are more and more temporary jobs nowadays, which means that there are jobs that last for a short period of time. The same job can also be defined as a transitional one, meaning that it is a job between two »real« jobs.</span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">On the other hand, transitory does not have distinct points A and B, the emphasis is not on time and neither on the beginning nor the end, but on the sole process of change. Saying that life is transitory emphasizes that life is always changing and that it will end in the end. </span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">However, transitional periods are not just periods in between any more, but are more and more becoming regularities, thus making life with all its transitions much more transitory as it used to be. To stress the importance of transitions in human life, I will make an oversimplified difference between traditional and contemporary environment. It is an oversimplification because I do not want to say that there are no traditions in contemporary world any more, I just want to stress the difference between different environments. </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">Tradition can be defined as the transmission of customs and beliefs through generations, how you behave, eat and dress, what you are allowed to do and how you relate to life and death. People inside these patterns are strictly regulated, every transgression is severely punished. This also means that there are clear lines of transition in these patterns, with rituals functioning as institutions that mark the passage, the </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"><i>trans.</i></span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> One of the most common is the transition from childhood into adulthood, which in every community is connected with specific initiation rituals, through which a child shows that he deserves to be an adult. In our society, we can say that the last real transition into adulthood was the one-year conscription army. </span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">In times when regulations kept people tight in distinct positions in their communities, everybody got a specific value and meaning. That also means that traditional transitions were crucial for people to make sense of their lives. Nowadays, all these boundaries are blurred, we have plenty of possible transitions but with the inflation of them they become almost worthless. When do we become adults? Today, this is not an easy question, because the complexity of today&#8217;s society does not make growing up an easy thing. In the USA, they tried to solve the problem with the creation of teenage years, i.e. a ten years mid-period between being a child and an adult. Initiation became a time of learning in the conscription education. Teenagers were the carriers of a newly created field of youth culture, which was not yet a »real« culture. All theses ideas were carried through the ocean to Europe in the post-war decades. </span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">In the last decades, the lines started to push higher and higher, with youth culture becoming mainstream culture. There was a lot of writing about »twenty-something life«, meaning the life after graduation and before getting a »real job«, an appropriate profession. However, because these real jobs nowadays never come, there is more and more writing about the idea that »the thirties are the new twenties«, meaning that there is less and less real adulthood, there is less and less clear where and even what is a point B to which we can transition from point A.</span></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">I want to stress three fields that are related to this transition into adulthood: education, work and marriage. </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">Education was always about learning something in order to get a degree that enabled a person to have a profession. Work was a vocation, another distinct position in society. Even in times before organized education, there was a guild system with a master-apprentice relationship, where you had to learn your skills in order to become a master. With modern economy in the 20</span><sup><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">th</span></sup><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> century, decades of work resulted in paid retirement. </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">University used to be the final and definite step in education, where you reached the highest peak of human </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">achievement</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">. Even the importance of a diploma can be seen in a way as a</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> title for women: when they graduated, even unmarried women could be called Mrs. instead of Miss. University degree was therefore a final step in the educational process, on the other hand, it was also an important step into the adulthood. Today, this is not possible anymore, because of so many people and so many information.</span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">We live in times of mass education, where</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> it</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> is supposed that everybody graduates, which makes a bachelor degree really just a first step in the educational process. This process never really ends, because so much</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> new information is</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> created every day and has</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> to be processed somehow. There are so many new inventions and so many new ways of work to be implemented. It is also impossible anymore that one person grasps all the knowledge that exists. This crisis of the university as a holistic project is seen in the creation of the Life-Long Learning Programs, the most popular of them being the</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> Erasmus student exchange. Nowadays, university is not a definite educational institution that can give you a definite social position. There is too much of everything new every day. Therefore, when and where is the point when you grow up, when are you educated enough to be an adult or even to be an educated person? </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">The end of education also resulted in getting work according to one’s</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> expertise. Precisely because there are not so many life-long contract jobs any more, there are more and more short-term and project jobs. This is by no means something strange, seeing it</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> from the position of endless transitions: a project is a truly transitional form, having a beginning and an end. What happens today is that after a project you can get another one, and after that just another one. You can also have more than one project simultaneously</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">. The same goes for</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> temporary jobs that are becoming more and more an everyday practice. This chain of projects and temporary jobs forces</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> a person to transition from one transitional period to another</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, but without really transiting to an</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> actual point B. The whole chain of transitions is today&#8217;s reality, thus making this endless transition our</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> common condition.</span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">For the same reason marriage is not important anymore and </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">transitions from one partner to another </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">are so common. Marriage used to be the pillar of the traditional economy, this is why in Ancient Rome</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> only the patricians could marry. In Medieval Europe, the feudalistic system restricted the production, management and exchange of goods and let them circle only in family environment. Marriage was thus the creation of a new household, which was actually the only economy. In the time when there were no national economies, when there was no unified global economy, marriage was not about love, but about managing property and work. In the time when there was no ministry of economics, marriage was about economy. However, with the creation of nation states, nations became new big families, with political economy as a</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> means of managing the production and the exchange of goods. In that time, marriage was about a distinct position in society. With the growing importance of the state and diminishing importance of the Church, the importance of marriage diminished. It became more and more just a romantic endeavor, not something that happened once in a lifetime. This went the farthest in USA where people marry and divorce out of a pure impulse.</span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">However, the state is not the most important institution any more. In the last decades, transnational institutions, corporations and national unions such as EU took the lead, making economy global on a scale that it was never before. With the creation of new global markets and their unification,</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> we got an enormous space for exchange and production. Goods started to flow all around the world; today&#8217;s production is on one side of the Earth, consumption on the other. One of the craziest examples of this are fish that are shipped from Northern Europe to China in order to be sliced and then back to Europe. Because it is cheaper </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">that way. Consumerism is just an endless flow of goods that has to be exchanged</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> faster and faster in order to keep </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">the global economy afloat. The same is with fashion, which regulates the taste of the markets in order to make changes faster. </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">Besides goods, people are more and more in transit as well, migrating throughout the world in search for </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">better work or just for the pleasure of traveling. There is not (a lot of) avant(o)urism</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> any more, just tourism, today&#8217;s fastest growing consumer industry, where destinations are new consumer goods, not means for revelations. Moreover</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, instead of spiritual transcendence, there is more and more transit, physical through space or virtual through internet. Alongside goods and people, with the appearance of the internet, </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">information exchange </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">just exploded. However, while Guthenberg&#8217;s invention of the printing that enabled fast </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">dissemination of new ideas started the protestant revolution, the internet has</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> not yet created a similar opposition to the global economy. Just the opposite – it made it stronger. Because today&#8217;s society is a society of endless exchange and endless sequences of transitions. »Change is the only constant« is a very popular saying in business circles. Although it is a quote from Heraclites, it has a much different sounding after 2,500</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> years: today&#8217;s society needs </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">constant change, but this change has to stay inside strict rules of exchange. In modern era, politics is mostly subordinated to economy, making modern politics’</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> main concern the </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">management of society, its people, goods, technology, information, capital and land. After the modern creation of national economy, the question of revolution was mostly just the question of how to change the management of the economy. This is why all the revolutions goals are another variation of</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> the same system as well. Both socialism and capitalism need the state and its economy to function. </span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">The already mentioned transition from (the so-</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">called) communism to (the so-</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">called) capitalism is the only possible transition, because it was a transition into the global (neo)liberal economy. This is why all the strategies and practices of resistance and emancipation create just another variation within the global economy of exchange. Moreover,</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> anti-capitalist strategies are mostly related</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> to a change of the economy on a global scale</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, which does not change the idea of the global economy as such. The exchange as such is not at stake, it always persists</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> in every new scenario of change. Modern era was always about creating new ways of life, new alternatives; this is how all totalitarian movements were created as well. The same goes for</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> avant-garde movements, the desire of which</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> was the same – to impose their view on the society as whole, not just on a specific segment.</span></p>
<p align="JUSTIFY"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">As I tried to show in this very brief outline, we have less life-changing transitions because we are living in a constant transitional period, without a real ending point to which we are transiting. This makes life much more uncertain, but, on the other hand, also much freer. And this is how society becomes much more transitory than it ever was. Life is transitory by nature, because it ends in some point. On the other hand, </span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">, communities and societies tend to last and were not as</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> transitory as they are today. This means that transitoriness</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> is one of the most important notions to understand in today&#8217;s society. Therefore, to raise the question about transitoriness is to question this endless change</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;"> a</span><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">nd – even most important – the boundary through which the change happens. Hence, the point is not to overcome the boundary and create a new variation of something, but to tarry with the boundary, to question the sole idea of change. This could be an appropriate way to embrace transitoriness.</span></p>
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		<title>Noise as potentiality for political/artistic action</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/noise-as-potentiality-for-politicalartistic-action/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 15:17:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Noise as potentiality for political/artistic action by Luka Zagoričnik In this brief text, I would like to enter the sphere of public space by means of listening to public protests as an assemblage of different initiatives, as a cacophonous event full of noises, voices, gestures, bodies and energies that enter the field of transitoriness before [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Noise as potentiality for political/artistic action</strong></p>
<p><strong>by <a href="http://transitoryart.org/luka-zagoricnik/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Luka Zagoričnik</span></a></strong></p>
<p>In this brief text, I would like to enter the sphere of public space by means of listening to public protests as an assemblage of different initiatives, as a cacophonous event full of noises, voices, gestures, bodies and energies that enter the field of transitoriness before categorization, formations, unison voices, fixed ideologies, demands, initiatives and actions. In other words, I would like to grasp or listen to the protests that happened in 2012 in Slovenia before the moment of their articulation. I will listen to them as if they were noise, noise that is not only a rapture, a void or defined with its known meaning, but noise as a problematic field that is based on contradictions that are present in the noise itself; inside these contradictions lies an open field of possibilities. Or as the title suggests – “Noise as potentiality for political/artistic action”. The theme of noise is quite fitting for the context of this symposium, not only because of its inherent transitory nature, but also for its tight etymologic connection to the sea and the navy in its form as noisea, as it was emphasized by Michael Serres: the sea, not only as white noise that is produced when the waves reach the shore, but white noise as pure potentiality that contains every possible frequency, and also has a shifting form, non-pattern nature, forming and deforming of waves, crashing into each other, etc. Nevertheless, we are on Cyprus and the waves are right in front of us.</p>
<p>In the last two decades, noise has become a fashionable item to be observed from a theoretical point of view. The theory is as follows: Disruptiveness and disorders lie in the very center of noise. Its ontological condition is a paradox because noise always creates and dissolves structures at the same time – it eats itself in order to constantly reemerge through a flux of data streams, information and sound. It doesn&#8217;t have a fixed form or fixed points, it escapes meaning, but at the same time it also provides it. It is multilayered with constant dislocations, it is confrontational but at the same time set in the background, and filtered through our perceptions or formal measures. It can be a discomfort or comfort. But what I want to suggest is that it is crucially embedded in our culture, even though we are doing everything to erase it from our lives or to contain it. However, in order to start thinking about noise as part of our culture, we have to abolish its confrontational moment by confronting it with silence, which is inherent to noise and can be understood as background noise – an omnipresent entity.</p>
<p>At the start, the protest in Slovenia in 2012 didn&#8217;t really have a fixed target. Targets were many and in its physical materialization in public squares and streets, as Johnny Cash would sing, &#8216;multitudes were marching&#8217; &#8230; and creating noise: antiglobalists, anarchists, common people, workers, army veterans, artists, intellectuals, fascists, they were all creating a dynamic body of voices, sounds, bodies and actions that were totally undifferentiated. If you can control the movements and the bodies during a protest with architectural space, police formations, special forces, corridors and legal rules, you cannot confine noise – it resonates, it bounces, it echoes and moves around, entering bodies, creating forms, and setting up actions. Which brings us also to the question of a tactical use of sound – through organization, megaphones, speakers, microphones, mobile technologies, sound devices, acoustic or amplified instruments, mobile and non-mobile sound systems which all enter the ever-shifting sound matter without a fixed center or fixed dynamics. We can also observe power relationships: who wants to be heard more, who wants to mobilize bodies and voices. Of course, the other side uses sound to control the masses as well, through modern technology that is devised for the warfare and not available for commercial use. There was shouting, booing, whistling, cheering, singing, playing music, performing, each of these activities mobilizing part of the crowd and then shifting somewhere else and so resisting immediate articulation. It’s tempting to say that their way of operating was prompted by affect rather than reasoning. And this is the moment that produced discomfort amidst the general public, the press and political powers.</p>
<p>When this noise reaches the point of articulation in the form of a unisono voice, movement, demand or political party, it is immediately subsumed in the prevailing political discourse, where it becomes an easy target for dominant politics and where, in order to be heard and seen, has to play by the already existing rules of the game, which is the game of politics that isn&#8217;t even in the domain of politics anymore, as many would say nowadays. When it contains itself, it loses its potentiality and changes from transitory to transitional, with a clear meaning and aim. Noise, of course, is not immune to this process, it is not even immune to becoming a commodity inside the frame of vulgar capitalism. For example, noise in the context of music as musical genre or noise as a commodity on the idea market: it is present in the heterogeneous field of academic sound studies for the last two decades, in information theory, in urbanism and architecture through the concepts of soundscape and sonic ecology, in the field of physics and acoustics, and in art through various practices of sound art. The last context is particularly interesting because noise, in the contemporary art field, has always been castrated – confined with spaces where it is presented (galleries, museums, even public spaces) and following strict regulations that prevent its potentiality to unleash.</p>
<p>Finally, I would like to present two works from the contemporary art field that are using musical form for their content: the first one, entitled Improvised Non-Concert, is by a Basque artist Mattin, and the second one, entitled Concierto ZAJ para 30 o 60 voces, is by a Spanish artist Esther Ferrer. Both are placed in the context of a concert while also trying to subvert it, and both can also be placed in the context of a social experiment and in the field of participatory art. They both rely on the loose structure, i.e. the structure of space and time of the performance. The second one also relies on the score or set of loose instructions. I participated in Improvised Non-Concert at last Documenta. It happened after the discussion among invited artists, theoreticians and the general public called Noise &amp; Capitalism. Both, the discussion and the concert exposed themselves as not being goal-centered, in the sense of wanting to result in a product, but rather focusing on the activity. During the non–concert, we were put in a space and it began — there was no goal, just the presence of people in a certain context and their activities. Some would talk, some would sing, dance, do nothing, some tried to provoke others, some tried to form a group, etc. During this activity, certain structures emerged and vanished, power relations formed and dissolved, some people performed, while some (just) thought they didn&#8217;t &#8230; It generated noise and posed question through the act of improvisation as a musical and performing act, a concert as a musical or non-musical act and as a social activity. Here, improvisation is the key thing; it’s the making of music that takes activity as a starting point rather than focusing on a final product. Somewhere during this improvised non-concert, Mattin dissolves this all too often presumed premise and puts it under critical observation. It should be noted that in Mattin&#8217;s case, what is problematic is exactly the aspect of observation and the role of the observer.</p>
<p>Esther Ferrer is one of the Spanish pioneers of modern performance art. In the seventies, she was a member of the collective ZAJ together with Walter Marchetti and Juan Higaldo that were closely associated with John Cage and the international Fluxus movement. In her work, Esther Ferrer continues with its basic premises. One of them is that through performance, social situations, tensions between the work, the performer and the audience are created; the latter two becoming a single but heterogenous body that is characterized by a specific social space. It also reveals itself in the present work Concierto ZAJ para 30 o 60 voces, which involved about forty people, including many non-musicians, performers and visitors who are united in one body, a social unit through the medium of voice and sound followed by an open composition, in which voices of different people enter individually, each one every minute, with content of your own choice that you can sing, recite, speak, yell, etc. And in various languages ​​and in different positions in space. This can be a public space, a theater, a gallery or anything else that deals with artistic and social forms with their own pulse and dynamics. The piece was originally written in 1984 and it could therefore be said that it belongs to a specific time and place, but the recent performances and record release from 2010 by the label w.m.o/r reveals its potential for a politically charged art of noise. Both Mattin and Ferrer use a well-established art form (a concert, or non-concert in Mattin&#8217;s terms following modern philosophical tradition of François Laruelle and his followers) and transform it into social action which defies strict definitions and containment, therefore creating a powerful field of potentiality, an event inside the art and political space.</p>
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		<title>art unlimited</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/art-unlimited/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 15:13:15 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[TEXTS]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ART UNLIMITED TRANSITORY ART FROM THE EYE OF THE BODY AND BACK INTO BECOMING &#160; by Sabin Borș … Yet you would like to understand what transitory is, curiously… Reading this, hearing that, one hopes to grasp a sense of what is coming through, already aware of its passage, the movement of the unseen, the [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>ART UNLIMITED</strong></p>
<p><strong>TRANSITORY ART FROM THE EYE OF THE BODY AND BACK INTO BECOMING</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-family: Cambria;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><a href="http://transitoryart.org/sabin-bors/"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">by <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Sabin Bor</span></span><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">ș</span></span></a></span></span></span></strong></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><span style="color: #000000;">… <span style="font-family: Cambria;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Yet you would like to understand what transitory is, curiously…<br />
</i></span></span></span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-family: Cambria;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Reading this, hearing that, one hopes to grasp a sense of what is coming through,<br />
</i></span></span></span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-family: Cambria;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>already aware of its passage, the movement of the unseen, the shift of knowledge,<br />
</i></span></span></span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-family: Cambria;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>the smothering ruin within.</i></span></span></span></span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">Twentieth century philosophies have long strived to develop and overcome the operational concepts for the investigation and criticism of the representational and non-representational dimensions of the image. To say the image is that which contains the unseen in what is visible has become a truism, but it is also true of the way we think the transitory is the vessel of history or the way we consider the neutral for its ethics. There is an ‘economy’ at work between appearance and disappearance, one that inscribes the image with the power to divide the visible and the invisible, restructuring the ways in which our lives are defined within a certain culture of the image. Culture is dependent on visuality to such an extent that some phenomenological implications of this economy now lie forgotten.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">Phenomenology – Transitory Ontology – Germinal Virtuality</span></strong></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">The visible was already a transitory and almost imperceptible event in Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology. The task of its actual representation was left to history’s castaways: artists and philosophers. Whether a “strait between exterior horizons and interior horizons” or “an ephemeral modulation of this world” [1] the visible for Merleau-Ponty was the illumination of a ‘momentary crystallization’ of visibility cast to draw up the topography and the trajectory of vision. Shapes stabilize in the exterior, while the subject intuitively captures them and thus institutes the visible through the very dematerialization that separates the subject from the object: “Where are we to put the limit between the body and the world, since the world is flesh?” asks Merleau-Ponty. The very notion of </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>chiasm</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> was based on the oscillation between the visible and the invisible to account for the way intentionality is diffused and ‘the production of subjectivity’ immerses into the flesh of the world. For Heidegger, it was the openness of poetry that enables us to dwell with things by hovering above them. Poetry displays what things are and could be, while the poet calls “that which in its very self-disclosure causes the appearance of that which conceals itself, and indeed as that which conceals itself”. [2] A ground of the apparent is brought into question here. Being is the foundation of things rather than the network of practical or cognitive relationships they share. In </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Process and Reality</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, Alfred North Whitehead discusses discontinuity as the essence of time, one that is nevertheless seen as a constant transition of one individuation to another, a continuity dependent on the decision of each existence. His phrase, “There is a becoming of continuity, but no continuity of becoming” [3] marks a reversal of the order of causes: continuity is the effect of interferences between transitions and concrescences. The idea of an existential heritage passed down from one precursor to the entity that comes after it creates a series of inheritances and transmissions that Whitehead calls ‘trajectories.’ The actual entities are acts of becoming that form these trajectories. Whitehead divides them into </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>concrescences</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, or “the fluency inherent in the constitution of the particular existent,” and </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>transitions</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, or “the fluency whereby the perishing of the process, on the completion of the particular existent, constitutes the existent as an original element in the constitutions of other particular existents elicited by repetitions of process”. [4] To simplify, two moments come together and generate a succession of inheritances and transmissions that resembles rhythms or intervals. With every breath ceased, another germinal breath prepares to displace the interval, to span the linearity of time, to give it its breathless depth. Just like a heartbeat, movement relies on a series of discontinuous acts of becoming, a series of contractions and absorptions that sustain the measurable harmonies. And it is Deleuze who, after </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Anti-Oedipus</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, raised the one question that marked the transition to </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>A Thousand Plateaus</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">: How does one write a sociology of fluxes? How do you psychologize a process that has no ‘for whom’? This process describes the virtual connections and assemblages that Deleuze and Guattari’s ‘Geology of Morals’ formulates as a process of stratification that disengages molecular forces from their misleading anthropomorphic and representational determinations. The social desiring-machine makes place for the stratifications of the brain that compose the image of thought. It is the infinite speed of thought that makes the transition between the various thresholds that compose the specific infinity of the concept. [5]</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> A more radical approach is taken by Alain Badiou in his attempt to find a ‘transitory ontology’ on a progression where nothing is concluded, an ‘intervallic dimension’ that has set no clear destination. [6] For Badiou, the event itself is transitory and cannot be decided within a situation. It can only be decided by a subject. A break from Heidegger’s poetic ontology brings Badiou closer to an engagement of thought with ‘contemporary atheism’, which departs from any lapse into the nihilism of finitude only to open up a different possibility in the field of the infinite fidelity to the event. Philosophy must assume the gravity of acting and thinking in its pursuit of the (trace of) truth by way of ‘restrained’ and militant action. Badiou’s militant subject is engaged in a mathematics of Being which is the thinking of every situation as pure multiple. (p. 30) This conception parts with Deleuze’s Nietzschean vitalism and the Anglo-Saxon linguistic turn to found mathematics as a thinking of ontology, or what Badiou calls the ‘Platonism of the multiple’, an attempt to separate logics and mathematics. Badiou’s Platonism acknowledges mathematics as a thought that is intransitive to sensible and linguistic experience, and dependent on a decision that makes space for the undecidable, while assuming that everything consistent exists. (p. 91) There is no knowing subject here; as mathematics proceeds axiomatically, thought must decide in favour of the axiom of choice. Binary oppositions subject/object or virtual/actual are abandoned in favour of an activation of being embodied in thought, with a logic of appearing that concerns the relations within possible situations. (p. 165)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> In </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Semblance and Event</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> [7], Brian Massumi’s discussion on the radical empiricism of William James draws on the distinction between ‘objective-transitions-leading-to-functional-ends’ and ‘experiences-and-percepts corresponding to them in the subject’. Since they “</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>both are in the transition</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">”, things and their experience are in transition together. Objects and subjects share this transitional movement of performative sharing, with the object bringing the subjective poles of the movement into phase. The object relates to ‘subjects’ as “differential poles integrating into a unity of movement”, which is the event. The duration of the event’s demonstrative performance is characterized by “a mutual participation co-defining the same dynamic” where subjective and objective elements “resolve back into differentials” only to let movement continue again. The object is an accumulation of transitions that is not defined by form but rather by the dispute of its renewal, as the identity of the event’s elements only follows their integration and dispersal: “What the object will definitely have been, and what precisely will have been the role of the subjects, is clear only in retrospect after each integration – by which time they are already in transit to another terminus.” Subject and object are thus defined in addition to one another, complementary, “in a continuing movement of integration and decoupling, phasing and dephasing, whose dynamic takes precedence over their always provisional identities”. [8] Subject and object are variations of themselves and each other concurrently; they inter-cross each other. Rather than fulfilling objective ends, says Massumi, we are carried “by wavelike tendencies, in a rollover of experiences perpetually substituting for each other”. As James puts it, “These [transitional] termini… are self-supporting. They are not ‘true’ of anything else, they simply </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>are</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, are </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>real</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">. They ‘lean on nothing’… Rather, does the whole fabric of experience lean on them”. [9] It is a definition of </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>art</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> that must be performed and brought into effect, a definition of living art, or the arts of life, a transitional expression of ‘creative philosophy’ that is continuously in the making. A </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>germinal virtuality</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> seems to allow for transformations and inter-generational processes that hold the power to in-form relations and expressions.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">The Touching Eye and the Hunt for Seeing</span></strong></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">It is the relation between transition and virtuality that is of interest to an idea of transitory art. It should follow transitions understood as processes through which the actual occasions of art are produced. Transition and the migratory movement of the transitory suppose the transitioning to and from occasions, the interpretative repetition of the past that provides the conditions for novelty. In their attempt to define an aesthetics of transition, David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins [10] trace the recent history of ‘apocalyptic transformations’ the computer brought at the end of the twentieth century and unveil the transition of media as a medium in transition. The technological utopias grounded on participatory democracy see their reverse in “an online culture of chaos” where information is commodified and human experience is ‘denatured’ or displaced by the virtual reality of the computer screen. Periods characterized by cycles of innovation and experimentation that often end in creative anarchy and institutionalization, as shown by Debora L. Spar [11], have brought a need for “a pragmatic, historically informed perspective that maps a sensible middle ground” amidst current conceptual uncertainties and technological transitions, with “media change as an accretive, gradual process”. (p. 2) The coming moment of media convergence brings a need to “recognize that such convergences occur regularly in the history of communications and that they are especially likely to occur when an emerging technology has temporarily destabilized the relations among existing media”. (p. 3) William Uricchio carries the idea further. [12] The transitional status of media is given by its ongoing and multi-faceted evolution. Technology, signifying systems, cultural contexts and cultural practices meet the trans-national dimensions of variant cultural meanings and the cross-audience dimensions of representational pressures, identity problems and moral panics. Systematic deployments, the dramatic re-purposing of media systems, or the intermedial redefinition of media are resonant echoes of “a media present that is itself very much in transition […] a moment of media instability” that holds the power to inform the reconstitution of media (pp. 30-31) and “to resituate the possible meanings that an isolated medium can generate”. (p. 32)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> These transitional instances can be observed in what concerns the video work of art. Despite the cinematic appearance of the narratives a video work produces, what it involves is a direct material coincidence between two micro temporal logics of sensation and computation. What constitutes the image in a video work of art is not the cinematic frame, but the contingencies of micro temporal frames of perceptibility. The cinematic image is made of micro images that are just as many micro temporal binding events. The very medium tells this to us. From the electromagnetic flow of the video to the algorithmic flow of the computer, a certain deterritorialization of the medium takes place. The transition from copper to fibre-optic cables informs the medium while the flow of information overcomes matter. But the images produced by electronic and digital technologies are transformations and composites of forces and intensities that dispute their fields within the flow.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> It is Bernard Stiegler’s </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>The Tongue of the Eye</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> [13] that questions the meaning of ‘art history’ and raises the stakes for a thinking on transitory art. For Stiegler, existence is exceeded by consistence, which “are objects that do not exist, but which consist”. Existence is “that which projects a consistence that it is not” for we have a tendency not to act out. The aesthetic development of non-human beings proceeds by means of works, which is to say through technique, therein giving access to consistence. The artist, like the philosopher, scientist, lawyer, or politician have the task to invent new libidinal economies in the place of those no longer working: “In this context, artists have a very specific responsibility: it is in the work of art that what constitutes the libido makes itself most purely visible. What is the work of an artist – say, a painter? </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>To produce an eye</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">. […] it is painting, sculpture, architecture, the entire visibility of that which has been seen by those who have seen it only to the extent that they knew how to bring it to sight.” (pp. 227-228) Stiegler resumes: “The spiritual eye that visible works give us to see is woven by the hands of artists.” We step outside our own bodies, through a social body that is woven by a </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>tekhnē</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> – “the tongue with the hand of the writer, the eye with the hand of the painter, the ear with the hand and the eye of the musician”. An ‘organic arrangement’ is formed through the montage of various forms that are projected in order to give us our eyes. Most modern painters, says Stiegler, were obsessed “by the becoming-invisible of the visible”. (p. 228) In order for us to see, a work must first be shown. It is for this reason that the museum is a place where we train our eyes to see and to transform themselves to reach their vision. But for Stiegler, the aesthetic experience is replaced today by the aesthetic conditioning to which culture industry is making us regress: “We have been destroyed and blinded – </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>all of us</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, for what we are – by this becoming-regressive of our ever-narrowing gaze [</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>regard</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">].” (p. 229) If art is to find its contemplative gaze on the comings and becomings into consistence, it must step back from “the voyeurist gaze introduced by the </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>buzz</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, the latest find in what has become a veritable marketing of art, and a contradiction in terms”. An active contemplation is a technique to take care of oneself, the others, and the realm of others.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">In Stiegler’s conception, we are technical and symbolic beings for as long as we regard “and reveal an eye that regards us in all that we see”. That which regards us like this is that which is constituted by our sharing of the world, i.e. our individuation with one another that constitutes ourselves as such. Stiegler’s account of a visit to the Prado Museum in Madrid opens the question of a pre-individual eye. The cultural superpositions in the collection of Western paintings allows the eye to “yield through space and time”, to constitute and deploy itself as a ‘milieu’. (p. 231) “Over-saturated by history – by a History of the eye – it constitutes what Simondon calls a pre-individual milieu, the pre-individual foundation of vision, which is to say, of the eye that is not in the eye socket, but rather like that which constitutes the symbolic process of transindividuation giving us to see the visible as it has </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>never been seen</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">. This transformation of the eye […] is called the history of art.” (p. 231) The transformation of the retinal eye takes place by assembling the organs through inanimate beings such as pigments of paint which thus become organic. “Every museum,” says Stiegler, “gives us to see this condition of seeing, and at the same time a genealogy of the eye that regards and is regarded […] even while it teaches the eye to see that to which it has yet to open. This transformation, which is the enlargening of the body by non-living organs […] produces </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>organa</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, artifices, works as well as tools and things (which are all, always, tools in some manner). These artifices hold together bodies and put them in relation […].” (p. 232) The aesthetic turns of the nineteenth and twentieth century, or what Stiegler calls “a machinic turn in sensibility”, triggered a series of short-circuits in the process of transindividuation that broke away from the ideas of </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>sociation</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> and </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>culturality</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> as active relations towards art to give way to cultural consumption. The expansion of the sensible is replaced, for Stiegler, by “an aesthetic conditioning that induces gregarious behavior”. (p. 233) The “great technological and industrial mutation” currently taking place is, according to Stiegler, digitalization. The development of digital technologies and networks allows a symbolic life based on associative and participative relations. As the artist deals with the public, “he sculpts the social” and must fulfill the political role of securing the processes of transindividuation in the current aesthetic wars dominated by the culture industry.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">The Re-Sociation of Relational Bodies</span></strong></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">The question of how can art sculpt the social through associative and participative relations is central to anything we were to label as transitory art, given that digital art remains largely constrained within an image framework, and that many of the works we call ‘interactive’ do not succeed in overcoming the hegemony of the picture and the picturesque. [14] Art needs to engage the body in a way that unveils the transient contingencies of the body’s interactions with its environment. In doing so, it can challenge the idea of boundaries and the nature of constructions, whence the social and the political are founded. Art – and ‘transitory art’ in particular – must emerge in the space of reconstituent activity. The political implications of this are fundamental and go back to Hannah Arendt’s idea of the body politics in action, where the public only appears through the processes of speech and action. [15] Art must not create [reproduce?] the space of appearance, but create appearance itself, and in that give us to see the visible as it has never been seen. It is the multiple and mutually inclusive dimensions of reality that art of transitoriness must actuate, topological extensions of the real that engage all senses into a holistic experience.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> Transitory art is not about the momentary, the provisional, or the content of moments. It is an art of mutual immanence, sharing the very in-ness and trailing of experience, without a perceptible transition. It is what Brian Massumi calls ‘experiential dissolve’ when discussing the affective event of anger: “There’s no determinate transition in a dissolve, just a continuous fading-out overlapping with a continuous fading-in. The point at which the changeover occurs is imperceptible by nature. It is purely abstract. But it must have happened. We know it did, because even if it wasn’t perceived, it was unmistakably felt. Known-felt, thought-felt. It’s a virtual affective event.” [16] The idea of transitoriness does not lie within the movement – it is an affective accumulation of shifting and varying non-localities. And to be able to render this, art must search for an affective eye endowed with the ability to fold vision and cause the folding of the body within the environment, a merge, a </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>blending</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> within the environment. The eye becomes the environment. It is what Deleuze has already seen as bodily forms of transition, in a more nuanced take on the idea of non-place as “a place only of changes”. These ideas are best reflected in dance and the choreography of thoughts it involves. “Dance makes directly perceptually-felt time of the body expressing its potential for change,” says Massumi, only to continue: “Dance is the conversion of the body’s movement in space into the Time of its alteration: its speculative translation into a universe of pure bodily becoming. […] The semblance of meaning produced by the dance is a direct, perceptually felt experience of the body’s power of animate becoming. Semblance of self-expression: pure impersonal expression of bodily power, in nonsensuous excess over the body. […] Body unlimited.” [17] This lived intensity and tension of living leads to existential procedures that can be translated artistically in order to convey the transformation of affects into emotion, so that it is their transition that renders us the continuous transformation of art and our re-invested vision, implicitly – “Any of these procedures can be narrativized in one way or another, structurally coded according to one version or another of what constitutes a structure, or procedurally formalized to one degree or another. Whichever path is taken, the point of conversion is the transformation of vitality affect into emotion. The conversion into emotion may be explicitly noted, thereby becoming the content itself.” [18]</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> Ideas of how we may understand transitory art and the transitoriness of art can also reflect Stamatia Portanova’s investigations on the digital as a metaphor of thought in </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Moving without a Body</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">. [19] Portanova’s interpretation of technologies as ideas is based on ideas </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>in matter</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, the potentiality lying behind materiality, and virtuality as a structural “incorporeal potential for variation”. The body becomes a map of both possible and impossible articulations and variations that, while “implicit in its composition”, open the body to transitional becomings. For Portanova, digital technology “is what modulates movements in a definitive manner; the digital is not a modulation but a codifying mold”. (p. 37) As such, it holds the potential to open perception to the “relational in-between” Erin Manning talks about, “as a resonating dimension of potential”. [20] By redefining movement into a series of virtual, rational and relational objects, digital technologies would desubjectify it and distinguish movement “from its mere organic and phenomenal embodiment”. (p. 64) A topological conception of both the body and its situation enables us to think of ourselves, art, gestures and activities in terms of the continuous subsistence as “the invariants of all transformational events”. Ultimately, it all comes down to the activation and actualization that would produce and “</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>make felt</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> [my emphasis] the schism between the virtual folds of duration and the actual openings of the now in its quality of passage. On its way”. [21] This is a way to think change without any thing changing, concludes Portanova in her account of Manning’s concepts, or rather “to activate the immutability of being (object) by replacing it with the movements of becoming (relation)”. Like objects, subjects are made of relation.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> It is relation that makes me believe that one perspective was not sufficiently discussed: that of camouflage. An expression of the modernist impulse in both arts and politics, camouflage becomes meaningful as a way of seeing, being, and moving in the world, allowing one to blend in and stand out concurrently. But, as Hanna Rose Shell explains, [22] “it is an individuated form of self-awareness that is also part of a network of institutional practices. It is an adaptive logic of escape from photographic representation”. (p. 21) The static, serial and dynamic forms of camouflage reflect distinctive types of photographic reconnaissance, changing in proportion as environments and technologies evolve. Their convergence is an expression of the “chameleonic impulse” to represent, or what the author calls “the technological approximation of visual evanescence”. Camouflage is a seeing which “is activated precisely by the rendering invisible of the self”. (p. 23) As technologies take over, people become increasingly passive as images are accepted as truth, in an operational sense. Live bodies, natural objects and human activities “are the locus of active processes of self-fashioning and the substrate of camouflage media practices”. “What is the configuration of self versus environment that enables one to efface the traces of one’s own presence from photographic media of surveillance?” asks Hanna Rose Shell – “It is </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>camouflage consciousness</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> [my emphasis], in which full self-consciousness becomes literal photographic self-analysis.” (p. 23) Camouflage too is made of relation. It is becoming and becoming-relation, one that is logic and poetic at the same time.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">A Museum of Transitory Art. ART UNLIMITED</span></strong></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">OK, let’s say transitory art… But a museum of transitory art? </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">The museum of transitory art could be an institution that encompasses the relational logics of the transitory and offers a participatory perspective over artistic practices, which, through their affective vitality and incorporeal impressions, show us a seeing that contributes to our transindividuation as human beings. Far from seeing this museum in its strictly institutional sense, I instead see it as a shifting yet practicable state that defines a generalized model of political action towards us and the environment. A museum, i.e. a political memory which informs action models, conscious and unconscious constructions of our awareness. A museum, i.e. a curatorial act that attends to memory, not by framing it into confined spaces or conceptual frameworks, but precisely through making available, accessible and approachable a set of artistic practices that shift away from current artistic trends only to generalize transindividual ways of seeing and becoming. It is an evolutionary understanding of both art and architecture that challenges the natural, cultural and historical foundations to address a memorial ecosystem. From artistic display and cultural display to ethical (self) display. It is not only the borders of mediums that become immaterial, but the borders of life itself. Our own bodies become more fragile, our own identities more mobile, our own desires more indistinguishable, our own selves more unstable. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">The metaphorical re-construction of modern art as transitory art expresses a </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>critical</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> shift. That is, an urgent need for (self-)criticism. Art can incite to expression only as long as it triggers self-awakening and challenges the cultural establishments of memory. I understand a museum of transitory art as a metaphor not only for the need to re-evaluate the foundational architecture and institution of the museum, but the very architecture of socio-political memory. A shift from economical rationality and technocratic bureaucracies to the civil logics of the public space, re-constituted. THE TRANSITORY IS THE MEMORY ITSELF. MEMORY IS THE EVENT. And it is memory, in the end, that a museum challenges, architecturally and institutionally. Art is not only seeing – transindividuation is introspection and, more importantly, recollection; a way of seeing and assuming what happens </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>between</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>in-between</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> artistic practices and exhibits, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>in-between</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> the social and the political – </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>in-between</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> history and evolution, as consciousness first and then as human be(com)ings. While a didactic discipline continues to inform the visual stimulus of art as what we may call the pedagogy and education of seeing, art and its museums need to build the interiorly common memory, a germinal memory of ourselves </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>as</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> human be(com)ings.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">A museum of transitory art, that is, an open space for our transition from input individuals to environs. A shift from the material and political archaeology of knowledge to the ‘stratigraphy’ of the living. The museum itself needs to interfere culture as discontinuity. In order to do this, a museum of transitory art needs to profanate the very institution of museum and art, so as to allow for a fundamental political restitution. This is not a museum of institutional practice, but rather the architecture of a metaphor. And it is this metaphor that can be turned into a model of political and aesthetic action. Ethical and pragmatic politics – spontaneous political aesthetics. It is our </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Boîte-en-valise</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> – to challenge the confinement of art within the walls of a museum, not with the irony of preserving Readymades as works of art by an institution, as Duchamp has out-maneuvered the traditional concept of the museum through practice and theory, but as a re-sociated habitus bearing the full weight of responsibility for the beings to come.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> Liberate (our)selves! Liberate (your)selves!</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">ART UNLIMITED</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><b>References</b></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[1] Maurice Merleau-Ponty, ‘The Intertwining, The Chiasm’, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>The Visible and the Invisible</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, translated by Alphonso Lingis, Northwestern University Press, Evanston, IL, 1968, p. 132.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[2] Martin Heidegger, ‘…Poetically Man Dwells…’, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Poetry, Language, Thought</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, translated by Albert Hofstadter, Harper and Row, New York, 1971, pp. 213-229, p. 218 in particular. Full quote: “What remains alien to the god, the sight of the sky – this is what is familiar to man. And what is that? Everything that shimmers and blooms in the sky and thus under the sky and thus on earth, everything that sounds and is fragrant, rises and comes – but also everything that goes and stumbles, moans and falls silent, pales and darkens. Into this, which is intimate to man but alien to the god, the unknown imparts itself, in order to remain guarded within it as the unknown. But the poet calls all the brightness of the sights of the sky and every sound of its courses and breezes into the singing word and there makes them shine and ring. Yet the poet, if he is a poet, does not describe the mere appearance of sky and earth. The poet calls, in the sights of the sky, that which in its very self-disclosure causes the appearance of that which conceals itself, and indeed </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>as</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> that which conceals itself. In the familiar appearances, the poet calls the alien as that to which the invisible imparts itself in order to remain what it is – unknown.” (p. 215)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[3] Alfred North Whitehead, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"> (1929), corrected edition, edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne, Free Press, 1979, p. 35.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[4] Id., </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>ibid.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, p. 210.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[5] “Concepts are ‘absolute surfaces or volumes’, forms whose only object is the inseparability of distinct variations.” The ‘survey’ </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>[survol] </i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">is the state of the concept or its specific infinity, although the infinities may be larger or smaller according to the number of components, thresholds and bridges. In this sense the concept is act of thought, it is thought operating at infinite (although greater or lesser) speed.’ Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>What is Philosophy?</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, translated by Hugh Tomlinson and Graham Burchell, Columbia University Press, New York, 1994, p. 21.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[6] Alain Badiou, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Briefings on Existence: A Short Treatise on Transitory Ontology</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, trans. by Norman Madarasz, State University of New York Press, New York, 2006.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[7] Brian Massumi, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Semblance and Event: Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England, 2011, especially pp. 29-37.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[8] Id., </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>ibid.</i></span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[9] William James, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Essays in Radical Empiricism</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 1996, p. 238 and p. 202, quoted by Brian Massumi in </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Semblance and Event</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, op. cit., p. 32.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[10] David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, ‘Introduction: Toward an Aesthetics of Transition’, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, edited by David Thorburn and Henry Jenkins, associate editor: Brad Seawell, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England, 2003, pp. 1-16.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[11] Debora L. Spar, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Ruling the Waves: Cycles of Discovery, Chaos, and Wealth from the Compass to the Internet</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, Harcourt, New York, 2011, mentioned in id., </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>ibid.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, p. 2.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[12] William Uricchio, ‘Historicizing Media in Transition’, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, op. cit., pp. 23-39.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[13] Bernard Stiegler, “The Tongue of the Eye: What ‘Art History’ Means”, translated by Thangam Ravindranathan with Bernard Geoghegan, in </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Releasing the Image: from literature to new media</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, edited by Jacques Khalip and Robert Mitchell, Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 2011, pp. 222-236.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[14] Installations relying on digital images rarely rethink the body and the socius in the environment and instead demonstrate the technological coups rather than an actual merging within the environment. Since most of the surfaces inciting to active responses rely on a series of stills (I touch the wall or I move my hand, the wall changes colour when and sometimes where the hand made the touch or the movement), it is a rather ‘didactic’ interaction that visually demonstrates that interactions actually take place. But is the hand nothing more than a proximate switch?</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[15] Hannah Arendt – </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>The Human Condition</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, second edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1998.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[16] Brian Massumi, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>op. cit.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, p. 65.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[17] Gilles Deleuze, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Foucault</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, translated by Séan Hand, University Of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1988, quoted and explained by Brian Massumi, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>op. cit.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, pp. 140-141.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[18] Brian Massumi, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>op. cit.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, p. 153.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[19] Stamatia Portanova, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Moving without a Body: Digital Philosophy and Choreographic Thoughts</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England, 2013.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[20] Erin Manning, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Relationscapes: Movement, Art, Philosophy</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, Cambrige, MA: MIT Press, 2009, p. 66, quoted in Stamatia Portanova, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Moving without a Body</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, op. cit</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, p. 38.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[21] Erin Manning, ‘The Art of Time,’ in the catalog of the 2012 Sydney Biennale, p. 2, quoted by Stamatia Portanova, </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Moving without a Body</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, op. cit</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>.</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, p. 90.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">[22] The following ideas are taken from Hanna Rose Shell’s remarkable investigations in </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;"><i>Hide and Seek. Camouflage, Photography, and the Media of Reconnaissance</i></span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif;">, MIT Press / Zone Books, 2012.</span></p>
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		<title>What is Transitory Art?</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/what-is-transitory-art/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 15:09:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[What is Transitory Art? by Dunja Kukovec &#160; The art of the last century is (was) subject to continuous tending towards the new; it was called modern at first, then contemporary and finally (new) media art. Transitory art is art that exposes – at the level of concept and context – the question of the [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>What is Transitory Art?</strong><br />
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<p><strong>by<a href="http://transitoryart.org/dunja-kukovec/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> Dunja Kukovec</span></a></strong></p>
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<p>The art of the last century is (was) subject to continuous tending towards the new; it was called modern at first, then contemporary and finally (new) media art.</p>
<p>Transitory art is art that exposes – at the level of concept and context – the question of the boundary. It represents a digression from the hysteria of capitalism, refusing the terminology that tends towards the new, such as modern, contemporary or (new) media art. It is taking shape in a time when invention per se or novum as such fail to be either a fetish or a solution; for many answers and (short-lived) novelties hide precisely in the substitution or alteration of context, in the transition from one reality into another and some or the same forms into others.</p>
<p>Our full acceptance, and often abuse of the contextuality of truth (and art) notwithstanding, there remains the key question of not abandoning the boundary, for it is only without boundaries and beyond that the impossible or the absolute may be achieved. Yet, in a time of the so-called “open society”, the perception of the boundary represents that very margin that defines both the outside and the inside. If until recently we were insisting that there are no boundaries, then also the beyond as such could not be possible. Today, we know and clearly see where the boundary (boundaries) stands, yet the “beyond” fails to come to pass. Therefore, the key question is not the abandonment of the boundaries or the narrowness of views, but rather why, despite our full knowledge and cognition, nothing really changes at the substantial social level.</p>
<p>Transitory art is consonant with the present in which no one is (does not want to or cannot be) neither in nor out, and in which we are aware of the answers, numerous new methods, tactics and strategies, but still fail to apply them in the geopolitically or technologically separated realities. Transitory stands for flexible, mobile, passing, unsteady, or even adaptable; while in formal terms, it may represent an event, an impression, a hack, a change of thinking or a gesture not necessarily tied to an object of art.</p>
<p>MUSEUM OF TRANSITORY ART<br />
Collective institutions of the last century that have shaped the paradigm of the present with mnemotechniques, history analysis and systematic archiving, function only under the guise of the universal and the objective; in practice they involve strategies of patriarchal-colonialist forces that create particular worth (and values). One day, history will be rewritten anew and archives will be updated.</p>
<p>MoTA museum exists both in real and virtual space. It may occupy either an existing institution or a public space. At times, it may occupy the actual physical space, while at other times, it occupies only a contextual framework. MoTA museum is not a national or an “exclusive” stronghold, yet it institutionalizes memory and gives meaning to art. Since collective institutions are a must for the visions of the past, understanding of the present and mastering of the future, MoTA museum is a reconstructed museum that is at once utopia and reality, vision and history.</p>
<p>If the avant-garde movements, overwhelmed by the futuristic enthusiasm, endeavored to open, bring the museum of modern art outdoors and destroy the archives, MoTA museum adapts to the time-space situation, somehow subordinating to art. Moreover, if in the past museums represented an artistic framework within which everything could become art, now, a museum is everywhere where art is present. MoTA museum maintains at least three parameters typical of a museum, but it de-constructs and re-constructs them.</p>
<p>The concept of collection and ownership is being maintained through the production and financing of art projects and artists, the space is a super-space or a network, while Mediatheque and ArtistTalk represent an archive and an educational “department”.</p>
<p>MoTA is a museum of transitory art that can really produce something precisely by insisting on the intersection of the established form of the museum and the new field of transitory art.</p>
<p>COLLABORATION AND REPRESENTATION</p>
<p>MoTA consistently seeks a networked, horizontal and consensual way of working that finds its utmost expression in the active collaboration. Everyone takes part in decision-making and is responsible for a particular field. Along with the support of the methods of collaboration, both among the artists themselves, as well as among artists, curators, theoreticians, producers and spectators, the museum best serves the artistic project if it fully conforms to its content and various needs.</p>
<p>MoTA sets out to represent artistic practices and projects that are often overlooked by the existing institutions. Some artists try to avoid the predictable institutional framework, while at times, their practice may shift into other artistic fields.</p>
<p>Since we believe that the attempt of social and artistic engagement taking the form of discovering, unveiling of, warning against or questioning the sociopolitical, technological and informational reality does no longer represent (the only) significant deviation from anxiousness, we are also interested in subjectivity as such and the direct and autonomous creative process such as, for example, programming or painting; we aim to research into the potential artistic practices that are introverted on the one hand, and formally experimental on the other.</p>
<p>FROM BRIGHT IDEAS TOWARDS THE QUESTIONS OF THE EVERYDAY</p>
<p>Let us now return to the question of the everyday, where transitory art searches for and also finds a great deal of answers or questions. Science and theory seem not to give much importance to this question and therefore, debates about the everyday turn out to be extremely irrelevant or even absurd. However, human life is best manifested in the everyday that constitutes most of our – seemingly happy – lives.<br />
In the revolution of the everyday, only art with its transitory nature can facilitate the understanding of ever new realities that differ, above all, by what is or is not allowed, how we behave (or how we should behave) and what state the physical body is in – sitting, standing, walking, running, driving or dancing.</p>
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		<title>FREEING THE UNDERSTANDING OF TECHNOLOGY</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/freeing-the-understanding-of-technology/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 13:58:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Peter Lukan When we enter the world presented by Ohira and Bonilha in their exhibition The Unknown – A Hypothesis About Immanence, we immediately face an intriguing mix of the technological and supernatural that extends to the paranormal. We encounter something unknown, something that calls for our curiosity and wondering. Electronic devices, stripped of their [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://transitoryart.org/peter-lukan/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Peter Lukan</strong></span></a></p>
<p>When we enter the world presented by <a href="http://transitoryart.org/ohira-bonilha/"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ohira and Bonilha</span></strong></a> in their exhibition <a href="http://transitoryart.org/welcoming-the-unknown/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em>The Unknown – A Hypothesis About Immanenc</em></span></a>e, we immediately face an intriguing mix of the technological and supernatural that extends to the paranormal. We encounter something unknown, something that calls for our curiosity and wondering. Electronic devices, stripped of their usual industrially designed appearance and their technological purposes, open for our interpellation. The Psychophone, a device for transcommunication with other dimensions, Raspberrypsy, a closed video loop using a visual variant of Schriber’s method displaying enigmatic images that are not expected there, and two Contemporary Divinities, simple radio receivers using a galenite crystal and a germanium photodiode that deliver sound out of thin air – all these make us question the way things work in the real world, outside laboratories and professional or academic discourse about technology. This drive of curiosity is what invites the spectator to make new interpretations about his or her relationship with technology. To interpret the unknown that technology can produce.</p>
<p>A broad fascination with electronic devices and electricity in general, reaching out of circles of professionals, seems to be a frequent phenomenon of the 20th century. Sparked by the first “entrapment” of a lightning bolt, ever feared by humans, into the so-called Leiden jar and carried on by Nikola Tesla, who devised a technological way to manipulate it on a large scale, the electrical revolution changed almost every aspect of human lives. The path for the emergence of radio apparatuses, first electrical devices to use electromagnetic waves travelling simply through air, was paved with the discovery of radio waves by Hertz by the end of 19th century and their successful manipulation for transmission by Tesla and Marconi. Photos of people firmly sitting or standing while listening to a contemporary radio broadcast keep an aura of mysticism. We cannot understand the strange arrangement of people in such photos if we don’t know that something invisible to the naked eye is going on – massive transcommunication.</p>
<p>The beginnings of manipulation with electricity urged the scientific community to articulate a theoretical framework for describing and explaining phenomena connected to it. Despite the vast usefulness of the theory of electromagnetism that resulted from this effort, its complex mathematics and the use of the somehow fuzzy and non-intuitive central concept of (electric and magnetic) field still leave some room for various articulations of popular representations connected to it. The use of the concept of field has spread also to other areas of human knowledge and practice, including the pre-existent classical physics, information theory and bio-energetic healing. On the other hand, electricity has been available in our homes for more than a century now and many people deal with various electric devices and make their own explorations. This is a fertile constellation for the blooming of alternative non-scientific explanations of phenomena. Understanding seems to be a basic intellectual human need.</p>
<p>Strange phenomena connected to electricity and labelled supernatural date back at least to antiquity, but of course the human fear of lightning bolts, which were ascribed to gods, had appeared even earlier. The aurora borealis, for example, was in the Middle Ages most often seen as a foretelling of a catastrophe. The Frankenstein story created by Mary Shelley was based on actually performed experiments with electric current flowing through cadavers and lifting them to sit straight up. Experiments involving electromagnetism often include levitating bodies. The famous photos of Tesla with lightning bolts flying above his head make a deep impression on any viewer, even nowadays; the fact that they were taken on his request makes him look like a mystificator. The ability to produce human-sized lightning bolts seems to be so intriguing that it has weaved its way into a subculture of Tesla enthusiasts, reproducing the so-called Tesla coil, originally meant for wireless distribution of electrical energy as a kind of electrical monument. Also, Tesla’s promise of delivering free energy through the air is still the goal of the whole subculture of technological enthusiasts that try to build an electrical perpetuum mobile and disprove the law of entropy that in theory forbids it; this is nowadays found under the internet umbrella term free energy. Some physicists that engaged in a theoretical description of their homemade free energy machines in order to expose the theoretical mistakes of their undermining by the law of entropy gradually became aware that this is a difficult and time-consuming task not really worth pursuing.</p>
<p>What I want to point out with these examples is that electrical phenomena, in spite of the fact that electricity has been ‘domesticated’ for more than a century, seem difficult enough to be theoretically described that one almost needs a technical formal education to feel comfortable with their explanations. And this is in the face of the fact that we live in the era of computers and information technology, which are nothing but devices for fine manipulations of electric impulses. Basically, we live amidst a lot of machines whose functioning we don’t really understand well. This leaves room for alternative explanations of some electrical phenomena, which may very well be intertwined with extraordinary personal, maybe even paranormal experience. In recent decades, technology conceived of as technological culture has also become an area of interest for various artists who mix art and science. In Slovenia, such authors include, for example, Dragan Živadinov and Marko Peljhan. That is all about the general socio-technological conditions into which we are by default immersed, and now let’s enter Ohira and Bonilha’s exhibition of some, let’s call them, technological unknowns.<br />
The authors themselves, already with the choice of the exhibition title, offer their interpretation guidelines for the exhibited unknowns. Their intention is, apparently, to strip technological artefacts of their usual role, determined to serve human needs, and expose what is truly immanent to them, what is their genuine immanence. Not what something does, in terms of serving human needs, but what something is capable of doing. For example, what happens when you make a closed loop with a device originally meant to be a medium like a TV or a camera? You turn something that was meant to be a medium, an instrument, into the message itself. You expose its immanent features by closing its mediational channel to the outer world and peep through the loop, as a hidden viewer, to see what happens. What you find are, surprisingly, some kind of patterns, maybe proper images that were not supposed to be there. Technology is supposed to be predictable, this is why we rely on its use, however, this result seems to have been unpredictable. These images seem to be what the machine produces on its own, despite being turned off, or to put it more poetically, we could say, what the machine dreams.<br />
When you reconfigure a radio receiver so that it is not tuned to any frequency, as it is its primary purpose, what happens? You remove a limitation of the device designed in a way to obediently and predictably serve massive human communication. You make way for the device to produce uncontrolled signals, its own immanent language, so to say. Again, we deal with some ‘dead’ tool, something material, which all of a sudden seems to become alive and acquire a will of its own. Or, to put it differently, it acquires the potential to become a vehicle for communication with other forms of life which find their communication seat somewhere within the machine, immanent to it.</p>
<p>The immanent substance of what we usually label ‘material’ is even more stressed with Contemporary Divinities #1 and #2, two radio receivers powered by a galenite crystal and a germanium diode, respectively. We are used to electric devices needing some electric source for their functioning, whereas the two Divinities work by themselves, apparently acquiring electric energy from the air and ground. They do not need human intervention in the form of plugging to acquire energy, they do it by themselves. In this sense, they are self-sustained, independent, and the galenite crystal and germanium diode are the immanent material hearts that deliver energy from ‘within’ the machine due to their special material features.</p>
<p>Immanence as a philosophical idea is a major feature of pantheistic philosophical systems such as Spinoza’s, Bruno’s or Schelling’s, for example. In a certain sense, it puts the focus on the conception that the world is self-contained, all life forms are part of it and all possible deities and higher beings are somewhere within it, maybe in some specific place, or maybe everywhere. Historically, this idea emerged in contrast to the well-affirmed concept of a transcendent God in the Christian world and was most sharply subsumed in Spinoza’s claim <em>deussivenatura</em>, God or nature. In the present context of technology, the implication of the immanence hypothesis is that technology, which is sometimes venerated beyond all limits, is part of the world, too, and therefore has no manipulative powers that transcend it or that are almost godlike. It is not something omnipotent, which one could be lead to think when watching an atomic bomb explosion, for example. This claim may seem as obvious as it can be but, being immersed in a deeply technological society, people sometimes tend to regard technology as a kind of saviour.</p>
<p>The thesis of immanence of technology amounts to dethroning the manipulative principle of technology, which permeates most of our everyday lives. In this respect, a similar position was taken by Heidegger in his work <em>The Question Concerning Technology</em> (1954), in which he identifies the essence of technology as creating standing reserves for exploitation. This backwardly defines us as exploiters – the more we live a technology-supported life, the more we figure as beings of exploitation. The hypothesis of immanence of technology in this regard implies also opening new potentials and perspectives of our own being in the world, not only as consumers and exploiters of technological devices but also as wondering, playful, poetic and communicative beings.</p>
<p>A crucial role in this opening of perspectives is played by explanations. The Psychophone phenomenon of contacting dead persons or spirits and Schriber’s method of feedback loop producing strange or unexpected audio and visual phenomena are in conflict with the ordinary scientific rationale because they lack explanation, more specifically, of the scientific kind. They point to the irritating fact that something technological remains unexplained. If it is often publicly heard that science has still a lot to discover, this often relates to cosmological research of the universe or to high energy particle physics – the so-called basic sciences. But technology is supposed to be already thoroughly explored because it is human-made, and when we make something, we are supposed to know all about it and have an explanation for all of its functioning. This standpoint was inscribed in scientific explanations and has been widely held by most participants of the scientific community for centuries. It constitutes the so-called foundationist understanding of explanations as determining what is possible and what is not. If something cannot be justified with an explanation, then it is not possible. This view largely appertained to the rationalist mind relying on Cartesian certainty and modern scientific objectification of nature, according to which everything that could be demonstrated rationally or, to put it in modern scientific terms, mathematically, counted as existing. This attitude culminated in scientific determinism that extended its influence well into the 20th century. Controversies over quantum physics, however, contributed a lot to its abandonment.</p>
<p>This rational and logical determination of scientific theories was embedded in scientific explanations and set the limits of what is possible. In this sense, such explanations had a justificatory and transcendent status with regard to actual events, similarly as gods in some religions. The term “natural law” echoes this transcendent status. Science as such was in this sense seen as superior to nature, as well as eschatological, propelling constant linear progress. Among historians and philosophers of science, the illusion of constant epistemological progress of science was disclosed by Thomas Kuhn in his epochal work <em>The Structure of Scientific Revolutions</em> (1962). His main point was that progress in science cannot be conceived as linear but rather as a movement constituted of paradigmatic shifts called scientific revolutions, between which longer periods of the so-called normal science are established. Before him, Karl Popper had already made a major impact on philosophers of science with his view on scientific theories presented in his work The logic of scientific discovery (1934). He established the criterion of fallibility, which is the principle that a scientific theory can fundamentally never be confirmed, and is on the contrary always subject to verifications and merely the best theory at disposal, the one that has not been rejected. This mitigated a little the status of the Cartesian certainty that scientific theories had enjoyed up to that moment. A very sharp criticism of the epistemological basis of science, which triggered much discussion, was that of Paul Feyerabend in his <em>Against Method</em> (1975). His main idea is that there is no unique methodology in science, which was labelled as epistemological anarchism.<br />
Generally speaking, philosophers of science have since then ‘softened’ their views on scientific explanations. They have broadened the concept of rationality in order to allow variations and changes in scientific methods, some even claiming that following the same strict rules would be irrational. In the 1970s, semantic theories of science started emerging, conceiving of science as the practice of making scientific models. The latter are basically of limited reach and cannot be generalized to the extent that they would describe ‘the whole world’ – the more particular and practical they are, the more limited their reach is. This view leaves room for models to have a descriptive, predictive and explanatory role but not necessarily an unlimited justificatory one, in the sense of exclusively determining what is possible and what is not. In fact, they still do so, but in the domain of their validity. Among practitioners of science, however, older views are still quite spread because not enough effort is put into presenting the relevance of these questions in an adequate manner during formal technical education.</p>
<p>By making the clash between the scientific and alternative explanations of the exhibited technological unknowns explicit, Ohira&amp;Bonilha’s work points also to the limits imposed by science through scientific explanations. Their action is in trying to trigger new perspectives in the thinking viewer, in evoking the question about the real meaning of an explanation, whether it is scientific or not, about its place in our everyday life, and the way it contributes to the shaping of meaning. Not only about the reason these devices are such and such and why some human inventors made them that way, but also about the manner in which their being such and such influences our self-understanding.</p>
<p>An influential work that opened these questions was Husserl’s <em>The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology</em> (1936). Criticizing a sort of emptiness of scientific theories, which is reflected in mathematical formalization, but not disregarding science and its achievements, he points out that modern science has difficulty in delivering meaning to non-scientists. Its crisis stems from the fact that a huge gap has formed between scientific and everyday thinking about world phenomena, and this is a crisis of meaning. He coins his central term lifeworld in order to account for the inextricable intertwining of thinking and lifestyle, theory and practice, subject and object. He points out that our knowledge and self-understanding are basically intersubjective and form within our lifeworld. In terms of science, this means stressing what is the mutual influence of laboratory measurement practices and theory articulation. This aspect is also one that Kuhn stresses, and he presents to us a certain epistemological hermeneutical loop. Even in science, as in other areas of life, what we create, in this case scientific theories, has a feedback influence on us, sometimes more, sometimes less directly. And, moreover, we, as beings, develop certain responses to our environment, we expand into our lifeworld. In the case of technology, this means that we develop a certain attitude towards devices, we build a meaning entangled with them. This includes triggering certain responses on our part, which form part of the interaction experience.</p>
<p>The question then is not how to correctly understand the working of the Psychophone, Contemporary Divinities and the video feedback loop using Schriber’s method. A more appropriate question is what other way is there to free these technological tokens from limiting scientific explanations in a way that does not make us “suspicious about all that is new but unexplained, which often eliminates the chance to change things for better”, as the authors say in an interview.</p>
<p>If we are technically more precise, these devices are not in reality energetically self-sustained nor totally closed within themselves, essentially isolated from the environment. The two Divinities with their semiconductor ‘hearts’ get their energy from sunrays, like photovoltaic solar cells, and are therefore dependent on energy from their environment. But for us, beings of technology, it is amazing that such a small piece of material with no additional elements can open a one-way communication channel with the world. Poetically put, a ray of light enables us to connect with social information and events. This reads pretty much like a description of a magic stone and it could very well be seen that way without causing harm to anybody.</p>
<p>The Psychophone, because it can catch a wide range of signal frequencies (it is not tuned like a radio), is susceptible to various kinds of electromagnetic signals. Our environment is full of electromagnetic signals coming from phones, radio antennas, electrical cables, amateur radio emitters, outer space etc. In a way, one expects to catch some kind of a signal if a receiver is transformed this way. On the other hand, again, we can wonder how is communication between such distant places made possible with nothing else than immanent qualities of materials used for antennas and receivers. Electromagnetic fields used for wireless telecommunication can truly be seen as a wonder that no one can really justify in a rational, logical way as something that is given, named and given an explanation to live along with this phenomenon. With the Psychophone, the listener can discern sometimes more, sometimes less distinct sound patterns, as well as voices, and maybe have a chance to establish real contact with some radio amateurs. Taking into account the projective nature of human mind, one could in principle even hear known people or those who are already dead. Most of us do hear their voices from time to time in our heads anyway and nobody bothers to ask where they come from. If we imagine a situation where such a Psychophone acquires the status of a device that triggers such experience in some person’s psyche, we can most definitely say that the Psychophone is a device for transcommunicaton.</p>
<p>The video camera closed loop using Schriber’s method is not a hermetically closed loop. Even if the system is turned off, one has to connect it to some electrical source in order to see the intriguing images, otherwise there would be none. This way, the machine still gets a minimum of energy that enables some electrons to leave the cathode, fly and hit the screen, which are finally recorded by the camera. Still, the fact remains that when the device is not in operation mode, strange patterns appear on the screen, displaying moderate regularity. A tentative technical explanation would be that this is probably the result of the frequency of movement of cathode rays on the screen, the sampling frequency of the camera and the feedback loop between the camera and the screen, the latter achieving a similar effect as the two opposing mirrors and repeating an image ad infinitum. But what we can find fascinating is the fact that even when the machine ‘sleeps’, it ‘dreams’ about patterns. That is something partially ordered, in which humans tend to see different meaningful things, e.g. asteroids, details of flies or something else. If our visual projection of meaning unfolds continuously, and the machine becomes the token that triggers this process, it can be rightfully named a (one way) transcommunication device.</p>
<p>What does having a scientific explanation mean for these phenomena? Does it preclude their ‘immanent magic’ from opening free interpretational questions of other types? The answer is affirmative only if we understand scientific explanations in the rationalistic sense of justification for the existence of phenomena. But if we understand scientific theories as symbolic models of reality used for practical manipulation and mediation in a large and still growing scientific community, then there should be no greater conflict in keeping our interpretational options open, in sparing transcommunication a place under the sun. Such a position enables us to keep our horizon of understanding open, to more freely interpret what happens when humans and human-made machines interact, how they have a backward influence on our self-understanding and so on. The technological unknowns of Ohira&amp;Bonilha disclose us mainly as communicative beings, as beings in search for other possibilities for communication, not stopping only at the established ones. We never know if new interpretations may bring some solutions that could change our attitude towards technology, nature, death, love, beauty and other potentially important topics in our lives. If they help bring some ethical or aesthetical turn, of which our society seems so much in need.</p>
<p>What scientists often overlook is the role of explanation in human lives in general, and what is the function of scientific explanations. Claiming that scientific explanations are the Truth, as some do, is a perspective-closing position, which chokes creativity and even development that is praised so much by the same scientists. What amateurs of science sometimes forget is that they can fall prey to the imperative of a hidden final Truth, which is possibly being held hostage by scientists, giving birth to conspiracy theories in science. Ohira&amp;Bonilha invite the witnesses of their work to “exercise freedom” by building their own understanding of technological unknowns without closing the horizon for only one type of explanation, one preselected Truth.</p>
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		<title>T.R.I.B.E.</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/t-r-i-b-e/</link>
		<comments>http://transitoryart.org/t-r-i-b-e/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 02:03:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Foreword to the book by Martin Bricelj Baraga This book is a result of a longer process that started years ago with the establishment of T.R.I.B.E. – Transitory Research (Residency) Initiative of the Balkans and Eastern Europe. T.R.I.B.E. was meant to be a research and residency network of the so-called ‘off’ spaces in the artworld, [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Foreword to the book by</p>
<p><strong>Martin Bricelj Baraga</strong></p>
<p>This book is a result of a longer process that started years ago with the establishment of T.R.I.B.E. – Transitory Research (Residency) Initiative of the Balkans and Eastern Europe. T.R.I.B.E. was meant to be a research and residency network of the so-called ‘off’ spaces in the artworld, trying to connect the not so connected scenes of Balkans, Eastern Europe and beyond.</p>
<p>We started T.R.I.B.E. with 4 diverse organizations: MoTA – Museum of Transitory Art from Ljubljana, Artos Foundation from Nicosia, Amber Festival from Istanbul and Ciant from Prague, alongside several partners, artists and initiatives. What we realized before establishing the network is that we had always met at the same places and venues – most often in the Western Europe. Therefore, we wanted to give artists and cultural activists the opportunity to meet and create in different, often unheard, or hidden contexts.</p>
<p>T.R.I.B.E. issued an open call “Transition &amp; Utopia”* and offered a shared residency format to both artists &amp; researchers where they would travel, research and create in more than one city consequently. Within the first two years, we developed several residencies and research papers, as well as working meetings and symposiums.</p>
<p>This book is a collection of those works and ideas that directly or indirectly reflect the theme ‘Transition &amp; Utopia” or relate to Transitory Art. It could be read as a book, as a manual or as the first introduction to discovering transitory art that has been published. We didn’t want it to be another art exhibition catalogue, so we included a few practical tools – interviews, articles and manuals that make an addition to the book itself. For instance, the manual on how to hack public space with sound by Nik Nowak and a manual on how to expropriate money from the banks by Nuria Güell.</p>
<p>“Transitory”<br />
We named TRIBE by the term “transitory” as a growing experiment and an effort to try to define transitory art through an organic process. This is why we have invited artists, whose poetics and tactics are very different from each other, so that the curation of the whole project would offer a more complex reading of transitory art.</p>
<p>MoTA – Museum of Transitory Art, whose name also includes the term “transitory”, never wanted to define this term in a manifesto manner. We never saw transitory art as a term that would be defined by a manifesto, but rather through different practices and thoughts that would correlate to today’s realities. We never saw the term as an exclusive truth or an artistic genre or direction, but rather as an inclusive term that could name the phenomena and practices we have been interested in since its existence.</p>
<p>MoTA is a collective of individuals, and each one enters this field from a different position. MoTA is therefore not a museum defined with walls or a building, but rather a collection of people and ideas that exist and are active within its programs.</p>
<p>But the term transitory within T.R.I.B.E. is to be read not solely from an artistic point of view, but as a term that relates to the transitional times and the very specific region we are working in. Within those three years, the issues we have raised in the open call Transition &amp; Utopia have become a reality – Cyprus faced troika measures and frozen bank accounts, Istanbul became a battlefield of protesters demanding the citizen right to public space vs. corporate powers, which penetrate everyday politics &amp; normal lives, and Slovenia has fallen into a deeper political, social and economic crisis as well.</p>
<p>Moreover, not only the Balkans &amp; East Europe, the whole Europe is in search of its identity, the one that has always been defined and expressed as the opposite to its “other” side. The very year 2014, with growing nationalist tensions, despair and a lack of vision in the political &amp; economic field in the whole Europe, resembles so much the year 1914 and the outbreak of the big war that it almost seems unreal how much history repeats itself.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Zadodati: &#8211; 1stMoTAtext / open call / cartographies text</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>THEME for RESIDENCIES 2013 &amp; 2014:TRANSITION AND UTOPIA</strong></p>
<p>Transition can be seen in acute forms in current political and social conditions and in the accelerated transition of social, religious and economic notions of value. In a situation of constant dislocation and perceived loss of values, Transitory Art can play a vital role in adjusting perceptions and bringing forward new forms, considering and analyzing not only longer-term solutions and structures, but also smaller, short-term interventions that can help trigger processes of change, including at the socio- and geo-political level.<br />
While the Balkans did enjoy a period of the so-called independence, they are now increasingly subject to historical Austro-Hungarian interests in new forms, and re-entering a state of disempowered economic dependence. This is accompanied by a loss of respect for human rights in Europe, accompanied by growing nationalism at the European center as well as the peripheries.<br />
Both center and periphery are experiencing an ever-harsher capitalist regime. This intensifies processes of migration from and across the Balkans. These conditions generate social, cultural and political uncertainty and a related lack of vision and leadership at a time when much of the region’s populations remain traumatized by the constantly changing and deteriorating life conditions.<br />
The forced and even catastrophic transitions occurring at all levels of human existence (intellectual, political, personal, media) produce widespread disorientation. Transitory Art is a process that responds to the consequences of transitional “realities”, which create such a widespread state of fear and uncertainty, and social and mental dead-ends.<br />
In the current state, change seems a utopia. We believe that the role of art is to allow space for the possibility of change, generating fresh perspectives and proposing new solutions. We search for concepts and ideas in which the citizens of a dreamless Europe regain their power to change.</p>
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		<title>Defining transitory art</title>
		<link>http://transitoryart.org/defining-transitory-art/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2014 01:52:05 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Neja Tomšič ‘it is difficult to get the news from poems, yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there’ William Carlos Williams www.alfredojaar.com &#160; In May 2014, ARTos Foundation and MoTA organised a three-day symposium to conclude the first two years of TRIBE residencies. The symposium took place in Cyprus, [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://transitoryart.org/neja-tomsic/"><strong>Neja Tomšič</strong></a></p>
<p><em><a href="http://transitoryart.org/neja-tomsic/">‘</a>it is difficult to get the news from poems,</em><br />
<em>yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there’</em></p>
<p>William Carlos Williams<br />
www.alfredojaar.com</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In May 2014, ARTos Foundation and MoTA organised a three-day symposium to conclude the first two years of TRIBE residencies. The symposium took place in Cyprus, perhaps one of the most visually scenic and illustrative countries for the topics we were addressing in the past two years – the topics of transitoriness and transition. The aim of this symposium was foremost to discuss and reflect on the present realities we are facing as artists in the broadest sense of the word – as critical and curious human beings who aim to make changes. Our purpose was to structure a gathering that would make us understand our practices better, and consequently conclude this project with a clearer idea of what transitory art is.</p>
<p>The symposium was roughly divided in four topics: tactical media, spaces, transitory art and sound, following the main trails we identified in the artistic practice of TRIBE artists. But in the end, the spaces panel led to a discussion on programming and emotions, transitory art became a discussion on death and archiving, and tactical media was about dismantling any kind of definitions, starting with art. Organically, we tackled and discussed questions that move us beyond categorisations, mediums and definitions.</p>
<p>What is transitory art? As the founders and directors of MoTA, we are asked this question often. Like in the Little Prince, we have an answer ready for adults: transitory art is the convergence of new media art and contemporary art, the convergence of analog and digital, and art that captures the transitional mode of the present moment. But for others, the answer lies somewhere else. There is no definition that would satisfy us, because in practice and in theory, we always find something that doesn’t fit in. In fact, I left Cyprus knowing transitory art does not need a definition.</p>
<p>Our museum started because we wanted to build a museum for us, a museum that would reflect the present; and transitory art is art that defies definitions – a museum that happens on the streets when like-minded people meet and collaborate, open-endedly, an artistic collective that is fluid, and dynamic, that responds and reflects, that changes its mission and methodology so that it responds to the situations we want to address, a museum of art that is in a constant search for the uncertain and the undefined. The introductory essays respond to the question “What is transitory art?”, opening the way for some of the possible answers, yet still not creating borders where there aren’t any. Written by our close collaborators, who work with us closely on both conceptual and practical levels, these contributions are an invaluable source for reflections on the facets of transitory art.</p>
<p>The second part of this publication is organised as an overview of concrete projects related to TRIBE. TRIBE was conceived as an experimental platform that would connect like-minded organisations in the Balkans and Eastern Europe, with the aim of creating a shared residency network, a collaborative approach to curating, and a platform for international co-productions. Projects were selected through an open call and by invitation. Roughly twenty artists and researchers participated in the residency program, while more than fifty others participated in different TRIBE activities.</p>
<p>The second part thus includes projects that were conceived and produced for TRIBE residencies (Azahara Cerezo, Ohira + Bonilha, Petko Dourmana, Flemming and Swintak); projects that are older, but respond to the aims of TRIBE (Jan Vormann, Nik Nowak, Nuria Guell, Société Réaliste, Karina Smigla-Bobinski); and projects that remained only project ideas or were not yet fully realised (Flemming and Swintak, Markus Jeschaunig, Gabey Tjon A Tham). They are presented in diverse ways – some as drafts, concepts and diaries, others as conversations, essays and visual documentation. The selection includes artists working in all media, and its editorial approach supports the diversity of artists and their ideas.</p>
<p>This is not a textbook on transitory art practices, it is rather a mind map that could lead to any possible answer. Like in our previous edition, the Outerviews,</p>
<p>the selection is personal. Artists that we respect and admire. Artists that we would like to see in our museum of the present moment, of life, of the streets. Artists that tell us more about life than the news.</p>
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