Look! A kitten! At Motto!
Feb. 2nd, 2010 09:17 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(Assumes David Shrigley-esque voice). Things that are popular on the internet:
1. Naked attractive people.
2. Cute kittens, jumping.
3. Opportunities to call strangers "asshole" and "douchebag".
....
89,374. The sort of things that Momus writes about on his blog, like arty bookshops in Berlin.
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As a matter of fact I was planning to write today about an arty bookshop in Berlin, Motto, knowing full well that almost nobody would pay any attention whatsoever, and preparing to console myself with an insight of the Dalai Lama: "If a practitioner thinks I hope people admire what I'm doing, expecting to receive praise for the great effort he is making... these are mundane concerns that spoil one's practice, and it is important to ensure that this does not happen so we keep our practice pure."


But then something remarkable happened. As I was browsing at Motto, making notes of interesting things they stock -- a book called L'Humanisme de Michel Foucault quirkily illustrated by Isabelle Boinot (whose work is really quite reminiscent of Shrigley's), some short stories art critic Jeff Rian wrote about Paris for Purple magazine (Purple Years, which in fact you can download for free as a PDF file here), a book by Margot Zanni about film locations rather excellently designed by Swiss designer Corinne Zellweger (it made me want to produce a much more illustrated and designed book next time), a British magazine called The Mock which proclaims, in its second edition, that anecdote is the new theory (you can read the issue free online here), and the gorgeously-designed (by Zak Kyes, natch) Exhibition Prosthetics co-published by Bedford Press and Sternberg -- I was suddenly attacked by a small black kitten.

Akiko Watanabe, who runs Motto, has just acquired this captivating beast -- a white-pawed small black cat, two months old, with huge pupils and a miniaturised instinct to murder. For this kitten (I didn't discover its name), Motto's piles of arty, gorgeous, intelligent and obscure books are nothing more than rocky outcrops in a tiny landscape, a "killing fields" populated by "mice" and "birds" evoked by a playful customer's wriggling, darting hands. For the kitten, a free handout advertising an art event, rattled in the air overhead, is enough to make a half-convincing sparrow.
Like a masturbating internet-user or the audience at a Keiji Haino concert (I saw one last night), the kitten is willing to suspend its disbelief in the interests of having a more exciting and fulfilling life. Yes, that's almost a real naked woman on my screen! Yes, Haino really is flexing, thrashing and swishing his blond mane around in an orgiastic access of Bacchic excess, and not faking or formularising it! Yes, that really is a sparrow, flying around the shop at such a low height that I could plausibly catch, kill and eat it, staining my furry black kitten lips with warm, red bird blood!
While the kitten calculated this, I was calculating myself. "If I make a short video of this kitten," I reasoned, "I could post it to YouTube, and in no time at all rack up something like eight million views. Because kittens -- along with Magibon not even bothering to hide her product placement -- are what YouTube users love more than anything else!" Then, I calculated, I could simply add the URL for Motto Distribution and I'd be transforming the Motto kitten into a very successful and effective viral sock puppet ad.
What would be in it for me? Well, I'd find a populist peg to hang an unpopular blog entry on, for a start. Look, a kitten! But also, by making a free viral ad for Motto, I'd lessen my guilt about the freeloading way I tend to use the store myself: browsing the interesting paper publications Akiko has curated, noting the most intriguing names and URLs, then going home and downloading free PDFs and JPGs of the stuff off the internet. Look, everyone! A kitten! At Motto!
1. Naked attractive people.
2. Cute kittens, jumping.
3. Opportunities to call strangers "asshole" and "douchebag".
....
89,374. The sort of things that Momus writes about on his blog, like arty bookshops in Berlin.
[Error: unknown template video]
As a matter of fact I was planning to write today about an arty bookshop in Berlin, Motto, knowing full well that almost nobody would pay any attention whatsoever, and preparing to console myself with an insight of the Dalai Lama: "If a practitioner thinks I hope people admire what I'm doing, expecting to receive praise for the great effort he is making... these are mundane concerns that spoil one's practice, and it is important to ensure that this does not happen so we keep our practice pure."


But then something remarkable happened. As I was browsing at Motto, making notes of interesting things they stock -- a book called L'Humanisme de Michel Foucault quirkily illustrated by Isabelle Boinot (whose work is really quite reminiscent of Shrigley's), some short stories art critic Jeff Rian wrote about Paris for Purple magazine (Purple Years, which in fact you can download for free as a PDF file here), a book by Margot Zanni about film locations rather excellently designed by Swiss designer Corinne Zellweger (it made me want to produce a much more illustrated and designed book next time), a British magazine called The Mock which proclaims, in its second edition, that anecdote is the new theory (you can read the issue free online here), and the gorgeously-designed (by Zak Kyes, natch) Exhibition Prosthetics co-published by Bedford Press and Sternberg -- I was suddenly attacked by a small black kitten.


Like a masturbating internet-user or the audience at a Keiji Haino concert (I saw one last night), the kitten is willing to suspend its disbelief in the interests of having a more exciting and fulfilling life. Yes, that's almost a real naked woman on my screen! Yes, Haino really is flexing, thrashing and swishing his blond mane around in an orgiastic access of Bacchic excess, and not faking or formularising it! Yes, that really is a sparrow, flying around the shop at such a low height that I could plausibly catch, kill and eat it, staining my furry black kitten lips with warm, red bird blood!
While the kitten calculated this, I was calculating myself. "If I make a short video of this kitten," I reasoned, "I could post it to YouTube, and in no time at all rack up something like eight million views. Because kittens -- along with Magibon not even bothering to hide her product placement -- are what YouTube users love more than anything else!" Then, I calculated, I could simply add the URL for Motto Distribution and I'd be transforming the Motto kitten into a very successful and effective viral sock puppet ad.

(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 08:59 am (UTC)(no subject)
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From:Adolf Kittler
Date: 2010-02-02 10:05 am (UTC)Actually, I just figured out the connection between the internet's two greatest obsessions, kittens and Hitler. They are, as Art Spiegelman pointed out (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maus), basically the same thing.
The difference between "cute" and "evil" is just a matter of scale.
Re: Adolf Kittler
Date: 2010-02-02 10:19 am (UTC)"Kittler's central project is to "prove to the human sciences [...] their technological-media a priori", or in his own words: "Driving the spirit out of the humanities", a title that he gave a work that he published in 1980. Kittler sees an autonomy in technology and therefore disagrees with Marshall McLuhan's reading of the media as "extensions of man": "Media are not pseudopods for extending the human body. They follow the logic of escalation that leaves us and written history behind it."
"Consequently, he sees in writing literature, in writing programmes and in burning structures into silicon chips a complete continuum: "As we know and simply do not say, no human being writes anymore. [...] Today, human writing runs through inscriptions burnt into silicon by electronic lithography [...]. The last historic act of writing may thus have been in the late seventies when a team of Intel engineers [plotted] the hardware architecture of their first integrated microprocessor."
Re: Adolf Kittler
From:Re: Adolf Kittler
Date: 2010-02-02 10:39 am (UTC)Re: Adolf Kittler
From:I am a kitten
Date: 2010-02-02 10:28 am (UTC)Re: I am a kitten
Date: 2010-02-02 10:36 am (UTC)Re: I am a kitten
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-02-02 10:44 am (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 10:49 am (UTC)I would love to hear another release sans the pyro-wizardry, with a return to emphases on melody and words. You write such beautiful melodies, I must say.
Goodrich (I too am Scottish-Canadian)
(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 11:03 am (UTC)are you coming home soon then
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Date: 2010-02-02 12:09 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 12:30 pm (UTC)Here's Fox, followed by Shrigley and Boinot:
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Date: 2010-02-02 02:06 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-02-02 08:20 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 03:49 pm (UTC)Oh momus, if only Click Opera weren't ending I could teach you ways to play with a kitten that would BLOW YOUR MIND!
(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 04:03 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-02-02 08:21 pm (UTC) - ExpandChat Roulette.
Date: 2010-02-02 05:40 pm (UTC)Re: Chat Roulette.
Date: 2010-02-03 04:47 am (UTC)grown dog
Date: 2010-02-02 07:19 pm (UTC)[Error: unknown template video]
haha... I'm totally laughing about the Keiiji Haino knock you couldnt help but throw in there... I saw him a few years ago.. in Tokyo... ah... it was cool, but not the mythic experience that I had in my head from the Fushitsusha days... also he was using a drum machine of sorts that was like... the stupidest thing ever... I mean, he sucked on that thing...
but suspend disbelief? he is who he is... (sort of a non-statement I know but... he's kinda like an aging cartoon character... although.. an aging PeeWee Herman could easily outdo him at this point. )
oh yeah, suX dick, cunt-licking bitch your blogs for jackoffs
(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 07:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 09:40 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-02 08:08 pm (UTC)Is there not going to be a countdown till the end with some kind of anticlimax-whimper party?
Future Lurking Good?
Date: 2010-02-02 09:13 pm (UTC)I’ll be missing the Click Opera community… regular anons, etc. but especially the lurkers!
(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-03 04:52 am (UTC)BECAUSE MY LAYOUT FUCKS UP WITH THESE KINDS OF IMAGES IT PUT THE CAT ON MY FRIEND'S POST AND UNFORTUNATELY POOR KITTY IN YOUR POST IS GOING TO DIE SOON ACCORDING TO IT.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-03 10:00 am (UTC)TELL ME YOUR DREAMS
(no subject)
Date: 2010-02-03 09:13 am (UTC)Olivier
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Date: 2010-02-03 10:01 am (UTC)(no subject)
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