imomus: (Default)
[personal profile] imomus
Art is dead, long live science! No, wait, scratch that, art is dead, long live urbanism!

The particular nature of the 'art is dead' message you're getting depends very much on the city you're in, and on where the art galleries mounting their currently-trendy interdisciplinary shows are turning for their funding. 'Art is dead, long live science' is a current London meme, and it's been encouraged by funding from The Wellcome Foundation. On October 17th BBC Radio 3's Sunday Feature was a 45 minute programme by Kodwo Eshun about Sci-Art, the hot new thing in the British art world: a series of collaborations between artists and scientists. There was an ex-Pogue, Jem Finer, talking about his work with physicists. There was Lewis Wolpert playing the obligatory fuddy duddy cynic, telling us that no artist had ever helped a scientist in any way. And there was a man from the Wellcome Foundation saying quite transparently that when you're giving wads of GlaxoSmithKline cash away, artists tend to flock around, eager to fit their pet ideas into whatever program you're proposing.



That attitude wouldn't go down so well in Berlin, where things are a bit less capitalist. Here, cultural activities are much more likely to get funding from the government than the pharmaceutical industry. The play I'm working on just now, for instance, is 100% government-funded, as are the fees of the students participating, even those from outside Germany. This government funding may explain why a lot of the art I've seen in Berlin in the past year has looked rather like a government report on urban issues. The show I saw at Kunst-Werke yesterday, Shrinking Cities, was just the latest in a long line of shows about cities. I trace them back to the fantastically influential Cities on the Move show curated in the late 90s by Hans Ulrich Obrist and Hou Hanru. Cities on the Move was about 'the Asian city as a force of disruption and an intense concentration of energy'. It was a sexy and optimistic show about the future, and certainly fired me up about living in high density Asian spaces.

Rem Koolhaas, who had big input into Cities on the Move, staged his own urbanism show this year at Berlin's Neue Nationalgalerie, Content, a big survey of his architectural projects, but also of his research into shopping and attitudes all over the world. The show came at the moment of Rem's greatest disillusionment with America (he was closing his US offices and concentrating on China) and has an almost anti-American (certainly anti-Bush) theme -- ironically, the success of the Seattle Public Library project and the probable cancellation of the China TV building in Beijing has since swung Koolhaas back to a much more America-centric position.

Then there was this year's Berlin Biennale, which gave over a lot of the rooms at the Martin Gropius Bau to urbanism and psychogeography, including my favourite piece, a photographic study of allotment gardens and woodland walks by Ingrid Book and Karina Heden. Last year we had the excellent Territories show at Kunst-Werke, a show about 'the production of space' in Israel, especially in terms of segregation and security.

What these shows try -- and in some cases succeed in doing -- is to balance an empirical, objective look at real issues in the world (journalism, sociology, fact-gathering) with an artistic freshness of presentation, and a concern for the lived experience and cultural meaning of the changes described. This is a German tradition going back to the post-expressionist 'new objectivity' of Die Neue Sachlichkeit, and it's an important counter-balance to German idealism and head-in-the-clouds romanticism (currently exemplified in art by the brilliant Kai Althoff).

Shrinking Cities is the latest interdisciplinary urbanism show. It's the result of three years of research by artists, architects, filmmakers, graphic artists, journalists, and cultural and social scientists. It's been financed by the Federal Cultural Foundation in co-operation with the Leipzig Gallery of Contemporary Art, the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation and the magazine archplus. It's all very serious and worthy and interesting. It's also, because of its subject, a rather depressing show, a show about decay and decline.



At Kunst-Werke, itself a post-industrial warehouse space, we get a floor which is basically a book about urban decay pasted up on the wall, with lots of timelines, demographic charts, facts and figures about four shrinking post-industrial urban areas: Detroit (USA), Halle/Leipzig (Germany), Ivanovo (Russia) and Liverpool/Manchester (Britain). On the upper three floors we get more quirky insights: a video about an eccentric tall black homosexual in Detroit who rode around on an amazingly colourful, trash-encrusted bicycle, a reconstruction of a Liverpool cultural projects office, interviews with 12 year old boys on derelict brownfield sites, clips from movies set in post-industrial wastelands, headphones with pop records like Marvin Gaye's 'What's Going On' and St Etienne's 'Finisterre' playing on them. (For more about the show, see the excellent Worldchanging blog about it.)

I'm enough of a post-Marxist Calvinist to appreciate shows like this, but sometimes they get you a bit nostalgic for the days when art galleries were full of that silly, personal, playful, pointless thing called art. It's not that art isn't still being made in Germany, it's just that you have to fly to London or Chicago to see the latest work by John Bock or Kai Althoff. And using all that kerosene just isn't good for the environment.

massive change

Date: 2004-10-25 07:13 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Have you heard of the show called Massive Change currently going on at the Vancouver Art Gallery? These two shows, Shrinking Cities and Massive Change sound quite complimentary.

http://www.massivechange.com/

Cheers,
Neil

Re: massive change

Date: 2004-10-25 10:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparkligbeatnic.livejournal.com
The website for that Massive Change website looks like a tacky and hyped load of propaganda for big biz & technocracy. Sorry to see the VAG has been bought by technocratists. Art seems to be shrinking indeed. One bit of science they definitely need to learn is thermodynamics, especially the first (no free lunch) and second ('worstward ho' as Momus has put it somewhere) laws. (Third law: you can only beat the second law in a non-existent, unattainable, perfect world of zero-temperature - a Marketing department?).

Re: massive change

Date: 2004-10-25 10:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparkligbeatnic.livejournal.com

Why do most of the pictures from that Massive Change website remind me of the cover from New Order's album 'Republic'?

Re: massive change

Date: 2004-10-25 11:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparkligbeatnic.livejournal.com

If that Massive Change exhibit can be taken as an ironic commentary on the state of late capitalism, it makes for quite good art, after all. For example, below is an excerpt from the 'Military' section of the site, which states that the Military will shift from the 'service of war to the service of life'. Drearily, all the entries are about projects in the service of the US military (are Vancouver and Toronto already a part of the USA?).

The following excerpt has quite a good retro space age feel. Is the date really 2003 and not 1963!?

Melts in your mouth, not in your hand
Thursday, October 09 2003 @ 11:23 AM EDT Views: 263
Contributed by: Editors

According to Gary Shults, chief of Natick Soldier Systems Center ration systems division, M&M candies and over 30 per cent of other commercial food products owe their existence to the military.

Other foods in the military-civilian technology transfer include canned meat (Spam), dry beverage mixes (Kool-Aid), freeze-dried coffee (Taster’s Choice), cake mixes, and dehydrated eggs and milk.”

The challenge of the Natick Soldier Center researchers and nutritionists lately is to develop a tasty, well-balanced meal in a compact, vacuum-sealed, airtight package impervious to moisture, extreme temperatures, bacteria and the shock of a 10,0000 foot airdrop, plus remain fresh as the day it was prepared for three years.

Today’s MREs – meals ready to eat – include smoky franks, chili macaroni, chicken parmesan packaged in high tech material that requires the addition of an ounce of water to trigger the heating process.

Re: massive change

Date: 2004-10-26 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Some of the interviews on the Radio Page are good, though:

http://www.massivechange.com/staticpages/index.php?page=radio

I'm listening to one right now which is very cynical about the effect of hi-tech weapons -- John Broughton:

http://www.massivechange.com/mcradio/JohnBroughton.mp3

Profile

imomus: (Default)
imomus

February 2010

S M T W T F S
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28      

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags