socks-studio

Emma McNally’s Fields, Charts, Soundings Cartographies

by fosco lucarelli

contemporary art, electronic arts, illustrations, maps, psychogeographies, technology, virtual chronicles

Emma McNally‘s work is an artistic cartography of imaginary nodes, network topologies, noise patterns, musical notations. Traces and scatters shape an imaginary, poetic confluence of scientific advances in genetics, neuroscience, physics, molecular biology, computer systems, and sociology

From a descriptive text on her Flickr profile:

“In Emma McNally’s work dense layers of carbon on paper create fields which offer themselves up to meaning: planes, vectors, topoi are overlaid, or coexist with swarms, shoals, marks laid out in rhythmic sequence.

The effect is of a continuous flux formed by a congruence of information systems: neural networks, contagion maps, sonar soundings, weather systems, water currents, charts plotting the migratory habits of deep-ocean mammals.

Focusing on rhythm as an expression of the dynamic of forming/unforming, McNally thinks this through graphically by highly charged percussive mark-making. Lines carry force, like the pulse of an ECG or a measure of seismic activity.

Ways in which the ‘matter’ or ‘noise’ of charged marks (unclaimed by frequencies or channels) combine, disperse and recombine into gatherings of static are explored. Passage is forged between differing rhythmic expressions: highly regularised, geometric systems of marks enter into configurations with chaotic swarms and fugitive marks.

Regularised, centralising and defining forces are disrupted, subverted and deterritorialised. The nomadic and fugitive are subject to forces that capture and formalise. Monolithic and viral tendencies mutually infiltrate.

Overall the attempt is made to maintain a state of flow, of passage between these forces where both are in danger of overrunning but are constantly overthrown – with the resulting mutations and proliferations played out.”





































































































































Utopia Factory Abraxas / Terrorism Museum, by Stéphane Degoutin and Gwenola Wagon

by fosco lucarelli

contemporary art, electronic arts, information graphics, politics, psychogeographies, satire, technology, urban chronicles, visions

Come back home right after a fast yet inspiring chat with Paris based artist Stéphane Degoutin at the 104, I and Mariabruna were curious enough to start looking at the work he did with his friend Gwenola Wagon.

In fact their sites show such an overwhelming quantity, quality and variety of production that we regret we didn’t already spend more time with him!

Ranging from media, online and installation art, theoretical texts to architectural projects, the couple’s “main research interests are mankind after man, the contemporary city after public space, architecture after pleasure.”

We can’t help featuring here two of their recent works:

The “Utopia Factory Abraxas“, a research center where different utopias can be empirically experimented by volunteers.

(This work is part of a wider research on the “Peripheral attractions by RER“. A tour by train around the outskirts of Paris is the occasion to show the projects of “Attractions périphériques” (Hypnorama, Utopia Factory Abraxas, Musée de la banlieu idéale, Wiki Forest). Nogo Voyages, a collective co-founded by Degoutin/Wagon is the organizer of such a journey, and declares itself “a projects’ laboratory whose atelier is the journey. From sightings in the suburbs of the world, the collective of artists offer movies, books, fantastic architectures.”)

(Following description texts by the authors)




UTOPIA FACTORY ABRAXAS
Stéphane Degoutin, Gwenola Wagon, 2010







Abraxas is the name of a gnostic god created by Basilides, an heretic religious teacher of the second century. The Basilidians did not believe in a magnanimous god, but rather in a demiurge, dual divinity. According to Carl Jung, Abraxas is “life and death in the same time. It engenders truth and lie, good and bad, light and darkness in the same word and in the same action”.

Thomas More first used the word Abraxas to name the island later known as “Utopia”. Presumably was he inspired by Erasmus’ Praise of Folly, in which Abraxas designates the city of the mad men. Only in the definitive version of his text did Thomas More coin the term “utopia”.

“Les Espaces d’Abraxas” is also the name of a large social housing complex buit by Ricardo Bofill at Noisy-le-Grand, a new town at the east of Paris. The building itself is undepictable: at the height of the delirious postmodern movement in architecture, made of oversized antique columns prefabricated in concrete, of dizzy perspectives and open atriums at the 17th floor, it has been used as a set for the movie Brazil.

It is rather peculiar to have chosen this name for a public housing complex. The area is often perceived negatively. Yet, it may change if one takes advantage of its oddity. Its ideal purpose was not to serve as a housing building. We propose to rehouse elsewhere the residents who wish so, let the others stay here, and t o use the vacant flats to install the offices of a Utopia Factory. The building would fit perfectly for this new use, since it already posesses the introversion appropriate for utopian places.

Utopia Factory is a research center where different utopias are experimented at full scale. Anyone can suggest a project. If it is accepted, a campaign is launched to find candidates for the experiment. The approach is empiric: the volunteers test the utopias for a period of a few months. In the event that it would not work as expected, they can experience another utopia, or come back to their previous lives.

We do not believe it is possible to build from scratch an ideal society, nor even that such a realization would bring happiness to mankind. But we do believe that the search for a better society can contribute to this goal. Therefore, Utopia Factory does not trynot to build an Eldorado, but the paths leading to it. Utopias tested here are perishable and not guaranteed. They do not aim for perfection, but rather to put the society into movement.

Utopia Factory Abraxas functions in a network of other Utopia Factories around the globe: Shanghai, Cape Town, Bronx, Tromso…






The second work here is the “Terrorism Museum“, an airport-shaped project which offers an ‘immersion in the imaginary of the terror’.





TERRORISM MUSEUM
Eléments pour un musée de l’imaginaire terroriste
Stéphane Degoutin, Gwenola Wagon, 2009-2011.

>> INFILTRATION TECHNOLOGIQUE DANS L’ESPACE AEROPORTUAIRE

>> DERNIERS ÉLÉMENTS DU MUSÉE







Terrorism museum is a project for an international airport. Localized in the transit areas of the the world largest hubs, open day and night, it offers an immersion in the imaginary of the terror.

Because of its ubiquitous safety procedures, the airport already is a terrorism museum. It places the traveler in a maximal state of alert. One roams inside visible and invisible security devices, which tend to cancel the slightest probablility of a threat. Yet, in a vicious circle, the more present is the surveillance, the more real the threat seems.

In the airport, several fantasies find themselves merged, under their most concentrated and hysterical form: the fantasy of the disaster, of the absolute surveillance, of the omnipresence, of unlimited shopping.

These smooth and hygienic spaces look as if they were designed to be the target of an attack. The place which used to be a symbol of speed, progress, and unlimited acces to the human difference, has become a place of stagnation, anxiety, air conditioned custody, as if one found himself the prisoner of a shopping center extended to the whole planet, indefinitely waiting for a plane crash or a hijacking that will never come. Desperately virtual, the threat becomes the object of a tension that proves impossible to unravel between the reality and fantasy, itself representative of the mechanism by which the terror spreads.

It is on this very point of tension, where it becomes possible to understand the mechanism of terror, that we implement the Terrorism museum.







Terrorism Museum is an application for smartphones. Sounds and videos are launched depending on the visitor’s position in space. Virtual reality glasses are provided, while he swallows a capsule which alters his mental state. Thus equipped, he wanders around the different zones of the airport, which appear transformed*.

The museum is not separated from the reality: it is an additional layer superimposed on the actual place. The public visits the museum while checking in his luggage, passing through the metal detectors, waiting for his plane, wandering in the duty free shops…

The furtive museum infiltrates the spaces devoted to security and the potential targets they constitute. It insinuates through he available networks (Gsm, Wifi, Gps…), everywhere in the airport, including in the surveillance areas and the forbidden rooms. No authorisation is necessary for its installation. Nothing indicates its existence. No one is aware that you are visiting the terrorism museum.

The museum takes the form of a series of geolocalized essays. Each zone of the airport is augmented with a layer of questions. Is the Occidetal world under the threat of a destruction it has himself dreamt? (Departures board) What will be the means to spread the terror tomorrow? — Future threats: a trend book. (Cafeteria) The toilets are filled with the voices of conspiracy theory adepts. Habermas, Sloterdijk and Virilio chat in the duty free shop. Escerpts of the Ballard novel Millenium People are staged in the parking lots. The viitor moves around the labyrinthic spaces of the museum, between the voices of philosophers, writers, directors, artists. True ghosts, as George Orwell, walk alongside with Don De Lillo, artists as Alain Declerc, Johan Grimonprez, surveillance specialists, secretaries, secret agents…







Why a museum of terrorism ?(Entry / Exit) Is the word “terrorism” valid ? Why is it used so frequently in contexts so different (organized terror by the state, violence by the oppressed…) ? Where do we locate its limits ? (Lost and Found) Why devote a museum to the imagination of terror ? Who uses terror, when, and to what end ? What does collective terror feel like ? How does it distinguish itself from individual terror ? (Deep Tunnel Kafka) Does an attack on public transport boil down to a fight against human movement ? Is its aim the heart of the modern world ? Is an airport the collective imagination’s most sensitive target ? Does it threaten civilisation even in the place where civilization directly connects itself ? Is it an attempt to curb the universalist dream of the unity of mankind ?(Habermas Elevator) Or, on the failure of universalism ? Do activists really threaten the network of data transmission, those cables that stretch thousands of kilometers under the ocean and allow globalization to
proliferate ? (Speculative Bubble) Will a viral system replace the threat of organized networks ? Is it possible to spread terror through the flu, the plague, or a virus that would contaminate people without discrimation (ideological, religious, ethnic, sexual, societal) ?(Derrida Corner) At what point ca we talk about total security ? Does the spread of security systems bring about a weakening and permanence of collective fear ? (Escape Chute) In a climate of extreme vigilance, how can we not be suspicious of everyone ? Does not the fear of danger risk being more noxious than danger itself ? Does a system based on prevention and simulation not engender a risk of widespread fellow suspicion ? Is surveillance as frightening as it is desirable ? How do we transform public places into something other spaces of suspicion ? At what point is a surveillance system a threat to democratic society ? Can the spread of surveillance minimize the fear of others – of all others- like television was able to minimize boredom ? (Red Scan Box) Do we live in a society of inspection ? (Deleuze Post-Scriptum) Is the ennemy inside or out ? Can we really keep a population in a state of alert while extrapolating terror, whire rendering it as probable as our next breath ? Is the invisible threat being used to reinforce the cohesion of a heterogeneous group, of disparate individuals, of a nation, of a state ? (Orwell Paradise Island) Does the West convey the idea of an omnipresent threat by mixing real danger with fantasy ? Does Hollywood mythology contribute to the fascination with destroying the West, particulary the United States, with recurring scenes ? (Baudrillard Vortex) Is September 11th the materialization of a dystopian Western fantasy ? (9/11 Hotel) Is the real subject of the museum the dystopian imagination of global cities ?







Museums of terrorism already exist. We can cite the Center for Empowered Living and Learning (CELL) of Denver (USA) and the International Center for Counter Terrorism in Herzliya (Israel) or the hall devoted to the “Kurd question” at hte war museum in Istanbul.

The aim of each is to denounce the political use of violence. We look to penetrate the interior of their logic, to make the connection between complex realities and the questions they raise, to bridge different points of view.







Would it be easier, as Elias Canetti argues, to declare a global war than to burn a single individual in a public place ?Is it because all attacks on the individual have become inconceivable in modern societies or because the states find themselves forced to fill all of the cracks in security ? (Don De Lillo Reverse Stairs) Does terror make good use of the characteristics of our civilisation (fear of death, for example, the exaltation of the individual), to insinuate itself like a parasite ? (Grimonprez Lounge) Does the city that refuses terror create the conditions for terror ? In what ways – anti-liquidity, accident, chaos, and all gives rise to a radical rupture within that system- are they manifestations of the utopia of control, of absolute security, in the height of the disappearance of the violence of eveyday life ? (Millenium People Baggage Claim) If the possibility of proliferating terror stems from our vulnerability, are the conspiracy theories that suspect an inside enemy redundant ? (Conspiracy Massages) Are we surethat the gap between an absence of lived experence of violence and its sudden, hyper-speculative eruptions in the media give terror its symbolic power ? Does not the discussion of terror rest solely on the fascination that it exercises over us ? Does it impose itself upon the imagination acording to a principle similar to the sacred with the same irresistible power that the divine imposed upon traditional societies ? Will its ghost continue to haunt us long after we have “explained” or deconstructed it, just like the shadow of God, according to Nietzsche ? (Nogoland Bits) If we manipulate it, if we divert this fascination, do we escape its grasp ? Is it futile, then, to evade it without asking the question of belief ?





Exploring the application “Elements for a museum of terrorism imaginary” (Beta) at Charles de Gaulle.




Exploring the application “Elements for a museum of terrorism imaginary” (Beta) at Charles de Gaulle.





Aerial view of Charles de Gaulle airport’s Terminal 1, where the museum will take place’.





View of the Ipad application “Elements for a museum of terrorism imaginary”.





View of the Ipad application “Elements for a museum of terrorism imaginary”.




Metachaos, by Alessandro Bavari (2011)

by fosco lucarelli

animations, architecture, contemporary art, electronic arts, literature, satire, sounds, technology, virtual chronicles, visions

Alessandro Bavari is an animation and painting artist living and working in italy.

METACHAOS is a multidisciplinary audio-visual project, articulated in a short film, a set of photography and mix-technique paintings. The purpose of the project is to represent the most tragic aspects of the human nature and of its motion, such as war, madness, social change and hate.

This work recently won the prestigious Golden Nica award at Ars Electronica 2011.

At the end of the images you can find the synopsys and the statement of the video, along with the Ars Electronica Jury Statement.

alessandrobavari.com/
info@alessandrobavari.com















































SINOPSYS
Metachaos, from Greek Meta (beyond) and Chaos (the abyss where the eternally-formless state of the universe hides), indicates a primordial shape of ameba, which lacks in precise morphology, and it is characterized by mutation and mitosis.
In fact the bodies represented in METACHAOS, even though they are characterized by an apparently anthropomorphous appearance, in reality they are without identity and conscience. They exist confined in a spaceless and timeless state, an hostile and decadent hyperuranium where a fortress, in perpetual movement, dominates the landscape in defense of a supercelestial, harmonic but fragile parallel dimension. In its destructive instinct of violating the dimensional limbo, the mutant horde penetrates the intimacy of the fortress, laying siege like a virus. Similar to the balance of a philological continuum in human species, bringing the status of things back to the primordial broth.

STATEMENT
METACHAOS is a multidisciplinary audio-visual project, articulated in a short film, a set of photography and mix-technique paintings. The purpose of the project is to represent the most tragic aspects of the human nature and of its motion, such as war, madness, social change and hate. An accretion of feelings that are metaphorically represented by specific visual forms, which are abstract conceptually, but concrete and tangible formally. The application of acid and monochromatic tints, besides the strong contrasts, makes everything intentionally more oppressive and tragic.

In order to obtain a more immersive and plausible version, the shot was taken adopting the camera live technique. The extreme and frenetic motion of the shoulder camera, similar to the subjective one, becomes a main constant, so that, along with the persisting cuts used to edit the video, create a bigger sense of instability and danger. In fact, thanks to the dissemination of Technology, it is possible to notice that the unconscious-esthetic potential of the shots available on Youtube, characterized by a pseudo-documentary and amateur approach, often offer an unexpected emotional involvement, which trigger an exhibitionistic-voyeuristic interchange between the author and the consumer.

The irrational gesture and action of the bodies, as if a collective form of madness controlled them, are inspired by artists like Bosch and Bruegel who, between the ‘400 and ‘500, produced an iconography where irrational images show sickly madness and pain.

The project has been realized using different techniques: live shots taken in discharged industrial sites, CGI animations, tracking and motion captures, besides various other analogical ones.

American Jeff Ensign, aka Evolution Noise Slave composed the original sound track, which has been progressively updated during the video production. The musical score was inspired by 6 separate pieces Jeff had previously created that were then combined into a hybrid. The composition was also based in part from a sonic interpretation of the ideas presented in Antonin Artaud’s the Theater and Cruelty overlaid on Bavari’s images.

JURY STATEMENT FROM PRIX ARS ELECTRONICA 2011.
Alessandro Bavari’s “Metachaos” is an impressive display of the amazing graphics that can be produced with leading-edge hardware and software. The 8-minute clip begins with a sequence of clear, geometric forms that suggest a serene world. But it doesn’t take long until it’s apparent that this was just the calm before the storm. Shadowy creatures and shockingly grotesque figures intrude into this domain rendered in black & white and sepia tones and rip it to pieces. Using the interplay of light and shadow, intentionally shaky camera movements and quick cuts, Bavari takes us on a tour de force through an unsettling imaginary cosmos that grips viewers and doesn’t let them loose. In addition to its extraordinary visuals, “Metachaos” features an impressive composed soundscape of incredibly concentrated intensity—noise elements paired with driving beats, panic-stricken screams, the rattling of bones and gale-force winds.

While some of as did not necessarily share the apocalyptic view of this film, we found that it left the most indelible impression. Narrowly passing through the first round, it grew on us, so that on repeated viewing it miraculously made its way to the top.
What starts as a cinematic, kinetik, yet clean field of geometry and bodies, gradually evolves, or devolves, into the artist’s vision of a nightmarish black-and-white world created by a continual collision of the human and the architectural form. It finally culminates in a screaming dance among the ruins. In a impressive virtuoso tour de force, Alessandro Bavari creates a constant mêlée of grime, projectile muck and dust among collapsing spaces at the stage for metamorphosing human bodies with branching limbs that seem constantly to break the architectural environment apart. Zombies with missing limb sand decaying skin and faces sometimes stand around listlessly and other times appear to engage in orgasmic sex. The human forms become insect-like and multiply in hordes across the building forms. Dust particles and snakes of turbolent, ferrous liquid finally explode into an apocalyptic ocean of flotsam and sludge.
Bavari’s few collaborators helped shape what the credit call “camera tremula” (shaky, documentary-style camera) and sound design. We commend his dedication to a singular artistic vision that is grounded in his practice as a photographer. This is a representation of a caustic end of the world, a world of a audible pain and hopeless destruction rendered with a disturbing reference to 80s-style computer-generated animation as well as 60s “actionism”.

Cycle Masturbation Machines, Jan Švankmajer, 1972-1973

by fosco lucarelli

electronic arts, illustrations, politics, satire, technology, visions

A great influence for Terry Gilliam and many other authors, Czech filmaker and surrealism artist Jan Švankmajer drew, in the early 70′s, a set of coin-operated masturbation machines based on scientific, historical and anatomical iconography.

Implemented by the State with the aim of providing a complete control over the sexuality of its citizen, these machines would ensure the workers a more satisfactory lifestyle, enable them to better focus on labor, avoid sexually transmitted disease and decrease sexual crime.

The machines themselves are composed of hidraulically operated artificial vaginas and penises, stimulating audiotapes, cartridges full of ejaculating substances, a disinfection system for the vagina and detailed user manuals.

These satirical works have been featured in the recent exhibition “Mondes inventés, Mondes habités” (“Invented Worlds, Inhabited Worlds”), at the MUDAM Museum in Luxembourg.

A review of the exhibition can be read on WMMNA.

Another personal exhibition (Unnatural history museum) is held in gallery Kerstin Engholm, Wien.











Taxonomies of Transition: Urban Segregation Maps by Bill Rankin and Eric Fisher

by fosco lucarelli

architecture, electronic arts, information graphics, politics, psychogeographies, technology

A taxonomy of transition“, (2009) by radical cartographer Bill Rankin is a visual essay on how racial boundaries mark the neighborhoods of a city like Chicago, “where the delimitation of (…) official “community areas” in the 1920s was one of the hallmarks of the famous Chicago School of urban sociology.”

This work uses dot mapping to show populations (Red/Purple is White, Blue is Black, Green is Asian, Orange is Hispanic, Gray is Other, and each dot is 25 people), hence describing three kinds of urban transitions: stark and precise boundaries, transitions and gradients, gaps.

This project was originally published as an essay in the Spring 2010 issue of Perspecta, the journal of the Yale School of Architecture.

In 2011 it won the MiniMax mapping contest at the “Moving Maps” cartographic biennale in Lausanne, Switzerland.









Astounded by Bill Rankin’s map of Chicago‘s racial and ethnic divides (above), Eric Fisher tried the same kind of mapping on 40 American cities. See here his “Race and Ethnicity” photoset, particularly because high definition images allow an for a better vision of the transitions.





Washingron D.C.: a strong separation between East and West;






Detroit: 8 mile beltway, providing a boundary for Black and White populations;






San Francisco Bay: white predominance over Northern side of the city, while relatively better integration on other sectors of the Bay;






New York: extreme racial segregation, increased by massive density. Possible cross-cultural ferment on boundaries;







LA: low density allows for blending neighborhoods;






San Antonio: even integration between white and hispanic populations.





Via: FastCo Design