dr.woooo on Tue, 8 Apr 2003 10:19:50 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> deserting the art bunker by John Jordan |
>From John Jordan < Date Mon, 7 Apr 2003 15:50:45 -0300 Subject deserting the art bunker hi friends and fellow deserters - here is the talk i gave in the culture bunker - the tate modern in london last week... during an event entitled - Live cultures: performance and the contemporary..... an attempt at a smart bomb aimed at the heart of the bunker - you can either see the web cast - below ( scroll down to the last day ) http://www.tate.org.uk/audiovideo/live_culture_conference.htm or you can read the notes - below enjoy and critical feedback would be great..as its going to be published in a catalogue later on.. heres to walking away love JJXX Presentation at LIVE CULTURE - Live Art at the Tate Modern - London 30th March The art of desertion "Life is so horrible that one can only bear it by avoiding it. And that can be done by living in the world of art." Wrote gustave Flaubert a little over hundred and fifty years ago.. And what has changed ? What has really changed? Here we are today, safe in the art bunker. Protected from the mess of the world outside, by thick white walls, and the cosy comfortable frame of culture. I imagine that most of us didn't wake up this morning thinking the world is a wonderful place and that the future has everything to offer us and our children. NO - I imagine most of us woke up and switched on the TV or the radio, or opened our newspapers and found ourselves numbed, angered or saddened by the words and the fictions, the images and the lies of war. But deep down, at the root of our sadness perhaps we realised something else, something that was there before, a feeling that the real war began a long time ago. And that today and tonight's war in Iraq played out for us in the spaces between reality TV and Hollywood is just one small part of a permanent war, a total war. A war waged everywhere, against everyone, everyday. A war whose collateral damage is the collapse of the world's ecosystem, the spread of hunger, the paralysis of poverty and exclusion, and the erosion of human dignity. "We don't do body counts, " said general franks referring to the Iraq campaign, nobody could ever keep count of the bodies that pile up in the war that never stopped. This permanent war has many command centres-one of them is not so far away from here. It's in other bunkers on the other side of the river Thames. Bunkers where battles are fought with computer mice and wires, desks and screens, spread sheets and numbers. Battles planned in the war rooms of capital - the trading floors, the banks, the exchanges, the corporate head quarters. This is the war of money against life. Waged by market fundamentalists whose only god is economic growth. Whose only laws are profit and competition? It's the most normal, familiar war there could be�. Another command centres of this war is even nearer to us - it's right here ---- it's inside our heads, its in our muscles and our skin, its in every action, every gesture, every whisper and thought, caress and choice we make� Its a command centre called compliance�. and its us. Against the backdrop of the war of money against life, we perform�we act�and most crucially we comply� Therein lies the greatest secret of the powerful, who want us to believe that they wield their power over us with their awe inflicting violence, their weapons and armies their police forces and psychological operations. But the threat of violence is not where their power really lies. It lies within us; it comes from those of us who acquiesce from below not those who command from above. We uphold their power, and their wars, through our cooperation with their orders and our obedience to their systems. This is why their greatest fear is that we disobey and desert. "We have never seen such ugly times" my friend Brian Holmes wrote to me late last night. It's a time of great crisis, unprecedented instability and simple choices.. We have entered the swansong of our present world system. Over the last decade a crisis of legitimacy has swept across the institutions of governments, systems of democratic representation, and corporate capitalism - combined with an economic decline unseen since the 1930's. Last time capital was in such crisis it took war and the death of 30 million people to get it back on track. This latest war in Iraq is just another attempt to forcefully realign a society out of kilter, to distract us from focusing on a failed global system and to fill us with so much fear that we forget to imagine any other way of living. "We have never seen such ugly times" and we have a choice. Obedience or desertion I think its time to desert - time to step away - time to escape the bunker mentality. We have to stop pretending that taking risks in the space of art, pushing boundaries of form, and disobeying the conventions of culture. . Making art about politics.. makes any difference� we have to stop pretending that art is a free space, autonomous from webs of capital and power. We have to stop pretending that the popularity of politically engaged art within the museums, magazines and markets over the last few years has anything to do with really changing the world. But change the world we must. And I make a plea for the artists to desert, to turn our backs on the system � walk away from the museums which have simply become outsourced corporate PR agencies, abandon the draw of glamour and fame, move out of the spotlight that assumes a monopoly of creativity and discard the notion of us being the experts of the imagination. I plea for us to refuse the spaces that make us separate from society, give up our privilege, renounce the cult of the individual and recognise the powerful "we" which comes out of the many separate "Is". Its time for the artist to become invisible To dissolve back into life. Its not a plea to take art to the streets or bring life into the gallery, theatre and museum - both those things have taken place continuously over the last century.. It's a plea for the artists to abandon our identities �� but not our creativity, It's a plea to value our creativity more, to understand its transformatory power and apply it directly to social change, to social movements, to acts of disobedience and strategies of survival. It's not a plea to lay down arms, to give up the weapons of imagination, far from it. We should never abandon beauty; never forget the joy of creativity, the strength of our visions. What Marcuse calls arts ability to challenge the monopoly of accepted reality is perhaps our most powerful weapon and one that all rebellions desperately need if they are to create e new ways of living. Its time to recognise that art should never have existed as a category separate from life. Its time to re write Flaubert and to perhaps say.." Life is so horrible that we can only bear it if we know we are changing it. And that can be only done by leaving the world of art." ---------------------------------------------- "But where's the art" she asked? I tried to convince the Arts council of England's Live art officer that developing an interdisciplinary project involving performances, media campaigns, a web sites and the creation of the worlds first therapy group for men addicted to pornography, was art. It didn't work. I tried to explain that they way I evaluated the aesthetic of my practice was through its social function. That I saw art as creative problem-solving mechanism, which could be applied to all walks of life, But I couldn't convince her and I walked out of that institution with tears in my eyes, feeling tongue-tied and misunderstood. For some reason I decided to take a roundabout way home and walk up Whitehall - as I reached downing street I saw a sea of hundreds of bodies lying on the ground, many were being dragged away by the police, and there I met Jason who I subsequently learnt was one of the founders of the radical direct action movement in the UK - we chatted - I told him I was an artists. I explained that I had spent most of my life trying to find a space, which contained both the social engagement of politics and the irresistible imagination of art -That I was constantly striving to develop a creative practise that was engaged directly in social change rather than creating representations of issues and struggles�. I didn't want to illustrate political change I wanted to make it. "Do you paint paintings of protest" he asked me � I sighed�. the tears returned to my eyes and I walked away�. For years I tried to bring down the walls built around definitions of what art could do. In the early nineties many projects I was involved in simply made the art invisible� a strategy for public involvement - A spoof development agency to uncover a buried river in south London, a spoof sex shop in a high street to discuss the relationship between men and pornography� facades that brought people into the work without the baggage of art anywhere to be seen. But something still didn't feel right� Then on an early morning in 1994 I climbed over a wall topped with shards of broken glass and everything changed. For the first time I threw my body in the way of a bulldozer to stop the construction of a road, the m11link road which was due to destroy 350 houses and several ancient woodlands in east London. Suddenly live art meant something completely different - the pragmatic collided with the poetic, the performative with the political. . Placing my body directly in the cogs of the machine, as a point of resistance in the flow of power, was not just playful but felt deeply effective. It was costing the road builders thousands of pounds in delays, it was generating images that catalysed debate in the mainstream media, and within the chambers of government, and it was radically changing the lives of people who were doing it. This I found out was direct action�Direct, un-mediated im-mediate action to change something. At its simplest, direct action is about taking direct control of our own lives, and refusing to accept the authority of bureaucrats or politicians, 'leaders' or 'experts' to act on our behalf. It shies away from the dangers and betrayals of representation, and it's taking matters into our own hands and acting collectively to address the issues that concern us. If we see someone who is hungry, we cook them a meal, if we think a mega damn should be stopped we put our bodies in the way of the rising water. It's not about asking others to do things for us, it's doing things for ourselves - its homeless Canadians squatting empty buildings; US Hacktivists blockading the World Trade Organisations website, Indian farmers burning fields of Genetically Modified crops, landless Brazilian peasants rebuilding their lives on occupied land. It is not a tactic of last resort, something that we turn to when all other forms of campaigning; such as letter writing and lobbying have been exhausted. Quite the opposite: it is the preferred way of doing things and It is both a way of working and a model for how we see a future society run. Discovering Direct Action was my moment of desertion, I slowly melted into a social movement, gave up the label of artists, but kept the weapons of creativity by my side and I soon realised that this was the most powerful, inspiring and socially efficacious context that I could use those weapons in. I immersed myself into direct action politics, eventually working with Reclaim the Streets, a group I stayed with for 7 years until the end of 2000. For the first time in my life I felt art merging with the everyday, I experienced the return of pleasure and play into politics, I felt extraordinary levels of collective creativity being applied to mass actions that were changing people, changing the world and changing the way radical politics was perceive. Reclaim the streets tactics and ideas spread across the world in the mid nineties and were to be a key component to rise of the global anticapitalist movement which erupted on new years day in 1994 with the indigenous Zapatista uprising and had its coming out party in Seattle at the World Trade Organisation shut down in November 1999. (Slides sequence here - describe basic rts tactics etc Explain street party/tripod M41- Carnival -Dresses� J18 - masks and choreography - global - Anticapitalists besiege city of London.. GLOBAL �) June 18 inspired activists in Seattle to believe that they could do the impossible and really shut down the WTO summit, which is exactly what they did. The struggles against capitalism had now spread from the global south to the global north.. Diverse movements were converging and building an entirely new way of seeing revolution which was not about taking power, not about taking seats in government, but breaking power into little pieces and sharing it between us, about creative alternatives to the capital that celebrated diversity and based on local desires. It was about taking risks and inventing a new forms of radical politics�. forms that respond to particular contexts and places. There's a big difference between taking risks in the world of art and in the world outside.. In the art world when you provoke, disobey the rules, push the boundaries, questions the cannons you get discovered, rewarded, acclaimed. In the real world you are, marginalized, surveilled, beaten and imprisoned. There have been many times I have wanted to return to the safety and comfort of the art bunker - when plain clothes police officers spent a week following me everyday as I took my son to school, when special branch raided my flat, when I was framed for something I never did, when the group I worked in couldn't recover from the vicious campaign of crimanalisation by the British media and the state. But I stayed outside, I knew where I was most effective and I paid the price for deserting the art system, the price for applying radical creativity to places which are out of bounds, real places, places where it made a real social difference, I couldn't pretend anymore. Listening to the screams of people as they were beaten to a pulp while they slept in their sleeping bags in the Diaz School, during the night of revenge by the Italian state in Genoa after the massive G8 protests. Witnessing broken teeth, ribs and jaws, punctured lungs and 66 people carried out of the raid on stretchers. Seeing the long streaks of blood smeared across a white marble floor, smelling fear and terror in the empty school building. It felt real to me - more Powerful than any drop of blood or pain or violence of I've seen in live art. Hearing about a middle aged woman breaking into an RAF base last week and causing 25 million pounds of damage to a Tornado bomber with a hammer and calmly waiting for the police to arrest her, thus risking many years in prison. It felt real to me - More courageous and more useful than any durational performance Witnessing a large medieval catapult firing teddy bears and soft toys over the fence erected around the summit of the Free Trade of the Americas in Quebec. Pulling the fence down and dancing on its back as bends and buckles. Seeing the clouds of tear gas rise above the city, fired at the rate of one minute for 3 days and nights, laughing as someone expertly hits the gas canisters back towards the police with an ice hockey stick� It felt real to me. More absurd, more adventurous and often more dramatic than any theatre. Observing an entire society creatively dealing with complete economic collapse in Argentina. Hearing about the government being deposed by the sound of millions of clashing pots and pans. Watching bankrupt factories being occupied and run by the employees themselves, witnessing those who have nothing experimenting with ways to grow food and work autonomously from capitalist systems, Listening to neighbourhood assemblies debate the future of their communities, practising direct democracy without leaders or representative, while standing in a circle on a Buenos Aires street corner. It felt real to me - More sustainable, more participatory and on a much larger scale than any Socially engaged site specific art practise. I could speak for hours of the extraordinary creativity I've seen displayed by the anticapitalist movements across the world�. But I must end now� I just want to say - There's an unprecedented global social movement out there. A movement of movements which is the living embodiment of the slogan "one no and many yesses." The "no" is a clear rejection of the single economic blueprint where the rule of capital is absolute, while the "many yesses" refer to the multitude of diverse, people-centered alternatives. The act of desertion is not just saying no - in fact its saying yes, yes to other ways of running our society, yes to a future without war, yes to a culture of life. -- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ "Be realistic and do the impossible, because if we don't do the impossible, we face the unthinkable." Murray Bookchin WE ARE EVERYWHERE - a radical publishing project is out this summer.... http://www.WeAreEverywhere.org "The role of the revolutionary artist is to make revolution irresistible." Toni Cade Bambara # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]