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Friday, 28 September 2012
As Radical as Reality Itself
                                Part 2: Responses




Friday, 28 September 2012
New Forms
        ipod, Wi fi, wii, internet, web
        2.0, virtual reality, bit
        torrents, Limewire, Spotify,
        simulations, gaming, mobile
        technology, Skype, online
        cloud storage, flickr, the
        external hard drive, digital
        tvs (big and small), cgi, final
        cut,logic,photoshop ipod,
        iphone, pdf’s, Second life.......




Friday, 28 September 2012
The smog of data
             The number of images uploaded to Flickr every week is likely to be larger
                than all objects contained in all art museums in the world.Today more
                 video is uploaded to YouTube in 60 days than all three U.S. television
                  networks created in 60 years. Flickr July 2007: 600 million images.
                    Flickr February 2008: 1.2 billion images (100 million / month).
                 Facebook: (June 2010): 500 million users 14,000,000 photo uploads
                 daily (2009). October 2009: 2 billion media items uploaded monthly;
                 1 billion messages exchanged daily; 20 billion photos on the site. May
                   2010: users share 25 billion pieces of information per month; 48
                        billion photos on site. MySpace: 300 million users (2009).




Friday, 28 September 2012
“If you add up all the hours that
          gamers across the globe have
        spent playing World of Warcraft
        since the multiplayer online role
          playing game first launched in
          2004, you get a grand total of
          just over 50 billion collective
        hours or 5.93 million years - to
           put that in perspective 5.93
         million years is almost exactly
        the moment in history that our
          earliest human ancestors first
                  stood upright”
        Reality is Broken -why games make us better
         and how they can change the world, Janet
                         McGonigal




Friday, 28 September 2012
an image of the earth wrapped in a dense,
               enveloping web of interweaving, interconnecting,
                        crisscrossing, seemingly infinite
                    lines of communication and exchange.




Friday, 28 September 2012
•       “Chaos (i.e. a degree of
                complexity which is
                beyond the ability of
                human understanding)
                now rules the world.
                Chaos means a reality
                which is too complex to
                be reduced to our
                current paradigms of
                understanding.

        •       Franco Beradi, Pg. 212
        •




Friday, 28 September 2012
“There is chaos when the world
         starts spinning too fast for our
         mind to appreciate its forms and
         meaning. There is chaos once the
         flows are too intense for our
         capacity to elaborate emotionally.
         Overwhelmed by this velocity, the
         mind drifts towards panic, the
         uncontrolled subversion of psychic
         energies premise to a depressive
         deactivation”

         Franco Bifo Beradi, The Soul at
         Work , pg. 125




Friday, 28 September 2012
The Filters can’t filter




Friday, 28 September 2012
Visualisation




Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
The Beast has many names


    Consumerist entertainment
    network
    Network Society
    Information society
    Media ecology
    Knowledge economy
    Globalisation
    Neo liberalism aka Capitalist
    Realism aka casino capitalism
    aka crack capitalism


Friday, 28 September 2012
Affects
      Compression of time and
      space
      A culture with a need for
      speed
      Flux, impermanence -upgrade
      culture
      Blurring of real and virtual
      (the virtual is real?)
      New social networks
      information overload (filtering
      becomes our chief activity)
      the smog of data....


Friday, 28 September 2012
Pathologies and Symptoms?

           Hedonia (inability to be bored)
           Hysteria
           Denial
           Chronic instability
           Inertia
           A.D.D.
           Homogenisation
           A Culture of Narcissism
           Option Paralysis

Friday, 28 September 2012
Possibilities
        Democratisation of culture
        at level production and
        distribution (long tail)
        Reinvigorated public sphere
        via online communities (see
        arab spring etc. ) - space for
        countercultures to grow(?)
        The replacement of passive,
        centralised, one way
        transmission media to
        decentralised, active,
        interactive media forms.

Friday, 28 September 2012
the paradoxes of change....




Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
Cognitive
              Mapping, the
                  absence
                 of stable
             meaning and the
                collapse of
             critical distance




Friday, 28 September 2012
‘achieve a breakthrough
        to some as yet
        unimaginable new mode
        of representing [..], in
        which we may again
        begin to grasp our
        positioning as individual
        and collective subjects
        and regain a capacity to
        act and struggle which is
        at present neutralised by
        our spatial as well as our
        social confusion.
        (Jameson, 1991)


Friday, 28 September 2012
“McCarthy
                               eliminates the
                                possibility of
                               psychological
                             distancing oneself
                            from what is taking
                             place; the viewer
                            laughs and recoils
                             at the same time”

                              Dan Cameron




Friday, 28 September 2012
“The point is that we are within
                            the culture of postmodernism to
                            the point where its facile
                            repudiation is as impossible as
                            any equally facile celebration of
                            it is complacent and corrupt.
                            Ideological judgement on
                            postmodernism today necessarily
                            implies, one would think, a
                            judgement on ourselves as well
                            as on the artefacts in question.”

                            Fredric jameson
                            ‘The Politics of theory:Ideological
                            Positions
                            In the Postmodernism Debate’,
                            New German Critique, 33 (Fall, 1984), p. 63




Friday, 28 September 2012
I find art's ability to guide,
       direct, and manipulate to be
       exciting. The only direction I
       see for art is as a tool for
       manipulating it public on
       every level - a political tool. I
       don't know if this places art
       above, below or parallel with
       advertising. [...] The
       techniques are the same. The
       audience is the same. I can
       never tell the difference
       between them and us. We
       are them. I am mass as much
       as I am I.

       Jeff Koons

Friday, 28 September 2012
The absence of stable meaning




Friday, 28 September 2012
‘Over the top’.....
                  delirious aestheticism......
                   accelerationism............



Friday, 28 September 2012
How to respond
      “I am interested in the ways that
       recent film and video works are
        expressive: that is to say, in the
         ways that they give voice (or
        better sound and images ) to a
        kind of free floating sensibility
          that permeates our society
      today...[..]By the term expressive
        I mean both symptomatic and
         productive. These works are
           symptomatic , in that they
      provide indices of complex social
      processes, which they transduce,
      condense and rearticulate in the
        form of what can be called [..]
                 blocs of affect”
                     Steven Shaviro,pg2.


Friday, 28 September 2012
“For as Jameson insists, the ‘global
  world system is strictly speaking
  “unrepresentable”, since its flows
  and metamorphoses continually
  elude our existential
  grasp...because of this it is
  necessary to proceed by
  abstraction :to “diagram” the
  space of globalised capital, by
  entering into it, and forging a path
  through, its complex web of
  exchanges, displacements and
  transfers”
  Steven Shaviro, pg.36




Friday, 28 September 2012
Richard Kelly’s Southland Tales

          a "strange hybrid of the
        sensibilities of Andy Warhol
             and Philip K. Dick"


         “Southland Tales, like
        most science fiction, is
      not about predicting the
      future. Rather it is about
       capturing and depicting
        the latent futurity that
       already haunts us in the
               present”
                Steven Shaviro, pg. 66




Friday, 28 September 2012
An heroic failure?




Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
Key features
     • A hyperbolic, accelerated, exaggerated
       ‘map’ of (a) ‘now’.

     • A channel surfing aesthetic toamimic to
       information overload. There’s flatness
           the constant stream of images, an
           equivalence between them. Distinct from
           traditional montage. In Southland Tales
           images are assembled together in a single
           smooth space.

     • Sound, specifically the voiceweightedkey in
       Southland Tales (the film is
                                    over is

           more to the ‘sonic than to the optical’
           Shavirio)



Friday, 28 September 2012
“Digital compositing implies a
                            continuity and equality among
                            its elements. The assembled
                            images and sounds all belong
                            to a single smooth space as
                            opposed to the hierarchically
                            organised striated space of
                            montage. However, this does
                            not mean that the result of
                            compositing is always
                            seamless’.
                            (Shavirio, 2010, pg.77)



Friday, 28 September 2012
• Michel on howinsound works
            books
                   Chion his numerous

                in cinema talks of sound
                providing added value to the
                image.

          • In contrast Shavirofar more
            that now sound is
                                argues

                overtly used (it is
                ‘foregrounded’). Sound,
                narration for example begins
                to tie together disparate
                seemingly unconnected
                images in films.




Friday, 28 September 2012
‘in the film just as in television news, speech guides us though
                            an otherwise incomprehensible labyrinth of proliferating
                            images…[…]Justin Timberlake’s neutral all encompassing voice
                            accounts for and thereby makes possible, the apparent visual
                            clash of different spaces’ Steven Shavirio




Friday, 28 September 2012
Being in touch with the
            world as it is……
          
 Critique of decadence and
            denial of art house
            protocols (its aloofness or
            separation from the world
            as it is or as it seems or
            ‘feels’)




Friday, 28 September 2012
‘Assayas’ difficult task,
    therefore, is to translate
    the impalpable flows and
    forces of finance into
    images and sounds that
    we can apprehend on
    screen.’ Shavirio, S, Post Cinematic
        Effect, Zero Books, pg. 37




Friday, 28 September 2012
Gamers Logic. Levels and
                 objectives.

        
     A fractured, disconnected, violent, lurid
              plot of murder, sex, transnational flows
              of people , money and drugs.
              Demonlover and Boarding Gate
              feature female protagonists, who are
              caught within a bewildering electronic
              landscape of surveillance, omnipresent
              screens and beeps, where the clear line
              between the virtual and real is
              dissolved. They can only make sense of
              their environment piece by piece , bit
              by bit, as they move from one
              disconnected space to another (every
              space seems to contain another space
              within it)




Friday, 28 September 2012
Rhizome
            Deleuze and Guattari introduce A
            Thousand Plateaus by outlining the
            concept of the rhizome

            Connection and heterogeneity: any
            point of a rhizome can be connected
            to anything other.

            Ruptures: a rhizome may be broken,
            but it will start up again on one of its
            old lines, or on new lines

            A rhizome is not reducible to any
            structure; it is a "map and not a
            tracing"



Friday, 28 September 2012
On a formal level Assayas
                 attempts to capture the
                 typography of this electronic
                 landscape, our media ecology by
                 dispensing with classical
                 cinematic perspective and
                 depth. The camera is frequently
                 close up, constantly moving
                 around or closely focused on
                 the main characters; the
                 background spaces are ‘poorly
                 rendered’ flat, homogenous.




Friday, 28 September 2012
‘The market forces traversing our
           world are so intense and so
           disruptive that one’s very identity
           is continually under threat. In a
           world of affective labour and real
           subsumption , one is always being
           called upon to reconfigure one’s
           being into new forms –from one
           identity to another.’
     
     Shavirio, S




Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
The waning of effect




Friday, 28 September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012

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Week 2 Sound and Vision - Responses

  • 2. As Radical as Reality Itself Part 2: Responses Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 3. New Forms ipod, Wi fi, wii, internet, web 2.0, virtual reality, bit torrents, Limewire, Spotify, simulations, gaming, mobile technology, Skype, online cloud storage, flickr, the external hard drive, digital tvs (big and small), cgi, final cut,logic,photoshop ipod, iphone, pdf’s, Second life....... Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 4. The smog of data The number of images uploaded to Flickr every week is likely to be larger than all objects contained in all art museums in the world.Today more video is uploaded to YouTube in 60 days than all three U.S. television networks created in 60 years. Flickr July 2007: 600 million images. Flickr February 2008: 1.2 billion images (100 million / month). Facebook: (June 2010): 500 million users 14,000,000 photo uploads daily (2009). October 2009: 2 billion media items uploaded monthly; 1 billion messages exchanged daily; 20 billion photos on the site. May 2010: users share 25 billion pieces of information per month; 48 billion photos on site. MySpace: 300 million users (2009). Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 5. “If you add up all the hours that gamers across the globe have spent playing World of Warcraft since the multiplayer online role playing game first launched in 2004, you get a grand total of just over 50 billion collective hours or 5.93 million years - to put that in perspective 5.93 million years is almost exactly the moment in history that our earliest human ancestors first stood upright” Reality is Broken -why games make us better and how they can change the world, Janet McGonigal Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 6. an image of the earth wrapped in a dense, enveloping web of interweaving, interconnecting, crisscrossing, seemingly infinite lines of communication and exchange. Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 7. “Chaos (i.e. a degree of complexity which is beyond the ability of human understanding) now rules the world. Chaos means a reality which is too complex to be reduced to our current paradigms of understanding. • Franco Beradi, Pg. 212 • Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 8. “There is chaos when the world starts spinning too fast for our mind to appreciate its forms and meaning. There is chaos once the flows are too intense for our capacity to elaborate emotionally. Overwhelmed by this velocity, the mind drifts towards panic, the uncontrolled subversion of psychic energies premise to a depressive deactivation” Franco Bifo Beradi, The Soul at Work , pg. 125 Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 9. The Filters can’t filter Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 14. The Beast has many names Consumerist entertainment network Network Society Information society Media ecology Knowledge economy Globalisation Neo liberalism aka Capitalist Realism aka casino capitalism aka crack capitalism Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 15. Affects Compression of time and space A culture with a need for speed Flux, impermanence -upgrade culture Blurring of real and virtual (the virtual is real?) New social networks information overload (filtering becomes our chief activity) the smog of data.... Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 16. Pathologies and Symptoms? Hedonia (inability to be bored) Hysteria Denial Chronic instability Inertia A.D.D. Homogenisation A Culture of Narcissism Option Paralysis Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 17. Possibilities Democratisation of culture at level production and distribution (long tail) Reinvigorated public sphere via online communities (see arab spring etc. ) - space for countercultures to grow(?) The replacement of passive, centralised, one way transmission media to decentralised, active, interactive media forms. Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 18. the paradoxes of change.... Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 20. Cognitive Mapping, the absence of stable meaning and the collapse of critical distance Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 21. ‘achieve a breakthrough to some as yet unimaginable new mode of representing [..], in which we may again begin to grasp our positioning as individual and collective subjects and regain a capacity to act and struggle which is at present neutralised by our spatial as well as our social confusion. (Jameson, 1991) Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 22. “McCarthy eliminates the possibility of psychological distancing oneself from what is taking place; the viewer laughs and recoils at the same time” Dan Cameron Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 23. “The point is that we are within the culture of postmodernism to the point where its facile repudiation is as impossible as any equally facile celebration of it is complacent and corrupt. Ideological judgement on postmodernism today necessarily implies, one would think, a judgement on ourselves as well as on the artefacts in question.” Fredric jameson ‘The Politics of theory:Ideological Positions In the Postmodernism Debate’, New German Critique, 33 (Fall, 1984), p. 63 Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 24. I find art's ability to guide, direct, and manipulate to be exciting. The only direction I see for art is as a tool for manipulating it public on every level - a political tool. I don't know if this places art above, below or parallel with advertising. [...] The techniques are the same. The audience is the same. I can never tell the difference between them and us. We are them. I am mass as much as I am I. Jeff Koons Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 25. The absence of stable meaning Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 26. ‘Over the top’..... delirious aestheticism...... accelerationism............ Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 27. How to respond “I am interested in the ways that recent film and video works are expressive: that is to say, in the ways that they give voice (or better sound and images ) to a kind of free floating sensibility that permeates our society today...[..]By the term expressive I mean both symptomatic and productive. These works are symptomatic , in that they provide indices of complex social processes, which they transduce, condense and rearticulate in the form of what can be called [..] blocs of affect” Steven Shaviro,pg2. Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 28. “For as Jameson insists, the ‘global world system is strictly speaking “unrepresentable”, since its flows and metamorphoses continually elude our existential grasp...because of this it is necessary to proceed by abstraction :to “diagram” the space of globalised capital, by entering into it, and forging a path through, its complex web of exchanges, displacements and transfers” Steven Shaviro, pg.36 Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 29. Richard Kelly’s Southland Tales a "strange hybrid of the sensibilities of Andy Warhol and Philip K. Dick" “Southland Tales, like most science fiction, is not about predicting the future. Rather it is about capturing and depicting the latent futurity that already haunts us in the present” Steven Shaviro, pg. 66 Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 30. An heroic failure? Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 32. Key features • A hyperbolic, accelerated, exaggerated ‘map’ of (a) ‘now’. • A channel surfing aesthetic toamimic to information overload. There’s flatness the constant stream of images, an equivalence between them. Distinct from traditional montage. In Southland Tales images are assembled together in a single smooth space. • Sound, specifically the voiceweightedkey in Southland Tales (the film is over is more to the ‘sonic than to the optical’ Shavirio) Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 33. “Digital compositing implies a continuity and equality among its elements. The assembled images and sounds all belong to a single smooth space as opposed to the hierarchically organised striated space of montage. However, this does not mean that the result of compositing is always seamless’. (Shavirio, 2010, pg.77) Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 34. • Michel on howinsound works books Chion his numerous in cinema talks of sound providing added value to the image. • In contrast Shavirofar more that now sound is argues overtly used (it is ‘foregrounded’). Sound, narration for example begins to tie together disparate seemingly unconnected images in films. Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 35. ‘in the film just as in television news, speech guides us though an otherwise incomprehensible labyrinth of proliferating images…[…]Justin Timberlake’s neutral all encompassing voice accounts for and thereby makes possible, the apparent visual clash of different spaces’ Steven Shavirio Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 36. Being in touch with the world as it is…… Critique of decadence and denial of art house protocols (its aloofness or separation from the world as it is or as it seems or ‘feels’) Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 37. ‘Assayas’ difficult task, therefore, is to translate the impalpable flows and forces of finance into images and sounds that we can apprehend on screen.’ Shavirio, S, Post Cinematic Effect, Zero Books, pg. 37 Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 38. Gamers Logic. Levels and objectives. A fractured, disconnected, violent, lurid plot of murder, sex, transnational flows of people , money and drugs. Demonlover and Boarding Gate feature female protagonists, who are caught within a bewildering electronic landscape of surveillance, omnipresent screens and beeps, where the clear line between the virtual and real is dissolved. They can only make sense of their environment piece by piece , bit by bit, as they move from one disconnected space to another (every space seems to contain another space within it) Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 39. Rhizome Deleuze and Guattari introduce A Thousand Plateaus by outlining the concept of the rhizome Connection and heterogeneity: any point of a rhizome can be connected to anything other. Ruptures: a rhizome may be broken, but it will start up again on one of its old lines, or on new lines A rhizome is not reducible to any structure; it is a "map and not a tracing" Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 40. On a formal level Assayas attempts to capture the typography of this electronic landscape, our media ecology by dispensing with classical cinematic perspective and depth. The camera is frequently close up, constantly moving around or closely focused on the main characters; the background spaces are ‘poorly rendered’ flat, homogenous. Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 41. ‘The market forces traversing our world are so intense and so disruptive that one’s very identity is continually under threat. In a world of affective labour and real subsumption , one is always being called upon to reconfigure one’s being into new forms –from one identity to another.’ Shavirio, S Friday, 28 September 2012
  • 43. The waning of effect Friday, 28 September 2012