Difference between revisions of "Aargh"

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* A Speaking Machine from 18th century inventor Wolfgang Von Kempelen
 
* A Speaking Machine from 18th century inventor Wolfgang Von Kempelen
 
* The Art of noises, by Luigi Russolo
 
* The Art of noises, by Luigi Russolo
 
 
 
ideas of time, perception, representation, sound, technology... these elements I will try to combine or relate in. 
 
  
  
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As a result , our culture becomes an entropic, static hum of everybody trying to capture the slipping moment.
 
As a result , our culture becomes an entropic, static hum of everybody trying to capture the slipping moment.
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===== Jean Baudrillard, America =====
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<big>''"There can be no silence up in the mountains, since their very contours roar. And for there to be silence, time itself has to attain a sort of horizontality; there has to be no echo of time in the future, but simply a sliding of geological strata one upon the other giving out nothing more than a fossil murmur”''</big> [America, Jean Baudrillard]<br>
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=====Luigi Russolo, The art of noises=====  
 
=====Luigi Russolo, The art of noises=====  
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Mechanisms for reclaiming time, as it is live for the individual
 
Mechanisms for reclaiming time, as it is live for the individual
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ideas of time, perception, representation, sound, technology... these elements I will try to combine or relate in. 
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The agency of the individual by working through the infinite interpretations and folds of reality that are possible at every moment, p 2 - A fiction extended into reality. p1
 
The agency of the individual by working through the infinite interpretations and folds of reality that are possible at every moment, p 2 - A fiction extended into reality. p1

Revision as of 10:49, 7 October 2013

For my resideny at Overtoon, I propose a site specific installation, xXx( workingtitle), which deals with time and our perception of time.

There are few find things my inspiration in the,

  • Douglas Rushkoff's 2012 Book, Present Shock,
  • A quote by Baudrillard,
  • Untilled, Pierre Huyghe's contribution to Documenta Kassel
  • A Speaking Machine from 18th century inventor Wolfgang Von Kempelen
  • The Art of noises, by Luigi Russolo


From the book : Present Shock by Douglas Rushkoff

"People have spent a great part of the 20th century obsessed with the future. We were looking forward. The rise of the digital age held the promise that the future would bring change of unprecedent magnitude, invigorated by new technologies. Computer speeds would double each year, and along with that, it seemed, anything would follow.
The future has arrived. The future is now. Our society has reoriented itself to the present moment. We are no longer leaning forwards towards the future but living in an eternal present, where everything is always on and happening in real time. It's not a mere speeding up, however much our lifestyles and technologies have accelerate the rate at which we attempt to do things. It's more of a diminishment of anything that isn't happening right now - and the onslaught of everything that supposedly is.

Yet this now is an elusive goal that we can never quite search. And the dissonance between our digital selves and our analog bodies has thrown us into a new state of anxiety: present shock.

As a result , our culture becomes an entropic, static hum of everybody trying to capture the slipping moment.


Jean Baudrillard, America

"There can be no silence up in the mountains, since their very contours roar. And for there to be silence, time itself has to attain a sort of horizontality; there has to be no echo of time in the future, but simply a sliding of geological strata one upon the other giving out nothing more than a fossil murmur” [America, Jean Baudrillard]


Luigi Russolo, The art of noises

Rushkoff is refering to the 2 decennia before the change of the century. With the rise of the digital era, But this same view of a future, energized by new technologies, is what drove the futurist at the end of the industrial revolution. When Russola write's with the endless multiplication of machinery one day we will be able to distinguish between hold

Russola's intonarumori

roars
claps
noises of falling water
driving noises
bellows
whistles
snores
snorts
whispers
mutterings
rustlings
grumbles
grunts
gurgles
shrill sounds
cracks
buzzings
jingles
shuffles
percussive noises using:
metal
wood
skin
stone
baked earth
...
animal and human voices:
shouts
moans
screams
laughter
rattling
sobs

This same view of a future, energized by new technologies, is what drove the futurist at the end of the industrial revolution. When Russola write's with the endless multiplication of machinery one day we will be able to distinguish between hold

energy momentum pull promise

Site specific setup

For my overtoon residency I propose a site specific installation, to be installed on the 11th floor of the high rise of which overtoon occupies the 9th floor. The main element I would like to use. is buildings stands out in the Brussels skyline. Wind has free.

what the effects are of of this energy and force can be used.


Winds hitting the building and will cause pressure on one side and suction or a vacuum on the other. Depending on the direction of the wind. I would like to use this energy and forces of the winds which will have it's effects on the interior...


11th Floor Airflow Turbulence High-low pressure

We were no longer adjusting to individual changes but at the accelerating rate of change itself

trying to graps the now. Yet this now is an elusive goal that we can never quite search

That is in short the gist of David Rushkoff's 2012 book : "Present Shock"

Pierre Huyghe

The individual's ability to get a handle on the present - to experience duration, to resist the condition of time as product, ...

A time negotiated in keeping with external constraints. A fiction extended into reality. An alternate coding of temporal practice. ....

Mechanisms for reclaiming time, as it is live for the individual

The agency of the individual by working through the infinite interpretations and folds of reality that are possible at every moment, p 2 - A fiction extended into reality. p1



This is the new now. Our society has reoriented itself to the present moment. Everything is live, real time and always on. It's not a mere speeding up, however much our lifestyles and technologies have accelerate the rate at which we attempt to do things. It's more of a diminishment of anything that isn't happening right now - and the onslaught of everything that supposedly is.


People spent the twentieth century obsessed with the future. We created technologies that would help connect us faster, gather news, map the planet, compile knowledge, and connect with anyone, at anytime. We strove for an instaneaous network where time and space could be compressed. Well, the future's arrived. We live in a continuous now enabled by twitter, email and the so-called realtime technological shift, Yet this now is an elusive goal that we can never quite search. And the dissonance between our digital selves and our analog bodies has thrown us into a new state of anxiety: present shock.

As a result , our culture becomes an entropic, static hum of everybody trying to capture the slipping moment.

when things begin accelerating wildly out of control, sometimes patience is the only answer. press pause..

instead of cultural comparison the dessert offered an absolute renunciation or sweeping away of culture


People spent the twentieth century obsessed with the future.


time perception of time,

Jean Baudrillard, America

"There can be no silence up in the mountains, since their very contours roar. And for there to be silence, time itself has to attain a sort of horizontality; there has to be no echo of time in the future, but simply a sliding of geological strata one upon the other giving out nothing more than a fossil murmur” [America, Jean Baudrillard]


"The future is now rights. We have spent the end of the 20th century being obsessed with the future. Looking forward. But now this has arrived. That is in short the gist of David Rushkoff's 2012 book : "Present Shock"


The individual's ability to get a handle on the present - to experience duration, to resist the condition of time as product, ...

A time negotiated in keeping with external constraints. A fiction extended into reality. An alternate coding of temporal practice. ....

Mechanisms for reclaiming time, as it is live for the individual

ideas of time, perception, representation, sound, technology... these elements I will try to combine or relate in.


The agency of the individual by working through the infinite interpretations and folds of reality that are possible at every moment, p 2 - A fiction extended into reality. p1