Wednesday, November 23, 2016

PASQUINO: The Melting Statue


PASQUINO: The Melting Statue

Link to Article about The Talking statues of Rome
http://www.italyperfect.com/blog/pasquino-the-talking-statue-and-his-congress-of-wits.html

Pasquino is the leader of  ‘Congress of Wits’, a handful of historic statues that form a pre modern social media network.

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

GROUP CONTACT INFO

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Friday, September 30, 2016

The flaneur

le_flaneur_by_spenot-large
Reworking of Paul Gavarni’s Le Flâneur by Spenot.
Little things in life supplant the “great events.” —Peter Altenberg, as translated by Peter Wortsman
The figure of the flâneur—the stroller, the passionate wanderer emblematic of nineteenth-century French literary culture—has always been essentially timeless; he removes himself from the world while he stands astride its heart. When Walter Benjamin brought Baudelaire’s conception of the flâneur into the academy, he marked the idea as an essential part of our ideas of modernism and urbanism. For Benjamin, in his critical examinations of Baudelaire’s work, the flâneur heralded an incisive analysis of modernity, perhaps because of his connotations: “[the flâneur] was a figure of the modern artist-poet, a figure keenly aware of the bustle of modern life, an amateur detective and investigator of the city, but also a sign of the alienation of the city and of capitalism,” as a 2004 article in the American Historical Review put it. Since Benjamin, the academic establishment has used the flâneur as a vehicle for the examination of the conditions of modernity—urban life, alienation, class tensions, and the like.
In the ensuing decades, however, the idea of flânerie as a desirable lifetsyle has fallen out of favor, due to some arcane combination of increasing productivity—hello, fruits of the Industrial Revolution!—and the modern horror at the thought of doing absolutely nothing. (See: Michael Jordan’s “retirements.”) But as we grow inexorably busier—due in large part to the influence of technology—might flânerie be due for a revival?
If contemporary literature is any indication, the answer is a soft yes. Take Teju Cole’s debut novel, Open City. Cole’s narrator, Julius, wanders up and down Manhattan, across the Atlantic to Brussels and back again, while off-handedly delivering bits of wisdom and historical insight. It’s not just that Open City is beautifully written, though that’s certainly true. Cole’s skill manifests itself in depicting the dreamy psychogeographic landscape—and accompanying amorality and solipsism—of Julius’s mind. Riding behind his eyes is a trip; even though we’re in his head, the tone of his thoughts still sets us at a distance.
Tao Lin’s recently released Taipei achieves something similar. As Ian Sansom wrote in the Guardian, “Passage after passage in the novel dwells on the meaning of disassociation and self-exile.” Examining the author himself yields a similar assessment, and Lin’s often-tortured relationship with technology means he’s broadcasting at all hours, day and night.
The idea here—of dissociating from one’s surroundings, of taking a step back—is important. Thanks to Open City and Taipei, I feel encouraged to pursue flânerie; I’m walking more, finding myself in secondhand stores or by the pier, in tea houses and dive bars—these little things do seem to matter, not least as an effective antidote to artificial busyness and its accompanying stress.
I recently attended a small breakfast panel with Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, and Jared Cohen, the director of Google Ideas. As the guests were mostly tech CEOs, our meal was analog, delicious, and free—or, at least, paid for by somebody who may or may not have been on the penthouse floor with us. I was overwhelmed by their titles, I confess; all I know for sure is that the bar was open, and that coffee was flowing freely.
Together, Cohen and Schmidt have published a book entitled The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations, and Business, which attempts to answer the questions our global technological future will ask of us. For Cohen and Schmidt, the book’s futurology makes sense—after all, they’re set to play a large role in developing what comes next. We sat at a long, rectangular table, much like Da Vinci’s in The Last Supper: Schmidt was in the middle, our prophet in more ways than one, while Cohen sat beside him, either Thomas or John, depending on your perspective.
From their book:
The internet is among the few things humans have built that they don’t truly understand … [It] is the largest experiment involving anarchy in history. Hundreds of millions of people are, each minute, creating and consuming an untold amount of digital content in an online world that is not truly bound by terrestrial laws … This is the Internet, the world’s largest ungoverned space.
What might Open City’s Julius make of that? A New York Times opinion piece published last February by Evgeny Morozov, a Belarusian technology writer, sees it as a death knell; he waxes nostalgic about the early days of the Web, comparing the evolution of the Internet to Baron Haussmann’s violent reconfiguration of Paris. “Transcending its original playful identity,” Morozov writes, “[the Internet is] no longer a place for strolling—it’s a place for getting things done.”
I agree, in a sense: corporations like Facebook divide the Web into increasingly well-defined, dedicated avenues, and, on the surface, there does appear to be a lack of diversity, idiosyncrasy, or whatever essence it is that drives flâneurs to flânerie. But I’d also argue that we are still here, driven underground, in a way, to keep the lifestyle alive. Even within mainstream communities you’ll find heterogeneity bubble up if you’re searching for air; because the Internet is unfathomably vast, claiming that its most popular parts are everything misses the rest of the iceberg.
No less remarkable than that moment when electric lights first blinked brightness across the world, the last few decades have changed the way we interact with the digital: we’ve gone from dial-up to broadband, from flip phone to smartphone, from local community to a global one. Our doubled lives enable flânerie—how often do we search our physical surroundings for things to post on Instagram? How long do we wander the depths of the Internet to find the perfect GIF? How many hours do you spend clicking the random button on Wikipedia? Where is real life?
Morozov mourns the death of the old Internet communities, but he misses the essential point: new arenas, new arcades have replaced them, and they’re no less valid than the old. Real life hasn’t changed, and twentieth-century France was no different. Though Baron Haussmann’s avenues made flânerie more difficult, and though the rise of street traffic may have endangered those brave flâneurs who walked their turtles, the flâneur’s raison d’etre—to participate fully through observation—has always remained the same. Now that we’re comfortably into the era of the postmodern, perhaps it’s time to take a brief stroll into the past, to sample its sights and its sounds.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

CASA LIN PHOTOS














Long but interesting

http://skemman.is/stream/get/1946/20471/47255/1/Louise_MSC_Final_$0028smaller$0029.pdf

Aliens and modern minstrels @casa lin 2015

Art Basel: Aliens and Modern Minstrels at Casalin

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Eddy Jean-Joseph reverses blackface; Jordan Levin

The annual Thursday morning brunch at Casalin in Wynwood is always a bucolic respite from Basel bustle. Sponsored and hosted by Lin Lougheed in his garden recreation of a pre-European pine rockland landscape, the Yard@Casalin showcases New World School of the Arts student artists - as well as cafecitos, fresh guarapo juice and pastries. This year was mostly performance pieces. Blonde, demure-faced Bernadetta Majauskaite wandered the grounds in a beaded white wedding dress (bought at Goodwill), her train trailing in the mud, humming a hypnotic melody as she "married" people by tying a strip of lace around their wrist, 100 times for A 100 Weddings. Skyler Nador tap danced on a platform covered in white paint in Colored Emotions.

But other pieces shadowed the sunny garden. Eddy Jean-Joseph,18, sat in a tiny dark shed, smearing white paint on his dark face, an ominous figure. The untitled piece was inspired by the minstrel show practice of blackface - when white performers smeared their faces with black makeup for a caricature of African-Americans - and by a newer version of cultural co-optation. "It was inspired by all these racial incidents that were happening, celebrities taking pieces of African-American culture," said Jean Joseph, who grew up in Little Haiti. Like Miley Cyrus wearing her hair in dreads. "I didn't like that - how some people pick and choose what parts of other people's culture they're going to put on," he said.

The three men in black Tshirts picking up trash about the yard would ordinarily have been invisible, or at least ignored. But this morning they took on symbolic meaning courtesy of the phrases on their black t-shirts reading "I am an immigrant/alien/undocumented cleaning the yard." Alian Martinez, 27, who arrived from Cuba just two years ago, looked to his neighbors, for the literally named Immigrant Cleaning Yard. "I'm very curious about how power is expressed in the relationship of work in this country, between employer and employee," Martinez said. "It doesn't matter how difficult the work can be, to realize it there always has to be money to pay for the effort. He's also fascinated by the politics and anger around immigration. While he thought there should be some controls on immigration, Martinez is puzzled at the hostility towards those who come here.

"Immigrants do the dirty work that no one wants to do," he said. "If America gets rid of all the immigrants, they'll lose that support."

The three men bringing his piece to life were Martinez' neighbors in Northwest Miami, and one really was undocumented, and the other getting his papers. Asked if they were embarrassed to wear labels proclaiming their status, Martinez said no. "They just asked how much they were getting paid," he said, pulling cash out of his pocket - $60 for each man. "It's more than they usually get."

One of them, Israel Menduina, with the "immigrant" t-shirt and a cap reading "native pride," was actually the U.S.-born son of a Cuban exile. "Immigrants come to work, to make an honest living, to take care of their families," he said. "I don't see nothing wrong with that."

- Jordan Levin
Arts & entertainment writer/music and dance critic
jlevin@miamiherald.com