2: Induction
After the stunning bureaucracy of entering the UK; fulfilling the biometric and pandemic health compliances, enrolling in the university, and establishing bank and cellular accounts, I went to take refuge in the modestly scaled organic modernism of Isamu Noguchi. The Barbican retrospective presented new sides of him to me. In one video interview I was struck by an almost self-orientalizing description of his work and a strained summation of eastern aesthetic ideas. An unpublished and confounding Readers Digest essay about Japanese internment exuded a callow and uncritical patriotism. It was hard to make sense of his politics and brought to mind La Malinche.
I sometimes get the sense many of the great artists included in the western canon, were basically lecherous men that cultivated skills, both material and social, that expedited the satisfaction of their desires. These western canons drip with libidinal residue (aura?). The cultivation of these excesses are not without their forensic pleasures. I went to The Making of Rodin show as an afterthought, and to use the right to special exhibitions that comes with my Tate membership. As its name suggests, the exhibition demonstrated a mutability in how an artists work might be presented and received. This occasion favored a behind-the-scenes, post-modern feeling survey of de-monumentalizing works that seemed to multiply in variation and relation, forming an almost quantum field of recombinable positions. Well known works and themes, split into constituent pieces, reconfigure in chimeric assemblages. Sculptures grafted onto vessels drawn from the artists giant collection of antiquities and wall texts on appropriation and fragmentation.
I was talking with R over breakfast about the tendency to allegorize and naturalize a historical moment according its technological metaphors. He offered that when Darwin said ‘fittest’ it was more about an ability to fit in; as in compromise and flexibility and less about competition and strength. R, a retired animator and member of the academy has alert eyes and a gentle disposition. He inspires me to develop a finer capacity for subtlety. He tells stories like an animator, embodied and performed and eventuating in deep laugh lines blooming from his eyes. He offers one story about his mothers sister who was a widowed lace maker that would come to visit from time to time. She assumed an air of superiority towards his mother who was a house cleaner and would sit, head cocked and smoking affectedly at the table while his mother would rush around trying to make her feel welcome. He described how she had dark stains on her fingers and bandages on her legs that the children would gawk at from under the table. The humor erupted from the tension between her affectations and the children’s naked staring. As is often the case, it was a humor born of difficulties and a complicated laughter. Both the story and its telling remind me of Jacques Tati and I say something about how much I love his films, and to which R replies how much his father loved Tati as well. Our conversation moves into an intimate register—more intimate than convention and our short friendship would recommend and brings to a communicable form the common well of suffering we take turns holding, in uneven measure.
He recalls a scene in Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot where Hulot, in the middle of a string of questionable decisions, is attempting to paint a boat that’s not his with a can of paint that keeps drifting away with the tide. He ends up doing more damage than good and when he gets in the boat it breaks completely, appearing to transform into a terrible monster and scaring everyone on the beach. This is more or less how I feel about most of my art and writing.
Chisenhale Notes for Abbas Akhaven
The Perry index was unknown to me until this morning. An index of ‘Aesopica’ or a collection of fables attributed loosely to Aesop. I also learned, in a likely unrelated turn, that perry-dot-nearly any top level domain has been squatted. And so apparently has Spinoza.biz. This particular Perry index has an extension, from an unknown temporal provenance of 3 additional fables:
585. Sick Lion, Fox and Bear. cf. 258
586. Calf and Stork
587. Flea and Gout
The cat’s paw, written on the roof of the Chisenhale and in the texts of Abbas Akhaven’s curtain call, variations on a folly is a reference to the fable where a monkey dupes a cat into burning his paw to retrieve chestnuts from a fire, which the monkey proceeds to eat until a maid comes in, disturbing the scene, and causing them to scatter. I imagine a Rashomon telling of the story from its constituents, but with reality TV style floating head interviews and lots of quick cuts and dramatic monologue. The cat might have suggested that it was the interruption that foreclosed on a more equitable distribution of chestnuts. Like those announcements on airplanes instructing you to put on your mask in the event of an emergency before helping your companions. Perhaps the threat of the maid is a state of exception that calls for singeingly draconian measures. The cat, like myself and nearly everyone I know, tells the perennial tale of exploitation, a capitulation to fleeting power assumed and transacted. The cat, perhaps like all those instrumental, realizes themselves interpellatively. And the maid is the arm, the final point of contact, of an absent but intuited power structure. She likely unthinkingly recites the internalized imperatives of a power she represents, and in turn enjoys an alleged privilege. This interrupted monkey cat dynamic gives a lot to consider. Are we to link the cat’s paw to the artists role for the institution? Or does the artist invite us to consider which roles we perform?
The former question becomes somewhat calcified and I take it with me through the forthcoming Frieze week and beyond holding it up to my eye like a piece of amber or a snapchat filter and seeing monkey hands and cat paws everywhere I look.
Is there some positional, aspirational balance between too explicative as a poetics and a fitting poetics for an age of explication that continues to elude me?
I clumsily wonder out-loud, to whoever is sitting next to me on those wondrous double decker buses with the big screen street scenes, if conceptual art doesn’t use rumor as the market-oriented mechanism for producing scarcity. A currency of gossip and elucidation.
Some cats I’ve known, including Dougie in the flat that I’m letting, lead a life of rest and abundance—with not an exploitative monkey in sight. There are fox that come for scraps in the garden, where Dougie spends most of their time, and everyone seems to get along. There doesn’t even seem to be a great deal of emotional labor involved. Sporadic and mutual seeming affections are exchanged. Is a relaxed cat in abundance a state to collectively aspire towards? And how many forms of life can we include in relaxed cat?
Inside the Chisenhale, a reconstruction of the colonnade that led to the destroyed Palmyra arch has been constructed on a giant green screen. This is the part of the exhibition we experience directly. There’s an unpleasant drone coming from a pair of speakers hung from the ceiling at the entrance of the gallery from where you first encounter the installation.
One of the lecturers at Goldsmiths in the Art and Ecology program, is telling me about the Aerocene society. They offer it’s a ‘lure for thought’—a formulation I like, if not distrust a little. It’s been a long asocial lockdown and this dinner with our nascent group feels deeply satisfying. Fatima, or Fatty as I’ve quickly taken to affectionately calling her, puts on George Michael and in short order we’re dancing to Rihanna and feeling as though we may be the only girl in the world.
This feeling like the only girl in the world occupies an interesting relation to the interrupted monkey-cat-maid triad, or rather the observed and elaborated interrupted monkey-cat-maid ecology. Does the feeling like the only girl in the world, in the thrall of its affective devices, come to stand in for the neoliberal insistence of the individual subject? And is the illuminated corpse of the (autotuned) Only Girl (In the World), somewhat recuperated by the sociality of its illumination?—In the sociality of the being more-than-vectors-of-disease together, illumination of the corpse of the (autotuned) Only Girl (In the World)?
Only Girl (In the World) itself performs the ultimate bracketing of the constructed individual from the world.
La-la-la la
La-la-la la
La-la-la la (uh, yeah)
La-la-la-la
I want you to love me
Like I'm a hot ride (uh, yeah)
Be thinkin' of me (uh)
Doin' what you like
So, boy, forget about the world
'Cause it's gon' be me and you tonight (yeah)
I wanna make you beg for it
Then I'ma make you swallow your pride, oh (uh, uh)
Want you to make me feel like I'm the only girl in the world
Like I'm the only one that you'll ever love
Like I'm the only one who knows your heart
Only girl in the world
Like I'm the only one that's in command
'Cause I'm the only one who understands
How to make you feel like a man, yeah
[cont…]
The lyrics are hard to meaningfully apprehend through the emotionally charged vehicle through which they are delivered. The beat is faster than my heart and puts me in a quantized state of bittersweet ecstasy. The poles marked by a nearly completely eroded sociality in saturating arenas of competition, and the quantized ecstasy of socially illuminating corpses in the key of power, opens up a un suturable rupture.
A local poet, Laila Sumpton and Chisenhale convene a workshop in response to Abbas’ installation. She provided several prompts, in her gentle and focused facilitation, to a group that feels like they come from a range of different socioeconomic backgrounds. The prompts I responded to were: ‘write about memorials’, ‘write a letter to Palmyra’ and ‘address the monkey starting with reach into the fire’.
1.
Isn’t it usually a memorial of the present?
A cold mechanic hum at the viewers frontal gaze
I think of the grid as a tool to organize space,
and when the space has been measured,
objectified forms can be (re)placed accordingly
At this stage of this unrelenting process
we’re mapping the constituent objects
of what is technologically measurable
This crumbling colonnade…
leading towards the impoverished mutability
the fast approaching primacy of virtual space
2.
Dear Palmyra,
This affectation shows how saturating
these colonial histories can be
I don’t feel entitled to that kind of endearment
for an object I’m so far removed from
though undoubtably implicated in
This applies to most objects though,
a large sonorous bowl
thriftstore cashmere
dissolving pictures
I wish we lived in a world
were people could move
with the ease of currency
A canon of everyone and everything
to be shared as widely as desirable
Not their flattened likeness
the cold mechanic hum
at the point of encounter
an inoculating drone
3.
Reach into the fire
I’m to ventriloquize the monkey
Who dupes the cat into harm
This comes as not even a footnote
In the long history of humans projecting
All manner of atrocities onto animals
Without giving them the dignity
Of simply rehearsing their own
I have ambivalent feelings towards these constraints and their results. It was a surprise to see what came to the surface when responding to them. I don’t really know what to do now with these texts. They belonged to a room of people responding to an artists work, and now they are here. The colonnade smelled like sweet earth and now it is here.
The following weekend Federico Campagna gave a response on the theme of ruins to Abbas’ variation. In anticipation of the event I started making my way through the highly listenable podcast Federico has been producing. He has a wonderful voice and an endearingly retrograde style of pedagogy that feels somehow balming. As though putting your worried mind to sleep with nicely shaped images of thought. He addressed an audience that seemed mostly absorbed and afterwards gracefully aikido'd my indignation about a recent title published by Verso, where he also works. The conversation moved to Berardi and La Malinche.