Darkness

One of my favorite artists, Katie Paterson. Absolutely splendid work. 

History of Darkness is a slide archive; a life-long project, it will eventually contain hundreds upon thousands of images of darkness from different times/places in the history of the Universe, spanning billions of years. Each image handwritten with its distance from earth in light years, and arranged from one to infinity.

Inception, Disconnection, and Atemporality

I saw Inception the other night and was pleasantly surprised. Perhaps I should have looked at the movie poster more carefully and noted the ominous presence of One Wilshire. For like One Wilshire, the film revealed more of itself as it went on and, even with all of its complexity, had a well-thought out ending, not the lame sort of ending that has frustrated me too often lately in projects that I otherwise liked, like Lost or Spook Country

The central conceit of the film is that the characters have access to a technology developed by the military to create dreams that can be inhabited and shaped collectively. I will refrain from discussing the movie in much more detail so as to avoid spoiling it for those of you who haven't seen it, but I thought I'd make an observation about how the film engages disconnection and atemporality, the topics of the first two chapters of my book on network culture.

Let's turn to space first. The argument that I make in the chapter of Life After Networks that I am currently finishing up is that everyday spatial experience today is marked by disconnection. Right now I am disconnecting from the space around me to connect with my readership in the mediated space of this site while teenagers in Japan are engaged in telecocoons with close friends via mobile phones, and bankers in London are getting back from lunch and texting each other on their blackberries. Now simultaneity has been a key part of our phenomenological existence since modernity came to its early adulthood and the telegraph was invented. Already in the Mexican War of 1846 to 1848, audiences in New York received daily updates from the front. By the turn of the century, simultaneity was recognized as integral to modernity and the products of the heady first thirty years of the century, from Les Demoiselles d'Avignon to Ulysses to the Light-Space Modulator evidence the modern's fascination with this condition. Radio and television brought simultaneity into the realm of everyday experience, but it was still one-way. Local telephone calls were the exception, although these were tied to specific locations: you had to reach a location before you could reach a person. 

Still, modernity and postmodernity were both marked by an alienation that stemmed from feeling disconnected from the world around you. Today, however, we disconnect constantly in order to connect with others at a remove from us. Mobile and smart phones, wireless enabled laptops, and so on make it possible for us to leave the spaces for places in which we can feel more at home. Where disconnection is unhappy, it is generally the common phenomenon of the workplace intruding on our private lives (or occasionally the reverse)  Even the primary means of experiencing music today, iPods, are a form of disconnection, although they connect us less to other spaces than color our moods, the massive amounts of storage the offer allowing us to augmenting the world we inhabit with a soundtrack to our choosing in a much more seamless way than the Walkman or Discman ever could have.

Inception embodies this as dream piles upon dream, each at a different temporal pace, each in a different space. The experience of dreaming is not that different from the experience of entering into a telecocoon, blogging or playing an MMORPG (indeed, the film could have substituted MMORPG for dream rather effortlessly… that it did not is telling). 

In talking about the film with Kyle Hovenkotter, who is working with me at the Netlab this summer, he pointed out that Inception is also thoroughly atemporal. i'm not going to say a huge amount about atemporality here. I've done enough of that in the first chapter of Life After Networks here. Simply enough, atemporality suggests that more than ever, history has come undone for us and we have lost any capacity for understanding our lives temporally. Thus, we inhabit a world in which we live in the present, but are perfectly willing to treat the past as a fetish object to be recreated in perfect simulation (Mad Men, artisinal light bulbs, etc.), even as we eschew the postmodernist trope of pastiche, which operated in the mode of irony. For all that I said about technology in the preceding paragraphs, cell phones,  iPods,  even laptop computers are all conspicuously absent. Clearly we are in some moment after the invention of bullet train and the Airfone, but it could as easily be 1985 or 1990 as it could today. 

So that said, I was surprised by the Building Design review that attacked the film for the supposed blandness of its architecture. I think the reviewer missed the point here. The very corporate banality of the architecture—the LADWP building become a thousand feet tall, for example, or the repeated appearance of One Wilshire in a chase scene—is key. The ability of the dreamers to construct paradoxical architecture such as stairs that endlessly rise or streets that turn in upon themselves put the focus on the way the architecture performed, not the way it looked. Beyond that however, this kind of corporate modernism made for not just the best-collapsing ruins, but also contributed to a feeling that the people in it are not entirely real. Most of all the architecture of Inception is atemporal. To introduce a building by Libeskind, Piano, or Koolhaas would have marred the film.

Summing up, I recommend the film for anyone working in network culture today. It captures our moment and, in so doing, allows us to come to an understanding of where we are, even if, in the end, any final answer vanishes from our grasp.    

 

The Stucco Box

Via the LA Forum. John Chase on the stucco box (aka the dingbat), one of the many great works he did. Simultaneously the definitive word on the topic and hilarious. 

John Chase

Sad news. According to Curbed LA, John Chase passed away this morning.

John was one of the smartest and most innovative thinkers I met in Los Angeles during my decade there. I met him soon after I got to SCI-Arc and he had a huge impact on the way I thought and could reduce me to tears of laughter in a few minutes when he described some hilarious architectural perversity.

His book Exterior Decorations: Hollywood’s Inside-Out Houses is still one of the most radical reconsiderations of architecture to this date. To me, it was neither an appreciation nor camp, rather it was the architectural equivalent of a Throbbing Gristle song. I will never forget his incredible deadpan description of a Case Study House turned into “hairdresser baroque.” I will greatly miss his keen insight, humor, and extraordinary capacity to make us revalue what we meant by such categories a “taste.” 

Is a Crash Coming?

At the Wall Street Journal Brett Arends gives ten reasons to avoid complacency and be on your guard going into the fall.

The Vital Center

In 1949, historian Arthur Schlesinger published the Vital Center in which he outlined his theory that American politics swung between near-Left and near-Right to assure a moderate progression of reasoned politics over time. When then pendulum moved too far Left, it moved to the Right until it swung back again. Today it seems, we have a new vital center, but instead of near-Left and near-Right we have Wall Street and the Military-Industrial Complex. 

Advice for Robert Dudley

Over at the Netlab, I posted a project by Caren Faye, a student in the fall 2009 “Evil” studio, for rebranding BP.  Maybe it’ll prove useful for Robert Dudley, the incoming BP CEO.  

Blueprints for a Better 'Burb

The collaborative entry between the Network Architecture Lab and Park for the Build a Better Burb competition is featured in the New York Times today in an article by Alison Arieff titled "Blueprints for a Better 'Burb."

During the first four (!) years of work at the Netlab, I wanted to focus on analysis. This summer, I felt that we were finally ready to undertake design work.

We have the best team yet at the Netlab—Leigha Dennis, Kyle Hovenkotter, Momo Araki, and Alexis Burson were the members who worked on this—and Will Prince, principal of Park, was a great partner. 

Get ready for more. Soon. In the meantime, take a look at revised version of our proposal, either in PDF form here or in the video below. And please vote for us on the site (here).

 

  


 

On Fetishism and the City

After years of hearing that Marxism has nothing to say about the economy,  even that bastion of new economy neoliberalism, Fast Company, is turning to Marxism to make some sense of the mess. In "David Harvey's Urban Manifesto: Down With Suburbia; Down With Bloomberg's New York," Fast Company's Greg Lindsay recounts some of Harvey's recent thinking on the economy and the suburbanization of the city.

My only quibble is that Harvey doesn't give us enough credit when he says (in the admittedly out-of-context quote): "We're all suburbanites now, without knowing it," he said. "We're all neoliberals now, without knowing it."*

I think we know full well. As Octave Mannoni, French Lacanian psychoanalyst, said of fetishism, "I know very well but nevertheless…" And what else is the urban hipster, that contemporary flâneur, but a fetishist? 

*One more quibble: once again, the term suburbanite is not really serving us well anymore. But I'll admit that it is a convenient shorthand. 

On Ecology

Ecologists are catching up to one of the Infrastructural City’s key lessons. Hybrid ecosystems are dominant today and we need to study them to understand the biosphere. Alas, ecologists are generally studying pristine wildernesses instead. Sort of like urbanists who look at New York and Boston and pronounce everything alright with the city? More at Nature.

Via Rob Holmes.

Syndicate content