Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
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The following is a report from Berlin by my friend and colleague Gordon Hicks.
Guest post #1 from Gordon Hicks:
I was just reading your post about police and ideas of 'inherent friction'. Sunday was May 1st and that means the May Day celebrations/riots in Kreuzberg. Since the studio where I am working is right in the middle of Kreuzberg (at Bethanien) we got to wander around the neighbourhood and take it all in.
The police/people duality seemed much more formalized than I am used to. Both sides seem to understand a lot more about it than they have in my past experience.
Most of the day is a huge street party with music and people hanging out being mellow. The photo below was taken in front of the studio building (Bethanien) in the park. Turkish beat music came from the South, rock music from the North.
There was a phalanx of reds marching up and down the neighbourhood in what I guess is a random pattern. They passed by at least three times, each time the group getting larger. Clusters of riot police would go into quick step manouvres in order to get positioned on this or that street in anticipation of the parade passing. (Parade below)
Cops. All sorts. And I mean all sorts. Good Riot-Cops, Just-Doing-Our-Job Riot Cops, and Big-Mean-Motterfucker-In-Black Riot Cops. ( I chickened out taking photos of the last class when I saw them straight arm a passerby.)
-Guest Poster Gordon Hicks
What is it?
quicktime / photos
Readers of this blog will already be familiar with Mr. Nobody (a regular contributor in the comment threads). Well there's a big Mr. Nobody solo show opening on Friday night in Toronto. Here's the blurb:
Hello friends of nobody!
Mr. Nobody is coming out of hibernation for his spring exhibition at Katharine Mulherin Contemporary Art Projects. Bring Mr. Nobody some luck this Friday the 13th!
'In the Hole'
(video installation and drawings)
May 13 - June 4
site: 1086 Queen West, upstairs
Gallery preview: Friday, May 13, 12-5pm.
Reception: Friday, May 13, 7-10 pm
HOURS: WED-SAT 12-5PM
The "Great Explainer," physicist and teacher Richard Feynman, speaking in 1964 at the Galileo Symposium in Italy (published under the title, "What is and What Should be the Role of Scientific Culture in Modern Society," in a collection of Feynman's essays, The Pleasure of Finding Things Out (Perseus Publishing, 1999) p.108-9:
...[T]here is a kind of responsibility which the scientists feel toward each other which you can represent as a kind of morality. What's the right way and the wrong way to report results? Disinterestedly, so that the other man is free to understand precisely what you are saying, and as nearly as possible not covering it with your desires. That this is a useful thing, that this is a thing which helps each of us to understand each other, in fact to develop in a way that isn't personally in our own interest, but for the general development of ideas, is a very valuable thing. And so there is, if you will a kind of scientific morality. I believe, hopelessly, that this morality should be extended much more widely; this idea, this kind of scientific morality, that such things as propaganda should be a dirty word. That a description of a country made by the people of another country should describe that country in a disinterested way. ... Advertising, for example, is an example of a scientifically immoral description of the products. This immorality is so extensive that one gets so used to it in ordinary life, that you do not appreciate that it is a bad thing. And I think that one of the important reasons to increase the contact of scientists with the rest of society is to explain, and to kind of wake them up to this permanent attrition of cleverness of the mind that comes from not having information, or not having information always in a form which is interesting.
"Frightening" moral philosopher, Mary Midgley, in her book Science and Poetry (Routledge, 2001) p.84:
Current scientific concepts are not adapted to focusing on subjectivity. Indeed, many of them have been carefully adapted to exclude it, much like cameras with a colour filter. [...] Galileo and Descartes saw how badly the study of objects had been distorted by people who treated these objects as subjects, people who credited things like stones with human purpose and striving. So they ruled that physical science must be objective. And this quickly came to mean, not just that scientists must be fair, but that they should treat everything they studied only as a passive, insentient object.
We know that abstraction made possible three centuries of tremendous scientific advance about physical objects. Today, however, this advance has itself led to a point where consciousness has again to be considered. Enquiries are running against the limits of this narrow focus. In many areas, the advantages of ignoring ourselves have run out.
This has happend most notoriously in quantum mechanics, where physicists have begun to use the idea of an observer quite freely as a casual factor in the events they study. Whether or not this is the best way to interpret quantum phenomena, that development is bound to make people ask what sort of an entity an observer is, since Ocam's Razor has so far failed to get rid of it. This disturbance, however, is only one symptom of a growing pressure on the supposedly subject-proof barrier, a pressure that is due to real growth in all the studies that lie close to it.
A few things are bugging me about contemporary internet interaction. I am really tired of the constant friendly prods and reminders to update software, as my computer chats away with corporations online, trolling for software products, both free and not free but all time-consuming to implement, supposedly on my behalf. Also (and granted this is partly due to human error) I'm sick of inadvertantly clicking on links that are direct to PDF files I really don't want to download. What really ramps up my aggravation is that Adobe Acrobat takes a little while to load and we have to look at this STUPID and insulting graphic the whole time. This dancing guy who is supposed to represent me, the happy user, is more like the assholes who cut me off in their SUVs while I'm riding my bike (and they're talking on their cell phones) than he is like me or anyone I associate with. I guess that just means I'm lucky I don't have to work in an office downtown, but geeze, even on Bay street I'm sure there's some other types of folk using Adobe Acrobat besides slick, trim, self-empowered white guys with their shirts tucked in producing file after file of ugly boring reports and purple bar graphs. Also, what are those cyclindrical things? Slinkys? And, um, nice letter 'A' there. I guess that little item represents both the broad field of typography, layout and design, and the whole line of Adobe products that service that field, and that your computer can constantly remind you to update and upgrade, keeping the brand recognition strong and the user's consumer indentity prepped and fresh for purchase 24-7. Arrrrg.