Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Artist's critique of protest

January 27, 2009 - how timely is this gallery announcement?

MARK TITCHNER
FEEL BETTER NOW! (Apathy and the New Sincerity)
Performed by Jonny Woo with Jeanette

Saturday, January 31st, starts at 8PM

Peres Projects
Schlesichestrasse 26
Berlin, kreuzberg 10997

Originally commissioned by the Serpentine Gallery, London in 2008, Peres Projects, Berlin presents an expanded version of this text based performance work. This multi voiced work is presented in the various guises of two of London's best loved alternative performers.

Alternatively humorous and disturbing this manifesto like assemblage, composed of fragmented found texts, aphorisms and axioms, examines how the failure of mass protest in the last decade has led to a nostalgic retreading of past failures. Focusing on the use of the polemical style in entertainment and media and how this consequently diverts social change towards individual selfishness. Disembodied and contradictory voices pile upon each other from crescendo to silence.

The work exists as a live companion to its sculptural equivalent 'Plateau Aurora Borealis', (2008) presented in the current show at Peres Projects.


Wasn't/isn't most protest about individual selfishness?

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

International pressure points that could erupt into war at any time during the next four years

The U.S. is confronted with a number of international conflicts. They will or will not escalate to wars depending on how ready the new administration is for a fight (don't hold your breath) or whether external (if that's any longer an operative concept) events force the hand of the U.S. Let's all hope that these "conflicts" fizzle out.

1. Iraq
2. Afghanistan
3. India/Pakistan - Kashmir
4. India/Pakistan - continuing guerrilla attacks against India from Pakistani territory or with Pakistani support
5. Pakistan - we have to send ground troops in to secure their nuclear stockpile*
6. Russia - invasion of Ukraine
7. Russia - invasion of the Baltic republics
8. North Korea - their nuclear capability grows to a danger point
9. Iran - breakthrough in weaponizing their nuclear capability
10. O! Did I forget Hamas in the Gaza strip?
11. O! Did I forget that Hebollah might decide to open a northern front in case more Israeli reservists were hankering to get back into uniform?

and then, of course, there are these concerns:

1. China gets a couple (even one) aircraft carrier, and the Chinese navy decides that chasing pirates off the horn of Africa is so much fun they can now take a hand in "protecting" oil exports from the Persian Gulf. Why should the U.S. Navy bear that task alone?

2. Germany decides that staying warm in winter is more desirable than attending meaningless NATO meetings.

3. Brazil, which has been increasing its military, decides that the Bolivian gasfields should become more dependable as a supply. Not sure we have a dog ready for that fight.

4. Etc., etc.

* This is the big worry. Will the new administration have a plan in place, or will we be concentrating on really important things like CAFE standards and seating Mr. Burriss?

The end of an era (continued):

If anyone needs a stronger demonstration of the fact that the irrational exuberance that created Bernie Madoff, the sub-prime mortgage crisis, the Gaza conflict, the palpable crescendo of the decline of the culture of the West and the election of a naive man-child to the U.S. presidency are all the same, single phenomenon, consider what has happened to London's Royal Academy.

Rachel Williams, who owns the Vilma Gold Gallery in London, is a friend of mine. Mark Titchner is a very good artist with a significant "dark side" to his work. This is the announcement from the gallery:

Mark Titchner: Psychosomatic Acid Test, Royal Academy, Friday 9 January 8pm






































MARK TITCHNER
presents
PSYCHOSOMATIC ACID TEST

9th January 2008, from 8pm
Royal Academy of Arts. Entrance at 6 Burlington Gardens, London, W1S 3EX



An evening exploring and celebrating Psychedelia and Psychedelics with…

Performance!

Evel Gazebo perform Hawkwind’s seminal 1973 live album “Space Ritual”.

Jonny Woo performs Mark Titchner's "FEEL BETTER NOW! (Apathy and the
New Sincerity)” 2008.

Talks!

Francesca Gavin “The Super Mario Bros Shamanic Neon Rave Talk”.
(The new wave of contemporary psychedelic art).

Arran Frood “Pressed for Opinion: a very brief history of psychedelics and the mainstream media”.

Peter May “The Entheogenic treatment of Cluster Headache: a brief outline of the potential efficacy of medicinal entheogens in a neurological syndrome often labeled ‘Suicide Headache’”.

Andrew Osborne “The Ethico-Aesthetic Object: The Tribal Assemblage and Space Rock”.

Plus!!
Music from DJ Laurie and a selection of artist’s video works and Psyche film ephemera!

TICKETS £6 (£5 Concessions) including exhibition entry.

As part of his Residency at the Royal Academy from the 3rd to the 9th of January, Mark Titchner also presents a selection of artists video works featuring

James Balmforth
‘The Consumptive Sublime’, 2008

Annabelle Craven Jones
‘From a question on leaving’, 2007

Stephen Dunne
‘Schizo Epiphanies’, 2009

Nicole Miller
‘The Conductor’, 2008

Jos Richardson/Tom Lovell
‘Voice/Off’, 2008

Mark Titchner
‘Ivy met Mike’, 2007

Plus daily dispatches, music and hanging around.


Vilma Gold | 6 Minerva Street | London E2 9EH | UK
Unsubscribe from future marketing messages from Vilma Gold

Monday, January 5, 2009

The election of Obama as the end of an era (draft of January 5, 2009)

The election of Barack Obama is viewed by most as beginning a new era in American politics and society. Under this view the new era will see the consolidation of ostensible gains in the status of women and minorities, the end of US unilateralism in foreign affairs, a narrowing of the financial and social distances between rich and poor and the use of government to provide increased health and educational benefits to those who cannot now afford them.

A more likely interpretation of the election of Obama is that it was another facet of the unbridled, irrational exuberance and dislocation from the real world that also led, among other things, to Wall Street excesses, the sub-prime mortgage crisis, the abandonment of religion particularly among the well-to-do, the anti-war movement, the devaluation of the stable nuclear family and the extreme elements of the environmental movement. The past twenty five years have seen the passage of millions of individuals from thinking of themselves as a people bound to a sovereign order that was viewed as protection but as a multitude. The multitude no longer thinks of itself as bound to a sovereign, now viewed as a threat not a protector - thus opposition to the Patriot Act, but as free-floating and capable of creating values as it goes along through social interaction among equals without recourse to revelation or history, two categories now untenable and unneeded. The confidence of the multitude that these changes, which they view as gains and improvements over the preceding decades, are irreversible and that prosperity would continue unabated led to a euphoria that would permit and demand a new leader who, no matter how inexperienced, and indeed because he had no history, would validate the all-on-one level, non-invidious, free-floating multitude.

All of these phenomena are effects of unprecedented wealth that was distributed far wider than any society known to history has ever known. These phenomena are already and inevitably being reversed. As the economy deleverages and scarcities in money and employment increase and economic and military security decrease, the euphoria will come undone. What happens?

Scenario 1: Most likely a tighter family structure will emerge to secure basic needs, men will crowd out women and whites will crowd out coloreds in the workforce, diversity will morph into more uniform values needed to feed, clothe and shelter the people. The sovereign will be seen as a necessary protector, and the military well be re-valued. Other countries and religions that are minor in the U.S. will again be seen as the "other," and whites will diverge from people of color. So-called free speech will be captured and channeled by newly formed, governing elites who will control monopolized media.

Scenario 2: The opposite is possible. Since all economies are games of musical chairs, as an economy contracts, chairs disappear. [In the past thirty years chairs have been added to accommodate same-sex marriages, easy marital dissolution, oversized houses, SUV's, tree huggers, dissemination of ugly rap, Jeremiah Wright and fundamentalist preachers, etc.] The dwindling number of remaining chairs could, for example, be taken by people of color, whereupon Christian whites in nuclear families could find themselves dispossessed.

Either way, the process will be brutal, and a political elite recently elected for their compassion and liberality will not be smiling through the changes.

Someone will rewrite Frederick Lewis Allen's account of the roaring Twenties to describe the changes after Clinton was elected through the end of 2008, and that book, too, will be called "Only Yesterday." The euphoria that will characterize the inauguration of President Obama will be recalled with fond nostalgia as the last great party, a party that marked the end an era.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Proposed bicycle trip on the upper Danube in July, 2009

December 18, 2008

The following is an exchange between my friend, John W., an older gentleman about my age, and me regarding a proposed bicycle tour this summer in Germany:

Dear T.:

I am not a biker but of course willing to undertake whatever regimen is necessary to get myself in condition. It sounds easy enough as you describe it- "flat, scenic and not very expensive" --"on buke trails." Is "buke" something between bike and puke? The latter might be my forte if it gets too tough. But knowing you, T., you are not going to do that to yourself. And as long as we are bicycling down river, with the flow, how difficult can it be? My only reservation is the German language. Yes I know they all speak English and therefore no problem communicating. It is simply that the German language is anathema to me. It is World War II and many Nazi movies as a child. I have never owned a German auto or for that matter a Jap auto either. I suppose your Frankfurt friends would not consider bicycling in France where I feel at home. But don't think that Germany puts me off such that I wouldn't go. I would not forfeit yours and Dare's company for that reason. Just a suggestion. How long is the trip and when in July? I expect to walk in France in the Spring. I would like to coordinate. One more thing would you consider moving the trip to earlier in the year to get the benefit of the cooler weather and less people? I look forward to this. John W.

My answer:

Re the proposed bike trip on the upper Danube:

1. Don't worry; you won't puke or buke.
2. We are booked up earlier. The weather will be fine, and there won't be many people in July. The departure date won't be fixed for a couple of months. Stay loose.
3. You have many more Germain traits than pansy French traits. You will feel right at home in Germany with the Germans. They are far and away the best people in Europe, no matter how badly Hollywood slandered them.
4. Everyone speaks English. Furthermore, my German is at least as good as your French - which may not be saying much.
5. You will love our friends. Bodo the lawyer is on your wavelength politically. He is past president of the Harvard Law School Association of Europe.
6. Some exercises in advance will be required. Your legs are in good shape, but I'll bet your butt isn't. I can suggest simple exercises that will prevent your trip from being ruined by sore-butt-itis.
7. The trip will be one week. It starts in a town called Donauschwengen and ends in Ulm. You fill fly to Frankfurt. We will already be in Berlin. We can meet you in Frankfurt. Also, you can combine this with a few days in Berlin and stay with us if you wish.
8. You like beer, don't you?
9. One gauges the difficulty of a bike trip by the color of the hair of the riders coming the other way. If it's grey, the ride will not be a problem. You will see a majority of old folks coming the other way. You will rent a bike as part of the tour. You could even room with Bodo to keep the cost down.
10. Good news: Our German friends insist on wine for lunch. Bad news: They won't pay more than five or six Euros per bottle. We don't do wine, so cheap stuff from the supermarket tastes good to Dare and me. Germans of their immediate post-war generation can't bear to part with cash - another trait you have in common with them.
11. The highlight of the day is the lunch on a grassy knoll along the river or, if we're lucky, a public picnic table. Dare and Hannelore, the other lady, will take turns shopping every morning before we pull out. You will have to pay for one lunch, but the total cost usually comes in under 20 Euros, including wine, for six. You can't believe how good German cold cuts, pate', cheese, gerkins and rolls taste after a morning of biking.
12. Dare gets out of control occasionally and wants to bike at the point with the men. I try to restrain her because I think it's bad manners. She is the best athlete in the bunch, however.
13. The other guy, Ulrich (PhD in physics and ex executive) used to be a bike racer, and he can fix anything that goes wrong. He once changed my tire on the platform of the Venice train station.
14. This will change your life. You voted for "change," didn't you?

Sincerely, T.

Next comment/query from John later on December 18:

T.: Buttitis is a definite malady I hope to avoid. When do I do? But those leather pants? and Italian shirts? How about a padded seat? Something more than those dreadfully hard leather, self-flagellating, ball busting, excruciating, you know what I mean. Are these road bikes or mountain bikes? How many hours a day? I think I like the idea of wine at lunch, something to anthesitize my nerve endings. I know I am probably ahead of myself but is one's bag shipped ahead or must one carry it. I am definitely one who belieives in carrying the minimum and let some one else do the heavy lifting. Is this a large group effort or just us and your Frankfurt friends. Who makes the bookings and when, along the way or before we start? Etc., etc. John

My answer:

15. Padded seat won't do it. Pain is not caused by the seat but by flabby butt muscles.

16. No leather pants or Italian biking jerseys. Khaki shorts or touring shorts with real or faux chamois in the crotch and old tee shirts will do. You should get a helmet at home and bring it with you. Also, biking gloves are desirable, particularly since your hands are no doubt soft from all that walking. An old, comfy pair of running shoes will do also.

17. Light, easy to ride and steer touring bikes. Wide, but not too wide, tires.

18. We ride about five hours a day at moderate speeds, but with stops and lunch it stretches to about eight hours. Our friends find it hard to pass up a coffee or beer place, and they drink Radlers. You will be expected to drink at least one. It is about half beer and half Seven-Up and when drunk cold can hit the spot. The Germans have to have a pastry at about 4pm. I generally have ice cream. Dare and you will have mineral water.

19. A van picks up your bags in the morning and delivers them to the destination hotel/pension. You will have a saddlebag for your extra jacket or sweatshirt, your poncho (a must), water bottle. Breakfast is usually a big treat and is included in the price. Some tours include dinner and some do not.

20. There will be only six of us. Other people might be on the same tour and staying at the same hotels, and sometimes we ride with them.

21. Ulrich will make all the arrangements. The tour company makes the hotel reservations and rents the bikes. You should have some kind of brochure, maps and other info before you leave home. This will be a simple ride because we will largely follow the river. The bike paths should have a smooth surface and on a route like this are well marked.

22. If anything starts to hurt, crying is not allowed. Dare will give you a dirty look if she hears any whimpering.

Sincerely, T.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Bad thought re the San Francisco Giants

December 13, 2008

Heard on Sirius XM Radio Hot Stove radio this morning: If you were a pitcher, why would you sign with the Giants when the left side of the infield has two guys* who can't move to either side? The person commenting is with a national publication. He called the Giants "a bad team."

*Renteria at short and Sandoval at third

A curious encounter with a Frenchman

December 13, 2008

Yesterday morning I was on my regular morning run to the Peets coffee store in Potrero Center in San Francisco. As I was parking, a new Honda speeding by stopped abruptly beside me. A trim, well dressed, possibly sleek young black man who looked like a forward on a professional soccer team, alone in the car, rolled down his right front window and asked crisply, "Are you from Biarritz?" I was both perplexed at the question and by his accent. I quickly realized that I was wearing a bright red sweatshirt by Kappa, a popular European sports brand that I had purchased in Portofino about three years ago. "Biarritz" was emblazoned in large white letters trimmed in blue (tricoleur) across my chest.

I replied "No. Why do you ask?"

"I'm French," he said. "I was wondering whether you are from France."

I told him that this was just a sweatshirt, that I had not been in Biarritz since 1957 but that I wanted to go back badly. Visibly unimpressed by my remark, he nodded, closed his window and drove off as abruptly as he had stopped without further comment.