Tuesday, 5 November 2019

Curatorial essay. Artists in-residence 2019: Beatrice Loft Schulz (UK), artistic duo UBERMORGEN (AT/CH/US) together with Nye Thompson (UK), plus ztheheng (DE) alias Alexander Zenker. Curator in residence: Mihaela Varzari


ElectroPutere AIR 2019 

Craiova
Romania


From Male gaze to Machine Gaze

Curatorial essay by Mihaela Varzari

My choice to invite Beatrice Loft Schulz, the artist duo UBERMORGEN together with Nye Thompson and their collaborator ztheheng (the alias of Alexander Zenker), as artists in residence, stems from my current research around issues related to cognitive capitalism and feminist studies as possible avenues to engage with contemporary art production. In the words of the media theorist Yuk Hui, ‘there is the need of turning technology into a support for culture’[1], of moving away from following technology’s pursuit towards perfection. This perfection, this nightmare of absolutism supported by the rationality on which the liberal or neoliberal state is built, has been also challenged by feminism, whose questions haunt ethics and re-write history. As Julia Kristeva observed ‘For the two thousand and five hundred years that ethics has existed, the feminine has been rejected from the sphere of ethics: it is not a subject, at most it is an object, if only!’[2]

Both artistic visions coming from Loft Schulz and Thompson & UBERMORGEN use technology as a filter, and while the former situates herself in the wider post-internet cultural dimension, the latter have been using the internet as a medium from its inception. Their research themes, developed during the 30 days spent in Craiova and Bucharest, are quite different, as well as their respective outcomes where the history of technology includes both the weaving loom and the manufactured network of robots becoming its own organism. 

Loft Schulz’s practice brings to the fore an existential dimension rooted in embodied feminism, which collides with her interest in unpicking the contemporary psyche molded by rampant technological development. She works across predominantly performance and text, as well as sculptural assemblages and crafts, such as weaving. Many of her works have as their starting point major historical female figures, such as Joan of Arc, or the unearthing of marginalized ones, like Beatrice de Dia, one of the best known of the Trobairitz during 11th to the 13th century in France. Her research into the history of computer programming, beginning with the historically neglected British mathematician Ada Lovelace in the first half of the 19th Century, reveals her practice to be concerned with women’s discarded contribution to technological development.

Beatrice Loft Schulz, The Story of Joan of Arc, 2014. Documentation of a performance for Rematerialising Feminism, ICA London. 
Courtesy: the artist

The more recent link between weaving and coding informs her thinking on crafts while it has not been directly expressed. Her textile-based piece Rain (2017) was made while looking at the sky  and trying to capture its constant movement.  During the residency, Beatrice gathered information on weaving techniques, visited workshops across the country, which included traditional looms, had meetings with conservationists and museum curators, and produced a small tapestry on a miniature loom. As a consequence of this research, Beatrice will spend one year weaving on a loom one single tapestry in her Glasgow studio. During this time, which may be seen as an extended performance with no audience, the activity’s monotony of this slow medium will allow Loft Schulz’s attention to fall upon the changing of seasons, her growing older, her moods and how they may be affected by working with certain colours. 

Weaving, this quintessential folk tradition developed in pre-history, asserts itself within contemporary art and technology through Loft Schulz’s refusal to justify or argue for its significance to our contemporary moment; it is a technology as significant as (if not more so) than the coding languages of today. Weaving (which according to Sigmund Freud had been invented by women alone) which surprisingly enough still continues to challenge the traditional hierarchical boundaries between craft and fine art, and in Loft Schulz’s practice is further tied to the developmental history of the internet. This need for a reappraisal of technologies history by Loft Schulz not only addresses the need to balance the history books to include significant but neglected women, but moreover wants to overturn the existing historical paradigm, forcing the art institutions to undergo internal and structural changes. It is not enough to exhibit more women if the structures which sidelined them in the first place are not themselves transformed.

Beatrice Loft Schulz, Rain, 2017,  yarn on rug canvas. Courtesy: the artist

Without taking away the complexity and the various nuances of the long-standing practice of UBERMORGEN, I suggest as a possible point of entry the aesthetics of the German hard rock band Rammstein. It has been argued already that their tactic to undermine fascism from within is through parodic re-enactment. They absorb the mannerism of the enemy, adopting all the seductive trappings and symbols of state power, then exaggerate them. During recent years UBERMORGEN's has turned towards the Alternative-Right, ideologically linked to the current trend of nationalism, anti-migration and anti-feminism in the West. The potent element of fear, the binding agent for these irrational attitudes, has been further explored during the residency, with the project UNINVITED, an ongoing collaboration with artist Nye Thompson, an artist whose practice is concerned with the challenges posed by Artificial Intelligence, global surveillance capitalism in relation to the age of Big Data, or national borders and identity formation in the UK. 

Her presence within the residency as a guest of UBERMORGEN and by extension of the residency programme, goes back to her project BACKDOORED (2016-2017) based on a vast archive of screenshots obtained though compromised surveillance online cameras. This project, aimed at tackling the issue of complicity in relation to data privacy, also sets the scene for her partnership with UBERMORGEN, which began in 2018. UNINVITED was conceived as a horror film for machines and it featured its first iteration at Wei-Ling Gallery in Malaysia during 2019. It was further developed during the residency with the help of engineers from Bucharest and the final film is expected to complete in 2022, with planned installations in London and Craiova during 2020. 

Nye Thompson and UBERMORGEN,  UNINVITED, 2019. Exhibition view- Paralogical Machines, Wei-Ling Gallery,  Kuala Lumpur. Courtesy: the artists

The installation is comprised of a robot running on a dolly, equipped with movement sensors and a projector showing images from an archive of  surveillance footage; frequently lo-fi representations of a mixture of domestic, private and public spheres. They evoke the sense of the uncanny, described by Freud as familiar and alien at the same time, just like the sight of a corpse, or indeed a robot. The sound and the editing style of the video, reminiscent of lower end of B movies, adds an eerie and charged backdrop to his unsettling drama. The taxonomy employed for classifying the images seeks to mimic that of an algorithm-based selection process, which brings to the fore a hot subject; how to understand and represent categorization in the 3rd millennium through the lens of accumulated data.

The robot was initially designed to react to a human audience, though after having heard of the existence of unused, underground spaces in the House of the People, also known as Ceaușescu’s Palace in Bucharest, the artists reconsidered human participation. The team are considering an online broadcast, which would exclude any actual live audience members interacting with the robot and its sensors, thus allowing the machines to become, according to the artists, ‘the performers, audience, content providers and commentators’. Machines spying on other machines contribute to generating Big Data, this insatiable, ever-growing monster with its own spiralling logic; which no-one knows how to deal with yet. Horror takes place right now, it’s called the reduction of the individual to set of data sold for profit. It seems to me, that within today’s accelerated humanity, where we are mere minds mined for data, and governed by cyber-spying, the fear of machines taking over humans is being replaced by humans becoming more like machines.

The project UNINVITED channels fear, a feeling equally captured by the horror films, as well as by political propaganda, through a restrained, cold and unsentimental aesthetic specific to net.art. Taking my lead from Gilbert Simondon, this project brings human experiences into the realm of machine-aesthetics, where the emphasis is on the functional and operational in order to challenge the human-machine dichotomy. More recent discussions within the team have been focusing on the possibility of having more than one robot connected through the cloud, as well as considering the whole project as one single organism through the animal-machine relationship. The folklore element is present in this project through its relationship to horror film genre, founded in the oral tradition of sharing and passing on tales and legends and it could provide a different entry point into unpicking UNINVITED. 

Nye Thompson and UBERMORGEN.  UNINVITED Organism Schematic (Network View), 2019. Courtesy: the artists

Both projects propose critical stances to technological development seen through pathologies ushered in by the rapid development of the internet, by addressing the feminization of the workspace, the materiality of the medium of weaving and its relationship to feminism, surveillance capitalism and machine aesthetics. Both projects react to the local context. Loft Schulz embraced manual weaving as a medium, inspired by the Romanian folklore, which is still present in this late industrialized country, whilst UBERMORGEN and Thompson reacted to the deserted underground spaces which once belonged to a dictator. The latter’s involvement with folk tradition emerges more obliquely through an appropriation of the aesthetics of the horror film genre, itself arguably a hyperbolisation of oral tradition. 

My own critical inquiry takes me down the path of engaging with artistic practices, which keep away from simply renouncing modern technology as intrinsically bad and the other dogmatically endorsing it. UNINVITED present a dystopian version of technology, which if not managed well may prove that there is nothing intelligent about artificial intelligence. Loft Schulz is more  redemptive, but this optimism requires a total restructuring, radical in its essence, which  when placed alongside UBERMORGEN and Thompson’s work could be perhaps read as science fiction itself – she is describing a reality that has not yet come into being UNINVITED’s brand of science fiction is posited as our reality, thus the creeping horror of it all.  Nevertheless, neither project neatly wraps up the questions they pose. The lack of human audience in both works adds to the multiple interpretations to be further explored.

This AIR edition based on exploration and production only, offered the artists the opportunity to re-think or develop some of their working themes, or earlier projects, and engage with the local histories and the social and cultural landscape of Romania. The two projects almost diametrically opposed and pointing into different directions, one to a neglected past, one to a dystopian future, makes me wonder about the teleological directions of the contemporary moment in art and the elusiveness of anticipating new directions.

[1] Hui, Y.(2016).  On the Existence of Digital Objects. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
[2] Kristeva, J. (1987c). Tales of Love. New York, New York: Columbia University Press.

***

This cultural project is co-financed by NCFA (National Cultural Fund Administration) of  Romania and Club Electroputere. The project does not necessarily represent the position of the NCFA and it is not responsible for the content of the project or the manner in which the results of the project may be used. These are entirely the responsibility of the funding recipient.

Supported by: AFCN, British Council, Teatrul National Marin Sorescu
Media Parteners: Zeppelin, Revista ARTA

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