So,
it’s been a slightly packed two weeks, with an intense five-day trip to Berlin
surrounded by the creation of a new work alongside the usual film watching and
video game escapism that occurs within my life away from London.
The
new work that I’ve created is centred around memes and an essay from 1995
written by Clifford Stoll, titled, Why
the Internet Will Fail. In the essay, and a book published in the same year
titled Silicon Snake Oil, Stoll talks
about why the internet won’t be a beneficial tool in the future, that it’ll be
full of ‘unfiltered data’ and that teachers will never be replaced by
computers. Of course, in the subsequent years he was deemed to be incredibly
wrong, as the internet grew into what it is today. In some sense however, a lot
of the things he did write about are very similar ‘issues’ (to some these are
‘issues’ to others they are the only reason that they frequent the internet so
regularly) that plague the network today; everyone’s voice being heard amounting
to a deluge of information that can never be sifted through, regular anonymous harassment,
etc.
After
reading this article, and some of the book, I decided to visualise the writing
using memes. A meme is usually an image accompanied by lines of text, typically
humorous, that is subsequently copied and shared over the internet, until it
becomes a well-known meme and slowly dies out and is no longer used regularly.
The images used are often derogatory, or not; it all depends on the meme. Using
memes to illustrate the essay makes fun of Stoll and the ideas that he had
about the internet whilst simultaneously demonstrating that he was right in
some parts of his argument, that the internet has become a breeding ground for
hate and abuse. In the video work, after every few words another meme flashes
up on the screen with the word that has just been spoken embedded in some way
within the meme. All the memes are different, with no repeated meme, all
sourced from Google Image searches, ranging from the most popular memes to the
obscure ones that are created for a small circle of friends. After editing all
the memes together, I decided to stretch them all, filling the screen rather
than keeping them at their original size, making the memes even more pixelated
and ugly than before.
I
also chose to harness a voice generator from the internet, making the voice
anonymous, as well as creating some ambiguity as to who is actually talking. Is
it an autonomous website, talking about all the hate that it sees every day, or
simply a middle aged man ranting about a tool he doesn’t understand yet?
Stoll’s
most important point seems to be centred around education, how teachers won’t
be replaced by computers as electronics can’t give users the human contact that
they crave. Thus, I chose to take the title of the piece directly from the
text, with the line Who Needs Teachers
When You've Got A Computer-Aided Education? I’m still considering how to
display this work, maybe in a school environment, like a lecture theatre or
something? I may wait until going back to uni in order to use the lecture theatre
there to project and photograph the work; it’s all about that ‘in situ’
photograph. We will see. For now you can see the work on my website here: www.bobbicknell-knight.com/#/who-needs-teachers-when-youve-got-a-computeraided-education/
Apart
from that I’ve finally begun to write my no screen contract that I’ve been
talking about doing for months now. It’s slowly becoming a thing, researching
all the different types of screens so if people were to use the document they
couldn’t find any loopholes in the contract. I still need to think of how long
the contract will last for, or if the user would set their own length of
non-screen based time. I’m also anxious to make it an actual legally binding
document, so may want to contact an actual lawyer at some point? Yet again, we
will see…
Oh
and I heard back from a festival called RETHink Art Digital Festival that’s happening
in Crete in September, my film Rules of
Engagement will be being shown at some point. So if you happen to be in
Greece next month, check it out: en.rethinkartfestival.com/artists.html
I
also have a new ‘show’ in Berlin in conjunction with The Institute of Fictional
Exhibitions Art Foundation. Follow this link to the press release: www.ifeaf.org/Bob-Bicknell-Knight
isthisit?
has been going pretty well, with last week’s show #15 containing three works,
with two of the pieces functioning as vignettes to Agnieszka Zimolag's video
work 'Phantom Surface'. The film, seeking to blur various barriers between the
real and the virtual, feels incredibly clinical and considered, almost too
perfect. This constructed ‘hyper-reality’ that Zimolag introduces the viewer to
is contrasted by Laila Majid’s endless gif of a tongue, ‘wibblewoBBbble
sllurrrRrRpy prrrRRobe’. This short repetitive visceral experience brings
Zimolag's work back to ‘our’ reality, reminding you that everything isn’t quite
so overly produced in ’real life’, and quite literally connects Levan
Amashukeli’s painting ‘Automatic Reality’ to the virtual assemblage. A work
that contains elements of fantasy blended with reality whilst exploring the
artists’ memory shadows, the watery reds of the painting attempt to function in
contrast with the mixture of greys and blacks within Zimolag's video as well as
complimenting the pinks of Majid’s tongue. Each piece is severely dominated by
Zimolag's soundtrack, a darkly ambient soundscape that opens up another point
of interpretation for both Amashukeli’s and Majid’s work, adding an overarching
experience to the micro exhibition. You can see the work here: http://isthis.wixsite.com/isthisit/15
This
week’s exhibition, #16, had the overarching theme of relationships, with Taylor
Ellis’ digital assemblage I still look at
your profile being the centre of attention, focusing on a relationship that
was ended in real life, with the subsequent ‘internet stalking’ being
facilitated, and somewhat encouraged, by social media websites. It has a very
DIY aesthetic, with the choice to transform the text bubbles into text boxes an
incredibly deliberate one, forcing you to actually observe what’s going on
within the collage rather than dismissing the messages as mere offhanded text
messages sent over I messenger. This was complimented by Seren Metcalfe’s video
work Empathy for inanimate objects
where she manipulates a concrete block in order to portray how one feels when
they’re in an unrewarding relationship; giving everything but gaining nothing.
Concrete blocks are also used in buildings and structures all over the world,
providing the foundations, walls and floors of the rooms that we inhabit on a
daily basis. Having a relationship with a given space leads me onto Adam
Saunders performance work Gesture 1.1.
Using software usually associated with live projections at music events,
Saunders utilises 3D motion tracking programs to control music by making small,
gestural movements with his body. Each artist seems to be looking at the
different relationships that puncture their daily lives, Ellis with a defunct
lover, Metcalfe with the very rooms she inhabits and Saunders with his own
bodily actions. See the videos here: http://isthis.wixsite.com/isthisit
I
also started a ‘curatorial notes’ section on the website, publishing why I’ve
put certain works together. Very minimal thoughts from me that you can check
out here, pretty much all lifted from this blog: http://isthis.wixsite.com/isthisit/curatorial
Now,
Berlin. The trip was focussed on the 9th Biennale curated by DIS magazine;
an amazing collective that run an online magazine, puts on exhibitions and now
curates biennale’s. The biennale was happening in five different venues around
Berlin, from the KW Institute for Contemporary Art to a sightseeing boat ride
that traverses the Spree River, forcing you to take in the art that’s around
you. Instead of going through each individual venue, I’m simply going to talk
about the work that I liked, which was basically everything. There were a few
non-biennale related exhibitions that I also went to, but I’ll get to that
later.
So,
one of my favourite works was a newly commissioned video installation by Cécile
B. Evans called What the Heart Wants.
I’ve enjoyed her work for a while, incredibly well created animations
accompanied by long monologues posing various questions to the characters
within the video as well as the viewer within themselves. In this new piece you
were given the chance to walk onto a dimly lit catwalk, suspended in water,
with various sculptural works emerging from the water accompanied by a huge
projection screen, reflecting against the black water’s surface. That in itself
is impressive, alongside the 40-minute video that is the centre of this
installation, featuring various different animations interspersed and intertwined
with clips from real life. I can’t really do the piece any justice by
describing it, all I can do is state how impressive and considered the whole
thing was and tell you to go and see for yourself.
Another
favourite piece was by Jon Rafman, obviously. He had a few sculptures on
display, alongside a new VR commission. The sculptures consisted of various
animals attempting to swallow one another. These are okay, not that amazing,
but I guess one has to make money somehow. It’s one of those things that’s
interesting for about a minute, and then you are bored, and there is nothing
more to see. The VR experience on the other hand, that was quite awesome. As
opposed to the piece that I saw at the Zabludowicz Collection many many months
ago, this work was a little more interactive, rather than being guided through
a space you were able to walk around, exploring the various environments that
the computer took you to. You start off overlooking Pariser Platz, a very basic
replica of the space that you just left behind when you put on the goggles.
Many things happen after that. A truly ‘fuck me’ moment was when the floor
collapsed below me and I began a long fall into the ocean, watching the sun
slowly setting as my legs slightly bent in anticipation of the impact. This is
what I want from a true VR experience. With these works I only ever want to go
once, to me going a second time would take away from the magic of the whole
experience, allowing you to poke holes in the journey; nobody wants that.
Overall I was impressed, although I want to see more interactive experiences from
Rafman in the future as he continues to experiment with the technology, rather
than simply being led down a corridor.
The
sightseeing boat tour was an interesting experience. The whole boat had been
turned into an installation by Korakrit Arunanondchai and Alex Gvojic, made to
look like the set of a Cronenberg film, which was fine, but a very 90s future
aesthetic that’s been heavily overused in the past few years. We get it, cables
look cool. ‘Below deck’ you’re presented with the staple of any Korakrit
Arunanondchai installation; the pillows, alongside an obscure video work
featuring drone shots and repetitive music. I do like his videos, simply for
how well filmed they are, although this one seemed a little obvious, especially
as it was being accompanied by the sheer amount of unneeded wiring and general
crap that had been stuck to the boat. I did however, love the idea of forcing
someone to experience a piece of work; you can’t walk away from a piece when
you’re on a boat. I definitely want to use this at some point in the future, be
it by simply having people sign a form saying that they have to stay in a room
for a certain amount of time, or something similar. The fact that you’re taking
part in something, rather than being the sole individual, definitely has
something to do with it, alongside transportation… Having a video piece on a
rollercoaster for example would be quite interesting, or, obviously, a plane.
Or on the toilet; places where you know people will spend a certain amount of
time in. Anyway, it was a good experience to have, art on a boat.
Will
Benedict had an interesting video piece to accompany a song by the Detroit
based band Wolf Eyes. The music was piercing, with the video consisting of an
interview with an alien on a television talk show. The piece was being shown in
an office, which was very interesting. I don’t think I’ve actually seen a work
displayed in an actual office before… Or maybe I have?
Simon
Denny had a bunch of work on show alongside Linda Kantchev, a postage stamp
designer. The first work one encountered was a didactic video explaining what
Bitcoin is, how it’s used, etc, with all the computer generated graphs that one
usually sees in these types of videos. You then come across three different
assemblages, trade fair like booths focusing on three real companies at the forefront
of digital monetary platforms; beginning with the corporate entities and ending
with the more anarchist start-ups. Denny continues to display massive amounts
of research exquisitely, his work is always very thought out and considered; as
always I’m a big fan.
Lizzie
Fitch and Ryan Trecartin had two video installations, shown in a stylized
concept bar and an aerobic/children’s play area. As always, they were
incredibly long, incredibly crazed tableaus centred around longwinded
monologues reflecting to the camera, a constant spew of information about very
little; welcome to the internet. At this point the duo seem to have such a huge
amount of money, each time I see a new work of theirs it’s even more crazy than
the last; where do they go from here? I’m excited, if a little bit frightened,
to look into their future. I find it hard to think of any other artwork that’s
more of a brain fuck than their video experiences.
GUAN
Xiao’s totem assemblages are always fun to see, even though I’m probably a little
fed up of seeing spray painted objects randomly thrown together, like a 60s pop
art sculpture. They’re okay, I think I’d just like to see something new from
her, rather than endless repetitions of the same thing.
Camille
Henrot had a disappointing installation on show called Office of Unreplied Emails, various spam emails alongside hand
written replies printed onto silicon lined the gallery floor, accompanied by a
bunch of terrible paintings displayed on make shift easels. I understand why
the paintings 11 Animals that Mate 4 Life
were situated beside the emails, but it just wasn’t needed, the emails within
themselves were interesting enough. I think the downfall of having created an
amazing video work in the past, Grosse
Fatigue, everything that you do after that will automatically be compared
to it. Obvious, but still a shame.
Yngve
Holen’s Window Seat sculptural works
were being shown in one of the spaces. This set of glass blown windows take on
the designs of talismans sold in countless tourism shops all over the world,
protecting against the ‘evil eye’. Shaped into the classic portholes of a
Boeing 787 they serve as windows to the world of global mobility with themes
surrounding economics and tourism. They were pretty and attractive to look at,
with a vaguely clever underlying narrative.
Ooooh,
Josh Kline’s video work Crying Games,
a particular favourite of mine, was accompanied by Mission Accomplished, basically tons of cat litter. Using
face-substitution software, various actors take on the faces of political
figures whose ideas, policies, and military campaigns defined the 2000s, with the
violent repercussions continuing to echo through our own time. The various
figures on the screen repeat the same two-word sentence over and over again,
‘I’m sorry’, whilst crying and holding themselves, rocking back and forth. It’s
incredibly humorous whilst simultaneously managing to be incredibly
distressing. Whilst you’re watching these actors in jump suits crying, you’re
standing on cat litter, absorbing their tears and general crap spewing from
their mouths, as of course it’s all bullshit. Really brilliant work.
Shawn
Maximo’s contribution to the biennale was turning a toilet into an information
space, creating a room where the real and the virtual collide, complete with
working taps and toilet. At the very least it was an interesting way to use the
space.
Seeing
Trevor Paglen’s Autonomy Cube is
always fun, hooking up to the anonymous network through your phone. The work
will probably never really get old for me.
The
giant Ewaipanoma (Rihanna) in the
courtyard of the KW Institute by Juan Sebastián Peláez was fun to see, but not
really that interesting, more spectacle than anything in particular.
Part
of a series of works by Adrien Piper Everything
#5.1 is a timeless piece of work. Part of the gallery wall is removed in
the shape of a gravestone, a piece of glass is inserted into where the wall
once was, turning the outer wall of the room into a work within itself. It’s a
clever piece of work, that continues to work after its creation over ten years
ago.
Josephine
Pryde’s The New Media Express is a
lot more spectacle than any real substance, but that’s okay because it’s a
miniature train that you can actually ride on in the gallery! That’s all I’ll
say about it, as that’s all you get from the experience, a failure in terms of
an artwork but a nice break from the norm.
Puppies
Puppies is an enigma within himself, an anonymous figure that surfaces for live
performances, posting internet memes that go viral or to take part in an
exhibition or two. The work on display throughout the biennale was titled Untitled (Purell), which was literally
hand sanitizer, melting into the very walls of the gallery space. I love this
idea, as at the time you didn’t really know why they were there, were they art,
or at some point in the exhibition were you going to handle something ‘gross’?
Which would deem the sanitizers a viable thing to have on the walls of a
gallery. I definitely want to have something invisible like this displayed in
the future, a readymade that will stand out enough for people to notice, but
not too much as to suggest that it is in fact art. Really clever.
Amelia
Ulman managed to satisfactorily translate her virtual, Instagram work, into the
real with her installation PRIVILEGE.
The square screens, the curtains simulating an environment that you’re not
really sure if you want to be in, alongside an animatronic pigeon. It was very
plain, very slimmed down and packed with obvious metaphors that can be explained
away with age. It was a nice beginner to the biennale for me, something to ease
you in.
Anna
Uddenberg’s Transit Mode – Abenteuer
attempts to join contemporary consumerist performative acts with ideas of the
body and real life experiences. A series of women mannequins contort their
bodies around various products, hinting at some sort of journey or activity,
from wrapping themselves around luggage to twisting around to take a ‘belfie’;
a bum selfie. They’re kind of interesting assemblages of things, mashing
various themes together with little care for subtleties. I want to see more of
her work.
Timur
Si-Qin had an okay installation, a fabricated landscape, mixing real and bought
objects to create A Reflected Landscape.
Fitted with cameras, you’ll appear on the television screen, being watched and
viewed from afar, watching yourself in real time. It always feels a little
gimmicky when this happens, like putting a mirror in a gallery, just asking for
a selfie to be taken. Maybe this is the whole point, if so, I’m slightly disappointed…
The
last artist from the biennale that I’m going to talk about is Hito Steyerl. I
was kind of disappointed, two video works telling her usual half real/half
fictitious stories using various animated technologies, one about a drone
operator and another about a computer animator. Once again, I go back to the
video that originally got her noticed How
Not to be Seen: A Fucking Didactic Educational .MOV File. Even her very
confused, money filled piece for the Venice Biennale, The Factory of the Sun was better than The Tower and ExtraSpaceCraft.
There just wasn’t enough content to grab onto, the stories not being real
enough, I don’t know. Or maybe they were just too short. I don’t know, they just
didn’t grab me like her previous work has done in the past.
That
was the biennale, quite an amazing experience. I then went to a few other
shows, some of which were equally as awesome. A huge show dedicated to Carl
Andre happened to be on show, with 50 works and over 200 poems by the esteemed
artist displayed. Although I personally don’t make the hyper minimal, incredibly material based work that Andre was known for, I still appreciate the
pure structures and impressive stature of his sculptures. The outwardly simple
poems alongside the structurally simple sculptures were simply an awe to be in
the presence of, alongside the actually gallery space which was an old train
station; a very intense experience.
In
the same institution there was a Joseph Beuys exhibition, with the highlight
being a work that I was never entirely sure was actually a real thing until now,
Unschitt (Tallow). A work that
involved 20 tons of beef fat being cast in the hollow of a pedestrian
underpass. These giant blocks dominated the space, creating an industrial-esque
presence whilst simultaneously presenting a more delicate, organic side. They
are definitely worth seeing in real life, and I’d recommend looking into the
process of how these monoliths of fat were made.
Another
exhibition in the same place yet again was titled Das Kapital, Debt – Territory – Utopia. This was an incredibly
curated show, which was unfortunately all in German, so when reading the
booklet, I was only able to pick out various artists that I already knew,
rather than being able to read through the whole thing. Highlights included On
Kawara’s magnificent One Million Years
emanating subtly from a bench in the gallery as well as Nam June Paik’s Zen for TV. There were many more works,
128 more to be precise, but I don’t have enough time or effort to go into them.
Another
great exhibition consisted of a micro retrospective, alongside some new work,
by Erwin Wurm. For the first time I was able to become one of his One Minute Sculptures, as well as
exploring his Narrow House. It’s the
kind of work that has many levels, the first level being pure enjoyment to be
experiencing these other worldly objects/installations, and sometimes that’s
enough to be a great thing. I did feel incredibly oppressed in the house, the
further you went the harder it got to explore the squished rooms.
In
terms of new work, he was showing a bunch of casts of everyday objects, some blown
up to outrageous proportions, which had been stood on and punched, literally
showing how worn down these various implements had become. The type of work you
want to have in your white cube house displayed on a wall; not a completely bad
thing.
I
also went to the Jewish Museum, an interesting experience, if only for the
incredible building. The two rooms that fascinated me the most were the Holocaust Tower and the Memory Void. Both rooms contain huge
empty expanses of space, with the tower being a cold, silent experience; a
space to reflect and the void being the location of Menashe Kadishman’s
installation Fallen leaves. This was
quite an incredible moment for me, when I found myself walking on 10,000 steel
faces, looking up at me with a fixed, moaning expression, whilst I stood over
them. A really distressing and violently beautiful moment that I won’t forget
for a while…
I
also visited the Medical Museum, which was a bit like visiting the Hunterian
Museum in London, when it still had tiny deformed babies bottled in jars on
their shelves back in 2005. It was a very weird experience, as it always is, to
look at the various medical apparatus’ and distorted body parts.
The
last exhibition that I went to was at the Kunsthalle gallery run by Deutsche Bank.
They had a show on called Common Affairs,
which was revisiting the ‘views’ award, with contemporary art from Poland. It
was a bit weird, a bit like going back in time ten years or so, with the
exception of one work by Rafał Jakubowicz
where he had chipped away at the paint of the gallery wall, creating the Deutsche
Bank logo, that he then proceeded to paint over. The work was made up of a
series of images of the installation, which considered the questionable activities
of the bank. A ‘diamond in the rough’.
I
think that’s it for Berlin, an incredibly satisfying first visit to the city.
It’s like a more condensed, friendlier version of London that you can easily
bike around, if only I could speak German… Apart from Berlin, the last two
weeks have been taken up by film watching and television consuming, as well as
continuing to hack away at the Witcher 3, unravelling the incredibly detailed
quests whilst getting a little too attached to various characters.
So,
films. I finally got to watch Ratchet
& Clank, which was unsurprisingly incredibly dull. I think it’s one of
those things that I should never have watched and just kept it in my mind as
this utopian ideal. As someone who loved the game series as a child, it was
just disappointing to return to as an adult.
Bernie
was a fairly ‘run of the mill’ experience, watched purely to indulge in more of
Richard Linklater’s back catalogue. It was fine, overly long and predictable.
Nothing more, nothing less.
I
finally watched Rain Man, a very good
film, a very sad film. One with a surprisingly ambiguous ending that made me
stop and consider for a moment whether Tom Cruise’s character was actually a
good guy or not. When Tom Cruise is good, he is very good, minus the whole
scientology thing. On a side note, I’m eagerly awaiting Louis Theroux’s My Scientology Movie, which will hopefully
be vaguely eye opening.
The Help
was another film that I managed to cross off my list. These kinds of films are
always very depressing and make me feel quite uncomfortable, for good reason
obviously. Good acting, an interesting story that had instances of humour interspersed
between the vial ‘casual’ racism.
Now,
Training Day. Why haven’t I seen this
before? Denzel Washington being a huge badass, alongside Ethan Hawke attempting
to do the right thing. Denzel is very good in so many things, most of the time
you can’t go wrong. A favourite of mine is Man
On Fire, think John Wick but not
as slick.
I
did watch Money Monster, which was
acceptable. You can’t really say no to George Clooney, especially when he’s
dancing around with a hat talking about stock markets. The only vaguely clever
part of the whole film is that, when everything is over, everyone watching the events
unfold on the tv immediately go back to what they were doing before, as if it
never happened. Quite an obvious, but still clever, observation of human life
in this social media obsessed world by Jodie Foster.
The Brand New Testament was quite an impressive thing, a film that
envisions that God is alive and living in Brussels. A God that has created all
the accidents and all the annoyances in the world. It’s a very crazed, very
flawed film, but definitely worth a watch. The focus is on the daughter of God,
who goes on a journey to gather six more apostles, making 18 in total, the
number of people in a baseball team (her mother’s favourite sport to watch).
She proceeds to take you on a journey through these people’s lives, considering
death and the value of living.
Watching
Miami Vice was a mistake, a film that
was way too obsessed with its soundtrack than its weak plot and even weaker
camera movement. I expected a little more, I don’t really know why I did considering
I didn’t like Blackhat.
Astro Boy
was pretty basic, a fun kids film that ‘doesn’t hold a candle’ to the likes of Frozen, Zootopia or any other high quality kids animations.
Tallulah
was a pretty smart story about a young woman who inadvertently kidnaps a toddler.
The premise is a little silly, although I’ve never had a child of my own so I
find it a little hard to empathise with the various situations that play out
throughout the film.
An
absolutely mental film that everyone should watch was Wild Tales. Six short stories that focus on the extremities of
human behaviour, each one a little cleverer than the last, each one ending in
dire consequences. Just watch the trailer to gain a little taste of what’s in
store, highly recommended.
I
think that may be it for films, not as many as I’d hoped to get through, but
still fairly acceptable. In terms of tv, I’ve been dipping into various shows in
an attempt to find something enticing to watch. I started to watch The Get Down, but haven’t watched enough
to actually give a proper opinion of it yet.
I
also watched an episode of The Night Of.
It started off a little slow for me, but I’m going to attempt to continue
forwards. I just want something that draws me in, something that makes me want
to keep watching until the early hours of the morning.
Oh
a while ago I did watch Stranger Things,
which I omitted from the other week’s post. Overall it was a solid show, but if
you have any love of sci-fi, you can see what’s going to happen at least two episodes
before it actually happens. The whole thing just felt too obvious, too staged,
too perfect. It needed to be grittier, less PG with a lot more death. Comparing
anything to Twin Peaks is obviously
wrong, but I wanted more Twin Peaks.
It was fun to watch for the high production values and the solid soundtrack,
but a program needs more than that to draw you in.
I
think that might be it, it probably should be as this has been a huge post,
close to my largest yet in 112 posts. So, next week, probably more films and
hopefully some art creation. As usual really, going with the flow of things. I’m
slowly starting to count down the days until I go back to London, which is in a
month or so. The holidays do seem to have slowly flown by with a depressing pace,
as they always do…
Enjoi.
Instagram:
bob.bk1
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