Crying pills bought on credit

[this is the talk I gave the other night in the Parsons' Fashion in Film series on Elio Petri's The 10th Victim (1965)]  



I start with what may seem a double disappointment for introducing a futurish high fashion war of the sexes, a black comedy about the bullets and saliva traded back and forth between two assassins assigned to kill each other in the "Big Hunt" competition: I'm not going to say much about fashion.  And I'm not going to say much about sex.



The former, in part, because the film so foregrounds this that it will talk plenty about it itself, and because there are some here who can tell me more about it than I'll ever hope or aim to know.


The latter, in part, because despite the ways in which this film plays at being an exploitation film there to give you the goods (the sheer startling physical fact of Ursula Andress makes this the case), it's a film about the endless deferral of getting the goods in which the prospect of cashing out never quite comes to pass, as the money passes straight through your name to the hands of your ex-wife, into a set of endlessly replaceable clothes that are not discernibly enjoyed, at most instrumentalized, into a choice of ready-made full-life furniture settings, into a game that may kill you but that has no stakes whatsoever.



    That's to say, this is a film about credit.  On death, sex, and ultra-modernism on the installment plan.  Or rather, after the installment plan, a presaged vision of the inconsequential plenitude to come.  This is a “future” film not only because it is replete with the futurish look of a certain derivation of the Italian-cosmopolitan 60s – a fact that, ultimately, marks it all the more in a present – but because if the film gave us a full info-dump (i.e. when a character or narrator laboriously explains how the future world came to be, which bombs fell or technological breakthrough led to rampaging robots), if it gave us that, it might very simply say: well, the 70s happened.  Well, there were crises and fuel shortages and there were people who called themselves communists and did things like burn banks and take over factories.  And there was a time when it seemed like this might not get better, as if certain deep tendencies of how the whole infernal apparatus worked would become as indelibly and idiotically visible as they have long been.


    But we got over all that.  Can we interest you in a line of credit?  And should you want to swap out mass violence for trading potshots with other impeccably dressed sexy ones in an execution proto-edition of Survivor, so much the better.
 

    Let me back up.  The film we're going to watch is from 1965.  The director is Elio Petri, not only one of the most underrated and underwatched Italian directors, from an American perspective, but one of the best political filmmakers of the century: always fierce, always misanthropic, often paranoid, always complicated and without clear resolution, and always didactic in the best way, in that it gives no injunctions of what to do other than to begin in the utter messiness of a struggle that started without you.  In this case, we face a film that's often considered more as a sexy, jazzy romp with some low-level critique of consumerism, greed, sexual relations, and the general barbarism of society at large.  That's off: sexy and jazzy as this may be, this is not a easily swallowable bit of pseudo-critical film.  The razor edge of Petri's political thought isn't dulled here, just buried inside a hip late modernist apple.  And it cuts all the more for that.



    It stars, in a flawless pairing, Ursula Andress and Marcello Mastroianni, it features a Pierro Piccioni score for which I apologize in advance, because it will haunt your head terribly, and yes, there are those costumes, designed by Giulio Coltellacci in collaboration with the Sorelle Fontana fashion house. It's based on a Robert Sheckley sci-fi short story (“The Seventh Victim”) with some noticeable differences in emphasis to which I'll return.



It is, in brief, the story of a society on the skids that's figured out how to control that drift through a game.  Faced with continual upsurges of violence, our not-named near future (Hitler is still given the example of what could have been avoided had the “Big Hunt” been around) confronts two possibilities: either violence happens because the current economic and social arrangement conditions it, (very much including the deep fuckedness of gender dynamics, particularly in its allegedly monogamous  married form), or because people are just like that.  Given the structural incapacity to think about the former, the ruling order designs the Big Hunt.

You'll get the details straight off in the film, but in short: you can sign up for a competition in which you must survive ten rounds of being alternately hunter or hunted, in which you are legally sanctioned to kill, in whatever manner possible and hopefully with as much flair as the law allows, your designated target.  The only difference between hunter and hunted being that the hunter is given full information about the hunted, while the hunted simply receives notice: your life is on the line.  One cannot just survive.  A hunted must kill a hunter, otherwise it's a life on the run.  Make the kill, make some money, make it through ten rounds, and you become a “decathlete,” win one million dollars, a number of product endorsements, and general celebrity.



    All supposedly to give an outlet to the basic brutality of human nature.  In the Sheckley story, in a manner much more explicit than in this film, there is a basic utility to the auto-destruction of “those kind of people”, as if the point of the hunt was to drag the genepool for its murderous weeds.  Here there's something else happening, where it's presumed that everyone has got a bit of this, and, in proper Adornian fashion, they libidinally displace their inaction onto the celebrity decathletes.  But the shadow of the other reason why people do this – capitalism rewards nastiness – lingers, and as such, the hunt is both a way of avoiding the confrontation with the social order and a consequence of what happens when the possibility of such a confrontation has been swept away.  One of Petri's other films is titled We Still Kill the Old Way.  That might ground title for this too: We Still Kill the Old Way, But Now It's Legal. 




    What I want to ask, though, is what goes beyond this sort of basic sense of allegory, that nodding understanding that, yes, you show a future in order to “really be about the present.”  Because given the film's release in '65, there are some aspects of it that were not yet fully materialized, elements of the years and decades to come, in which what it jokingly points toward became  a real curse of a "pointing forward", a deferral onto a future payback, that came to structure more and more of social life.
    So let's ask of this future: What kind of future (what does it look like), what's underpinning this, and why?



    What does it look like, then?  Here we get into the side of things that occasion it being watched here, namely, the style of it, its futurist look.  Or rather, as I'd prefer to call it, to differentiate from either a certain historical avant-garde tradition or from a sense of being concerned visually with a serious consideration of what might be to come, its futurish look.  There is a lot of white, both buildings and fabric.  A rough adherence to either boxy right angles (when long walls or incongruous furniture or popped collars), snug black outfits halfway between Italian tailoring and latex fucksuits, bursts of neon, unnecessary bits of fabric (see her entirely superfluous head strap there to help keep the sunglasses on).  But not all things look this way.  People are still flying Pan Am, the cars are no different, the robots we see are cobbled together more than a bit DIY, and above all, not everyone has gotten the word that you're supposed to wear Courrèges.

Regarding this last point, we should note the way that a) not everyone is clad in such fashion, and b) more forcefully, the version of the future on-display is not an imagining internal to the film itself.  Rather, it is a historically marked “futurish” style, tied specifically to Courrèges and others, such that the wearing of it – by those who make of it a project – is distinctly not of the future, but of that mid 60s moment.  And in this way, the parts of the film that look most “futurish” are the parts that have the least to do with the future, belonging instead to a very distinct moment in which one could demarcate oneself as being savvier than thou by wearing clothes that do not button, that look like they were made of oil at some point, that cling and hug and hypothetically have distinct fabric qualities that might block UV rays or go from day to neon glaring night without missing a beat.  But reading them as of the future would doubly miss the point.  We've had 45 years since then, and we're no closer to wearing neoprene bodysuits as a general population.  And such clothes never belonged to a different project of designing for a mode of future life in which such concerns for utility would come to rule the day.


    Two brief points on this overperfomance of the future.


First, when you meet the central computers in Geneva (the echoes of Swiss banks are utterly unmistakable) and they read out their newest hunter/hunted match in staccato tone to an empty room, we register that if things are really that advanced, a rough approximation of normal talking cadence should be one of the first things a supercomputer could pull off.  Rather, in trying to sound like it belongs to the future, it casts itself all the more back onto a period we've left far behind.



Second, a small note: when Ursula Andress' character reveals why a bullet has not in fact killed her, it isn't because she's wearing a teddy made of a carbon fiber weave with titanium supports.  It's because she has a damn good set of “leather undergarments,” a remnant of craft fashion that gets the job done when no number of shining white polymer dresses can do the trick.


    What's underpinning this future?  I've hinted before: it is the structure of credit, of banking on outcomes, of insurance and deferral.  Such an account deserves more time than I can give it, and as such, I'll just gesture here, in a way that the watching of the film itself will fully bear out, that the support system for this order to come has little do with a restraining of the basic human urge to murder, and everything to do with those computers in Geneva, with this death on a prescribed plan, and above all, with the decoupling of credit and wealth from a sense that real wealth is held by anyone, other than the confidence, performance, and promise of paying back.  All the more in a time when what matters is not a settling of accounts and a cashing out, but a general precarity, a living off borrowed time and living with things that you bought on credit.


Tellingly, Marcello – one of the more feted hunters in the game, albeit a bit past his prime and not quite top mark – has zero money to his name, who finds his account drained by his ex wife and unable to do anything about it, who hasn't paid his doctor or coach in a long while, who likely won't make it much longer, yet in whose name an entire new set of chic furniture can be ordered the moment his previous set is repossessed.  If the film exists in the future, it is a very near future, in the immediate decades to follow '65, after the dollar is decoupled from the gold standard and becomes the sole backing in a world of floating currencies, after manufacturing stops making so much cash, and after capital starts figuring out how to buy and bide time by extending credit to those who will never be able to pay it back.


    To the third question: why is this all the case? The answer the film gives throws it back on the more superficial terrain that it gives, even as it undermines it: it's a fucked up love story.  But not just between Marcello and Ursula, not just between the two assassins who meet their match and who are doomed to keep trying to kill one another, albeit with a weary tenderness.  Rather, between what we might call capital and labor, or, more anthropically, between classes, not because she seems better off and he's stuck hustling, but because the very dislocation of this type of conflict onto an individual, managed, and, in this film, murderous flirtation type of conflict itself refracts a story about what happened in that period following this film.



In short, in the time when Italy got hot and radical, when it started asking not the older question of why the world under capitalism is so vicious but rather how such a world is composed, how it wasn't remotely a narrative of top-down imposition of power from a state but an awful love story of dependence and desperation.  Of how those who had struggled to kill their opponent often made it stronger, of how the constant back and forth of gaining and losing an upper hand lead, increasingly, to a situation  far bloodier and with far less motion, as the 70s bled out into the 80s and neoliberalism beyond.
 
This isn't just a projection on my part because I think that all films should be read this way: a cursory glance at Petri's other films and, more than that, the historical situation of Italy shows us a time when insurrection was both talked about and attempted, when people stopped going to the cinema as often for being caught in a terrorist bomb blast, and when the sharper thinkers on the left started realizing that the real question wasn't how do we stick it to you? But maybe we should start seeing other people, that what had to broken was this deadlock of perpetuation, of feeling like you're the hunter on top for a bit, knowing damn well that come next round, the general structure – credit, value – that dictates the whole thing will be in place and that it'll be your turn to feel harrowed and on the run.  How fitting that the scene of the first murder is The Masoch Club, perhaps not just a cute joke on how disaffected this future time of jaded murder viewers are, but a real sense of how class antagonism is reduced to a cycle that revolves but with no revolution.  A melodrama of  stale antagonism for the era of easily available consumer credit to come.


    This film series falls under the sign of melodrama, and such a designation gives another way in to what's at stake in The 10th Victim.  What, then, is meant by melodrama? At the heart of it lies a two-fold logic: that of excess and that of sentimentality, of an inherited structure that is supposed to have real effects (i.e. romantic weepy situations making you weep) that no longer produces those effects in a “natural”, fleshed out way, such that you go through the motions, all the more figuratively and gesturally, hollow and acting out.


    The connection here to what I raised about both futurish fashion (you don't produce the effect of the future, you simply turn up the volume on the stale signifiers of that) and about radical collective violence (you don't produce effects on a future arrangement of things, you just parcel that violence out into a legitimated self-perpetuating structure) should be relatively obvious.  This is a melodramatic film because it depicts an objectively melodramatic world, one that is crowded with excess but that does not cohere, and that demands of its subjects that they feel something for which they haven't been given “adequate” preparation.
 

But like some others, I want to defend melodrama for two reasons.  First, because it nails, elaborates, and dwells in that very condition, of the genuine affect of being in a historical situation that has no discernible outlet for that affect.  In this way, as you watch the endless reversals and betrayals of Mastroianni and Andress, what you'll see is neither a purely cold detached mercenary logic willing to screw the enemy to put him in the ground nor an overwhelming of purpose through a flowering of real pathos, in the “falling in love was your first mistake” kind of tearjerker way.


Rather, it is a tentative, searching, genuinely perplexed and misplaced, genuine confusion of what one is to with affect and desire, particularly when that desire isn't just – or isn't much at all –  to fuck your deathmate but to fuck over the terrible world in which you live, that awful, rabid, unstable, shrill world of credit and banks, of rules and promotional opportunities, of marriages and furniture.  It is that which cannot be figured, which can only be displaced into a restricted set of individuals to kill, into the hostility of love, into a managed war of the sexes.


    The second point about melodrama is that I think what gets called melodrama – that strange hybrid of ineffective forms which resorts to manipulative measures to get its audience to feel what those forms can no longer produce on their own – is a crucial underground legacy running through the culture of late capitalism.  We might to return to debates about “modernism” or “realism” here, but we don't need to.


Rather, we can just say that if some of the fights about such a thing was about the tension between a fractured style intended to mirror the fracturing of experience as opposed to a more coherent style capable of mapping the wider social world and processes by which subjects came to be fractured like that, melodrama not only points a third way, it also points a certain historical direction – and associated ways of feeling – without which the last century and this one cannot be understood.  That is a direction, and structure, of credit, of expectation, of a promised outcome that will not happen other than through the betting on, and borrowing against, the possibility of it being the case.


And credit here means not some imposed financial structure from above, as if you could blame such a thing on some one, but a general condition, a general relationship that comes to infect and stain all things: how people think about sexual relations (consider Marcello's mistress' insistence that she has invested a lot of time in this relationship and she will kill him before she lets him default on their marriage-to-be, the future guarantee of security against which she leveraged her fucking of a married man).


How people think about clothing: one, but not everyone, invests in a present vision of what the future may be both to differentiate oneself (to profit from foresight) and to bring about the future conditions in which such a future sense may be regarded as presently compelling.



How people think about lived space: the line of credit stretched out and frozen, briefly, into a set of objects that surround you, the repossession of which is no problem, given that credit extends its arms longer than the repo man and you call up immediately and order a new set, because when you answer the question “how will we pay for this” with the future profits of one making a killing in the future, no one can say no.


How people think about history: marked out in a series of gestures that mark out the worst love story ever told, of capital and labor, in its distinctly late 20th century garb, not of those who've got the cash and those who don't, but of those who've got the cash insofar as you count what's owed to them and those who've got the cash in hand provided they pay it back in double, triple, on and on.


    Into such a stalemate walks the melodrama, with all its nervous, pacing energy, its failed attempts to play it cool.  Like all good political art, it doesn't know more than the situation it takes on: at most, it performs what cannot not be the case.  Those British Gothic scenery chewing Gothic melodramas, those Sirk weepies, this Petri defaulted credit thing that may not look like a melodrama, but that is one at the end of the day, all the more because it registers the sense that neither the expected structure nor the emergency measures of pushing your buttons is going to channel the affects of the viewers correctly: all these melodramas are a lost didactic mode.


They're part and parcel of something we think of closer to film that wears its politics on its sleeves – Russian kinotrains showing Eisenstein films, Pontecorvo showing the French how the Algerians were busy undoing colonial rule – because what they do is point a finger and say:  

see this, this future that is to come?  That isn't the present, in some allegory.  That is the present insofar as there is no present now that isn't valued in terms of what it might come to mean, a weak approximation of the future garbed in silicone sheen and dark glasses, a version that belongs only to a present that teeters on a razor's edge of future payback, and which has been teetering there for a long time, going nowhere, displacing its mass violence, making more of the same, buying it on credit, playing games, fucking around.

Who can blame such a disaster for at least wanting to look sharp?

Doomsday comes to Williamsburg. (About damn time.)



And on Saturday, I'll be speaking at the 2010 Doomsday Film Festival, joining Paul Schrader, Steve E. Jones, and Heather Urbanski to talk about the deeply awesome Hardware (which is, in a way, Repo Man meets Short Circuit meets The Road Warrior, plus Lemmy from Motörhead) and problems of misbehaving technology.  The whole weekend looks good, despite my deep discomfort with events that involve the phrase "Free ZOMBIE Makeup", as the films are an unusual and underwatched set, especially Colossus: The Forbin Project.

5:45 - 8:15PM
CYBERNETIC REVOLT
Hardware
Richard Stanley, U.K., 1990; 92 min
$8.00 Admission
View the trailer »

A post-apocalyptic scavenger (Dylan McDermott) brings home a battered cyborg skull for his metal sculptor girlfriend, unaware that it contains the brain of the M.A.R.K. 13, the military's most ferocious bio-mechancial combat droid. Soon, the dismembered fragments reconstruct themselves from household appliances, turning their apartment into a combat zone as the reborn machinery goes on the rampage. From underrated visionary Richard Stanley (Dust Devil). Along with appearances by Iggy Pop and Lemmy of Motörhead. "An energetic, low-budget Pandora's Box of delights, tailor-made for the disposable '90s." – Derek Adams, Time Out

Followed by a panel:
  • Paul Schrader (Director of Affliction, Auto Focus, American Gigolo, Blue Collar)
  • Steve E. Jones (Against Technology: From the Luddites to Neo-Luddism)
  • Evan Calder Williams (Combined and Uneven Apocalypse)
  • Heather Urbanski (Plagues, Apocalypses and Bug-Eyed Monsters)
  • Moderator: Andy McCarthy (mograbs.com)

Talking Beheading tomorrow


Tomorrow night at Parsons, a four-beheaded Cerberus, as Ed Keller, Nicola Masciandro, Eugene Thacker, and I offer a light evening of talking decapitation via film.  I will be talking about the Hammer Frankenstein series, guillotine modernism, and the fundamental problem of having one head too few and one body too many...

Come join us, 6:30 to 9, at Parsons.

HM Statement of Support


Historical Materialism statement of support for some historically situated material interventions happening these days in the UK.

"In this case the happiness of the suburbs would be consistent with the death of God"


"But at least one of the things that Nietzsche could have meant is that the social role that the Judeo-Christian God plays in our culture is radically different from the one he has traditionally played in prior epochs of the West."

You don't say!  A piece so inane that it ends up calling out full-throated for and confirming a virulent nihilism, however accidentally, via its willingness to get dumb.  A neo-pastoralist, diversity-of-opinion anti-intellectualism masquerading as the task of philosophy. 

That, and the reduction of Melville to an author of Let the White Whale Go, Ahab! Forgiving the Death of the Big Other and Enjoying the Simpler Things.
("The meaning that one finds in a life dedicated to “the wife, the heart, the bed, the table, the saddle, the fire-side, the country,” these are genuine meanings.  They are, in other words, completely sufficient to hold off the threat of nihilism, the threat that life will dissolve into a sequence of meaningless events.")

This sort of thought - not difficult nihilism, not the arcana of ontology - is why philosophy calls out to be loathed.  Because at its worst, it points, with the middle finger of the hand that bears political economy's index finger, to its own dimly aware reflection and finds that it has been too hard on itself.

And for the record, the prospect of a "highly culture, poetical nation" working to lure back the old gods over which "the great Sperm Whale shall lord" constitutes one of the more nihilistic conception of a national culture industry I have ever read.  Now, we're getting somewhere, eh Ishmael?

Dirty, dirtier, dirtiest


 If anyone has or can find a copy of Petri's Le Mani Sporche (his 1978 TV adaptation of Sartre's Dirty Hands, starring Mastroianni with a Morricone soundtrack, yes, this exists), I will owe you infinitely.  Need it something awful.

Species fleeing


Humanity will be happy only on the day when the last capitalist is hanged with the guts of the last worker

Stop... Stop... Stop...


There were two French films released in '78.




A cete and a flock of pseudo-freedom


In such an environment it is easy for speech to be "free" because a change in political will rarely leads to any change in these basic instruments. Western speech, as something that rarely has any effect on power, is, like badgers and birds, free.

The camera is no longer a sun and the cinema makes progress and a throat is opened




Notes toward a future history of Satanic modernism

Logic of the worse and worse


Goldsmiths, this long weekend.  Go.

Me at Parsons, 1


NYC:

This coming Tuesday night, I'll be talking at Parsons about Petri's deeply excellent The 10th Victim (1965), linkages between exploitation film and credit, melodramatic realism, the need to make a future look like buttons no longer exit on clothing but that all machines have too many of them, Ursula Andress, and the self-annihilation of the species.   Come join, it'll be a blast. Info here, despite the misdescription of the "scholarly"-ness of much of anything I write:


FASHION IN FILM: Melodrama

Tishman Auditorium
Tuesdays, 7:30-9:30pm
Free and open to the public
Speakers John Epperson, Tom Kalin, and Evan Calder Williams revisit camp classics, making the case that a pioneering use of fashion and style to dramatize cultural, social, and political taboos renders each film a masterpiece.


December 7 | THE 10TH VICTIM | Dir. Elio Petri, 1965 | Introduced by EVAN CALDER WILLIAMS

Evan Calder Williams, author of Combined and Uneven Apocalypse and scholarly essays on film, will introduce Elio Petri’s prophetic sci-fi fantasia starring Ursula Andress and Marcello Mastroianni. On a TV game show set in the future, beautiful people in search of fame and fortune kill or be killed while aiming for the biggest product placement possible. Pitted against the stunning and Courrèges-clad Andress, is Mastroianni the hunter or the hunted?

'Life'



NYC:

Next Friday (the day I'll be talking decapitation at Parsons), there is this conference where my very smart friend Knox will be talking.  Join me there to dismantle notions of "life", and then we'll go talk about what happens when you lose your head, that wasn't yours to begin with.

Perched between different conceptions and practices of the life sciences, philosophy, historical inquiry and political purpose, the concept of life emerged in the later nineteenth century as a site of tension in and between different movements that drew upon its manifold ties and used it at times in a vague and popular and at others in highly precise fashion. What kind of “vague” concept was this? How did it become useful, what confusions and contrasts did it allow for, and how did different different disciplines and sciences take up its very notion? This conference aims to present different ways in which conceptions of life in the life sciences, especially in biology and psychology facilitated problems, concepts, and a guides of philosophical, scientific, and political thought.

Conference Program 
9:45-10 Introduction (Stefanos Geroulanos, NYU History)
10:00-12:30 Moderator: Anson Rabinbach (History, Princeton University)
Jan Goldstein (History, University of Chicago)
The Tocqueville-Gobineau Correspondence: Political Affiliations of the Flesh, circa 1850
Knox Peden (History, Tulane University and University of Queensland)
The Alkaline of Recapitulation: Haeckel and History
Ben Kafka (Media, Culture, and Communication, New York University)
The Destiny of Anatomy (On Marie Bonaparte)

12:30-2:00
Lunch Break
2:00-3:45 Moderator: Andreas Killen (History, City College of New York)
Camille Robcis (History, Cornell University)
Child Psychoanalysis in France and the Oedipalization of Life
Stefanos Geroulanos (History, New York University) and Todd Meyers (Anthropology, Wayne State University)
Kurt Goldstein and the 1930s Revision of Physiology

4:15-6:00 Moderator: Bruno Strasser (History of Science, Yale University)
Ruth Leys (Humanities Center, Johns Hopkins University):
Vital Affects: Historical and Theoretical Reflections

Benjamin Lazier (History, Reed College):
Biospherics: Globalizing Life in the Twentieth Century

The conference will be held at the Remarque Institute Seminar Room
King Juan Carlos Center Room 324. 53 Washington Square South.
New York University. New York, NY 10012

Cannibalistic hangover cure


[thanks Knox]

The Coyote, having torn through the picture plane, hangs over the abyss, next to a ruined painting


Beside the everything going wrong in order that it may go wrongly on again,

beside the dejected drooping limp dick snout,

beside the transvestite come-ons (see the recurrent moment when the coyote dresses up in a blonde wig to urge the Road Runner to slow down and get busy a minute, which, given the relatively incoherent gendering of the Road Runner, makes it not only queer but, more relevantly, interspecies fucking, and one that crosses all the instinct wires of eat or run),

beside the question of expanding credit that lingers behind it (as prediction of times to come, how else does he afford all these things which he uses to ensure the reproduction of his labor, and the consequence that the Roadrunner has nothing to do with sustenance),

beside the Roadrunner being our last century's finest figure of pure Drive, always seething forward, even as the space cannot be mapped, progress cannot be figured, there is no forward, and the urge to catch it is a latching onto its inconstant appearance in the realm of supposed coherence,

beside the question that it therefore isn't about hunger but about a project of recovering species being via technological apparatuses (the freezing and extension of the body into a set of dispensable products, somewhere there is an Acme graveyard with Acme tombstones for all the combusted, shattered ex-Acme products),



beside the fact that it is the cultural consideration of hostile objects par excellence, in which every commodity works wrongly but you never stop to consider stepping outside of the commodity, of making your own quick-drying cement or knives or bombs rather than relying on the technical ineptitude of the budget-rate Acme, 

beside the fact that his failure is just that of being a non-virtuosic consumer,

besides all that,

Zobacz więcej na www.streemo.pl
[start this at 3:00]

recall that moment, in all its permutations, when Coyote paints a canvas of a road continuing straight ahead and puts it, tipped vertically, to match a real road that is but which ends in a sheer cliff, and the Roadrunner speeds blithely into the illusion, and then a truck comes from it and flattens Coyote, and he suddenly suspends belief in materiality or a clear division between representation and what's the case, and he runs full speed into the canvas, tearing through, a tattered sabotage of the work and its purpose, now failed twice (to prevent a viewer from engaging with it fully, first, and then from allowing a viewer to do so), and Coyote hangs in the air, somewhere behind the torn curtain and the busted picture plane, and there is no ground beneath his feet?


That's modernism.


Not some cool overcoming of the rules of the game, not a theoretical enterprise, not a rigorous examination of the conditions of visibility, but a last-ditch effort to have it be the case that those rules ever were and ever stayed the same.  That would prove that you could control it all along, and that the taking apart of the rules would inaugurate a new set, stronger all the more for having been negated, like the burning of a king to bring back his sovereignty without the constraints of a figured body.  That there could be Modernism, not a sloppy tangle of incoherent differing operations whose rules do not cohere.

If anything, the selection of the term "situation" by the SI gets something of this right, even if not for this reason: closer to Debord's love of strategic thinking, particularly of the military variety, the point is not that one constructs situations but that "situations" are all that there ever are, a variegated set of inconstant responses to a universal law of value but one which never makes itself manifest twice the same way and which registers the previous engagement with it: the capacity of one to have engaged, when such engagement is witnessed and marked by another, thereby means that such engagement cannot be repeated.  And with each instance, the canvas or film or piece of rock is torn and stretched, shattered through or thicker for all its absorption and perforation, til it swells and and rips and droops and gapes, til all that can be seen are the holes, a ragged lace to be stood in front of for 17.0 to 2 to 29.2 to 32.5 seconds.


More simply...

His paintings are those of versimillitude and trompe l'oeil, but they are so only in order to produce an encounter that will irreparably violate both the principle and the feathered body that enacts it.
And they are so only in terms of a failure, not an Adornian one, but one as follows, via a set of assumptions:
a) that there could be something coherent enough as a general Modernism (which would assure  the constancy of the art in question,  i.e. how it should work, such that two bodies engaging with it will have roughly the same experience, and the general disenchanting of its role, such that one who has "seen behind the curtain"/puts the paint on the wall can now see its potentially instrumental, and not aesthetic, role)

b) that not everyone has got the word about this new game in town, and, as such, still engages with it according to the old rules of the game

c) that there has not be a total clearing away of previous modes of art practice (there is still plenty of non-modernist stuff out there, and it's therefore reasonable for even the canny to expect that

d) that the tricking of the intellect leads to a necessary tricking of the body, such that the body will run up against harmful material conditions which the head did not adequately grasp, not being adequately up with the times

e) that you can disbelieve in the integrity of viewing and yet still use it to other ends, that you can correctly determine when and where one remains at the level of the painting as trompe l'oeil: that you can know better than yet still figure out how those who don't know will interact with the painting


On each ground, though, this comes entirely undone:


a) one engages deeply with the work while another is stopped up short, and the fact that one knows that it is, in fact, a trick to bring about a desired end does not guarantee that the work can and will function in this manner, for anyone other than the trickster, and only then in a negative dysfunctionality

[in addition, the very promise of a "general modernism" is a tricky one, given that part of its self-definition is the general coming undone, via particular interrogations of the limits of particular media, of a supposedly general set of conditions by which people engaged with aesthetic experiences.  But, of course, it helps to decide that there were a coherent set of rules to start, and it's pretty clear that regimes of vision and aggregate modes of engagement aside, it takes something like a rhetoric of modernism to declare that there was a stable, however messy, pile of Art Before The Fall]

[the Roadrunner speeds through an idyllic setting]

b) Sure, there are those Roadrunners who don't get it, who seem to plow blindly ahead through the pain, but this one "gets it" in a very convenient, perverse, and  cunning way, gets that modernism has nothing to do with a monolithic new rule of perception (if it's a painting, it is a material incident, it is not a space of vision to be entered), that it's an uneven set of borrowing, deploying, dcclaring, and revising, all those things that you supposedly had to wait for a post prefix to give you

c)  Such a version of the continued persistence of "pre-modernist" modes assumes that on each occasion, the ones who don't know any better will interact with it in the manner correct to its object, that they will treat modernist things like modernists (perhaps scratch their heads and refer to the capacity of their children to paint that) and unmodernist things as un-modernists (they will run straight at an illusion as if it's real).  This has never been the case. As if there's something incommensurable between recognizing the materiality of a painting and engaging with it as a field of vision, as if you couldn't realize that the widening of the terrain of potential operations didn't just mean that you can rip the canvas when you need to, just as much as you can get lost in it when that's the better option.  As if vision was ever an unthinking

d) Yes, you cannot stop, but there are calibrations, subtle, quick, a tensing up, a knowledge wired into the wheeling tendons that knows nothing other than a deftness of how to slip through holes and make them when need be.  Moreover, consider the four permutations, and the missing last one:


the head knows and the body knows (the Roadrunner "gets" that it's a painting and stops dead in front of it, to be potentially eaten, or, more likely, it gets nowhere near it, it forecloses the potential of such an experience)

the head knows and the body does not know (the Roadrunner recognizes, as it surges forward, that what it faces is not a real road but a painting of one, that's to say, a modernist painting that cannot be engaged, and it crashes through the canvas, falls to the canyon, to be potentially eaten)

the head does not know and the body knows (the Roadrunner wants to treat the painting like it is not a painting, that's to say, a pre-modernist painting that can be engaged as not art but experience, but there is an instinctual holding back, a skittering, perhaps to be potentially eaten or maybe the body finds something fiercer and finally puts those powerful legs to use disemboweling that saddest of predators)

the head does not know and the body does not know (the Roadrunner penetrates fully into the space of the painting and is not potentially eaten, although

If the scheme of Coyote is predicated, endlessly, upon the imagined ignorance of the Roadrunner, it turns out, in fact, that it is just this ignorance which is the saving grace.  Or rather, not from a master's perspective, the simulation of ignorance, of the possession of unknown capacities not beholden to the normal ordering of the world.

e) That misrecognition of Coyote - yes, this will work because, not in spite of, the mental and corporal non-knowledge of the Roadrunner - is an extension of a deep fantasy of thought's capacity of approximate stupidity, that you can rationally determine a response that is not based on reason.  Against this, we know that: thought needs to get dumb (that is, think itself to the point of its dissolution, but not remotely in order to give primacy to some "knowledge of the body," which is an idiocy of a different, and more dangerous, order) and that this dumbness must impel a recognition that a correlation between what ought to be the case and what tends to be the case has never, ever existed.

---


In each case, in these five modernist fuck-ups, a similar doubt, staved off for, lies at root: namely, that the canvas might not be constant.  (It is in this precise way, more than others, that art mirrors the commodity form: it cries out for the originary stasis, and non-decay, that the principle and moment of exchange demands, a freezing of a thing into an object that will be used, handled, torn, ruined, but that at the moment of the contractual, expected interface, it will be as it should be, and the only thing that might change is your perception of it, if it will be a wise investment, if it is or is not a clever neo-expressionist reworking of Rococo elements.)


For, in this episode, as in the episode we might call modernist painting, which is nothing but a series of potential and disjointed encounters, yet which do share a common abstraction beneath them (or rather, a common drive toward abstraction, conveniently - though perhaps not casually - in the period in which the global spread real subsumption of labor put abstraction of a more dominant order on the map everywhere), in this episode, there are two subterranean, unwanted possibilites: the canvas is marked by each encounter (not because the material magically absorbs its interlocutors, but because your awareness of others having passed this way before, who've had a certain kind of experience to it, conditions your own), or, opposed yet simultaneous, the canvas is not constant and never had any rules to ensure a common experience.  At most, it is a fixed, albeit scarred, center of stable focus around which a seething storm of different factors turn, and there was nothing specific about it, in terms of intention or of form, other than the historical specificity of its instance.

In other words, what the Coyote's fall spells out, beyond a nicely crystallized and over-literal "rupturing of the picture plane", is the way in which such an instance - a painting, a political moment - may be structurally determined, and as such, deserves to be constant across time, yet which nevertheless is informed by the actions of those who watch those who have gone before, and in trying to repeat, to do the same thing, to assume that the breaking of the rules that have just occurred have therefore reset the rules, such that if one body passes into the painting, so too all others which follow. 

That just because you broke with perspective, one can have perspective no longer.  That the exceptional and inconstant happen only once per ruling order, and only in order to solidify the next order according to which things add up and paintings are either looked at or run into.


What, though, of this practice, of Coyote doing what does look a hell of a lot like a trajectory of modernism writ in minor:

figurative painting intended as an extension of the space and ordered in which it exists (Coyote paints a road, producing an imaginary wholeness over a rupture in that space, the road looks like it belongs, it is verisimilitude)

a questioning of the relation between a perspectival field and the material surface on which it exists (the Roadrunner breaks the rules by pointing out a fundamental contradiction between the flat, impermeability of the canvas, and the three-dimensional space that it both portrays and in which it really exists: by penetrating into the imagined space, the Roadrunner also penetrates past the two-dimensionality of the painting)

a material rupture that takes to its full limit the logic of that question, physically enacting that critique, and extension of the space of viewership to the entire space in which the work is situated (Coyote runs at the canvas and tears a whole in it)

a revision of what constitutes the work of art, such that the entire process of questioning, investigation, revision, and failure to reinscribe a non-critical surety becomes the work itself, recorded across time
(the Coyote, having torn through the picture plane, hangs over the abyss, next to a ruined canvas)

I leave for an entire other time the instance of the text behind the torn painting, such that all which remains after the "failed encounter" is a new tradition, one that documents process, a conceptual work in which the viewer stands to the side of the work, and sees only the vanished artist, the ruined work, blasted through with a body as if with a wound, the words emerging in the ephemeral detritus picked up on the approach toward the canvas:


Were he an artist, he's got loads of possibilities: a lumpen Futurist of the Southwest with equal parts technological excitement and dejection, a Land Artist who specializes in procedural work involving dynamite and the unintended consequences of the drive toward accumulate on the landscape (an Eco Crusader producing and documenting the scarred and charred rocks, marked with one too many blasts of misfiring Acme TNT).  At his best, the one who doesn't enter the illusionistic space but busts through the material frame, who finds perspective to be a tearable barrier, just a flimsy stop before the canyon, he'd be a cut-rate mash-up of Luciano Fontana


with Pino Pascali, 

 

and an emphasis on the Povera of the later, not in starting from the humble materials of rope and straw, but from the real material of the poor, the bargain technologies doomed to poison, jam, sticking, and take your hand off.

But because he's supposedly not an artist, and not interested in selling his busted canvases, or seeing them as producing significant advances away from figuration or anything, but only in sinking teeth into that dry, lean, meatless little hunk of the Real, he can sees his paintings as means to an other end, just one more failed technology to join the junkyard.

Of course, the concern is not the consumption of the bird but the circulation of capital engendered by its pursuit (it's an excuse for the technology, for the purchasing of Acme, the motivation in the name of primary consumption - caloric energy - that allows for the total froth and frenzy of mail-order shopping, to order up death on an installment plan).  And as such, if he got smarter, he would just let the Roadrunner enter the painting and burn it like the Dadaist he never let himself be, trapping the Road Runner in some other episode, walled inside a pile of ash and a perspective going nowhere.

Two final instances.
First.




[start this at 3:10]

The condition of entrance - that is, of engagement - is not belief.  It is the framing of an other watcher, of us, of those for whom the painting is just an encounter inside a wider one, a frame one step beyond the Coyote.

painting 
    I
    I
    I
Roadrunner (painting as aesthetic experience to be engaged or as trap to be avoided)
   I
   I
   I
Coyote (painting as aesthetic experience for Roadrunner, as trap to be set, and as thing which has now been engaged and violated by Roadrunner)
   I
   I
   I
us as viewers (painting as aesthetic experience for Roadrunner, as trap to be set, and as thing which has now been engaged and violated by Roadrunner, and failure of Coyote to have a successful aesthetic encounter: all of which constitutes for us the cultural experience of the cartoon as a whole)

Watching closely, the sequence - and the "camera," if one can speak of the position of the camera in animation -  is organized in accordance with and entirely these levels. 

When the Roadrunner sprints through, we are facing the painted tunnel straight on, such that it recedes into the painting.  The Roadrunner enters it as our sight does.
Then Coyote decides to make a charge at it.  As he does, the camera is framed to the side:


With this the accidental anamorphosis, as we see it skewed from the side, the rendering impossible of the illusion from our perspective brings about the same condition for him.  The complicity of the third party, a triangulation, breaks down the prospect of engaging "naively," for Coyote has been performing for us, setting up the gag, demanding the moves of the camera.  But...



After his smashing into the rock, the camera/drawing reframes, again facing the rock straight on, the only condition by which the roadrunner can exit once more, its day absorbed into the museum finished.

That's to say: the experience of the Roadrunner isn't just impossible for Coyote because he's witnessed both it and his own experience of producing the illusion.  It's because both experiences, all experiences, fall beneath the shadow of another set of eyes, that sees our seeing, that we cower beneath, nervous about the right and cool way to do things, about what's naive and what's knowing, about being a sucker or not.  And as we stand there waiting, debating, something roars out from within and blindsides us.  That something is history, which comes when our back is turned, which kicks us when we're down, which gives us a reason to storm the walls, that comes out only and ever from what we thought was closed to us.

Second.  A final instance such that seems to countervene all that has gone before, of the basic problem of Coyote is that he's a disciple of some bad Enlightenment, who can't shake off his realism enough to dare to win, who isn't a fanatic, such that when he charges point blank at the painted stone wall, he knows how stupid this is and that this won't work, that the rules do not persist, that the truck or train blasting out of it into him is no confirmation that the perspectival space will remain porous.

For there is this:





[start this at 4:00]

There is this, this jaw-drop, when Coyote finds a stretch of "normal" road and erects a canvas on which he paints a scene of a broken bridge over a chasm that isn't there.  His previous paintings have depicted - and given the Roadrunner's use of them, actually brought about - a new functionality to an exhausted, abandoned landscape.  Roads where old ones crumble away!  Railway lines cutting through the mountains to get you to the families and jobs that do not exist!  Coyote paints this break-down and waits for the Roadrunner, who sprints straight through it and the illusion.  Frustrated, Coyote chases after him, expecting the painting to treat him as he's treated them all along, as flat surfaces set up on walls and in front of voids, something to be passed through with little resistance.  And indeed, he encounters none, but wrongly.  He runs into the painting and off the rails.

A few things of this.

If anything, this is first a recognition, a witnessing, of the previous encounters.  He knows that the way the Roadrunner engages with art is to participate with it so fully as to pass into it, or at least to treat it not as representation but as a continuous portion of the visual field.  He'll halt before it, becoming potentially edible once more.  Or, better, he'll hurl himself into and off, lost where he can be neither buried nor eaten, where all this can end once and for all.

Insofar as belief relates at all, it is here the disbelief - that cherished disbelief of the knowing painter - that makes this bursting through possible.  More than that, more at dusk, remains the possibility that it is a mortal leap of not caring, a suicidal indifference.  Like the Wendigo who cannot stop even as his feet burn, the Roadrunner is driven ahead.  The double-bind of the painting could just be the emergency exit, the tricking of drive into plummeting.  But this cunning -  I will use the fact that I know it is just a painting to allow me to not stop and therefore enter the painting - makes the belief impossible.  He passes through, his death taken from him.  And Coyote, as before, forgetting that an exception does not an order establish, believes in reverse, believes that it's just painting.  For the first time, this belief confirmed: every time before, his knowledge of "just a painting" was countervened by the Roadrunner.  This time that belief is confirmed, and it is at that moment, a moment of belief without object, that vulnerable moment of assuming the world to accord with judgment, that he strays into the danger of that aesthetic experience he's held off for so long.


Coyote has become a real modernist painter, once and for all,  by becoming a realist painter.  He's now painting ruin, he's filling the landscape with a representation both of what it looks like (busted, dangerous, worthless) and of the value and social relations on which it runs and which it enable (busted, dangerous, worthless).  

He recognizes the breakdown of coherency, of what should be the case (there should be roads, birds should not fly into painted spaces), and presents that, finding in that stupid impossibility a subject worth painting and an experience that will be shared at its harshest: you, you who believe, you may not get caught and eaten, but you will participate in the wreckage of art.  I may have been the one to paint this break, chasm, but you, you bring about the real wreckage: a hole in a painting of a hole.  

That will not be filled, which reveals the world on the other side, on this side, the limitless map of all that is without value, that has no edges, that is a dessicated ocean, to be part and parcel of this hole.  A volume in which this feeble trompe l'oeil was alone an anchor.


The pen may or may not be mightier than the sword, but these books are shields, and from behind them fly things that stain

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