Alan Sondheim on Sun, 10 Aug 2008 19:28:40 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Hi Sugar, an open letter which is also a text or poetics - |
Hi Sugar, an open letter which is also a text or poetics - This is the fallingsky series, which occurs in the skysphere; it needs the base exhibition space to make any sense, I think. There are several elements in it, including physical objects which collide and may in fact go out of world, leave the lifespace altogether. That's fine with me; it's always possible to replenish them. There are other objects that rotate, and objects that both rotate and shuttle; these are a form of creative impulse. At small volume, shuttle turns to shudder, frisson, as if there were an organism within that adjusts itself homeostatically every decade of seconds or so. The organisms - those with weight, those which rotate, those which shuttle, interpenetrate and interact with one another; nothing is produced but the semblance of community, which for all intents and purposes _is_ community. Another element is a small rotating lozenge which generates the usual rings; these are small textures sufficiently light to run on most machines with everything else going. Here, the element clearly shuttles in a rectangular pattern which is reproduced as a lineage; this is evident in the shuttled rectangles strung out along the ring-beads which of course are particles in constant but relatively even movement. All of these objects and spews, and murmurs of movement, deconstruct the machine, any such, reconstructing organism out of the remnants, or at least the dream or miasma of organism. It fascinates me that the show here in the skysphere has to be constantly tended, to keep the objects within. The sexuality of these objects is one of apparent infinite or wrapped pattern - a sexuality which transverses fields which are self-defining; in other words the transversing is both field and transversal, transgression and ingression. Thus the textures, mouths, lozenges, against an infinite blackness that wraps upon itself with the thinnest of shells. Here, within the skysphere, I find I can work with almost total freedom, without restraint from gravity - unless desired - and other artifacts coding and reminiscent of the real/physical world both within virtual and physical space, what I call the true real. So just as my stay at West Virginia is coming to an end, so the space has become the most fully developed I'm capable of at the moment. Since I have, I think, several months of residency left (three?), I can use this arena or space as a crucible for viewing and re/viewing phenomenological issues of objects and their potential inconceivability. Don't forget that even ordinary objects won't last very long in the grand scheme of things - a scheme in which plasma, not hardened material substances - is the dis/order of the day. For me, _every_ object is inconceivable, both intrinsically and extrinsically, and this crucible, skysphere, gives me the opportunity to explore these issues - particularly as the entrance to the sphere should be through the already existing Odyssey exhibition space proper. Just as there are teleport spheres sending one down into the water and/or out again, so there should be teleport spheres sending one up as if indefinitely into the skysphere. The semiotics of the skysphere are set out in the exhibition, which can be read as a moving and perhaps virulent book; this coding basis, appearing as a self-generating field of part- objects, then infuses the demateriality of the skysphere. The skysphere itself is non-text, and its contents non-textual; there are residues and residences of the uncanny and abject present, as well as negation, homeostasis, and intermittency. (Beginning of problematic claim.) All of this above isn't about Second Life itself, although manifestations like the skysphere would be different elsewhere. It's also not about Linden Labs, current server costs, bandwidth issues, game computers and the like; these will change and the political economy of the Net will continue to transform (if not disappear altogether). Right or wrong, I think of this work as concerned with the phenomenology of the virtual, and the inhering of the virtual in the physical world. This inhering has existed since dreams, gestures, languagings, tools, customs, have existed - in other words, since culture has existed, and one can easily make a case that culture has existed all the way down; even amoeba demonstrate learning and adaptation. The phenomenology of the virtual is about our very being, our inhabiting, of ourselves, others, worlds, signs, totalities and their ruptures. It's interesting to think of _this_ virtual world at this time as a practical laboratory for philosophical work, but I claim that it is, and that this and other spaces create unique opportunities for participant-observation in epistemological, ontological, and other issues, often considered off-limits to concrete experimental investigaton. (End of problematic claim.) Please let me know how to activate a teleport sphere to these regions; is a flight bracelet required or desired? And let's do an announcement to open it up to a public, if possible. In the meantime, there's always the fallingsky jpg series, as well as a very short video segment indicating blackness and blurred potential. http://www.alansondheim.org/fallingsky.mp4 http://www.alansondheim.org/ fallingsky jpg series To access the Odyssey exhibition The Accidental Artist: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Odyssey/48/12/22 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org