1992 - Immediatism: An Invisible Movement - Hakim Bey (Peter Lamborn Wilson)

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Immediatism: An Invisible Movement

All experience is mediated - by the mechanisms of sense perception, mentation, language, etc., - and certainly all art consists of some further mediation of experience.

However, mediation takes place by degrees. Some experiences (smell, taste, sexual pleasure, etc.) are less mediated than others (reading a book, looking through a telescope, listening to a record). Some media, and especially "live" arts such as dance, theater, musical or bardic performance, are less mediated than others, such as TV, CDs, virtual reality. Even among the media usually called "media," some are more and others are less mediated, according to the intensity or imaginative participation they demand. Print and radio demand more of the imagination; lm less; TV even less; and virtual reality the least of all - so far.

For art, the intervention of capital always signals a further degree of mediation. To say that art is commodi ed is to say that a mediation, or standing-in-between, has occurred, and that this betweenness amounts to a split, and that this split amounts to " alienation." Improv music played by friends at home is less "alienated" than music played "live" at the Met, or music played through media (whether PBS or MTV or Walkman). In fact, an argument could be made that music distributed free or at cost on cassette via mail network is less alienated than live music played at some huge We Are The World spectacle or Las Vegas night club, even though the latter are live music played to a live audience (or at least, so it appears), while the former is recorded music consumed by distant and even anonymous listeners.

The tendency of high-tech, and the tendency of late capitalism, both impel the arts farther and farther into extreme forms of mediation. Both widen the gulf between the production and consumption of art, with a corresponding increase in " alienation." With the disappearance of a "mainstream" and therefore of an "avant-garde" in the arts, it has been noticed that all the more advanced and intense art-experiences have become recuperable almost instantly by the media, and thus are rendered into trash like all other trash in the ghostly world of commodities. "Trash," as the term was re-de ned in, let's say, Baltimore in the 1970s, can be good fun - as an ironic take on a sort of inadvertent volkkultur that surrounds and pervades the more unconscious regions of "popular" sensibility - which in turn is produced in part by the spectacle. "Trash" was once a fresh concept, with radical potential. By now, however, amidst the ruins of Postmodernism, it has nally begun to stink. Ironic frivolity nally becomes disgusting. Is it possible now to be serious but not sober? (Note: the New Sobriety is of course simply the ipside of the New Frivolity. Chic neo-puritanism carries the taint of Reaction, in just the same way that Postmodernist philosophical irony and despair lead to Reaction. The Purge Society is the same as the Binge Society. After the "Twelve Steps" of trendy renunciation in the 1990s, all that remains is the thirteenth step of the gallows. Irony may have become boring, but self-mutilation was never more than an abyss. Down with frivolity - down with sobriety.)

Everything delicate and beautiful, from Surrealism to Break-dancing, ends up as fodder for McDeath's ads; fifteen minutes later all the magic has been sucked out, and the art itself dead as a dried locust. The media wizards, who are nothing if not Postmodernists, have even begun to feed on the vitality of "Trash," like vultures regurgitating and reconsuming the same carrion, in an obscene ecstasy of self-referentiality. Which way to the Egress?

Real art is play, and play is one of the most immediate of all experiences. Those who have cultivated the pleasure of play cannot be expected to give it up simply to make a political point (as in an "Art Strike," or "the suppression without the realization" of art, etc.) Art will go on, in somewhat the same sense that breathing, eating, or fucking will go on.

Nevertheless we are repelled by the extreme alienation of the arts, especially in "the media," in commercial publishing and galleries, in the recording "industry," etc. And we sometimes worry even about the extent to which our very involvement in such arts as writing, painting or music implicates us in a nasty abstraction, a removal from immediate experience. We miss the directness of play (our original kick in doing art in the rst place); we miss smell, taste, touch, the feel of bodies in motion.

Computers, video, radio, printing presses, synthesizers, fax machines, tape recorders, photocopiers - these things make good toys, but terrible addictions. Finally we realize we cannot "reach out and touch someone" who is not present in the esh. These media may be useful to our art - but they must not possess us, nor must they stand between, mediate or separate us from our animal/animate selves. We want to control our media, not be controlled by them. And we would like to remember a certain psychic martial art which stresses the realization that the body itself is the least mediated of all media.

Therefore, as artists and "cultural workers" who have no intention of giving up activity in our chosen media, we nevertheless demand of ourselves an extreme awareness of immediacy, as well as the mastery of some direct means of complementing the awareness as play, immediately (at once) and immediately (without mediation).

Fully realizing that any art "manifesto" written today can only stink of the same bitter irony it seeks to oppose, we nevertheless declare without hesitation (without too much thought) the founding of a "movement," immediatism. We feel free to do so because we intend to practise Immediatism in secret, in order to avoid any contamination of mediation. Publicly we'll continue our work in publishing, radio, painting, music, etc., to be shared freely but never consumed passively, something which can be discussed openly but never understood by the agents of alienation, something with no commercial potential, yet valuable beyond price, something occult yet woven completely into the fabric of our everyday lives.

Immediatism is not a movement in the sense of an aesthetic program. It depends on situation, not style or content, message or school. It may take the form of any kind of creative play which can be performed by two or more people, by and for themselves, face-to-face and together. In this sense it is like a game, and therefore certain "rules" may apply.

All spectators must also be performers. All expenses are to be shared, and all products which may result from the play are also to be shared by the participants only (who may keep them or bestow them as gifts, but should not sell them). The best games will make little or no use of obvious forms of mediation such as photography, recording, printing, etc., but will tend toward immediate techniques involving physical presence, direct communication, the senses.

An obvious matrix for Immediatism is the party. Thus a good meal could be an Immediatist art project, especially if everyone present cooked as well as ate. Ancient Chinese and Japanese on misty autumn days would hold odor parties, where each guest would bring a home-made incense or perfume. At linked-verse parties a faulty couplet would entail the penalty of a glass of wine. Quilting bees, tableaux vivants, exquisite corpses, rituals of conviviality such as Fourier's "Museum Orgy" (erotic costumes, poses, and skits), live music and dance - the past can be ransacked for appropriate forms, and imagination will supply more.

The difference between a 19th century quilting bee, for example, and an Immediatist quilting bee, would lie in our awareness of the practice of Immediatism as a response to the sorrows of alienation and the "death of art."

The mail art of the 1970s and the 'zine scene of the 1980s were attempts to go beyond the mediation of art-as-commodity, and may be considered ancestors of Immediatism. However, they preserved the mediated structures of postal communication and xerography, and thus failed to overcome the isolation of the players, who remained quite literally out of touch. We wish to take the motives and discoveries of these earlier movements or their logical conclusion in an art which banishes all mediation and alienation, at least to the extent that the human condition allows.

Moreover, Immediatism is not condemned to powerlessness in the world, simply because it avoids the publicity of the marketplace. "Poetic Terrorism" and "Art Sabotage" are quite logical manifestations of Immediatism.

Finally, we expect that the practice of Immediatism will release within us vast storehouses of forgotten power, which will not only transform our lives through the secret realization of unmediated play, but will also inescapably well up and burst out and permeate the other art we create, the more public and mediated art.

And we hope that the two will grow closer and closer, and eventually perhaps become one.

[From Dharma Combat no. 11, P.O. Box 20593, Sun Valley, Nevada 89433

Contexto

Immediatism: An Invisible Movement se enmarca dentro del proyecto artístico en linea y sitio web The Seven by Nine Squares de Florian Cramer (1). Según una serie de cartas intercambiadas entre Cramer y el artista Stewart Home, el último reveló que el proyecto es una experiencia literaria que sostiene una postura distinta a la suya sobre el neoismo al que Stewart considera como "un movimiento cultural en la tradición de la vanguardia del siglo veinte", mientras Cramer, a través de su sitio, lo recontextualiza como "un experimento epistemológico" (2). Aunque se desconoce la fecha exacta del proyecto, según las cartas compartidas, Florian ya se encontraba trabajando en el sitio web para el año de 1995. Al sitio se fueron incorporando diversos documentos sobre neoismo por lo que se convirtió en una antología de este movimiento. Según revela el autor, el sitio "The Seven by Nine Squares" fue calificado por Point Survey, en la década de 1990, como uno de los mejores sitios en Internet de la década de los 90 y "Web of the Week" por Steinkrug Publications (1). El documento aparece en el listado de manifiestos de The Day of the Manifestoes(3), el cual formo parte del Hybrid Workspace de la Documenta X de Kassel en el año de 1997 (4). El Hybrid Workspace fue un espacio dependiente de la Documental X de Kassel en el que desde el 21 de junio hasta el 28 de septiembre de 1997 participaron 11 grupos relacionados con las artes, el Internet y el activismo con diversas charlas y talleres, cada grupo tuvo una participación que duro entre 10 y 14 días (4).

Autoras

Florian Cramer, nacido en Berlín en 1969, es profesor de Cultura Visual del Siglo XXI en la Academia Willem de Kooning y el Instituto Piet Zwart en Rotterdam, Holanda. (5) También fue investigador y dicto clases con especialización en literatura, arte y medios de comunicación en el Instituto Peter Szondi de Literatura Comparada, de la Freie Universität Berlin. De 2006 a 2010, fue director del Programa de Maestría en Medios en Red en el Instituto Piet Zwart, Rotterdam (6). Según ha declarado su experiencia personal se basa en "una mezcla de literatura comparada e historia del arte combinada con la cultura del bricolaje post-punk y post-Fluxus y obsesiones técnico-críticas con medios" (5). Cramer ha colaborado ​​en varios proyectos editoriales, incluido el repositorio de software artístico Runme.org, el Inestable Digest of code poetry y el .WORM Parallel University Press. También colaboró ​​en publicaciones, performances, intervenciones, entre otros formatos con Lloyd Dunn, Stewart Home, John Berndt, Istvan Kantor, Roberto Bui, Eva & Franco Mattes, Heinrich Dubel, Sebastian Luetgert, Rafael Horzon, Cornelia Sollfrank, Alan Sondheim, brisa mez, Tatiana Bazzichelli, Katrien Jacobs, Coolhaven, Jeroen Kuster, Mariëtte Groot, colectivo filmwerkplaats, Paolo Davanzo y Lisa Marr, Wilhelm Hein y Annette Frick, Lukas Simonis y Ergo Phizmiz, Jan van Den Dobbelsteen, Rasheven Rowenta, Goodiepal & Pals, Woodstone Kugelblitz y Clara Balaguer (5). Algunas de sus publicaciones más destacadas son las siguientes: Codeworks: Netart on the border of Language and Codes (2005), per.m]utations - permutationen (1996), Combinatory Poetry and Literature in the Internet (2000), Exe.cut(up)able statements (2011), Anti-Media (2013) y el articulo What Is Post-Digital (2014) (7). En el presente es director del centro de investigación para las industrias creativas Creating 010 en la Universidad de Ciencias Aplicadas de Rotterdam (8).

Fuentes

(1) https://www.stewarthomesociety.org/neoism/ninesq.htm

(2) https://www.thing.de/projekte/7:9%23/Welcome.html

(3) http://www.ljudmila.org/~vuk/dx/lists/workspac/0000.htm

(4) http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-9705/msg00008.html

(5) http://floriancramer.nl/

(6) https://dutchartinstitute.eu/page/3336/florian-cramer

(7) https://www.zotero.org/florian_cramer

(8) https://www.phdarts.eu/Supervisors/FlorianCramer

Archivo

Archivo:Immediatism an invisible movement.pdf

Enlaces

URL: http://www.thing.de/projekte/7:9%23/y_Immediatism.html

Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/web/20180122232612/http://www.thing.de:80/projekte/7:9