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Critical reflections.


About a century ago, Auguste Rodin presaged our condition in his conversations with Paul Gsell: the "death of art" is due not to the damage inflicted on the various fields of representation by photographic "objectivity" but to a conflict of duration. Pitted against each other are the unceasing time of human perception (and thus of art) and the double, profoundly Cartesian invention of static and dynamic time that seems to interrupt itself (the instantaneous) and mechanically start up again (the photogram pho·to·gram  
n.
1. An image produced without a camera by placing an object on photosensitive paper and exposing it to light.

2. A photograph.
), each image in motion from the spectators perspective, but in reality inert on the strip of film.

In response to Henri Frederic Amiel's Romantic description of a landscape as a slate of the soul, Edgar Degas, an inveterate inveterate /in·vet·er·ate/ (-vet´er-at) confirmed and chronic; long-established and difficult to cure.

in·vet·er·ate
adj.
1. Firmly and long established; deep-rooted.

2.
 photographer, retorted, "No, it is a state of the eyes" (why not even "artificial retinas," as Nicephore Niepce, a pioneer of photography, put it)?. Our enraged en·rage  
tr.v. en·raged, en·rag·ing, en·rag·es
To put into a rage; infuriate.



[Middle English *enragen, from Old French enrager : en-, causative pref.
 Cartesian adds: "In liberating itself from the tyranny of nature, art does not expand, it boils down to itself." Degas Degas
To release and vent gases. New building materials often give off gases and odors and the air should be well circulated to remove them.

Mentioned in: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
 foresaw the therapeutic evolution of a technoculture of substitution that, having attacked the perception of the environment, would come to cling to presence in the world of bodies - those unbearable travel companions that up until then could not be gotten rid of.(2) And this, while applying the standard exchange of parts detached from machinery to the human organism.

Xenografts or technografts soon permitting a possible substitution of bodies (even to the point of an interchangeability of new transhuman beings), and finally the definitive repression of the evil of living, since now, one could live having ceased to exist - such is the instant of the photogram.

The dogged pursuit over a span of more than two centuries of the suppression of duration for the exclusive profit of the instant (photographs) and soon of the instantaneity of a real pseudotime (television broadcasts), would eventually throw societies up against the wall of time, would drive them back against the uncrossable limit of the absolute speed of light of electromagnetic waves.

As a first alarming scenario, the strategy of least interference, the strategy of nuclear deterrence, followed the hyperactive conflicts of the past. Now, no longer mobilized, the population of the planet was held hostage. This concerted absence of movement - the physical paralysis of the two superpowers being more virtual than real - was simply a retreat before the absolute accident of the final instant of the end of time.

Though it seems to have already been forgotten, the privation of duration in favor of the instant - the last instant - is death, even the death sentence curiously abolished during "the balance of nuclear terror," simply because it no longer served as an example, given that we were already all virtually dead, in the anti-cities strategy.

At the end of East/West deterrence, are we no longer hostages, sentenced to death, in this war that is already lost in advance, the war that consists of killing time? What happens to the face of a world no longer in the process of going by more and more quickly but of crashing against the wall of time? Is it, like the face of the overequipped pilot martyred by the acceleration of his apparatus, misshapen mis·shape  
tr.v. mis·shaped, mis·shaped or mis·shap·en , mis·shap·ing, mis·shapes
To shape badly; deform.



mis·shap
 and as close as possible to disintegration? What have pictorial perspective, acoustic depth, and the cluster of phenomena variously known as "the arts" become l,f not the oracles of this strange, disfigured dis·fig·ure  
tr.v. dis·fig·ured, dis·fig·ur·ing, dis·fig·ures
To mar or spoil the appearance or shape of; deform.



[Middle English disfiguren, from Old French desfigurer
 world?

Since the last century, a few merchants, businessmen, and perspicacious per·spi·ca·cious  
adj.
Having or showing penetrating mental discernment; clear-sighted. See Synonyms at shrewd.



[From Latin perspic
 critics have contributed to rescuing the avant-gardes from the economic ghetto where the traffic jam of industrial metadesign placed them. But now, it is a question of extricating ourselves from a ghetto that closes our movements and actions in on themselves, in an effect of instantaneous return, a prodigious (cyber) feedback.

"The artist contributes first his body," said Paul Valery, "his body the center of energy." The problem of art today is identical to the problem facing the idle and unemployed, those who previously contributed their body, center of energy, and no longer have a place in the metaphysical joke of technoculture.

Consider the proposals of some cyberpunks: "Technologies of communication and biotechnologies are important tools because they allow us to reinvent our body... It is true that multimedia can be a formidable instrument of control and servitude servitude

In property law, a right by which property owned by one person is subject to a specified use or enjoyment by another. Servitudes allow people to create stable long-term arrangements for a wide variety of purposes, including shared land uses; maintaining the
, but it is up to us to generate tomorrow the codes and the specifications through which bodies will be represented in a cyberspace where everything exists as metaphor."

Why tomorrow? Is it too modem to be described?

Our comfort today comes not in shelter from the darkness of night or the harshness of the seasons - in which elapsed time unceasingly renews itself - but in protection from the anguished perception of a final instant that has become perpetually present.(3) In this retroactive context, "art" is no more than our point of view, a final material, a vein to be mined until it is exhausted like the others ... like those old movies, always the same ones, viewed by Howard Hughes, the reclusive re·clu·sive  
adj.
1. Seeking or preferring seclusion or isolation.

2. Providing seclusion: a reclusive hut.
 millionaire bunkered away from the world, lying drugged and naked, covered in bedsores Bedsores Definition

Bedsores are also called decubitus ulcers, pressure ulcers, or pressure sores. These tender or inflamed patches develop when skin covering a weight-bearing part of the body is squeezed between bone and another body part, or a bed,
 and excrement excrement /ex·cre·ment/ (eks´kri-mint)
1. feces.

2. excretion (2).


ex·cre·ment
n.
Waste matter or any excretion cast out of the body, especially feces.
, in a darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 room on the top floor of the Desert Inn in Las Vegas.

With cyberculture cy·ber·cul·ture  
n.
The culture arising from the use of computer networks, as for communication, entertainment, work, and business.

Noun 1.
 dispensing energy to practically inert bodies, the perceiving active man would, over a few years, pass over to the perceiving inactive man, with neural and muscular activities reduced to a necessary minimum. From this new handicapped motor begins the great regression of the living, the reversal of the accepted logic of the evolution of the species, the most accomplished link in the chain (man?) putting himself back of his own accord, not far from where, it seems, the first glimmers of terrestrial life appeared. From the false survival of cryogenics cryogenics: see low-temperature physics.
cryogenics

Study and use of low-temperature phenomena. The cryogenic temperature range is from −238°F (−150°C) to absolute zero. At low temperatures, matter has unusual properties.
, to the vogue for cocooning co·coon·ing  
n.
Retreat into the seclusion of one's own home during leisure time, as for privacy or escape: "The harassments of daily life
, to the Japanese otakus of the '80s, to the multiplication of eschatological es·cha·tol·o·gy  
n.
1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the end of the world or of humankind.

2. A belief or a doctrine concerning the ultimate or final things, such as death, the destiny of humanity, the Second
 sects, to the power of virtual grafts and nano-machines, to in vitro in vitro /in vi·tro/ (in ve´tro) [L.] within a glass; observable in a test tube; in an artificial environment.

in vi·tro
adj.
In an artificial environment outside a living organism.
 and in vivo biocultures, the great machines, to in vitro and in vivo biocultures, the great organic mutation began with the constitution of embryonic communities, its survivors awaiting improbable technological springtimes.

It has been a long time since anyone dared to speak of progress in relation to the technological fundamentalism that has raged for two centuries. But how can one describe this new supraconservatism of living matter outside "natural paths," which has developed insidiously in cultures and attitudes during that period of nuclear deterrence when we all effectively became the living dead? In fact, after the extinction of any hope of spiritually surviving materialism, there has been an inversion of human temporality tem·po·ral·i·ty  
n. pl. tem·po·ral·i·ties
1. The condition of being temporal or bounded in time.

2. temporalities Temporal possessions, especially of the Church or clergy.

Noun 1.
, accompanied by the patent refusal on the part of our era to generate the next one.

"The French naturally dislike what they see," declared Henry IV.

Are they wrong? Are they right? This is more than ever the question of the choice of perception. Is one truly free to choose what one sees and feels? Obviously not. Conversely, is one constrained to perceive against one's will what proposes itself and now imposes itself on everyone's gaze? Certainly not.

There would not be, in effect, "art" on the one side and a more or less informed criticism or spectatorship on the other, mirroring each other. Criticism and art are one, they are inherent to each other as phenomena, a "conscientious objection" in the most literal sense, as is demonstrated by their history.(4)

"In the age of the information highway, the last luxury is, in a sense, a context" says Wired. We must admit that we find ourselves in a situation that escapes us," to such a degree that the dominant discourses heard here and there seem completely "out of step," a "thousand miles" from what we experience and feel in reality. That is the permanent, carefully smothered smoth·er  
v. smoth·ered, smoth·er·ing, smoth·ers

v.tr.
1.
a. To suffocate (another).

b. To deprive (a fire) of the oxygen necessary for combustion.

2.
 scandal of a world that, since the beginning of the industrial era, has not ceased to go by faster and faster, marching past and disappearing at a rate that accelerates in accordance with the degree of progress in techniques of transmission and representation.

If art, in the words of Victor Hugo, once consisted of putting the mask of the visible on the invisible, our world, deprived at once of art and criticism, would then have an unhealthy tendency to "lose consciousness" and finally to "pass out."

Translated from the French by Sheila Glaser.

(1.) To cope with her splenetic sple·net·ic   also sple·net·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to the spleen.

2. Affected or marked by ill humor or irritability.

n.
A person regarded as irritable.
 temperament, Elizabeth of Austria-Hungary (Sissi), nicknamed "the locomotive empress," would relocate an average of 300 days a year. During that same period, the historian Jules Michelet declared, "Thanks to the railway, the medicine of the future will be a preventive emigration." (2.) See Seneca, De brevitate vitae [On the brevity of life]. (3.) One no longer cures boredom with travel, but terror with video: the new "virtual therapy" is used to desensitize de·sen·si·tize
v.
1. To render insensitive or less sensitive, as a nerve or tooth.

2. To make an individual nonreactive or insensitive to an antigen.

3.
 the chronically anxious. Helmet on head, they are comforted on the screen with the "limit situations" they fear until they are able to overcome their phobia phobia: see neurosis.
phobia

Extreme and irrational fear of a particular object, class of objects, or situation. A phobia is classified as a type of anxiety disorder (a neurosis), since anxiety is its chief symptom.
. (4.) "I am from the opposition that is called life" - thus, the famous adage recalling the bonds that exist between art and the perpetually critical state of a reality in the process of going by (Paul de Tarse). To eat, not to become prey, to survive, to survive oneself - from the first wall paintings (30,000 years before our era), to Su Tung-Po's remarks - "Vision surges in front of you. You mast seize this vision with the brush, because it can disappear a, suddenly as the hare when the hunter approaches" - to Van Gogh's disillusioned dis·il·lu·sion  
tr.v. dis·il·lu·sioned, dis·il·lu·sion·ing, dis·il·lu·sions
To free or deprive of illusion.

n.
1. The act of disenchanting.

2. The condition or fact of being disenchanted.
 assertion, at the end of a 19th century already given over to the mechanical acceleration of perception: "Those who say I paint too quickly watch me too quickly."
COPYRIGHT 1995 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Virilio, Paul
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Nov 1, 1995
Words:1615
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