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Fondation Cartier Pour L'Art Contemporain, Paris. (Reviews).


The gnawing question raised by "Ce qui arrive..." (What happens ... , officially translated as "Unknown Quantity"), the exhibition at the Fondation Cartier conceived by technology theorist Paul Virilio and cocurated by Leanne Sacramone, is how this trial run for Virilio's prospective "Museum of Accidents" could possibly have fixed on the destruction of the World Trade Center as the exemplary case. Yet at the core of this show, labeled "The Accident," five extemporaneous ex·tem·po·ra·ne·ous  
adj.
1. Carried out or performed with little or no preparation; impromptu: an extemporaneous piano recital.

2.
 recordings of the event by Tony Oursler, Moira Tierney, Jonas Mekas, and Wolfgang Staehle established an unequivocal center of gravity that pulled ineluctably on thirteen similarly shrouded black-box film installations selected, one can only imagine, less along the lines of intrinsic interest or quality than of brute homeomorphism ho·me·o·mor·phism  
n.
1. Chemistry A close similarity in the crystal forms of unlike compounds.

2. Mathematics A continuous bijection between two figures whose inverse is also continuous.
: smoke (Peter Hutton), explosion (Bruce Conner, Cai Guo-Qiang), demolition (Dominic Angerame), anomie anomie, a social condition characterized by instability, the breakdown of social norms, institutional disorganization, and a divorce between socially valid goals and available means for achieving them.  (Peter Hutton, Jem Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
). Although the images of September II could easily have been snipped from the audiovisual continuum that Virilio has so frequently vilified, they nonetheless plugged into (if not to say exploited) our inchoate Imperfect; partial; unfinished; begun, but not completed; as in a contract not executed by all the parties.


inchoate adj. or adv. referring to something which has begun but has not been completed, either an activity or some object which is
 ideas and active anxieties about terrorist networks and imminent geopolitical upheaval--not accidents.

Virilio's decades-long diatribe against technology--technology as such, and a fortiori the Enlightenment project--involves a conception of "the accident" as technology's essential, defining defect, a flip-side automatism automatism

Method of painting or drawing in which conscious control over the movement of the hand is suppressed so that the subconscious mind may take over. For some Abstract Expressionists, such as Jackson Pollock, the automatic process encompassed the entire process of
 in a kind of technoentelechy. Any artificial mishap would do to prove the point. To justify the exhibition's peculiar slant, however, Virilio has offered only the elliptical el·lip·tic   or el·lip·ti·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or having the shape of an ellipse.

2. Containing or characterized by ellipsis.

3.
a.
 observation that September II inaugurated an "inevitable confusion between a terrorist attack and an accident," in that the terroristic stratagem STRATAGEM. A deception either by words or actions, in times of war, in order to obtain an advantage over an enemy.
     2. Such stratagems, though contrary to morality, have been justified, unless they have been accompanied by perfidy, injurious to the rights of
 consisted of seizing upon "the accident" as a form of "disguise." "Ce qui arrive...," in turn, seized upon this singularly loaded "disguise," and in doing so not only conscientiously perpetuated the inevitable confusion," but also participated in a well-known Virilian stratagem, fraught with ever so many quid pro quos, to restore the gothic chill to technology and place the malice irremediably ir·re·me·di·a·ble  
adj.
Impossible to remedy, correct, or repair; incurable or irreparable: irremediable errors in judgment.



ir
 inside.

The films, together with a number of TV monitors flashing disaster reportage culled from the archives of the Institut National de l'Audiovisuel The National Audiovisual Institute, known by its French acronym INA (Institut national de l'audiovisuel) is a repository of all French radio and television audiovisual archives. , for the most part merely isolated the raw gestalt of devastation. On the other hand, the works grouped under the rubric "The Fall"--alluding to 9/II by way of generic reference to the collapsed edifice and the airplane crash-revealed the resistance of contemporary art to exploring "the accident" within Virilio's narrow, idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 definition, one that renders chance null and void. Armed with his own ethos of damage, Lebbeus Woods (in collaboration with Alexis Rochas) contributed the sole work commissioned expressly for the occasion: a monumental sculptural landscape that filled the Fondation's glass-enclosed main exhibition space. Anchored in disjointed concrete slabs, nine hundred filiform filiform /fil·i·form/ (fil´i-form) (fi´li-form)
1. threadlike.

2. an extremely slender bougie.


fil·i·form
adj.
 aluminum tubes bent into cumulatively chaotic or "accidental" patterns provide a spectacle suggestive less of some sudden impact than of a more general exertion of physical for ces--the succumbing of tensile strength to excessive stress, whether natural or man-made, instantaneous or prolonged. Seemingly weightless, pristine, a model of good composition from any vantage point, the work is unfailingly aesthetic. Similarly, Nancy Rubins's nearby taut suspension of wreckage, MoMA and Airplane Parts, 1995/2002, for all its torn metal skin and shattered windshields, nonetheless participates in art's industrious recycling and accepted aesthetic principles of assemblage. Both sculptures present indices or imprints of random, disruptive action-but not in any way that sabotages the integrity of the art object: In the most conventional of senses, they work. Only Stephen Vitiello's interactive sound environment, designed to accompany Woods's installation and calibrated to interior movement and exterior noise, allows for the active intrusion of contingency; but it also underscores, quite incongruously for Virilio's rechnophobic purposes, the heavy reliance of all three pieces on technological me ans for their conception-computer projections, engineering, electronic sensors-making each of them into something of an object lesson in techno-reliability.

At illuminating cross-purposes with Virilio's desultory ruminations on an accident-induced "end of humanity," Artavazd A. Pelechian's remarkable Our Century, 1990--in a class by itself-surveys a quite different horizon of expectations. Spun from the kind of mind-boggling archival aviation and aerospace footage that only space agencies or the military would have on file, the film's intricate, fuguelike braiding of images and themes--spotting feats of endurance, human and material--sets in motion an insistent oscillation between the inane and the astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
, the frankly bizarre and the awe-inspiring, the outlandish and the strangely glorious. Not that there isn't enough destruction: Some explosions seem to bleed right off the screen. But Pelechian's vision is of the unalterable fact of human activity, with all the wayward ambitions, contrivances, and even sacrifices that it necessarily entails; that is to say, the thrust is anthropological--not "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
," to use Virilio's portentous term, the extinction of homo faber remaining too wild a guess.

"Ce qui arrive..." was mounted in adherence to the "imperative of responsibility." Yet in the face of an increasingly perilous concatenation of extremist thinking worldwide, Virilio in recent years has had no compunction about characterizing technology as a "fundamentalism." Coming from someone who has raged ceaselessly against the "progress" that has effaced traditional reference points, the use of such terminology can only have a powerful ricochet effect. Unlike Jean Baudrillard, however, who wrote baldly of the "jubilation" experienced by the terrorist in each of us at the sight of the Twin Towers' "suicide," Virilio is loath to formulate what it is that the accident as a "disguise" dissimulates: the premeditated targeting of an advanced infrastructure, the intentional turning of modernization against itself. Without the guise of a "disguise," the exhibiting of 9/II leads not to an inevitable confusion but to an inevitable conflation (database) conflation - Combining or blending of two or more versions of a text; confusion or mixing up. Conflation algorithms are used in databases.  of technophobic See technophobe.  and terroristic ends. Rather ironically, Andrei Ujica has installed a video of Virilio (in his cameo appearance) behind and below-way down below-what looks like a two-way mirror for identifying felons: There he is, bombarded by a small cone of particles traveling at the culturally fatal 186,000 miles per second, otherwise known as limelight, surrounded by total darkness.

Lauren Sedofsky is a Paris-based writer.
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Author:Sedofsky, Lauren
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:992
Previous Article:Castello Di Rivoli, Turin. (Reviews).
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