Tomas Saraceno.Berlin-based artist Tomas Saraceno is currently working on a site-specific project for the Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art in Passariano-Codroipo, Italy, and was recently awarded one of the first Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation Fellowships. His work has been included in this year's inaugural Moscow Biennale and in the Venice Bienalles for architecture (2002) and art (2003). [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 1 THE ANTI-TOP TEN Organisms feed on the flow of matter and energy from their environments to stay alive, and all organisms produce waste. But an ecosystem generates no net waste; one species's waste is another species's food. All living systems communicate within themselves and share resources across boundaries. You never know how energy is going to get recycled ... what other worlds exist with value we can't yet comprehend ... perceiving the imperceptible, the unexpected, the not-yet-named, possible only through a mechanical exercise ... in a weightless space ... far away in another galaxy ... watching True Stories ... "I've been trying to meet you." 2 DE-EDUCATION As Fernando Pessoa tells us, life is a long process to unlearn the learned. Take the eternal energy of the great artist Thomas Bayrle at Frankfurt's Stadelschule and mix it in a cocktail with the Venice University Institute of Architecture: Together, these two centers of education (in my experience) paradoxically remain by far the best places to unlearn everything! 3 ASHES TO ASHES Ashes to Ashes may refer to: As a metaphor:
necropolis (Greek: “city of the dead”) Extensive and elaborate burial place serving an ancient city. The locations of these cemeteries varied. and therefore from a culture of the dead. Today, under the above slogan, memorial-spaceflight.com helps us send cremains cre·mains pl.n. The ashes that remain after cremation of a corpse. [Blend of cremated, past participle of cremate and remains.] Noun 1. into orbit. As for the living, how about a celestial investment, a plot on Venus or Mars? Welcome to moonestates.com: "Now For A Limited Time ... There Are Over 1.1 Million Lunar Land Owners from 176 Countries Already!" This could be the best real-estate deal in the universe. 4 DEFYING GRAVITY Ecosystems achieve stability through the richness and complexity of their ecological webs. The wider their biodiversity, the greater their resilience. In Paul Scheerbart's 1904 sci-fi novel The Emperor of Utopia, a party takes place in some twenty floating restaurants held aloft by large balloons. What a perfect scene for a gathering of Bruno Taut, Wenzel Hablik, Yona Friedman, R. Buckminster Fuller, Gyula Kosice, artist Gert Rietveld, aircraft designer Yuri Ishkov, winners of the Ansari X Prize The Ansari X PRIZE was a space competition in which the X PRIZE Foundation offered a US$10,000,000 prize for the first non-government organization to launch a reusable manned spacecraft into space twice within two weeks. , and everyone connected with Leonardo magazine. Perhaps they'd discuss the UFO UFO: see unidentified flying objects. (United Functions and Objects) A programming language developed by John Sargeant at Manchester University, U.K. sketches of Einar Thorsteinn or, more generally, their shared quest toward the outer spaces once deemed the domain only of God, now ruled by the laws of military radar. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 5 GETTING ABSORBED At "Kafka" (Inc. Cyber Cafe) in Miami or "Shakespeare" (and Co. Bookshop) in Paris, you could fall asleep--lost between the books, dust, and coffee--and no one would find you for days. Like Sir John Soane's house in London or the Museo Xul Solar private library in Buenos Aires, these are places to blend in, disappear, and soak it all up. 6 PARTNERSHIP Life persists on the planet not by combat but by cooperation. Kenneth Snelson's geometric sculpture inspired R. Buckminster Fuller's tensegrity tensegrity (ten·sāˑ·gri·tē), n an architectural principle in which compression and tension are used to give a structure its form. Conceived by R. research, resulting in Snelson's tower at Park Sonsbeek in Arnhem, the Netherlands, which eventually collapsed in a windstorm wind·storm n. A storm with high winds or violent gusts but little or no rain. windstorm A storm with high winds or violent gusts but little or no rain. . And so what? Art exists only when it fails, as Adorno tells us, but failure can't be our goal or nothing would get accomplished. That's why we need each other. Together, we will Do It! 7 STRATEGIES FOR SURVIVAL Change your environment, mutate mu·tate intr. & tr.v. mu·tat·ed, mu·tat·ing, mu·tates To undergo or cause to undergo mutation. [Latin m yourself, reproduce, or wait until a better time, like animals when they hibernate See hibernation mode. ... or shoot a movie without any film in the camera, like Jay Chung. Chung's latest work, with Q Takeki Maeda, shares a sense of productive stasis with the films of Clemens von Wedemeyer, or with Waiting for Godot Waiting for Godot tramps consider hanging themselves because Godot has failed to arrive to set things straight. [Anglo-French Drama: Samuel Beckett Waiting for Godot in Magill III, 1113] See : Despair Waiting for Godot . With introspective in·tro·spect intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects To engage in introspection. [Latin intr delay, you can outlive out·live tr.v. out·lived, out·liv·ing, out·lives 1. To live longer than: She outlived her son. 2. the present. 8 PROGRESS Back when Gordon Matta-Clark bought his "microparcels"--impossibly small slivers of New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. real estate left over from the demarcation lines of other property--he said he was excited by their inaccessibility: "Everyone's notion of ownership is determined by the use factor." More than thirty years later comes architect Patricio Cuello and his "24 inches house" (seen at Bienal Miami + Beach, 2003), a possible use for the formerly useless. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 9 NETWORKS Like the networks at all scales of nature, we find living systems nesting within other living systems and networks within networks. Their boundaries are not of separation but of identification ... AlexisRochasHeidulf-GerngrossAndreasZybachNatalijaMiodragovicMirjanaStojadinovicCiroNajlePeterCookClaudioCaveriStefanoBoeriClaudioVeksteinBollingerGrohmannFreiOttoOlafurEliassonDanielBirnbaumMarkWigleyHansUlrichObristRirkritTiravanijaJuanHerrerosTueGreenfortJeppeHeinMichaelBeutlerCatherineDavidCarolineEggelCristianeRekadelnesKatzensteinDanielaSwarowksyLucaCerizzaChristineBarnthaler. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 10 REVOLUTION The tsunami that devastated dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. Southeast Asia also modified the Earth's axis and shifted the North Pole about an inch. Daytime decreased by 2.68 microseconds, because the planet now spins slightly faster. But more subtle action, in fact everything we do, has the potential for global impact. As NASA's Dr. Benjamin Fong Chao says. "Any worldly event that involves the movement of mass affects the Earth's rotation, from seasonal weather down to driving a car." |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion