UTS Assembly
Online lecture series
UTS Assembly is an online lecture series that invites leading creative minds from the humanities, visual arts and design to reflect on the conditions that shape our everyday lives.
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Nato Thompson on ‘Cities
Listen to author and curator Nato Thompson on CITIES.
Nato Thompson is a curator, self-described “cultural infrastructure builder” and author of Culture as Weapon: The Art of Influence in Everyday Life and Seeing Power: Art and Activism in the Twenty-first Century. As the previous Chief Curator and then Artistic Director at Creative Time in New York, his exhibitions and projects included Paul Chan’s production of “Waiting for Godot” in post-Katrina New Orleans, Kara Walker’s A Subtlety, and the itinerant Creative Time Summits, among many others. He has worked as Artistic Director at Philadelphia Contemporary and MASS MoCA. Thompson is the founder of the Alternative Art School and a co-founder of the blockchain platform, Artwrld alongside artist Walid Raad, and designer Josh Goldblum.
Hello and welcome to UTS assembly. My name
is Stella Rosa McDonald and I'm the curator of
UTS Gallery and Art Collection.
I'm speaking to you from Gadi Nura Sydney, and I'd
like to acknowledge the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation upon
whose ancestral lands the
UTS campus now stands.
I'd also like to pay respect to the elders both
past and present acknowledging them as the
traditional custodians of knowledge for this place.
I'd further like to acknowledge the traditional custodians of
the various ancestral lands from which
our other attendees join us today and pay my
respects to their Elders past and present.
Thank you for joining us for UTS Assembly a live
lecture series that invites leading creative minds to
reflect on the conditions that shape our everyday lives.
I'm thrilled today to welcome Nato Thompson to deliver the
inaugural lecture on cities.
You're welcome to submit questions for Nato in the
Q&A box during the session and will seek to
address them at the end of today's program.
Nato Thompson is a curator author and
cultural infrastructure builder. He's the former
chief curator and then artistic director of Creative
Time in New York.
For those who aren't familiar with Creative Time, for over
fifty years it has commissioned and presented ambitious
public art projects with thousands of artists throughout
New York City across the country and around
the world.
During his tenure at Creative Time, Nato developed projects with
artists that underscored the civic role of
art in shaping society and public space.
Nato's exhibitions and projects included Paul
Chan's production of Waiting for Godot in
post-Katrina New Orleans, Kara Walker's A
Subtlety and the itinerant Creative Time
Summits amongst many other projects.
Nato has worked as artistic director at Philadelphia
Contemporary and MASS MOCA and is
the founder of The Alternative Art School, and the co-founder
of the blockchain platform Art World.
Nato's work brings particular focus to socially engaged
art and its intersection with civic
life, politics and media in
local and global contexts.
It's for these reasons that I'm thrilled to welcome NATO today Nato.
Thank you for joining us. I'll stop
talking and hand over to you.
Nice intro. Thanks Stella really
appreciate that and
Hello everybody. I'm gonna share my screen .
We'll
just get into it. I was thinking, like, let's talk about cities.
You know, there's just been this thing called a pandemic and
it's really changed idea of
cities here. I'm going to start share.
We're gonna do two things.
So let's start the share. I'll start here. I decided
to call this lecture that I'm gonna present
to you also
Metaverse urbanism. Okay. Here's the deal.
I know you hate the term metaverse. I hate it
too. I hate it. Who wants to borrow a term for Mark Zuckerberg
of Facebook? Certainly, not me, but it does.
I have to say I feel like it does actually describe something in
that matrixy way.
Of disappearing into the internet and you know,
I will just tell you that I
have made a life out of art and politics
and doing stuff in public space. I even had
the joke that was people love
art because it isn't the
internet.
So it is ironic to say the least
that I
that I actually have disappeared into the internet. I
put all my chips on the internet and I will talk about it
and I'm gonna talk about two projects. So what I want to do in this lecture is
I'm gonna talk about two different things my art school, which
is all online and my Art World
project which is a blockchain NFT project with artists
both of which exist around in here.
That said I have a deep affinity for
public space and of course, ironically or
interesting this lecture ultimately be about cities.
But it's funny because I was asked to do a lecture on
cities and I thought oh my God cities. I've been
in this computer for three years. Am I the only one? So we're
gonna think about what happened to that city while
we were all in here. Let's think about it. All right.
So here we go.
Let's move. Oh, come on. Oh, I
gotta go in here. Pandemic
occurs. Oh my God, there
we oh, that's why I got to hit.
Social distancing takes place, as you know.
You know when the pandemic first came about I don't
know if you remember.
Yeah.
I remember when in the United States when everybody was wearing gloves, but
not masks. Do you remember this? I was taking pictures
of gloves all over my city of Philadelphia. Anyways, then
the term social distancing came about and this
kind of giant retreat from the social into the
home.
And while that was happening, I began in
my own kind of deeply needing socialness
way. I started doing interviews with artists on
Instagram, on Instagram live.
And I started like thinking. "Oh my God, I can
like
talk to people all over the world like, live." I mean it's a
dumb realization. But certainly I would say something about the web is
you always it's almost like you get to know it again every like
10 years you get to know over new version of it like "Hello again
internet. How are you?" Oh anyways, so
I was like, "oh my God, I could talk to artists all over the world.
I can have a community.
All over the world." Okay. This
is what everyone slowly starts realizing
and I had a friend Zane who said to me. He said,
you know, what at the very beginning of the pandemic he said,
"think of this pandemic
as a boot camp for the world
on the internet the whole world
in the next year is gonna get a boot
camp.
On social networking and internet life." Yo,
ain't that the truth into the
metaverse we go. There's
The pandemic create demand for both video game
consoles and cloud gaming.
In first part of 2020 Nintendo reported 73%
year over year increase in
revenues much of which attributed sales and Nintendo Switch. Well Cloud
Gaming revenue grew by
nearly a billion from 2020 to 2021.
St. That's all of you know, this is a tech school so you guys know this
more than I do but you know, certainly I come of the
age where music and film where the dominant cultural
forms and there was a essay by
these guys Horkheimer and Adorno in the mid
20th century about the travesties of
the rise of music and film as
the new cultural forms away from theater and operas.
They hated the idea of jazz, but we are in a new
cultural revolution. As you know, where video games by
far topple music and
film as the number one cultural influence
on the world and why is that important? Because the
world of the metaverse is radically shaped by
video game culture and a lot of the technological instruments
that are used that shape our social being
come out of that culture as you know, yo, I
don't know how many of you hang out in these spaces.
I think they're totally intense, but there
we go. We're all in we're all in the metaverse. And then I don't know how many
of you been to a Esports Stadium,
but I'm down. I think it's cool.
I don't know if any of you bought land in decentraland
the metaverse space where land is for
sale. I just talked to a guy yesterday that sold a
plot of land for 1.8 million dollars two months
ago. What? I don't know. Simultaneously, online
learning. I started art school in 2021
75% of schools are planned to
operate online prior to this 57% volume
for equipment digital tools 40% were elementary
students 64% some Middle School 63% for high
school students 80% of schools of purchase or are preparing
to purchase additional technology for students. What am I talking about? Yeah, you're
in school. You already went through it, you know online learning became
a reality.
I'm going to talk about my online arts school. But if
you can't it's it is a such a profound shift
in the way knowledge is being
disrupted, and I know that you have
I know that you have experienced it in your
own University setting it probably led to a lot of frustration for you
for faculty, in person, masks
whatnot. But this shake-up will
forever radically transform the land
of education.
And then finally D5 Bitcoin, I
know two weeks ago Bitcoin went Brroww!
But not as much as the global economy went Brrrrow!
I would love to hear from any of you crypto miners, crypto people
crypto critics, crypto kitties, crypto punks.
But the whole "De-Fi" decentralized finance
revolution that came out of cryptocurrencies of
blockchain technology has radically shifted the
notion of a trustless economy not regulated
by banks, totally internet environmentally disastrous
and profoundly shifting culture
and finally something I also want to talk about: NFTs
non fungible tokens, digital assets
secured through but not through blockchain technology often
associated with these artists. I don't know if
you're familiar with the Bored Ape Yacht Club on the left
Seth Green. Apparently the famous. Is he
a famous actor? I'm not sure why he's famous lost his
Bored Ape was gonna do a whole TV show about how to
stolen out of his wallet.
I dunno if you read that, and then here's Beeple, you
know, this is the artwork by the artist who made
an artwork every day. These are this is 5,000 of
his first drawings. That is it was
put into one image. It's called the first five thousand
days sold at Christie's for a whopping 69
million dollars.
Oh, not that long ago less than a year ago and completely
blew everyone in the traditional art world's mind that
this thing called NFTs could sell for that much.
And finally remote work.
The idea that one could work from home in an
office? And while there was
in the United States a profound moment called the Great Resignation
where people and I'm part of it decided they
never wanted to go back to work and they were ready to shift
their life and wanted to work remotely.
While that isn't the rule it is certainly a
big part a big percentage of
that has happened.
So I want to talk about two projects. I've started I want to keep mindful of
time. We're doing good. I'm gonna talk about
two online projects and then I'll talk about some public art too. And then we're going
to talk about the kind of tensions between these spaces
and you know, I'm a curious soul. I must
say I started as a curator whatever that is
a person that chooses art and works with artists to make
projects happen. I love that. I got into it only
because I loved hanging out with dreamy crazy people and I
always feel like my job and life is to make impossible dreams
happen in physical spaces, but
now I make impossible dreams happen in digital
spaces. But nevertheless the idea is to make wild dreams
come true and that's sweet. It's kind
of like two parts PT
Barnum one part Karl Marx, but I feel like
this art school... So I
was a curator and then I got done working for people. I
got tired of having a boss.
And as much as being a curator is great, there's always a boss
above you can't handle that anymore. So I started two businesses and one them is
two businesses and one of them's the The Alternative Arts School and I'm not like a neoliberal.
I'm like, it's not some Libertarians
like money rules everything. I'm more like
interested in intentional uses of the money in order
to produce new worlds. And certainly the intentional uses
of resources is a way in which
you can make a world and the alternative art school which is to be
simple is an online art school. We have a lot of artists actually
from Australia at the school.
But the alternative art school I have a film I can
show you a little bit we'll show promote it. Let me promote it to you.
Do you believe that your
voice has meaning?
I believe that artists have some really
important information to give the rest
of the world.
Artists that attend this school are building it with us. We're constructing a
new world literally together.
um
today we're going to take an image of the different
rooms in our homes and make a kind of collective
home. Which room
am I supposed to be? Oh, let's get the kitchen table.
Okay, so everyone ready?
If somebody wanted traditional teaching they
wouldn't be going to school called the alternative
arts school make a video that addresses something
that impacted your
identity. Eat food in the shower.
Create a depiction of Labor.
Has me thinking about language
language relative to enslavement there are very few places where you
can actually find a platform it
is we call AM where Billy
is in Thailand that allows so much difference to
be in the same room. I would like to show you
how is it like in my neighborhood?
They open space for really personal
narratives and how the personal
is political too.
I'm a fifth
generation longshoreman.
This school has been like a miracle for me.
I don't feel like a misfit. There's the
first time I really feel like I'm home.
artists around
the world
teaching artists around the world. The idea
of art bringing people closer together is becoming
more real to me. So I think everyone came
for school and they stuck around for a community recovering conceptual
artists. That's good.
All right, that's cool. Anyways, so
I like that Viola. So basically, you
know that school which is kind of a dumb idea which is producing into
what I realized is. What is a school?
It's people coming together in a space and learning from
each other and something that you can on the Internet. It's a I
always think the best ideas are really obvious and you
can produce
exchanges between people across race, class,
gender, sexuality, geography
and our artists that attend many of them are in
their 30s 40s and 50s. They have life experience. They're more
like colleagues sharing ideas, working
artists and it is profound because
the artists that come a) they want to be there b)
everyone that knows that has gone to a grad
program, the best teachers are your fellow students
and the fellow students that are also your
community from around the world. It's such a crazy dumb
idea. So currently we have 99
artists attending this last semester from
26 countries around the world. So it's
a profound range. It's been going for two years and it
is entirely online. So that's the first project. I took on during
the pandemic.
What's next? Oh, well. Yeah,
there's some of our classes. Okay second. I launched
with the artist Wally brought another guy named Josh Goldblum a
NFT platform called Art World happy to
talk about NFTs with you. Certainly. I want to say this
on in the short of the long. First of all, let me introduce an artwork that
we've just commissioned by Walid Raad is an artist that's from
Beirut who teaches at the Cooper Union School.
in New York, these are
this is a birthday cake for
Omar all Bashir.
It is one artwork of 20 that
we've made. These are all from a project called Festival of
gratitude.
These are a series of birthday cakes for dictators tyrants
princes princesses, sheiks, sheikhs,
CEOs and goats.
They are NFTs that
allow that allow one to purchase.
They're one of ones which is say one of each available online
on our platform that we're just launching and we have a sale
with Christie's that allows one to buy
a birthday cake for Vladimir Putin as he turns
69 years old all proceeds go to Ukraine now, but it
is a project that really celebrates the
tyrants and dictators of our era and just like the
early 20th century that ushered in
both Dada and Surrealism. We are
entering the 21st century in a world where democracy is
becoming a really tenuous project and
the autocrat dictator right-wing forces
of the world have come to bear in places like Brazil,
Hungary,
Turkey, Russia, the United States,
England, I don't know we can go on, India.
It's a very very fragile world and the
democratic project is terrifying and what better way to acknowledge
it than to celebrate the dictators who don't seem to ever
go away. In terms of that, I will say this about the
NFTs and my foray into the net which is
While there's been a lot of bad art. I actually think
a lot of bad art is great news. I do think a lot of young people in a
space getting excited. It's great news. And I don't
think the bar has ever been lower in the art world
in terms of its contributions economically to
the broader culture. Most people think of the
art world... I've worked in the art world for nearly 30 years and I've
gone to art fairs where there's money going on all over
the place and none of it seems to make its way into
the alternative spaces or the artist friends that I
have. It seems like just like Junior High School.
There's some party for rich kids that you're not invited to
and seems like life is always this story
called "you're not invited". You watch passively
as the world goes by and you're out there watching it
happen unable to understand why you're not in it.
Well,
In my mind at this point for me as a political
person if I don't tackle the art world's economics
straight on then what are we doing? Just being
jugglers at the side. Well in the
NFT space you can actually build economies a)
artist can get royalties and secondary sales,
which is never before happened. And what we're doing
is attaching artist projects to the alternative spaces
in the world. So that money is actually in perpetuity transferred
over to an art world we
actually believe in. And intentional economics are
in fact possible in the NFT space. It
is not I would say a given and I think most
people's de facto mode is to hoard all the money for themselves and
rationalize it. As my uncle told me man is
not a rational creature man is a rationalizing creature
and never more so than the nft space where
the entire rationales and cash grab but that said
besides the cynical sardonic view of all
humanity. I would say that the intention
use of resources and the capacity to build
audiences with art
is profound and I am a huge believer in
building alternative art worlds in there with the art world
in the NFT space as with the online arts school. If
I was to go building physical art school, I'm gonna
go get bricks.
And I'm gonna go put some cinder block down. I'm gonna get some air
conditioners and I'm gonna hire a security guard
and a gardener and then we're gonna build this
whole I mean, what's the what what is my
startup money to be able to build a university
campus?
But on the internet...
I just get good teachers and Zoom and I have a university! What?
And here I couldn't get a physical
gallery. Go to Chelsea and like pay all
that rent and then have someone sit there.
I couldn't do that. But here I have a gallery. I've got
the best artists in the world.
What what? All right.
Oh space. Let's talk briefly about public space too. So while saying
all this is the lecture about cities.
I haven't talked about cities at all.
Well, let me ask you this. I want to talk about a little bit of public art.
I don't have a lot of time. I'm really mindful of time, I'm a very punctual person.
I want us to ask what about cities? I'll tell you one thing. That's
interesting about the pandemic and I know for the record I have.
I've in a besides being glib. I'm kind
of glib the pandemic has been a disaster. I have a lot
of friends that have lost friends. I've gone through
a lot, a lot of you have, so a lot of sympathy it's
not some funny thing. I understand that. It's
also radically shifted the way cities work
profoundly. So and in fact all my favorite theorists
about cities all got it wrong. No one
I read ever said there's gonna be a pandemic and it's
gonna completely reverse this the globalizations of
cities as you know it. Nobody wrote that.
Everybody up until the pandemic said that
people are gonna move into the cities that like proximity to
power resources and the main Global cities of London, New
York City Hong Kong Sao
Paulo. Like this is the
way the World's gonna Bbe shaped. Is these mega cities.
Now what? Remote work.
62% and workers age 22 to
65 claim to work remotely at least occasionally 44% of
companies do not alone remote work of any kind.
There's a real battle going on.
What else happened?
Last summer in the United States, we had a March
for Black Lives. It took over the whole city after the ongoing and
continued assaults on Black people
not just by police structurally politically economically
the kind of teeth of structural racism
and bending exhausting and painful for people
of color. Not just the United States, but globally
And there's been movements, marches for that that literally erupted cities.
What's crazy is it was a lot of youngins... you
remember this? I dunno maybe you guys participated in it. The cities
are erupting with like protest movements and the
older folks like me
don't want to catch covid and nevertheless. There
was these March these massive protests disrupting cities.
I was this oh, I know what this is. Yeah. Okay. Wait, I'll
go back. I'm gonna do that real soon. Hold on.
That almost time. Um, hey, do you can
you guys um real quick? Okay in the United States, um,
there was a group and I'm from Philadelphia There's a
group called Monument Lab that decided in during
March for Black Lives, there was a lot
of taking down of monuments. In the United States was like Civil War monuments or
monuments from the kind of era of slavery. So like Civil
War generals on monuments that are often encouraged like
white supremacist white leaders
were torn down in certain cities and this group Monument Lab
was there to kind of produce art experiments with artists
to think about what other monuments we could construct. So this
is a pick with a fist of resistance by the artist Hank Willis
Thomas. Here is a monument
that are Tanya Brughera produced called Monument
to New Immigrants.
And here is a monument where the artist Karyn Olivier
actually took a monument that was in a neighborhood
which was a war monument and then built mirrors
all the way around it with people reflected people's
own thoughts. I'm hoping
that our esteemed crew wouldn't mind sharing that video
now of Kara Walker that I'll end on so, okay.
Can you guys do that or how do I do that?
Yeah, I'll help you out one second.
Do I stop share?
Oh you do that. Okay, cool. Thanks.
Is an elaborate sort of marzipan or sugar sculpture
made of sugar paste to kind of fondant that typically in
these large Banquets that would have been thrown in the
Medieval Era at the court of King Henry.
They would have had main course and then a sugar
subtlety and then people would eat it. So handle this kind
of power of ingesting that this desirable precious
substance, but also you're
sort of ingesting the power of the king. Anyway, when I
heard the term subtleties, I was a goner like, oh
I have to make a sugar sculpture. It's like oh, of course.
I'm really proud that Creative Time is undertaking this
extremely ambitious project.
It's not just ambitious and scale. It's ambitious in
terms of its content. Kara Walker is encouraging
us to look at things that are so visible in our society
that we wish were invisible. Our histories of slavery
and our contemporary relationship to slavery, immigration,
migration, mythologizing of
black women's bodies.
And it's our belief that Creative Time, that public art
creates a space to engage in those difficult
conversations.
I'll just
give you guys on what you're looking at here. It's okay.
Let me just talk about it. It's okay with the building.
It's here creating the context and it is like the
sculpture is kind of the subtlety to make a
piece that would talk about this as well and Echo it and
alright. Yeah, maybe we
can just turn the sound off and I'll talk over it. So basically what we produced is
a project with us ours Kara Walker, which was a massive sculpture
literally about two city blocks long. I
don't know 60 feet tall.
Made of well, it's actually made of Styrofoam with
a sugar slather around. So it's
entirely encased in sugar and this was
in the Domino Sugar Refinery which is to say
this is the oldest, this is one of the oldest sugar
refineries in the United States. It's the place
where literally they took the sugar cane from
the Caribbean.
And made sugar white and this
was the room they did this in and they refined it
and when you walked into this space, which is this massive cavernous space
was like a evil Willy Wonka place and the
walls were like encased in this like gross
old molasses smell
and you could still smell it and it was just all
over the place almost look like an Anselm Kiefer
painting everywhere.
and in this
she had produced the sculpture that looked like a
kind of caricature of a Negress
who's also part that like
a mammy figure that had also
become a sphinx like a sphinx of Egypt.
And almost at that scale.
Shouldn't and there was a kind of some exaggerated female
genitalia in the back. It's very
sexualized very big and it lorded
over the space in this room.
Where of course
not only was sugar refined but the sugar sale
of sugar was the part and
parcel of the slave trade what was
called the Triangle Trade where British ships went
to Africa they bought slaves they brought them to the
Caribbean where they made sugar they brought the sugar
to the United States the money went back to Britain to get more
slaves and this is called the triangle trade and this is
the you know, the foundation of the United States economy.
Was built on slavery and the lives
and all that happened directly because of it in
this room. I tell that story and this
is a big public artwork and it's I also joke, this is
like, this is my this is the year 2014 I think
of this is my public art platinum album. This
is pre-pandemic. This is public space but it
also has an internet tie-in and I know I'm running a
little over but I'll just I'll be quick and that project
which I want you to see a picture of I'll
find a picture. Um, but that project happened
the same
year that a film
12 Years a Slave came out
and it won Best Picture and it's buying an artist came
out of the artist. He's a filmmaker named Steve McQueen and it
won the Oscar for Best Picture and I
was thinking so you have this Oscar winning film about slavery.
And then you had this Kara Walker project about slavery and
that project what was interesting is people came to it.
And then this is really early social media
and people began discussing: what
was the proper way to look at
the artwork? So the
artwork and then all this internet chatter and
all these chat rooms and all this
Twitter stuff just blowing up and everyone's getting angry
and fighting with each other and people being to being
accused to being disrespectful and then there's white privilege.
And then suddenly like what I realized is unlike a
movie where you sit passively and watch a film and
then leave and have dinner talk about it.
With the artwork you don't just look at
the artwork.
You literally look at people
looking at the artwork and then read the
tweets and read the social media phenomena that inform the
artwork itself and that there's this profound synergy
between public space
and the internet social that creates this massive
catalyst that is quite profound. I say
that because I do believe wholeheartedly all the
kind of ingredients that went into March for Black Lives
in so much is the energy the Zeitgeist around a
social media platform getting a critical discussion that
feeds the public energy happened.
I want to leave on that note. I have another project. I wanted to
show you guys so much. It's short by the artist Simone Lee.
We did a whole project around a health clinic
called the free people's medical clinic, but
I just want to say in short when it
comes to cities and I'm not resolving much.
But I am interested in all of these projects and I'm interested
in radical redistributions of wealth. I'm very invested
in how we can think about decolonialism but also
systems of equity and
and and and and acknowledging dispossession
and extraction whether
it is through colonial projects whether it is through slavery,
whether there's through patriarchy but not not but
I want to say this and this is my big big but.
I want to build a world. I don't want to critique the haters.
I don't want to critique the Trumps. I don't want to critique the
right. I want to build with people I love. That's
what I want to end on and that's what I want with the cities
and that's what I want on the internet. And that's why I want with NFTs. I
want to build an art world worth inhabiting with people
I care about I invite you all to do that with me. Maybe that's
what I'll end on.
Also, maybe I could take questions.
Nato thank you. That was incredible and a beautiful
articulation of the
You know, the that art is a part
of everyday life. It's it's just one of the threads the
ties together. So
thank you. There are a couple of great questions.
One is as we
re-emerge into the public realm and the
pandemic continues, what should artists bring
from what they've learned in the
online space to public space.
What? Okay, so that's into me.
That's the question and I do think this
is what I think is like I mentioned like there's a
maybe I wasn't articulating it well enough but I'll
say this there is a profound dynamic between people interacting and
discussing something and art.
And I say that because
it's not just art. You know, they I did I wouldn't when I
worked at Mass MoCA the Museum of Contemporary Massachusetts. They did
this Harvard research on one of my exhibitions and they learned
something which is very funny, which is people learn more
about the show in taking a survey
about the show, which is the more
people talk about art together the
more they learn about art together. And so
I think having a space whether
it's a Discord Channel whether it's a
Twitter space but digging in to art
that excites you but also building a critical discussion make
sure you mature about it and then finding
ways for that discussion to land in public
space to find ways that has tentacles out there
in the world, you know, and there's all kinds of mediums for you
to be as little as like you need to do an AR thing. You can
literally just meet up on a corner and talk but I
think like what you guys all know this like people always get
like "Oh the metaverse there's nothing
like real" everyone gets so reactionary like you're like," I don't
want to live in the world anymore. I just want to live in
the internet." I'm like dude. There ain't nobody that just wants
to live in here. Like people do like a shower.
People like a hot tub, you know what? I mean? There's things in the physical world
that a little better than in here. We all know that so like I
think it's about finding cool ways to connect these things.
And the other thing I'll say too about class that I'll just
say that this at my school. Something that I realized was crazy when they
talk about community in the United States. I don't have the
language is the same Australia, but people always say what about the community?
I realize what they mean is broke people that don't travel.
Right and it's often bounded by like race, class lines, but
what was wild to me is on the internet you can
travel.
Like like a lot of people don't get on
planes and go visit people like famous art
people. Do you know that's a real privilege to travel so
much but like when you take communities that never travel
and they get on Zoom and meet diasporic communities like
them or like make Indigenous community connections
across vast spaces to build new cultures.
That shit's profound, and making those
things hit the ground whether it's like a little exhibition here or
there or ways that come in. There's this we're in
uncharted territory for human sociability. So
I think baby steps make it things out in the world's cool. What
else?
I think that brings up really interesting
considerations about
public space as undemocratic,
you know and and thinking
of how we can take the language of
the internet to public space. There is another question. I suppose
it relates to the documentation and
preservation of public art and the
question is will today's public artworks be
tomorrow's toppled monuments?
I mean
it's different, you know, I'll say this.
A lot of the artworks. I'm sure they contemporary always are very
temporary.
And the ones that tend to be permanent, you know,
it's a different kind of.. I allowing it to bureaucratic, but the
ones that are being toppled right now the way they come to life
is different and I mean that in so much is the ones that are getting
toppled or either war memorials,
right, so they're literally like to generals or people
that fought in wars. That's one style.
The other is extremely wealthy
benefactors, like power, demonstrations
of power like Sir Walter Blahblah
and there's some statue of him, but back in
the day if you gave tons of money or you just own the town you pay
for statue of yourself to go in the center of town
and they'll come up with some reason why you're there but it's just because you
were the you were the baller that had all the cash and you
made a monument to yourself.
Or your friend did, but like that's a lot
of monuments and that's just to say that's a
different mode than the way Contemporary Art is
put in public space. Those are different financial models
and
Increasingly cities don't do a lot of permanent
public art because it's much more contested.
There's not many arts budgets anymore.
You know, I mean
God bless Nan Goldin who totally took down the Sackler family
who's produced Oxycontin, but you
know in front of the Metropolitan Museum is one of
the most egregious families of carbon emissions called the Koch brothers.
They have a water fountain right there in front of
the Metropolitan Museum the Koch brothers water fountain. People
throw stuff in there and yada yada, but
I mean in general, I think the wealthy have started
getting a little skittish about throwing their name
everywhere because the hordes, the angry hordes come
after them. And and so I don't
know I think it's a different kind of model and you have to be specific about where the
funding is coming from and what that Monument does.
Do you see a relationship between blockchain, you
know crowdfunding, independent of
those models of
arts funding from people in power. Do you say connection there?
I mean, here's the deal. I'll say this there are
these things called decentralized autonomous organizations
or called DAOs. They're basically giant pools
of money, often crypto money. So a ton of
ether, a ton of Bitcoin, pooled together by a bunch
of artists or groups of people.
They think of them as under trustless groups
or self-organized.
They're popular and they buy as you can imagine
groups of people buying art together nfts buy Art
differently.
Than people trying to decorate their house.
And that I mean just to be simple most aren't
sold in the world.
On the below $20,000 level.
Is Art to decorate homes?. And so
I I don't that's the commercial part of that
and for the record just to get you my sense.
I've always been into art you could never decorate a
home with. So, you know when everybody thinks all art is
about decorated homes online.
No, I'm so I'm ass backwards. I thought
like I never understood what all that art that decorate homes is
for. Like that's house decorations. That's art, but
nevertheless I would say that because the economy of
buying things in a group is very different. Now
does it totally change the funding structures?
No, but does it does it
change the landscape somewhat? Yes, and I
do think this, I know the
physical world that analog world of arts funding is pretty static.
It's not changing very much out there. I've been
in this field a long time. It seems pretty stable and
boring but do I think this world
is changing all the time. Yes every
month. It's a new world and does that mean
there's new possibilities? Yes, and are
you tired of gatekeepers and people telling you you can't do
things? Well, I am and and there's it's chaos in
here. It's almost exhaustingly chaotic, but there's not
as many rules. I think that's cool for art. You know, I think
I'm game on for that.
Nato we're going to finish up, but I think your
work really speaks to the
way that art intersects with
our social life and the way that it can exist not
through public monuments necessarily, but in
our collective memories, and I lived experiences, so thank
you for being with us today. It's great
to have you here and have your awesome presentation for
audience. So, thank
you everyone for joining us online, please thank Nato.
Through your screens. Right on awesome. You guys
are awesome. Join us on July 29th to
hear from Gaetano Pesche discuss How Art and
Design can shape Futures. Thank you Nato.
Cheers guys. Take care.
Yaara Bou Melhem on ‘Surveillance’
Yaara Bou Melhem is a journalist and filmmaker. She was a foreign correspondent with Dateline, SBS TV and Al Jazeera English for more than a decade. She has made documentary shorts including War on Truth (2019) which followed digital rights pioneer, Maria Ressa and her global campaign against disinformation. Yaara’s debut feature-length documentary, Unseen Skies, interrogates the inner workings of mass surveillance, computer vision and artificial intelligence through the work of US artist Trevor Paglen. Yaara’s films and investigative journalism have received a number of accolades including two UN Media Peace Awards, two New York Film & Television Festival Awards, a Hong Kong Human Rights Press Award and numerous Walkley awards.
'Surveillance' with Yaara Bou Melham was a live lecture and is not available for viewing.
Camille Henrot on ‘Technology’
Listen to artist Camille Henrot on TECHNOLOGY.
Camille Henrot is one of the most influential voices in contemporary art today. Her critically acclaimed practice, encompassing drawing, painting, sculpture, installation, photography, video and film, examines what it means to be both a private individual and a global subject.The relationships between objects, language and desire and the superstructures that contain and define knowledges are a defining concern of her multimodal and singular practice.
A 2013 fellowship at the Smithsonian Institute resulted in her film ‘Grosse Fatigue,’ for which she was awarded the Silver Lion at the 55th Venice Biennale. She elaborated ideas from ‘Grosse Fatigue’ to conceive her acclaimed 2014 installation ‘The Pale Fox’ at Chisenhale Gallery in London. In 2017, Henrot was given carte blanche at Palais de Tokyo in Paris, where she presented the major exhibition ‘Days Are Dogs,’ She is the recipient of the 2014 Nam June Paik Award and the 2015 Edvard Munch Award, and has participated in the Lyon, Berlin, Sydney and Liverpool Biennials, among others.
Stella McDonald: Hello and welcome to UTS Assembly my name is Stella Rosa McDonald and I am the curator of UTS Gallery & Art Collection. I’m speaking to you from Gadi Nura, Sydney, and I would like to acknowledge the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation upon whose ancestral lands the UTS City campus now stands.
I pay my respects to elders, both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for this place
i'd like to acknowledge also the traditional custodians of the various ancestral lands from which our audience and speaker joins us today and pay my respects to those elders past and present.
Thank you for joining UTS Assembly, a lecture series that seeks to detail the richness of creative practices across the humanities, visual arts and design by inviting leading creative minds to reflect on the conditions that shape our everyday lives.
I'm thrilled today to welcome Camille Henrot to deliver the third lecture in the series on Technology.
This lecture is pre-recorded early on the morning of the twenty first of October, while it's the late afternoon in New York, where Camille is currently based
Camille Henrot is one of the most influential voices in contemporary art today. Her critically acclaimed practice encompassing, drawing, painting, sculpture, installation photography video and film examines what it means to be both a private individual and a global subject.
The relationships between objects, language and desire and the superstructures that contain and define knowledges are a defining concern of her multimodal and singular practice.
A two thousand and thirteen fellowship at the Smithsonian Institute resulted in her film gross fatigue for which she was awarded the Silver Lion at the the 55th Venice Biennale
Gross fatigue, a poetic and breathless film that Camille has described as an experience of density, brings together diverse creation, myths, sciences, and anthropologies to tell the story of the creation of the universe in thirteen minutes, set against the backdrop of a computer desktop and a spoken word narrative.
Subjective and intuitive, the work relates the universe to the internet and points to the impossibility of a unifying system of knowledge
Camille has generously offered the audience today the opportunity to view Gross fatigue, and a link will be provided to you along with this recording.
She elaborated ideas from Gross fatigue to conceive her acclaimed two thousand and fourteen installation The pale fox at Chisenhale Gallery in London,
in two thousand and seventeen Henrot was given carte blanche at Palais de Tokyo, in Paris, where she presented the major exhibition days are dogs.
She's the recipient of the two thousand and fourteen Nam Jun Paik Award, and the two thousand and fifteen Edvard Munch award, and has participated in the Lyon, Berlin, Sydney, and Liverpool biennials, amongst others
Camille welcome to Uts Assembly, and thank you for joining us.
Thank you very much. I'm very um honored to be invited to talk with you today.
Well, preparing this today I was a little bit like confused how to approach the topic of technology. The first question I asked myself, is like
um. Am I a relevant person to talk about this topic? And and what would be my angle? Because the truth is, I know very little about technology. I am myself
very technically, unfit to the use of computers and telephone constantly. I don't know how to do very simple updates or struggle with extremely simple operation. What I do
understand, though, is uh, and what i'm interested in is how humans relate to technology and the
so the pre technological model that I relied on. What i'm interested in is actually what is not technical, but technology, but what is rather like psychological, the psychological implication,
that that um
technology as a role to what direction of that is social, that is Gregarian. The psychological implication
that this environment that we call social media has created in terms of like reproducing models of the family, models of control, models of sovereignty, models of help. So often in my approach.
Uh, I start with problems. Uh, I start with failure. I start with a feeling of inadequecy
So one of the works I thought would be a good start is a series of work I made in two thousand and fifteen, two thousand and sixteen that are called Bad Dad and Beyond they are a series of inter phones and telephones with a multiple choice that explore the perversity of help. Basically How when we seek for help, especially online, we are met with control. And we are met with other expectation. We are also confronted to our own
desire to be seen, but also to be respected, and the different implications of that, and how much that positionof seeking for help, but being received with surveillance is echoing
a specific childhood memories and feelings of powerlessness that comes from childhood.
My analysis was that we expect too much from technology, and what we receive is not what we expect.
So there's a combination of
the fact that we expect too much also make us harder in our judgment towards the
um
the being that provide help. Um, but also it creates a feeling of powerlessness that is itself also creating a certain kind of self hatred, of self devaluation.
Um. The very fact that we are also confronted to our own research. So how technology, when seeking for help, is acting as a mirror and and instead of
answering with a specific response. It's confronting us with a mirror of ourself, with other people with the same questions, same interrogation, and not much more solution,
which is basically the principle of the Forum. You know the principle of the Gregarian impulse and sort of like open conversation.
So just to come back to the work itself. Uh, it's a series of nine machines. Some of them include the screen, some of them don't
The first one that I can see was called Bad dad and beyond and was a machine that would combine the
traditional problem with fathers, with traditional problems, with computer or Internet or Wi-fi. So typically
I researched historical bad father's. There's many of them
it seems that bad father's have the existed since historical time. So it would be like taking the example of Agamemnon, who killed his daughter to change the weather forecast, to get a good weather for his war
combining with problems you get on your computer. So it would be "if your
father killed your sister and deleted files without your permission, press one."
That would be one of the example of the question you would get. There would be also a question that
typically you relate to, like privacy. Um, this is, for example, is coming from a telephone which is called Um,
um.
Sorry "easy cheating". It's another little cell phone call is the cheating that would typically start asking you question; "when is your birthday?"
"How much money do you make you?" "Do you receive psychiatrics?" "Is Google right about you?" "Do you have children?" "Why don't you have children?"
"Do you remember your mother birthday?" And the more it would progress in the question, the more it would triggering, filling up shame and guilt.
It's a little bit the principle of Rosa la rose; The idea of suffering the consequence of your own impulses. So by trying to spy on someone you are being spied on basically
Another one was called splendid isolation, and it would be more like a traditional voice over with not so many choices, using psychiatrist's classical questions to
fast track intimacy with their clients.
So yeah, all these different works had in common a sort of like relationship between humans and technology. And how technology is not something completely new. The technology by we often associated
associate technology with the future and with modernity. But um, it's still made by men and women who have a reptilian brain who have escapist impulse,
and who have drives that are also very primal. So
the ideas that actually in there,
in that structure, these different tools that we have around us, they reproduce um um system of power and system of domination that are inherited from a very ancient past.
And this is why, you know, it's for bad dad and beyond. But it was very much a way to address problems of authorities through technology and problem of autonomy.
And what happens when a need for help is met with control.
There's another aspect of emotional and psychological aspect, of being confronted with a mass number of information that I explored in my work. It was from a work that is coming
before, and it's work from two thousand and thirteen. So a few years before bad dad and beyond, the work is called Gross fatigue.
It's the film that was presented at the Venice Biennale
and that you will be able to access online. I will provide a link. The film was made during a Residency at the Smithsonian Institute.
The Smithsonian offered a residency, and one of the advice I received before applying for this fellowship was, please focus on one topic
But the Museum itself, the Smithsonian Institution, which is not one museum but a very large group of museums, doesn't focus on anything. It's quite the opposite, very much it's the conglomera of museum that has a sort of universal scope,
and the museum itself, in the way it has been created, as we all know, was created under the model of the Cabinet of curiosities. Which was very much the idea of gathering everything. And it's actually interesting that
each department of the Smithsonian Natural History Museum is calculating how the percentage of species they believe they have in their collection in regard to the totality of species they believe exist. So they would say, for example, we own
the specimen of sixty percent of fish that exist. So this kind of attitude, it tells me, really related to the way the Internet has been conceived,
and and also navigating the website of the Smithsonian inspired me to the idea of
the way the internet can function, and the way it's a continuation of the museum, and especially of the Universal Museum.
Uh, and
it also felt that
Through this universal impulse there was some kind of madness behind. I was interested in the neurotic aspect of this impulse of gathering everything at the same place,
gathering everything online, doing the database, gathering everything in the storage, displaying everything in an exhibition. This whole idea of like bringing together everything in the same place in the same basket. That was something that I felt like we
are living with that since a long time that it seems natural to us, but it's not something natural. It has also a certain drive. And what is the drive behind it. To me it felt it was a death drive.
It felt like It's the fear of death, of our own death, but also the fear of disappearance that is driving this project. It's interesting, for example, that the
during the Indian War in the United States was
the years where the most object were collected for the Natural History Museum. So at the same time there was a genocide organised
that was also the driving force for the museum collection. So literally, not only were objects collected on dead bodies, but also the death was both the excuse, and the drive for the collection. We have witnessed that as well in Europe in the nineteenth century where a lot of
animal species got extinct because of the competition between the Natural History Museum in Paris and the Natural History Museum in London.
When they they were competing to get the last specimen of the dodo, for example, which which causes the dodo extinction.
So this is a a little bit of a parenthesis,
but is to illustrate that the
extinction and the extinction itself is both the, how do you say, the the the taboo, the thing that is rejected, and also a sort of secret goal.
Because, of course, when something is extinct, the collection of the museum becomes more precious. So there is a lot of ambivalence around
that aspect which I was hoping the film can capture. I know that aspect that the film wanted to capture is
the dynamic between the personal and the global, which I think is the dynamic we experience every time we open a web browser.
Um,
maybe I um move a little bit now to sorry I didn't organize the talk at all in a chronological way I it's more like organized towards thematic which I saw relate.
So the last chapter of this presentation, I thought, could be around as a series of new work that I just produced last year. But that
are somehow connected with gorse fatigue which is a work from two thousand and fourteen
So basically ten years later
During the pandemic I was invited by the Sigmar Polke Foundation
to conceive a group of work for the anniversary of the death of Sigmar Polke
and it was a very special moment, because it was a moment where I did not have a studio anymore. I was stranded in France and couldn't come back to New York, which is my home,
and I was staying at my mom's place. I was trying to make some space inside the house so that I could work and basically trying to declutter. So I sorted out books, and the first book I put in the pile to the trash
were books about etiquette.
So what to do when you're invited to dinner, manners for women, dos some don'ts
for young girls. There was actually a lot of them from different times,
most of them in the French, but some of them also in English
and um,
and at the same time I was also considering Polke's work, and his irritation with patriarchal models and systems of authority
one work in particular really inspired me, the idea that maybe it was wrong putting this etiquette book in the pile of the trash.
So I went back into the trash pile and found them at the very bottom and recuperated them, and started to read them and select excerpts of those books that I was particularly interested in.
Some of them I scanned, and I also printed, and it became some kind of collection of
a fragment of paper which are fragment of advice about how to reply to an invitation to a wedding, how to reply to an announcement of birth, how to pack your luggage for a weekend
how to write a note when somebody has lost a dear person their family. So all this different situation,
and going through them, I realized that they have a lot in common with
um
the phone and telephone piece of bad dad and beyond, I realized that somehow my interest with this book had to do with how they themselves kind of
form some kind of code a structure and a code. And this code being obviously connected to a social class and gender,
but also and culture. But also this code somehow being something that is still present today, but in a more invisible form,
because those books seem to me really obsolete and really coming from an old time at first when I found them. But you know it's the same way with this telephone and inter phones. It's often when technology seems obsolete to us that it's actually relevant,
It's not clearly useful in terms of a day to day approach. But it is maybe, or maybe it has become as the image of something that exists now, but in a different form, and maybe it becomes a good object to talk about something else. The same way
The telephone and the inter phone
were a way to address the relationship with
the state, the police, the patriarchal system's relationship with politics, relationship with doctors, and all the different situations where abuse of authority and abuse of power can happen the same way. Maybe this etiquette book
is an image of the same thing as social media. It's neither
malevolent, neither benevolent, but it's not neutral, either. It is a cultural product. It is shaped by culture. So I started to collect images that I found were relevant
online that in a way, I felt was a product of those etiquette books and
also reading more about the books, I started to kind of have a sort of like tenderness for them. I sometimes wished that as a child I would have been given some of this advice. So they were
the same as the Wiki-how advice online. There is one part that is positive, and then another part that is a bit negative, because it becomes, intrusive, or because it also confronts us systematically with the fear of failure. But
it's an ambivalent character, the same way a parent is an ambivalent figure.
So I saw that there was interest in bringing together the error message
the
um the etiquette advice and um, the systems of
creating social categories online
In the past. Um,
we were identified - I mean as a member of the Human Society - we were identified and framed by the way we speak. By the way we dress,
and also by the way you write or manners basically
and this will very much the way you would recognize, uh, you would differentiate social class. This is the purpose of those etiquette which was actually to bring the manners of the upper class to the working class and I think that most of them are written with a democratic impulse,
even though they reproduce prejudice and class caricatures, they were written in the idea of bringing connection.
But now, the system that identify us is way more sophisticated. It's a system that looks at the way
not only the way we dress,
but it looks at the friends we have, the music we hear. It looks also at our escapist self, the things that we don't even
are aware that we are looking at, and so it became very clear to me that there was a really interesting aspect of bringing together those two things
and the process, the technical process, of bringing those two things together became also something that I was very interested in.
Um. The printer of Sigmar,
which I discovered also started to work with Sigmar because of of an accident. I broke my arm also at that period, so that was also was triggering for me the interest in using print
and using tools like Photoshop and procreate, and apple pen; tools that were reproducing and mimicking the gesture of
drawing and painting, but on the computer,
and
the same way etiquette is about mimicking, and imitating the manners of somebody else, the same way those applications imitate and reproduce the manners and the custom of craft. So what became really interesting for me is to confront them and combine them. And uh, it becomes a little bit of an infinite
game of imitation where I scan some of my brush stroke and then digitalize them, vectorize them, use them as masks, printing around them. But then
turning them away. I could reprint again, applying a different type of pigment, some of them iridescent and with different color this is those images are showing a little bit the process something which is taken from the studio,
as you can see here the color are changing according to the light, so it's an effect called interference that I was really interested in. That Sigmar Polke also used a lot.
Another technique that is a little bit specific that I did a lot for those works was the idea of trying to reproduce the hand gesture of drawing on a digital palette, but to enlarge it and do it manually and
one of the techniques that I was very fond of was using the
pastry tools, tools that people use to make cakes, I want to make cake decoration.
There's something so flat about the digital image that it constantly try to recreate volume artificially. But then it also makes too much volume right. I don't know if you noticed when you using Photoshop, the people who are graphicdesigner here or people are artists using photoshop. You probably have noted that all the effect of texture and effect of shadows and , three dimensionality online are kind of like always a little bit of a caricature of what you see, with the eyes
so I was really interested in using the artificiality of those techniques and turning them
around so that with the hand, I would imitate the computer, and then with the computer imitate the hand in sort of like a conversation. Here, for example, in this painting of The Old Rule
What seems to be a paint splash with the brush is actually real paint, but it's according to a vectored drawing of it. So
every different step is a little bit not exactly what it seems to be.
Obviously, there was also a lot of experimentation in this process. I realized now that i'm talking about it, it looks like I knew exactly what I was doing, which is not the case. I was improvising a lot, and that was also an aspect of the production and the technique that was very interesting
it was interesting to the printer of Sigmar as well. So we experimented with
printing first, and painting after, or painting first, and printing on top of it, using the mask and he used them in different places. We also experimented with very precise placement, as you can see in this images. This was like an indication of how to place
an element of collage from the etiquette book.
But sometimes also we used the idea of approximation, and actually like wrong placement. In the works that were just a little bit before. If you want to slide back, maybe two or three image before with the image of the dog.
Yes, for example, on the left part, the image with the picture of the child, this image
is printed inside a mask, but the mask was actually overlaying it. It had moved a little bit while printing. So this is why you kind of like see a shadow
like it's the same shape has moved. Because there was a mask for the preparation of the canvas and there was a mask for the prints, and they didn't perfectly overlap
the same here on the right, I did not plan to have this edge on top, but once it happened, actually
I really liked it so. Because the presence of this edge would enlight how the brushstroke is in the middle of the canvas. So there was a little bit of...everything was a conversation, I would say a conversation between techniques, but also a conversation between
the different people and expertise involved in the making.
This is another example where the original drawing was also made with the graphic palette, and procreate or apple pen system,
and another part of the element is the actual drawing on paper with water colour that has been scanned, and then combining those different elements with elements I took from the etiquette book, I would
then on top use this system with a pastry line.
You can see here also an image of how the masking looks a little bit like when you work in 3D, the scan of the space you see on your screen when you
fabricate 3D shapes, but was made just really DIY.
um.
This work 'Cells'
is probably one of the work that I was thinking about when I said
that we are categorised by the music we listen to.
In this case I integrated my spotify list,
and I confronted it with the image that reproduced the sonogram
and then by other images from my library.
There is always a element of a randomness in the way I associate images, and the reason why they come together is not always
um
accessible with words to me at first, it may become more clear as the work exists. There was something about the echography and pregnancy,
and the spotify playlist that
to me made a lot of sense.
The presence of water, the idea of a basket, the idea of carrying something with the idea of also transparency of skin, and all sorts being transparent.
This is example of other works. All of them had been kind of conceived during two thousand and twenty during the pandemic, so you can see, maybe through the news
and the connection between a pandemic and the state of pregnancy. The idea that there's something inside of the body that is not visible,
and has a lot of consequences. And
the way the apps now see inside our bodies. This is something that I, especially through health, I mean, we've seen now in the US also the get the catastrophic implication of those apps, especially the period tracking apps.
But during the pandemic
the relationship with our body had changed. All of a sudden there were so many articles and so many testimonies online about heartbeat accelerating and different symptoms. I think a lot of us
became a little bit paranoid about "Oh, what's happening in my body? Do I have it this virus, or do I not have it?" I mean, I remember that feeling before the test even was invented.
And so there was a certain state of projection into our bodies, and also the idea that skin is a bit new to the layer of privacy. But is it really? That's a little bit what those works were exploring. I used images,
and you see, that was an images of my last trip
coming from New York to France, and after that trip I was never able to return to New York before at the end of the pandemic being on a visa. So
there was a sense of melancholy but also a sense of panic in those images.
I don't know where we are in terms of the time line. Um,
maybe I can see a few more words about the
the different layers. I thought that we didn't talk exactly about the different steps, but there was more than thirty three steps for each painting. So it was really a layered process,
and very often creating the final image was a little bit of like a peeling the skin off in some parts. So the skin, and the effect of the skin was also kind of a pattern that you can see in the images themselves like the dry earth
or when the paint's dry and it creates some kind of skin. I don't know if some of you are familiar with this text of Kristeva, the power of horror, where she is talking also about the skin of the milk.
So these were sort of like inspiration, a little bit in the background. They are not direct references, but I saw in the process itself of making the work
there was a relationship with uh the idea of skin and the idea of like peeling and different layers, and uh a bit like an onion. There is a Neapolitan expression that says a head is like an onion, and it's something I really like this expression, and I think it relates very much also to the way technology functions as well, with the windows opening into each other.
So through this exploration of these different layers of skin and the different layer of transparency and privacy, maybe the common connection would be
the loss of privacy, but also this: the fact that this loss of privacy is also not something new. This feeling of being seen in control of surveillance, also connect us to our child itself, as well as the feeling of inadequacy and the feeling of failure related to the use of the computer, which also, I think relates to the feeling we have when we are
confronted with the hotlines. I mean, especially if you are a foreigner and you're using a hotline in a different language than your mother tongue.
I wanted to maybe end on a little commentary on this sort of new variation around surveillance and taste which is the suggestions that we now receive; suggestion things we should do in our emails. But also of songs
we should hear, or books we should order, people we should follow. It's a little bit of an element I didn't pay attention to initially, and it's the consequences, of course, of like framing us into a category. But
I wanted to explore a little bit the the reason behind the irritation. I was wondering if it was only the irritation of being spied on, or of being under the gaze of a machine, or of it was something more. And
I was trying to find a phrase that would describe the feeling, and, like the disagreeable feeling I had when I received ads about an object I've consulted online and that I ended up not buying, and it felt to me that it's a little bit like having dinner, and
the day after coming back, and at the table is still the dirty dishes. It's a little bit like being confronted to our own déchets, our own detritus. And this concept also actually is exploring the powers of horror, Julia Kristeva, this idea of what is rejected
in the trash basically. The things that we don't want to see. They are not fresh. They are corrupted.
They are not desirable anymore. And so, there is also something about being confronted to our dirty self. There's a lot of Google searched we do that we don't like to be reminded of and a lot of our impulses are coming from a place of easy satisfaction, or is escapism, and being tracked and being reminded of it, is sort of like slightly disgusting, and maybe a little bit guilt tripping at least.
There is something very logical in the algorithm. But we are not logical as people, and this is also why it's irritating to be confronted with our trash, so to say, like the things we've seen, the object we wanted, the friend we might like.
We are not.
We don't know who we are, and we are not the same person one day and the day after. I feel like one aspect that maybe technology, and especially social technology, and the way it's target advertisement has maybe not understood, is the inconsistency of us human beings. We are not consistent. We may one day want to donate to save the Amazon forest, and another day not even be able to sign
a protest in our neighborhood to save the local garden. There is no logical, or there is not only logic in all behaviour, and one of the reasons for that is obviously that
we are mostly driven by all feelings, and all feelings are extremely volatile. Uh, this is why \I decided to end this talk with a quote of Marcel Proust that doesn't have anything to do with technology, but has a lot to do with how we humans are able to deal with our emotion and the expectation we have towards others.
Thank you,
Stella McDonald: Camille, thank you so much.
At the beginning you referenced, You know your sort of confusion around being invited to speak on technology, and I think you articulated exactly why we invited you. Because there is something very strongly in your work that
almost articulates an ambivalence towards technology, against the way that I think it's commonly perceived. But I think what your talk today did, and what your work does as well is, it looks at the ineffable in and also the complexity of technology. The way it induces anxiety in us, the way that it is a mirror of the human body and human movement and choreography.
The sort of the metaphorical language you use around it as well, technology as an onion, privacy as a skin is so wonderful to hear. So thank you so much for joining us and making the time
to join us and for everyone watching as Camille mentioned, there will be a link to view Gross Fatigue, and I believe other films as well Camille, is that right?
Camille Henrot: I could also send you a link to the film Saturday, which um is a little bit a different topic, but also has to do with um expectation towards technology and activism and a better life. The idea of like fitness, religion aesthetics, how the expectation ofbeing good looking, but also a good person are transformed into and used in the technology. How technology is a product of religion basically
Stella McDonald: Cleanliness is next to godliness perhaps. Well, thank you so much um for joining us, and I wanted to ask. I I mean you don't have to answer this, I'm really curious to see what you're working on next
Camille Henrot: right now I'm working on building a house for myself and my family.
Stella McDonald: How wonderful!
Camille Henrot: That's really occupying a lot of my thoughts. I'm really interested in domestic space. How really small detail of domestic space can be full of meaning and full of sensation.
Yeah, I'm very interested in what brings pleasure in daily life. What gestures bring pleasure in daily life. It's a very Epicurean project. So it's the main project. I have another exhibition at the end of June, but I still don't know so well what I'm going to do. I just know I want to use car parts, that's it.
Stella McDonald: And is your ebay addiction still strong?
Camille Henrot: It's less strong because ebay is way less interesting than it used to be because it
The beginning of eBay was very much like a second hand market, like a flea market, and a lot of it was pictures were made by the user and some of them were really bad pictures or really funny picture. And I think now most of ebay is a lot of it isn't actually second hand project for real. A lot of people are using a standard images, like a commercial images, so it's not as interesting as before, and to be honest I'm glad that i'm healed from that addiction, and that ebay is less interesting because it was very invading. Um,
Yeah, The last thing I I need right now is more object in my house.
Stella McDonald: Well, thank you Camille.
Camille Henrot: Thank you very much.
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