[-empyre-] passports and LHE
School of Missing Studies
info at schoolofmissingstudies.net
Thu Jan 17 02:56:45 EST 2008
Hello everyone,
Thank you Christina for organizing this and for the nice intro; we
are happy to participate.
In the Western Balkans where Lost Highway took place, passports
continue to be a big issue as borders have proliferated and for
example Serbia has changed its country name four times in the last
fifteen years. Yet we found with LHE that today travel in the Western
Balkans is very open for all passports. Here is a little background
and some questions that we throw out for discussion---
Lost Highway Expedition
Project of Centrala Foundation and School of Missing Studies
www.europelostandfound.net
Lost Highway Expedition took place during August 2006 through the
emerging capitals of the Western Balkans. The expedition plotted a
route roughly along the unfinished ‘Highway of Brotherhood and Unity’
as it was called in Yugoslav times, traveling to the nine cities of
Ljubljana, Zagreb, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Skopje, Prishtina, Tirana,
Podgorica, and Sarajevo.
The expedition searched for positive aspects of Balkanization and
explored the emerging distinctions of each new capital city along the
highway. Although the country that this highway was meant to unify no
longer exists, the highway infrastructure remains as a significant
reminder of the ideals of voluntary participation, rebuilding and
connectivity. Today as the highway network is being expanded and the
region is experiencing a different wave of building executed from
individual initiative, the expedition set out to find out more about
these processes and to speculate about its future.
During Lost Highway Expedition almost 300 architects, artists,
writers, curators from around Europe, the Western Balkans, and North
and South America participated along the route with partner
organizations in each city in activities ranging from discussions,
public art actions, guided tours, visits to archives, and picnics. As
everyone organized their own journey, the makeup of the group was
distinct in each city. Yet it temporarily cohered around points of
common interest to investigate the abrupt and continuing structural
and visual transformation of these cities that is both the result and
the engine of the changing realities of the Western Balkans and of
the future of Europe.
Lost Highway Expedition navigated the connections of independent art
and architecture projects in the Western Balkan capitals and
initiated new ones. The expedition did not carry a nostalgic
imperative, but provided fresh opportunities for self-organized,
voluntary participation and relay between the newly-distinct cities.
The expedition generated both individual and collective outputs: self-
propelled artistic projects and research, a collectively-curated
exhibition and the production of Lost Highway Expedition Photobook.
The network that emerged during the expedition has also sparked a
long-term project to gather a source pool of knowledge on
contemporary culture of the Western Balkans as it aspires to a future
in the European Union.
Some questions prompted by the expedition are:
Can travel be a form of political activism? If so, under what certain
conditions?
Is LHE an artwork? Can it be architecture?
Is it necessary to have a material output or a human network as a
result of such an experience, or is it an ephemeral undertaking?
What tools and models might this provide for a new approach to
spatial practice, in terms of architecture, artmaking and curating in
particular?
In comparison with experimental and conceptual art of the 1970s, with
its main preoccupation with communication (whether visual, spatial,
performative, or linguistic), what can we learn from the self-
organized, collaborative aspects of LHE about the development of
“phenomenological,” “situationist,” “relational,” and “participatory”
creative modes?
What are the potentials of undecidability and unfinished
infrastructure, such as those examples seen along LHE?
Katherine and Srdjan
School of Missing Studies
On Jan 16, 2008, at 8:31 AM, Naeem Mohaiemen wrote:
> Simon's reference to India reminded me of a short piece I had
> written for FORUM about India's "illegal" Bangla migrants.
>
> Cloud of Silence in Bangla Town
> http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2007/august/bangla.htm
>
> Read it alongside this companion piece by Udayan Chattopadhyay (he
> and I have been dialoguing about the two Bengals for many years)
>
> Epaar Opaar (This Side, That Side)
> http://www.thedailystar.net/forum/2007/august/epaar.htm
>
> I think it will highlight that issues of passport/citizenship are
> not limited only to North-South crossings, but also South-South.
> India talks about the "Bangladesi illegal menace". Bangladesh in
> turn screams about Burmese refugees (Rohingyas) that have been
> crossing "our" border for last 20 years.
>
> I was flabbergasted to hear of large number of foreign students
> coming to Bangladesh medical schools (my father left the country to
> study), until I discovered that a number of them were Palestinian.
>
> Everywhere in the world, there is always another country whose
> passport is worth still less than yours.
> On Jan 16, 2008 4:58 AM, Simon Biggs <s.biggs at eca.ac.uk> wrote:
> A recent trip to southern India highlighted the issue. This is an
> area that
> is supposedly "booming" but in reality is coming apart at the seams
> as its
> social, technical and political infrastructures collapse under the
> pressures
> of rapid change. The embedded class structures, amplified by passport
> apartheid, feeds a corrupt system where there is little respect for
> human
> life. The benefits of globalisation thus only accrue to those with
> the right
> passports. Others are left to die in the mud. In this context
> perhaps the
> only sensible response to hopelessness is anger?
>
> Regards
>
> Simon
>
>
> On 16/1/08 01:01, Christina McPhee wrote:
>
> > To add salt to the wounds on this issue of passport privilege and
> > site/non-site, I just want to say, that at this moment our mailman
> > software at COFA is apparently censoring Naeem's email so that his
> > posts must be reposted through the moderator, or else they
> completely
> > disappear. In the past years (in late 2006) I recall that the
> filters
> > were censoring in re Arabic/Islamic nomenclature, does anyone recall
> > this? it was in connection with the month that Ana Valdes moderated
> > on Palestinian issues. I am chagrined beyond belief that the list
> > moderating interface doesnt pemit us any way to address this
> situation
> > and that I must appeal to the College of Fine Arts In Sydney
> > adminstrator whom I do not know. Apparently someone at the COFA has
> > set up filters for their lists and -empyre- is adversely affected.
>
>
>
> Simon Biggs
> simon at littlepig.org.uk
> http://www.littlepig.org.uk/
> AIM/Skype: simonbiggsuk
>
> Research Professor in Art, Edinburgh College of Art
> s.biggs at eca.ac.uk
> http://www.eca.ac.uk/
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> empyre forum
> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
>
> _______________________________________________
> empyre forum
> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
______________________________________________________________________
This email has been scanned by the MessageLabs Email Security System.
For more information please visit http://www.messagelabs.com/email
______________________________________________________________________
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://mail.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/attachments/20080116/fd59f04f/attachment.html
More information about the empyre
mailing list