[-empyre-] Last call and a few random posts
Renate Ferro
rtf9 at cornell.edu
Mon Jun 3 03:53:27 EST 2013
Dear all,
Just a quick note that our discussion will be coming to an end later
today. Last chances for any to respond to a post or make any final
thoughts. Many thanks to Ana Valdes whose idea it was to discuss
collaboration this month. I will be sending out a final post for this
month Collaboration: Art Practice, Theory, Activism in just a bit.
Just a moderator's note. We have had odd posts coming though
inadvertently that have not been filtered by our mod site. Case in
point the two last posts from Melinda Rackham and myself will launch
our next month celebrating -empyre's archives. The moderators
apologize.
Renate
On Sat, Jun 1, 2013 at 10:27 AM, Renate Ferro <rtf9 at cornell.edu> wrote:
> Zach thanks so much for the footnote to Jack Halberstarn's "The Queer
> Art of Failure." I think I found a pdf online....
>
> http://centerforthehumanities.org/sites/default/files/media/Queer%20Art%20of%20Failure.pdf
>
>
> On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 6:15 PM, Zach Blas <zachblas at gmail.com> wrote:
>> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>> hi again!
>>
>> i'm glad that renate picked up on failure and its relations to
>> collaboration. i'm quite interested in failure right now, especially
>> how it's recently been taken up in queer theoretical works like jack
>> halberstam's "the queer art of failure." halberstam argues that
>> failure is a crucial component of queer aesthetics, since queers
>> having been failing to conform / adhere to various normalizing
>> impulses for quite some time. halberstam describes failure as a style,
>> a way of life, for queers. here, queer failure is about realizing the
>> potential and other possibilities that open when one doesn't attempt
>> to align with standardized / mainstream notions of success.
>>
>> being attuned to this kind of failure seems rather crucial when
>> collaborating because failure is always occurring. the collaborative
>> process takes its twists, turns, bumps, diversions, and embracing
>> those moments of failure during the collaborative process is what
>> pushes the work further (for me, at least). in the mask-making
>> workshops i've led, the moments of failure have been powerful learning
>> experiences that help me continue to develop these workshops, almost
>> more so than when the workshop goes perfectly (but perfectly has never
>> really happened, of course). i guess what i'm getting at here is that
>> it's really worth embracing those moments of collaborative failure,
>> even if they're painful and difficult.
>>
>> as for the issues of aloneness vs collaboration that ana and renate
>> have brought up, it seems like these two are never really completely
>> detached. the longer i am a practicing artist, the more and more i
>> fully realize just how collaborative art-making is, even if the
>> project isn't explicitly collaborative--from receiving critique and
>> feedback, material help / support, finding exhibition sites...the list
>> can go on and on. even during a collaborative workshop, for example,
>> the creative constraints mentioned previously could be thought of as
>> individualized parts that an artist has pre-determined before the
>> collaborative process begins, so you have both aspects at work here.
>> i'm not that interested in debating whether collaboration or working
>> alone is "natural" or not; we all come to that through our specific
>> social and cultural situatedness. i see no problem with an artist
>> withdrawing to work alone; i enjoy thinking of that gesture as a
>> collaboratively antagonistic relation to sociality.
>>
>> johannes, thanks for your message and questions! i'm really drawn to
>> the mask as an artist because it resides on a blurry boundary between
>> practical use and a more utopic/transformative demand: the mask can
>> aid in practically cloaking oneself from a variety of surveillance
>> devices, but the mask in protest today--from anonymous and black blocs
>> to pussy riot solidarity protests and the zapatistas--is also about
>> positive collective transformation. on this front, the mask is a
>> utopic refusal to be normatively legible, to be represented by the
>> state...there is a commonizing impulse at work with the mask. i see it
>> as a kind of aesthetic, creative, performative exodus that attempts to
>> imagine an exit out of the current socio-political situation. in this
>> sense, i find theoretical work on opacity by philsophers like edouard
>> glissant and nicholas de villier incredibly compelling and useful.
>> their writing insists on a kind of
>> ontological/ethical/politica/creative opacity at the individual and
>> relational levels...and in the midst of global, obsessive drives to
>> standardize how human presence is calculated, parsed, and interpreted
>> by technologies like biometrics and gps, theories of opacity seem so
>> incredibly important and highly needed. also, i'm deeply influenced
>> and moved by much transgender scholarship on the admission and
>> regulation of gender by biometrics and surveillance technologies. work
>> by dean spade and toby beauchamp really expose the violence
>> transgender people encounter with reductive approaches to identity,
>> like biometrics. dean spade has a powerful conception of critical
>> trans resistance that focuses on the idea of transformative justice
>> that is, again, more utopic and impractical, such as prison abolition.
>> but taking such a stance is critical, and i hope the masks i am
>> collectively developing in these workshops are gesturing toward such
>> transformative visions.
>>
>> but you are right, johannes, you can't wear this mask when you're at a
>> border checkpoint--a location where you would absolutely want to. so
>> as an artwork, it's important for the mask workshops to help everyone
>> involved envision and construct a utopic proposition that blurs the
>> relations of practicalities and utopic--perhaps "impossible"--demands.
>> you might think of something like theatre of the oppressed workshops
>> here as a correlation. the interventions we perform are more
>> speculative and creative--but they are certainly real, public, and
>> create tangible disturbances.
>>
>> there are several groups of people / organizations that i want to do
>> these workshops with, and undocumented persons are important to
>> include. but such things take time, as i begin by developing
>> relationships with people instead of just cold-calling them about a
>> workshop.
>>
>> one element of this workshop that has actually been a struggle is
>> color! the masks are always 1 solid color (those creative constraints,
>> again!). but if the masks are about getting out of the normative traps
>> of identity by collectivizing, using colors like black, yellow, and
>> white become troublesome because the masks can be reduced to
>> blackface, yellowface, whiteface. this is an on-going issue that is
>> always addressed in the workshops, and we try to decide on color
>> collectively. but i am still searching for a creative constraint that
>> can offer a way to work with color sustainably, throughout many
>> workshops.
>> _______________________________________________
>> empyre forum
>> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
>>
>>
>
>
>
> --
>
> Renate Ferro
> Visiting Assistant Professor of Art
> Cornell University
> Department of Art, Tjaden Hall Office #420
> Ithaca, NY 14853
> Email: <rtf9 at cornell.edu>
> URL: http://www.renateferro.net
> http://www.privatesecretspubliclies.net
> Lab: http://www.tinkerfactory.net
>
> Managing Co-moderator of -empyre- soft skinned space
> http://empyre.library.cornell.edu/
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empyre
--
Renate Ferro
Visiting Assistant Professor of Art
Cornell University
Department of Art, Tjaden Hall Office #420
Ithaca, NY 14853
Email: <rtf9 at cornell.edu>
URL: http://www.renateferro.net
http://www.privatesecretspubliclies.net
Lab: http://www.tinkerfactory.net
Managing Co-moderator of -empyre- soft skinned space
http://empyre.library.cornell.edu/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empyre
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