Friday, August 19, 2011

transcriptions, 19

transcription19


P l I D L 9 z m P V
p a l i m p s e s t
3 G Q w H Y 1 A y n
a n t i q u a r i a n
R 4 o a H b h l I 8
r e p r o d u c e s
w n 5 I S N L 7 L q
v a n i s h i n g
l J 3 F R T q g 2 0
l i b r a r i a n
M Y H i j 2 S v 8 N
m y s t i f i e d
b S t 5 7 0 9 q T s
b e s t s e l l e r
O r n U Q 1 L C w Z
o r p h i s t i c
A k 9 h k Z F f F m
a r c h a i s m s
A B w m 3 Z E S m g
a m b i g u o u s
Z 6 J p Z 7 y Q 3 a
s o l i l o q u y s
Q z g g T z b a Z Q
o n o m a s t i c
v H 9 H C 3 n m V h
v o y e u r i s m
K 0 a d s c D j s 4
b r o a d c a s t s

Friday, August 12, 2011

A text is a text is a text

1. A rose is a rose is a rose. Like a chair is a chair is a chair… the loop excludes transcendental signifieds. Warhol prints...

2. Since Gertrude Stein, we have seen language moves that no longer fall within the classic forms that have been institutionally validated as "poetic." The "poetic" has become more and more a term that designated a limited paradigm of reading. If it is overblown by many, if any claim is made on its behalf, it indicates not only an over-extension of the term but also an attempt to confer a cultural value to language moves that otherwise would not get any "cultural" or "market" value. Any move in a vast language game that impacts the way we handle that game does not need that label to get attention. Beyond the attempt to insert that move in the institutional market to get some attention, to call any writing "poetic" is narrow, restrictive, self-serving, and self-prophetic.

Thus, a general cultural bias simply reasserted itself when the existence of the category of the "poetic" was assumed a priori as an aspect of language use instead of suspending this assumption for the sake of objective linguistic inquiry. To assume something is not to prove anything. We should try to test another assumption, that there is nothing inherently poetic in the uses of language beyond the rhetorical and the formal, or beyond the market politics of institutions.

3. To remain within a hackneyed definition is to wallow in one's significance pond: a semantic self-delusion. It is to be caught up in the force of one's own can of demonstratives. To be unaware of a linguistic fantasy is naïveté; to be aware and to continue in the same path is self-delusional; to be aware of this awareness is a second-degree fantasy, that of self-parody.

Finally, to dismiss or to devalue powerful language moves that fall outside of our own valorized forms and rituals (especially when those moves offer inversions and critiques of our valued word order) is to display one of the most short-sighted traits of negative discrimination.

Beckett & the impossible voice

By intensely interrogating the line that divided discursivity and narrativity, the meta-textual procedures deployed by «Texts for Nothing» exposed the aporetic dynamic of the Beckettian oeuvre. As a failed voyager in a landscape that seems to impede progress at every turn, the Beckettian personnage never goes anywhere. The blocage seems to come from an essential difficulty: what is the difference between the speaking "I" and the narrating "I"?

The answer always sounds obvious. The first one does not tell a story and only speaks. The speaking "I" speaks because speech is done in the present, and the person saying "I" is the same person referred to by the word "I." This disambiguated state of the speaking "I" is its deictic advantage. When this "I" speaks, it cannot be part of a story. Even in a homodiegetic narrative, the speaking "I" cannot be part of the story without first becoming a narrator. In other words, I cannot tell a story at the same time as I am living its events. It would be magical to see the "I" realize the events of a story at the same moment it is spoken, like some kind of performative act. Towards the magical ending of One Hundred Years of Solitude, for example, the narrative time and time of narration coincide. If the "I" says "It is a Tuesday" and it is not really Tuesday, we start to think that this "I" is probably deluded or hallucinating. Or this "I" is probably not deluded at all or crazy, but is in fact telling a story in which the events that are being told are happening on a Tuesday. The "I" certainly cannot make the day a Tuesday just by saying it.

When "I" says It is a Tuesday when it is not a Tuesday, and if it is certain we are not hearing mad speech, then what we have is a memory or story. The question we then ask is: who or what or where is this "I"? Can a machine tell a story? If by "can" we mean having the physical capacity to produce words, whether as recording or as programmed strings, then we say Yes. But if "can" means to function as a narrator, dependable or not, real or not, then we tend to say No because we seem to require more from a narrator than just the ability to reproduce sound. (Another example: a grocery list is not a story primarily because we can't see any narrator in it.) However, the fact that anything can take the role of the narrator, living or not, already tells us about its indefinite nature. It is simply a linguistic function.

At the beginning of "Texts for Nothing," the homodiegetic speaker/narrator appears "suddenly." This instantaneous appearance on the scene is immediately followed by an assertion of the inability to "go on." On the second sentence, an indefinite "someone" addresses the speaker, forming a dialogical pair: "You can't stay here." This is quite understandable, and the contradiction is only apparent: the narrator function cannot have a deictic status in the here-and-now of discourse. But this situation is made more complex by the third line, which probably summarizes the whole aporetic dynamic of the text: "I couldn’t stay there and I couldn’t go on." This situational cycle repeats itself, and carries the speaker, strangely, for many more pages to come: " And were there one day to be here, where there are no days, which is no place, born of the impossible voice the unmakable being, and a gleam of light, still all would be silent and empty and dark, as now, as soon now, when all will be ended, all said, it says, it murmurs." The "impossible voice," "the unmakable being": don't these fit a good description of the narrator function? The weirdness of this voice comes from the fact that it is no one and nothing, and yet it speaks. "It’s not true, yes, it’s true, it’s true and it’s not true, there is silence and there is not silence, there is no one and there is someone, nothing prevents anything." Impossible, and yet cannot be unmade.

And who is the narrator's interlocutor? Is it another character? The indefinite nature of the interlocutor reveals the monological status of the text: "Someone said, perhaps the same, What possessed you to come?" Here we see one instance of the coincidence between the narrating "I" and the narrated "I." Often, too, this bipolarity extends to the problematic attempts of the narrator/speaker to include contextual orientation in the text, elements that would normally be deictic parts of discourse: "I’ll describe the place, that’s unimportant...." "How long have I been here, what a question...." "And now here, what now here...."

This aporetic movement may all seem to reaffirm the clear distinction between discourse and narrative, between the speaking "I" and narrating "I," but the substantial use of language items we normally associate with a speech situation coupled with the constant breakdown of any attempt to produce a progressive narrative line also seem to point out a difficulty that still requires resolution. The clear-cut distinction we thought we had between the two "I"s is always creating a problem: on one hand, a totally narrative "I" would be an impossible voice, a "someone" without place and time except in language; on the other, a totally discursive "I" with full deictic capacities would not be able to tell a story. In short, it becomes a choice between an impossible narrative which exists as a "nothing" ("Whose voice, no one’s, there is no one, there’s a voice without a mouth...") and a very restrictive speech that simply speaks but cannot ever progress without first falling into narrative, thereby losing its full deictic status and becoming another "nothing." 

However, if " to speak of once, is to speak of nothing," then any use of language that does not carry with it any trace of story-telling or any trace of re-citation cannot even begin to exist as speech. Even in a conversation that goes "How do you feel?"/"I feel better now, thanks" is presumably carried within a stream of history laid out as a narrative or memory. An absolutely unique speech that happens only once for the first time and once only cannot be repeated or remembered. It is a speech that can't go anywhere, a speech that we can't even imagine to happen. 

As the quandary of nothingness at every turn, this voiceless voice keeps turning, mute speech that echoes its absence again and again. Time without time, space without space, these texts for nothing outline a zone where language speaks when it narrates, and narrates when it speaks.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Beckett's alibi (2004)

Posting something written many years ago:

     Beckett’s oeuvre represents one of the most sustained meditations on the nature of writing (we could mention Derrida, Jabès, Blanchot, Queneau up to Perec, Barthes, Calvino or Borges, Barth, among many others). Maybe the 20th century should be called the Century of Writing, following the « lingusitic turn » in discplinary and philosophical concerns after Nietzsche and Saussure.

     In general terms, the work « Texts for Nothing » (TFN) marks the moment in literature where writing can no longer be viewed as either representational (object-action-events) or expressionistic (conscious-unconscious self), or even an objet d’art in the neoclassical sense of Form or in the Parnassian concept of Art for Art’s sake. Hence, the mode of subjectivity « simulated » in TFN is one of bleak desperation (desespoir), and the textual « dynamic » one of self-contradiction (in all senses of the word as logical-linguistic conflict and mutual exclusion, as postulation and cancellation, as the proffering of one statement and its reverse, etc.). In syntactic terms, this can be seen in the paratactic and repetitive organization of the text, and in the exploitation of the comma to signify a continuous inconclusion or irresolution, or the lack of a teleological completion of thought or action. It is no doubt part and extension of the « stream of consciousness » technique in late modernism, a mode of utterance that the speaking «voice» deploys as a signature of its inscription as a dramatic monologist in search of narrative form.

     In this condition, the fabula of TFN can be seen as basically that : the search for narrative form (or sjuzhet). It marks a later stage in the progressive obsolescence of narrative elements that had Sarraute and Queneau searching for their « characters» in terms of their « identity » or « presence ». As a search for narrative form, the dramatic monologist cannot therefore deploy narrative as a means to such an end. This implies that at the very outset, all rhetorical elements belonging to the repertoire of narrative would be either interdicted, suspended, or, if used, requalified and even contradicted. This explains the momentary lapses of TFN into some occasional « pockets » of recognizable « story » threads and its eventual abandonment of them. Furthermore, as a mode of desperate search for narrative form, the « psycho-emotive » state of the monologist would translate into various types of blocage : uncertainties or doubts, indefiniteness, hesitations, reluctance, dilemmas, impotence, apprehension, difficulties, scruples, misgivings, vaccilations, etc. These forms of blocage are the direct result of the realisation that the search for narrative form cannot escape using the elements of narrative for its initiation. Hence, the incipits are often not foundational commencements for a sjuzhet about to unfold, but periodic bursts of intense blocages. In other words, the search for narrative form outside of the narrative format cannot even begin, cannot even dream of beginning. (Is it not that a narrative is defined precisely by a quest, that it is in itself the modus operandi of any search ?)

     How can the search for narrative form, which must take the narrative format as supposition, even begin when the fact of inaugurating the search activates the form immediately ? By this activation, the monologist translates his/her search into narrative, narrates his/her search as s/he searches for narrative form, and marks the site of the split of the subject into the multiple positions of monologist, author, narrator, figure, and narratee, and reader. The advent of multiplicity is probably not the greatest threat that ends the search and transfroms it into the object of the search ; the greatest threat is that, by incarnating narrative form at the moment of the search for form (by suspension of form, of course), the monologist abdicates or evacuates his/her position of priority as presence before form, and marks his/her inscription into and via narrative, terminates or executes his search, and, thus, heralds his/her non-presence as the prelinguistic space or origin of speech. The monologist, becoming plural, assumes the face of the other/s, resumes the speech and voice of the other/s, and most importantly, begins to inhabit the space of the other/s, which is the space of writing, the space of death and disappearance, atopia...

     But our monologist stubbornly pursues a logic or ethic of refusal against a capitulation to the Other, to death, to Nothingness. It is the desperate cry of the dying nostalgia for a presence, that metaphysical Now and Here space of Being prior to the irruption of difference. And yet, how can one be in two places at the same time ? That would really be an alibi.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Kenneth Goldsmith & "Uncreative Writing"

Kenneth Goldsmith's two new books on "conceptual" or/and "uncreative" writing:

1. Against Expression: An Anthology of Conceptual Writing (Northwestern University Press, Chicago, 2011)
2. Uncreative Writing: Managing Language in a Digital Age (Columbia University Press, New York, 2011)

Here are some quotes from his discussion of "Conceptual poetics" (http://www.sibila.com.br/index.php/sibila-english/410-conceptual-poetics):

"If it all sounds familiar, it is. Conceptual writing obstinately makes no claims on originality. On the contrary, it employs intentionally self and ego effacing tactics using uncreativity, unoriginality, illegibility, appropriation, plagiarism, fraud, theft, and falsification as its precepts; information management, word processing, databasing, and extreme process as its methodologies; and boredom, valuelessness, and nutritionlessness as its ethos. Language as material, language as process, language as something to be shoveled into a machine and spread across pages, only to be discarded and recycled once again. Language as junk, language as detritus. Nutritionless language, meaningless language, unloved language, entartete sprache, everyday speech, illegibility, unreadability, machinistic repetition. Obsessive archiving & cataloging, the debased language of media & advertising; language more concerned with quantity than quality. How much did you say that paragraph weighed?

"I teach a class at the University of Pennsylvania called “Uncreative Writing,” which is a pedagogical extension of my own poetics. In it, students are penalized for showing any shred of originality and creativity. Instead, they are rewarded for plagiarism, identity theft, repurposing papers, patchwriting, sampling, plundering, and stealing. Not surprisingly, they thrive. Suddenly, what they’ve surreptitiously become expert at is brought out into the open and explored in a safe environment, reframed in terms of responsibility instead of recklessness.

Well, you might ask, what’s wrong with creativity? “I mean, we can always use more creativity.”(1) “The world needs to become a more creative place.”(2) “If only individuals could express themselves creatively, they’d be freer, happier.”(3) “I’m a strong believer in the therapeutic value of creative pursuits.”(4) “To be creative, relax and let your mind go to work, otherwise the result is either a copy of something you did before or reads like an army manual.”(5) “I don’t follow any system. All the laws you can lay down are only so many props to be cast aside when the hour of creation arrives.”(6) “An original writer is not one who imitates nobody, but one whom nobody can imitate.”(7)

When our notions of what is considered creative became this hackneyed, this scripted, this sentimental, this debased, this romanticized . . . this uncreative, it’s time to run in the opposite direction. Do we really need another “creative” poem about the way the sunlight is hitting your writing table? No. Or another “creative” work of fiction that tracks the magnificent rise and the even more spectacular fall? Absolutely not."

Fantastic machines of rewriting and retranscription? As textual (re)productions that are not expected to be "read," Goldsmith's work may be seen as an extension of his beginnings in the plastic arts. The texts produced are re-produced or recycled, not as a book in the classical sense of a container/carrier of meaning and information, but as an archival artifact presenting the frenzied & omnipresent (re)production of more language material than we can handle or read. The more likely display space is the collector's gallery rather than the library. This does not mean that Goldsmith is forging new objects as "art" pieces, knowing well that he situates his process along the lines of "conceptual" exercises that include Duchamp and Beckett (Watt) as predecessors.

Craig Dworkin ("The Fate of Echo" in Against Expression):

"With conceptual writing, in contrast, the force of critique from the very beginning was just the opposite: to distance ideas and affects in favor of assembled objects, rejecting outright the ideologies of disembodied themes and abstracted content. The opacity of language is a conclusion of conceptual art but already a premise for conceptual writing. The very procedures of conceptual writing, in fact, demand an opaquely material language: something to be digitally clicked and cut, physically moved and reframed, searched and sampled, and poured and pasted. The most conceptual poetry, unexpectedly, is also some of the least abstract, and the guiding concept behind conceptual poetry may be the idea of language as quantifiable data....

"Writing, in these cases, referred more to itself, or to other instances of writing, than to any referent beyond the page. Oriented toward text rather than diegesis, these works present writing as their subject rather than imagining writing to be the means to a referential end."

Cut & paste: the very logic of quotation, no longer of an original or originating source, but of another quotation. However, to say that a quotation "reveals" the meaning of another quotation is to revert to the classical paradigms of reading. The consequence of a conceptual writing projected this way would also require a different definition of reading.

Monday, August 8, 2011

transcriptions, 18

transcription18


U c D d T h m n r B
d i t h y r a m b
P a s A s U p I E c
p a r a s i t e s
c J p b m e g r J V
s u b m e r g e d
Y t e L n T j i q p
e n t e l e c h y
j Q w q H a Q V g f
e x h a u s t i v e
s p y w s D v v E s
a s y n d e t o n
A N q b m g Z C d k
a m b u s c a d e
P S n d Y o Y Z k e
p a l i n d r o m e
U R c S C b q w Q v
u r b a n i t a s
B b C Y l r g D f v
c y c l o t r o n
C k C s h c q I g N
c r a s h s i g n
f F G E s t f s H J
u n e v e n t f u l
T b e C c Z d Q o w
t e n a c i o u s
G e Y y d w h b N b
g e n e r a t i o n

Saturday, July 30, 2011

transcriptions, 17

transcription17


I b X K n N X s T r q R M V q R I S m u
i n e x i s t e n t t o r q u e m u t i s m
a y z u b d x X K I j g P K I j N c W g
s u b d i v i d e s p i n n i n g c o r e
Y k R z c D J E O r e D V z i P A Y a M
r e a d o u t r e d u c t i o n i s m s
D J K C A C i W t q R d U q N c R N m S
d e c i m a l r u d i m e n t n u m b e r
d m O j L X s n E p k f i Q o k h y U I
d e m o n s t r a t e d f r i c t i on
Y a Z A Y G h Y w V N A N j F j R X S E
a n a l y z i n g n a n o u n i v e r s e
g f K l X X s x R O g J a b Q a g p X o
g e n e s i s r o g u e l a b o r a t o r y
L x P Z O j Z O X v p n L p O x s q c a
u n o r t h o d o x p h o n o l o g y
X c Q q l n g U S E Z B O t h r i G f T
p o o l i n g f u s e d p o s t s c r i p t
j x W x U c H z m K X a i A f f a R h p
e x h a u s t s m e t a p h o r i c a l
T M p Z l r s L j u n w j B D n I U I w
t e m p o r a l i n d i v i d u a l s
w Q z G G x r z s E p R b t i l t a x Q
w o r k i n g r e a d a b i l i t y E Q
O C o f X i x R r K Z R x o a Z T D l R
o b f u s c a t e s r e a c t o r t i d e
e D Y A L W G s w R Q W C P K B E Q T c
r e d r a w i n g w o r d b r a c k e t s

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

transcriptions, 16

 transcription16


D Z a u T K V F C o d e m o t i o n
S P H f S X R r l n o n s e r i a l s
j V w q z E L g b A l a n c i n g
P O L v b c f a c t s o l u b l e s
e R A t g f q G v r a t i f i e d
h A V r u L P I n k b e h a v i o r
F A n D u v R b w g a n d e r i n g
T W g Y i q q N A h e m i s t i c h
s H E w F X L t O h g e s t a l t
Q W n k o B X j h b l o w o u t s
X g E l l U y l p e r e x c l u d e d
z l R J X p Z Z z c i r c u i t r y
c v P z r C T q s r e a s s e r t s
i g Q U a Q B H o t i n q u i r y
p y Q t J J O D X z p r o j e c t s
y z p Y B n q a d v e n t u r i n g
T t H a w d f t o m e t a d r a f t
G z x m a d D K d r a m a t i c
k Q H g l S v h o r e s o l v e s
B I q b k q h T u s i g n a t u r e
c N Q r f n Z o f c o n t r o l s
I N a B s y V f g i n v i s i b l y
D m c M B s h m r e m e m b e r
n p b v F l R Z H p r e v i s e d
E h t a A N y b l s e n t e n t i a l
A R h A N I a O r h a r m o n i c
c W m Y h l e O K a s s e m b l e d
M D K i m n T C s m i m e t i c s

Friday, July 22, 2011

Asemic logos : Letter lamps



Meaningfulness

1. Meaningfulness cannot be universalized from a single source.

2. Meaningfulness does not necessarily lead to more meaningfulness.

3. Meaningfulness can be socialized in group fantasy rituals (cults, fads, fevers, schools, gangs, etc.).

4. Meaningfulness does not exclude meaningless sources.

5. Meaningfulness is not necessarily the property of a group or a language.

6. Meaningfulness can just be fictional.

7. Meaningfulness is a transfer of value with no end.

8. Meaningfulness can turn up anywhere with very little belief.

9. Meaningfulness is between us all the time.

10. Meaningfulness is with us for only a while.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

transcriptions, 15

transcription15


5 V E y e N C B s s
s e q u e n c e s
x z 9 4 5 m N v 7 b
e x a m i n e d
v j 5 2 d s U O H 4
v i s u a l i z e d
R G V u C C m q v C
r i g m a r o l e
Y h x C J X t 2 1 6
e x t e m p o r e
t 9 X P 6 o A p A 0
t o p o g r a p h s
8 d m t X i l Y V z
a d m i t t i n g
K I 7 k X U u e R t
r i t u a l i s t
C t w S X 8 D B y m
d y n a m i s m
s D L d 4 f 8 W 6 l
s o l i d i f i e d
e 2 K 7 Z X G w 5 T
e r g o n o m i s t
R 4 o V k V W j t n
r e v o l u t i o n
M 0 q d T I W v e F
m o t i v a t e d
D P Z F s 2 n J F 8
d i s p e r s i o n

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

transcriptions, 14


transcription14


r B e L 6 2 z H Q n e R F q w b e n f d
b a b e l z o n e r e f i n e d
X s s 8 p 3 6 I T D 3 6 C r X K K 4 Z b
e x p l o i t e d e c p h r a s i s
H r 7 H x P p U 2 X e Y u e f M 8 j B v
h i g h e x p u r g a t e d m o t i f
o 4 H 8 m r w o S Z b L 9 U p E I 8 J i
m o r o n i c o s c i l l a t i o n
e V B 6 r Y l d F z f X C o 5 g c C 1 Y
e v e r y d a y f r e q u e n c y
N y d j d 9 6 K K W b O L H 8 N X 5 X 5
n i g h t l y e l e c t r o l y s i s
X n R H v i w N s f Z a E C X 1 1 g 2 L
f a r m i n g f a c t u a l i t y
y Y Z f N G 9 5 s 9 s J U e x v J n W e
u n d e f i n e d j u d g m e n t s
a s 5 c 8 b O 2 e w T r W I F d H K O b
a s s o c i a t e d w i t h o u t
U V Q F R C S g e v c N I m R 6 E W v n
u n f o r g e d n u m b e r i n g
B g E r u 5 k e o f 1 C U N a u x o F m
b r e a k o f f i c i a l a x i o m
K i C Q 5 D L y O p t V 2 T L A z 1 L W
k i n e t i c o p t i m a l
q q a l K I 5 N 5 J G r K J 1 p k r F T
q u a l i f i e d g r a v i t y
X X Z I H I e Y c E R D s c B R b N m 8
q u a n t i f y c r u d e b r a n e s

Friday, July 8, 2011

transcriptions, 12

transcription12

z 6 j 2 E 9 V 6 b D
a I r s c a p e s
f O V W y k o o d v
f o l l o w I n g
l I E t d z X 8 R G
l e t t e r I n g
e U L x H x o x n v
e u p h o n I c
U R E x 6 b z 2 l S
o n e I r o s
k h l F p Q j A G C
h I j a c k s
G C E o h e 5 v w N
g e o d e s I c
C b w 3 2 T 6 f l V
c e n t u r I e s
X v u Y H 9 7 g n 6
e x e c u t I n g
1 l J j 6 T H x r 6
I l l u s t r a t e d
v a R r 0 D D Q 9 f
p a r o d I e s
n s 7 S p C P q 4 8
n e t s p a c e
D l z I k k z D R g
d I z z y I n g
Q D M H r S V I D d
d I m e n s I o n

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

transcriptions, 11

transcription11


8 s S e R F R j o r
a s s e r t I o n
8 s S e R F R j o r
s e c r e t I o n
8 s S e R F R j o r
i n f e r I o r
8 s S e R F R j o r
o u t e r-f o a m
8 s S e R F R j o r
d I s s e c t i o n
8 s S e R F R j o r
o v e r r I d e
8 s S e R F R j o r
e r u d I t i o n
8 s S e R F R j o r
c r o s s-o v e r
8 s S e R F R j o r
s e d e n t a r y
8 s S e R F R j o r
e x t e r I o r
8 s S e R F R j o r
l e a s e-f o n t
8 s S e R F R j o r
p r e s e n t o r
8 s S e R F R j o r
o b s e r v e r
8 s S e R F R j o r
a f t e r s h o c k

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

transcriptions, 9-10

transcription9


E S r i q T X i N G
s t r I n g i n g
Y M b t I f t S h Y
m y s t i f I e d
k b I 0 3 r 0 Y G g
c r y o g e n I c
V R C n 7 g H o M 3
a n g s t r o m
1 4 N Q 0 O U a 0 V
t r I-n o v u m
m q U T h 3 f 8 J O
m y t h-f o l d s
2 U g T g x x 8 W 5
m u l t I-s e m i c
L z x v K y 2 U W t
l e x I–c u l t
z k w W t 4 t 5 w n
b e t a–c l o w n
G 4 H i O 6 c R x Z
g r a p h o n I c
x X c X 1 y 8 S 4 Q
x e n o p h o b e
F A 8 C K B H f Z c
f a n t a s I z e
9 O g P r O Q G 7 V
a n t I-p r o o f
2 Z G D I K g b 8 x
a d d I n g-b o x



transcription10


n M t p T Y T w k e
n a n o-t y p e
u B R e C L p D S e
s u r-e c l I p s e
r t Q 3 5 b W T K 9
r o o t-w a k e
v r f h k a 9 Y S E
a n a p h a s e
f f n L g P w r D d
f l I n g-d r a w
X d a p 3 h s u m o
a d a p t I s s i m o
A n S g e N l h x M
a n a e s t h e t e
4 3 N n v o 2 3 V O
f o r u m-v o l t
C T A D I Y F x a K
s t e a d y-f a c t
G t X 2 Z X k g 6 5
g e n e r a t I n g
I c h P k U y 2 T x
i n t u I t e d
s C b M s c T N y g
s u b s t a n t I v e
R D 1 Y i t J 8 0 W
r a d I a t e d
u p z a o m B Z K h
z a u m-b o o k

Monday, June 27, 2011

transcriptions, 8

transcription8

n 2 k 0 w S S 3 p n
s h o w-s p i n
A X N g X I l 3 7 i
a u x I l I a r y
3 x U N 2 d N v u y
r u n-e n v o y
v 0 u j 5 I n 1 q Z
f o u n d-s I g n
p J O G y C f H x n
p r o g e n I c
a g h b N 2 l d q D
a g e n t-l o a d
j 3 P f S Z v E l 4
g e s t u r a l
W e D c l 5 d 3 8 W
m I d d l e-v I e w
I j X Q 0 T J a 3 O
q u o t I e n t
f I D u H a c F O 7
t r u e-f a c t o r
1 j 5 7 e d s O 5 P
p l a t e-d r o p
k S u Y r E j 4 v R
s c r e e n e r
s b H f j I t A Z k
s u b–s t a f f
E 0 a n B 5 U r b i
l o a n-b l u r b

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

transcriptions, 7


transcription7


E q W X r E 2 Z e h
e x t r e m i s
e m q x 6 G 0 t W J
e r g o s u m
p W r l N U 2 M h g
p o w e r I n g
V 0 w y 8 p M 6 S 6
v o y e u r i s m
a L M 8 I r 0 C 3 8
m i r a c l e s
p r x X g 9 p W 1 5
p r e s s u r e
o F M u m 6 S Z 4 u
a m u s e d
V b h u C m 2 h f d
v o l u m e s
4 F w N k v T i O G
q u e s t I o n
t S I d l p M r t t
s I d e-l i m I t
E 1 2 4 C 6 f j s R
e r r a t I c
L h I t Y p o Q G 3
l I n e-p o l e s
N h y T 0 i K w 7 1
n e g a t o r y
m D 6 5 O H k d K v
m a c r o-h e a d

permutation & fantasy

A dice thrown unhinges words from a center. They begin to float, as if ignorant of origins and ends. It was an iconic moment. It was as if writing rediscovers pictorial space as a way of decentering language at a time when the pictorial arts are abandoning classical spaces (visual poetry, for instance). First, the linearity of writing is repositioned in a multi-directional space. Next, linguistic elements regain their visual and material weight over plain symbolic or metaphoric functions. Then they shed their classical formal constituents and organizing principles, from semantic associations to generic markers and syntactic orders. Finally, they recover an infinite space of multi-directional distribution and transformation. The liberating movement from an "abstract" or logico-syntactic mode of organization towards a more "concrete" or spatio-material  mode is further extended by the "dynamization" of the notion of the "concrete" as a realm of indeterminacy (the new "abstract").

The disappearance of classical spaces spawned various species of materialism and conceptualism: the object became more formal and material, non-symbolic, and at the same time, conceptualist (cultural and historical fantasy). But we can also say that, with the disappearance of classical spaces. traditional materials found a closer affinity with a decentered language. In an "action" painting, for example, the "content" pointed at is an intersection of event, process, and material, with the randomized production representing a non-pictorial, non-deterministic space. Directional and formal markers have disappeared, leaving us only with the impression of an extensive, non-teleological material process.

The various possibilities of a post-pictorial, permutational space: noise & the open line. The approach has always been a dualist contradiction. Permutational space is everywhere; it forces you to read, however errant your effort may be. But it does not end there: any moment of subjectivity or fantasy is swallowed back by the noisy sea, which reaffirms its inescapable power in the meeting space of subjective and objective chance: the open line.

Monday, June 20, 2011

transcriptions, 6

transcription6


m 6 V V G j Q Q 1 w
m o t I o n- c l u e
B n p P F 5 C 3 x z
r e f o c a l I z e
r p o h H s I 4 T S
p r o s e I s t
A j t v r w F o d Q
a t t e n t I on
b 7 C T B b 3 L I N
b u b b l I n g
b H A B 6 y 0 b z c
b a r y o n I c
N O W g T w f k 7 f
n o w-w e I g h
S 3 6 m g I y N o Q
s a m e-t h I n g
f r M R N m 9 k 2 P
f o r m I n g
U S O r R B d h l R
s o b e r-b I r d
m A 7 M e X l e s g
m a x I m I z e d
c C 3 C X o 8 d 4 t
c r e a t I o n
3 V I C L x N a x b
v I s I o n-l a n e
f i V v L g x U p z
f I g u r e s-u p

Sunday, June 19, 2011

transcriptions, 4-5

transcription4

r j E 1 I X L t l h N M C u N J 5 p E S
p r e f i x l i m i t c u n e i f o r m
3 w r 0 M d c 2 0 o J z h p y F 1 7 a O
r o a m i n g c o p y f u n c t i o n
A 6 1 5 R u N f h Y I j A 4 B g 8 o 0 T
o v e r r u n F Y I r e b o o t s
t p I b Q N I D e F S 6 X z m B y q z r
b i t-d e f i n e d p a s s e r b y
H J a 6 C 5 I 3 V y Q K w 0 6 O 9 d c p
d e e p h a p t i c w o r k
t 7 g 1 H X h I F U R P C Q 4 L I P M n
b i f u r c a t e s f l i p s
k v k o B b 8 l c 1 C y 8 6 o J K c I D
c y c l i c i d b o b b l e s
L M h 8 W X t 6 T U I A L f n I 8 o P B
t e x t u a l f i n i t e r o w
J g 2 y e N J C K A u h s N R M o H w w
h u s h e n g i n e r o o m
y B V 3 m J 2 z w o 9 c 3 Y 2 d 0 M V A
b e a m s w o n d e r d o m e
M d S J 6 g s Z A g f q R x t 2 y v G 7
m e d i u m s i g n r o t a t i o n s
U 3 p 2 g B m g g z Q O e P 6 W D I I h
u p g r a d e z o o m  w i d e n i n g
N x d c y 4 V S k G Z F z L 0 7 3 g w v
n o n-d y n a m i c s f o l l o w
D e Y r 1 e U I y u 5 J O l H F 9 I L R
d e n a t u r e d r e-f i l e r



transcription5

c l K I C W S x 6 D b m a D L k H i m 6
c l o c k w i s e d e m a n d  l i k e
q e d 2 B p f w Z 4 g M P r W 3 Q y 3 g
Q E D-p o w e r e d m e e t i n g s
N N L 3 K K f R R r 3 e w 4 q v h W h L
n o n-e l e c t r i f y i n g r e n e w a l
O R H C B 0 M m L m I 5 P S I Q B Y e E
o v e r m i n i m a l p s y c h e
2 4 d W I e R e I 6 T K g 8 I 2 M I 0 Y
2 4 h-w i r e d i n t e n s i f i e r
N m 8 u x U p n y t H B x Z Y g N M X f
m u m m i f y  t h e s i g n a l
I j Z I b h x K K d 5 Z a G D R 4 Y R F
b e h i n d t h e g r a f t e d
y y 5 N k R G P j A L w d 9 s R B X z 7
i n k-p a l e d e s e r t s
x G 7 F 8 a n E c Q 8 Y v k K X r s J c
a l p h a-e c h o s e c r e c y
S g S Y x 0 s 7 L U P I W F z Q m a V H
s p o k e n l u d i c f r e e d o m
O n K G g L 8 s g O J S g b u 7 p l q o
o n g l a s s a s s u m p t i o n
f c v 0 M Z b o f D a n r 9 U 1 p F g 8
f a v o r e n d a n g e r i n g
7 Y Q U a U I 1 D f w 6 W L x 2 L Y u Y
q u i d d r a w n f u l l y
Q H E 7 H 6 F J O j k G 0 J k H c I V h
q u e s t i o n i n g o r j o k i n g

Saturday, June 18, 2011

transcriptions, 1-3

transcription1

c 2 X 1 u L n P u c u L I I m s F r U Q
c a r b o n c u l t u r e l i m i t s
6 9 T U a 1 7 b 9 O y 8 Y 4 P 4 u e m C
a c t u a l b o d y f o r E m c 2
e b p J D J c K d P o E X 8 k d o E w e
e b b i n g p o e t r y d o w n
E O Y J X c a W E 0 y M 8 Y c C H 7 H R
t h e e x c l a m a t i o n c h a i r
N P C T f y h t u 2 h 7 M u 9 C j f W I
n o c i t y m u s c l e w i t h
E l n m g y I P J P 7 C v Y t N n q j R
i m a g i n e d c o u n t r y n e a r
E I O D p 5 P 1 r Z 1 C 2 b I O D g D F
e x p i r a t i o n b i o d e g r a d a b l e
1 I x V 9 c O u c Y K 5 5 I C l b p 2 Z
l i t c o u c h c y c l e b e e p s
0 h P S g O X P L U v X C z h A k e Z M
p a s t s h a k e s t h e m
a L w W p R c g A A O K T p H I T Z b t
a l l o w s p r a c t i c e
o W Q q u z 6 p x R L E H 0 k 6 r j R 2
q u e s t i o n s w h o l e s c o r e
S U g P D O e 6 S d 3 O o x 9 k D V E q
u n d o e s 3-D d r i v e s
A r j K N h u O 9 L P E v 6 6 q j t z h
k n o w i n g h e l p e d q u i t
0 d K H x L c 1 g 2 h O g K z o V o J N
O K g o n e s o o n




transcription2

d 1 l Y k p 5 4 S f N P A 7 L T 3 m 1 K
l i k e n o p l a c e o f l a t e
J 9 c 6 c q j v 0 j h I E F 6 3 E I h i
j u n g l e h e t e r o p h o n y
Q I V r e P r q 1 g J V T w l f V D 9 N
p r e p a r e s q u a l i t y f i e l d
7 l H 1 t a r u p X H O s S 9 v k F O J
h i t & r u n h u s t le
P D j k d K J o B r I q 9 T T S N Y B J
b r i g h t j o b s t a t i o n
3 4 h 1 G Y N 2 t H T 5 s K b f T w 2 Y
w h i s t l e i n t h e n i g h t
V 6 y d D 3 Y I N x b d I x O F J n l s
y i n y a n g f i n a l e
L 1 O L r b 4 B E 4 g z j 3 U E o e a 6
u p p er l o b e b e c o m e s
n R I z j d G f m C E N N a w u 9 t s p
r i d i n g c e n t e r s t e p
e J 1 B 3 P E B v 1 M 0 m Y K D K r e 7
p r o b a b i l i t y c e r t i f i e d
u V e 4 1 n u Y s J 6 w T H r Z K O 3 7
e v e n i n g n u l l s t h r o w
7 z B i 9 s y 4 t Z X C V H l K m G h m
b u s y s i te c h a n c e a g a i n
h L a 5 w v 9 K W D A B y j Q S z N g 0
l a t e w a v e d a n c e  a n d g o
v F g r w q 8 3 7 9 I L W x m E v 6 0 d
f o r w a r d m e t a-m o o d




transcription3

o 1 X a J r 4 G 0 d P H y c u v I M P 4
e x p o r t p h y s i c a l g o d
Y c K 4 A w 0 G G t v j m G W M h v a 5
y a w n i n g w o r l d g e m
r F j o R 2 4 0 X y 5 v g h R k I e x W
f o r m u l a t e c o m p l e x w a v e
E N R d X K U R u R o G W c X z A h Y Y
e n d r o g u e g a l a x y c u r l
z c A c L g Y I q 8 Y 0 m y a F h Y r H
m y o p i c f l a s h c a l a m i t y
q R p O p a c q g F g 6 R x 6 U 0 a D N
o p a q u e r u n n e r b e n d
a 5 n L Z O n E u a z j p N Q E N 0 w E
z o n e i n t h e q u e u e
H y p J R 8 8 q K 6 I k U Y l y R M N 6
h y p n o t i c q u i c k m i n e
7 0 B N G K f S Y x 1 t b X 8 M J o M q
o b v i o u s s y s t e m a t i c
1 J I B O q 1 q V 5 Q 5 I v 6 F K O D X
b o r d e r l i n e q u o t a t i o n
1 j G K P o h d U Q c n T Q P d 7 z f j
g r e e k f o u n d e n t r o p y
q V A Y 2 I t r Q L V v Q 5 V s 3 V P k
w e l l a d v e n t u r e s p e a k s
L Y D g 2 U I 5 Y a C H 5 c H T Z A N h
l e a d l i q u i d c h a n n e l
0 k c Y b R X m x n R i M I 7 J N k V D
b r e a k m i x e d-m i n d k e y



Thursday, June 16, 2011

Noise poetics & the open line

1/  EVERYTHING is noise. that's the fundamental idea.  given any item X, it is noise until an item Y arrives to transform it into a relevant and meaningful thing. however, Y in turn needs Z so that Y could be understood and used to convert X into the opposite of noise. but Z also needs the item A, which would need B, which needs C, and so on. thus, at any given moment, any item X is certain only insofar as it is part of a network of other known things.

IF this network is finite, this can only mean that X can become anything else in another network. in short, what is and is not noise is determined by a systemic process, and cannot be named thus without this nominating support. we cannot know what is meaningful and meaningless, what is not and what is noise before this event. if everything is noise, then we lose all ability to identify it. noise, after all, cannot be meaningfully indicated, without that indication becoming the opposite of noise. it is when we begin having difficulty assigning it that it starts to infect everything else. to qualify something as noise means losing its meaning; to identify something as noise is simply to clothe it with a symbolic value. the same thing happens when we make chance; we cannot create that which happens anyway with or without us.

2/  AS a purely non-symbolic gesture, we cannot create noise. noise creates itself. but noise also creates the symbolic, by passing through us, hiding in our anxiety for meaning, and creating a name for itself. disguised more deeply, it succeeds in producing the first language.

AS a symbolic gesture, the production of noise will always court the inescapable binaries. what it produces is both more noise and more language, or both less noise and less language, yet ultimately neither one nor the other. in this scenario, where conscious effort is within and without noise, the best that could be done is to do nothing else except that minimum effort required to get things moving. that is, the goal is simply to keep it moving, more or less, by doing nothing else.

3/  SINCE everything is an echo of the big bang, everything is a part of its movement, everything is a rule. On the surface, Otto Zitko's chaotic network of entangled lines (not without the occasional strange attractor) seems to be going anywhere and nowhere. yet, there is no error, there is no mistake in all this entangled mass. everything is simply an event in all direction. every gesture, every stroke is an affirmation. his extreme "art of the open line" consumes every angle, and exhausts the full energy of the unbounded line. "as calligraphic expressions of non-literal writing" (Herbert Lachmayr), Zitko's lines crisscross the dimensions of both symbolic and non-symbolic noise, avoiding the language of literal writing through the evocation and evolution of the line into something other and greater than itself.

BY dreaming (Klee), the known line becomes at the beginning a meaningless scribbling, or what appears to be symbolic noise. Pursued further along, however, it becomes something more and something else entirely. neither settling as proto-writing nor as symbolic noise (scrawl, the opposite of the legible), la ligne en libre parcours becomes an event in itself, without ceasing to evoke in its wake the shadowy gestures of a proto-writing that dissolves itself as if by being over-written: proto-writing gives way to noise, which gives way to the event.


Otto Zitko : "The art of the open line" -Herbert Lachmayr

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Sightings of A


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...

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Two Notes

1. Simplicity and complexity are the extreme ends of the world, reiterated on varying levels and scales, so that what is simple from one perspective becomes complex when approached from another. They are not actual opposites, since we all know that complexity can be born from simple conditions, and simplicity can become the outcome of complex processes.

2. Reading begins, and ends, in mystery. In divination, the borderline between language and thing breaks down. Anything has the potential to become a medium and a message. Anything has the potential to be read. However, by going beyond science and beyond art, divination is condemned to suffer the greatest of skepticism and ambiguity. There is no legitimacy in it, since the mixture of subjectivity and accident is the direct opposite of the laws of method and the method of laws. The only interest one can have in it is the way it dissolves the divide between language and non-language, or between the known and the unknown. Where anything has the potential to speak, everything unknown becomes a language, and every language becomes an unknown.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

weather patterns

Signs are born at the crossroads of accidents, where we happen to be located. Thus, one accident is paired with another, and produces a mysterious narrative made up of more crossroads, ready to be opened.

weather

boat+meteor

orbit

watermark

flight

zodiac



Wednesday, May 25, 2011

[asemic] landscape

landscape
             

Asemic writing is not the simple absence of language, or the opposite of language, or the simple presence of a language that cannot be deciphered.

Whatever is asemic is a dynamic moment where things get divided into 1) the becoming-language of the-language-I-know, 2) the becoming-language of the asemic item into the-language-I-don't-know, and 3) the becoming-non-language of everything else. In this scenario, the process of becoming-non-language may even be seen as the parasitic threat that can transform anything into an asemic item.

Thus, in any analysis of an asemic piece, we just need to look at a three-fold interaction: the 1) foregrounding of the asemic item in the perceptual field, the 2) surrounding linguistic or paralinguistic cues, caption or context, and the 3) supporting non-linguistic or material "environment" of the whole interaction (e.g., ink, monitor, paper, brain, or even earth and sky, all in the process of becoming-non-language: that is, whatever we bracket off from the process of interpretation or translation or even divination). This tactic can be useful in both the consumption and production of [asemic] items.




Tuesday, May 17, 2011

s.moke.s

We are always between form and formlessness, not knowing which subsumes which. Sometimes, we come close to something that we feel is speaking to us, a cloud taking shape, something indescribably familiar, like the asemic smoke in this piece, temptingly moving towards a hidden language, like that of fate.


smokin'