Sunday, April 27, 2003



PROJECT OVERLOOK is an on line brainstorm conceived to elaborate a reply to the new permanent global war.

Since September 11th 2001 the worldwide socio-political – cultural and mediatic situation has been evolving drastically.

The answer to the terrorist masterpiece is the escalation of a new military and mediatic campaign that unifies war and entertainment in a new form of apocalyptic spectacle - a “wartertainment” that is spreading in a very totalitarian form.

Shocking and awing with an unprecedented global spectacular impact - one of the most strategic effects of this new “medialitary” thing is the disempowerment and obsolecence of any form of art - language or media code as we know it .

The project’s main goal is to map out this new frame, to unveil its apocalyptic nightmarish image and - moving beyond the actual artistic and mediatic forms – to design and realize events that contrast and dissolve the paralysing picture of the absolute war into which we are framed.



a brilliant piece about the wartertainment by SAMUEL WEBER ( Avalon Foundation Professor of Humanities at
Northwestern University - author of The Legend of Freud (1982), Institution and Interpretation (1987), Return to Freud: Jacques Lacan's
Dislocation of Psychoanalysis (1991), and Mass Mediauras: Form,
Technics, Media (1996) etc etc:

SAMUEL WEBER

WAR – TERRORISM AND SPECTACLE
<<>>
[...] The notion of spectacle can, if we take the time to reflect a bit,
help us describe just what is distinctive about International Terrorism
being declared Public Enemy Number One. For in order for something to be
a spectacle, it must, quite simply, take place, which is to say, it must
be localizable. Whether inside, in a theater (of whatever kind), or
outside, in the open, a spectacle must be placed in order to be seen
(and heard). But the place, and taking-place of a spectacle is no
ordinary locality not at least in the way place has traditionally been
defined: namely, as a stable, self-contained container. For the stage or
scene of a spectacle is never fully self-contained. To function as a
stage or a scene, a place must itself take place in relation to another
place, the place of spectators or of an audience. The space of a theater
is divided into the space of the stage and that of the audience. This
makes the place and taking-place of a spectacle singularly difficult to
pin down, since, as Guy Debord put it, in his book The Society of the
Spectacle (1967): "the world the spectacle holds up to view is at once
here and elsewhere; it is the world of the commodity ruling over all
lived experience. The commodity world is thus shown as it really is, for
its logic is one with men's estrangement from one another and from. . .
what they produce."

[...] In the images of catastrophe that dominate broadcastmedia "news,"
the disunity is projected into the image itself, while the desired unity
is reserved for the spectator off-scene (and for the media itself as
global network). To support such identification and the binary
opposition on which its success depends, images must appear to be
clearly localizable, self-contained, and meaningful at the same time
that they englobe destruction, mutilation, and implosion. They must
contain and comprehend the catastrophes that thereby appear to be
intelligible in and of themselves, without requiring the spectator to
look elsewhere. The spectator thus can sustain the illusion of occupying
a stable and enduring position that allows one to "stay the same"
indefinitely. This is the moral of the story, whether it is called
"Enduring Freedom" or "Infinite Justice."

The War against Terrorism is thus conducted in the name of enduring
freedom as the freedom to remain the same, to keep one's place
indefinitely. This is also the message of infinite justice: to remain
indefinitely the same is to pursue the enemy relentlessly, without end,
until he is cornered in his innermost redoubts and destroyed. The
trajectory that leads from the Twin Towers to the caves of Tora Bora
marks the will to power as a will to endure. This is the not-so-hidden
religious subtext of the ostensibly secular War against Terrorism, which
is above all a defense and an affirmation of "globalization" as the
right to rule the earth. To rule the planet, one must survive. But to
survive, one must rule. Western television (and often print) media
appeal to their viewers by promising them the continued rule of such
survival. "Stay with us: we'll be right back after the break." Stay with
us and survive; leave us and perish. The spectacle of the Twin Towers
imploding a phallic fate if there ever was one and of a portion of the
Pentagon in ruins, broadcast in "real time," had two effects. On the one
hand, it heightened the anxiety of the "break" on which the appeal of
consumption is based. Consumer confidence was shattered, at least
temporarily, and after a period of mourning, the official discourse had
to urge all citizens not, as one might have expected, to "get back to
work," but to "get back to consuming," and start spending again. The
promise of immortality was broken, for the time being at least. Since
precisely such traumatic breaks are at the origin of the compulsion to
consume, the basic structure and process was not fundamentally altered
as long as the putative cause of such anxiety could be located in an
image, confined to a site, a stage or, rather, relegated to multiple
sites and stages, but in succession, one after the other. This is the
end of the military response to terrorism: it must be named (al-Qaeda),
given a face (Osama bin Laden), and then above all located (Afghanistan,
Tora Bora, Sudan, Somalia, etc.) in order then to be depicted, if
possible, and destroyed.

[...] On the other hand, when terrorism is defined as "international,"
it becomes more difficult to locate, situate, personify, and identify
or, rather, it can only be located in sequence, one site after the
other, not all at once. From this point on, the War against Terrorism
becomes a scenario that unfolds step-by-step, yet intrinsically without
end in its effort to bring the global enemy to "infinite justice."
Almost from the beginning of this "war," the Bush administration
asserted that the enemy was "international" in character, neither
limited to one person, however important, nor to one state, however
nefarious. Thus, the War against Terrorism, unlike the cold war, cannot
be defined primarily as a war against a single state, the Soviet Union,
or against its international emanation, the "Communist Conspiracy." It
is not even a war against a single terrorist organization, however
decentralized, such as al-Qaeda. International Terrorism englobes all
the "rogue" states that for years have been designated by the U.S. State
Department as aiding and abetting terrorism: Iraq, North Korea, Sudan,
Syria, and so on. What characterizes this policy is its continuing
effort to tie terrorist networks to nation-states. This identification
both supplies and supplants any discussion of other possible "causes,"
conditions, or ramifications. In this view, all of these can be located
in the pathological behavior of individual "rogue" states, whose
roguishness consists in their refusal to follow the norms of
international behavior as laid down by the United States government. (In
passing, it should be noted that the political use of the word rogue has
an interesting history. The first time I became aware of the word was in
relation to the assassination of President Kennedy, when it was used by
investigators though certainly not by the government to describe
elements of the government ["rogue" elements of the "intelligence"
services or military] that might have acted secretly, outside the
official chain of command. Later the term was used to designate states
that did not comply with American expectations of proper political
behavior, such as Libya, Cuba, North Korea, Iraq, and the like. In
short, from a term designating the disunity of "official" state
organizations, it became a designator of abnormal political-state
behavior, a symptomatic development, to say the least.) In conclusion,
the spectacle, at least as staged by the mainstream broadcast media,
seeks simultaneously to assuage and exacerbate anxieties of all sorts by
providing images on which anxieties can be projected, ostensibly
comprehended, and above all removed. Schematically, the fear of death is
encouraged to project itself onto the vulnerability of the other which
as enemy is the other to be liquidated or subjugated. The viewer is
encouraged to look forward and simultaneously forget the past;
encouraged to identify with the ostensibly invulnerable perspective of
the camera registering the earthbound destruction as blips tens of
thousand of feet below. Such a position seems to assure the triumph of
the spectator over the mortality of earthbound life.

The trails of the B-52s in the stratosphere high above the earth
announce the Demise of the Caves and the Second Coming of the Towers.
And with these Good Tidings, the first global spectacle of the
twenty-first century appears to approach a Happy Ending, at least on our
television screens. Yet it leaves a gnawing suspicion: that if the
spectacle seems to be drawing to a close, for the time being at least,
the scenario itself is far from over.

I receive and post this article wrtitten by Reed Johnson – staff writer of the Los Angeles Times appeared on the nwsp edition of the April 20th:



War in all its awful beauty

Can anything that causes so much death and destruction also be exquisite? Ask an artist or a poet.


By Reed Johnson,

War, we all know, is hell. But war is also beautiful. It is the savage lyricism of "The Iliad," the epic sweep and microscopic precision of a Bruegel battle scene, the solemn symmetry of a photograph, published in Life magazine in September 1943, of three soldiers lying dead on a New Guinea beach, their dark bodies pressing into the light sand.

Look again at some of the imagery spewing from America's war with Iraq. On our TV screens, chiaroscuro clouds of smoke and sand drift to engulf palm trees, minarets, people. In newspaper pages, shafts of light from exploding missiles pierce the desert night, recalling Walter de Maria's wondrous outdoor sculpture "The Lightning Field." A British soldier's reflection in a pool of leaking oil shimmers and blurs.

In the split-second it takes for the eye to absorb them, momentarily removed from their grim context, these images are ravishing, exhilarating, uncanny. Beautiful.

"War is beautiful because it combines the gunfire, the cannonades, the cease-fire, the scents, and the stench of putrefaction into a symphony. War is beautiful because it creates new architecture, like that of the big tanks, the geometrical formation flights, the smoke spirals from burning villages," wrote Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (1876-1944).

The author of those feverish sentiments was an Italian poet, dramatist and intellectual snake-oil salesman who is credited with inventing the short-lived art movement known as Futurism. When Marinetti set down the principles of the movement in a 1920s manifesto, he exalted war as if it were a magnificent orchestral score composed for bullets, flames and blood, launching an aesthetic that later served the bellicose Italian dictator and Hitler henchman Benito Mussolini. But over the years, saner minds have echoed the idea that war can produce gorgeous images and striking effects that furnish the raw material for sublime works of art -- a subtle yet crucial difference from Marinetti's rabid notion that war itself can be a form of art.

To anyone who has experienced war's ravages firsthand, that idea may sound naive, grotesque, even absurd. Yet over centuries of human brutality, the aesthetic has seldom been at odds with the horrific. Leonardo da Vinci, painter of delicate saints and serene landscapes, stuffed his notebooks with sketches of furious men at arms and fiendishly clever fighting machines. In the 1860s, Mathew Brady shocked the New York public by exhibiting gruesome photographs of Civil War dead. "Here are the dreadful details!" an accompanying text declared. "Let them aid in preventing such another calamity from falling upon the nation." Only later was it revealed that Brady and his collaborators had repositioned some slain soldiers for dramatic effect.

During the last months of World War II, Japanese warlords persuaded thousands of college-educated student-soldiers to "die like beautiful falling cherry petals" in service to the emperor. This exquisite metaphor, deeply engrained in Japanese culture, was exploited by the warlords in one of the most effective fusions of ancient aesthetics and modern propaganda technique ever devised -- a fatal act of performance art.

Even overtly antiwar artworks like Brady's photographs, Goya's chilling series of aquatint prints, "Los Desastres de la Guerra" (The Disasters of War), and the Vietnam-as-tragic-farce movies of Oliver Stone, Francis Ford Coppola and Stanley Kubrick are as memorable for their dazzling imagery and high-art allusions, their stirring snatches of Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyrie" and Barber's Adagio for Strings, as they are for their pacifist sentiments.

In his just-published memoir "Jarhead: A Marine's Chronicle of the Gulf War and Other Battles," Anthony Swofford observes that fighting men make no distinction between pro-war and antiwar movies once they get caught up in the intoxicating visuals. Another witness to the aftershocks of the 1991 Gulf War, German filmmaker Werner Herzog, captured the devastating destruction of Operation Desert Storm in his 1992 documentary, "Lessons of Darkness," which featured hallucinatory shots of burning oil rigs, ruined buildings and corpses submerged in sand dunes, all set to the music of Verdi, Wagner and Mahler. While the movie added up to a scorching indictment of war's waste, most reviewers raved about how beautiful it all looked.

Today, war is still reshaping our sense of the aesthetic, as for the past 1 1/2 years the world has been alternately repulsed and transfixed, saddened and mesmerized by the devastation unleashed on Afghanistan and Iraq, Washington and New York. For now, the immediacy of these images may make it impossible to view any of them as aesthetically charged objects. In time, however, it's likely that some will be regarded not just as journalistic documents, but also as artworks, and that they will in turn supply inspiration for those seeking to make art.


SONTAG'S VIEW

In her newly published book "Regarding the Pain of Others," writer and critic Susan Sontag, focusing on photography, asserts that "there is shame ... in looking at the close-up of a real horror. Perhaps the only people with the right to look at images of suffering of this extreme order are those who could do something to alleviate it.... The rest of us are voyeurs, whether or not we mean to be."

Because photography purports to capture real life, unadorned, its depictions of war are more problematic than those of other art forms. But as Sontag acknowledges, photographic images reflecting horrifying events can be beautiful on a purely formal and aesthetic level. Among the examples she cites are certain stunning images of the World Trade Center ruins. However, she writes, "the most people dared say was that the photographs were 'surreal,' a hectic euphemism behind which the disgraced notion of beauty cowered."

As Sontag observes, most thinking people feel guilty for deriving sensory pleasure from anything directly connected to the suffering of others. How can we suspend our ethical and moral judgment, even momentarily, and allow ourselves to be dazzled by those psychedelic strobes over Baghdad, those cataracts of tanks and troops rolling across blasted desert-scapes, those majestic towers in Lower Manhattan cascading like steel-and-glass tsunamis? How can we shut our ears and eyes to the screams and mangled bodies

behind those abstractions, just beyond the range of the camera lens?

And yet the impulse to aestheticize war is as old and possibly as instinctive as the urge toward war itself. Metaphorically, it's no accident that Beauty, in the person of Helen of Troy, was the cause of the decade-long battle between the Trojans and Greeks, a cultural touchstone of Western civilization. Centuries later, Freud mused about the symbiotic relationship between Eros, the heavenly personification of sexual love, beauty and desire, and Thanatos, the dark embodiment of the death wish.

Like the gods Mars and Venus, who were clandestine lovers in Greco-Roman mythology, war and beauty are deeply, almost pre-cognitively embedded together in the human psyche. Though reason and ethics may insist that nothing that causes death and destruction ever can be truly beautiful, the senses argue otherwise.

"The tracer rounds made lines of incandescent beauty, lovely arcing curves and slow S's and parabolas of light," wrote reporter Michael Kelly, who died two weeks ago covering the second U.S.-Iraq war, upon witnessing the bombing of Baghdad during the first U.S.-Iraq war.

Though the sensory overload of war wouldn't seem to call for any embellishment, it often tempts witnesses to go it one better. As Sontag notes in her book, Brady and his colleagues belong to a long list of photojournalists who doctored or staged some of the most famous battle images in history (including the raising of the U.S. flag at Iwo Jima). Two weeks ago, a photographer for The Times lost his job after using computer technology to combine parts of two digital images into one. "His explanation was that he wanted to improve the picture," Times managing editor Dean Baquet told the Washington Post. "It's heartbreaking. People believe that newspapers screw around with pictures for political reasons. In his case it was an aesthetic thing."

The aesthetic rules for Hollywood, of course, are different from those for journalists. Cinematographer Janusz Kaminski won deserved praise for the heart-racing realism he brought to the opening 25-minute D-day montage in Steven Spielberg's "Saving Private Ryan." But in his quest to bring the audience "as close to the soldiers as possible through the camera," Kaminski hit upon a form of "realism" that was, in fact, a brilliant act of stylization. "That's where the idea of kind of a hyper-reality came from, the idea of employing different camera speeds, creating this kind of staccato movement," he says.

Although Kaminski says it would be wrong to describe an actual scene of human carnage as beautiful, he thinks the word can be applied, for example, to the Kuwaiti oil fires of Operation Desert Storm. And he's a connoisseur of the visually sensual in movies like "Apocalypse Now" and "The Thin Red Line."

"Beautifully, beautifully done movie," Kaminski say of the latter, "the sweeping camera through the grass revealing crawling soldiers, or hundreds and hundreds of Japanese soldiers burning alive and their uniforms smoldering. There's some beauty in it, you know? It's a totally different, poetic look at the events, philosophical and poetic."

Max Ryynänen, an art critic and vice president of ROR Gallery in Helsinki, Finland, agrees with the great philosophers who argued that ethics could not be separated from aesthetics. "Still, sometimes the phenomena we encounter may just seduce us to stress the ethical or the aesthetical," he said in an e-mail interview. "A Van Gogh strikes us aesthetically if we are into art. A beautiful sunrise strikes us aesthetically even if we are not into art -- you don't need background for it. A picture of an African child suffering because of hunger strikes us ethically, whatever intentions we have. I'd say the World Trade Center [attacks] had both effects on us Europeans, watching it all safely from a distance."

Even when terror and destruction strike close by, threatening our homes, our loved ones and our very lives, it may be hard to curb the impulse to grab a paintbrush, pick up a Leica, or wax rhapsodic in prose or verse. Like many artists and photographers in New York City when the hijacked planes hit the twin towers, Daniel Rothbart, an artist and writer, immediately grabbed his camera and began shooting the unfolding scene -- "which perhaps wasn't the most humane thing to do," he says. He saw careering police cars and firetrucks, long rows of identical TV news-truck satellite dishes arrayed along the West Side Highway, "almost like a forced perspective, looking backward," and a massive pedestrian exodus ahead of the onrushing plumes of ash.

"It was like this extraordinary ballet, this choreography, that had been realized through this intense study of the terrorists,"

says Rothbart, who lives with his wife (then his fiancée) in Manhattan's TriBeCa neighborhood, just a few blocks from the World Trade Center site. "You felt guilt and discomfort in appreciating that inner beauty. There's a conflict. There's something extraordinary in witnessing that building, and at the same there's guilt knowing people were trapped inside that building and were dying."

Rothbart says he didn't see himself "engaged in making art that day" but in "documenting history." He still hasn't done anything with the photos he took, and for a long time after the attacks he felt that he couldn't write or make art. "It was really a powerful feeling of impotence in the face of what happened, or irrelevance." He finally dealt with the subject months later in an essay for NY Arts magazine on the aesthetics of war, in which he cited Marinetti's quote and likened the collapse of the twin towers to the immolation of Valhalla in Wagner's opera "Götterdämmerung."

"The burning buildings held a primordial fascination for those who experienced them," he wrote. "However troubling it may be, this current of abstraction that allows us to see beauty in carnage exists within us all. Like a subterranean current in the human psyche it reveals itself in moments like the destruction of the World Trade Center, but is rarely acknowledged and almost never embraced."


COMPOSER'S WORDS

Karlheinz Stockhausen, the German avant-garde composer, was publicly chastised around the world for a kindred statement that he made about the Sept. 11 attacks. The terrorist strikes were, he said, "the greatest work of art imaginable.... Minds achieving something in an act that we couldn't even dream of in music, people rehearsing like mad for 10 years, preparing fanatically for a concert and then dying, just imagine what happened there. You have people who are that focused on a performance and then 5,000 people are dispatched into the afterlife, in a single moment. I couldn't do that. By comparison, we composers are nothing." Stockhausen later amended his remarks, saying he meant that only a Lucifer could have orchestrated the attacks.

Even the composer's most ardent fans might agree he was guilty, at a minimum, of gross insensitivity. But Raúl Zamudio, a New York art historian, independent curator and author of a magazine essay titled "Art & Violence: Poetry After Auschwitz, Art After 9/11," thinks Stockhausen's point may have been that "the spectacle of violence was so great that you could only have seen it through an artistic or formal lens." Perhaps Stockhausen had in mind Wagner's hypothetical concept of a gesamptkunstwerk, or "total artwork" synthesizing all forms of aesthetic expression.

A far less grandiose musical response to Sept. 11 succeeded beautifully for many listeners in transforming tragedy into art. Two weeks ago, American composer John Adams received the Pulitzer Prize in music for his 25-minute work "On the Transmigration of Souls." Commissioned by the New York Philharmonic, the piece incorporated adult and children's choruses as well as voice-over readings of victims' names and taped street sounds. Adams has said he envisioned the piece as a "memory space" where "you can be alone with your thoughts and emotions."

Which option then, for the artist, is more aesthetically and morally responsible when confronting a horrifying event such as war: to make the most thoughtful, deeply felt and expressive artwork one can, or to insist that no art should be made at all? Inadvertently, Stockhausen's notorious quote echoed a famous epigram coined by German philosopher Theodore Adorno and cited in the title of Zamudio's essay: "To write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric." And yet poetry was written, plays were staged, movies were made, paintings were painted, music was performed after Auschwitz. Some of these works were even about Auschwitz.

Surely something more than mere prurient interest lies behind our compulsion to look and record, to contemplate even as we recoil, to marvel even as we mourn. One person's exploitation of tragedy, after all, can be another's attempt to understand, to make peace, to make amends. And as critic and journalist Henry Allen

wrote in a June 2000 article in the New Yorker, it's an irony worthy of Oscar Wilde that "we can worry about people being exploited with photography after they've been bombed, starved, exiled, mutilated and hacked to pieces with machetes."

Putting it another way, the mere act of staring or not staring at an image of war, of reading an elegy about a battle or listening to a piece of music inspired by thousands of lost lives, will do little one way or the other for the victims of those calamities. The preservation of their memory and the meaning of what they endured depends on what we do after we put down the poem about Auschwitz or Hiroshima, or the one about Baghdad or Basra yet to be written; after we exit the photo gallery and go home; after we emerge from the vicarious dreams of the movie house and step into the light of day.

"Let the atrocious images haunt us," Sontag writes in her book. "Even if they are only tokens, and cannot possibly encompass most of the reality to which they refer, they still perform a vital function. The images say: This is what human beings are capable of doing -- may volunteer to do, enthusiastically, self-righteously. Don't forget."

Or be prepared, in another time and place, for another terrible beauty to be born.