Issue # 20
November 2010
Available online:
e-flux.com/journal
Keti Chukhrov asks how immaterial goods produced by cognitive labor can be connected back to a field of general social knowledge. While cognitive labor adds value to commodities (in the form of branding, for example), perhaps the worker can still capture and direct the knowledge it produces. Many are familiar with the slavery of networked, freelance labor, but the possibility of a “communism of capitalism” seems to suggest that the conflation of work and leisure, of production and consumption, have produced entirely new terms with which to understand the fluid dynamics of freed time. (see full essay here)
In a response to Sven Lütticken’s “Art and Thingness” series, Joshua Simon embarks on his own three-part series with “Neo-Materialism, Part One: The Commodity and the Exhibition,” speculating on whether the commodity can be understood as the thing that precedes any object, including art objects. If one takes up the provocation to view the commodity not as a passive carrier of value projected onto it by humans, but as a form of being that decides its own value and relationship to other objects through an inanimate language of things, one finds that it is perhaps objects that decide our value as humans, and not the other way around.(see full essay here)
Franco Berardi examines how cognitive labor exacts a severe emotional toll on the networked, “liberated” worker. It seems that the unlimited potential of technology, while freeing the worker from material work, produces another, immaterial form of enslavement precisely in the removal of material limits by means of which the worker would otherwise sense pleasure, as well as time. Under a regime of constant intensification and availability, we find cognitarians in search of a body, of new terms by which to understand limits within the paradigm of immaterial work. (see full essay here)
Nato Thompson considers how accelerated, wired life negatively affects the human body and the way it experiences time, and if the patience and resilience of long-duration, socially applied projects might find ways of working within a capitalist economy while escaping the negative effects of commodification. (see full essay here)
Simon Sheikh continues his “Positively Revisited” series of short essays looking back at pivotal pieces of critical writing from recent history. This time, Sheikh looks back to Hito Steyerl’s landmark text “The Articulation of Protest,” published in 2002 by republicart.net. Starting with a meditation on the ethics and aesthetics of activist filmmaking, how do we begin to overlay a kind of aesthetic ideology on a mode of image production that justifies itself in purely pragmatic terms as being shot “in the field” and “in the heat of the moment”? How do we locate the set of finely crafted aesthetic decisions that guide such a spontaneous form? (see full essay here)
—Julieta Aranda, Brian Kuan Wood, Anton Vidokle
The print edition of e-flux journal can now be found at:
Amsterdam: De Appel / Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten / Antwerp: M HKA / Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst / Austin: Arthouse at the Jones Center / Banff: Walter Phillips Gallery / Barcelona: MACBA / Basel: Kunsthalle Basel, Museum fur Gegenwartskunst / Bergen: Rakett / Beijing and Guangzhou: Vitamin Creative Space / Berlin: b_books / Berliner Künstlerprogramm – DAAD / do you read me? / NBK, Neuer Berliner Kunstverein / Pro qm / Berlin and Zurich: Motto / Bologna: MAMbo – Museo d’Arte Moderna di Bologna / Bregenz: Kunsthaus Bregenz / Bristol: Arnolfini / Brussels: Wiels / Bucharest: Pavilion Unicredit / Cairo: Contemporary Image Collective (CIC) / Townhouse Gallery / Calgary: The New Gallery / Chicago: Graham Foundation / The Renaissance Society / Dublin: Project Arts Centre / Dusseldorf: Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen / Eindhoven: Van Abbemuseum / Frankfurt: Portikus – Städelschule / Genève: Centre de la Photographie / Ghent: S.M.A.K / Glasgow: CCA Centre for Contemporary Arts / Sculpture Studios / Graz: Grazer Kunstverein / para_SITE Gallery / Hamburg: Kunstverein / Hobart: INFLIGHT / Istanbul: BAS / DEPO / Platform Garanti / Cologne: Kölnischer Kunstverein / Leeds: Pavilion / London: Gasworks / ICA / Serpentine Gallery/ Visiting Arts / Los Angeles: REDCAT / Lisbon: Maumaus, Escola de Artes Visuais / Ljubljana: Moderna Galerija / Luxembourg: Casino Luxembourg / Marfa: Ballroom Marfa / Madrid: Brumari / Pensart / Mexico City: Proyectos Monclova / Montreal: ESPACE PROJET Art Contemporain + Design / Munich: Museum Villa Stuck / Walther Koenig Bookshop, Haus der Kunst Munich / New Delhi: Sarai-CSDS / New York: e-flux / Independent Curators International (ICI) / Printed Matter, Inc / Nottingham: Nottingham Contemporary / Omaha: Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts / Paris: Centre Pompidou / castillo/corrales – Section 7 Books / Portland: Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, (PICA) / Publication Studio / Prishtina: Stacion – Center for Contemporary Art Prishtina / Riga: Kim? / Rio de Janeiro: Capacete / Rotterdam: Witte de With / Salzburg: Salzburger Kunstverein / San Antonio: Artpace / São Paulo: Master in Visual Arts, Faculdade Santa Marcelina / Seoul: The Books / The Book Society / Sherbrooke: Foreman Art Gallery of Bishop’s University / Skopje: Press to Exit Project Space / Sydney: Artspace / Ramecourt: Performing Arts Forum, St Erme Outre et Ramecourt / Stockholm: Bonniers Konsthall / Index / Konstfack, University College of Art, Craft and Design / Stuttgart: Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart / Tallinn: Kumu Art Museum of Estonia / Toronto: Mercer Union / The Power Plant / Torun: Centre of Contemporary Art Znaki Czasu in Torun / Utrecht: BAK, basis voor actuele kunst / Casco-Office for Art, Design and Theory / Vancouver: Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, University of British Columbia / Vilnius: Contemporary Art Centre (CAC) / Warsaw: Zachęta National Gallery of Art / Wiesbaden: Nassauischer Kunstverein (NKV) / Zagreb: Gallery Nova / Zurich: Postgraduate Program in Curating, Zürich University of the Arts / White Space.