29 de septiembre de 2013

el "flâneur" contemporáneo...

Me tropiezo como por casualidad (sabiendo que las casualidades van jalonando nuestro destino) con esta figura del flâneur que llama poderosamente mi atención... Ese personaje que Baudelaire dotaba de identidad en las incipientes ciudades modernas del siglo XIX:


«La multitud es su elemento, como el aire para los pájaros y el agua para los peces. Su pasión y su profesión le llevan a hacerse una sola carne con la multitud. Para el perfecto flâneur, para el observador apasionado, es una alegría inmensa establecer su morada en el corazón de la multitud, entre el flujo y reflujo del movimiento, en medio de lo fugitivo y lo infinito. Estar lejos del hogar y aun así sentirse en casa en cualquier parte, contemplar el mundo, estar en el centro del mundo, y sin embargo pasar desapercibido —tales son los pequeños placeres de estos espíritus independientes, apasionados, incorruptibles, que la lengua apenas alcanza a definir torpemente. El espectador es un príncipe que vaya donde vaya se regocija en su anonimato.» Charles Baudelaire. "El pintor de la vida moderna", 1863.

Un producto singular de la vida moderna que se constituirá en una de las figuras de los debates de la modernidad desde la experiencia urbana, creadora de un nuevo individuo y nuevos vínculos sociales, nuevas percepciones del tiempo, del espacio, de la libertad y del bienestar. Una disociación del Otro desarrollando estrategias para relacionarse de manera distante:


«[…] encontramos una misma preocupación básica: el que la persona se resista a ser suprimida y destruida en su individualidad por cualquier razón social, política o tecnológica. Cualquier investigación acerca del significado interno de la vida moderna y sus productos o, dicho sea en otras palabras, acerca del alma de la cultura, debe buscar resolver la ecuación que estructura cómo las metrópolis establecen entre los contenidos individuales y supraindividuales de la vida.». Georg Simmel, "La metrópolis y la vida mental", 1903.

Una figura que perderá su placer por la búsqueda en pos de la producción y el consumismo "en un caminar zombificado por las calles vitrinadas, las galerías comerciales y los shopping centers".(Walter Benjamin).

Sin embargo, reivindico la figura del flâneur decimonónico como "una manera de pensar y de vivir contemporánea", un proceso de aprendizaje y descubrimiento (Nassim Nicholas Taleb), que redescubre el placer de vagabundear la ciudad sin objetivos previos, sólo por el mero placer de observar sin apenas ser visto:

«[…] paseante solitario que explora, que acecha, que cruza el infierno urbano, el caminante voyeurista que descubre la ciudad como un paisaje de extremos voluptuosos. Maestro en el gozo de observar, avezado en la empatía, el flâneur encuentra el mundo "pintoresco"» (Susan Sontang, "Sobre la fotografía", 1977), «[…] un daquerrotipo errante y apasionado, que atesora hasta la menor huella, y en quien se reproducen, con sus reflejos cambiantes, el curso de las cosas, la agitación de la ciudad, la fisonomía diversa del espíritu público, las confesiones, antipatías y admiraciones de la multitud.» (Victor Fournel, "Ce qu'on voit dans les rues de Paris", 1867).

Y dentro de esta categoría del flâneur reivindicativo de la ciudad como apasionante espacio de observación, desde Argentina el fotógrafo Albano García hace del flâneur, además, un individuo en-red-ado que comparte su peculiar y particular voiyeurismo urbano bonaerense en su Diario Visual de Buenos Aires...

26 de septiembre de 2013

Now we're shining right back up...

a TED Talk by Stewart Brand::


«Ever since, I’ve been asking travelers back from remote places what they noticed out in the countryside. Their universal report: The world’s villages are emptying out, everywhere. People are moving to cities far more rapidly than most of us realize.

Increasing urbanization is accelerating the economic development of the world with remarkable speed. The consequences are going to be profound, particularly for the institutions that serve people — government agencies, corporations, and the creators of infrastructure. Although a growing number of people have noticed the change, few civic and corporate leaders are prepared to deal with it.

Demographically, the next 50 years may be the most wrenching in human history. Massive numbers of people are making massive changes. Having just experienced the first doubling of world population in a single lifetime (from 3.3 billion in 1962 to 6.5 billion now), we now are discovering it is the last doubling. Birthrates worldwide are dropping not only much faster than expected, but much further. It used to be assumed that birthrates would get down to the replacement rate of 2.1 children per woman and level off, but in most places the birthrates continue to decelerate with no bottom in sight. Meanwhile the “population momentum” of the already born and their children will carry world population to a peak of 7.5 to 9 billion around 2050 and then head downward. (...) Just as the population exploded upward exponentially when the birthrate was above 2.1, it accelerates downward exponentially when it’s below 2.1. Compound interest cuts both ways. Fewer children make fewer children»

City Planet, February 2006, in Strategy + Business

21 de septiembre de 2013

a frightening food sequence...

from SAMSARA the film produced by Mark Magidson: 


"We are happy this clip has struck a chord with so many people, and we hope that the interest in this clip will lead viewers to see SAMSARA in its entirety. This clip represents only 6 minutes from a 100 minute long film, which was photographed in 25 countries and explores many other diverse aspects of the human experience. We would love for viewers to experience SAMSARA as a whole."

SAMSARA food sequence from Baraka & Samsara

SAMSARA is a Sanskrit word that means “the ever turning wheel of life” and is the point of departure for the filmmakers as they search for the elusive current of interconnection that runs through our lives.  Filmed over a period of almost five years and in twenty-five countries, SAMSARA transports us to sacred grounds, disaster zones, industrial sites, and natural wonders.  By dispensing with dialogue and descriptive text.



Director Ron Fricke and producer Mark Magidson, whose award-winning films BARAKA and CHRONOS were acclaimed for combining visual and musical artistry. 

Expanding on the themes they developed in BARAKA (1992) and CHRONOS (1985), SAMSARA explores the wonders of our world from the mundane to the miraculous, looking into the unfathomable reaches of man’s spirituality and the human experience. (...) showing how our life cycle mirrors the rhythm of the planet.

19 de septiembre de 2013

the geography of youth...

What is it like to be young in today’s world? The Geography of Youth is a public art project, sharing the stories and faces of Millennials from all corners of the globe:

"We designed TheGeography of Youth, a project where we would travel around the world interviewing Millennials about their lives, making their portraits and sharing their stories online, and later in a public art show. In early 2011 we hit the road. We traveled mostly by bicycle from Alaska to Argentina, then in a loop around Europe and Morocco. Then we traveled by mini-camper-car around the United States. We’ve slept on restaurant floors and in haunted forests. We’ve eaten rat and mystery meat and street food and we’ve only had food poisoning three times. In the grand tradition of travel we’ve learned as much about ourselves as we have about the world around us.
In the spring of 2013 we opened The Geography of Youth to online submissions. We invite all 18-32 year olds to upload a self-portrait and answer the same twelve interview questions that we’ve asked hundreds of Millennials around the world. Please, join us in creating the largest participatory portrait of a generation ever made by submitting at www.geographyofyouth.tumblr.com.

It is our hope that these images and words will spark dialogue about our generation, our challenges, and our triumphs."
PART I

PART II

18 de septiembre de 2013

one million pieces of art...

Jason McHenry life project: One Thousand Thousand, to create one million uniformly sized (5,5"x7") original mixed-media painting works on paper. He's been working on it for the last 20 years and has gathered already almost 330.000 pieces...




The project is open so if you want to participate as an artist you can learn the standards here...  or as an 'art supporter' you can buy some pieces  here (5$/ud)






































17 de septiembre de 2013

Hank bought a bus...

Hank is a University of Minnesota architecture student who has bought a school bus and converted it into a traveling home as his Master's Thesis project. His idea now is to travel 5000 miles across the western United States. You can follow Hank adventure here





14 de septiembre de 2013

the unexpected...

...to take a human body and  turn it into a 2D image... That's the illusion the artist Alexa Meade gets painting directly on people...

«It was about shadows. I was fascinated with the absence of light, and I wanted to find a way that I could give it materiality and pin it down before it changed. I came up with the idea of painting shadows. I loved that I could hide within this shadow my own painted version, and it would be almost invisible until the light changed, and all of a sudden my shadow would be brought to the light. [...] I couldn't have foreseen that when I wanted to paint a shadow, I would pull out this whole other dimension, that I would collapse it, that I would take a painting and make it my friend and then bring him back to a painting. [...]But then again, I guess it's also not unforeseeable that you can find the strange in the familiar,as long as you're willing to look beyond what's already been brought to light, that you can see what's below the surface, hiding in the shadows, and recognize that there can be more there than meets the eye.»





11 de septiembre de 2013

The Death of an Insect...


Erään hyönteisen tuho
The Death of an Insect

7 min, 35 mm, animation / documentary / experimental, 1:1,85, dolby digital, 24 fps, 2010
synopsis:
In a lifeless urban landscape where time itself has stopped its crawl, a mad ballet is commencing and a newly hatched butterfly is about to die.
This tragic story was constructed using dead insects gathered from forgotten attics and tool sheds, between window panels and cobwebs. It combines a number of animation techniques from classic stop-motion animation to animated 3D models of x-ray CT-scanned insects.

main credits:
Director, Script, Cinematography, Animation, Editing: Hannes Vartiainen and Pekka Veikkolainen
Music: Joonatan Portaankorva
Mixing consultant: Olli Huhtanen
Producer: Hannes Vartiainen, Pekka Veikkolainen
Production: Pohjankonna Oy

Awards and festivals:
World premiere at the 67th Venice Film Festival, 2010
Awards for the Death of an Insect:
Best Experimental Short, CFC World Wide Shorts, Toronto, Canada, 2011
and a variety of honorary mentions for best animation, best music, etc.

biographies of the directors
Hannes Vartiainen (b.1980) has a background in film. Pekka Veikkolainen (b.1982) has worked in the fields of animation and illustration since 2000. The two started their own production company in 2008 and they have so far completed four short films:

2 de septiembre de 2013