Other Publications: Agnieska Kurant
Transcription
Other Publications: Agnieska Kurant
VARIABLES Agnieszka Kurant VARIABLES July 23, 2016 – October 30, 2016 Agnieszka Kurant The End of Signature, 2016. Glass tubing, ink, water, pump, Autopen machine. Engineering : Mason Juday Photo: Jean Vong A.A.I. (System’s Negative), 2015. Hot zink poured into abandoned termite mounds in the African desert. Collaboration : Dr Paul Bardunias, Dr Rupert Soar Agnieszka Kurant: Logically Unbridgeable Gap My first encounter with the work of artist Agnieszka Kurant (b. Poland, 1978) was at a visit to Kurant’s solo exhibition, Variables, at the Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in October 2014. There was a scientific precision and mystery in these works that immediately provoked my curiosity to know the ideas driving the work. As an architect deeply interested in the overlapping zones of science, art, philosophy, music, and architecture, I sensed a kindred spirit in Agnieszka. With positive enthusiasm we look forward to her work presented July 23, 2016 at our ‘T’ Space gallery. As Steven Holl Architects is currently in design development for the new Rubenstein Commons at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, I have been rereading Albert Einstein’s Ideas and Opinions (Crown, 1954). When Einstein reflects on the evolution of philosophic thought throughout the centuries he asks: “[W]hat knowledge is pure thought able to supply independently of sense perception? Is there any such knowledge?”. In regards to the gulf between the world of concepts and ideas and the world of sense perception he sites “An almost boundless chaos of philosophical opinions…” He also writes: Hume saw that concepts which we must regard as essential, such as, for example, causal connection, cannot be gained from material given to us by the senses… If one reads Hume’s books, one is amazed that many and sometimes even highly esteemed philosophers after him have been able to write so much obscure stuff and even find grateful readers for it. Einstein’s sixty-year-old reflections are still provocative and make me feel that Agnieszka is doing philosophy rather than writing about it. The logically unbridgeable gap between concepts and ideas and the world of sense perception persists, but it is bridged by great works in the arts. I believe this chasm can be spanned by articulate works of art, music, poetry, and architecture. It is the science / art / philosophic structure of this bridge that attracts me to the physical manifestations of Agnieszka’s ideas and it is an honor and pleasure to share these with the ‘T’ Space community. Steven Holl June 23, 2016 A.A.I., 2014. Mounds built by termite colonies from colored sand, gold and crystals. Collaboration: Dr. Paul Bardunias, Dr. Leah Kelly Photo: Jean Vong Above and right: Currency Converter, 2016. Various objects, pegboard, steel, wood, pigment print on paper. Production: Madeline Hollander Photo : Jean Vong Capital Objects Agnieszka Kurant and Sanford Kwinter Dialogue Sanford Kwinter: What first struck me in your work is how it gives expression to what many in the design world find most revealing these days: a consistent materialist vision of the human universe. Of course there are very explicit “dialectical materialist” components in your work—your primary interest in making historical process sensible, for example, and the often hidden operations of subdivision and exclusion that determine how forms emerge. But more importantly, it is in how you conceive of the landscape in which we live and of all the things with which we interact as endlessly connected from one level to another. From language, to capital and forms of exchange of all types, to form itself and to all instances of organization as if each was but a variety of energy and matter without barrier or distinction of any kind between them. . . You see physical reality as a moving system of complex economies. Agnieszka Kurant: Yes, indeed. My point of departure is an interest in complex systems in nature and in culture, and in the complex economies that these systems produce or display. I was particularly interested in the crystallization and stratification of civilizations, societies or social movements, which could be compared to the processes of rock sedimentation, or the ways in which crystals, glass, or ice are formed. This position derives from Arthur Iberall’s homeokinetics and was further developed by Manuel de Landa. More recently the concept of social physics has been elaborated by Alex Pentland as well as by complexity scientists such as Sorin Solomon, Steven Strogatz, et al. Crystallizations of civilizations are said to have begun with extensive trade and flows of goods among dispersed populations of hunter-gatherers, turning these loose structures into more dense forms. Subsequently three kinds of fictions that emerged—money, gods, and laws—allowed the self-organizing systems of human species to create overarching narratives in order to form larger societies of people who never met. I found it interesting that experiments with simulations of growing artificial societies were partially inaccurate and limited. For example, applying the models of artificial societies to already extinct civilizations did not necessarily replicate the results we know from history. The desire to use computers as civic thermostats and Living Currency, 2014. Supercapacitor, battery, aluminum, steel. Engineering: Eric Humphreys Photo: Jean Vong program societies, as was already imagined by Marshall McLuhan, is partially realized through “reality mining” and feeding data to statistical modeling programs, the terrifying consequence of which is the increasing surveillance of our lives. At the same time interesting work is being conducted by some physicists using computer simulations for modeling e.g. political conflict resolution. I also started to analyze the crossover of the assembly line of nature and of culture. The exchanges between the economy of organic, non-organic, and cultural machinic phyla, or some sort of universal phylum for all forms. For example, in the contemporary world when energy becomes a new currency, it turns out that the ultimate form of capital is the sun which now not only powers nature, but also can be mined for energy. Energy eventually turns into information, and information into capital. Recent discoveries of the extra-terrestrial origins of gold, oil, and tantalum make us imagine that the future will be linked to extraterrestrial, alien capital. At the moment, traditional mining of fossil fuels and minerals is accompanied by the mining of bitcoins, Ethereum block chain—the currency of which was significantly named “gas”—and massive scale data mining by corporations. I started to explore the process of emergence which happens in exactly the same way in nature and in culture. Various phenomena and forms emerge the same way in organic ecosystems, the urban fabric of society, and on the internet. An emergence of a single human thought in the brain is governed by principles similar to the emergence of a political movement, a stock market crash, or the self-organization of a slime mould or termite mound. All of these are forms produced by complex systems. And the economies of these systems are similar too. To give a simple example: the termite colonies not only evolved into a labor society with class divisions, but some groups of termites within each colony often become idle for periods of time, so there is even the notion of free time of sorts embedded in that system even though presumably termites do not have consciousness. Another example of the overlapping of different systems is the emergence of the new geological formation recently named plastiglomerate appearing on the shores of Hawaii, created out of melted plastic trash, lava, and broken shells at the crossover of nature and culture. What I found most fascinating was the inability to predict the non-linear behavior of these complex systems. All these phenomena inspired me to explore the crossover between collective intelligence and artificial intelligence which some of my recent works relate to. It becomes apparent that artificial intelligence as imagined by science fiction may remain a fiction for many more years, since simulating the complexity of the human brain seems nearly impossible. Meanwhile, however, we can simulate and evolve phenomena resembling artificial intelligence on the basis of collective intelligence via crowdsourcing. This is what I will be concentrating on during my collaboration with the MIT AI Lab and Anthropology Department, which I’m bringing into a dialogue to produce some new works. I started using emergence to develop new ways of creating and evolving forms. For example, I outsourced a series of sculptures to termite colonies to create models of a dispersed and completely unaware social factory. I also produced collective signatures morphed for various communities since it has been observed in both biology and The End of Signature, 2015. Site-specific projection, Autopen machine. Collection Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Photo: Kristopher McKay Right: The End of Signature (detail), 2016. Glass tubing, ink, water, pump, Autopen machine. Engineering : Mason Juday Photo: Jean Vong social sciences that colonies of bacteria or insects, civilizations or various communities can be perceived as collective persons or characters with distinct personality traits. That project – The End of Signature – reflected also on the obfuscation of singular authorship and on the looming end of handwriting replaced by typing on technological devices. What is fascinating for me is the fact that now we are abandoning the attachment to financial capital and realizing that it’s social capital that is going to be the much more important factor in the economies of the future; we realize how social energy becomes a currency on a par with other energies that are also becoming sui generis currencies. Take the renewable energies or even the fossil fuel energies and their gradual abandonment—both are currencies. It is interesting to watch the abandonment of the gold standard in 1971, the emergence of alternative currencies which followed, and now the beginning of the abandonment of the fossil fuel-based energies and the emergence of new ones including the increased role of social energies harvested though crowd sourcing. These are the different kinds of energy that are the new emerging currencies of the contemporary world. We naively thought that automation would decrease exploitation, but the extraction of machinic surplus value with computers is simply a more perverse and concealed process. I think these things become apparent when we look at games such as Minecraft where almost anything can become a currency expressed in cubic units. Another example is Goldfarming where virtual currencies and minerals can be exchanged for real cash. People in several developing countries and at Chinese labor camps work as gold farmers in online games to acquire in-game fictional currency that other players around the world purchase in exchange for real-world money. Another interesting phenomena is Click Farms, which simulate online popularity, are another interesting phenomena.. They are a form of click fraud, where a large group of low-paid workers is hired to click on paid advertising links. These fake clicks are essentially different from those arising from computer bots. The workers are paid, on average, one US dollar per thousand likes or per thousand people followed on Twitter, but then the companies are selling their likes and followers at a high cost of 250 Google+ shares for $12.95. $200 million a year is earned from fake Facebook activities. I would risk a theory that pretty much everything, including human life, freedom, creativity, etc. can be expressed in units that can be converted into measurements of another currency. Contemporary economy, driven by the energies of social capital, makes it even more apparent that everything in the world is based on circulation and conversion of energy into and out of form. And my works are often based on circulation and conversion of energy. One of the versions of The End of Signature is based on the circulation of water continuously drawn from the museum’s water system, constantly washing away the black ink resembling oil. Living Currency is based on the harvesting of kinetic energy generated by the audience and its conversion into electrical energy constantly charging a battery-sculpture. I know that you are also working on problems of energy in relation to form and formation—what practices or forms have you identified in contemporary use? SK: Well, my concerns are at once a bit different and deeply similar; I too am pretty wedded to the framework that considers all modalities of storage—including that of Capital, but of information as well—as consistent with and as extensions of basic materialist frameworks and agents, such as physical energy or heat (Georges Bataille). But I also see transformation as the basis of all salience in the world—far more than “things”—and hence I see the world itself as a metabolic continuum of emerging and receding saliences (and since only these movements and changes register to perception and experience, their logic of appearance also extends to both aesthetics and neurobiology). The language that best permits description of these phenomena— that is, that best permits the isolation of significant meanings within what presents itself to us—is arguably thermodynamics. It tells us where batteries (accumulations) exist—reservoirs that can produce changes and forms, and where gradients of flow need to move to recede into the invisibility of equilibrium and thereby to transform their environment in turn. Like you, I see the world as populated by demons, the kind Clerk-Maxwell spoke of, and I see it as our job to ally ourselves creatively with them, in concept, attitude and practice. Above and above right: Untitled, 2014. Conveyor belt, motor, mirror. Production: Alexander Benenson Middle and bottom right: Minus One Dollar, 2012. 1000 metal alloy coins. Photo: Wojciech Olech In many of these same senses I also recognize an almost sensual exuberance in your plastic work, shall we say a propensity for, and a cultivated attention to, the life of forms and their attributes: colors, textures, shapes, controlled developments, behaviors, even flow, etc. This gaiety at times belies the nightmarish vision of multiple invisible tyrannies that you just described, or, if I can say it another way, the necessary vision of the new machinic rationalities that control not only the conduct of our lives, but of our thoughts and affects as well. In the design world, digital and social-generative forms of labor overwhelmed nearly all other concerns and approaches for nearly three generations, ignoring much of the curious animism we are speaking about here, and descended into an almost pure form of what Marx called commodity fetishism. How do you reconcile your own role as producer of sensations and “things” with the fetish culture with which they are bound to be integrated in our market universe? AK: I’m both horrified and inspired by the speculations of financial capitalism where artworks become yet another currency and their content becomes often irrelevant. Meanwhile, mass computation of the 21st century creates an illusion that almost anything can be computed, from the algorithms of taste to the global happiness index… from climate change to high frequency trading… to nature. So my response to that has been to search for the uncomputables. Speculation became a mode of production in both finance and art. My work analyses the speculations and fictions as well as the hidden exploitations of social energies and social capital. Looking for alternative quasi currencies is typical for post-Bretton Woods capitalism where the value of money is no longer guaranteed in the gold standard. The transformation of artworks into mere currency can be clearly observed in Freeports—such as the Geneva Freeport— which are warehouses storing art and other valuables and collectibles in the areas or territories at international airports with no customs duties. Artworks held in Freeports are kept in closed crates which are rarely, if ever, opened. Artworks are used there by corporations and wealthy individuals to merely store value in a manner similar to stock market bonds or gold. Very often transactions between these corporations and individuals happen through trade or exchange of these sealed crates containing multi-million-dollar artworks. Paradoxically the dematerialization of the art object proclaimed by conceptual art is realized in cognitive and financial capitalism. We live in a paradigm of the economy of the invisible. While the allegedly immaterial conceptual artworks are in reality turned into easily commodifiable and often fetishized certificates of authorship and documentations, contemporary capitalist production is based to a high degree on immaterial, virtual products such as patents, copyrights, strategies, debts, air rights, virtualization of money, and the immaterial and invisible labor. In fact, the underpinnings of conceptual art can be traced to the same moment in time as the beginning of cognitive capitalism, when people started to use ideas as a kind of coinage / currency. Since then, money and labor are becoming increasingly immaterial and invisible. What is particularly of interest to me is the fact that the same way that co-creation of products is currently often outsourced to customers, the co-creation of value of artworks is outsourced to audiences. Duchamp’s idea of the viewer completing the work should currently be rephrased as “the viewer completing the value of the work.” Not paying for a museum ticket or gallery entrance fee does not mean they are free. The visitors contribute to the increase of value of artworks exhibited at various institutions by merely Instagraming a photo from a given exhibition or liking an image of an artwork on Artsy or Facebook. Contemporary production is mixed with circulation and is based on crowd creativity when almost everyone is an artist. We live in the times of circulationism which is not about making images, but about circulating and accelerating them. One of my main areas of interest is the erosion of singular authorship. Digital culture has accelerated the production of memes, which are examples of works without authors. The internet memes circulate and mutate, constantly evolving and dispersing. The development of the crowdsourcing platforms, currently used mostly for commercial and often exploitative purposes, will probably lead in the future to new collective ways of producing experimental artistic content in a similar manner to how Wikipedia is used for producing knowledge. It becomes increasingly apparent that the concept of the author is, to a large extent, a construct created to appropriate the labor of the multitude of the dispersed and networked creative process. Meanwhile, the artist became the paradigmatic economic actor of our time. For example, the process of gentrification is often using the social capital of artists who turn out to be important players in the game of the real estate market although they do not participate in the profits. Urban gentrification often begins by artists bringing symbolic social capital to wherever they move. As soon as the artists transform industrial ruins into commercially attractive “creative” spaces, developers and investors immediately come in to capitalize on the artists’ resourcefulness. We all participate in these disguised exploitations; it is yet another example of invisible exploitation of social capital. So in my practice I’m trying to critically and subversively play with these phenomena. The piece Mutations and Liquid Assets, for example, is a quasi alchemic fusion of four existing works by different artist: Joseph Beuys, Richard Prince, Carol Bove, and Carsten Holler, which I bought and subsequently melted together into one form. The idea was to create a sort of mutation of four ideas—or four memes merging into one—an alloy of four works made of different metals, or four minds. This fusion led to the emergence of a hybrid new form. The four artworks were physically liquefied like other forms of capital, in that case through their literal melting. SK: You have identified a second universal acid at work in our economic and cultural world, one that operates alongside, often just like, yet in some ways even beyond traditional Mutations and Liquid Assets, 2014. Original artworks by Joseph Beuys, Richard Prince, Carsten Holler and Carol Bove melted into one form. Steel, silver, bronze, brass and the artworks’ certificates. fiscal currency: that modern substance par excellence that we refer to as money. You refer to these as memes, but seem to acknowledge that they are at bottom no more than artificial modes of monetized form that has somehow hijacked the production of cultural meaning. Now these new forms circulate with little or no distinction between high and low; indeed they are indifferentiable as art and commerce, and indeed may represent a new amalgam. Their status is indifferent to the labor relations embedded in them because social media has reduced market friction—and hence measurable entropy—to zero. In other words, art has found an even more efficient market than fiscal markets and hence has begun to achieve its expropriations, to continue the Marxian model we seem to have adopted today, invisibly and in an almost completely diffuse state. It would be hard, indeed dishonest, not to see this as an even more rarified—and insidious—form of alienation which deprives humans ever more from access, not only to unregulated, volatile physical sensation, and experience, but also diminishes our capacity to achieve what Nietzsche called untimely meditation, or what his French followers called “thought from outside”—the power to imagine and engender what is not currently sanctioned by the organized forces around us. I unreservedly side with your systems’ approach to understanding how forms arise in our world, but I wonder to what extent you may too strongly rely on a version of negative dialectics— the belief that art is doing something by simply staging a social antagonism—that no longer finds traction in a fully abstracted flow world, and in actuality confirms and affirms some of its most pernicious effects by further naturalizing them (and that this imputation might apply to nearly all art practice today. . . ). AK: I have always been very skeptical of overrating art’s agency in general and its ability even to stage social antagonisms. I think that if art succeeds to work as a catalyst for people to ask questions about the status quo then it is already a lot. I think we should not be naively positivist about any systems. Information networks are often assumed to be democratic because they supposedly exist without central command but in reality networks produce their own forms of control, governance, and hierarchy. Mass computation of the 21st century subjects our decisions, movements, tastes, and feelings to the invisible action of arbitrary political algorithms. The internet is completely surveyed and monopolized by copyright and control. Even knowledge is being privatized. The internet of things will further reinforce the rule of the few monopolies or the siren servers, as Jaron Lanier calls them, such as Google or Facebook. Right now the economics of networks is such that only these central servers make money from the flows of free information. At the time of its sale to Facebook, Instagram had exactly 13 employees. It is not because those employees were so extraordinarily valuable but because much of its value comes from the millions of users who contribute to the network for free. One thing is true though; in a world in which more things are potentially nearly free, social capital is going to play a far more significant role than financial capital and that’s what interests me in my recent research… How can we think about new ways of making, emerging, evolving artworks based on social and not financial capital. Architecture and urbanism have obviously been investigating these problems for a long time. It is particularly interesting to look at how societies or social groups, emigrants etc. who found themselves in situations of profound financial crisis and various calamities start operating as societies without money or without traditionally understood architecture; they find the way to build out of literally nothing without any master plan. In a way I am trying to apply this thinking to my recent works by looking at other ways of producing forms that could emerge as results of collective intelligence. I’m trying not to be naïve about it. As I said, each complex system soon starts to produce some form of hierarchy and control. This concerns for example the emerging system of the so-called sharing economy and it would probably also concern the proposed system of guaranteed minimum income economy. But perhaps understanding the mechanisms governing these systems could allow us to try to circumvent their logic, and art is an interesting laboratory to do that. In our contemporary flow world, it is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to “do things with art” so I am glad if my work becomes a catalyst triggering some questions. SK: It is heartening to encounter these ideas in an art and form maker today, because the trenchancy and provocativeness that these ideas held for architects only a generation ago—when they appeared in more technical guises like ”self-organization” and ”automata theory”—has been nearly completely lost. The study of these assembly mechanics by designers seems to have been abandoned at just the historical moment, as you imply, that their social penetration has made them all the more urgent and critical insofar as they may be contributing to the eclipse of fiscal capital itself as the primary shaper of material reality and public forms. Furthermore, this new category of action may well be presiding over the transition from a money and private initiative economy to that of a social dynamo that relies on diffuse and integrative processes of energy extraction that taps the widest field of resources ever accessible in order to concentrate ever greater value within ever smaller holds. Whether it really differs from the proverbial “invisible hand” remains an open question. . . Is it possible then that social participation is the most naïve of political movements and battle cries, a Trojan Horse that is plunging us into ever more obscure processes of subsumption, and subjugation, that we mostly don’t even know how to think simply because we are them? Your own strategies seem curiously to acknowledge this with a kind of pervasive irony. . . I find this as well in your flirtations with objects, as if they were somehow autonomous and magical when the wider evidence of your project claims otherwise; that they are never other than artifacts of systems relationships. . . AK: The idea of social participation may well be a fiction, but the problem of audience labor is important. I like to set traps for the audience and subvert the naïve idea of participatory art into soft exploitations since in the digital media realm we are all constantly being slightly exploited through the sales of our personal and behavioral data to advertising companies. Many of my works are about audience labor. I’m interested in situations of energy and work harvested from the audience unbeknownst to it and this happens pretty much all the time online, but also with audiences visiting museums and Instagraming pictures. Within my exhibitions I’m trying to re-create the systems or relationships of things from the real world, so some works parasitize or exploit other works. For example, the battery charged by the audience entering the museum is powering the levitating meteorite. This summer it will be used to power a perpetual motion machine, a utopian dream. I started thinking about artworks and exhibitions as living intelligent organisms, as forms of artificial life. Many of my works behave like organisms, viruses, or memes, constantly evolving and dispersing because they are inspired Previous Page: Air Rights, 2014. Electromagnets, wood, foam, powdered stone, pigments. Fabrication : Krzysztof Smaga Photo: Jean Vong Above: Quasi Object, 2014. Animatronic soccer ball, robotic mechanism, motor. Engineering: Eric Humphreys Photo : Jean Vong by the unpredictable behavior of systems such as the internet or a revolutionary movement. They are like living organisms. I was also inspired by the fact that nowadays in the US, corporations have the status of humans and corporate personhood allows a company to claim some of the same legal rights as an individual. Some of my works such as Quasi Object seem to have their own agency and agenda. This work turns upside down Michel Serres’ and Bruno Latour’s idea of a quasi object, which circulates between people in a network. In this case, Quasi Object is an animatronic soccer ball circulating between invisible players and moving around the museum. Its movements are derivatives of actions of unaware online workers and players. Minus One Dollar consists of slightly altered quarter dollar coins which I introduced into wide circulation as spies in the system. Part of the work is always at the museum and part of it circulates in the real world. In our era we are surrounded by objects that have hybrid, transitory, and shifting status, value, or meaning…Connected objects, inherently unstable objects, and speculative products, and I am constantly investigating these relationships between the objects’ value, authorship, production, distribution, circulation, and ownership. I find Bruce Sterling’s notion of a spime very useful. It describes a situation where “an object is no longer an object but an instantiation. ”Spimes“ begin and end as data: they are designed on screens, fabricated by digital means and precisely tracked through space and time throughout their earthly sojourn.” We are also surrounded by what Timothy Morton calls hyper objects which exceed the time scale of human civilization. They are so massively distributed in time and space that they transcend spatiotemporal specificity. The isotope of Plutonium-239, which is the byproduct of nuclear reactors, has a half-life of 24,000 years. That’s close to the age of the Lascaux cave paintings. What humans tried to achieve over the centuries with the creation of monuments of various kinds—namely some form of eternity—is paradoxically achieved with the byproducts of our industrial era. A styrofoam cup, for example, has a half-life of thousands of years, so it has some qualities of a monument. My works mix very serious problems with very playful forms because I’m reflecting on the relationship of fiction and magic with economy, and politics. I am trying to draw attention to the fact that the speculations and exploits of capitalism often happen around fictions and phantoms. Part of the irony in my works addresses the naiveté of the concept of the alleged autonomy of critical art practices. There is absolutely no autonomy, no escape from the art system, to which also the critical and activist art practices are subjected so the only way is to embrace it and play with it. SK: Aren’t some of the ideas you are drawing on here—spimes, hyperobjects, etc.— actually mistaken understandings, default half-concepts that fail to think beyond the limits and commonplaces of noumenal objecthood? Or to put it more parochially, do they not represent the same essential conceptual failure, now five decades later, that led art theory to misapprehend the breakthroughs and transformations of time-based, or ecological art, perception, and thought— i.e. Minimalist exteriority—that we saw so sloppily managed in Michael Fried’s 1967 essay? By this I mean yet another naïve attempt to “save the object” by endowing it with irreducible metaphysical qualities (the Ding an sich) or, by proceeding like capitalism itself, continually to supplement reality with new axioms that infinitely extend its illegitimate operations into novel contexts? Or yet again, to misapprehend what Alfred North Whitehead called the “prehensive character” of space-time objects, which is precisely that they are occasions and events? AK: I do not entirely agree. I completely share the understanding of objects proposed by Whitehead and recently analyzed by object-oriented ontology as objects-events, but the notions I mentioned do not represent a conceptual failure because they do not actually assume noumenal objecthood. On the contrary, they can actually help ordinary people understand the event-like character of objects beyond the philosophical discourse because these notions are describing the concrete problems and experiences of everyday life. They refer to the transformations in economy, Above: Production Line (Serial 1), 2016. (in collaboration with John Menick) Realized with the input of the online workers of Amazon Mechanical Turk platform, Plotter ink drawings on archival paper. Right top: Production Line (Parallel 1) and Production Line (Parallel 2), 2016. (in collaboration with John Menick) Lines drawn by the workers of the Amazon Mechanical Turk online platform, Ink plotter drawings on archival paper. Photo : Jan Domicz Right bottom: Production Line (fabrication process, detail) ecology, in the technosphere and social networks that influenced the status of real objects and the experience of their users and not art objects and the beholder’s experience. I am talking about the actual changes e.g. in production and distribution of objects. It may sound as a metaphysical problem, but it is actually a fact that humanity does not know what to do with nuclear waste and we are encountering problems that may sound like science fiction, but are actually very real: how to mark the sites of reservoirs of nuclear toxic waste to civilizations who may find these sealed sites in thousands of years, assuming these people may not use writing any more? What kind of signage should be used? In what language or system? So the messages that are being composed now by groups of anthropologists, linguists and physicists have a hybrid status of atemporal objects that are trying to anticipate the future and establish communication with future humans. My point is that objects like these have a higher ability to actually transform over time than most art objects. What is more, I have always found science and political economy much more inspiring than art history. Singular authorship in art may disappear or dissolve in the future. I often imagine the evolution of culture in a few thousand years. Perhaps the climate and technological changes in culture, which just like religion, emerged as yet another evolutionary adaptation, may evolve into something else which will be more useful to humans in the future world. So art as a social phenomenon probably also has an expiration date and will cease to exist despite its claim of being exempt from the usefulness paradigm which is, as far as I am concerned, a fiction. What I am inspired by is the evolutionary character of technology and of objects in general. And so my works often change their status, form, and value after I made them. I like losing control over the works. Simply because the internet memes and other forms of collective or complex forms of authorship seem to much better reflect the nature of the objects we are surrounded with. The project Production Line, which I recently developed with the artist and programmer John Menick, is based on the crossover of collective intelligence and artificial intelligence which we applied to art production. We outsourced this project to the people working on online crowdsourcing platforms such as the Amazon Mechanical Turk. The workers are being paid for drawing a single line. The forms emerge out of thousands of simple lines drawn all over the world. The fact that Amazon allows for digital payment of bonuses to former workers enables us to pay the workers additional amounts after these artworks get sold, so the workers are participating in the profits, which complicates the status and value of this work. New York City May 18, 2016 It was a pleasure to have Agnieszka Kurant make an exhibition at ‘T’ Space, and to listen to the music of Frances-Marie Uitti at our July 23 opening. We thank Jim Holl for the handsome graphic design of this catalogue, Agnieszka Kurant, Sanford Kwinter and Steven Holl for their insightful words, and Dimitra Tsachrelia, Javier Gomez, Jessica Merritt, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, Kristin Costello, and Lev Pakman for their assistance. 2016 marks the first year that our audience has become stakeholders in ‘T’ Space. We are truly grateful to all of our Patrons, Sponsors, Donors, Friends and Emerging Supporters for their contributions that make ‘T’ Space a sustainable project and a vital force in the Hudson Valley and beyond. Susan Wides ‘T’ Space Director | Curator PATRON $10,000.00 and up Elise Jaffe & Jeffrey Brown Steven Myron Holl Foundation SPONSOR $5000–$9999 Cheim & Read LLC Sueyun Locks, Locks gallery DONOR $1000–$4999 Helen Harrington Marden & Brice Marden Joan & Martin Camins Lars Müller Gwendolyn Bellman & Thomas Hesse Lenore Malen and Mark Nelkin Charlotte Mandell & Robert Kelly Enrique Norten Low Road Foundation Steven H. 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