AVA Akademija za vizualne umetnosti Razstava diplomantov Academy of Visual Arts Ljubljana Degree Show 2014 Galerija Vžigalica, 11. 7. - 31. 8., 2014 Vsebina Contents 07 Uvod Introduction Pepi Sekulich 11 Prilaščanje subjektivnosti The Expropriation of Subjectivity Sebastjan Leban 18 Matjaž Bertoncelj 22 Ari Gabrijelčič 26 Ana Jagodic 30 Zala Kobe 34 Kristina Mehle 38 Anže Rumiha 42 Luka Savić Uvod Pepi Sekulich Treba je priznati, da je bilo študijsko leto 2013/14, v vseh pogledih, najzahtevnejše, od nastanka AVA – Akademije za vizualne umetnosti ter začetka implementacije programov leta 2008. Splošna družbena atmosfera se je zadnja leta poslabšala in vplivi, milo rečeno, pervertirane in skorumpirane družbe, ki mazohistično sledi neoliberalni paradigmi, ki od državljanov zahteva, da si morajo še bolj zategniti pasove, ter jim že na mesečni ravni dodaja nove luknje, delujejo tudi na študente, ki težko uvidijo lastno perspektivo ... Živimo pač v sistemu, v katerem se jemlje revnim, da bi se še bolj bogatile korporacije ter njihovi razvajeni delničarji. Na akademiji AVA se trudimo ohraniti moralo in kljub negativnim vplivom okolja motivirati študente, ki na svojih ramenih že nosijo prekerno sedanjost. Nepredvidljiva prihodnost pa je tako ali drugače v njihovih rokah, saj z aktivnim in afirmativnim delovanjem nanjo lahko tudi pozitivno vplivajo. Pričujoča dela izražajo interdisciplinarno naravnanost, originalnost in individualnost pristopov, ki duhovito, kritično in originalno reflektirajo čas, v katerem živimo, ter obenem napovedujejo čas, ki prihaja. To nam daje upanje v boljšo, svetlejšo prihodnost. Iskrene čestitke vsem študentom ob koncu študija kreativnih praks vizualnih umetnosti ter kolegom, predavateljem, ki so z lastnim vložkom oplajali študente ter jim s posredovanjem znanja omogočili in podprli njihov vstop v profesionalno polje delovanja. Dekan 7 Introduction Pepi Sekulich We have to admit that the 2013/14 academic year has in every respect been one of the most difficult years since 2008, when AVA – Academy of Visual Arts was founded and began offering its programs. Over the last few years, the general social environment has deteriorated and the impact of a – to put it bluntly – perverted and corrupted society that masochistically follows the neoliberal paradigm, forcing citizens to keep on tightening their belts by adding new holes in their belts virtually on a monthly basis, has been affecting students, who have an increasingly hard time seeing a future for themselves in this field. The fact is that we are living in a system that takes from the poor to further enrich already wealthy corporations and their spoilt shareholders. Despite the depressing environment in which we find ourselves, we at AVA continue to try to keep morale high and our students motivated. They are already carrying the burden of the precarious present on their shoulders. Yet the unpredictable future is also in their own hands, one way or another, because through their positive actions they can also positively impact the future. The works presented in this show express the interdisciplinary, originality and individuality of approaches reflecting the time we live in now in a humorous, critical and original way while at the same time anticipating the time that is coming, thus giving us hope for a better, brighter future. Congratulations to all the students who are completing their study of creative practices in visual arts, as well as to all the lecturers for enriching the students with their input and for enabling and supporting their entry into professional activity by sharing their knowledge. Principal 9 Prilaščanje subjektivnosti Sebastjan Leban Walter Benjamin v knjigi Umetniško delo v dobi mehanične reprodukcije razmišlja o transformaciji družbene realnosti kot posledici razvoja in vpeljave strojev v produkcijo. Njegova teza temelji na tem, da se razvoj kapitala definira z mehaničnostjo in tekočim trakom, ki sta omogočila nastanek nove tehnološke paradigme, ki je korenito spremenila način produkcije, družbo, svetovni red in umetnost. Marx v Grundrisse pojasni, da ves razvoj kapitala poteka v načinu produkcije, skladne s funkcijo kapitala. To nastopi, ko »sredstva dela ne prevzamejo le ekonomske oblike fiksnega kapitala, ampak so tudi odstranjena v svoji neposredni obliki, in ko fiksni kapital prevzame vlogo stroja znotraj produkcijskega procesa«.1 V fiksnem kapitalu je družbena produktivnost dela izključna last kapitala. Marx poudarja: »Višja ko je raven razvoja fiksnega kapitala«, bolj kontinuiteta produkcije in reprodukcije postaja »zunanji obvezujoč pogoj načina produkcije, ki temelji na kapitalu«.2 To pomeni, da je v osnovi kapitala, da se stalno spreminja in izumlja nove načine produkcije, ki so podlaga za njegovo nadaljnje osvajanje, prilaščanje, produkcijo in lastninjenje. Kot meni Beller, je kapital z nastankom kina našel nov način izkoriščanja presežne vrednosti, ki jo ustvarja delavec. Ta se kaže v raznolikosti podobe in v njeni zmožnosti materializacije pogojev za prilaščanje kapitala, ki segajo onkraj meja materialne stvarnosti dela in življenja. Kinematični način produkcije prevzema logiko tekočega traku in jo vpenja v človeško subjektivnost. S tem preoblikuje človeško zavest in podzavest tako, da postanemo popolnoma podrejeni realni subsumaciji. Zato ni odveč trditi, da se prav v kinematičnem in digitalnemu načinu produkcije uresničuje na novo nastala paradigma kapitala, katere cilj je popolna podreditev družbenega telesa. Seveda to zahteva celostno preureditev imaginarija, ki postane tako odvisen »od organiziranosti vidnega sveta«,3 v katerem imaginacija in ideologija delujeta kot »imaginarni odnos do realnega«,4 ki strukturira razvoj kapitala. Beller trdi, da gre pri sodobni produkciji tržnega blaga za obliko montaže. Mehanična paradigma se je posodobila z naborom vizualnega imaginarija, ki povečuje produkcijo tržnega blaga in presežne vrednosti. S tem postaja kapitalizem neskončen, saj ne le pridobiva globalno nadvlado, temveč prodira v sam imaginarij. Kar je zgodovinsko in sodobno definirano kot iluzija kapitala na podlagi podobe in s podobo, je pravzaprav konstitutivni element realnosti. S podobo je kapital presegel meje tovarne in neposredno 11 vstopil v naše domove, zapolnil naša življenja in jih spremenil v tržno blago. Bifo v knjigi After the Future vidi to spremembo na še bolj sofisticirani ravni. Sklicujoč se na Marazzija, postavi tezo postfordistične nove realnosti, ki v delavcu vidi rekombinant finančnega kapitala. Odvisnost od kapitala je dosegla takšno stopnjo, da se vsakršen poskus razveze od njega izbriše. Bifo ugotavlja, da smo v finančni kapital vključeni kot del njegove mašinerije. Revolucija v načinu produkcije se kaže v tem, da kot delavci nismo le podrejeni mehaničnemu načinu produkcije v tovarni. Bifo vidi tak primer v mašineriji finančnega kapitala, v okviru katere smo delavci spremenjeni v imetnike delnic5 podjetja, ki izkorišča naše delo.6 Tako stanje je značilno za novo ekonomijo (New Economy), v kateri govorimo o novi obliki subsumacije delavcev kapitalu; način, ki ga Marazzi zaznava v novem procesu podrejanja delavčeve usode tveganjem finančnega kapitala. Kot Marazzi trdi, se to dogaja na ravni brisanja »mej med kapitalom in delom, ki je implicitna fordističnemu mezdnemu odnosu, tako da delavčeve prihranke veže na procese kapitalistične transformacije/ restrukturacije«.7 Delavec je spremenjen v delničarja kapitala, ki ga subsumira. Še bolj problematična pa se zdi (kar se med drugim neposredno veže na Bifovo zahtevo po novem družbenem boju) realnost, ki jo zaznavajo Bifo ter tudi Deleuze in Marazzi. Gre za realnost, ki zaznamuje realno subsumacijo kapitala, pri kateri si delavec »soprizadeva za uspešno delovanje kapitala«.8 S tega stališča postane realna subsumacija popolna, celo perverzna, saj izničuje razredni boj tako, da veže delavca na spekulacijo finančnega kapitalizma. Tovarna kot naravno okolje dela in kapital s svojo materialno produktivnostjo sta preurejena z novo kodo delovanja, ki omogoča utelešenje kapitala v človeškem telesu, umu in duši. Ta koda je indeks kinematičnega in digitalnega načina produkcije, v katerem kapitalizem (kot trdi Bifo) ne potrebuje več delavcev (v fordističnem smislu), ampak »celularne fraktale dela, podplačane, prekerne, razosebljene«.9 Trditi, da je kapitalistični stroj vseobsegajoč, da naseljuje našo zunanjost in je konstitutivni del naše notranjosti, pomeni definirati nov način produkcije kapitala v kinematični in digitalni dobi, v kateri so meje med delom in nedelom, mehaničnim in nemehaničnim, človeškim in nečloveškim izbrisane in nadomeščene z naborom tehničnoekonomskih regulacij, ki nadvladajo naše življenje. Če spremljamo razvoj kapitala v kinematičnem načinu produkcije, vidimo, kako vseobsegajoče je telo kapitala, ki biva v podobi in fluktuira v vizualnem. Ta revolucionarni preskok kapitala iz strogo ekonomske in politične sfere v kulturno sfero Beller pojmuje kot prehod v smeri naselitve čutnega, pri čemer je logika »kapitalizirane vizualnosti vsesplošno razširjena in strukturira željo, 12 učinkovitost, percepcijo in samopodobo na svetovni ravni«.10 S tem postanejo kultura, kulturna industrija in umetnost polje, ki omogoča indoktrinacijo v kapitalistični način produkcije in življenja ter tudi oblikovanje odpora in razvoj radikalnega kritičnega diskurza, usmerjenega proti dominaciji kapitala. Na podobni osnovi govori Marazzi o današnjem kapitalu kot o transformatornem elementu, ki se izjemno učinkovito prenaša ali neposredno ponotranji v družbeno delovno silo.11 Tiziana Terranova v zvezi s tem pojasni, kako je ekspanzija digitalne ekonomije ustvarila realnost novega fleksibilnega dela in delovne sile, ki od delavca zahteva nenehno posodabljenje, da je lahko kos stalno spreminjajočim se izboljšavam v vseh fazah produkcije. To stanje zaznava Terranova v brezplačni delovni sili znotraj digitalne ekonomije, kjer lahko vidimo transformacijo dela vse bolj v smeri samozaposlovanja. Tako transformacija načina produkcije ponovno preuredi odnos podrejenosti do kapitala. V digitalnem načinu produkcije človeška subjektivnost »ni več samo instrument družbenega nadzora«,12 ampak postane neposredno produktivna za kapital. Če je v mehaničnem načinu produkcije paradigma kapitala temeljila na stvaritvi novega prostora produkcije z osvajanjem sveta (teritorialno), si kapital v kinematičnem načinu produkcije in posledično tudi v digitalnem načinu produkcije ne prizadeva le za to, da bi si podredil delavčevo kreativnost znotraj delovnega procesa, ampak tudi njegovo dušo. Karl Marx, The Chapter on Capital (Continuation), Second part of the Grundrisse and the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, Economic Works 1857–1861, v: MECW, letnik 29 (New York International Publisher, 1996). 2 Prav tam. 3 Jonathan Beller, The Political Economy of the Postmodern, v: CMP (Dartmounth College Press, 2006), 10. 4 Prav tam. 5 Zaradi politike uničenja socialne države in aktivne politike prekarizacije so delavci prisiljeni vlagati v pokojninske sklade, trg vrednostnih papirjev, investicijske sklade, da bi si po upokojitvi zagotovili socialno varnost. 6 Franco Berardi, Necronomy, v: After Future (AK Press, 2011), 109. 7 Christian Marazzi, From Post-Fordism to the New Economy, v: Capital and Language (Semiotext(e), 2008), 37. 8 Prav tam. 9 Prav tam. 10 Jonathan Beller, Wager within the Image: Rise of Visuality, Transforamtion of Labour, Aesthetic Regimes, v: Cultural Machine, letnik 13, (2012), 7. 11 Christian Marazzi, The Violence of Financial Capitalism (Semiotext(e), 2011). 12 Prav tam., 11. 1 13 The Expropriation of Subjectivity Sebastjan Leban Walter Benjamin in The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction reflects on the transformations brought about by the invention and introduction of machinery in the process of production, as its implementation in the wider social sphere. He departs from the thesis that capital developed through mechanics and the assembly line, into a new technological formation that will drastically change the mode of production, society, the world order and art. It is Marx that in Grundrisse explains how the full development of capital takes place by the mode of production corresponding to its function. This occurs when “the means of labour has not only taken the economic form of fixed capital, but has also been suspended in its immediate form, and when fixed capital appears as a machine within the production process.”1 It is in fixed capital that the social productivity of labour is placed as the sole property of capital. As Marx points out, the “greater the scale on which fixed capital develops” the more the continuity of the process of production and reproduction becomes the “externally compelling condition for the mode of production founded on capital.”2 Meaning that it is in the very nature of capital to constantly change and develop new modes of production, by way of which to conquer more, expropriate more, produce more, and own more. As Beller argues, with the advent of cinema capital found a new way of extracting surplus labour from the worker. This new way resides in the multiplicity of the image and in the possibility of the image to materialize the conditions of expropriation of capital beyond the material reality of work and life. It is the cinematic mode of production that takes the logic of the conveyor belt and inserts it into human subjectivity. By this it kneads our consciousness and unconsciousness up to subsuming us entirely to the process of real subsumption. Thus consequently it is by the cinematic and digital mode of production that we see realized the new emerging paradigm of capital whose purpose is the complete subjugation of the social body. This of course demands a complete reorganization of the imaginary that from now on depends “upon the organization of the visible world,”3 in which both imagination and ideology functions as the “imaginary relation to the real”4 that structures the development of capital. For Beller, modern commodity production becomes a form of montage. The mechanical paradigm has been upgraded by a set of visual imaginary that expands commodity production and the production of surplus value. In this way capitalism becomes infinite, since it does not only achieves global dominance, but it enters into the imaginary. What is defined historically and contemporary as the illusion of capital through and by the image is in fact a constitutive part of our reality. It is with the image that capital transcended 15 the limits of the factory and enters directly into our homes, fulfilling our lives, transforming it into a commodity. Bifo in After the Future detects this transformation on an even more sophisticated level. Referring to Marazzi, Bifo is able to structure the thesis of the post-Fordist new reality that sees the workers as the recombinant of financial capital. The dependency upon capital is developed to such an extent that any possible alternative of not being depended on capital is practically erased. As Bifo observes, we are included in financial capital as part of its machinery. The revolution in the mode of production implies the fact that as workers we are not solely subsumed to the mechanical mode of production of the factory. Bifo unveils such an example being realized in the very machinery of financial capitalism, where as workers we are transformed into shareholders5 of that same enterprise that exploits our labour.6 A condition we see realized in the New Economy where a new way of subsuming workers to capital is in place; a way that Marazzi locates in the new process of tying the fate of the workers to the risks of financial capital. As implied by Marazzi this happens on the level of eliminating the “separation between capital and labor implicit in the Fordist salary relationship by strictly tying workers' savings to processes of capitalist transformation / restructuring.”7 The worker is thus transformed into a shareholder of that same capital that subsumes him. What is even more problematic and that is directly links to Bifo’s demand of a new class struggle, is the reality Bifo, Deleuze and Marazzi detect, a reality that marks the real subsumption by capital in which the worker is “co-interested in the good operation of capital in general.”8 In this way the real subsumption becomes total, or to say even perverse, since it annihilates the class struggle by tying the workers to the speculation of financial capitalism. The factory as the natural environment of work and capital with its material productivity has been rearranged by a new code of operation through which capital is able to execute its embodiment in the human body, brain and soul. This code is the index of both the cinematic and digital mode of production in which capitalism, according to Bifo, no longer need workers (in the Fordist sense), but it needs “cellular fractals of labour, underpaid, precarious, depersonalized.”9 By stating that capitalist machine is all-embracing, that it populates our externality and it is a constitutive part of our interiority, is to define the new mode of production of capital in the cinematic and digital era, where the limits of work and non work, machinic and non machinic, human and non human is erased and replaced by a set of techno-economical regulation that overrules our lives. Following the development of capital in the cinematic mode of production we become aware of the all-embracing body of capital that resides in the 16 image and fluctuates within visuality. This revolutionary leap of capital from the strictly economical and political domain into the cultural domain is what Beller defiens as the passage towards the habitation of the sense where the logic of “capitalised visuality is widespread, structuring desire, performance, perception and self-perception on a world scale.”10 This way culture along with cultural industry and art becomes the field of both the indoctrination in capital’s mode of production and life and the formation of resistance and the development of radical critical discourse towards capital domination. On similar premises, Marazzi speaks of today’s capital as of a transformatory element that has the powerful effectiveness of being transmitted or directly internalized in the social workforce.11 In this regard Tiziana Terranova explains how the expansion of the digital economy has produced a reality of a new flexible work and workforce that imposes a constant reskilling of the worker to be able to cope with the ever changing amelioration in the software and hardware production. A condition Terranova locates in the free labour power of the digital economy, where we can see the transformation of labour more and more toward self-employment. This way the transformation in the mode of production reorganizes again the relation of subjugation toward capital. It is in the digital mode of production that the human subjectivity “ceases to be only an instrument of social control”12 but it becomes directly productive for capital. If in the mechanical mode of production, the paradigm of capital was to invent the new space for production in achieving global conquer (territorially), in the cinematic mode of production and consequently in the digital mode of production, capital is concerned not only with how to subjugate the workers’ creativity within the labour process, but also with how to subjugate the workers’ soul. Karl Marx, The Chapter on Capital (Continuation), Second part of the Grundrisse and the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, Economic Works 1857-1861, in MECW, Vol. 29, (New York International Publisher, 1996). 2 Ibid. 3 Jonathan Beller, The Political Economy of the Postmodern, in CMP, (Dartmounth College Press, 2006), 10. 4 Ibid. 5 Due to the politics of destruction of the welfare state and an active politics of precarisation, workers are forced to invest into pension funds, stock market, investment trust in order to provide themself social security after retirement. 6 Franco Berardi, Necronomy, in After Future (AK Press, 2011), 109. 7 Christian Marazzi, From Post-Fordism to the New Economy, in Capital and Language, (Semiotext(e), 2008), 37. 8 Ibid. 9 Ibid. 10 Jonathan Beller, Wager Within the Image: Rise of Visuality, Transforamtion of Labour, Aesthetic Regimes, in Cultural Machine, Vol. 13, (2012), 7. 11 Christian Marazzi, The Violence of Financial Capitalism, (Semiotext(e), 2011). 12 Ibid., 11. 1 17 Matjaž Bertoncelj Matjaž Bertoncelj (risba), Jelena Bertoncelj (sivine), Fjodor M. Dostojevski (tekst) Grafična novela po romanu “Ponižani in razžaljeni” Matjaž Bertoncelj (art), Jelena Bertoncelj (greys), Fjodor M. Dostojevski (text) A graphic novel after a novel “Humiliated and Insulted” Ponižani in razžaljeni/Humiliated and Insulted Svinčnik, tuš na papirju, photoshop/pencil, ink on paper, photoshop 18 Ari Gabrijelčič Visoka umetnost/High Art Instalacija iz različnih materialov/Mixed media installation 22 Ana Jagodic Svilnata zver (detajl)/Silky Beast (detail) 118 × 175 cm City light, used wax strips/Oglasna površina, uporabljeni depilacijski trakovi Chewland (detajl/detail) 230 × 176 cm Žvečilni gumiji na platnu/Chewing gums on canvas 26 Zala Kobe Koncept, koreografija in ples/Concept, Choreography and Danced by: Ida Hellsten, Luke Thomas Dunne, Bence Mezei Oblikovanje svetlobe/Light Design: Leon Curk Izvirna glasba/Sound Design: Jérôme Li-Thiao-Té Oblikovanje scenografije/Set Design: Zala Kobe, Živa Petrič (Akademija za vizualne umetnosti – AVA) Izvršna producentka/Executive Producer: Tanja Skok V sodelovanju/In collaboration with: AVA - Akademija za vizualne umetnosti Zahvale/Thanks: Luka Curk, Eric Dean Scott, Endre Mezei, Tanja Skok, Jaka Šimenc, Katarina Škaper, Ana Štefanec, Goran Pakozdi, Julija Travančić, Marija Zidar Kaj se zgodi, ko se dotakneš/What Happens When You Touch It Scenografija za plesno predstavo/Set design for dance performance 30 Kristina Mehle Odraz transparentnosti/Reflection of Transparency Instalacija iz različnih materijalov/Mixed media installation 34 73 Anže Rumiha Srečno, moja ljubezen!/Goodbay, My Love! Igrani film/Feature film 38 Luka Savić Mar bi vi zmogli?/Could You? Skulptura/Sculpture 42 Akademija za vizualne umetnosti Academy of Visual Arts Ljubljana Predavatelji / Lecturers Jaka Bonča David Burrows Philip Burt Željko Hrs Karmen Ključar Jasna Klančišar Gregor Kroupa Sebastjan Leban Živa Ljubec Tevž Logar Miran Mohar Jovita Pristovšek Andrej Savski Pepi Sekulich Andrej Šprah Aleksandra Vajd Martina Vovk Asistenta / GTA Matija Jakin Sanja Vatić V spomin / In memoriam Dušan Černe - Duško (1949-2014) Tehnična podpora / Technical support Klemen Drobež Gostujoči umetniki / Visiting artists 2013 /14 Nika Autor Sezgin Boynik Alenka Gregorič Marina Gržinić Janez Janša, Janez Janša, Janez Janša Andrea Murnik Avi Pitchon Apolonija Šušteršič Katalog izdala / Catalogue published by AVA Trubarjeva 5 1000 Ljubljana Slovenija www.ava.si Urednika / Editors Sebastjan Leban, Miran Mohar Oblikovanje / Design Miran Mohar, Patrick Ward Postavitev / Layout Luka Savić Prevodi / Translations Jasna Hrastnik, Tanja Passoni Lektoriranje / Language editing Jean McCollister, Sonja Pezdirc Tisk / Print Studio Print, Ljubljana Akademijo za vizualne umetnosti podpirajo / Academy of Visual Arts Ljubljana is supported by Gigo Design + Communications Individa d.o.o. Muzej in galerije mesta Ljubljane Studio Černe d.o.o., Ljubljana Tift d.o.o. Ljubljana Društvo NSK Informativni center Vogmar, Ljubljana AVA 006 podpira / AVA 006 supported by Fotolito Dolenc d.o.o, Ljubljana
© Copyright 2024