Flux Diagrams and Maps of the Trajective Lecture at "Parallel Spaces", ICA
London, July 5, 1997
by Inke Arns <[email protected]>, Berlin
http://www.projects.v2.nl/~arns/Lecture/london.htm

------------------------------

 We always refer to objectivity and subjectivity, but never to *trajectivity
*. The anthropological discussion of the nomadic life and of sedentariness
explains how the city emerged as the most important political form in
history; but there is no understanding of the vectorial aspects of our
species and its progress to and fro across the earth.
Between the subjective and the objective there is obviously no room for the
'trajective', that is, for the fact that movement takes place from here to
there, a movement from one to the other, without which we will never really
understand the different *rules for the perception of the world*. (Virilio)

At the end of the eighties and beginning of the nineties, political events
have led to a disintegration of the previously valid world order, according
to which the world was separated into two antagonistic blocks. This formerly
prevailing order is now being replaced by globalization tendencies with
world-wide effect, causing new mental cartographies to emerge and so
demanding radically different systems of coordinates. Two strategies of
reaction are now becoming visible: on the one hand, there is reversion to a
static, defensive understanding of one's own location, which is meant to
provide some kind of stability (*space of regression, ethnospace*), and on
the other hand, the possibility of what might be referred to as a more
situational or flexible location of the self, which is intended to guarantee
a means of orientation within the emerging meta-spaces of global
mobility (*world
spaces / transit spaces*).

*Space of Regression / Ethno Space*

In present day Europe, the concepts of national-cultural identity find
expression in a tendency towards increasing subnationalisation. Although it
appeared to have been overcome, in political practice both an increasing
tendency towards the hermetism of the external boundaries of the territories
they enclose is emerging, and a simultaneous increase in their ideological
overloading, inasmuch as the territory is becoming a significant point of
reference with regard to separation from and the segregation from the other
/ the others (1). (I just would like to remind you of what has been going on
in a European country formerly called Yugoslavia since 1991 and gently point
to the discussions about the 'Fortress Europe'.)

In the nineties, artists are investigating the mechanisms which constitute
the political, territorial *status quo*. In this process, they create
subversive orders which function parallel to the status quo, and which are
always aimed at a transformation of the territory, that is, at breaking
through the established territorial boundaries. On the one hand, artistic
concepts attempt to create alternative counter-ideas to the newly underlined
political fixation or preoccupation with territory, ethnic groups and
borders; on the other hand, they question the sense of a territory defined
in national-cultural terms and - to cite Fredric Jameson - attempt to
develop new productive categories for the definition of social space:

The new political art - if it is at all possible - will have to deal with
the 'truth' of postmodernism, that is, it will have to hold onto the most
important fact, onto the new kind of world space created by multinational
capital. In this, a breakthrough ought to be possible, a breakthrough to
new, as yet inconceivable means of representing this space, means with which
we can again begin to determine our position as individual and collective
subjects. [...] If there is anything which may be referred to as a political
manifestation of the postmodern age, then this would be called upon to
design a *global cartography of our perception and cognition*, and to
project this into a social space open to precise evaluation. (2)

*World Spaces / Transit Spaces*

At the present time, it is becoming obvious that the previously valid *rules
for the perception of the world* are not the only valid ones, and that
besides or below the former systems of world order, new and alternative
forms and rules for the perception of the world are possible. Our cognitive
process towards the perception of the world is a process which has, with the
use of analogue media and the increased extension of transport routes,
undergone fundamental changes since the 19th century. Since WWII, a process
of increasing dislocation (that is, of increasing removal from any spatial
ties) has been accelerating with the employment of digital media and global
(at the same time globalizing) computer networks, a process which makes the
development of new regulative criteria necessary. According to Virilio, the
world is shrinking due to the acceleration of information and transport
routes, and the most recent aspect of this process is the "disappearance of
distance". Whilst the past was determined by spatial order, temporal order
will be the key to the future.

Shrinking physical, territorial space is set off by digital territories,
from whence emerges, according to Timothy Druckrey, "[...] a neuro-geography
of cognition, an utopos of networks, forms of electronic reception, and of
post-territorial community [...] whose hold on matter is ephemeral, whose
position in space is tenuous, and whose presence is measured in acts of
participation rather than coincidences of location." (3)
The French urban planner and dromologist Paul Virilio also points to the
alternative possibilities of perception when he refers to trajectivity and
the vectorial as two constants neglected by our perception:

We always refer to objectivity and subjectivity, but never to *trajectivity*.
The anthropological discussion of the nomadic life and of sedentariness
explains how the city emerged as the most important political form in
history; but there is no understanding of the vectorial aspects of our
species and its progress to and fro across the earth. Between the subjective
and the objective there is obviously no room for the 'trajective', that is,
for the fact that movement takes place from here to there, a movement from
one to the other, without which we will never really understand the
different *rules for the perception of the world*. (4)

*Examples of Artistic Strategies*

The spectrum of the four artists' or art groups' strategies I now would like
to present you briefly, ranges from experiments in physically crossing real
territories, to the simulation of political, territorial structures and
mechanisms, and finally to fundamental forms of conquest of uncontrolled
territories, which approach strivings for expansion.

Some of you may have see the *World Flag Ant Farm* at the 1993 Aperto of the
Biennale di Venezia, an installation by the Japanese artist *Yukinori Yanagi
*. For the *World Flag Ant Farm* - a live-ant farm - Yanagi made replicas of
the flags of all the 170 members of the United Nations out of transparent
plexiglas boxes filled with colored sand. The boxes were placed in a grid
formation, with plastic tubes connecting each flag to its neighbours.
Thousands of live harvester ants were released into this static environment.
The ants travel throughout this piece, establishing a subterranean tunnel
system, gradually destroying the visible surface, unwittingly dismantling
national symbols and indifferently blending allied and enemy territories as
they busily transport sand grains from one place to another. It confronts us
with a metaphor for the fragility of national identities as the individual,
self-contained flags disintegrate before our eyes. Says Yanagi: "My
intention is to dissolve the symbolic signs of stasis into an organic form
that changes with time and circumstance." (1990) Motion and movement,
transportation and transformation have proven to be among Yanagi's most
effective interventions.

While in the eighties Ljubljana's radical multimedia art collective *Neue
Slowenische Kunst* (consisting of the painters' collective Irwin, the
theater collective Noordung and fronted by the rock group Laibach),
relentlessly "overidentified" with the socialist ideology of Yugoslavia,
publicly and loudly, stirring the audience and the state into a rage, NSK's
strategies have changed in the 90s: Parallel to the declaration of
independence of the Republic of Slovenia in 1991, NSK, previously an
'organisation', declared their transformation into a 'State'. The artistic
concept of the *NSK State in Time* comments on concrete political
developments in ex- Yugoslavia in a specific way: As an artistic state
concept, the *NSK State in Time* defines itself neither through a concrete
geographical *territory*, nor through an ethnically fixed *Staatsnation*.
For the definition of a proper 'spiritual' territory the concept of NSK
emphasizes the notion of time. Time is understood as a new productive
category for the definition of space. Within this terminology, 'time' is
equated with the accumulation of individual 'experiences'.
The artistic concept defines the *NSK State* as an "abstract organism, a
suprematist body" and "confers the status of a state not upon territory but
upon the mind", whose borders are in a state of constant flux, "in
accordance with the movements and changes of its 'symbolic' and 'physical'
collective body." (5)
By putting an emphasis on the factor of *movement*, another productive
category for the definition of 'space' is given. It is through movement,
i.e. a physical change of location, from one place to another, and through
the ensuing intellectual preoccupation with the 'other spiritual territory',
that new experiences become possible, leading again to the creation of
'time'. Says Irwin: "The relation between place and time is the key
relation. Movement implies temporality, i.e. produces time." (6) Within
Irwin's terminology, this specific form of movement can be equated with a
'transplantation of knowledge':

There are basic differences between the perception and interpretation of the
sign language of Irwin's paintings. This is one of our main concerns,
because signs change with time and place. A sign may have one meaning in
Russia, and yet another meaning in the West. Recognition of signs and
symbols functions in such a way that their meanings differ with places; but
nevertheless they have certain elements in common. Differences and
similarities provide logic to our research. Irwin's starting point is to
proceed from the specificity of the place of its origin, and to transfer
experience [to the West]. This is transplantation of knowledge. (7)

The 'immaterial' *NSK State in Time* performs this movement by materializing
in different time intervals under the form of an 'embassy' or a 'consulate'
in various places (8). This means that the members of the different NSK
groups, as performed for the first time in 1992 during the "NSK Embassy
Moscow" (9) in Russia, travel to a certain place together (in Moscow, a
private appartment), and then through lectures of NSK members and
participants from Slovenia or ex- Yugoslavia as well as local theoreticians
and artists, and discussions with the audience, stimulate an exchange of
experiences. For the duration of the 'embassy' or the 'consulate' the place
of the event is declared to be state territory of the *NSK State in Time*.
As of today, the *NSK State in Time* has been installed temporarily, as well
as permanently, in various European cities, and, in the summer of 1996, in
the United States of America.

In the 80s NSK could be described as static, bound to place, analyzing the
flux of aesthetic- ideological signs through territories. In the 90s the
artists' collective, through its transformation from an organisation into a
state body, itself becomes an immaterial 'organism', fluctuating through
real territories. As such, the *NSK State in Time* becomes a trajective
vehicle of a 'pure exterior', a core without interiority, a border without
territory. The only form of existence of the *NSK State* are its embassies,
ephemeral temporary materialisations serving to make visible symbolic
differences. The aim of the transposition of NSK, of movement, of travelling
and the ensuing changes of location of the entire NSK organism can be seen
in communication and exchange with this other (different) place, or, using
the words of Irwin, in the creation of time.

The Cologne-based group *Knowbotic Research (KR+cF)* develops complex
interfaces between the data spaces of computers and the human world. For
their project "Dialogue with the Knowbotic South" (DWTKS), so-called *
knowbots* or computer agents collect scientific data of the Antarctica that
is publicly available on the Internet. Says *Knowbotic Research*:
"Antarctica is surveyed by a formidable array of automatic measuring
instruments which, installed and maintained by scientists, observe and
record natural phenomena as an extension of perceptual organs. These
measuring instruments divide the entirety of nature into processable
information units." In *Knowbotic Research*'s installation, the collected
scientific data is translated into a series of abstract and intuitive
interfaces that can be experienced by human observers: cold zones, fields of
light, and pixel formations.
Our knowledge about Antarctica does not rely on direct experience of this
territory, but is digitally staged with the help of *knowbots*, as non-human
observers of mathematically established facts. *Knowbotic Research* is
developing a cartography for the imaginative mapping of the Antarctica, and,
at the same time, pointing to the contingency of scientific world images.
Working with the same scientific data, applying the same scientific process
of digitally reconstructing nature, the result of *Knowbotic Research*'s
work differs greatly from what is generally accepted as the scientific image
of Antarctica. This process of "Computer Aided Nature" points towards a
future form of territories; those organized data specifically.

Today, according to official statistics, refugees and 'displaced persons'
make up almost 1 % of the world's population (47 Mill / USCommitte for
Refugees, 1990). *Ingo Günther*'s conception of the *Refugee Republic* is
based on the realization that "refugees are the involuntary, and as yet
unrecognized avant-garde of the future." The territory that could be
occupied by the world's refugees (37 people per square kilometer) would
equal the territory of France, Germany, England and Italy taken together. Of
course the *Refugee Republic* is not about creating a territorial state;
rather Günther projects the republic of refugees as an "experimental and
experimenting, supra-territorial state, which anticipates the
socio-ideological and economic demands of the present and the future
multiculturally and multilingually, both demanding and facilitating
solutions." The supra-territorial *Refugee Republic* will use the internet
as a communication infrastructure, linking refugee camps all over the world.
In 1996 it has declared "tele-territorial sovereignty" on the Internet (
http://www.refugee.net). The *Refugee Republic* has applied for a
representation in the UN as well as in other international organisations.
Although some have criticized Günther's project to be cynical (especially
when in 1995 the *Refugee Republic Corporation* was founded and the
distribution of 50 million shares was announced), the *Refugee
Republic*still points to alternative ways of approaching developments
that are
generally interpreted very negatively: "Refugees and migrants are by no
means only a problem; rather they are also a solution, and in this sense
they equal capital".

*Maps of the Trajective*

Today, as I have pointed out, two radically opposed notions of territory can
be perceived: first, there is the persistence of, or the recourse to - what
Timothy Druckrey has called - the 'old' "geo-spaces of modernity", and
second, there are the new global spaces which I have characterized as *transit
spaces*. Certainly, these two are interconnected phenomena: the production
of locality - or, in other words, the production of 'stability' -
(retribalisation, regionalization, nationalism) can be understood as a
reaction to the emerging meta-spaces of global mobility, which are perceived
as destabilizing any kind of prevailing order of perception of the world.

The four artistic approaches I have briefly presented here are examples for
how artists attempt to provide a new sense of orientation in these new *transit
spaces*, how they re-articulate and re-formulate places which the subject
may put on his / her map and create new itineraries, how they deal with the
transition from stasis to movement, e.g. by pointing to the fluxes
underlying 'real' territories (movements of migrants etc.); -- in short: how
they provide us with an understanding of what Virilio calls 'the trajective'
or 'the vectorial aspects', with an understanding of "the fact that movement
takes place from here to there (...), without which we will never really
understand the different rules for the perception of the world."

An aesthetics of cognitive mapping, as drafted by Fredric Jameson, could
make possible the situational representation of an individual within what I
have called *transit spaces*. It is in here, within these *transit spaces*,
that different trajectories are crossing and overlapping. It is about making
these trajectories visible.

*URLs:

NSK*
Transnacionala. A Journey from the East to the West (June 28 - July 28,
1996) <http://www.ljudmila.org/trans/>
NSK State in Time / The Official NSK Electronic
Embassy<http://www.ljudmila.org/embassy/>
Documents / Reviews on "Predictions of Fire" (USA / SLO 1995) by Michael
Benson <http://www.ljudmila.org/kinetikon/>

*KNOWBOTIC RESEARCH*
Their projects <http://www.khm.de/people/krcf/>
Dialogue with the Knowbotic
South<http://www.khm.de/people/krcf/antarctica/antarctica.html>

*REFUGEE REPUBLIC*
http://www.refugee.net --> for USA
http://www.t0.or.at/~RR/ --> for Europe

*Footnotes:*
(1) see Rainer Ansén, 'Die Ethnisierung Europas. Zur Philosophie der Neuen
Rechten' ['Ethnicizing Europe: On the philosophy of the New Right'],
in: *Lettre
international*, Heft 24 / 1994, pp. 89 - 90; Boris Groys, 'Sammeln,
gesammelt werden. Die Rolle des Museums, wenn der Nationalstaat
zusammenbricht' ['Collecting and being collected. The role of the museum
when the national state collapses'], in: *Lettre international*, Heft 33 /
1996, pp. 32 - 36
(2) Fredric Jameson, 'Postmoderne: Zur Logik der Kultur im
Spaetkapitalismus', in: Andreas Huyssen / Klaus Scherpe (eds.), *Postmoderne.
Zeichen eines kulturellen Wandels*, Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1989, p.
99 f.
(3) Timothy Druckrey, 'The Fate of Reason in the Global Network: Teleology,
Telegraphy, Telephony, Television, Telesthetics', in: ars electronica (ed.),
*Mythos Information: Welcome to the Wired World*, Wien / New York: Springer,
1995, p. 152
(4) Paul Virilio, *Revolutionen der Geschwindigkeit* [Revolutions of
Velocity], Berlin: Merve, 1993, p. 62
(5) Eda Cufer & Irwin, "NSK State in Time"(1993), in: Irwin, "Zemljopis
Vremena / Geography of Time", (http://www.ljudmila.org/embassy/3b/time.html).
Note: NSK makes a distinction between its 'citizens' and its 'members'.
'Citizens' in practice are anyone who can scrape together the money for a
passport, while 'members' are specially fifteen people. (M. Benson)
(6) 'Irwin', in: "Transcentrala (Neue Slowenische Kunst *Drzava v casu*)",
video by Marina Grzinic & Aina Smid, 20.05 min, Ljubljana 1993
(7) Op. cit.
(8) As an addition to the embassies and consulates, the *NSK Drzava v
casu*issues passports, which are understood as a "confirmation of
temporal space"
(NSK) and which can be obtained by any person irrespective of citizenship or
nationality.
(9) Neue Slowenische Kunst, "NSK Embassy Moscow. How the East sees the East"
(Irwin in Collaboration with Apt-Art International and Ridzina Gallery,
Moscow May 10 - June 10, 1992), Obalne Galerije Piran / Loza Gallery Koper
(eds.), Koper [1992]

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