http://natural-fiber.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=280:micronation-macronation-2012&catid=63:latest-projects&Itemid=65 
 



HONF
MICRONATION/MACRONATION
2012

During the end of March 2012, Indonesians from various backgrounds were voicing 
outrage against the Indonesian Government's plan to cut subsidies on the type 
of fuel used by most of the population, which would directly result in fuel 
price hike. Hundreds of demonstrations and rallies took place in many 
Indonesian major cities.

Days before 1 April 2012, the date when the Government's decision is due, the 
demonstrations escalated in intensity, which culminated in clashes between 
police and protesters. The situation grew alarming nationwide as conflicts 
between people and the Government were in the rise. Finally, after an intense 
plenary session, the House rejected the fuel price hike proposal. Shortly 
afterwards, the issue of fuel subsididies removal gradually went out of public 
attention. The general public were pleased and soothed.

Nevertheless, isn't it the truth that our dependence—and the rest of the 
world's dependence—on unrenewable fossil fuel has grown to such a large extent? 
Isn't it the truth that fuel prices will continually increase as supply grows 
scarce? Also, how long can the Government keep subsidizing fuel with its 
ever-increasing price? At the moment, with fuel subsidies in place, the 
important, urgent matters of fuel availability and fuel dependence are gone 
from public discussions; not deserving of public attention, let alone thoughts.

Amidst such circumstances, the House of Natural Fiber (HONF, Yogyakarta, 
Indonesia) have been cooking up ideas and experiments to discover alternative 
ways of obtaining alternative energy sources, which comprise the substance and 
the socio-economic-political context of the MICRONATION/MACRONATION project 
development.

HONF's presentation at Langgeng Art Foundation (LAF) is their starting point to 
introduce these ideas as well as the technical-practical implementation 
possibilities. The presentation—as a sustainable design prototype—consists of 3 
core components: a) Installation of a fermentation/distillation machine to 
process hay (raw material) into ethanol (alternative energy to substitute 
fossil fuel); b) Satellite data grabber: to obtain data related to agricultural 
production (weather, climate, seasons); c) Super-Computer: to process data 
(weather, seasons as well as ethanol production capacity), which is also 
capable of predicting when Indonesia can reach energy and food independence if 
this MICRONATION/MACRONATION sustainable project design were to be implemented 
as a public strategy and policy to achieve the condition of energy and food 
independence in Indonesia. [1]

This presentation is a good opportunity for us to reassess basic performative 
premises of various practices combining science, technology and arts. HONF's 
project—as with their previous projects—actually blurs the boundaries that have 
thus far been setting apart science, technology and arts. They combine all 
three, which to us brings home the question: where is the boundary between 
aesthetic experience and function? What possibilities could the relationship 
among science, technology and arts bring when confronted to actual problems in 
today's communities?

Compared to various other fine arts practices involving elements of social 
activism which have hitherto been tested and conducted by a number of artists 
in Indonesia, HONF’s current project actually proposes something new and 
different. They no longer practice the “taking to the streets” or 
“teaching/utilizing arts to raise mass awareness” kinds of activism, nor do 
they practice arts that involve local environmental/community issues. [2] 
Instead they view social-political issues by assessing various strategic areas, 
which are not solely based on the “people versus corporate” or “people versus 
the State” axes.

By widening our acceptance of various dimensions of relationship which exist 
between the artists and the public today, we can see that HONF still employ 
‘aesthetics’ in their work, although their chosen strategy of visualization 
naturally no longer focuses on the ‘fine arts’ conventions. For instance, data 
processing and presentation in their work—be it related to nature, environment 
or various calculations—will be shown in various forms of visualization. But 
this time we need to take it as visualization that may not necessarily always 
serve as representation (art).

Faced with ecological issues, HONF choose to activate their creativity to 
render such ecological issues more open and accessible by the public (creative 
ecology). Data which are unfamiliar—or perhaps even concealed and made secret 
from the general public’s knowledge—are presented in an easy-to-undertand 
visualization. In other words, data pertaining to public interests and public 
life are returned to the public (hacktivism, open-source, democratization of 
information dan knowledge).

Furthermore, the use of science, technology and arts in HONF’s projects should 
no longer be viewed through a conventional formalistic aesthetic perspective, 
if we can accept that this project is a design which involves a number of 
systems (physics, biology, mechanics, digital data-processing, and so on)

That way, MICRONATION/MACRONATION is a practice which may possibly bring 
various new elements into the practices of fine arts that have been taking 
place in Indonesia. Through HONF’s works so far, we are in fact presented with 
the opportunity to re-formulate basic relationships which can exist between the 
art(ists) and the public. Is this not a truly relevant issue, considering how 
the faster, more complex public (social, economic, politic, cultural and 
global) reality keeps on changing? — HONF | Enin Supriyanto | April 2012.
- translated by Eka Jayani Ayuningtyas - 
________________________________


[1]At the same time, the prototype of this design is being tested through the
MICRONATION/MACRONATION project simulation land in several agricultural fields
and villages around Cangkringan, Merapi, Yogyakarta, in cooperation with local
residents.

[2]Compare with the environment-related fine art activities and activism in 
Indonesia in
the past.


http://natural-fiber.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=280:micronation-macronation-2012&catid=63:latest-projects&Itemid=65
 



  


venzha
the house of natural fiber
yogyakarta new media art laboratory (HONF)
Jl.wora wari A80/6 
Baciro - Yogyakarta
Indonesia
T : +62 (0) 817468621 
F : +62 (0) 274 564276 
E : ven...@yahoo.com
      ven...@natural-fiber.com
URL : http://www.natural-fiber.com


______________________________________________
SPECTRE list for media culture in Deep Europe
Info, archive and help:
http://post.in-mind.de/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/spectre

Reply via email to