Atmospherical approach to the Reichstag Building, house of German parliament, through the eyes of two young cleaners with foreign background. Joao leads through the film, posing philosophical questions about work, society and politics. Nihat cleans meticulously letters of a text about the meaning of life, which are embedded into the foundation of the building, but he does not comprehend...
“What is democracy?” is not one question, but is actually two questions. On the one hand, the question relates to conditions of the current, parliamentary representative democracies that are scrutinized critically in this project. On the other hand, the question traces different approaches to what a more democratic system might look like and which organizational forms it could take. The project asked “What is democracy?” to numerous activists and political analysts in 15 cities around the world, in Amsterdam, Berkeley, Berlin, Bern, Budapest, Copenhagen, Moscow, New York, Rostock, San Francisco, Sydney, Taipei, Tel Aviv, Thessaloniki and Warsaw. The interviews have been recorded on video since January 2007. Even though all interviewees were asked the same question, the result was a multiplicity of different perspectives and viewpoints from people living in states that are usually labeled “democracies”. This pool of interviews builds the basis for a film in eight parts, which (re)presents a kind of global analysis about the deep political crises of the Western democratic model. In one video, Adam Ostolski (Warsaw) explains that originally “the modern idea of democracy was connected to the notion of progress” and parliamentary states “had some tendency to become more and more democratic by including new types of political actors, such as workers and women. […] But since the 1980s, since the neoliberal trend in politics and economy we have a regression of democracy.” Lize Mogel (New York) notes that situation changed in such a way, that when you think about representative democracy today “you are not necessarily talking about individuals being represented, but more capital being represented.” Nikos Panagos (Thessaloniki) even argues that “representation and democracy are incompatible terms. Therefore, under no circumstances could the present system be called a democracy. It is just a sophisticated form of oligarchy.” While some subjects in the videos elaborate their ideas of direct democracy or decision-making processes of indigenous communities, David McNeill (Sydney) raises the issue of whether it makes sense “to continue contesting for the right to own and define the term democracy” or whether “it has been so corrupted and polluted by the conservatives that claimed ownership of it, that it is better to be surrendered.” The film discusses the contested notion of “democracy”, which is misused for the maintenance of order by those in power, while at the same time “democracy” still represents an ideal hundreds of million people in the South desperately want to achieve. Today it seems almost impossible to be against “democracy”, even though it is getting emptier and emptier. A potential strategy could try to fill what is called “democracy” with new meaning. In this sense, the film presents a multi-layered discourse on democracy, which expresses a broad field of opinions that go beyond the borders of nation-states and continents. The film has eight parts with the following titles: “Rethinking representation”, “Politics of exclusions”, “Secrecy instead of democratic transparency”, “New democracies?”, “Is representative democracy a democracy?”, “Direct democracy”, “Reclaiming Indigenous politics” and “Should we consign the Western democracy model to the ash heap of history?”
Una dona es proposa fotografiar moments d'intimitat. En un lloc de cites d'Internet, escriu: 'Estic buscant persones a les quals els agradaria ser fotografiades en públic i revelar alguna cosa de si mateixes ..." What I'm Looking For documenta aquesta aventura; les connexions formades en aquesta intersecció entre l'espai públic virtual i el real. El vídeo és una reflexió sobre la naturalesa de la fotografia i la persistència de la visió. Una breu història de desig i control.
UntitledSimon decided to record Barry delivering a monologue exploring US imperialism and the project for the new American century. This speech became the focal point around which animation was constructed. "what Barry says" is very much a response to Simon witnessing his peer's apparent lack of interest in the anti-war marchers between the attack on Afghanistan and the second gulf war. Many young Londoners seemed to feel that they could do nothing to stop the attack on Iraq, so why bother
Untitled"What I want to recount actually happened." "Well, then, I'll record your story on my tape recorder." With his usual generosity, Don Palmiro agreed.
UntitledHot Pro-Classic Rodeo action. This video unzips the latent homoerotic potential underlying the macho cowboy posturing at the Pendleton Oregon Round-up.
I could not remember anything about my childhood. I made a decision to remember. West Fingerboard Road relays how I remembered my forgotten childhood memories, and references the writings of philosopher Gilles Deleuze that echo my ideas on memory and the process of remembering. This is a four-minute animation with sound. "It is true that every work or art is a monument, but here the monument is not something commemorating a past; it is a bloc of presentations that owe their presentation only to themselves and that provide the event with the compound that celebrates it. The monument's action is not memory but fabulation. We write not with childhood memories but through blocs of childhood that are the becoming-child of the present..." What is Philosophy, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari This monument West Fingerboard Road does not commemorate my childhood years. It is a bloc of images that refer only to themselves, and that combine several parts of my childhood to be celebrated. West Fingerboard Road's action is not memory. I drew not with childhood memories but through a set of fabrications. I had forgotten my memories for so long, that once I decided to remember, there was no way for me to really decide what was real or not. Fabulations they definitely are. So I drew not with childhood memories, but through my imagined blocks of childhood. What I have now in West Fingerboard Road is a becoming-child of the present. Specifically, this piece has become my own inner five year old as I can have and remember her now. West Fingerboard Road has been made with support from The Netherlands Foundation for Visual Arts, Design and Architecture (known in the Netherlands as Fonds BKVB.)