Thursday, June 18, 2015

Future Citizen (statement)

for TTTV's X21 series

Last year I was abroad for most of the summer. One’s relationship to the US changes as soon as you step outside of its borders. I resume a process of knowing what I do not know when I am outside this deeply colonized and colonizing place. Outside, as Heriberto Yépez says, its dominant logic of “cybermnemetics” and “neomemory” (if an outside can in fact really any longer exist in a thoroughly Americanized global context). When I was in Germany, the wealthiest of all the countries in the European Union, I witnessed—via the Internet—Palestinian bodies described as “telegenically dead” by the Prime Minister of Israel. In tandem, I watched Black bodies in the US routinely executed by police and the reactions to these executions and the acquittal of the officers who would perpetrate them by the people of Ferguson, Missouri. I still wonder how poetry can bear witness to violence.
I still wonder whether it can. There was a time when I posed this question—what is the relationship between poetry and witness?—in terms of aesthetic form. Something in, say, Steve Reich’s “Come Out” does something to my body to undergo the bodies of others when tape loop echoes and desynchs from tape loop. Something happens in the ear itself, in the neurology of the hearing process, which is both formal and physiological and cultural. Like hearing one’s hearing themselves hearing. Like overhearing one’s self as a social actor. Art and poetry I still think can bear witness in this way—“To make the bruise blood come out.” To draw to the surface what must be felt in the (social) body in order to create conditions for empathy—and a reaction to one’s empathy that reactivates our senses of responsibility. This becoming visceral to the pain of others. I still believe that art/poetry can perform this function. And that it is not enough. The 21st Century requires that I put my own body, ideas, emotions, time, breath, and resources on the line in order to build relationships of solidarity and kinship with those who would attempt to usher in (revolutionary) change—change that reorders the violent structures of our world. This cannot happen on the page alone. It cannot only happen through discourse. It has to happen somewhere else, somewhere that I believe poetry and art can still condition, but that poetry and art themselves can only rarely effect. Call this a commons, an ante-public space, or a fugitive public, or the social body. Can poetry, in the words of BIFO, reunite the general intellect with a social body, our technological and epistemological capacities with a commons? Given the limited capacity of individuals, I believe that it is crucial that one think about the decisions they make with regards to who and what they publish, what they curate, what editorial projects they take on, how they navigate various institutions, what materials they teach as well as how they teach them, and how they conduct themselves in public forums. These decisions contribute to a micropolitics; a non-official (or non-statist) politics of collective enunciation. If one has the capacity to do nothing else, it is to shape existing organizations and conversations and create new ones that need to be had. It is also to make visible those who have been submerged and displaced on account of violence and to withdraw one’s own subjectivity when necessary. One can, one must in fact, yield/wield their resources and appropriate agency for others. This is especially true of those with privileges based on their gender, ethnicity, race, sexuality, and/or class background. One needs to interrogate the value of their own practice for the communities and discourses they would feel it most urgent to serve. How do our words intend to affect others? Words also fuck us up. Words also kill. And they redouble the violence of what or who has already been killed. I don’t want words to redouble the objects of our despair. Which is not an avoidance or sublimation of what is fucked up, but also not its miming, however “radically.” Whether intended or not—and it would seem to me a mixture of the two—Conceptual Poetry’s most visible practitioners have shown themselves to be either ignorant or negligent to a broader context regarding race in the US currently. This is a flaw not just of the person or their stated theoretical positions, but their aesthetic. An aesthetic that redoubles the objects of our despair. An aesthetic that re-kills. Last summer, when I was abroad, I wrote a poem that drew upon the media environment of the Ferguson event as represented on the Internet and via Twitter and Facebook. Looking at it again now, a flood of images return. Not just images, but ideas. Not just ideas, but feelings. The tear is still an intellectual thing. This poem has never been published except on my weblog, but I feel a certain relief that it exists, if only as a placeholder for thinking and feeling through things for myself. Perhaps this is the first decolonizing gesture—writing the poem to explore the limits of one’s own beliefs, feelings, thinking. To realize the vast extent of one’s ignorance (and/or negligence). To push up against that limit (as though the first form that resistance can take). Where we also acknowledge our culpability for what we don’t know. And we recognize willful ignorance as an expression of malice. The poem is a site of knowing what we don’t know and thinking through how this not knowing can effect how we conduct ourselves in the world. What we say about our work and our intentions for our work matters too. Not just as a rhetorical performance, or as a denegation (speaking of things so as to not have to speak about them), but as something that also reveals the limits of our understanding and the integrity of our thinking. Something that, in other words, also re/kills or chooses not to re/kill, that redoubles the objects of our despair or attempts to transform a ubiquitous and unmitigated violence. I want to oscillate the making of the poem—the poem that is often intuitive, and semi-discursive, and gestural, and incomprehensible—with a more self-conscious work of social practice, whether teaching, organizing, curation, parenting, editing, studying, or an infinite number of daily activities.
The poems become theoreticians directly in their immediate practice.





Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Discussion with Margarita Sánchez Urdaneta


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Margarita Sánchez Urdaneta will screen her film Mouth Filled Ash. The work reflects on how accounts of forced disappearances, mass graves, and terror tactics are obtained and framed in Colombia. Margarita Sánchez Urdaneta will be joined by the Thom Donovan in an examination of the relationship between accountability and forensics.

The event is organized in conjunction with
 the Whitney Independent Study Studio Program Exhibition, on view June 9 - June 27, 2015 at EFA Project Space.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Interview with Maj Hasager


http://www.akademiesolitudeblog.com/2015/05/19/reopened-city/


"I do believe in a sort of slow art, at least in terms of production, and your framing of »an art that is careful to use time itself as a means of overcoming exploitation and expropriation« resonates very well with my thinking around methodologies. Specifically in the sense that there can be an alternative to the rush of newness in the art world—both in terms of production of objects as commodities as well as in relation to sociopolitically engaged art practices that can easily be highly commodified as well. Working conditions for artists or any other cultural producer often equate to a very short time frame and little pay to develop substantial projects. I would say that to me, the artistic process is a long-term commitment to people and places in order to be able to listen carefully to their personal narratives, to gain a larger understanding of a specific historical and cultural background—which does not necessarily stem from my own cultural background and experiences—before making a visual and textual interpretation.”—Maj Hasager

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Isaac Pool's Light Stain (blurb)


http://whatpipeline.com/store/light_stain.html

In Isaac Pool's sculptural works, one encounters a series of quasi-figures that are abject but also extremely funny. Such works (for lack of a better term) conjure awkward forms of presence, subtly echoing a landscape and idiom of post-disaster capitalism Detroit where he is from, but also of a queer habitus after the Internet. The poems in this book provide an integral context for Pool's aesthetic practices. Navigating familiar institutional and social spaces, they tell a story of the promethean courage by which one transcends their class origins while remaining faithful to their cultural background. Forms of life are mediated by objects (the photographs collected in the book show us this). There is a numinousness about objects and of private spaces that seem as disposable as they do otherworldly (light stains?). 

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Joseph Bradshaw's The New York School (launch)

EAST COAST BOOK LAUNCH FOR JOSEPH BRADSHAW'S THE NEW YORK SCHOOL

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  • Featuring Brenda Iijima, Thom Donovan, Monica McClure, Iris Cushing and others.

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

Max Razdow's True Corpus


http://razdow.org/archive/
A corpus, as Michel de Certeau reminds us, referring to mystical literatures, mediates the relationship between between a “name” and the “rules” of a set of texts. Faced with Max Razdow’s “True Corpus” I find curious the word “true” to describe a body of work. “True Corpus,” for me, is emblematic of a particular tendency in contemporary art. Particularly among artists in the US who survived the 2000s as twenty somethings (as both Max and I did), to seek lines of flight in the fictional, (Romantic) imaginary, mystical, and occult. What does it mean to construct a world (or worlds) when the actual one is being destroyed? To what extent is this moral or ethical? To what extent might we say that it is political, as well—engaged with the production of a public? Faced with the destruction of the world—and the erosion of familiar locations of institutional and ideological authority, as de Certeau reminds us—the mystic seeks a direct line with God, inventing a “siteless site” in which the self and other might enter into a dialogue. Razdow’s work undoubtedly invites an encounter through mystical trends and images. Then again, what he is doing seems straight up Blake, marshaling a made-up cosmology against empire. For Blake, it was the English Monarchy and early industrialization that were his primary antagonists; for Razdow, it is what he refers to in one of the drawings as a “technocratic enclosure” around which a dragon wraps itself. Curiously, in another work, one reads “a dragon plus a rhizome plus a star.” Dragon, other of a medieval cartography and world-view; star, signifier of the cosmic, of fate (disaster), of astrology; rhizome, that natural form with which Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari launched their theories of "disjunctive subjectivity," “deterritorialization,” and “transversality.” In a time when the rhizome has come to represent new enclosures—the financial market, the deterritorializing economy of semiocapital, governance through debt—rhizome eclipses Blake’s factory as the primary icon for technocratic enclosure, thus empire. The true of “true corpus,” then, would seem to me a ruse, or distraction, like bling. The word true flashes emphatically, it mesmerizes, but the truth flees in a proliferation of symbols and marks that defy it, that in fact insist on a kind of iconoclasm, an anti-truth. Atopian and non-perspectival, our eyes wander in the worlds Razdow has instantiated. The effect of his works is not unlike that of book cover illustrations I loved as a kid. One does not even have to read the book—reveling at the cover for hours at a time is enough, hallucinating its contents. Allegory functions through the appropriation of a set of symbols, but Razdow’s pseudo-allegory, his parable, buckles under the weight of its hybridity and baroque density. Happily, we get lost in the details. Interpretive authority slips from our grasp, but we still love to look, and wonder. Primitive accumulation functioned through the enclosure of the imagination, as well as the expropriation of land and natural resources. Magical thinking—a commons of wonderment—had to go to make way for forms of rationality that could render possible the intensification of physical and epistemological enclosure. Pushing back against the technocratic enclosure has often been the fight of artists since modernity. To invent fictions not not of this world, but also not entirely of them, as a means of recodifying. The cat who appears before a looking glass (or a portal to another world?) acts like a rückenfigur. It mediates our own absorption and private delight in depictions of a world conjured. The cat also functions indexically, to remind us of our own domesticity. That these worlds make us feel at home—if not in fact safe—despite the world crumbling around us. Somewhere between the moody paradise of the fantasy novel and a ruined collective world recollected in tranquility, we are transported. 

Thom Donovan 
NYC, 4/17/2015

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

if your eyes aren’t here it’s not mine (Interview)


"My ‘ideal community’ is made of women over the age of fifty, Mom, angry teenagers, coyote pack sounds, forgotten bananas in the freezer, and the permission granted in banal niceties such as ‘sorry’ or ‘thank you’. I was on a competitive swim team for most of my adolescence and I never got good. People kept thinking I’d improve my time, be faster, everyone else seemed to be doing it, but I never did. I became obsessed with getting faster, but not because I wanted to earn points for my team (I was far away from ever doing that) but because it felt like a funny abstraction for others to support me. I think about that time often because I loved my teammates. I was even voted captain, but the coach wouldn’t allow it, because I was too slow. She was a total asshole."--Cara Benedetto

http://poeticresearch.tumblr.com/post/116334973747/area-sneaks-sheets-5-cara-benedetto-thom

Monday, April 13, 2015

Ancients no. 2 (ed. Brandon Shimoda)



ANCIENTS No. TWO

a photocopied reproduction of a stack of paper, featuring collages, drafts, drawings, dreams, emails, essays, hair, notes, poems, receipts, and trash, byAmber Atiya, Sarah Boyer, Sam Christopher, Phil Cordelli, Dot Devota, Thom Donovan, Yanara Friedland, Ally Harris, Christine Shan Shan Hou, Jared Joseph, Purdey Lord Kreiden, Carrie Lorig, Feliz Lucia Molina, Caitie Moore, John Niekrasz, Christopher Rey Pérez, Kit Schlüter, Ben Segal, Robert Snyderman, Yosuke Tanaka, Michael Thomas Taren, Cassandra Troyan, and Jackie Wang

Cover photograph of Midori Shimoda. Limited Edition; print copies available soon.

See Ancients No. One (2013)