Monica Rizzolli a few days ago, wrote, in part,

"Artistic practices potentialize individual "FIELDS" When an individual through painting, writing, music is capable of synthesizing a new idea, a thought convincingly, that individual action can reverberate-- exponentially changing--the masses. But how is this process happening?Many individuals are at this very moment painting, dancing, writing, immersed in their creative processes. Why do some modify their environment and others not? What makes the "FIELD" relevant? If we understand the "FIELD" as the action, the agent and the environment (all together), are we to think that an action at odds with its environment, creates a sterile "FIELD" ? Yet, from time to time, an individual at odds with his or her environment creates a new paradigm. The "FIELD" is unpredictable.....we can conclude that, minimally understood, as a "FIELD" becomes visible, it is possible to induce it; and, a sense- condition apparently irrelevant to the whole, can sometimes become a mass phenomenon."


Monica's post leads to this moment when as we stand by and watch collective bargaining destroyed in Wisconsin. We are precarious, we are at odds with 'environment', are we making a sterile field. Is the silence of -empyre- that sterility in nonaction. How can art practice matter? What is the default? Why is it so enervating, why are we sterile, what are we doing, what is to be done? .....

With that I want to bring forward an astonishing article just now published on Occupy Everything. Thank you, Cara Baldwin, for bringing it to my attention. The writer is Jaleh Mansour.

Jaleh:
"Artistic practices of the last decade highlight the remunerative system of a global service industry, one in which “art” takes its place fully embedded in–rather than at an interval of either autonomy or imminence–the fluid, continuous circulation of goods and services: Andrea Fraser’s Untitled (2002) in which Fraser had her gallery, Friedrich Petzel, arrange to have a collector purchase her sexual services for one night, Santiago Sierra’s 250 cm Line Tattooed on Six Paid People (1999) in which the artist paid six unemployed men in Old Havana, Cuba thirty dollars each to have a line tattooed across their back. Fraser’s work was characteristically “controversial” in the most rehearsed ways, and Sierra’s drew criticism for having permanently disfigured six human beings. The misprision and naivete of the critics spectacularized both, of course. Sierra’s retort involved a set of references to global economic conditions that the critics may not have liked to hear: “The tattoo is not the problem. The problem is the existence of social conditions that allow me to make this work. You could make this tattooed line a kilometer long, using thousands and thousands of willing people.”1 Both Fraser and Sierra point to the quasi-universality of what autonomist Marxist theorist Paolo Virno calls a “post-fordist” regime of “intellectual labor” to describe the shift from the assembly line to a wide range of labor in which traditional boundaries and borders no longer apply. Virno says, “By post-Fordism, I mean instead a set of characteristics that are related to the entire contemporary workforce, including fruit pickers and the poorest of immigrants.”2 This post-fordist regime is characterized by flexibility, deracination, and the shift from habituated work to contingency. Concomitantly, the post-fordist laborer does not take his or her place in the ranks of he masses, but flows into a multitude, differentiated by numerous factors, among them, post-coloniality, endless permutations at the level of gender, ethnicity, race.

For Virno and the autonomists, art and culture are no longer instantiations of exemplarity and exceptionality, as for Adorno, but rather “are the place in which praxis reflects on itself and results in self-representation.” In other words, the cultural work operates as a supplement, a parergonal addition to an already existing logic. It neither passively reflects nor openly resists. There is no vantage or “outside” from which art could dialectically reflect and resists, as Adorno would have it. Long since the work came off its pedestal and out of its frame, from the gallery to the street, the ostensibly non- site to the site as Robert Smithson put it, cultural production is too embedded in social and economic circulation to reflect let alone critique. Virno sees this limitation—the absence of an outside—as one shared with that of activism and other forms of tactical resistance: “The impasse that seizes the global movement comes from its inherent implication in the modes of production. Not from its estrangement or marginality, as some people think.”3 Ironically, the luxury of estrangement and marginalization enjoyed by the avant-garde and neo avant-garde is no longer available. And yet, it is “precisely because, rather than in spite, of this fact that it presents itself on the public scene as an ethical movement.”4 For if work puts life itself to work, dissolving boundaries between labor and leisure, rest and work, any action against it occupies the same fabric.



http://occupyeverything.com/features/notes-on-labor-maternity-and-the-institution/







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