dear nettimers,

Something non network centric. Geert Lovink asked me to write something about 
the passing of our dear friend, colleague, machine artist and researcher Remko 
Scha for the Institute of Network Cultures blog. Instead of personal memories I 
was remembered of a period in the early 1990s when Remko and I were working on 
an unrealisable idea (though not pataphysic in nature), which captures his 
spirit and aesthetic ideals quite perfectly and I wanted to share this curious 
story here.

bests,
Eric

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

The Zombie of the author
In memoriam Remko Scha (September 15, 1945 - November 9, 2015)

Amsterdam, November 20, 2015

Yesterday afternoon a large group of family, friends, colleagues and 
co-travellers in free spirit said goodbye to Remko Scha, distinguished 
professor in computer linguistics, machine artist, composer and co-founder of 
the Institute of Artificial Art Amsterdam (IAAA). A dreary day at the ‘Nieuwe 
Ooster’ cemetery befitting for this sad occasion.

It was only recently that I had found out that this old friend and admired 
co-spirit in intellectual freedom had contracted a lethal disease that would 
inevitably curtail his existence here on Earth, always too early. We had not 
been in close contact for many years, as these things happen so often, so when 
Geert Lovink asked me to write something for the blog of the Institute of 
Network Cultures, I hesitated, as I could not write something personal, 
legitimately - others spoke at his memorial service more befittingly, 
yesterday. I can however write something about his artistic and aesthetic 
ideals, which in their aspiration to ‘universality’ are highly idiosyncratic, 
singular, and specific.

In the early 1990s, fresh out of university studies into the Arts and following 
my involvement with the first two editions of the International Symposia on 
Electronic Art  (ISEA 1988 / 1990), I was asked at a conference to consider 
writing an essay for the British Journal of Aesthetics about the ‘aesthetic 
implications of digital media in the arts’. This produced a dilemma. How to 
write something for a journal that was an ‘institute’ in its field, though not 
necessarily in the field of interest I was primarily pursuing. Honourable, 
established, but also deeply entrenched in (Academic) tradition, and seemingly 
entirely at odds with the experimental cultures I became increasingly involved 
in. What’s more, what could a youngster like me (at that time, 1991) possibly 
suggest to such an ‘Institution’?

At that time I was involved in an intense discussion with Remko Scha about 
machine art, its conceptions, its practices, and indeed its aesthetics. As so 
many people recounted at the memorial service yesterday, intense discussion 
about such topics was what Remko was all about . When we debated this Remko was 
already well established as professor in computer linguistics at the University 
of Amsterdam. But beyond that he had an extended history and background in the 
arts and music, including in machine art. His performances with The Machines, a 
live installation / performance set up with a construction of electric guitars 
and basses played by household construction tools (fitted with ropes activating 
the guitar-strings, drills, barn machines and more), had hit famous rock and 
performance stages around the planet. So it seemed that teaming up with Remko 
would give sufficient weight to take on the challenge of British Aesthetics.

We decided to take the aesthetic idea of what Remko called Artificial Art, art 
made by machines, to its ultimate consequence, the complete and utter 
abolishment of the human Author in the work of art, and then proceed to 
question how this ideal could be approached by means of digital media. This 
proposal was, to some surprise by the both of us, accepted by the journal 
editor who had originally invited me, and so we set out on a joint intellectual 
journey to pursue not the death but the annihilation of the Author.

To explain this artistic / aesthetic position it is necessary to go back to the 
classical Kantian understanding of the aesthetics of beauty. For Kant the 
aesthetic experience of beauty is characterised by a disinterested free play of 
the cognitive and sensual faculties, producing a sensation, an experience, that 
is finally subjective and pleasurable. These words must be qualified. 
Disinterested reflection is a reflection that is not predicated on a specific 
concept. The aesthetics of beauty involve the cognitive faculties, but not to 
fix them on a particular concept, to make fixed judgements. That beauty 
involves the senses needs no explanation. 

Then the experience is ‘finally subjective’, this refers to the fact that we 
can experience beauty and be aware of it, but we cannot transfer this 
experience itself to others, it remains subjective. We can only say that we 
experience something as beautiful, and by comparing this vague statement to the 
vague statements of others about supposedly the same thing (though we can never 
be sure as we do not have access to the other’s subjective experience) we can 
get some approximate confirmation that some things are indeed beautiful (and 
maybe others not or less). And what makes matters even more complicated is that 
such judgements about beauty, what is commonly referred to as ‘taste’,  are 
cultured. The capacity for aesthetic reflection and experience is a given for 
every human being, but its specific deployment is subject to external (non 
subjective) conditioning.

The crucial hinging point for Remko was the issue of ‘disinterestedness’. To 
achieve disinterested reflection a concept or an intention is actually a burden 
- it takes the observers out of the free play of senses and cognitive faculties 
and fixes them on a concept, a meaning, an intended effect, message, or any 
other irrelevant artistic aspiration (fame, sex, money) - irrelevant that is to 
say to the pursuit of the aesthetic experience of beauty.

We find this position actually also in Kant. For Kant aesthetic reflection is 
learned from ‘nature’ and only transferred in a secondary sense, and always 
inferior, to human art. “Nature’ in this understanding of Kant has no ‘Author’, 
thus the  spectacles of ‘nature’ can be observed disinterestedly, no concept or 
idea needs to be inferred from it, and with this ‘nature’ offers the supreme 
canvas for disinterested aesthetic reflection. (Now obviously we know that the 
concept of ‘nature’ is itself deeply contested, argued not to exist, on an 
argumentative level considered equally vacuous  as the notion of a ‘God’, which 
itself as a concept was not entirely abolished by Kant in his transcendental 
experience either. So there is lots of room for debate and contention here.)

The conclusion that Remko drew from this, and which he considered absolutely 
inevitable, was that the author was always in the way of aesthetic reflection 
and experience, because the author would always follow a certain aspiration 
(embarrassing or not), have intentions, require and sometimes impose concepts, 
or apply any and all of those unconsciously even while desperately trying to 
avoid them. Machine art, if it were to become entirely autonomous from its 
creator, could however offer an escape from this desperate situation so that we 
could seek recourse to the arts, instead of over-maintained and ‘cultured’ 
nature (certainly in The Netherlands where an unauthored ‘nature’ does not 
exist), to rescue the possibility of a completely free aesthetic experience.

The consequence of this was that we should not celebrate the death of the 
Author (though we had other reasons to do so), but we should instead strive for 
the complete and final elimination of the author. And that in turn meant that 
the true challenge for machine aesthetics was to create machines, in essence 
formal systems, in which the presence of the author was entirely eliminated.

So after quickly writing down this starting point of the exploration (and being 
very giggly about it), Remko and I set out to come up with formal systems  / 
scenario’s that could live up to this task. We considered random procedures, 
following on from a variety of random art experiments in the 20th century 
(Duchamp, Tinguely and others). However, since we were discussing this in the 
context of digital machines we quickly ran into the problem that true 
randomness does not exist in a digital machine - in fact randomising functions 
were simply complex mathematical formulas that would take a timed event in the 
computer as the seed value for a series of computational cycles to produce a 
specific output, which then would be more or less unpredictable depending on 
how successful a given algorithm and its underpinning mathematical function 
would be - but NOT entirely random. Thus in digital quasi-randomness the 
Author’ (of the algorithm) perseveres. 

What’s more the ‘outputs’ generated by such quasi-randomness were largely 
unsatisfying. ‘Nature’ itself may be without intention, but it is not without 
structure, and thus offers a greater sensorial richness.

Remko came up with the idea of generative visual and auditory grammars - sets 
of rules picked up quasi randomly by the software machine to generate outputs, 
where meta-rules could modify outputs further, creating more unpredictable 
results, but not without structure. And indeed, the Institute for Artificial 
Art has produced a series of such generative software machines in the visual, 
auditory, muscular and architectural domain, which can be explored at the 
Institute’s website ( www.iaaa.nl ).

We soon realised that these generative grammars constituted simply a deferred 
authorship. The author was still there, no longer with a capital ‘A”, but 
present nonetheless in the code of the software, the structure of the 
algorithm, still infected with the biases and preconceptions of its author. 
Remko tried another idea, meta generative grammars  - so systems of rules that 
would generate other systems of rules (visual and auditory grammars) that in 
turn would generate outputs - to bring further unpredictability into the game. 
However, also this procedure would not meet our requirements as it would simply 
constitute a ‘second order deferred authorship’, nothing more, and so the 
author would still persist, even if not immediately perceptible / intelligible 
(which would count as progress in this account).

We continued for a few months writing scenarios (using stock images as 
industrial digital ready-mades modified by second order generative grammars for 
instance), sending them back and forth, discussing them in face to face 
meetings - in his university office, in bars, at cultural events, whenever we 
had a chance to connect. But we never were able to come up with a procedure, as 
scenario, a formal system, that would once and for all eliminate the author, 
not even with a lower-case ‘a’. The author would always come back to haunt us a 
zombie of intention, preconception, bias, and interest - a continuous threat to 
unfettered aesthetic reflection. 

Until finally we gave up...

We concluded that within the digital the author could not be eliminated and 
thus our endeavour had proven to be senseless. We felt that it would be a 
facile and empty gesture to then write a text for the journal that would draw 
this conclusion, as our set aim was to achieve the opposite. And so, we ended 
the exploration, thanked the editor for his generous interest and invitation, 
and never wrote or published the paper (despite having extensive notes).

Remko did continue his quest for an aesthetic ideal, which we now knew was 
unattainable, with the Institute for Artificial Art. producing a variety of 
wondrous artistic interventions in years to come. In this he was inching ever 
closer to a ‘universal’ aesthetic language freed from subjective debasement, 
culturation and the abominations of taste. And exactly with this singular quest 
he became a unique idiosyncratic voice, somewhere in this shadowy land between 
the arts and the sciences.

He will be deeply missed, by many, certainly by me.

Eric Kluitenberg
Amsterdam, November 20, 2015


#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]

Reply via email to