Situating Manhattan
Psy-Geo-Conflux is coming to New York this weekend. "Part festival and part conference," the event's website declares, "it brings together visual and sound artists, writers and urban adventurers to explore the physical and psychological landscape of the city." Or, in the words of The Village Voice: "The event is centered around a seasoned yet growing field of creative recreation and alt-geographic exploration called psychogeography. Trying to define this obtuse field is an adventure itself, although a relatively straightforward definition includes 'the study of the effects of the geographic environment on the emotions and behavior of individuals.'"
In practice, that means a creative crew of artists, philosophers, and urban spulunkers are planning an assortment of oddities and adventures. Among them: "Sharilyn Neidhart organizes an outdoor human chess match powered by cell phones. Margrethe Lauber leads a tour and group photo shoot of 'back spaces' of famous buildings such as those at the UN and Lincoln Center. The Brooklyn-based collective Toyshop fills the streets with 'sound riots,' a 'detritus band,' and a junk band. The Dutch creator of Socialfiction.org, Wilfried Hou Je Bek, will generate computer codes from pedestrians. Photographer and author Colette Meacher gives a lecture on discovering Immanuel Kant's theory of the sublime on city blocks. Sound artist Sal Randolph organizes a weekend-long collaborative field recording pool, transmitted in via cell phones and back out as streaming MP3s on the Web."
The word "psychogeography" was invented in the '50s, but the idea really goes back to the surrealists' notion of the d?rive. For more on the topic, go here.
[Via Bryan Alexander.]
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
And why should we care about this? Must be a blue state thing.
Texas is a red state, right?
Interesting link, Jesse.
Texas has always tolerated assholes. Used to be that the coyotes and Comanches finished them off. Now, sadly...
Do you condone any individual or group that uses the airwaves to intrude on private property (homefolks' TV reception or the McDonalds' drive-thru line)? This shit is art? Around here, fuck with the TV reception and it's time to turn out the dogs and slip the safety on the .30-06. And don't you even be messin' with the Golden Arches.
Texans have always appreciated a good fool (Barbara Jordan, Ann Richards, California for having any dealings with Enron, etc.). But we know manure when we see manure.
Ordinarily, property rights are sacrosant. But I've never been able to understand what those McDonald's contraptions are saying under any circumstances.
Anyway, I like the very idea of a bunch of "anti-capitalist" artists fooling around with CB radios in Dallas.
My god, does anyone actually attend these things ? I could go into how oh-so-full-of-itself it sounds, but I'll just stick with an observation that it sounds profoundly boring. Doesn't anyone have fun on weekends anymore ?
They might be able to pull that shit in Dallas, but just let 'em try it in Fort Worth.
Steve-O: Amen to that, brother. In Fort Worth, we know how to handle this sort of riff-raff, not at all like those mint-julip-sippin' city-slicker pansies in Dallas.
Like blogging, independent film, and Texas, psychogeography is a rich mixture of extremely interesting projects and self-indulgent crap.
I'm still trying to figure out which category the cell-phone chess game fits into. It sounds kind of neat, but I can just imagine it falling apart in practice...
Jesse - I wonder if, before the game begins, they have the Verizon guy walk into each square on the chess board and say, "Can you hear me now?"...
Castleing sounds like a nightmare. And I kind of liked this line: "players representing bishops, rooks, knights, and especially queens should prepare for a fairly athletic couple of hours."
They should get actual bishops and "queens" in the game for some added interest.
EMAIL: nospam@nospampreteen-sex.info
IP: 210.18.158.254
URL: http://preteen-sex.info
DATE: 05/20/2004 06:14:48
People are just smart enough to not be happily ignorant.