Just a week left now for New Yorkers to visit
Ghosts in the Machine,
an exhibition at the New Museum of fifty years of work based around "
the constantly shifting relationship between humans, machines, and art" and tracing "
the complex historical passage from the mechanical to the optical
to the virtual". It stretches from "
Jacob Mohr’s influencing
machines to Emery Blagdon’s healing constructions", to "
reconstructions of lost
works and realizations of dystopian mechanical devices invented by
figures like Franz Kafka", to work based around "
dismantling the mechanics of
vision in order to conceive new possibilities for seeing" such as Op Art and Stan VanDerBeek’s
Movie-Drome ("
an
immersive cinematic environment where the viewer is bathed in a constant
stream of moving images"), to recent artists like Mark Leckey, Henrik Olesen,
and Christopher Williams, whose works "d
isplay a
fascination with earlier machines and the types of knowledge and
experiences that are lost as we move from one era to the next,
constantly dreaming up new futures that will never arrive."
Reminded me of this book I picked up recently:
Published in 1973, written most likely in 1970-71, and, crucially,
based on the 1960s.
As the contents pages indicate:
Like so many Zeitgeist-snapshot books (and there are loads of examples of this in terms of big-picture rock books - including a few of my own) it projects forward from what seem to be the most era-defining and progressive tendencies of the present (which by the time the book comes out is the immediate past). Except that by then, other and usually radically different tendencies have emerged.
Art and the Future's "prophecy" doesn't envision things like body art, performance art, appropriation art, or indeed most of the major trends and directions that would transpire in the Seventies and thereafter.
But it's full of exciting photographs and reproductions of work by artists, mostly long forgotten, that impart a retro-future frisson - specimens of kinetic art, computer art, early video art, and some of the same people covered by the
Ghosts in the Machine exhibition, such as Hans Haacke. I've been meaning to scan some of them in here, but in the meantime, here's a few from the web.
This first one is from
Art and the Future itself
The rest are pictures, or Youtubes, of works by artists covered in the book.
Nicolas Schöffer was a musician as well as a kinetic art pioneer, and some years ago I stumbled on this record (later to be Creel Pone-d)
Released in 1979 on the Hungaroton label, it's an attempt to translate his plastic arts oriented theories about color
and structure and space into sound: "to construct
trapped time--in the same way as trapped space or trapped light
information." The austere pulses and pure poised tones of pieces like
"Chronosonor 5" are not so much music as sonic mobiles hanging in space.