Cultural Amplification

This is the blog for the studio group working upon CA: Fear, Intolrance and Anxiety.

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

Culture Shocking a Cultureless mind

I almost missed it when I first drove past the place. There was nothing about it that made it stand out as anything. It was simply a bare concrete building tucked away next to a train underpass. For all intents and purposes the place look like an inner city warehouse. It had all the natural stereotypical doodles to lend itself well into that façade, the run down industrial dumpster bin, the rusted rail underpass, an open derelict parking lot, and most importantly, a door with no handle. When my friend first took me there I wasn’t sure what I was getting myself into, this place looked a little too hardcore for me, sure I played computer games and I currently own 73 computer games excluding console games and old previous games that my computer cant run anymore. Of the 73 games about 48 of them I bought in the last 3 years. So at roughly $99 per game, I’ve got about $7,227 worth of computer games sitting either on my desk or shelf. So computer gamer I maybe, but I don’t think I was hardcore enough to go to a place like this. We parked under the under pass and in true cliché form I got out from my friends run down Datsun, flipped up the collar of my coat, donned on my fingerless gloves and prepared myself for the experience. We walked up the sidewalk and crossed the street in slow motion Reservoir Dogs style. He pushed the door open and my world became black. When my eyes adjusted to the disappearing light of the outside world I looked around. The place was bare with open tie supports running along the ceiling with specifically located blue lights to illuminate locations like the toilet, lounge and pool tables. In the darkness I made out the shimmer of banks and banks of computers and the bale eyes of their precision optics and an interesting musk, which I guess, was an infusion of pizza, sweat, coke, and other things. Taking all this in the few seconds I had before I followed my friend to a counter. There was an Indian guy behind the counter who looked out of place being clean cut and neat. The sort of person you’d imagine at a country club kicking back after a game of tennis with his friends sipping his gin and tonic fondling the mindless heiress his going to marry because their parents made an economically drive decision 10 years ago now solidified in contract form. Behind him, the Indian guy or “Curry”, which I found out was actually his avatar not a derogative name which I first thought it was, was what looked to me a never ending supply of sugar. He and my friend talked for a while in a language I could just understand never calling each other by their real names, and never actually wanting to, it seemed that only avatars were acceptable here. As they talked I looked around the room again and notice stuff I’d missed such as the pool table at the end and the couches in front of me, and that the whole place was blue. Though they had little lighting, the common motif was blue, the sort of blue you’d find on strobe lights or customized cars, even the computers had blue lights installed inside them that pulsated out this artificial heartbeat through the Perspex side panels. After a while I got registered on their sever and got an avatar which enabled me to log on and use their machines. Moving off into the sea of computers my friend and I sat down in a quiet little corner. It was nice; my experience of places like this wasn’t the best. Places I’d gone before could only be described as dilapidated at best. Seats where broken and ripped, computers in a state unfit even for something that doesn’t live, a corner of cannibalized pc’s scrapped to boost the power of the already depleted resources of the place and generally a fog of scum clung to everything. This place was nice in comparison. It was clean, looked efficient; we had comfortable chairs, computers that looked like they could power NASA and an air of serenity often heretical to be associated with a Lan center. I stayed there for a while, that being about 7 and half hours, and it was pretty quiet for the most of it until about 9 at night. The place started to get crowded and the noise level which was none existent before hand except for the light conversation a few people were having had risen to a cacophony of laughter and abuse. People started to come in and each one greeted by Curry, and like with my friend, always an avatar, never their real names. What was surprising was the demographic of people present. The assumption is that predominantly Asian customers and children populate these places. The running joke between my friends and I is that computer games are as much of a national sport for Asians as cricket is for the commonwealth countries. And from my experiences of other Lan places this assumption seemed to hold its own ground. But it was different this time. There were children there, but very few, and those that were there were around the ages of 15 or 16, the rest were people my age or older, that being 18 to about 25. But the most important thing though not disturbing was that they were mostly white, the disturbing aspect was that this place was clean, I can’t stress how unnerving it is to have a place that did what it did that was clean. Could it be that I stumbled across a secret gaming center for white Anglo Australians where they could hide and play computer games way from the shameful gaze of their football man groping brethren or the Australian branch of Internet savvy KKK members?As I sat in my little corner with my friend who was happily headshotting anyone who he could find with his M60 in Battlefield Vietnam, I sat and just watched people come and go and having spent a life watching people coming and going due to my constant traveling in my youth, I began to get use to the whole situation. Not that I’m racially intolerant, but it’s like seeing a group of people suffering from dwarfism trying to play basketball with the Harlem Globetrotters. Such was the irony and the absurdity of the situation that I was more or less under some form of paralysis until I became numbed to my new surroundings. Later on that night as I left the place with my friend at 3 am when apparently the place was just starting to come alive my friend told me that it was clean because it’d just recently opened about 3 months ago. Now that was January 2004, its now September, and I can safely say that place hasn’t changed at all, it still has that peculiarity above all peculiarities. But that’s just a place, it really doesn’t serve any other purpose than a physical vessel to transport the people there to another reality, the virtual reality populated by nerds and geeks of all sorts because lets face it, if you spend so much time in front of the computer like me and have become at least faintly aware of not just “internet” culture but of individual game culture and further into that community clan culture, you’re a nerd or a geek, sure you may play the occasional football or get off your arse to walk to the fridge and that constitutes your daily exercise, the point is you only occasionally play football and if walking to the fridge and back is that taxing you really must come to terms with the sole fact that you’re a geek or a nerd or just really really really really really unfit. But it doesn’t just stop there, even within this minority group of nerds and geeks there’re smaller groups who often don’t like being associated with other groups. I met this one guy at Minitour, a connoisseur of comic book collectables who was adamantly against me saying that he and that Treky in the black trench coat in the corner were the same. No he would tell me, I’m not like them, to which I would reply, but sure you are, you shop at the same places, you dress a like, watch the same tv shows and really you could both hold long and intense conversations with one another about your respective interests. No Charles you don’t understand, I collect comic books and the like, I’m not a Treky, they’re different, they’re intense. Intense I thought? This coming from the man who once beat up a little kid to get the first issue of Venom published by Marvel comics back in the heydays of the 90’s when comic books were celebrating their silicon breast and macho men phase. Interesting, truly if he could see a difference and I could not, there must be something more, perhaps in the nuances between the two, where one would whisk out his wallet Captain Piccard style to pay for his complete DVD box set of Star Trek while the other would web-slinger style his wallet out to pay for that oh so hard to find limited edition Spider-Man #253 where Spider-Man and Mary Jane get it on in a tree house only to have the Green Goblin pumpkin bomb it to smithereens. How is it that I was so blind to this stark difference? I, too an avid lover of the comic genre, did I miss something during my life that made me retardedly unable to discern this sort of thing? Or I’m just not hard-core enough to understand? One thing I am certain about is that these people didn’t have it easy through high school.

Thursday, September 09, 2004

You are not alone

I have been in bed these past four days. Hit by a 'sledgehammer virus' -tht leaves you weak, after repeated attacks of high fever, so weakk that you cannt turn quickly when you shave as it makes you dizzy. Who designed the SH virus? And with that I open the topic that nothing is beyond the province of reason or in our language - the project. (what happened to the post that I made yesterday? Is this another manifestation of the virus - its 'LSD' like character? Never mind here it is again ...)

To start from the beginning:
1. In the first week of the semester I said 'enough'. By which I meant that you have opted for this studio so that you do not need to do a 'redesign' project. Or a project which is constructed (for all projects are constructeed) within the confines of a bussiness enterprise. You are being asked to say ' the emperor is not wearing any clothes' - or rather moved to a place where it is unseemly to speakk of profit as the basis and motive for design. Profit from 'fear'? Thats ugly and nasty.
2. Having acceepted that you will not speak of business - I showed my anxiety. I do not accept you will not speak of business. I was not happy (nay comforted) till you changed all you terminologies and methods. New terms and new methods. Okay you said. And promptly did nothing - or not much. Where are the new methods? And so it goes..
3. To move on: The I said immerse yourself (in humaanity and its foibles and fears), which you did. So now what?
4. Well: You have to propose the project!! What, I ask you, iss you contribution to the world of Industrial Design?
((the ibook has a soft key pad - so you will see lotss of repeat vowels. Which I have been anxioussly hunting down. I will now stop ddoing it. Lett it be as they say.)

And then I started browsing. And promptly disscovered that my thunder haad been stolen. First they stole my innovative topic (in 1999 my title of 'story telling' was stolen the next year by MIT for their media lab projeect, talk of feeling like Klaus Kinski in the amazon flood? Did you guys see Aguire the wrath of GGod by Herzog? Awesome film. Awesome director!) and now they are doing what I thought was my innovation. What is that? I came to Austraalia last year. And what struck me was the universal ssadness. Everone was sad. Or anxious that others sshouldn't see them haappy. And there was a lot to be wary of - cameras everywhere. A fearful people - very unlike any other place on this planet. Can I say this openly? I did so - in a lecture on 'Heterotopia' for the Interior students in April. And then not to appear obnoxious I decided it would be better to do it within the confines of a studio. So was born this topic FAI - my take on Oz. And now I find its not only Oz but America too and a lot of other places. So there is a Social Research Conference on Fear (http://www.newschool.edu/centers/socres/fear/index.html). So far so good. It feels like only the topic has bcome common!! But wait I am ill and browsing and sure enough I begin to turn up other design people doing the same thing in method and approach. What is that?

Okay you look ar real life. And that is where your intellectual aspect of design iss located. Not in a factory or bussiness. So you go looking for key issues in contemporary life that need challenging or transformation - or that as a designer you can step into these issues. Just to validate for yourself that you are alive and not a robot (or employeee in your language). And sso we are on to something new you think -'I have never encountered this before'. Wrong! Or so I discovered. There are so many others doing it to claim new is farcical (almost like a soap or shampoo ad - new and improved). Who? These people- http://www.institutewithoutboundaries.com/
And
http://www.nextd.org/

Institute without boundaries has an interesting ddefinition of what a projeect is. (with so many eee's it looks like speedy gonzalves is writing and not I. Eeeeeeyah! Andale, andale! Ariba, ariba!

Looked aat another way. Why are you ddoing this crazy sstudio with Soumitri? To get a job with IDEO. Now thats a good goal.

So long for now. I have to make it to Americos drinks tomorrow. Weak and wasted - but willing.

See you all next week.

Wednesday, September 08, 2004

Fear

Fear is probably very significant today. It certainly is the theme song for the developed countries these days - especially in the rhetoric of the Australians and Americans. Here is a site that will interest you http://www.newschool.edu/centers/socres/fear/index.html - looking at Fear.

After Friday last we need to get back - when I am better - to talk about what: as a designer - your response is - to your topics.

We need to also speak about your proposition/ your project, your method and what you will do for the end of the semester.

Until tuesday then!

Monday, August 30, 2004

Other doing what we are doing?

See this site for interesting contexts:
http://www.ccd.rpi.edu/

Friday workshop

Sorry for doing it so late. Here it goes,

Session Plan:
6+6+4 presentations, each presenter gets 45 minutes with question/crit session included.
9-1 PM - Ross Mc Leod (10-1), (+Liam TBC)
2-6 PM - Chris Ryan (2-4),
6-10 PM - Michael Trudgeon, Peter Burrows

Who presents in which session?
The bar idea is unworkable as Friday evenings are no good for the bar. We could end up in our space, or in the context room, or in 8.4.16 (which is dark and the projection may be working).

We have cancelled Friday drinks at 87 because of this event.

FAI topics
Please verify/correct and reply with final names of topics. I would like to circulate this on Wednesday.
1. The sacred and the profane, Mario
2. Rear Vision Apparition, Bryan
3. Durian Durian – Culinary Contradictions, Dana
4. ??, Mark
5. Triggered Reflection, Tony
6. Racial Intolerance, Charles
7. Reformist Box, Damian
8. Spelunking, Stacey
9. ??, Sid
10. Promo Manifesto, Linton
11. Black Market Power, Vendy
12. Six Dollar Limit, Toyah
13. The mind attack, Kaliyann
14. Darker Ness, Paul
15. ??, Kat
16. Cover thou Waste, Bart

I need volunteers - to organise the event space, to make a poster of the event, to record the event on video/pix, to make handouts for the panellist, to make a document after the session AND

Two of you have to be student panellists for each session - for three sessions thats six of you.

Friday, August 20, 2004

Pretending to be god

We do not have conformity because we need it or that it was thrust upon us, we have conformity because we need it to taste the ecstasy of prediction, to be that one step closer to being god. For if we cannot conquer chaos we might as well destroy it through order.

Wednesday, August 18, 2004

A one day workshop

Talking to Bryan today I asked if I could suggest a one day workshop to the CA group. A workshop in which you present your project and the audience (carefully chosen - so that they can make effective contributions to your topics - and individually briefed by me and personally invited). The date for this would be Friday 3rd September. I have found a nice room for this - RMIT Bldg 96, Lygon street. It would run for the whole day. And each of you gets half an hour. 15 mins prez and 15 mins discussion. And it will be exhausting. And this is something that helps your projects immesurably. I know, and have seen it often in the past.

(We are doing one such event for Ban, masters student working on 'bicycling in melbourne', week after next. With Green Peace, Bicycle Victoria, Melb city council etc...)

So please discuss. Should we do it? Should it be for all of you? Or should it be optional for those who want it?

Like I said - its not meant to be simple. But I am there for support.

Monday, August 16, 2004

Handout Feedback

I've just finished reading most of the handouts and there are a few things that I’ve noticed which aren’t really dealt with or even mentioned. The foremost is that there seems to be a lot of whining about western values, western ideals, western drivers for commodisation. But there seems to be not mention of eastern values, eastern ideals, and eastern drivers to whatever it is they drive for. See what I mean, I don’t even know what the desired end goal for eastern drivers is. Considering we are living in Australia and in the great context in out immediate neighbors are oriental in origin wouldn’t it be prudent to perhaps at least touch on some basics regarding this. Second a lot of the text in the handouts takes the assumption that our morals and ethics are the same as theirs or that we have ethics and morals at all! What happens if I don’t have any? Or mine differ so much that I might as well not have any? It seems that the writers aren’t really interested in these things and more in the lime light of publishing something that’s most likely very well researched and written but to me something close to a pseudo-intelligencia tripe. I’m sure as much as we’d like to think Australia is the same as the United States or Europe, in truth we’re not because our history and culture are completely different. It just comes across to me as interesting information but hardly applicable to our situation.