User:Ohjian/XPUB 2

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YEAR 2


Graduation Project

Getting Started

Previous Practice

Book Making

As a graphic designer with a strong love for printed matter, making books – i.e. thinking, editing, designing and publishing books – is my practice. I have always been interested in the book as the supposedly most complex structure when it comes to printed material. But to me the term has never been limited to the codex, which is the most common form of the book in Europe. The ancient clay tablet, the papyrus scroll and even the quipu, which is essentially a system of knotted strings, are considered to be historical forms of the book and actually I think that all kinds of printed matter can be subsumed under the term as well. They include a broad variety of materials, tools, binding methods and publishing processes. Accordingly the book could take any number of forms, and instead of treating it as a transparent container I believe it should be shaped by the needs of its content.

A few years ago I had to recognize that in some cases there are needs that go far beyond the book, regardless of how broad your definition of the medium may be. Working with the literary estate of the author Robert Musil as part of a scholarship, I found myself confronted with a rather complex structure of text and hypertext.
I had to realize that its sheer diversity and extent required a new approach to my practice. This led to creating a large array of books, folders, fanfolds and lose leaf collections, resulting in an extensive network of printed matter with interconnecting nodes and links.
To make this experimental edition accessible, all the different parts had to be spread on a surface. It was only then that the interspaces, the surface itself, the exhibition room and even the reader choosing a path through the non-linear text became part of the publication.
In retrospect this long-term project made me realize that I am no longer committed to a traditional book making practice and instead feel the urge to further question outdated concepts and definitions of media.


Example: »The Mistake of this Book is to be a Book«, 2020

This work is an approach to the literary estate of the Austrian author Robert Musil, taking into account the findings of literary studies and philology yet emphasizing the perspective of my book making practice. It started as a graduation project and was further developed and realized as part of a two-year scholarship.
With his project »The Man Without Qualities« Musil initially aimed for a two-part novel. Whereas the first part was published in 1930, the second part was never completed and ultimately remained a fragment. Over the years Musil discovered the sheer infinite possibilities of how to finish the novel. His excessive writing process resulted in numerous varying drafts for the missing ending, equally existing in his archive and spanning a network-like structure of text and hypertext. The author´s estate comprises around 12,000 pages, including numerous chapters, drafts, notes and remarks as well as essays, diary entries, lists and correspondences.
After thoroughly examining, sorting and rearranging the material I created an extensive network of various printed matter, including books, folders, fanfolds and lose leaf collections. This process made me question the limited understanding of the term book and led to a broader sense of the word. The project evolved into an exhibition, considering the exhibition display, the space and interspace as well as the body experiencing the text as integral parts of the experimental publication.

Experimental Book – Robert Musil


The main issues of interest in this project were:

1) Musils concept of the Möglichkeitssinn (sense for possibilities):
In one of the first chapters of „The Man Without Qualities“ Musil introduces his concept of Möglichkeitssinn (sense for possibility) versus Wirklichkeitssinn (sense for reality). Both seem to exist: the sense for reality in a person who understands that things are what they are, and the sense for possibility in a person who recognizes that things are what they are, but also they could potentially be different.

In the beginning of the novel the protagonist appears to be a person with sense for reality, which has a strong impact on his life: He joins the military and becomes part of a strict and rigid structure that is hierarchical and produces boundaries and limitations rather than space for possibilities.
Gradually and over a long process the protagonist leaves these fixed structures behind and becomes a person with a great sense for possibilities, questioning the limitations of the past and exploring possible futures instead.

Interestingly the author himself seems to go through a parallel evolution: When he started to write the novel there was the idea of a two part series, where both volumes should be similar in size and length. The second part was supposed to be written and published two years after the first one. But this never happened. Instead Musil spent 12 years, until his death, on writing for the second part, which finally remained a fragment.
Over the years Musil discovered his own sense for possibilities, resulting in various drafts for the missing ending that equally exist in his archive. Since the drafts have various interconnections and no hierarchy, more and more possibilities emerge, not only in the texts themselves but also through their relation to each other.

This brings me to the second main issue which is …


2) Structure as sense of possibilities
The concept of structure is often associated with the act of organizing, sorting, selecting, categorizing. These actions can be (and actually are often) used in a violent or harmful way.
[Keywords: tree, hierarchy, patriachy, capitalism, colonialism, centralized network, marginalization …]

But structure in itself just describes the arrangement of and relations between the parts or elements of something complex. This concept doesn’t have to be strict, rigid, hierarchical or linear. A structure might as well be fluid and in a constant state of becoming, caring for relationalities and what emerges through them.

[Keywords: entaglement, implicancies, intra-action, rhizom, distributed networks, feminism, intersectional, non-binary, animacies …]

Structures often bring limitations, but some might as well bring space for possibilities.


3) Limitations and potential in the structure of the book
Whenever Western Europeans think of the term book, they actually imagine the codex. This specific form of the book comes with a specific structure: a front and a back cover, a spine, the double-page spread, the sequence of pages. It is linear, fixed through binding and rigid since every content has to fit on a page. There is still some room for variation in the structure, for example the size and the number of pages that vary from book to book.

But how is it possible to go beyond these limitations of the book? How could the structure be adapted to be able to support such entangled content and material as you would find with „The Man Without Qualities“?

In this case the structure went from the codex to a horizontal, non-linear, open ended, flexible and interconnected tableau with various forms printed matter, ranging from books, folders, fanfolds and lose leaf collections to maps. There is no beginning nor ending and the reader finds themselves situation within, following (or not) links between the elements of the edition to find their own path through the text.


I am wondering:
How can I integrate structures into my life and practice that are inviting possibilities, the unexpected, the overseen?

Tableau Musil.jpg

Tableau Musil 2.jpg

Workshop Hosting

The combination of structure and possibilities also relates to my workshop hosting practice.

In a workshop a provide a certain structure that creates a space for things to happen. The structure can for example include a theme, schedule, a workshop script, prompts and exercises, a location or actual space, a number of participants, small tutorials and an idea for a final outcome.
All these parameters of the structure are carefully curated and balanced out, so that they hopefully create this space for possibilities.

Example: Summerschool 2022 – Ghost Files

1) Protocols:
For the Summerschool 2022 I prepared so called protocols. Each student was assigned a number and following the protocol they had to send a postcard to another student in the room. Depending on the protocol the other student would annotate on the postcard and either send it back to the first person or maybe to a third person in the room.
This structure that the protocol provided enabled conversation and collaboration in the group and helped the students to bring in an element of surprise, of the unexpected.

2) Multi-perspectivity:
Another structure that played an important role was the idea to bring 12 different perspectives together to try and delineate a topic together. Next to the collaborative aspect of the protocols there was also enough space for individual work, so that every participant could follow their own approach and elaborate a situated angle on the theme. These different perspectives would be brought together in the final outcome, providing a thorough collective investigation.

3) Format:
The final format for the outcome was another structure I provided: A book in sheets, ready to be rearranged, filed, exhibited or even discarded. It invites the reader to think along, follow their own path through the material and to add their own annotations and thoughts, some speedy drawings or items to the collection. Depending on order and arrangement of the cards, again new possibilities arise from within the material.


Publishing Process

For years I have worked in the context of publications, but just recently I realized how feel comfortable and experienced with some very specific roles in this practice, whereas other are rejected. Roughly you could divide the publishing practice into three main stages:

a) Hosting: initiate a publication; provide a space, a topic, prompts; invite others to create material
b) Creating: produce textual or visual material to be published
c) Curating: select, organize, arrange the material; design the publication

Previous to XPUB I have mostly positioned myself either at the beginning or at the end of this process: As a workshop host I would initiate a project and provide a structure and space for students to create material. As a graphic designer I would organize, edit and design pre-existing material to curate a publication from it.
The new role I want to explore starts from the middle: Accompanied by the familiar processes of hosting and curating I now also want to create material for a publication. By integrating all three roles into my work I aim to trigger an iterative process towards a more entangled, less divided publishing practice where hosting, creating and curating shape and inspire each other.

Maybe this again relates back to structure:
When hosting or curating I am mostly a bird, overlooking the whole structure with all its elements and connections. For the process of creating I may have to shift this perspective and position myself inside of the structure, only seeing what unfolds right in front of me.





Mappings

This is a first draft. I am trying to map my interests.

Mapping Keywords – First Draft


Mapping Keywords

This is an attempt to lay out all keywords that are present in and important for my past, current and future practice. I want to find out how all these things relate to each other, how they connect.

Mapping Keywords


Mapping Related Resources

Here I am trying to map all related resources (texts, artworks, artist books etc.) that come to m mind while thinking with the keywords in the precious map.

Mapping Related Resources



Mapping Prototypes

In this map I collect visual sketches of my recent experiments, prototypes and projects that relate to the keywords map. They all have certain aspects I am curious about and that I want to explore further.

Mapping Previous Experiments and Prototypes


Annotated Bibliography / References

Author/Artist Title Category Keywords Synopsis Quotes Link
Lucy Lippard 557,087 / 955,000 / c. 7,500 / 2,972,453 artist book / exhibition catalogue dematerialization of the art exhibition, mail art, non-linear, non-hierarchical, mix of documentation and conceptual art new approach to the exhibition catalogue where the book itself becomes the exhibition "each catalogue was an envelope of loose note cards containing statements, documentation and conceptual works by each artist, to be rearranged, filed or discarded at will. If Lippard described Conceptual art as the dematerialization of the art object, these catalogues effectively announced the dematerialization of the art exhibition. (One reviewer claimed Lippard had been the artist, and that her medium had been other artists.) " https://www.mottodistribution.com/site/?p=28017
Dieter Roth 264 Little Clouds Artist Book conversation through handwritten prompts or questions and drawings as answer or reaction to it
Marcel Broodthaers Musée d'Art Moderne Exhibition fictitious museum, miming institutional approach, playing with roles (artist, curator, museum director etc.) "… a work of fiction allows you to capture reality and at the same time what it conceals"
Peggy Buth Desire in Representation Artist Book artistic research, interplay of fact and fiction

Project Proposal

Last update: 2022/11/02

1. What do you want to make?

My project shall be an investigation into Ghost Files and the question of „How does matter emerge?“ or „How can matter find its way into our shared existence and towards imaginary futures?“

The outcome of this investigation shall be a (printed) publication, that itself becomes a space where matter emerges: It remembers, archives, collects, arranges and curates matters of concern around the idea of Ghost Files. In a process of empirical becoming and researching it manifests itself in temporary visualizations, ready to be re-thought and re-formulated again.


2. How do you plan to make it?

The term Ghost Files, that has no official meaning or definition, will function as the entry point, the lens and the mode of operation for this research process. It delineates the liminal space of becoming, where Ghost stands for something vague and immaterial whereas Files represent something concrete and tangible. This ambiguity of Ghost Files opens up a paradoxical terrain of (im)possibilities, oscillating between the no-more and the not yet, between nothing and everything at the same time.

I imagine this project to be an intimate attempt, creating a space for myself and others to explore this unknown terrain from within and to experiment with diffractive ways of thinking, reading, writing and making.


3. What is your timetable?

4. Why do you want to make it?

Through this deep dive into the abstract idea of Ghost Files and by asking „How do we imagine what is unformulated yet?“ I hope to reveal some troubling dynamics, structures and implications that are immanent in the production of matter but often concealed or overlooked:

How is matter created and who creates it?
Under what conditions and limitations?
Who decides what matters?
What are the implications of matter?

I hope that thinking, reading, writing and making with Ghost Files helps me to understand and potentially subvert, infiltrate, haunt and hack these conditions. For me this counter normative attempt is a gesture towards a more open, intersectional, distributed and experimental approach to my publishing practice.

5. Who can help you and how?

6. Relation to previous practice

My practice has always been situated in the realm of graphic design and printed matter, evolving around the question of structure: network, interconnection, multiperspectivity and non-hierarchy are just a few of the keywords that have been present throughout my work.

Looking at the production of matter in the context of print publishing, this practice could be roughly divided into three different roles or stages of a project:

a) Hosting: initiate a publication; provide a space, a topic, prompts; invite others to create material
b) Creating: produce textual or visual material to be published
c) Curating: select, organize, arrange the material; design the publication

Previous to XPUB I have mostly positioned myself either at the beginning or at the end of this process: As a workshop host I would initiate a project and provide a structure and space for students to create material. As a graphic designer I would organize, curate and design pre-existing material to form a publication from it.
With this project I want to explore a new role and start from the middle: Accompanied by the familiar processes of hosting and curating I now also want to create material for a publication. By integrating all three roles into my work I aim to trigger an iterative process towards a more entangled, less divided publishing practice where hosting, creating and curating shape and inspire each other.


7. Relation to a larger context

hints (to be elaborated):

  • Ontology / Hauntology
  • Production of matter / knowledge
  • publishing practice

8. References/bibliography

  • Hope A. Olson: „Mapping Beyond Dewey´s Boundaries: Constructing Classificatory Space for Marginalized Knowledge Domains“ [ How structures produce matter / idea of a paradoxical space ]
  • Donna Haraway: „Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective“ [ multiperspectivity / situated knowledge instead of absolute knowledge / who decides what matters? ]
  • Karen Barad, Adam Kleinmann (2012): “Intra-actions” (Interview of Karen Barad by Adam Kleinmann) [ how matter comes to matter / entanglement and intra-action / diffraction ]
  • Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattarí: Rhizom [ structure as a process of becoming ]
  • Alexander R. Galloway: „Protocol. How Control Exists after Decentralization“ [ distributed networks and protocols as process of becoming]
  • Robert Musil: "The Man Without Qualities" [ Möglichkeitssinn / reality awakens possibilities, but it will always be the same possibilities, in sum or on average, that go on repeating themselves / until someone gives the new possibilities their meaning, their direction ]
  • Colin Davis: "Hauntology, spectres and phantoms"
  • Jacques Derrida: "Spectres of Marx" [ Ontology and Hauntology ]

Thesis Outline

Last update: very raw draft


1. Introduction

2. Focus chapter
- How structure (even open and complex ones) impacts matter / create (im)possibilities
- Potentials and limitations of structures
- structure as a process of becoming (rhizome, protocol, verb, conjunction)

3. Focus chapter
- Ghost Files as a Paradoxical Space of Becoming
- Ontology vs Hauntology
- Unknown territorie(s) of (im)possible futures

4. Ghost Files as a Mode of Operation
- gesture towards a more open, intersectional, distributed and experimental approach to publishing practice.
- Invite the ghost in the structure

5. Conclusion

6. Bibliography

Reading, Thinking, Writing, Making with Ghost Files

SUMMERSCHOOL 2022 – GHOST FILES

Ghost Files – Images

Ghost snapshot

Ghost range

Ghost Files – Annotations

Ghost Files – Definitions

Ghost Files – Synthesizer

Public Moment: Leeszaal

Public Moment Leeszaal 06.jpg

Ghost Files – Circuits


Collective Moment: M&M Session

Collective writing session

Diary of Unfinished Thoughts

MISC.

MISC.1

MISC.1.1