[Oberlist] Romania @ No Order: Art in a Post-Fordist Society

Igor Mocanu igor.mocanu at gmail.com
Sun Jun 12 08:44:53 CEST 2011


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Date: Sat, Jun 11, 2011 at 2:55 PM
Subject: No Order: Art in a Post-Fordist Society
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June 11, 2011

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*Archive Books * <http://www.no-order.net>

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 *No Order
Art in a Post-Fordist Society*

 *Magazine Launch*
June 7, 2010, Triennale Milan, 5.30 pm
June 9–11, Spanish Pavilion, 54th Venice International Art Exhibition
June 23, Archive Kabinett, Berlin

www.no-order.net

 Archive Books is pleased to announce the publication of the new art
magazine: *No Order. Art in a Post-Fordist Society*. This editorial research
and investigation project focuses on the relationships between contemporary
art systems and capitalism's production processes.

By means of an investigation into current creative industries—and their
social, economic and semiotic assemblages—the magazine contributions
(essays, articles, interviews and dialogues as well as artists' projects)
aim to deconstruct, analyse and intervene within the ambit of the procedures
and forms of cognitive capitalism. It will concentrate, in particular, on
the phenomena of the 'biennalisation', 'financialisation' and
'spectacularisation' of the political, beginning with the control and
distribution of forms of artistic education, production and display on a
global scale.

The *Editorial Board* is comprised of a series of transversal figures from
various geographic and cultural environments, and includes *Asef Bayat,
Harun Farocki, Peter Friedl, Maurizio Lazzarato, Sylvère Lotringer, Achille
Mbembe, Angela Melitopoulos, Christian Marazzi, Nelly Richard, Florian
Schneider, Nomeda & Gediminas Urbonas* and *Françoise Vergès*.

Amongst the numerous contributors to the first, 400 page issue are: the
curators *Roger M. Burgel, Vasif Kortun, Charles Esche, Viktor Misiano*; the
sociologist *Maurizio Lazzarato* and the economist *Christian Marazzi*; the
filmmakers *Deimantas Narkevičius, Harun Farocki, Yervant Gianikian & Angela
Ricci Lucchi*; the Russian philosopher *Alexei Penzin*; the Chilean theorist
*Nelly Richard* and the German art historian *Astrit Schmidt-Burkhardt*.
There are artists projects by *Stephen Willats, Erick Beltrán, Warren
Niedich, Société Réaliste, Falke Pisano*, the Argentinian collective *Etcetéra,
Rossella Biscotti, Luca Frei, Oliver Ressler* and *Vangelis Vlahos*, who
contribute with essays, graphic designs or maps and cartographies.

*No Order* is published annually and is bilingual (English and Italian). It
is edited by Marco Scotini, published by Archive Books (Berlin), and
promoted and supported by NABA – Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti di Milano.
Beyond the normal divisions and pre-established formats of periodical art
magazines, this editorial project is structured into an assemblage of three
sections: *Time Zone, Play Time*, and *Time Machine*.

The cartographies in *Time Zone* trace out emerging artistic 'systems',
geographies of governmental disparities, and different dynamics of cultural
work. What is at stake here is the position that these local systems are
adopting in the globalised system of contemporary art. This section focuses
on the way the role of cultural industries is affecting various economic
scenarios around the world. Time Zone is quite simply a rewriting of the
opening section of art magazines – that of news and appointments. In this
issue: *Russia*, the *Czech Republic, Romania, Croatia* and *Turkey*.

*Play Time* corresponds instead to the central section of an art magazine,
which is generally dedicated to monographic essays on particular artists.
Categories like 'author' and 'work' are concepts that belong to a particular
historical period—that of the modern age—but they are no longer able to
analyse and portray the processes of contemporary production. Deconstructing
the hyper-visibility of certain organisations and giving visibility to the
invisible networks and processes that permeate the space of art, in a
collective chain of Education/Market/Display, thus becomes the only possible
form of action in today's state of 'work'.

The section *Time Machine* aims to complete the issue by questioning the
position of time at the heart of capitalism, but no longer in its 'modern'
form, which based the production process on the contrast between use value
and exchange value, and thus, by extension, on the dialectic between reality
and representation. On the contrary, time—which is based on potential/actual
relationships—is now the basis for the information economy. At a time when
appearance has entirely replaced reality, the subject is always a 'power',
insofar as it is memory, on the point of manifesting itself. The last
section of art magazines is given over to art reviews, and the category it
deals with is always the time dimension of 'after'.

The cover picture is taken from the demonstrations at the Milan Triennale in
1968. The underlying theme of the XIV International Exhibition of Modern
Decorative and Industrial Arts and Modern Architecture was 'Large Numbers'.
The XIV Triennale never opened. It was occupied by students during the
demonstrations and all the exhibition areas were destroyed. 'Why not try to
start again, precisely here in Milan? In that same space in which the great
process of social transformation was interrupted?'


For further information about the launch, or for press inquiries and orders,
please contact:

*ARCHIVE BOOKS*
info la archivebooks.org
www.archivebooks.org





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