Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Sounds from my room (10/12/11, 2:02 pm - 2:05 pm)

1. The chirping sound of someone unlocking a car
2. A thumping from upstairs, another thumping (possibly someone moving a piece of furniture)
3. A scraping sound from upstairs
4. A car going by
(Note: all throughout, there is the low atmospheric sound from outside my window, along with the hum of my computer.)
5. A louder sound, almost like a saw
6. The saw sound again; a creak from a door
7. A more muted saw sound
8. A car with a loud muffler going by
9. Another car, moving more quietly
10. A very distant car
11. A closer car
12. A very low bass sound somewhere in the building
13. A metallic rattling
14. Footsteps in the apartment
15. A door shutting in the apartment; a second door shutting
16. Another car going by
17. A car alarm going off
18. A more distant car
19. The hum of an appliance
20. A car horn
21. Someone going down the stairs
22. Another car
23. A quick, sharp sound in the basement, maybe a wire being moved
24. Another car
25. Footsteps upstairs
26. Someone moving loudly down the stairs, possibly carrying something
27. Another, distant car
28. Footsteps again, then a door closing
29. More footsteps
30. A car going by in the distance, honking
31. A very distant car
32. A closer car

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Curbside

Link (high-resolution version): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWNbgAxfsnY

Pieter Hugo - Permanent Error


When a computer game, a website, or a spreadsheet becomes obsolete, it tends, in a way, to split in two: on the one hand there is the “real” file or database, the one that we maneuver through or tinker with on the screen, and on the other there is the object, the disk or the piece of hardware that encloses it.  The first can easily vanish without a trace (if it isn’t mechanically mothballed by the Internet Archive or another website-preservation outfit), while the latter lingers on as slowly decomposing junk, spent evidence now free to be channeled across the globe for whatever use it may serve.  Most often it moves from a developed to an undeveloped country, perhaps even roughly back to where it was manufactured.  A peculiar, unsavory circle closes, from basic subsistence, through comfort and advancement, then back to subsistence again.  It is the raw factuality of this unsavoriness that Pieter Hugo documents in his exhibition of photographs, entitled Permanent Error.
The location is a dump on the fringes of Accra, one of the largest cities in West Africa; it serves as a nightmarish version of a data center, with clouds of plastic fumes in place of any service or transmission.  The hardware and software are incidentals in the retrieval of metal wires and other metallic bits of material, to be carried or carted off to communities nearby.
Judging from the photographs, the bulk of the work is done by young men, most seemingly in their teens or twenties, who dig through the heaps with long picks or with their hands.  One wipes his eyes, probably affected by the noxious smoke that fills the air.  A lone woman stares pensively at the viewer, a shiny metal bowl hinting at everyone’s justification for lingering around this empty landscape of dirt and white plastic.  Though, as the titles of each work remind us, this place is technically a market, hardly any signs of trading or interaction can be seen; even in the two or three group photos the men generally focus on the ground before them, absorbed in their task.  Whether this is due to the photographer’s staging—clearly there is some, as in every picture there is at least one figure posing, unsmiling, for the camera—or the reality of the situation, it clearly expresses the unpleasantness and solitariness of the task.
Formally, the photographs possess a striking, though barren, beauty, with the occasionally rich colors of the figures pairing off elegantly against the dark, vacant landscape.  The rising smoke would be enough by itself to draw the eye’s attention, in the absence of any portraiture, but the two in combination help to create the double effect of identification and alienation that, theoretically at least, carries across to the actual experience of the workers.  The fire and smoke also make one aware of the images of international war that lurk on the horizon, yet another exportable commodity with its own particular varieties of detritus.  As the narrator states in one of Harun Farocki’s recent films: “Like our commodities, most of our wars, these days, are made in the third world.”  It is only natural, then, that the pursuit of a means of survival in these places should become a form of low-level, self-inflicted chemical warfare.