Zizek on Time’s 2006 “Person of the Year”

Slavoj Zizek criticizes Time’s 2006 “Person of the Year,” and then suffers death by a thousand comments. Whether the flaming he undergoes unwittingly justifies his posting about the nature of online interaction is anyone’s guess.

Polish Reggae, stadium markets, and a Fotoplastikon

Henry Jenkins — MIT director, professor and blogger — has a wild blog entry about his trip to Poland that documents, among other things, Polish Reggae, stadium markets, and a Fotoplastikon. Bruce Sterling points to the entry this week, and focuses on the Fotoplastikon, but what caught my eye was the amazing cultural collision that is Polish Reggae:

Keep in mind: There are almost no Jamaicans living in Poland. This is not a case of emigrant populations porting music to another part of the world. Poland is an incredibly homogeneous country with very limited immigrant populations and clearly, there are no cultural reasons for Jamaicans to want to relocate to this part of the world. Reggae emerged here because it served Polish interests and reflected Polish tastes and thus it has taken some distinctly Polish shapes… A group called Izrael was the first to introduce the sound into Poland in 193. [sic] Some members of Izrael heard a few songs and were so fascinated that they started to produce music in this style (at least as they understood it). I gather there’s a good deal of reinvention going on here given how limited their initial exposure to the music was. The name created confusion in Poland with some people assuming this was a Christian Rock group. Indeed, my hosts shared with me stories of older people storming out of the concert, confused and angry, having hoped for a more conventional religious experience.

For more on the Fotoplastikon (aka the Kaiserpanorama), see Jonathan Crary’s Suspensions of Perception, which also features praxinoscopes, stereoscopes, and tachistoscopes. The Kaiserpanorama is actually on its cover.

Some friends’ openings this week in NYC

Michael Rakowitz’s The invisible enemy should not exist opens on Friday, January 12, at Lombard-Freid Projects. The show follows up on a few of the Iraq themes Michael started exploring in his project for Creative Time.

This Saturday, “The Nightly News,” a group show, opens at Luxe Gallery. 16 Beaver collaborator Pedro Lasch and Nomads and Residents collaborator Liselot van der Heijden are included. Unfortunately the Luxe Web site is not current, but here is an excerpt from the press release:

“The Nightly News” an exhibition curated by

Kathleen Goncharov and Stephan Stoyanov

LUXE Gallery,

24 W. 57th Street # 505

New York, NY 10019

January 13th – February 10th , 2007

Opening Reception: Saturday January 13th, 2007. 6-8pm.

http://www.luxegallery.net/

Reading by Charles Doria and performance by Pia Lindman. Saturday, February 3. 6 PM.

Artists: Robert Boyd, caraballo-farman, Jody Culkin, Lieven De Boeck, Al Fadhil, Liselot van der Heijden, Dominik Lejman, Ahmet Ogut, Pedro Lasch, Pia Lindman, Christodoulous Paniyatou, Jackie Salloum, Lydia Venieri, Michael Waugh, Fred Wilson, Michael Zansky, and others.

The Nightly News is an exhibition of works by artists from around the world, some showing in New York for the first time. These artists were born in Iraq, Iran, Palestine, Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, Belgium, Poland, Mexico and Finland, as well as the United States. Current events and issues such terrorism, war, surveillance, xenophobia, racism, religious fanaticism, immigration, nationalism, and the abuse of power drive the exhibition.

MIT podcasts with artists

Audio and video with Vito Acconci, Judith Barry and others.

Wired Magazine: NASA’s lost Apollo 11 videos

the lost nasa tapes

The Apollo 11 moon landing was one of the greatest achievements in the history of mankind. And engineering a video setup that could capture the event and beam it back to Earth so that half a billion people could watch it — that was pretty impressive, too. But the version of the footage that the world saw on TV was muddied and degraded. Luckily, a pristine version of the raw footage was recorded onto 14 inch magnetic tape reels and sent to NASA for safekeeping. One snag — NASA now has no idea where that tape is.

About

John Menick is an artist and writer living in Mexico City.
Bio | Resume (PDF)