« Posts tagged deleuze

capitalism as tourism

there’s something to be said about people who, for whatever reason, have the basic necessities taken care of. i, of course, am one of those people. it’s doubtful that i will ever starve. i’m not rich, but i do have a cushion, of sorts. and there are plenty of people who are like, in a way. i don’t mean the very rich, or trust-fund babies, or young people with great careers. i also mean people who live off their parents and do nothing for themselves, who may be highly intelligent or even well educated, but for whom life is one big video game fest. or whatever.

this problem, if it is in fact one, has been around for ages, for as long as there have been wealthy or bourgeois. but with capitalism it’s even more pronounced. when you consider that most of us being human, have the same taste, for bacon or fatty foods, or good beverage… most of people in the sum of human history have struggled for the basic necessity — never getting to taste oyster. it’s hard to get oyster. so unless you have a connection to someone, or you yourself have that skill, you’ll never get to experience it. much like a good piano performance or whatever. but with capitalism you can be better than most people at something completely useless. like bean counting. and with the right business structure, you can fit into a machine that needs expert bean counting. so now you have a job. and with money, you can transform your better than average, otherwise useless skill into something extraordinary. now you can have all the oysters you want. or all the beautiful music you have no skill to play.

this video, the above video is kind of the opposite. but it fits too; heres someone who can become more of an expert at something relatively useless. if he had to get a job, it might be getting bird’s nests… or living in the arctic to climb cliffwalls to get bird’s eggs to feed his family. but it’s not even that. with the market place you can indulge in whatever desire you want, and really hone in and focus on it.

i think there is a dialectic in development, that prevails across anything that requires skill. like darts, or chess or horseback riding… playing the tuba. it’s like how children find a picture awesome, because they’ve never seen something so shiney before. but when they get older, shiney doesn’t so much matter. it’s now about composition or mass. if you can get enough taste, you begin to appreciate tension in a picture, something that is off balance, that was before, a little disturbing because it’s not perfect. eventually what is art isn’t the topographically ideal symmetry (all buildings are cubes), but buildings which suggest that ideal symmetry without being it, and then buildings which exaggerate that function to the point at which it almost doesn’t work — but they pull it off.

its alot like the marquis de sade with his art — you can worship the ideal body like some marble heart, you can flail a body until it is really just a body and becomes the marble heart — you can stretch the body so it hangs on a thread of life, and in turn stretch that consciousness until it’s a pure consciousness on its own horizon. i mean, what is what you love isn’t it, when you meet someone, when you two are together on your own horizon.

i guess there’s no accounting for taste. but it happens so many different ways in so many different directions. especially when it comes down to connoisseurship. when the art becomes central, and everything else wraps around it. that central disharmony is an elevation of a gradient so that all the white beads are to one side of a membrane that holds them there. against entropy. i suppose when smoking a cigar, there’s a way to do it without burning too much. or drinking your manhattan, there’s a balance of bourbon to vermouth depending on the specific flavors (i like wild turkey 101, so that’s difficult to balance). addiction is the finest of gradients, the centralisation of specific disharmony. i guess this rock climber needs to collect his off beats, so he can dispel them in a fury of climbing.

that kind of collection is on the one hand, admirable. the attitude he speaks of, of going at it with positive energy day to day… to do the task. that’s life isn’t it? what architect or designer or film director or chef or even waitress or file clerk or call center rep can’t relate to that?

but having conquered one climb and celebrating before going to the next — that’s a token given right to chess puzzles, to sheet music, to composition of novels, to picking up girls, to fucking video games. and no one admires an obsessive video game player. is there an art to fiddling with controls? yes. it’s not easy and in the old 4 bit or even 8 bit games, there’s a finesse of skill in timing and execution that you don’t often get in today’s intensive graphics shooters.

but even having gone there, what about the mindless action of early 8-bit textured 3D rendered 2D worlds, like DOOM?

but everyone constructs their own horizon. we all have our own values and hooks and traves. we make our own house with our own definitions, and store our own fancies. character, which many of us have at least, topographically, is the result of internal and external strife. literally — we are like stars. stars want to explode because of fusion, but also want to implode because of gravity. our character is the boiling of our surface due to external and internal stimuli. character is how we deal with our blindspots, how we deal with our intensities. those of us who harness our own specific intensities and sculpt our own obsessions still have our own horizon — but it becomes more obviously focused. raymond roussel wrote locus solus in the same byzantine labyrinthian excess as the marquis de sade wrote justine or 100 days of sodomy. only rather than a crass sexual game, we have a objectification, raised to the meta. a garden of disharmony built on cultural excess. think of samuel beckett as the super-james joyce — the pulling through of narrative as a THING, to sculpt out that ill-defined kernel called narrative and make it into its own living and breathing surface. i am speaking of the indulgencies of post-industrial capitalism each expressed as a film, a genre, a brand name. each with its own internal world brand, which is disconnected from the last. schizophrenia with deleuze and guattari is a conceptualized way of noting half worlds in disconnect, interacting with a multi-valience of bursting out logics. this is that schizophrenia, but even more so, an eating of its own internal excess to be an excess. the lacanian moebius strip best explains how the inside is also the outside — and so with this caterpillaring of self as a climber, or as any connoisseur we have the bending of fundamental distopias into a collective consciousness called self. neurotic and bundled as a person, we don’t seek to become at peace in the utopian hippie sense, one with the world, but we seek to be consumers, one with our digestion.

ultimately though, the need to digest different kinds of ornate-tacies is limited to forms which fit our central disharmony. he seeks a new climb which he can then chew on with his fingers and does, his weight as he swings the planet around his gravitational center. i am the center of the world. as a financial otaku one’s digestive system collects financial tools as unique shapes in the cilia, embedded in several stomaches, as monies that imprint shadows in the interior lining as options or leverages. its at the bar that you pick your poison and at the university with a list of colleges that you do the same.

in difference and repetition deleuze highlights how thought is another form of metabolism. flowers contemplate the variance of sunlight with their circadianisms as consumers in supermarkets contemplate products with their digestion and their social affluences.

in the end though, you might as well travel to japan to experience their politeness and their ramen, or go to arches national park in utah for their red rock formations. try shabu shabu in taiwan with real pork blood, you know the kind actual taiwanese eat, with their native mushrooms. or sit at a fancy whiskey bar trying different scotches from the thousands of islands and peninsula that decorate the topography of scotland. look at different rothkos in a book, or read balzac and then compare him voltaire or proust. be an arm chair traveller, watch andrew zimmern eat things from other parts of the world. you’re still tasting exotic landscapes. you’re still sampling different pussies — different only through age, and diet, and something that can only be individual. funny how when you think of phallic signifiers, pussy becomes another cock. we’re all sticking things in our mouths and contemplating, sniffing, seeing.

in the end though, all this excess. all this sightseeing, all this sniffling of new butts. just try it, and leave, feeling like somehow the journey has changed you. you are 1up on the dialectical ladder, one more climb richer. one more scotch wiser. and you get that, on your own horizon, you stamp another sopwith camel on the side of your red tri-fokker. when really, you’re just feeling things out with your intestines, tasting exotic packaged sausages and ultimately making exotic shits. wearing our your digestive system for the brief blaze of your lifetime, that much more knowledgable about the wall papers youve landed on. so it becomes a thing you can show off about on twitter or vimeo.

spend 20 years traveling all across italy for the different wineries.

don’t fool yourself. truth is, you’re just another tourist. only because you don’t wear mickey mouse hats and snapshots of tall skyscrappers, you carry some dignity with you, like some neo-electronica hippie. so much wiser for living now than thirty decades ago. crowd in all the hotspots you saw on yelp and make a nice collection of shot glasses.

nothing worst than a tourist than an enlightened tourist.

on Art

Sculpture is the most ideal art. Music is the most pragmatic. Dance is the most expressive.

The dream of the artist is to inscribe in the space inside the body outside the body. It’s very much as what Deleuze said regarding the inscription of great books being written in flesh.

I don’t mean that art should be tattooed, but that it should connect what is internal with what is external.

Yet art is not limited to the permeation of membranes or the echo of a model in the head of an artist to the exterior, nor does art have to do with the fidelity of transmission between an external source with an internal experience.

The worst artist is one who carefully conceives of his creations as a matter of controlling the experience of his audience — about transmitting a message, of needing to supplement their art with a libretto or scoffing at those who do not understand their art. Art as a capitalist endeavor is owned, but art as art is experiential germination not teleological. Art is not an essay, it is not about message or medium, although essays can be art. Mediums themselves may be art, and messages can certainly have that artistic impulse.

Rather, to make art is to germinate a form with its ambivalence and its multi-valence and its integral congruity such that the experience of that form extends itself naturally within the substrate of a manifold.

So while each of us are manifolds, select reflections of the world around us, our manifold itself is permeated by forces beyond us from the outside. Those forces can reverberate within our manifold to manifest a chamber of interlaced experience. That vibration, be it pleasurable or stinging — be it without judgement is the result of art. Great art can lead us to intenser vibrations.

Although of course, we judge such vibrations on the face of pleasurable experiences, or singular expressions in allowed social spaces. The accidental death of a parent, or the purposeful interruption of employment can both be traumatic instances, but not permissible within the social realm of ‘art’.

This is how sculpture can be the most ideal form. In the rigidity or fluidity of material, we can experience the visual (and tensile) sensuousness of a form that interrupts a space we are in and informs us of an otherworldly experience. Traditional otherworldly statues of Gods and Demons, plants and other creatures can invoke in us the presence of a static creature such as Venus de Milo. More contemporaneous forms vary in their simplicity or texture to suggest the raw indeterminacy of a gesture — perhaps highlighting the specificity of a bird in space as with Brâncu?i.

In much the same way, music allows for the literal and synecdochiac reverberation of rhythms and beats that bounce within the antechambers of our manifold. We literally vibrate with sounds that resonate with us. As the rhythms align the internal weave of our core, as it is already pre-made with alliterations from familiar genres and languages, so does speech and poetry jolt us with the strength of its diastole and systolic pistons such that we get the hip shaking, head pounding one-step, a halfway intrusion into the expressive realm of Dance.

If you follow me so far, you will understand the how dance and other forms likewise fall under art.

Great art is not the germination of a thought, so much as it is the construction brand new memetics, not of the replication of cliches and icons — although there are room for these too, as art. Art can be any kind of verbal or non-verbal language, it is a modal set operating on other modal sets. And we human subjects are not the only manifolds, although that is our best experience of alien worlds that weave worldly produce in often inexpressible or even inexcusable forms.

Manifolds exist as reflections in the pond, registers in your motherboard — manifolds are topographical maps of the earth, presented as 2D fold-outs. Manifolds are imprints of a system, or a totality along a specific interface, such that the movements of a knight in chess is a particular manifold. A table is a manifold of a factory. A chair is the manifold of the man who made it, the woman who sat in it for fifty years and the weather outside her home.

When Charles Bukowski grew old, wrote poems and started to vomit his brains out, drink is heart and his relationships down the toilet, he is a manifold of a great deal things. His abusive father, his teenage acne, his misery and search for pussy, his subsequent selfishness and alcoholism, his many wives, his days traveling and giving talks. When Michel Hemmingson wrote about the human scum, like the step-father who fucks his step-daughter, or shall we imagine a novel Hemmingson might write… a Vietnam vet who ends up in Hawaii, drugged out, alcoholic, washed out, alienated from the his family, his life interrupted, working a worthless job, waking up drunk each morning, walking the beach dressed like a bum, watching the waves crash on virgin sands, dreaming of the pussy he had, of his children who hate him, barely riding his bike to work once in a while, and his friend who drives a crab truck. This too is a manifold, the manifold written out in words meant to be inscribed in flesh, a way of life. A way of living, a weave, a potential argument for humanity, for existence, for the interruption of alien consciousness on our planetary cosmos.

Philosophers desire to be artists, they desire to walk the thin line that intersects all manifolds, runs through them. But that too is a manifold, one which seeks to imprint its attending indexes onto other manifolds. Plato wrote his Republic as an exploration of what he thought is, justice and the best social roles to express that justice. Heidegger, Sartre, Nietzsche, Marx and even Hegel all wrote on what the best way to live was, the best life to be. The different indexicals that tie these manifolds together act as spaces within a statue, to help formulate the different modes of awareness along bands of consciousness. Shall we name the indexes in Freud? Father, Child, Mother. Lacan? Analyst and Patient, Symbolic and Real and Imaginary. Language works as Moebius Strips that both inform us of our specific meaning along an indeterminate range. Art that does not apply so directly to such vast and vague concepts such as Society and Justice still carry a language a rhythm like Frank Sinatra’s do-be-do-be-do or a do-wop that enfolds us and unfolds within us in a place and time of our being-here regulated by limbs, circadian rhythms of day and night, our social function (formal, wedding or in the bedroom with an intimate guest) and what we had for lunch earlier, our hopes and dreams, the deixis of our self image &c.

In this manner, art is more than just a medium or a message. It is the way in which we weave and are weaved by our surroundings, the ripples of our actions in other’s lives and their actions in ours. We are made and unmade by the minute, by the hour with the expressive forms that carry alien forces directly into our filters, such that the Simpsons expressed in South Park is more than just South Park or the Simpsons, but informs us of each. We watch Lost not as Lost is made or watched by its producers or written by its writers, but as we are made and it is made through us. So the truths and beauties that Moulin Rouge spoke so highly of in Art is less the periodic expression of “partial theories as though formalized through science” but the deployment of our own orientation to that stimulus, our own expression of our manifold as a slice of a context, through the deixical filters of self image and being and through the rubric of oneness, the way evolution isn’t about the development of a single species through time but the cohabitation of a series of forces as they co-evolve, the planet as one massive domino, biome on biome, niche on niche and weather system on planetary rotation.

Living life is art in the broadest sense and our awareness of it does not make it less rich but in fact is irrelevant to its continuation. If anything our awareness is an interruption of a process through the privatization of a deterritorialized space and the prizing of one deixical filter above all others. The projection of ego and selfhood is to mistake the manifold for everything else, when in fact manifolds are little more than dirty mirrors. Remove that dirty mirror from its manifestation and place it in a vacuum and it would be like putting a diamond in a room with no light. Or cutting a figure from a painting out. Taken out of context, the figure lacks all balance of perspective and is no longer adequate to its task. It functions as an empty vector. Unless one projects the original painting around the figure or introduces the figure as a piece in a new manifold, nothing will happen. A mirror in the dark like a soul without a body will falter and vanish completely without a trace like animals in iron cages.

railing against the 2nd attention

i was thinking about the fakeness of souplantation along with its faux industrial look (at this location) when my dad decided to strike a conversation with me about the illuminati.  started by saying that george washington in a letter acknowledged their existence.

he went on a little bit about the statue of liberty — talking about first how the two men who built it were illuminati… talking about various symbols in the statue of liberty.

i wont repeat the conversation but frankly i found it vaguely annoying because i don’t care.  my reasoning as i explained was that such symbols do not do anything.  does the symbols on the U.S. dollar bill serve to make the sun shine?  guarantee the U.S.’s place in the world?  serve to hurry along the 2nd coming of Jesus?  when i explained this to my cousin she found it to be incredibly negative.  she retorted, saying that symbols are important because they serve to remind one of things.  i then mentioned the stain glass windows in catholic churches with the 12 stations.  things like that do carry meaning and can help improve one’s life, but the presence of symbols themselves are meaningless — one has to take them seriously and bring them into being with one’s own person, otherwise it’s as plain as decoration.  really if one lives it, why does one need symbols?

it seemed that my dad took the presence of such symbols (in some part) to mean the presence of a shadow government, i found that completely bogus.  governments and institutions are so ineffectual.  for there to be a shadow government ruling the planet for hundreds of years, one would need an incredibly tightknit organization — one completely disciplined and lean with near perfect information (some how).  how often do the local police solve crimes (for instance)?  i won’t get started on that but i will mention that belief in a masterful conspiracy is really unlikely.  government is so cumbersome.  and any kind of super secret government won’t be secret for long — because there is no elite squad with near perfect technical information, certainly not fifty+ years ago.

nonetheless, disproving conspiracy theories is kind of a ridiculous thing to do because it’s near impossible.  it’s an epistemologist’s field (which i am bad at) but how can anyone prove anything?  if we have a choice in what we believe in and how we organize anything then we should have a set of criteria to determine the most effective beliefs.

what i want to get to here, is what carlos castenada calls the 2nd attention.

i want to extend castenada’s thought as exposited in books like ‘the power of silence’ and ‘the fire within’.  he calls the first attention to be that of everyday man.  the 2nd attention is the shifting of awareness from the first attention into the other bands of awareness, like that of other animals or other creatures not of this world.  the 3rd attention is when the entire luminescent being lights up simultaneously, and that is analogous to near immortality or complete awareness or enlightenment.  i don’t want to go into detail about this but i will analogize the 2nd attention here.

in a sense there is no first attention…if there were, it would be common sense, or an everyday sense of things.  a shared reality of sorts.  when getting into the particulars it’s apparent that there isnt a shared reality.  there are clusters of shared realities in different groups that reinforce one another.  these groups verge into areas that castenada would define as the 2nd  attention.

the analogy of the 2nd attention is best explained with the ‘sorcerers’ who search for the truth and power in the 2nd attention.  castenada talks about these men, heroically going through unknown areas of the psyche and going mad, or disappearing altogether, lost and unable to come back.  often, in castenada’s books, don juan and carlos get stuck somewhere overnight in the desert, because they are wandering through the 2nd attention (in a controlled way by don juan) when they are spotted by a creature of the 2nd attention (sometimes one who was once a man) and they must hide from it and wait until sunrise before they can escape.

in this analogy, the 2nd attention works for ppl who try to identify truth and gain power from it.  they are ordinary people like you and i but they are also people who are interested in politics, or religion, or philosophy.  they are world-builders, system-builders, mystics who try and find the source.  in reality, they are pretty much anyone who gets shaken up by reality, who experiences the death of a close one or a traumatic failure of some sort and comes to question life and existence and meaning.  we all wander the 2nd attention in some way, departing from the strict ‘middle way’ of the 1st attention to come up with our own conclusions about life and reality, of the people around us and whatever else that seems to need explaining and ‘fitting into’ with everything else.

in a way, meaning is used to formulate social hierarchies so that we can fit everything together in a way independent of any one individual or according to one individual.  we say this is how we should live, this is how society should be — we judge everyone and ourselves — whether it be from a perspective of economics, or a religion, or evolutionary psychology.  some kind of universal meaning is introduced to reinforce a social order so that we can say “this is how things should be and our place in those things”

so in that sense, all different theories and systems are equal — because what kind of objective metric for which we can possibly come up with which is ‘right’?

in what sense are things ‘right’?

is it arguable that a paranoid-schizophrenics’ daydream “works” for them as much as my paranoia about paying my taxes on time “works” for me?  there are consequences to both!  and while we can say well, most of us all pretty much believe in paying our taxes (as we also believe in the consequences) can we say also say that when reading a paranoid-schizophrenics’ exposition (say written in a notebook) about the nature of the universe when we understand that words can have inter-textual, slipperiness?  likewise, to capitalize on deleuze and guattaris’ schizo-analysis (which is not about schizophrenics at all, but a structure or a way of connecting things, a different kind of meta-epistemology) can we reject alternate modes of meaning make simply because they are unfamiliar to us?  most of us do!  that’s the point of meaning!  to find the big man, or who should be the big man on campus.

so it comes about that i think a criteria for 2nd attentions that ‘work’ should be whether or not those models are ‘dead-ends’.  i think in the ‘planet earth’ series, sponges were called ‘evolutionary dead-ends’ because they could not progress anywhere else.  likewise, in the castenada world, many of those sorcerers are dead-ends simply that because while they may gain power, they are also lost, or unable to return from their situation.  they are trapped in their own separate worlds, forced to focus and rely solely on the inhumane in the second attention.

example?

many some ppl who know me know that i like philosophy (or that theoretical shit) so that when dan brown’s book ‘da vinci code’ came out, quite a few recommended it to me, equating what i liked to what dan brown did.  i know many ppl won’t equate philosophy with whatever dan brown wrote about in his book, but if you think about it, abstractly the two do resemble one another.  esoteric knowledge, hermeneutics — systems of thoughts, abstract arrangements of meaning… much like what foucault’s pendulum by umberto eco was about with the knights templar, the crusades, free masons and what not.  connections of history and finding a meaningful connection/system in place by which we order the world.  the difference between philosophy per se, and this other stuff, is that philosophy isn’t tied so necessarily to individuals nor do specific time and places.

nonetheless such ‘master’ conspiracy theories seek to explicate events and order a grand narrative, much like fredric jameson’s the political unconscious, such that even ‘the end of narratives’ qua postmodernism is incorporated into an articulate structure which cannot but preserve the theory itself.  to get back to grotesque conspiracy theories such as those involving the knights templar, such theories often take real ambivalence and incorporate it into the theory so that one’s own ignorance plays a role in reinforcing the theory’s metaphysics of presence.

like the 2nd attention sorcerers, one then becomes trapped in that world.

and what then?

is the purpose of developing such a theory, one founded on history and specific events to continually find more information to support it?  even freud with his oedipus complex moved into a different direction as time went on.  it’s inevitable that one’s theorys and ideas should slide as one grows older, or changes location.  but isn’t it usually the case that ppl abandon their ideas, and forget them if they don’t write them down?  we are not our ideas and our ideas are not us.  but ideas at a particular time do suffice as the internal workings of how we orient ourselves among everything else.

and if orientation is what’s at stake, then truth is less important than we feel it to be absolutely.  i say it is best to have an out look which does not force us into any kind of intellectual, emotional or otherwise ‘dead end’.  one should, aesthetically and on principle, seek to come to terms with one’s surroundings… and as we are imperfect beings, in the spinozan sense, we always will have partial knowledge, incomplete and inaccurate.  we must continue to absorb, be flexible and evolve.

even when choosing a career, who wants to be hemmed into being just a customer-specialist?  it’s true (in nature and in today’s world of specialists) that to survive well, one should pick a robust niche that will exist regardless of market forces, and narrow in on that niche to ensure one’s employability.  but that’s only if you want to stay still.  staying still though, is much like a mollusk or clam.  we can’t direct the environment — it’s too big — so it’s best to just ride along within its shadow.

i think of the energy used to lodge and unlodge one’s self from a position to be analogous in structure to the pianists who practice for hours daily to become virtuosos.  when you play a passage, your hand does the motion in the most efficient way for it.  but that’s not going to help when you have a variety of complex forms to perform which require a different motion.  so to be efficient in those complex forms you need to undo the easiest hand motions repertoire in your subconscious and mold your virtual hand (stored in your head) closer and closer into the shape of a keyboard.  and to do that you must transverse the keyboard.

the energy to unbind and re-train one’s hands can be thought of in terms of activation energy.  to transition to a lower energy state (smoother motion and thus, more efficiency).  this is much like the energy it takes to unravel ‘bad habits’ or in our case, to utilize complex hermeneutical pathways to satisfactorially explain phenomenon.  theories which do not explain phenomenon well, require continual maintenance and continual upkeep.  it takes a great deal of energy and anger to be a racist or a bigot.  it takes a great deal of emotional investment and risk of suffering to be self righteous in the face of society.  the harder one solidifies a theoretical apparatus the greater the risk to the thinker if it fails.

i don’t know if enlightenment is ‘real’ in the way of stories.  certainly buddhist enlightenment is real, in the sense that is a publically acknowledged phenomenon within various religions.  i won’t speak of it, but i will mention that it’s difficult to discern how if ever anyone were to understand that one was not in fact lodged in the 2nd attention and that one ‘got it’.  this brings back the question of metrics — or i should say, the lack of metrics.  there are so many different systems and ways of understanding.  for instance, to bring ‘karma sutra’ back to its origins, there is a warning in many tantric traditions of looking up and trying esoteric meditations and yogic practices by ones self. without the proper teacher, one runs the risk of invoking pain and wandering off the path these practices were designed to follow.  the risk in this reminds me of much in the end of the yoga sutra which warns against indulging in the powers that arise from getting close to the unpolished mirror.

when one closes in on the sun, one risks blindness.  the closer one gets,  the increase in the risk of permanent blindness.  if one were on the path to becoming the perfect pianist (assuming such a thing were possible), if one were to stop when one were close, the habits that one has acquired only solidify all the more so, for all the energy and work one has sunken in would help emboss the structures one currently has.  it takes more energy to undo errors done in the extreme than it does errors early on.

this warning, of course, only explicitly functions within the context of there being a given path to follow.

real life — naked life, i should say — is fuzzy and without clear boundaries.  within the context of organized religion, there is always a direction to tread (as it’s organized in a certain way).  slavoj zizek, true to his hegelian loyalties has written extensively that one should follow a given (and perhaps seemingly arbitrary) path as such a path is the best way to guarantee one access to the universal.  if one follows the hegelian dialectics for synthesizing meaning, then one should!  and so zizek has written a good number of books on why the christian legacy should be protected, and what such a pathway has to offer.  aesthetically it’s also consistent that zizek is in fact an authoritarian.  the best way to ascend to a universal guarantee of some sort (any sort, for with zizek all roads lead to the hegelian-esque Notion) is to follow a path as deeply as it goes.  sufis, as well, have an added requirement that one should master at least two different disciplines in order to understand how mastery extends beyond the prohibitions of a medium.

i have waxed about hegel before, so i won’t do that now, but it will suffice to say that if one reaches beyond the mode of the medium one can encounter analogous structures unbound by a particular medium.  we master painter and a master musician can talk!  we don’t need to use the language of a particular language to understand that literature of one culture has analogous movements and tropes possibly found in other literatures… and that syntax in computer languages can invoke syntax in non-computer expressions.

in this way, one can seek the various territories of particular fields, as they are woven with their tropes and their memes and their intensive structures to alight on more primary principles.  such principles posit indexes which can become expressed in a particular discipline.  folks, i am talking directly on deleuze and guattari’s combined notions of plateaus, machinic indexs and territory.  deleuze and guattari are right to repeatedly invoke the success of man not only of his hand as a de-territorialized paw (which can become a hammer in holding a hammer, or a screw driver when using a screw driver) but also in his ability to abstract beyond aesthetic and sexual beauty — to combine abstractions in fomulations of bodily meaning, philosophy and the literary arts.

we can be affected!  and we can affect!  highly developed sensibilities follow the most human of us.

while in the abstraction of so much internal semiosis eventually allowed each of us to experience the reterritorializing of that internal phenomenal space as ‘consciousness’, the process does not guide us in a given direction to further de-territorialize the signs which are re-terrtorialized along specific expressions originating from specific contexts.  perhaps a word ‘allegory’ will always remind you of your 8th grade english teacher, or ‘meta-physics’ will always be the astrology and tarot card section in a bookstore.  and the sight of lingerie will always afford a sexual or ‘naughty’ sensation.  we respond to that with our vaguely deterritorialized bodies, smitten with tattoos and panty hose and other trappings of social signify-ance…  and for all our abilities to abstract, build bridges and realize that a pen is also a weapon… remain trapped in the inner workings dependent on the inherited contexts of our social bretherian.

is it enough then, to realize an illumaniti conspiracy theory as a way of gaining access to social order?  is it enough to work out a ‘pick-up-line’ system to get laid only to have to invest into that system over and over, and refine it and work it so as to be able to work it?  or to vote for a particular political party and rally under that party with the trappings that this is the only way to clear up society and make it ‘what it should be‘ so that it is the ‘best possible world’?  to clothe julian assange with the trappings of christ or satan when he is still a man?  or in some cases, to claim our less fortunate as ‘mere animals’ for living off welfare?

i don’t write this so much for you, because i don’t doubt that this doesn’t apply to you.

in fact, you already know how things should be, and that it’s very apparent this or that style is the right style and that the order inherent in credit cards and drivers licenses are in fact one of the real orders of things.  this is not far from the truth, and if you are thinking i am saying there is a way of mastering reality then you are a bit mistaken.

lets go back to aristotle with his seemingly minor distinction between artificial and natural.  aristotle posited an order of things which says that natural things have essence.  he aligns the state with natural things, as it is supported by people.  artificial things, like wooden statues, do not have that essence, they do not ‘belong’ to the primary motion.  and of course, aristotle brings about a taxonomy to get us closer to true immaterial being… a like a great-grandfather of the biological taxonomy we use today.  but if aristotle allows the state to have essence because people make the state up, and the state changes over time, so then do all items and things of people.  and it is not the objects themselves that we make (artificially) which have essence, but their meanings and ideas.  in a very real way, we then go back to the earlier idea in this entry — meaning is what allows us to create social hierarchies for us to orient ourselves to everything (including each other).

reality as such, is all that, by definition, a meta-state of orientation: any kind of grasping or inclusion of another piece is also reality.  we cannot unthink reality.  very lacan!  and given that all our positions, experiences and bodies are different, it makes sense that there be as many Real(s) as there are people.  beyond that social criterion of orientation, we do have some abstract ability to understand non-people orientation, such as with chemistry or math.  to understand how we fit in with them, however, is to mistake a rock for having the same kind of meaning as a spoon.  natural things have essence as they were, but artificial things only have essence by virtue of how it functions (pragmatics — interesting aside but this does suggest that everything is pragmatics in the the deleuze and guattari schizo-analysis sense).  in a real way, how you understand things is who you are.  and how you change, when you do change, incorporates those alterations in a worldview.

but — wandering in the 2nd attention is not pointless!  and to find commonalities in how various relations work in the inexpressible beyond specific signifying processes internal to us is in some sense to grasp the noumenal skin by which we generate context and meaning.  certainly not a pointless endeavor!  after all, to forgo such a process is to strongly risk being ruled by a 2nd attention dead-end, to be required to bring energy to maintain a world-system, which only asks everything of you — and takes away your free choice as a de-territorialized mammal, denying you much of the energy you might have otherwise, to grow.

wander free and easy.

On Entropy

The failure of language is the interjection of reason as a substitute — a short hand for what actually happens IRL. IRL is not interested in values, desires or shoulds — only like water, going to the first lower, more stable point.

In other words, the reason why d&g don’t ask why. only how.

And it is through this how that we etch out the virtual which provides the basis for what is selected qua actual.

The Violence of Subjectivity complements our Lack of Negativity

There is an inherent violence in being a subject.

AS what Slavoj Zizek calls the universal exception, our subjectivity each, is an exception of the unbreakable rule of the universal.

This subjectivity must be “non-all” an untotalized whole which prevents the universal from foreclosing.

Part of why I think so much continental philosophy goes on and on about subjectivity and cannot bridge the gap between subjectivity and society remains in this gap between the “non-all” and the universal.

A great part of why modern philosophy starts with Kant is that Kant provides exegesis on subjectivity — but only does so at the expense of the noumenal.  Kant sacrifices the rest of the world, the external world in exchange for securing subjective phenomenal experience.

Hegel tries to fix Kant.  The genuis of Hegel is that he wrote on the extra subjectivity, the becoming-universal of particulars — he tried to bridge that gap with his dialectical absolutist system, to totalize the non-all and unproblematize the subjectivity by enfolding it back into the Notion.

Whether he succeeds or not is up to debate of course, but no other philosopher has come close to his achievement.  This is why Hegel remains for both Marx and Lacan (in fact even today), the godfather — Hegel provides the only comprehensive system of talking about the universal qua society with an eye on the particular.  He does so by nearly sacrificing the subjective, but saves it through a kind of transcendental rambling.

By comparison, Deleuze and Guattari don’t even talk about subjectivity; they make it irrelevant.  Graham Harman also side-steps this Cartesian mutualism by going via the Object with Merleau-Ponty and his notion of flesh.

But I’m not going to go in depth to examine others.

What’s so damning about Hegel is that through his particular becoming-universal he found the universal on the particular, through a kind of metaphysical “raising” of essence.  This is obviously what Deleuze and Guattari do with various meta-tools, like territorializations and refrains, the difference though is that Hegel does this raising through negation.

Negation eliminates what does not fit that form.  To emphaize my point, Kristeva attributes negation as a concept to Hegel — the specific making of a negative (something).  Contrast this with Kant and Kristeva points out that Kant only discovered negativity — the absence of what we are looking for.

The negation of Hegel allows us not only a radical de-subjectivising but also the clearing of room to make way for the *trumpet sounding* throne of one particular to rise up to the throne of universality. In contrast, Kant used negativity in order to make room.

Where violence comes into place is our rejection of the negation.  Our supposition as a subjectivity must come about through social effluence — we stand up to this symbolic universal by declaring our relevance against our own negation by this universal.

We tear out and subjectivise what would be an object.  We would do violence to universals and other would-be universal small-others through our radical Otherness qua subjectivity.  Think of the violence today perhaps in Libya and Egypt

Think of the French Revolution.

Think of all the expressions of free-self organization that the U.N. throughout the 20th century and up till today have stamped out, and how small-other Universals qua government seek to legitimize their claim on what would be a universal expression of their own brand of subjectivity… we return to State Democracy its own Jacobianian Excesses in the form of our own self-subjectivisation which then must always be violent.

This is also how Hegel is also the first modern philosopher-statesman inasmuch as the first and only true philosopher on modern Universality.

Unfortunately we seem stuck on this in Continental Philosophy and unable to articulate other forms of universality. We can’t articular a society let alone conceive of one. And no, ramblings of a disintegrated body of objectivity does not a society make.

So no: the radical pluralism of Deleuze and Guattari do not count simply because while they clear our the space for alternate forms they are too reactionary against Hegel to be useful in constructivism.  It’s also questionable as to whether or not we are at a point in which there is enough space for anything else to be constructed.

Meaning at Work, or Why utility is a prori only to itself

When I was growing up, my parents presented me with a life path.  It went something like this:

  1. Go to public school
  2. Go to College
  3. Get a job
  4. Get married and buy a house
  5. Have kids
  6. Work until your kids have left home
  7. Work until you retire
  8. ????

I asked them, what’s the point of that?  They didn’t have much to say, I’m not sure why, but their basic argument was to say, well, look at us.  We are doing it and it’s fine. (Ironic perhaps, but they are at step 8 now, and the four question marks seem to loom over them everyday…. such that they still have no answer.)

But at the time, being something like, 10 years old, I didn’t have much to say.   I’m not going to fight-club my way through this, but I will mention that this post will survey a growing trend that I have noticed across different areas of our online media, that of where meaning and work inter-relate.  After all, even if you don’t follow the schema above, if you wish to be “standing on your own two feet” you’re going to have to contribute to society in a meaningful way.

Contribution doesn’t always mean being paid but it does mean earning a living somehow and not soaking up someone else’s resources.

But that’s the catch isn’t, it?  I mean, how I defined the problem: in a meaningful way. That’s problematic.

If you’re on the blogosphere reading this post written in American English, most likely you’re in the upper part of the Global Economy.  Not necessarily at a leadership position, but certainly in the upper stratas of the global-economy.  So you think of the world in terms of $$$$ in terms of capitalism.  How does meaning fit in?

After all that’s what this blog is about: Meaning.  In particular:

 

Meaning in the Workplace

I’d like to cite an article first written by Tammy Erickson.  You can find the article in the Harvard Business Review Blogs.  The article is titled: Meaning is the New Money, although the url suggests an earlier title was about challenging deeply held something… (probably belief?)  To sum this article: Erickson challenges the common belief about what best holds us together as a work-force when we work at a job.  For instance, my parents suggested that I do something I like.  What I like, like many teenagers, had nothing to do with earning money because it was pretty much focused on pleasing myself.  And no one will pay me to do things that please me.

So while many of us like money, working a job to make money isn’t something (I hope) most of us have to do.  What my parents meant is that we should do something for a living that we at least enjoy.  If you think about it, most of us spend more time with our coworkers in a week than with our loved ones, at least during our waking hours.  That’s kind of a sad thought.  All those turn-key children.  Left alone without guidance from parents who slave away….

No, Erickson argues that we all need meaning in our jobs, we all need to be energized by what we do, to believe that it matters.  Here’s a compelling quote:

My research has clearly shown that high levels of engagement, and the associated discretionary effort, occur when our work experiences reflect a clear set of values that we share. For many today, meaning is the new money. It’s what people are looking for at work. Clear company values, translated into the day-to-day work experience, are one of the strongest drivers of an engaged workforce, one primed for successful collaboration.

Now if that doesn’t convince you read, or at least skim, the article I don’t know what will!

Isn’t what all the corporate magazines talk about?  Team-building a corporate culture with a cohesive message so everyone is on the same page, working happily towards a shared goal?

So now, if I get this right — companies not only need to produce more value for their customers than it costs (monetarily) to produce that good or service — they also need to produce meaning for their workforce so that their employees are on board the project too… not just as a wage earner, but with a clear vision and focus as to how their work at the company is meaningful and helps others in the long run.

Sounds like managers also need to become teachers!  And CMOs and CEOs need to be philosophers!  So then, if I take this article literally, business organizations need not only a clear cash flow that makes fiscal sense for them to operate and survive business cycles, but also that businesses need a clear pedagogical skeleton so that the message is disseminated from the philosopher-CEOs and COOs and CFOs that drive a business towards its strategic goals.

Certainly many of the more successful corporations that have exploded since their founding today have that clear mission and vision of the kind of company they want to be.  But besides the issue of meaning, what else is at stake?

What happens when we lose meaning?

 

The Great Depression of the early 21st Century

Certainly in our current lifestyle, we find ourselves amid a “Great Depression” comparable to the many depressions in the earlier part of the 20th and latter part of the 19th century… For instance, Detroit basically has 50% unemployment (from World Socialist Website via Jodi Dean, here: The Depopulation of Detroit).  If we take Detroit as a sintome of our current employment life, what does that entail?

The issue as I see it has less to do with what happens if we get meaning back in our life, but what happens if we lose it.  If we treat our jobs as vehicles for money, which is how we might traditionally look at our job, we end up in a completely different kind of “depression”.

From the Socialist Worker via Jodi Dean, we get an interview of Alex Callinicos called Capitalism’s Crisis.  This Callinicos hails from a Marxist view of what has traditionally been seen as a deficit on the part of laborers.  I’m not a big Marx expert, or even fan, but I do find him useful.  The idea is that the surplus value of a laborers’ only real commodity (his time, energy and life-force) is where capitalists make their profit.  The crisis of capitalism that Callinicos refers to is the end of capitalist profit.  I don’t want to talk about capitalism too much here as a system, but the basic idea is that as long as capitalism is profitable that profit can be spread among everyone (albeit unevenly).  When that profit stream dries up, it needs to get its $$$ from somewhere, so Callinicos talks about how it is going to try and take more of it from its working class by deducing wages or benefits.

So the lack of jobs that say, Detroit faces (along with the rest of us) also stems from the lack of profit that is to be had (eating up all our equity from our finance instruments circa 1980 to mid-2000s).  By the way, Alex Callinicos also wrote a book called Against Postmodernism which I read trying to figure out what Postmodernism was.  I was an undergrad at the time, and frankly, my first attempt to grasp what he was saying resulted in a huge fail.

But in any case, if Callinicos is correct, then our current recession is actually a depression.  And as such, it is unlike the depression resulting from the speculative crashes in 1929 — this depression is actually a crisis in the logic of capitalism.  If the system of economic redistribution is no longer adequate to redistribute… meaning or money or whatever it distributes, then it has failed us.  To quote Callinicos,

The great Russian revolutionary Lenin said there’s never a really hopeless situation for capitalism as long as workers allow it to survive.

Sooner or later the system can recover from any crisis. It would be difficult for it to return to the pattern of the recent past, as the financial system has been seriously weakened.

While the slump continues, it’s important to see that it’s uneven. One section of the system, the historical core in North America and most of Europe, is still quite depressed.

But if we look at China and the economies associated with it, which include Germany and Brazil, they are growing quite quickly.

This reflects the way in which the Chinese state threw everything into preventing a protracted economic slump.

The fact that this bit of the system is growing is a further destabilising factor, however.

It produces tensions between the US as the dominant capitalist power, and China—increasingly seen as the major challenger. That makes it harder to manage capitalism.

But even if they do find a way of muddling through, what produced the crisis was the logic of capitalism and the system—a system that is driven by blind competition in pursuit of profit.

That system will continue to produce crises and continue to try to solve them at the expense of working people and the poor.

So the only real guarantee of escaping crises like this one is to get rid of capitalism altogether.  That may not be a bad idea, but it also may not be necessary.  Callinicos seems to adhere to Marx to understand what Capitalism is… but you should also understand that Marx himself did not really see capitalism as a horrible system.  Faulty, to be sure, but not without its merits.

Nonetheless, we can take this Callinico’s call to action a step further.  Richard Seymour, author of the blog Lenin’s Tomb, in an article titled Towards a new Model Commune critiques the basic segmentation that happens in capitalist culture — the organization of the workforce, the regulation of our 9-5, the unthinking box each of us puts herself in when we think, oh I should get another job, often with a helpless conviction that there is in fact no other way for one to live…. that we cannot effect a change in the larger system because I’m just one poor little me!  What can I do? The question then comes as a parallax reversal of JFK’s statement, we should not live for our system — we should ask that our systems live for us, allowing us to live.

 

Beyond Nihilism: Meaning without Utility

Having followed me thus far, you’ll be impressed with how far “left” I have gone.  But this is not a matter of liberal or conservative however; the status quo has no substance in itself.  People will only adhere to a meaning if it continues to service them well.  So the question is more aligned with Immanuel Wallerstein‘s dichotomies from his World Systems Analysis.  We have rather, three parties, a defense of the status quo for no change, a desire for some carefully measured change, and then we have those few who want radical change.  Critical theory, or at least a philosophical eye on the relations that be want change, push for change, dooming it to be “left”.  So what does this mean? Our “left” and “right” positions is really more accurately, a measure of how things can be “better”.  The Americanizations of Liberal and Conservative are anything if not misleading.  Conservatives may want change, but it’s not so much change of what is fundamentally sound, but a tweaking of our current day back to the intentions of “the good ole days”.  Liberals more would more on the side that what is fundamentally sound has yet to be.

Thus, the content of both sides is irrelevant, their positions are metered around what is seen as being fundamental “change” or not.

So my point in bringing this up, if anything is that while you’ll see that while this entry has gone into the very “liberal” ideologies of Marxist critiques of capitalism, you can find similar thoughts echoed, if not in the right then at least in the status quo.

My evidence for this?  Straight from the business blog of Tony Schwartz, We’re in a new energy crisis.  This one is personal.  While much of this blog’s purpose is to promote their “The Energy Project” which has to do with auditing tasks that businesses (and their front running exes) perform to save energy.  Not energy like green energy or electricity, but personal energy.  What does this blog post reveal about one of his key principles?  It’s worth quoting:

Companies need to take up the cause of a new way of working.

The companies that build competitive advantage in the years ahead aren’t going to do it by seeking to get more out of their people. They’ll do it instead better meeting people’s core needs — physical, emotional, mental and spiritual — so they’re freed, fueled and inspired to bring more of themselves to work every day.

What assure people energy — what meets their needs — is to give them meaning, to energize them with a goal, exactly what Erickson writes about above.

But then we knew this already.  Victor Frankl wrote Man’s Search for Meaning which is actually a memoir of his survival from a Nazi Concentration Camp.  His analysis and conclusion is that human beings need meaning to survive.  He observed that those who survived the camp did so because they had sufficient reason not to give up.

I don’t think that we of the global economy are ready to give up.  And our daily lives DO have meaning, albeit personal meaning.  For many of us, our jobs mean a little bit, we find a way to incorporate what we do into the larger picture of how others live around us.  Even still though, to get supreme satisfaction is requires more than just knowing that we did our part in some small way.  Having a personal disjunction between our life with our family and friends and what we do in the office is perhaps one of the greatest conundrums of the modern era.

Both Gilles Deleuze, Felix Guattari and Jean-Francois Lyotard (to mention a few) cite our postmodern, post-industrial society with its circularity of capital (C-M-C and M-C-M) with its built-in limits as endless producing — all without producing any meaning.  Instead, meaning is foreclosed between production on one side, and consumption on the other-side through the parallax multi-faceted kernel of $.  The only thinker I know of who seems able to transcend this analogous gap between money, commodity and capital is Kojin Karatani and he proposes a barter type system as a way of side-stepping the dialectic. (Slavoj Zizek has written extensively about parallax gaps, of which this is one… but he does not offer solutions, just further re-defining of the problems in the dialectical structure.)

Anyway, such discussions between meaning and money are fit for another time.  And my reading of Lyotard’s Libidinal Economy is quite rusty.  I did try and tackle this subject before here: On Capitalism, a Tragedy although the approach was quite philosophical.

And no, I don’t think capitalism is a tragedy, I was just playing off of Michael Moore’s Capitalism, a Love story.

So the takeaway?  If anything it’s not that we can work more hours in a day.  Or that we could be more productive if we paid our employees more, or save our economy by shrinking the benefits to those who have jobs.  I suppose I can write a little bit on that some other time, maybe.  But what I want to end with here, is simply that if we are to find our way out of the current economy deadlock, and our collective dissatisfaction with how much we work then we need to take a risk and alter the way we approach work.  This can’t happen until businesses collectively see their mission to be more than just greed and profiteering.  The world today is remarkably different from when Adam Smith wrote The Wealth of Nations.  The main difference is that the world then was much bigger.  Today we live in a sandbox. We find our resources dwindling and our pollution with no where to go.  We used to shit in someone else’s backyard — but only now we see that someone else’s backyard is also our backyard.

If anything we need to forcefully reinstill meaning into our existence.  Instead of embracing the null of capitalism and relying on transactions and cash flow to be the determining factor of meaning and rationality (decision making) we need to find some other means.  Which will be hard, because we wouldn’t be changing the tangible pieces on the table.  We would be changing the intangible relationship of those pieces, the logic of how they work together.  I think if anything, the experiment of a centralized bureaucracy like the Soviet Union’s most likely isn’t the answer…

So to get back to the takeaway, we have to understand that Homo Economicus cannot be the basis for Rational Choice Theory.   This kind of maximization of utility can only be cohered when understood in conjunction with a meaningful metric.  Only one kind of meaningful metric exists:  MONEY.

One could argue that the metrics don’t need tampering and the basis for rational choice is sound, it’s rather the instrumentation needs to be refined.  But then if you use the Energy Project as above, can we actually put a dollar sign for every effort spent on pedagogically infusing an employee with the company mission?  Or the time spent by a manager to explain to an employee how they fit into the company network?  Or the extra productivity an employee may show (or not lose) because such time and energy was spent?

Well, business has a vested interest in these things, and big business has a ton of money and a need for quantifying studies so I am sure someone has been insane enough to create tools to describe what I’ve described directly above.

But in all seriousness: I am not alone in voicing a concern that economic theory is insufficient in properly modeling and putting into practice what is healthy for human beings.  This article:  Goodbye, Homo Economicus from Economist’s View voices concerns about the insufficiency of linking rational choice theory (with its model of humans as homo economicus, interested mainly in external measurable values of maximizing utility and minimizing cost).

What the “madmen in authority” heard this time was the distant echo of a debate among academic economists begun in the 1970s about “rational” investors and “efficient” markets. This debate began against the backdrop of the oil shock and stagflation and was, in its time, a step forward in our understanding of the control of inflation. But, ultimately, it was a debate won by the side that happened to be wrong. And on those two reassuring adjectives, rational and efficient, the victorious academic economists erected an enormous scaffolding of theoretical models, regulatory prescriptions and computer simulations which allowed the practical bankers and politicians to build the towers of bad debt and bad policy. …

Which brings us to the causes of the present crisis. The reckless property lending that triggered this crisis only occurred because rational investors assumed that the probability of a fall in house prices was near zero. Efficient markets then turned these assumptions into price-signals, which told the bankers that lending 100 per cent mortgages or operating with 50-to-1 leverage was safe. Similarly, regulators, who allowed banks to determine their own capital requirements and private rating agencies to establish the value at risk in mortgages and bonds, took it as axiomatic that markets would automatically generate the best possible information and create the right incentives for managing risks. …

The scandal of modern economics is that these two false theories—rational expectations and the efficient market hypothesis—which are not only misleading but highly ideological, have become so dominant in academia (especially business schools), government and markets themselves.

I am not familiar with the author of this article.  Where this article stops, is in suggesting how economics could be reformed so that the internal models that build our current understanding of how resources and finances should be handled better on a different axis of value.  That’s okay though, this article is from a blog about economics, not about meaning in the face of rational nihilism via utility… an understanding of money that is nearly a priori due to its near-circularity.

But if anything, the takeaway should be that our current system needs to change in some fundamental ways because of a lack of meaning in our workplace and the lack of integration between our system of resources and how people live.

It’s not enough to BS a company work-place environment.  That environment needs to be genuine. People today are quite savvy at detecting bullshit.  Likewise any meaning a company creates, like the lessons in a public classroom, for it to be meaningful, need to be integral to our personal lives, in some way.  And that choice has to be allowed by each individual, we need a society that sets the proper conditions for such connections to thrive.  What such a society should be, or how it should be transitioned onto is of course, a difficult but collective choice each of us needs to make on a daily basis. In the case of public education, nearly impossible for students — perhaps near impossible for us capitalists — as we’ve defined our global system of economics to systematically exclude the intangibles, thereby excluding the very things that assures each of us the highest priority in meaningfulness!

Still, the next time you go to work, decide for yourself, if this is what you ought to be doing.  Not in terms of today or tomorrow, but in terms of next year, or ten years from now.  Understand that maximizing a paycheck is like maximizing utility.  Getting a pleasant job that is close by is like minimizing cost.  Is that really the best way to live — according to such minimal and circumstantial constraints?

After all, in the journey of being alive, we collect things, bank accounts and stuff.  It’s not been accepted that anyone who has died has come back to really talk of their post-life experience.  Even still, we all see that No, you can’t take it with you.

So the worthwhile part needs to be the journey, not the destination.  Why else would we possibly be here and now, alive today?

If this is so, then society should try and maximize its populations’ “journey” instead of maximizing utility in the form of numbers in a corporate bank account…

The Confusing Junk of Modernism: How Duchamp isn’t an Artist

In Cabinet Magazine, issue 27, there is an article titled Readymade Remade about Pierre Pinoncelli who first made a big name for himself by pissing in Marcel Duchamp’s readymade urinal. The article examines Pinoncelli’s argument that he was bringing history and value to the urinal by doing so. While the French gov’t did not agree with Pinoncelli at all, especially after Pinoncelli pissed in the same urinal again in 2006 — the article decidedly agrees with Pinoncelli. The writer, Leland de la Durantaye, smartly cites Duchamp himself as the authority — Duchamp, after “defacing” the Mona Lisa, claims that his Mona Lisa is not a readymade. Rather this remade Mona Lisa is an “assisted readymade”. By taking mass produced art and introducing “a unique commentary”, Duchamp means to bring this item back into the spectrum of art. With this, Durantaye implies that Pinoncelli is right in his claim that the French gov’t is wrong — but then after fining Pinoncelli, should the French gov’t pay him the money? After all, Pinoncelli’s “unique commentary” has increased the value of this French treasure by taking a mass produced readymade which has “lost [its] readymade authenticity, [its] unique identity, and [. . .] dynamically infus[ing] one of the replicas with [authenticity]”.

Pinoncelli's Duchamp's Urinal

Twice stained, thrice as valuable. Look up Pierre Pinoncelli on the internet. You'll see he's quite a pissant. HA HA HA!!

Besides the “unique critique” of Duchamp’s work (of which Pinoncelli is a decidedly excited fan) there are three possible directions for contradictions:

1) Durantaye takes for granted the implication that what is valuable in art is expressed monetarily.

2) Benjamin’s famous essay on Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction equates uniqueness with art — that mass produced copies only accentuate the value of “originals” which the elite can then possess as being art. By unifying Duchamp’s readymade and his assisted readymade, Durantaye implies that Duchamp is not producing art at all — if a readymade meant to be art can be in need of “assistance” to rejoin the status of art then Duchamp is not at all an artist for Duchamp is not producing art.

3) Simultaneously, as you can imagine, Pinoncelli’s urine was cleaned from the “defaced” readymade. Nonetheless, Pinoncelli left, in the language of Lacan, an unseen stain, on that particular readymade. The British have recognized this readymade as being more intrinsically valuable. One of the subtexts of this article is that what is valuable is not necessarily tangible… that art itself has moved beyond the realm of pretty pictures and skillful techniques (for what kind of technique has Pinoncelli, besides the admirable ability to urinate in public before the eyes of others? — no doubt a feat most of us could not accomplish).

Taken all at once, although somewhat contradictory, we come across a paradox. Art then, in the contemporary age, is what both unique, intangible and monetarily valuable. Of course no matter what the French gov’t thought, they could not allow anyone pissing on any art. Imagine if they awarded Pinoncelli? What kind of people would go to the museums in the hopes of making “readymade” money? At once we see that art cannot be what is tangible. Of course, tangibility may be our best claim to any sort of possession of it. We go to museums to see art, but in fact run abut something else. So is art tangible?

If it is only tangible then Duchamp is not an artist. If it is intangible, then Duchamp and Pinoncelli are both artists. Durantaye sides with Pinoncelli and Pinoncelli with Duchamp.

But if art is not material, then what is art? If Duchamp is not an artist but a “materialist contextualist” then how are we to approach material context? We all understand that art can be horribly elitist, but is it so only in order to promote/protect its own value? Does this then make the lives of our celebrities art? What about expensive, corporate, buildings? What then happens to punk and the D.I.Y. culture? Is that no longer art but just noise (since anyone can punk)?

Again the direction seems to lie more with Deleuze and Guattari’s how more than the what. While both of these thinkers equate art with concept, if we take this discussion seriously it seems that art lies more with social positioning than anything else: architecture must be valuable because of the resources taken to produce it, as are museum housed works — and the millions of punk fans world-wide.

This bodes woe for fans of Kristeva, and all the art lovers around… as well as Deleuze and Guattari’s book What is Philosophy. But that’s the one book of theirs that I do not like. So that’s fine by me.  (Any “commentary” I would like to share on that book?  I think not, at least, I can’t comment if you’re watching…)

Me, personally? I don’t believe in any of what I just wrote anyhow.
Is that tangible enough for ya?

Beyond Existentalism

it occurs to me two implications of the previous entry one existentialism:

http://sulphuroxide.com/2011/02/22/meaning-in-the-face-of-annihilation/

1) that if meaning only works for one’s self, there isn’t any reason to respect anyone else’s mental capacities or conclusions, except for purposes of “living together”. in cases where more authoritarian minded individuals would think things like ‘single mothers are bad for society’ ( http://www.npr.org/2011/02/24/134031175/For-Single-Mothers-Stigma-Difficult-To-Shake ) there’s really no reason to respect anyone else’s life choices, or life situations… the same goes for gay marriage and homosexual relationships wherein concerned individuals would deem others as being in ways that detrimentally affect them even while more libertarian or liberal proponents would claim that such adult relationships fall under rubric of ‘no one’s business but the parties involved’…

2) nonetheless, for these reasons, existentialism does not have any strong role in politics.

while i adhere strongly to the ‘meaning is ultimately meaningless’ camp — i’m not sure where else to go with this. in the past few weeks ive been sliding really close to vulgar marxism… where questions of beauty and aesthetics become less relevant… simply because of how these problems are defined (up in the air, too, vapid and ‘feel good’…). at the same time though, especially in practice with web development (as the most obvious case) beautiful code — aesthetically pleasing algorithms and presentation — remain at the forefront of my conditions for a project that is more ‘completed’. this is a definite issue, to put it bluntly, at the onset, a huge contradiction.

i think this ‘huge problem’ that i have is very similar to more traditional philosophies (of which i think i draw a large part from)… namely the differences between idealism and physicalism… the lines are badly drawn (imho) because it’s not so much the mentalists vs the physicalists… but really a difference between “ontology” and “ontic” or design and economics. zizek fielded this area strongly with this back in ticklish subject although I must say that by parallax gap, he may have resolved it enough in his head that the question is buried but never fully addressed anymore but as a more general debate… i don’t know i havent read any zizek recently…

a more pragmatic approach can be found within the debate between urban designers on the point of view of ‘good design’ vs ‘economic business plans’– neither of which by itself, are always what’s best for neighborhoods. the quote froms directly from this discussion, and it’s eloquently put by mariela alfonzo
you can catch the link here: http://www.publicprivatepassion.com/2011/02/can-cities-take-stand-on-good-urban.html

Ultimately, the bottom line is you cannot reach a compromise between urban design and economic development – that’s a losing battle. I firmly believe you need the former to achieve the latter, but you have to understand the latter when devising the former. We HAVE to stop looking at “design” as a line item within the “costs” section of a pro-forma.

the company apple masters these principles with their slick ipod, and iphone designs… and while they do not have market dominance wen it comes to the cell phone industry, they are industry leaders.  if you apply this ‘solution’ analogously to philosophy then you get that meaning, in order to be more than an existential statement of how one navigates — in order to be ‘meaningful’, it must also be epistemologically sophisticated in how one interfaces with their situation, to put it in a smarmy but ‘duhh’ kind of way. so as far as politics go, we can’t be sophists… and we can’t be arrogantly totalitarian, but at the same time, we need to reify our problems. we must be sophisticated in the deleuze and guattari way via concepts — we must seek to address problems that are critically problems — in how those structural crises make a real impact. we can’t address all problems that we find — because many of them are not really meaningful problems.

how we separate this, between what is meaningful and what is not, throws us back quite a few steps. the ‘corporate’ response would be to define the problem in a tangible metric… so that we can attain that goal. which of course, would please stock holders, give us a strong sense of progress… but this ‘solution’ by itself also did cause the stock crises of our current day. we do also need to keep in the big picture as well. which is a problem, because tactically we have ‘solutions’ which cannot be ‘solutions’ in an open-ended undefined system.

you realize that philosophy as a whole works best when it abstracts/extracts meaning from complexity.  it reduces phenomenon the way language names things, the way we put new information, new items we encounter into old files.  so philosophy, and a systems approach can best work at giving us tools to handle past situations.  it can ‘predict’ previous events accurately because the relationships which were relevant at the time of philosophizing were — relevant.  things change, and sometimes those events don’t work no more — the indexes have been re-shuffled so a system may not predict anything much anymore.  i think this is where the quote above (from an urban planner on the relationship between ‘good’ urban design and ‘productive’ economic plans) applies.  the various ‘schools’ are great, because they have focused on their limited scope questions on real world situations.  we’ve gotten so in-depth!  but that depth is narrowly defined and runs the risk of becoming a kind of art-for-artists.  in order to make great statements that shake up those studies AND make them accessible for outsiders, we need genius,  we need something new and fresh to break out of old paradigms.

believe it or not, the bloggers from the havard business review all echo the same issues.  in a world of structured relations, structured cash flow, marketing plans and business plans… urban planning and a SYSTEMS approach, we need what they call ‘innovation’ — part of the key in many of their posts is a kind of ‘how to break out of our mold’.  if existentialism as a philosophy only works for one’s own meaning — how we connect with others, how we expressedly cross the gaps in this field becomes a matter of innovation and creativity.  after all, getting stuck in one’s head is like starting a college in academia. to use a classic example, do neurologists and cognitive psychologists talk to one another?

to use the quote above as an analogy, to use effective communication requires that we understand the mindset of the one we speak to and our own mindset.  both need to inform each other, which means of course, a transdisciplinary approach. (again, DUHH).  how descartes has problems with this, stems from how he defines the mind as a closed system.  well guess what, our minds ARE closed systems in so far as we think about them as such… they obviously still manage to create objects and process new information in astonishingly innovative ways.

where this happens at the subterranean level, is of course, what deleuze and guattari call rhizomes.

how we facilitate and actively push for those connections is what i call rhizomatic architecture. ITS NOT JUST ABOUT TREES (aborescence), BABY!

Meaning in the Face of Annihilation

A few days ago, I was showing houses to an old friend who is now a client. It was raining and we had passed by a smaller duplex. The pictures on the MLS aren’t the same as seeing the context of the property with your own eyes. After seeing it, he decided he didn’t want to gos in and disturb the people in there. There are better deals around. We were talking about life in general — catching up as it were — since we hadn’t really talked in a long time. In showing houses, you inevitably turn towards the topic of the future. Let’s call this future-talk.

Future-talk is odd, it’s not often grounded in the present even though we talk about the future by way of the things we do during the present. But sometimes it is, and you can see that doesn’t just contain hopes and dreams that people have for the future. The future often also contains a justification of the present (current actions, current statuses &c). The present then, acts like a bridge that links the past and the future… even though it’s really disjunct (the present belongs to neither past nor future). And yet, looking for a home does this past-present-future connection quite well. People who want to buy a home, who have money are serious. It’s not chump change to drop close to half a million… It’s something to want a place to call your own, to START A FAMILY

What people want in a home is about as important as who they are, and what their priorities are. Buying a house, even as an investment, represents a whole-lotta-commitment, (in a Led Zeppelin kind of way) and as old friends we were genuinely interested in what the other was doing. This is the best kind of relationship building anyway, and the best sales people do it well. They are interested and understand their client — at least they can appear to be to the client. And that’s what’s important, to orient yourself. Not just what the inside of the house looks like (which is where most of us see the house anyway)… but also the outside, the kind of neighborhood, the people, the schools, the local businesses, if we can see our parents coming over (or not), or friends… in American Literature, the home is a very important character. It’s kind of like the over-shadow, even if the home is also the town… where someone runs from, or runs to… And in that way it acts much like how God acts for people’s lives. It orients them, it becomes an attractor (or repellent)…

So fast forward a bunch of particulars, when we got back into my car, he asked me if I believed in God.

Now I don’t know what he thinks, and I didn’t ask — but I told him, yes I believe I do. Although if most people ask me if I do, I usually say No because if I say Yes, then I appear to be very misleading. The fact is, what I am thinking of in my head probably in no way resembles what they are thinking of when they mention God..

This needs elaboration so I said very directly, I don’t really believe in the supremacy of a particular entity, per se, at least not one that is separate or dis-contiguous from everything else. I also don’t believe that I am (or that human beings are) central to the workings of the universe or that my actions (or that human actions) have any centrality to what’s actually going on. The universe is indifferent.

My friend then said, Yes, that’s really not in agreement with most people.

I also added I don’t believe that the meaning in my head has any bearing whatsoever on the universe at all. Meaning makes no difference to anyone except myself and vis versa.

A good short article on the uncentrality of Das Sein can be read by Paul Graham. He wrote an essay called See Randomness. I realize now, after I’ve put it in here, that the article itself exists in a vacuum much unlike future-talk and houses but very much like the present. In other words, this article does not attempt to bridge any kind of relationship with a point of view that we are in fact central to the universe, or that the meaning we take for granted is inscripted in the very core of the universe. Rather Graham argues for consideration of alternate understandings of events. He grounds his appeal for personal distance on an evolutionary foundation — that our ‘identity’ of a cohesive, rational self is an indeterminate fiction — that we should not take central our own needs and desires when orienting the ‘meaning’ of the things that happen around us. He would agree with me then, that meaning is the way each of us navigates what would otherwise be ‘randomness’. This meaning is not a universal principle in which our suffering or joy has any bearing in the cogs of the cosmic machine. Our suffering or joy is, rather neutral, much like how chemical reactions are neutral.

Gilles Deleuze in Practical Philosophy wrote very elegantly on this topic. I read his book twice to understand how he dismantles notions of ontology and instead recombines (and yet includes them) from a ground floor up so that they retain their parts, their sums, essences, attributions and conjugations. The first reading only served to confuse me, as the orientation wasn’t around a metaphyics of presence even while he preserves ‘essence’ as a central mode of anchoring meaning. The difference lies in the supposition that essence is constructed as “a relation of reciprocity” even while “Essence — Necessarily constitutes the essence of a thing …, a thing can neither be nor be conceived without, and vise versa, what can neither be conceived without the thing” (64). See how Deleuze has his cake and eats it too? Essence is the thing and the thing, essence. Likewise, what overrides the interactions of what we would understand both in a physical and a mental way is abstracted as a neturality of the interplay of relations — the exposition of Spinozan Ethics — without consciousness as being at all primary. In fact, it’s closer to epiphenomenalism if anything, although what Deleuze does does not push a metaphysics of presence of anything, nor does it sustain that heavy mutuality of dualism…

When a body ‘encounters’ another body, or an idea another idea, it happens that the two relations sometimes combine to form a more powerful whole, and sometimes one decomposes the other, destroying the cohesion of its parts. This is what is prodigious in the body and the mind alike, these sets of living parts that enter into composition with and decompose one another according to complex laws. The order of causes is therefore an order of composition and decomposition of relations, which infinitely affects all of nature. But as conscious beings, we ever apprehend anything but the effects of these compositions and decompositions: we experience joy when a body encounters ours and enters into composition with it, and sadness when, on the contrary, a body or an idea threaten our own coherence. [. . .] In short, the conditions under which we know things and are conscious of ourselves condemn us to have only inadequate ideas, ideas that are confused and mutilated, effects separated from their real causes. That is why it is scarcely possible to think that little children are happy, or that the first man was perfect: ignorant of causes and natures, reduced to the consciousness of events, condemned to undergo effects, they are slaves of everything, anxious and unhappy, in proportion to their imperfection. (19)

I believe that to most people who would orient themselves (or at least humanity) in the universe, and understand that there is an intrinsic place for them, for an I to wait and stand in luxury, as the children of the universe — either in this life or the next. I suspect that many of us feel (even if we know otherwise) that we are some how important — or that we are somehow deserving of all good things. So many of us, after Deleuze’s reading may feel that this point of view is horrible burden. Without that grounding of I or even God, there is no reason for anyone to behave or be good. Without God, many would insist that we get ultimate freedom but you also get ultimate responsibility. The universe won’t take care to preserve you, or transmogrify you based on karma… It is as though, without a direct core to the center of the universe, we should all eat each other and be terrified that others can do to us as they will.

Many thinkers and writers have written that exposure to the Scared Other, Big Other, the Eagle are all terrifying experiences that would destroy small others like ourselves. To experience God, as it were, is to become annihilated. I don’t believe this to be the case though. Yitz Jacob who ponders the mystic musings in the Jewish tradition has a particularly applicable story here about one’s relation with the Sacred Other on Heaven and on Earth. The point of the story then, I think, has to do with being able to relate to HaShem, which is easy in Heaven but not so much on Earth. While being stifled on a “Heaven that sees all” makes much sense to me, the radical view that our essentiality is not at all cohesive (that we disintegrate) when faced with the Cohesion of the Almighty jumps too far. Now, Jacob does not claim we disintegrate in his blog post, but he does note that when in Heaven, everything is visible — by this, I took it to mean that HaShem is visible too. And if God is apparent then it also becomes very apparent what we should do. This doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t exist in Heaven, but it does mean that we lose our free will.

I am not so sure that is the case. After all, should not the Cohesion of the Almighty must in fact include the cohesion of all our little partial essentialities as well? So it’s not so much that without God we get everything. Rather, it’s with God that everything is allowed.

Fyodor Dostoevsky in The Brothers Karamazov explores this topic through Ivan Karamazov — this is related to Ivan’s struggle. The brunt of it is that only with God can we have anything — only with God is everything allowed. The naked weight is that God is necessary — He does define for us what is allowed, but only because without God we would be an indistinguishable mass from everything else. Ivan, ever so rational, insists on the sheer the perversity of human beings that the Devil is made from Man’s image even though a God may or may not exist. I don’t know who Dostoevsky found inspirational enough to create a character like Ivan from, but I do feel that Ivan is under-developed. Ivan’s main source of torture is that he isn’t sure if there is a God or not — he seems to think there isn’t actually a God because of the vast cruelties that people play on one another — because bad people get away with so much! Ivan is getting two things confused though. Ivan continues to serve in a religious institution, so not believing in God is a terrible burden for him. Nonetheless Ivan sees the reasoning for expressing a belief in God — unity and singularity in the physical sense, not withstanding, but also for human society. People need God. People need to be put into their place — his poem ‘The Grand Inquisitor’ uses the tools of the Devil to do the work of God. And it’s through the Devil that the goodness of God can become apparent… that we then can see that we do have a choice. God becomes then, a field that anchors it all, Devil, God, everything. This field contains everything actual and anything possible — while containing an inscripted navigation as to what is good and right for people.

So to go back to Deleuze, what is right and good for people as a society is what mutually increases their power — what allows them to coexist in harmony. It is of no small coincidence then, that this relationship is much like the Cohesion of the Almighty. On the one hand, the big picture is necessary — for us to be one, but to ride upon the Law and live it to its fullest extent would force us to lose our ability to have freedom. To use Jacob’s parable, the Earth is curved so we can’t tell what’s all around us — so we can do what we like, in a limited scope — even if it is to make mistakes. It’s only in the firmament where we can see all around, and experience the full blunt of it. Keeping the big picture in mind is difficult — as material creatures we are made to get what we can now, enjoy ourselves and satisfy immediate urges. Why wait? We don’t know what will happen to us next! So we end up with conflicting behavior that satisfies one aspect of our person but not another or we short ourselves in the long run for short term gain… and where does meaning fit into this?

Meaning fits into everything as the justifications, explanations, short-circuits in our daily lives that smoothen over the otherwise random assortment of information that would bombard us, distract us, vex us or otherwise provoke perhaps too much uncertainty in our lives. If we were terribly uncertain, it’s doubtful we would ever have children, or ever buy a house, or ever do anything. If we didn’t think we could finish what we wanted to do then most of us would probably never do it. I believe meaning is the tactical moves that assure us coherency in our personal internal lives.

In other words, meaning isn’t the inner workings of physics or math, or biology. The knowledge of science explores actual relations, insofar as we can test them. But that’s not meaningful. Rocks are not meaningful. Plants are not meaningful. Being alive is not meaningful. Being alive is biological. Evolution is not meaningful. The movie A Serious Man, one of my favorite movies, explores this issue. Larry Gopnik understands the math that he teaches in his class but he does not understand the story behind Schrödinger’s cat. He is always caught up in a series of diversions, wondering what the ‘truth’ behind any event is. Knowing or not knowing the truth is not important — the Coen brothers continually sink us into ambiguity, delay our reception of what anyone actually means or the actual intent of any character’s action. Gopnik then gets caught up in how that ‘truth’ of anything is both hidden and not at all meaningful. He can’t ever decide what he wants because he thinks he needs to know ‘what the intent of everything’ must be before he can figure out what he should want. It drives him to the brink, where he comes speechless, and only stares ahead.

This is very much the serious philosopher’s problem is. We think that the universe should somehow have a place for us, that what we want should somehow be apparent to us, written for us in the stars, in our surroundings, in life. We may come some day to understand how life works, how to stop death, how to create beauty and art — these things may become possible through science. But that kind of knowledge isn’t meaningful because it won’t tell us how to live or deal with all things personal.

This means then, that meaning is not universal. Meaningfulness is for US… each of us… independent of one another. It makes sense then, that our mental worlds are coexistent but also incompossible — that a gull of incommensurable, indefinite and indeterminate difference separates one mind from another … and that we aren’t privy to one another’s minds… even if we are all ‘made the same way’. We aren’t made to read each other’s minds. It would be bad for us if everyone else could read our mind… because we would be manipulated and abused. Our individual survival would be uncertain… yet ironically, as humans we are incredibly social and we DO need each other. Together we are strong. Under an Almighty, we are all the more Mighty. As a society, we do need those ‘universal’ inscriptions that having a God would define for us. It’s just that, while there is always a Big Other in any human culture who judges each of us small others (even if it is a reciprocity such as the Asian notion of ‘face’) only the Judeo-Christian-Islam traditions so directly gave Him a Voice, or should I say, the Word. And it seems that traditions in this tradition, such as Protestants, so individuated this Word so that it wasn’t a complex system like Confucianism or the Hindi-castes, but rather it was tied to a single soul, for each of us, waiting for us to become ripe, to gain awareness of it.

And that’s where I can’t follow. Personally, that’s too much like a road written in the firmament (although to some it isn’t…). To project such a path seems to me to prompt a kind of Lacanian hysteria — much like Star Trek — we would zip around the universe looking for something but not knowing what. On the one hand then, Protestants, especially Puritans, have a very dour outlook. They are serious. And now, we get to the most deadly of future-talks. After all, everything, all responsibility for their own relationship with God rests on their shoulders. What about their past? Their present? Their future? It’s all written in the sky. Without that relationship with God, there can only be nothing. But now that I wrote this, I don’t think that responsibility rests only with Puritans… In any group, understanding how responsibility is divided is important; be it on an individual, a family or a collective of some sort, any group needs its members to be responsive in a way that is coherent. I suppose though, by separating any kind of Word from meaning means I am writing this entry as a philosophical dead-end. There is neither impetus nor universal appeal because this kind of meaning is too individual. (It is, after all, one philosopher can hardly talk to another!) Nonetheless, what I have put here works for me (at least now)… although it is written mostly as a universal statement about human kind.

Perhaps ironically, as such a ‘universal’ statement, it must encapsulate an unnavigable void and include other minds… even though this statement most likely, is not meaningful for you.

Yet at the same time, it becomes a very special thing, when a home speaks to you about your future.

Unfolding Kandinsky: Spirituality and Expression

It took me about two years to get through most of Gilles Deleuze’s works. In that time, my understanding of Deleuze fluctuated greatly. The apex of my academic education came about when I wrote the following paper when finishing my second BA as a grad student (I had mostly completely my graduate degree. I had another a year I needed to wait because of the way my classes fell, so I decided to finish a second BA in that year.)

The following paper was written for an Art and Religion Class back in 2005. Any paper we produced as the class paper needed to involve religion (or spirituality) and art. I chose Kandinsky, because in looking at texts, I thought it would be an easier transition to write about an art’s thoughts on art than on art directly. Also, to make the paper manageable, I decided to limit the works from Deleuze to just The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque. Eventually under the same instructor (Linda Lam-Easton, who was a very unusual but extremely well crafted instructor) I audited a Taoism class which I never completed. I was going to write a paper on Taoism and Immanual Kant but never got around to it.

Anyway, I post this paper on Kandinsky here as a point of reference.

Unfolding Kandinsky: Spirituality and Expression

In Kandinsky’s first book, Concerning the Spiritual in Art, he introduces painting as a mode of spiritual expression. His focus is on how art is spiritual and how material works to influence spirit. Although he speaks at length about art in general, his main focus is on painting. When he reaches the section on painting, he claims that painting has two “weapons” (24) color and form. Perhaps because of his heavy reliance on musical examples of form, he feels it unnecessary to explore form. Instead, he examines color. Yet, the examination of color is even less useful than the aesthetic statement about spirituality in art. Even before diving into an examination of color, Kandinsky disclaims, “such definitions [of color] are not universally possible” (24). But for the remaining pages in his work, he feels it necessary to try and provide these impossible definitions. In the midst of all this, where he theorizes about the psychological develop of man and the reasons why we must paint in new ways – only “a first encounter with any new phenomenon exercises immediately an impression on the soul” (23). This first encounter is an encounter with spirit, with art. Yet in shaping his explanation, he remains limited by the classical perspective, a comment both on art and theory. While he recognizes that a certain human being sees art while other human beings see things, he still ignores the role a specifically formed subject has on painting and vis versa. In other words, he does not go far enough in his examination. Kandinsky himself realizes this, which is why he wrote a second book, Point and Line to Plane in an attempt to cover any gaps in his subject matter, not by examining color, but by examining form. This second work relies heavily on a methodology imitating science – to be objective and to master the Real by covering it up with a discourse generated by methodology. For this reason, he resists speaking of the subject and of spirituality, even as he tries to cover gaps in his first work. What is decided at the end of Kandinsky’s second book is that art relies on a projection of tension, between lines and points in order to achieve a spiritual visual space. This also assumes that such tension is innate in viewing human beings. In his first work, Kandinsky would speak of such tension as “vibrations in the soul” (24). In his second, he claims that “Art mirrors itself upon the surface of our consciousness” and that “entering art’s message [is] to experience its pulsating-life with all one’s senses” (17). How this happens is beyond Kandinsky’s explanation but extremely relevant to his work. To help further critique Kandinsky’s project I will rely on the work of Gilles Deleuze, in particular his book The Fold: Liebniz and the Baroque.

Before we get to introducing the intricacies of Deleuze’s work, let us ground Kandinsky’s system a little further in order to better understand how Deleuze can address Kandinsky. Kandinsky begins his second book Point and Line to Plane by noting a dual nature of the world: the external and the internal. He uses the traditional metaphor of painting as a window, except that he cites the window as a limitation. Only when “we open the door, step out of the seclusion and plunge into the outside reality [do] we become an active part of this reality and experience its pulsation with all our senses” (17). Although (or because) he is an abstract artist, Kandinsky claims that art is to “mirror itself upon the surface of our consciousness” which is not that of the material world but the spiritual. How this is achieved is unclear, although Kandinsky does claim that it takes a more developed man to experience these “psychic effects” (CSA 24). Perhaps because we are all so disenchanted with a world full of objects we see over and over, Kandinsky insists that it is only through new impressions that we can get at that psychic effect, hence the abstract nature of his art. Yet doesn’t Kandinsky in PLP insist that the formal elements of art remains the same throughout all art forms?

In Point and Line to Plane, Kandinsky meticulously examines three elements as an extension of one another across different artistic mediums: dance, architecture, music to name a few. Perhaps because Kandinsky is a painter, he explains each of these elements in terms of a visual geometry, a geometry that permeates his work. The two paintings I have selected are examples of how Kandinsky explores space. Different than Klee or Ernst, Kandinsky insists on the primacy of geometric shapes and full colors. He does not do the painterly thing and fizzle out his forms, rather his lines are sharp and his colors are well defined. This does not mean that these compositional elements are primary. Throughout his book, he uses notions like “absolute sound” (70), relative temperatures like “cold” and “warm” (59) and relative movement like “sliding” (63) to explain his compositional elements. Although these are not necessarily visual terms, they only supplement Kandinsky’s explanations. The visual components always form the basis for how we understand what is expressed in art. The dancer’s expression is inherent in the lines his body makes (42). A Chinese pagoda expresses itself “with means of equal clarity as curves leading to the point – in short precise beats audible as a transition of dissolution in which the space form fades away into the atmosphere surrounding the building” (40). Even music has lines and points that structure its expression as Kandinsky notes from a score of the motif in Beethoven’s Symphony No 5. Yet these are only cursory examples because Kandinsky is concerned with how points and lines create planes which are another way of expressing tension.

Tension is the key to Kandinsky’s theory. How we get to form tension relies on the basic building blocks of point and line. Through those formal elements, as well as the use of color, certain psychic effects build and release a certain quality. For example, in “White Line” Kandinsky characterizes a white line as tension or tension as a white line. It removes itself from the background of colors and shapes which comment on it. Furthermore, its shape seems to rise from the lower right into the upper right, to become looser. Using Kandinsky’s own examination of a similar line as an analogy, Kandinsky writes

A free curved line, [. . .] has an obstinate “look” because of its broad upper part [. . .]. This line expands as it moves upward, the expression of curvature becomes more and more forceful until the “obstinacy” attains its maximum (PSP 134).

This line has a looser feel to it’s left side and a tighter resistance on the right. This tension is inherent not only in the line as a comment to itself (from topside to bottom) but also through the various colors that it overcodes. These separate lines and colors remark on the white line through their different rhythms and repetitions. It are these rhythms and repetitions of lines that Kandinsky calls composition, the creation of qualities and quantities that interplay in tension. Tension however, is only one kind of term, the other is universal harmony. Kandinsky writes

The universal harmony of a composition can, therefore, consist of a number of complexes rising to the highest point of contrast. These contrasts can even be of an inharmonious character, and still their proper use will not have a negative effect on the total harmony but, rather, a position one, and will raise the work of art to a thing of the greatest harmony (original bold 97).

Although Deleuze and Kandinsky diverge in their understandings of art, it is in harmony and composition where they mostly agree. The differences in lines that run throughout a painting are harmonious; that is the aim of painting. Although Kandinsky here most obviously portrays it in pieces like “White Line”, where “The simplest case is the exact repetition of a straight line at equal intervals – the primitive rhythm” (original bold 95), Deleuze would disagree. There is nothing simple about even parallel straight lines. Rather such repetition is only a repetition found inherent to a series. This is the additive nature of harmonies which do “not relate multiplicity to some kind of unity, but to ‘a certain unity’ that has to offer distinctive or pertinent traits” (128). In other words, each series of lines has its own inner characteristics. This is the same kind of realization that realizes a harmony out of even divergent lines, or even lines that do not relate in the kind of “primitive rhythm” of Kandinsky. Deleuze notes that this kind of harmony passes through different kinds of strata,

preparing and resolving dissonance. [. . .] The preparation of dissonance means integrating the half-pains that have been accompanying pleasure, in such ways, that the next pain still not occur “contrary to expectations”. Thus the dog was musical when it knew how to integrate the almost imperceptible approach of the enemy, the faint hostile odor and the silent raising of the stick just prior to receiving the blow (131).

This pleasure however, is not the same as tension, it is only a unitive affect, the play of the focal point of the eye from one position to another along two convergent series which have an additive harmony on one another. In this case, the tip-toeing of the attacker, the raising of the cane and the bash is one series. The other is the series of the dog going to eat its food, eating its food and then being hit. This is like the two series of the three black triangles of “White Line” pointing through (behind) the white line. Another kind of series would be the kind of dissonance of the lower and upper left corners and the lower and upper right corners that converge without any direct touch. Rather these corners affect each other. Further understood would be to extend Liebniz’s theory of evil in which damned souls

produce a dissonance on a unique note, a breath of vengeance or resentment, a hate of God that goes to infinity; but it is still a form of music, a chord – though diabolical – since the damned draw pleasure from their pain, and especially make possible the infinite progression of perfect accords in other souls (132).

Harmony is always harmony of the inside where different essences relate in relation extending beyond each of the parts. This is how harmony is not to be found in one piece or the other but in the whole that is its own part. We can understand this as two choir members who sing in harmony together but who do not hear each other and do not know what the other is doing. Deleuze talks about these kind of series as additive effects, parts to a whole that is different from its parts, like the music of the Baroque in which many horizontal melodies converge and diverge:

It is at once the horizontal melody that endlessly develops all of its lines in extension, and the vertical harmony that establishes the inner spiritual unity or the summit, but it is impossible to know where one ends and the other begins. But, precisely, Baroque music is what can extract harmony from melody, and can always restore the higher unity toward which the arts are moving as many melodic lines: this very same elevation of harmony makes up the most general definition of what can be called Baroque music (128).

This is where the notion of composition occurs, the knowing interplay between harmonies, or tensions. This is also the apex of Deleuze’s book. In The Fold, Deleuze ends his discussion about folds on a chapter titled “The New Harmony”, exactly where Kandinsky is in the middle of his book on PLP.

Here, at the level of the composition, Kandinsky might as well end his work, but instead he goes on to further develop the idea of tension in what he calls the base plane. This last section of PLP is not a true development of the previous ideas, but more of an application in painting, although I am sure Kandinsky does not see it that way. True, Kandinsky has not explained all he knows yet but he has defined what composition is: the play of harmonies and “complexs rising to the highest point of contrast” (97). Yet what is contrasted and how harmonies rise is only explicated in Deleuze, not by Kandinsky, despite Kandinsky’s claim that his work is analytical. Further, only in the beginning of his last chapter on BP, “basic plane”, does he show how tension can develops without explaining how. We will speak at length in the near future about why different tensions happen but for now, Kandinsky’s point is more pressing as it reveals the limitations of his theory. In his viewing of two kinds of rising lines, one that goes left and one that goes right (“White Line” is one that goes right) he reveals his understanding of tension and spirituality. The harmony that

Tie[s] in with these two [contrasting] sides is another special feeling which can be explained by the characteristics already described. This feeling has a “literary” aftertaste, which again discloses the very deep-going relationships between the different expressions of art – and which, furthermore, gives us an inkling of the very deep-lying universal roots of all art forms – and, finally, of all spiritual fields. This feeling is the result of the two sole possibilities of movement of the human being, which, in spite of various combinations, actually remain only two (121).

These two feelings are of “movement into the distance” for lines moving left and for the right, “movement toward home” (121). The differentials of these two lines play against the BP of the canvas. This is to say that Kandinsky always bases the larger tensions of composition as an effect harmonizing the canvas as the BP, the square that presents the entire harmony, that even forces harmony between series that might otherwise have their own harmonies. Although Kandinsky is satisfied in his theory with this maneuver, in his painting he is not. Witness the twisting of the BP in “White Line” as the four corners are realigned with dynamic triangles that re-angle the focal point of the central space. This is an added layer of complexity for what was a simple white arc no longer arcs through the familiar square space of the BP. Although Kandinsky stops with the BP in his theory – as he wants to remain general – we see the limits of the BP. For what if there are other planes? How can spirituality be a consequence of the ever-present materiality of painting? We see then, that Kandinsky would have done well to go on, because if the BP is the final grounding of tension in painting, what if the canvas was no longer rectangular? With this simple change in material, already Kandinsky looses a full third of his theorization.

In order to re-cover what Kandinsky was interested in, we must understand the way in which he addresses the tradition he addresses. Kandinsky was very much aware of the traditional bounds of painting inherited from the Renaissance, i.e., that painting should be a window to the external world. His contemporaries too reacted to this level of materiality in all kinds of different ways. Magritte for instance, made paintings of easels completing landscapes, as well as windows which were broken (on the broken shards of glass would be a same image of the outside as the window). Kandinsky however, sought not to comment on tradition but to escape materiality through abstraction. As noted in the quote above, Kandinsky was fully aware of the window metaphor. He sought to circumvent it by “stepping outside”, but not to the material world, but the spiritual one. His play of shapes, lines and colors were meant to be a direct link to this spiritual outside, to express. As noted in his first work which is a combination of artistic statement and an analysis of color, Kandinsky defines what he means by the spiritual in art.

In Concerning the Spiritual in Art, Kandinsky presents us with a dichotomy that means to speak beyond painting and art. He posits two polar modes which are incompatible but coexisting: the material and the spiritual. These are different levels, areas where art can achieve goals. For Kandinsky most art deals with material: the drawing of objects, exposition of technique and reproduction of material. For most artists, says Kandinsky, what remains largely untapped is the spiritual in art. Only in this spiritual space, created by the artist, can an inner soul be expressed. This spirit is “‘what’ the inner truth which only art can divine, which only art can express by those means of expression which are hers alone” (9). This early aesthetic statement reflects Kandinsky’s own ambitions in his paintings. He wants to achieve a spiritual dimension of expression in his art. For this, he chooses to leave material expression completely behind. Kandinsky cites the familiarity of the world, of colors and objects to be disenchanting. Without the nominal content of traditional painting, he is freer to develop. A loose assumption Kandinsky exercises here: a man must develop with the art otherwise he will not be sensitive to its psychological effects. How these effects are mined are found for Kandinsky in his division of painting into two different elements: form and color. Although form and color are the two modes of composition through which painting expresses these two modes interact but occupy different axises. They comment on each other, and add to a sum greater than the parts but do not directly interact. Only in his second book, which we have already explored at some length, does he attempt to describe how it is form too, leads to the spiritual.

In his desire to break free of the traditional mores of painting, Kandinsky does miss a crucial point. He does not radically break with the classical viewing apparatus but modifies it by keeping the subject that is implicated by the view. After all if Kandinsky abandons every-day objects to gain an immediacy of spirituality in his painting, then why should it take a more sensitive, developed subject to view the painting, in order to understand it properly? What happened to immediacy? Should not the spiritual be apparent to the viewer, to the viewing eye without support from an apparatus? What Kandinsky wants is ambitious; an immersal of the subject into the spiritual of painting, but what he needs before this can happen is the subject to bring a certain viewing-apparatus to the painting. The viewing subject must be schooled first, in a certain kind of viewing! This too is the case with classical painting which has always been both representational and perspectivist. In a sense, Kandinsky rebukes the content of painting but preserves the form. He still is very traditional in that he is still a representationalist. Although he reacts against material representation, he replaces the object of representation with another object, the material with an abstract geometry of lines and shades, shapes and colors. In his book about Francis Bacon titled The Logic of Sensation, Deleuze comments on representation as being grounded by a kind of view:

Greek art [. . .] distinguished planes, invented a perspective and put into play light and shadow, hollows and reliefs. If we can speak of a classical representation, it is because it implies the conquest of an optical space, a distant viewing that is never frontal: the form and the ground are no longer on the same plane, the planes are distinguished from each other, and a perspective traverses them in depth, uniting the background-plane to the foreground-plane; objects overlap each other, light and shadow fill up space and make it rhythmic, the contour ceases to be the common limit on a single plane and becomes the self-limitation of the form or the primacy of the foreground. Classical representation thus takes the accident as its object, but it incorporates the accident into an optical organization that makes it something well founded (a phenomenon or a “manifestation” of essence (original italics 101).

This view, seen by the subject, grounds both the organizational lines of perspective, the event horizon of infinitude and the presence of objects whose relationship is only dynamic along a dimension of perceived depth. In paintings such as this, a whole world view (and view of the world) is accorded by which things come to be represented. What’s philosophical about such paintings can be articulated with first Descartes and then Kant. Both philosophers relegate the external world beyond immediacy, positing substance untouchable. What could only be apprehended were attributes as attributes were posited as the most direct experience we could have of a world as external. For Descartes, a “substance is a ‘thing in which what we conceive exists formally or eminently’” (Fold original italics 54). Kant takes this further when he grounds space and time as a priori, a an experiential structure inherent within all subjects. This is the bind common to traditional painting and early modern philosophy where subject and view are as one. We could not be a subject without viewing the painting through this perspective and this painting could not be as a representation without a viewing subject. Thus, paintings ground their representations and in doing so ground their viewing subjects as the subject qua focal point implicated just afore the painting at the level of the viewer’s eye. For representationalism there is no other experience of paintings. Implicit in this is traditional painting’s experiential objects. Within the objectified space of the painting objects can arise only through the specificity of attribute. Because of this, technique and cliché became the marks of good painters. Although Kandinsky reacts to this proliferation of technique and cliché vehemently, he too follows this tradition by grounding his representations on a plane. This is a different plane however, as this BP is a dimension of space not grounded on a dynamic illusion of a third dimension but on borders of the actual canvas. We can see this in the chapter on the BP. Consistently, Kandinsky formulates shapes and lines on the BP, noting that these shapes and lines have added weight depending on which quadrant of the BP is painted. Kandinsky is aware of the BP’s affects but considers this to be the mode of painting. For instance, in the examination of two reflected lines, he writes

Turning this example upside-down is especially fitted to the investigation of the effects of “above” and “below” and this is something the reader can do for himself. The “content” of the line changes so radically that the line is no longer recognizable: the obstinacy disappears completely and is replaced by a laborious tension (PLP 135).

Further, he examines the affects of the base plane, various times, diving the BP into “four primary parts, each of which has its specific appearance” (126). Never mind that these corners of the BP are differentiated only in position to the viewer. Of course, this is the case when paintings can be hung in all kinds of ways different from how the artist painted it. Nonetheless, even before any markings are made, Kandinsky is describing an apparatus that pre-organizes the work. For instance, these corners touch at what Kandinsky calls “the ‘indifferent’ center, out which tensions flow diagonally” (126). This is very much like the lines of perspective that flow out from the viewing subject of more traditional material representation. How has Kandinsky modified the classical view of perspective? It is as if the subject were released from his position on the ground and thrown into the air to see the world as a bird’s eye system of Cartesian coordinates. This view is still consistent with classical perspectives, because it assumes an objective gaze that is all the more objective because even further, the subjective field of view is presented without a mediating subject. Now, the viewing subject sees as a God, all the field for there would be nothing left from his sight. All that remains is the null point of a zero center. You can see then, how this new viewing apparatus of the subject is modified but simultaneously retains the basic system of representation. One suggests that this field of representation is all the more deceptive because its viewing apparatus is entrenched, made invisible. This is not to say that spiritual immediacy should be founded on a materiality that is not canvas or rectangular or planar. Rather, if there is a spirituality of the art work, let it be of the art work itself, and not the added effect of the viewing eye. In a sense, we must approach the works as naïve and let the work tells us of what it will without pre-focusing the work in any particular way. As Kandinsky writes

Our materialistic age has produced a type of spectator or “connoisseur,” who is not content to put himself opposite a picture and let it say its own message. Instead of allowing the inner value of the picture to work, he worries himself in looking for “closeness to nature,” or “temperament,” or “handling,” or outer expression to arrive at the inner meaning (49).

It is exactly this inner value that is locked away when art must always be formulated off a theoritical, pre-fabricated BP. In the context of the BP’s tensions, this inner value remains a kind of surplus, the originary excess that all works of art retain, even though this value can be obscured by inner tensions. As mentioned previously, we can see Kandinsky’s own attempt at shaving away the BP in “White Line” which when combined with the pluralistic, multifaceted background, obscures the effect of the BP on the “White Line”. In effect, he paints with more sophistication than he is aware.

If abstract art is not enough, what else is needed to get at this spirituality? Is not harmony enough? Indeed, with Deleuze we see that harmony is enough, although there are two consequences of a radical harmony: 1) The viewing subject as apparatus, not as actual person, must be gotten rid of and 2) we must understand what it is that is harmonized. If harmony is a sum that is greater than its parts, then what are the parts? Are these parts sums in themselves or are they only parts, partial and incomplete without the harmony? We shall see in a moment that these two questions are related and that the answer to the second naturally follows from the answer to the first.

Too often are we used to treating all matters that we culturally hold equivalent in the same manner, oblivious to the individual differences which determine preferential treatment. To see all paintings in the same way would be to confuse an actual, real painting with our shared cultural assumptions of what paintings are and how they function. In effect, we would confuse the objects we place for the cultural place where we shelve objects. To this end, the removal of the subject’s viewing lense leaves a void that needs to be addressed. Certainly many paintings ask to be treated in the same way. They request that we read this one like the last one, and thus are painted as such. This not need be the case however, with abstract art, or with art that is painted with the avant garde in mind. With this, we almost have to forget who painted what, to see what the painting itself expresses as its own essence. This is the understanding of philosophies of difference, of which Deleuze is par excellence. This means that every difference is itself an identity, and that identity is not to be found on the negative transcendental qualities of X is not-Y, not-Z, not-A and not-B but that X is its own difference as an affirmation of X. Taken in this way, it is as if Deleuze would take the viewing lense of the transcendental subject (who sees the field from above as if a God) and smash this lense against the viewing field. Space then becomes deterritorialized as topographical differences arise on their own originary tension. Kandinsky is here at this point of originary difference in the beginning of PLP in his chapter on points.

On his examination of points Kandinsky attempts to describe an isolated phenomenon before building up to the next step. In this isolation, Kandinsky is at his most purest but what he misses when he goes to the next step is to extend this prior understanding to the next level. He discards what he has learned in order to embrace what he knows. Kandinsky begins by writing that these points are both “an incorporeal thing” (25) and a “Disturbance originating from within” (26), both of which he explains by saying that points are “‘human’ in nature” (25). These meanings are conceptual but they betray Kandinsky’s first grasp of difference. But this is different from the alienated substance of Descartes, rather as Kandinsky explains early on one must have a direct apprehension.

In a conversation with an interesting person, we endeavor to get at his fundamental ideas and feelings. We do not bother about the words he uses, nor the spelling of those words, nor the breath necessary for speaking them, nor the movements of his tongue and lips, nor the psychological workings on our brain, nor the physical sound in our ear, nor the physiological effect on our nerves. We realize that these things, though interesting and important, are not the main things of the moment, but that the meaning and idea is what concerns us. We should have the same feeling [read attitude] when confronted with a work of art. When this becomes general the artist will be able to dispense with natural form and colour and speak in a purely artistic language (CSA 49).

Interesting to note is that Kandinsky follows this exegesis of what not to do after complaining about the cultivated spectator who brings his cultural baggage to the scene of art. Kandinsky does not see cultural baggage as innately different from a mechanistic analysis because the two are the same for him. Of course, we might be interested with how paintings are deployed in various cultural settings and views, but that is an examination of culture. On the contrary, a direct apprehension to the level of the interesting person’s ideas require that we pay intimate attention to what he says and how he uses those aforementioned lips, tongues and sounds without being preoccupied with the mechanics of them. We must rather, pass through these various enunciations and grasp at the wholeness of his speech and his gestures in order to reach a level by which parts are of a whole and that ideas and meaning are immanent a present expression.

Language is perhaps a bad example because of its loaded nature. Deleuze presents us with an understanding of the point which he borrows from Liebniz that extends Kandinsky’s point about points. Liebniz is famous for his contribution to mathematics (he founded calculus at the same time Newton did) as well as his philosophical monadology. Curiously enough, this philosophy addressed Descartes’ dualism and it is this dualism in painting which we shall remove. Aforementioned, Descartes separated the subject from the world by claiming that originary substance is different from attribute, that substance was a conceptual matter of necessity but only through the accidental encounters on the level of attribute. As Deleuze writes, “for Descartes, the essential attribute is confused with substance, to the point that individuals now tend only to be modes of the attribute as it generally is” (54). Only through an understanding of attribute qua substance qua expression can we return individuality and distinctness to its rightful place. The traditional grammatical example demands distinction between subject and attribute. The scheme of attribution works by first expressing a quality and designating an essence that is to say, the subject is the basis by which the predicate acts. However, with Liebniz we have

the event [which] is deemed worthy of being raised to the state of a concept: the Stoics accomplished this by making the event neither an attribute nor a quality, but the incorporeal predicate of a subject of the proposition (not “the tree is green,” but “the tree greens . . .”). They conclude that the proposition stated a “manner of being” of the thing [. . .] and they put manner in the place of essence (53).

It is this manner that replaces the conceptual substance in the monad. We return to Kandinsky’s characterization of the point as a “disturbance originating from within” (26). This is to say that a conceptual point is the abstraction of manner as difference. When the actual point becomes, so becomes the monad in its characteristic “as an independent being and its subordination transforms itself into an inner purposeful one” (28). Kandinsky is only right when he is at his most theoretical for he at once contemplates the point as its own being but looses this when he subordinates all points as the same point. Rather we should being to understand that each point, or monad, has its own life that does not require substance. In isolation, monads are clearly what they are, but what about in tandem?

When Kandinsky extends the point by “another force which develops not within the point, but outside of it” (54), he begins to conceive a line. But this force is not from the outside of the point but from within it. He mistakes the line as an extended force that erases the point because he thinks that points have an innate substance, but this is not so. Rather, the line is an extension of a point’s force from where arises an expression and harmony that creates the whole. This can be understood from calculus where Liebniz conceived of a rate of change different at each point of the arc of a line. Line is a series of monads each of which extend their differential force along the arc, passing the expression as line. Monads in series is the variation of a curve along a curve as the measurement of movement takes movement as measurement. A single monad then, objectively speaking, is a differential, a rate of change that expresses itself as its own variation. Deleuze writes

Moving from a branching of inflection, we distinguish a point that is no longer what runs along inflection, nor is it the point of inflection itself; it is the one in which the lines perpendicular to tangents meet in a state of variation. It is not exactly a point but a place, a position, a site, a “linear focus,” a line emanating from lines. To the degree it represents variation or inflection, it can be called point of view. Such is the basis of perspectivism, which does not mean a dependence in respect to a pregiven or defined subject; to the contrary, a subject will be what comes to the point of view, or rather what remains in the point of view. That is why the transformation of the object refers to a correlative transformation of the subject [. . .]. The point of view is not what varies with the subject [. . .] it is [. . .] the condition in which an eventual subject apprehends a variation. (original italics, 19-20).

This is how space becomes topographical, as monads express themselves in tandem. Further this is how paintings can become expressive not in space but by compressing and releasing space, by moving through the relative temperatures of “hot and cold.” The language Kandinsky uses to try and explicate colors expresses not temperature or depth, but relative variation of one degree or another. It is these many different points, intensities and lines of force that build the harmony by commenting as a whole, on it holographically. For this, each monad has with it, the whole engendered, a microcosm that is relative to its degree of variation of the macrocosm. But one should not fall back to a comfortable transcendent objectivity to find grounding for monads, rather it is the monads that comment on each other to topographize a fuzzy objective ground. A given topography does exist in two, three or four dimensions, but more correctly, expresses each dimension in tandem. Each point is a difference but together, any three points have a rhythm that convergences as the seeds for a plane, not it is not that planes have seeds for points. To further explicate, Deleuze recapitulates Liebniz’s statement about the monads and the city.

For if [. . .] Liebniz makes the monad a sort of point of view on the city, must we understand that a certain form corresponds to each point of view? In conic sections, there is no separate point of view to which the ellipse would return, and another for the parabola, and another for the circle. The point of view, the summit of the cone, is the condition under which we apprehend the group of varied forms or the series of curves to the second degree. It does not suffice to state that the point of view apprehends a perspective, a profile that would each time offer the entirety of a city in its own fashion. For it also brings forth the connection of all related profiles, the series of all curvatures or inflections. What can be apprehended from one point of view is therefore neither a determined street nor a relation that might be determined with other streets, which are constants, but the variety of all possible connections between the course of a given street and that of another. The city seems to be a labyrinth that can be ordered. The world is an infinite series of curvatures or inflections, and the entire world is enclosed in the soul from one point of view (24).

Rather then, monads here are fragments of the smashed lense where that objective viewing apparatus has fragmented into subjective, continually variable instances of its viewed objects. You might ask at this point, what determines how monads express? If a monad is a variation on a point in concert with others, might not a differential of a monad encompass other monads in tandem? And further, is this not what a line, or a plane or a tangent is? The answer is yes, this is how monads, are. According to Deleuze, monads

includes the whole series [and] conveys the entire world, but does not express it without expressing more clearly a small region of the world, a “subdivision” [. . .]. Two souls do not have the same order, but neither do they have the same sequence or the same clear or enlightened region. It might even be stated that insofar as it is filled with folds that stretch to infinity, the soul can always unfold a limited number of them inside itself, those that make up its subdivision or borough. A definition of individuation remains to be clarified: if only individuals exist, it is not because they include the series in a certain order and according to a given region; it is even the inverse that holds (original italics, 25).

Thus we have both the world within the subject but the subject too within the world. Either one could not be without the other. This is radically different from Kandinsky’s comprehension of the BP as an empty basic plane that already has differentials of tension and place. This is how the BP itself is a work of art before Kandinsky paints, but also how the BP insisted by Kandinsky can obliterate the art of an artwork by denying that artwork its own relations. In a half step, this too is how monads can be in a series or line, but how that line is also a continuous variation of monads like notes in melody. What gives a line its inner tension, as Kandinsky might say, is what makes a melodic line harmonize not to another line but to itself. This is where Deleuze comes up with the notion of the fold.

Further more, although these monad/points maybe one sided, how Deleuze comprehends these monads are as folds. Each one interlocks with their neighbor and expression dominos to infinity. A line on a painting may retain its force through all the swirling mass of colors and lines it crosses, but this line too can extend outward beyond the BP, as its own tension to comment on its surroundings. The Mona Lisa can smile at Guernica all the while both paintings retain their own intensity as if in solitude. We can see this play of commentary and folding in and out in “Several Circles No. 323”. Circles themselves for Kandinsky retained a special meaning, as an extended point, a fortissimo vibration that is its own inside. Literally, these circles are what Deleuze might call incompossible, as each wraps itself within its own world, its own highlights, its own note. They nonetheless play with one another (in what is compossible) like two songs from two different radios at the same time, neither fully aware of the other but in harmony, of the same world. Thus, only on the level of the fold that extends (despite) variation that we begin to converge on what Deleuze calls the second story of the Baroque, what Kandinsky might call the level of the spiritual.

Again, recalling Kandinsky’s polar modes of materiality and spirituality, Kandinsky notes that these two points are mutually exclusive aims of art. One can desire to capture the material or one can desire to capture the spiritual. Kandinsky professes to the spiritual, as we see in his art, but theorizes on the level of the material, basing his theory of composition on the tension inherent in the BP. Indeed, Kandinsky should aim a little higher, but such heights are difficult to metaphysically describe as each painting is in itself a monad incompossible because of its specificity, wrapped up in its own world. Again, only on a level beyond differentiation, where variation reach beyond material bounds to enfold other variations, do we find yet another higher story that achieves a purity, a reflective unity of its own. This is how life rises up from its plastic forces where

The organism is defined by its ability to fold its own parts and to unfold them, not to infinity, but to a degree of development assigned to its own species. Thus an organism is enveloped by other organisms, one within another (interlocking of germinal matter), like Russian dolls. The first fly contains the seeds of all flies to come, each being called in its turn to unfold its own parts at the right time. And when an organism dies, it does not really vanish, but folds in upon itself (8).

Further, this is how a body arises, the folding of one monad over others, consistently and each differential monad expressing its own difference through the body of many variations. This body is thus defined by a dominate monad as “a clear and distinguished zone of expression” (original italics, 98). Thus while on a lower level, we have monads of continuous variation, blind to each other like the several circles whose pink is pink and the other whose yellow is yellow, separated and happy in their separate spaces. Simultaneously on the upper level, we have the painting an entire differential, as harmonious, where melodies enfold and interplay folding and unfolding on each other like so many children passing the hot potato, some quickly, some hanging onto it, others giggling and some hiding back, but each in their proper turn. In terms of curvature, Deleuze writes of the two floors:

On the upper level we have a line of variable curvature, without coordinates, a curve with infinite inflection, where inner vectors of concavity mark for each ramification the position of individual monads in suspension. But only on the lower level have we coordinates that determine extreme, extrema that define the stability of figures [. . .]. This is the organization of the Baroque house with its division in two floors, one individual weightlessness, the other in a gravity of mass (102).

This is not to say however that there are two paintings, but rather that there are two paintings because there is one. It is impossible to tell where one floor ends and the other begins because these two comment wholly on one another. Deleuze attests to the inner beauty of fabric, the folding textures of Baroque characters whose ruffles accentuate a form by hiding it all together. Under the dress is an elegance that is common with the dress. On the one hand we

are dealing with two cities, a celestial Jerusalem and an earthy one, but with the rooftops and foundations of a same city, and two floors of a same house (119).

Although in actuality, the two floors are the same floor and the house is as one whole. This is perhaps too simple, and would repeat the dualism of Descartes, for there is not one spirituality or one materiality but a mix which is impossible to differentiate. Perception, expression and hallucination are the same for each has no object but subsists over the artwork as a second floor, simultaneously folded in and enfolded. Otherwise said, the object of perception is the perception, and the expressed essence is the attribute expressed. By extension, there are not just two Jerusalems, as that would insist on the same dualism, but a plurality. The man on the corner selling hot dogs is a different Jerusalem than the man on the other corner selling popcorn. The small dirty children who run around pick-pocketing have different Jerusalems each, and each Jerusalem is wrapped up in the differentials of the children. Likewise, the woman in the limousine, the fountain that breaks sometimes, the courier in his own car are all Jerusalem in convergence and yet each separately is divergent and enfolding. Thus, we have in the body of the mass of people many Jerusalems, and we also have the entire city as a whole, floating animated as if a cartoon coding through the dirty streets, the churches, mosques and synagogues. In this way, spirituality is inherent in all forms, in all matter, in all art. As Kandinsky claims that there is no pure decorative art, and even art meant as decoration is not lifeless (47). Thus we have the two meta-levels, spiritual and materiality as extreme points themselves, polar modes which may resist one another, one being made of porous sponge-like matter and the other made of clear airy mist, but the two are the same, commenting on one another. Where art enters as art is not on the level of the purely material, although we might begin with BP, but it is neither incorporeal, as might be a consistent feeling or a tendency. What rises through is the expression of both, a compossible world, divergent from this one perhaps, but all the more in active although not in force but in presence qua force qua presence. We can end thus, with a quote from Deleuze, as he explains that it is not the sum of the monads that realize a body. Rather it takes both floors,

the bending of the two levels, the zone of inseparability that produces the crease or seam. To state that the bodies realize is not to say that they are real: they become real with respect to what is actual in the soul (inner action or perception). Something completes or realizes the body. A body is not realized, but what is realized in the body is currently perceived in the soul. The reality of the body is the realization of phenomena in the body (120).

Spirituality is achieved as a realized shock, of the whole puzzle or of pieces that slide into place all the while the thing remains the same and is transformed or reaches another level.

Thus, contrary to Kandinsky, it is not the content of objective perspective that derails the spiritual in painting. Such content is itself the expression of materiality, but that expression is itself only a symptom of a dominate monad, a larger differential, one that would extend and overcode other monads and signify only itself over and over, everywhere. This one view demands itself objective over all, that there is only this one world, one focal point, one view, only this one transcendental acumen. In much the same way, Kant binds self and subject as in every experience through the grounding of a priori transcendental machines. This consistent view is a regurgitation that denies the larger body as constant variations, intensities that point to a many inflected theme. As art is expression, so must each art have clear expression. This means, and Kandinsky is on the right track, to replace the representation with an immediacy of access, to grasp that expression and not mistake it through something else. What he forgoes in this access however was the subject, the missing mediator. This does not suggest that everyone viewing art would view art the same way. We are all comments on each other, the artwork and the world. Each color is a comment on another color because each color is a shade of itself. A soul is a differential, which has a particular view, yet this vantage point need not dominate the artwork nor need it insist on its mastery by folding the artwork into an apparatus alien to the artwork. Thus while a body and a world exists as freedom, a zone of unfettered expression, so too an artwork must be free, on the BP, in your head, on the wall, unfettered and unchained. Art qua spirituality cannot uplift the subject unless the subject too is willing to be uplifted, brought to that seam or crease, to be enveloped, enfolded. If we want art to express, we should not fold the artwork into ourselves but be folded, unfolded and enfolded.

Deleuze, Gilles. The Fold: Liebniz and the Baroque. Trans. Tom Conley. Minneapolis: Minnesota 1993.
Kandinsky, Wassily. Concerning the Spiritual in Art. Trans. M.T.H. Sadler. New York: Dover 1977.
—. Point and Line to Plane. Trans. Howard Dearstyne and Hilla Rebay. New York: Dover 1979.