News & musings from Alyce Santoro (aka: Alyce B. Obvious), social surrealist, delicate empiricist, rhythmanalyst, philosoprovokateur. More at alycesantoro.com.
Saturday, August 10, 2013
PHILOSOPROPS: A UNIFIED FIELD GUIDE
dear friends,
i have just launched a crowdfunding campaign to raise funds to print copies of my new book PHILOSOPROPS: A UNFIED FIELD GUIDE.
If a scientist-turned-artist wrote an illustrated guide to philosophical implements used to investigate how thinking shapes culture, this would be it.
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/819527322/philosoprops-a-unified-field-guide
the amount of funds i am able to raise will determine whether the book is digitally or offset printed in an edition of 100 or 250. if i can exceed the initial goal, the plan is to invest the additional resources into having the cover letterpress printed. the more i can raise, the more beautiful the book will be as a philosoprop in-and-of itself.
i am crowdsourcing not just the means to print the book, but generous friends are already in the process of helping to edit and proof-read the manuscript. i am also seeking thoughts on publicity, and recommendations on appropriate outlets for distribution (thanks so much to everyone who has already offered ideas!). i am attaching the press release below – please feel free to share it with anyone you feel may be interested!
and please don't hesitate to contact me with any thoughts or questions you may have!
thank you very much to everyone for your ongoing support.
Monday, June 10, 2013
JUNE STUDIO NEWS
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"The Impossible Community" by John P. Clark |
dear friends, for the past 4+ months solid, since the close of my "solo" * show and associated dialectic revivals at gasser-grunert gallery in nyc, i have been writing. and writing some more. i have something up my sleeve that i look forward to introducing soon...
meanwhile, i'd like to present the obvious international, a sub-work that has emerged from the larger, still-under-wraps project.
"the obvious international" is an imaginary collective - one joins by imagining oneself a part of it.
the manifesto was published this week in article form at truthout - the precepts are being crowdsourced - all are invited to contribute!
i'd also like to invite you to read my interview with social ecologist john p. clark at loyola university on his excellent new book "the impossible community: realizing communitarian anarchism". here's an excerpt:
"We need to stop demanding the impossible and simply do what is impossible. The strongest evidence for the possibility of something, including the impossible, is its actual existence. So, to begin with, we have to do some serious anarchaeology, uncovering the rich history of free community that lies under layers of domination and the ideology of domination." - John P. Clark
in an effort to support my writing habit, i have made available a brand new edition of OM (recorded with 136.1 Hz) ties in the sonic fabric shop, just in time for father's day! on sale now thru the end of june. OM edition yardage in black is also available - special discount for anyone on this list - please inquire.
all best,
alyce
alycesantoro.com
@alyceobvious
*autonomy is an illusion
Monday, May 20, 2013
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
existence precedes essence: the ashtray teacup philosoprop
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Ashtray/Teacups, Glass
teacups, ceramic paint, letterpress “EXISTENCE essence” tag, open edition begun
circa 1995.
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Back during my teenage obsession with the existentialists, in an effort to help me understand what Sartre meant by existence precedes essence, my father (a philosophy buff) used the example of a teacup that is
used as an ashtray. A person (or thing) is not necessarily what he or she (or it) purports to be - we are instead defined by our outward function and actions. If the teacup is used as an ashtray, can it really be considered a teacup, or does it take on a new existence as an ashtray?
The Ashtray/Teacup is perhaps my
earliest philosoprop.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
dialectic revival #3: wendy osserman's movement score for sonorous sails
Dialectic Revival #3, January 21, 2013: Site-specific movement score by Wendy Osserman performed by dance company members Lauren Ferguson, Emily Vetsch, Cori Kresge, and Wendy Osserman at Gasser-Grunert Gallery for Alyce Santoro's Sonorous Sails.
The Sonorous Sails (Tell-Tail Thangas After Sandy) are a set of 2 sailboat-sail-like shapes (21' x 10' and 17' x 5') made of Sonic Fabric, a textile woven from cassette tape. The sound collages contained in this edition of fabric include samples collected on and under the streets of New York City during the 5 years immediately following 9/11/2001. The "Between Stations" album is available for free download here: soundcloud.com/sonic-disobedience/sets/between_stations
Tell-Tail Thangas (After Sandy) were created in December of 2012 especially for the cathedral-like lower gallery at Gasser-Grunert, which was entirely submerged during Hurricane Sandy. The sails, pointing to the heavens, are symbols of resurrection, resilience, reverence, and cooperation with nature.
Friday, February 08, 2013
tell-tail thangkas (after sandy) at gasser-grunert
My solo exhibition Philosoprops & Ontological Apparatus from the Center for the Obvious & (Im)Permacultural Research opened at Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert Gallery, 524 W19th St, NYC on January 10, and will remain on view until February 16, 2013.
Tell-Tail Thangas (After Sandy) are a set of 2 sailboat sails (21' x 10' and 17' x 5') made of sonic fabric, a textile woven from cassette tape. The recordings contained in this edition of fabric include sound-samples collected on and under the streets of New York City during the 5 years immediately following 9/11/2001. The "Between Stations" album is available for free download. Tell-Tail Thangas (After Sandy) were created in December of 2012 especially for the cathedral-like lower gallery at Gasser-Grunert, which was entirely submerged during Hurricane Sandy. The sails, pointing to the heavens, are symbols of resurrection, resilience, reverence, and cooperation with nature.
Monday, January 07, 2013
dialectic revival series
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WELCOME to the DIALECTIC REVIVAL |
This month, as part of the Philosoprops & Onotological Apparatus exhibition in NYC at the gallery of Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert, we will be hosting a series of focused discussions in the spirit of a Dialectic Revival.
The primary goal of the dialectic method is to pool knowledge and compare and contrast differing viewpoints on a matter for the purpose of deepening overall understanding. Unlike forms of debate in which one side attempts to demonstrate the superiority of a singular view over an opposing one by any means available (including emotional persuasion not based in reason), those willing to engage in a new dialectic favor logic, analytical proof, and rational deduction. Those who participate in dialectic discourse recognize that all conditions are in a continuous state of flux, and therefore definitive resolution may not be possible.
We hope you can join us at 523 W 19th St. for the following discussions:
SATURDAY JAN 19
5pm: "Green Hermeticism and Eco Art"
A discussion on art, science, alchemy, and associated apparatus with Eve Andree Laramee, Linda Weintraub, and Dehlia Hannah
SUNDAY JAN 20
3pm: "In Search Of..."
Killing the Buddha editors Brook Wilensky-Lanford, Nathan Schneider, and Meera Subramanian will invite dialog on quests for the divine, using their own experiences as jumping-off points: searches for the Eden of the past, proof for the existence of God, and an Eden of the future, respectively. Click here for Facebook invite.
MONDAY JAN 21
6:30pm "Site-Specific Movement Score in Room Submerged During Sandy" Wendy Osserman with dance company members Lauren Ferguson, Emily Vetsch, and Cori Kresge will cite the specific.
7pm: "Trigger Points After the Storm"
In a post-Sandy environment can we layer bioregionalism, environmental justice and intuition for coastal resilience? We will explore how aesthetic tools can trigger healing. Hosted by Aviva Rahmani, with Wendy Osserman.
TUESDAY JAN 22
7pm "Philosoprops & Ontological Apparatus"
Implements as catalysts for discourse with Nathaniel Katz proprietor of the Pacifist Library, Chris Robbins of Ghana Think Tank, and "Really Literally Literary", a special spontaneous action with Nina Katchadourian and Elizabeth Demaray
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
philosoprops & ontological apparatus at gasser-grunert gallery
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Philosoprops & Ontological
Apparatus
from the Center for
the Obvious
&
(Im)Permacultural Research
by Alyce Santoro,
Delicate Empiricist
All Are Invited to Join the Center for the Obvious &
(Im)Permacultural Research, a Semi-Ephemeral Anti-Institution Dedicated to Reverence
of Phenomena and Non-Phenomena. Associated Artifacts & Happenings at Gasser-Grunert,
524 W 19th St., New York, NY from January 10th through
February 16th, 2013.
On January 10 from 6pm – 8pm Please Gather With Klemens
Gasser, Tanja Grunert, and Alyce Santoro (Delicate Empiricist) for the Hoisting
of a Sonorous Sail, Woven from Cassette Tape Recorded with Samples Collected On
and Under the Streets of New York City.
ALSO OFFERED:
The
Homeopathic Remedies for the 5 Ills of Society – based on the premise that like cures like, tinctures to counter
VIOLENCE, DETACHMENT, CONSUMERISM, ALIENATION, and GREED were made from dilute
solutions of bullet, glue, water from Wal-Mart, emptiness, and money,
respectively.
The
Upside-down LIFE – silkscreened on newsprint, this enlarged version of the
LIFE magazine logo is intended as street art, to be applied upside-down. In a
topsy-turvy world, making things right begins with a mental shift.
Goethe’s
Game – delicate
pieces exist within a closed system, each entity acting on others regardless of
physical proximity. Based on 1970’s toy “Booby Trap” and quotes by Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, "If you would
seek comfort in the whole, you must learn to discover the whole in the smallest
part," and Buckminster Fuller, “The
entire universe is in tension.”
Assorted wearable apparatus, including a Satellite Dish
Hat, a Copper Listening Pillow, and Sonorous Superhero Suits made of fabric
woven from cassette tape.
CHOOSE
DETERMINISM – Research-in-progress into a “grand unification theory” for
philosophy: can free will and determinism operate simultaneously, as do the paradoxical
laws of classical and quantum physics?
Dialectic Revival
– Ongoing collaborative inquiry and improvisation. TBA.
ABOUT THE CFTO/IPR:
The CFTO/IPR encourages exploration into Joseph Beuys’
postulate, “Before considering the question WHAT CAN WE DO we have to look into
the question HOW MUST WE THINK?”
Our inquiries lead to the generation and collection of philosoprops, catalysts for open-ended discussion around a
range of social, scientific, and philosophical concepts. In order to
effectively communicate about these themes we are working to revive dialectic, an earnest form of information-pooling
that acknowledges and embraces paradox, nuance, flux, and interrelationship.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe referred to research based on
intuition and empathy derived from prolonged observation as “delicate
empiricism”. With a background in science and scientific illustration, CFTO/IPR
agent Alyce Santoro uses a delicate
empiricist approach to the development of conceptual movements and multimedia
catalysts for dialog and social engagement that challenge notions of
separateness between seemingly disparate entities.
Santoro is the inventor of Sonic Fabric, an audible textile woven
from recorded audiocassette tape, and has initiated several experimental social
action campaigns including the Synergetic
Omni-Solution, the
Dialectic Revival, OCCUPY
EVERYWHERE, the USE HALF NOW
Campaign, and Collective
Democracy. She is a frequent contributor to Truthout.org, where she writes about
the social construction of human relationship with the biosphere. She moved
from the Brooklyn neighborhood of Red Hook seven years ago to experiment with
appropriate technologies (including permaculture, rainwater harvesting,
small-scale solar, etc.) in the Big Bend region of far west Texas, 90 miles
from the Mexican border.
For more information please contact:
website: http://www.gassergrunert.net
email: tanja@gassergrunert.net
phone: 646-944-6197
For more information please contact:
website: http://www.gassergrunert.net
email: tanja@gassergrunert.net
phone: 646-944-6197
Sunday, November 11, 2012
the structure of a philosophical revolution
Dear All, I’ve recently returned from an inspiring
and intense month in the northeast, where I left my heart with friends, family,
and everyone who is recovering in the devastating wake of Hurricane Sandy.
During the month of October, as a result of my constructive
critiques of Bill McKibben’s article on climate
change’s terrifying math, I was invited by 350.org
and Blue Mountain Center to
spend two weeks cloistered away in upstate New York with 20 other
socially/ecologically focused artists/activists. Together we discussed messaging
and strategy, shared information and skills, and imbibed the restorative qualities
of BMC, brilliant company, and the splendor of autumn in the Adirondacks.
For me the experience was both affirming and
unsettling. It was a privilege to have the opportunity to share ideas with a
group of people all working in different ways to foster a culture with a set of
new “normals”, a culture within which it usual to think and act with reverence
and concern for one another and the world at large, to listen deeply without
judgment, to work collaboratively without hierarchy or competition. During the
residency I had planned to work on the Dialectic Revival, a paradox-
and nuance-embracing dialog project…but it was entirely unnecessary, since every
conversation unfolded in precisely the way I’d been imagining. We discussed our
simultaneous senses of hope and hopelessness, the balance between independence
and interdependence, art and activism. Together, for 17 days, we lived in the
changed world we wish to see. Staving off overwhelm at how to best deliver a
similar sense of creative cooperation to a wider audience with limited support
from established systems was a collective challenge.
It became more obvious than ever to me that we are in
the midst of a cultural paradigm shift unlike any since the 16th
century move away from the geocentric model of the universe – there are those
who already have a visceral understanding of humanity’s ultimate
interconnectedness with the biosphere, and those who are fiercely
resisting. I expound upon this
idea further in my latest article Structure
of a Philosophical Revolution.
Another profound tidbit reinforced by the BMC
experience is that often the most potent illumination devices contain humor (sometimes
referred to as “tactical frivolity”), ritual, &/or abstraction. As in
sailing, the most direct route is not always the most efficient. Herein lies
the socially transformative potential of art. Bill McKibben is inviting us to “do the math”, to understand fully the dire
state of Earth’s ecology from a rational, scientific standpoint. In addition,
artists can help us to feel the math,
to bring meaning and purpose to existences that have been devoid of these vital
things since the dawn of the scientific age, when we began to value tangibles over
intangibles.
My experiences during the last half of this year
(attending the Marfa
Dialogs on the Politics and Culture of Climate and Sustainability and
participating in ISEA2012,
in addition to the focus residency at BMC) have increased my resolve to
continue exploring a “middle way”, a separate discipline that Goethe referred
to as “delicate empiricism”. I look forward to sharing my research with you.
I leave you with a song taught to the BMC group by a fellow
resident, the stunning singer-songwriter Anais
Michell:
We Are
Going
Heaven Knows Where We Are Going
We’ll Know We're There
Heaven Knows Where We Are Going
We’ll Know We're There
We Will
Get There
Heaven Knows How We Will Get There
We Know We Will
Heaven Knows How We Will Get There
We Know We Will
It Will Be Hard We Know
And The Road Will Be Muddy And Rough
But We'll Get There
Heaven Knows How We Will Get There
We Know We Will
We Are
Going
Heaven Knows Where We Are Going
We Will Know We're There
Thank you BMC, 350.org, and dear generous friends without whose support this experience would not have been possible.
Heaven Knows Where We Are Going
We Will Know We're There
Thank you BMC, 350.org, and dear generous friends without whose support this experience would not have been possible.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
studio news: ISEA2012 and new articles at truth-out.org
Dear All, I hope your summer has been replete with meteors, ice pops, and other seasonal delights! Those in or near Albuquerque, I hope to see you at The International Symposium on Electronic Art 2012 where, after more than a decade of existence in only partial form (as a book that can be folded into a box) The Universal Raisin Cake Theory will at long last make its debut as the multi-part installation it was intended to be, complete with giant raisin-galaxies that guests to 516 Arts will be invited to lounge upon while contemplating the text and having a bite of Universal Raisin Cake. The opening is September 20 from 6 to 8pm. Also as part of ISEA, I'm looking forward to doing some field recording/sound-collage-making workshops with high school students.
As the state of our world becomes increasingly tenuous, I find my roots in science playing a more overt roll in my work. I've recently written two pieces (both published in Truth-out) in response to Bill McKibben's feature in Rolling Stone titled "Global Warming's Terrifying New Math"; as dramatic and ubiquitous as the data on our changing environment may be, it is proving difficult to use it to discern what tangible actions we can take to address the problems. I've written this 2-part series in the interest of shifting from fear to action:
"We Have Met the Environment, and it is Us"
"The Multifold Resistance: An Invitation" (or "How to Break Up With Big Oil: a Complex Relationship")
As a result of these two pieces (and the ongoing Synergetic Omni-Solution project in general), I am honored and delighted to have been invited by 350.org and Blue Mountain Center to attend a focus residency during the month of October in upstate New York for artists working to communicate about our planet's delicate ecology.
A third piece, also published this week in Truth-out, serves as an introduction to both the and Dialectic Revival projects: What Does Collective Democracy Look Like? It's Up to Us
As excited as I am about all of these things, none are particularly lucrative. In an effort to generate funds I have opened an on-line PHILOSOPROP SHOP stocked with a range of philosophical sundries & supplies, including sonic fabric accessories and yardage. There's also a DONATE button for those not currently in need of philosoprops, but who feel compelled to support the ongoing work of the Center for the Obvious & (Im)Permacultural Research nonetheless.
Ever-Grateful for Your Support,
Alyce
Wednesday, August 01, 2012
the multifold resistance: an invitation
Today my article "The Multifold Resistance: an Invitation" was cross-posted from the Synergetic Omni-Solution blog to Truthout. They've changed the title to "How to Break Up with the Oil Industry: a Complex Relationship". Once we understand our relationship to the issues, we can begin to take practical steps to begin addressing them.
Monday, July 23, 2012
we have met the environment, and it is us
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william blake's "newton" |
Saturday, June 09, 2012
SLOW NUMBERS opening at SHOW ROOM in nyc, sun june 10
hope you can join me for the opening of SLOW NUMBERS at SHOW ROOM, 170 suffolk street on the lower east side of manhattan, sunday june 10 from 6 to 8pm. i'll be showing a 24' scroll made of sonic fabric.
Wednesday, April 04, 2012
the visible, the invisible, and the indivisible
(cross-posted from my other blog, the synergetic omni-solution)
Prevailing
thought is like prevailing wind; it requires less effort to allow oneself to be
carried along than to set a course that goes against it. Also like wind,
thought is often presumed to be invisible. But one can quite easily learn to
observe the effects of both on tangible objects, and thereby gain the ability
to harness the power of either.
The
first lesson in sailing usually occurs on the shoreline. Students are invited
to determine from which direction the wind is blowing by looking for clues:
flags, trees, boats at anchor, the feel of the breeze on one’s own skin, and through
careful observation of subtle variations in the texture of wavelets on the surface
of the water itself.
In
order to see thought, one only needs to look around oneself. The urge to
connect turns into telephones, televisions, and the internet. The inclination
to travel manifests as cars, ships, planes, and trains. The need for social
organization is revealed in our political systems. And so forth and so on…
But
what is a thought, exactly? An electrochemical impulse? Does it require an
embodied agent, or is it possible that ambient electrochemical forces cause
matter to coalesce into particular patterns and configurations, resulting in
the infinite variety of artifacts we find ourselves among? Needs, longings, and
desires arrive with the distinct sensation that they are ours alone – but couldn’t
the existence of a tree be the outward expression of a fundamental “need” in
the universe for an efficient, multifunctional carbon dioxide processing unit?
Sophisticated
new investigative apparatus developed around the 17th century in the
form of telescopes and microscopes suggested to their human operators that the
world around us could be broken down into parts, and that we ourselves are
unique entities that are distinctly separated from the environment in which we
find ourselves. Galileo declared “Measure
what is measurable, and make measurable what is not so.” That which could not be made measureable
was granted an air of dubiousness, if not eliminated outright.
The
scientific method (i.e.: formulate a hypothesis, design and implement an
experiment, analyze the result, repeat), however useful it may be for technical
applications, was never really intended as an all-purpose standard to which social
and philosophical principles should also be applied. Just because we cannot
measure intuition, love, compassion, grief, or inspiration certainly does not
mean that these things do not exist, or that they are somehow inferior to that
which is tangible. Over the course of the past 400 years as human culture has
become increasingly industrialized, we have also become more compartmentalized.
As we’ve come to put less value on the immeasurable, we’ve rationalized
ourselves into a state of intolerance of the nuanced, the complex, the seemingly
paradoxical. Things that could be taken as two sides of the same coin are
instead viewed as diametrically opposed: art vs. science, religion vs. reason, classical
vs. quantum physics; determinism vs. free will; left (hemisphere of the brain
or political party) vs. right.
Ironically,
at the same time that scientific rationalism has come to dominate prevailing
thought, science itself has taken a turn towards subtlety. With advances in
quantum theory, we are moving into a strange new domain where things do not
function according to the orderly and predictable rules that we have come to
rely upon. Tests with subatomic particles are not only practically unrepeatable;
they reveal that the very nature of our experiments makes objective observation
impossible.
Fortunately
there are many other ways to collect and interpret information about our
reality. The ability to hold several seemingly contradictory views
simultaneously, the willingness to cultivate, explore, and trust subtle sensory
signals, the boldness and endurance required to set a course that defies the dominant
paradigm – this is the domain of certain artists, poets, musicians, shamans, ecologists,
permaculturists, philosophers, and others adept at seeing and feeling
connections to the obscured dimensions and forces of nature that others neglect
to notice.
Throughout
history visionary practitioners from every field of human knowledge have felt
compelled to share their particular mode of data processing. A few notable
examples might include musician John Coltrane, conceptual
artist/social-environmental activist Joseph Beuys, quantum
physicist/philosopher David Bohm, writer/scientist Wolfgang Von Goethe, physician/natural
scientist Hans Jenny, spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, inventor/futurist
Buckminster Fuller, and poet Allen Ginsberg. Through their work, each of these
individuals has given form to the otherwise invisible/inaudible. The products
of their inspiration resonate in those who experience them – our senses know
them to be true without analytical proof.
Goethe
called investigation that involves a kind of connectedness to and empathic
understanding of a subject delicate
empiricism. Beuys believed that by becoming more attuned to the subtle forces of the ecosystems we inhabit we can rediscover
innate aptitudes that will help us to mend ourselves, our communities, and the
planet. He believed that it is the job of both shamans and artists to shake
people out of ordinary, habitual states of mind and to reawaken latent faculties.
Even slight shifts in individual and collective values and
intentions could quickly bring new sets of priorities into the mainstream,
radically altering prevailing thought. Like a flock of starlings that moves in
an elegant cloud of instinctive, constantly modulating cooperation, changes of
mind can have an instantaneous ripple effect across an entire culture. When
Beuys said everyone is an artist he implied
that each of us is not only capable of accessing the same mysterious, improbable,
constantly unfolding, infinitely creative phenomena – we are the phenomena. Each of us is an outcropping, an empathic agent
of transformation, wired to receive,
process, and transmit.
To
hone one’s connection with this font of supreme imagination, Allen Ginsberg prescribed
this simple but profound experiment to aspiring creative practitioners: “Notice what you notice.” Like a single
pebble out of thousands that catches your glance on the beach, the things you
find yourself aware of – and the state of awareness itself – these are the clues.
Each of us is a receptor for a different part of the same sublime puzzle. Evidence
is everywhere. The investigation never ends.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
web of sound and light
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
OM = C# 136.1 Hz
based on an image from The World Is Sound: Nada Brahma: Music and the Landscape of Consciousness, by Joachim-Ernst Berendt
the sonic fabric custom editions crowdsourcing campaign thru usa projects ended successfully, having raised enough funds to weave a 125 yard batch of fabric. the cidade da cultura de galicia will be receiving a 30-yard edition containing a blend of music from this unique region of spain.
i will also be weaving 40 yards containing only a single note - C# 136.1Hz. this tone is the base note of the sitar and tamboura, and is the note upon which tibetan monks have been basing the OM chant for thousands of years. it is considered by many in indian and tibetan cultures to be the primordial sound of the universe.
it is not too late to have a hand in the making of this very special custom edition - by purchasing yardage, you are making this project possible. please visit the SHOP page for details.
Friday, July 01, 2011
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