culture as a release for our ‘brexit feelings’

Caitlin Moran on desert island discs said if we had had more artists like ‘common people by ?  maybe we would not have brexited. cos that is what culture should be – a release for our brexit feelings

 

Now I am reading into this that our brexit feelings are those which belong in the unconscious and are totally self seeking and murderousand that culture can somehow deal with those feelings (disarm them) and allow rational and humane behaviour

survival value? 1

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08b7t20

The infinite monkey cage talking about games of chance and gambling

talking about game playing (Schillers spielraum) being crucial to discoveries in mathematics Euler tried to solve th Koenigsberg ? puzzle and produced graph theory and

‘He made an abstraction of what was going on for each side of a bridge that was a node and then there was like a line going from node to node and he made what looks now like a network and that has become an extraordinarily rich and vibrant field in graph theory mathematics and a lot of the stuff that is around now wouldn’t be around if it wasn’t for leonard euler’

 

this looks like visual art ‘looks like a network’ and abstraction drawn? drawing that moved into mathematics

 

graph theory – graphic = drawing

Even though Euler found the problem trivial, he was still intrigued by it. In a letter written the same year to Giovanni Marinoni, an Italian mathematician and engineer, Euler said [quoted in Hopkins, 2],

This question is so banal, but seemed to me worthy of attention in that [neither] geometry, nor algebra, nor even the art of counting was sufficient to solve it.

 

Euler believed this problem was related to a topic that Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz had once discussed and longed to work with, something Leibniz referred to as geometria situs, or geometry of position. This so-called geometry of position is what is now called graph theory, which Euler introduces and utilizes while solving this famous problem.

geometria situs = geometry of position (pat fundamental to realistic painting./drawing)

the applications of graph theory are endless re so many things disease spread/transport theory/etcetc

 

the female speaker refers to maths as the ultimate playground

 

Taking on Trump: How to Prep for the Inauguration with Art

Inauguration with Art

BY MARGARET CARRIGAN | JANUARY 13, 2017

(/#FACEBOOK) (/#TWITTER) (/#PINTEREST)

Detail of Goya’s “The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters” (1799). (Francisco Goya [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons)

President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration continues to near with alarming speed and increased absurdity, prompting numerous plans for protests, demonstrations, and exhibitions. Yet, despite the many calls to and opportunities for action, it’s hard not to feel powerless in the face of the escalating mischief and mayhem that surrounds the Trump administration’s takeover.

For instance, within the space of the last 48 hours of this article’s writing alone, we found ourselves back

in the Cold War era as a British spy went into hiding (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article- 4113576/Former-MI6-spy-hiding-Russians-Trump-dirty-dossier-1million-two-years-working-undercover- supplying-FBI-information-cracked-open-corruption-FIFA.html) after Russia cited him as the culprit of a dirty dossier on the President-elect; Trump held his first news conference (https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/compost/wp/2017/01/11/what-the-bleep-happened-at-the-trump- news-conference/?utm_term=.8b93a478aa9f) in which he essentially said he doesn’t mind if his business

dealings may prove conflicts of interest while he is president and steadfastly will not release his tax returns (despite the fact that he demanded a birth certificate (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-demanded- obamas-records-now-more-are-asking-where-are- trumps/2016/08/12/b536925a-5ff3-11e6-9d2f- b1a3564181a1_story.html?utm_term=.b4030f9da608) of Obama), all while humiliatingly shouting down members of the press while they tried to ask reasonable questions; and the Senate aggressively started dismantling the Affordable Care Act (https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/12/us/politics/health- care-congress-vote-a-rama.html) by approving a budget blueprint that will strip millions of Americans of health care coverage and curtail free contraception for women.

This is just the start. The next four weeks, four months, four years will not be easy. Under our fearless and feckless new leader, Americans will continue to face a barrage of rhetoric and policy changes that may undermine our pursuits of life, liberty, and happiness. If we are to take up Obama’s charge he set us in

his farewell speech (http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/10/politics/president-obama-farewell-speech/) — to be our own agents of change — then our first order of business is to educate ourselves and visualize our resistance. This
is where art can play its role (http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2016/12/what_can_artists_do_to_oppose_donald_trump.html) as a tool for expression and galvanization.

Unfortunately, we can’t all provide an inspiring response waxing poetic on the power of creativity (https://medium.com/@deborahcullinan/on-saturday-november-5th-2016-before-the-world-got-so-much- darker-several-hundred-people-9a080d1c3f2#.4nyzvxkbr) to overcome the palpable gloom of misogyny, xenophobia, racism, and hyperbolism we’re finding ourselves in currently. As Artnet’s Ben Davis pointed out (https://news.artnet.com/art-world/art-must-admit-trump-lesson-764063) after Trump’s election, we must consider the limits of cultural activism, especially if we want to have a hope of using it effectively. Even more important to note is that we’re all exhausted: overworked and underpaid, pushed to our limits mentally, emotionally, and financially by the dysfunction of late capitalism. The flaccidness of any failed movement against Trump will not be due to lack of interest or creativity, only a dearth of energy.

Pragmatism isn’t as sexy as optimism or even anger. But it’s necessary because we have a long road ahead of us as Trump takes the reins of our nation. Perhaps the most important question right now is not “how can I make a difference,” for the enormity of such a vague query can overwhelm and lead to inaction. Instead, perhaps we should ask, “what can I feasibly commit to for the next week/ month/ year/ Presidential term/ etc.” Know your own limits and act accordingly because Trumpism is not a problem that will be solved by one march on Washington — we need humble, sustainable actions for the duration.

We have one week until Trump takes the Presidential oath after which he will lunch in front of a painting that represents a dark moment in American history (https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/museums/donald-trump-will-eat-his-inaugural-lunch-in- front-of-an-image-of-slavery/2017/01/13/961a31e0-d76e-11e6-b8b2-cb5164beba6b_story.html? postshare=3321484327372802&tid=ss_tw&utm_term=.2cac700f91da): George Caleb Bingham’s “The Verdict of the People” (1855), which depicts public reaction to a likely proslavery candidate’s election victory. Many art institutions, in solidarity with the DisruptJ20 movement (http://www.disruptj20.org/get-organized/call-to- action/), will close their doors for Inauguration Day (http://hyperallergic.com/350191/j20-art-strike-ny- closings/). Until then, consider finding solace, sagacity, or solidarity in the following events and exhibitions included in the modest list below.

Anti-Trump Free School (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/anti-trump-free-school-escuelita-libre- anti-trump-tickets-30508243979)
January 14
Free University-NYC (http://freeuniversitynyc.org/) and Mayday Space (https://maydayspace.org/) have collaborated to present a day of workshops, teach-ins, and skill-shares with the aim of instructing participants how to effectively resist the recent intensification of xenophobia, hate crimes, endangered reproductive rights, white supremacy, attacks on workers, and environmental destructions that Trump’s election has bolstered.

Sessions include “Artivism: How to Use Your Talents to Protest,” “Visioning for Black Lives Under Trump,” and workshops on self-defense and protest health and safety, among others. Childcare, Spanish interpretation, and food by the Mayday Kitchen will be provided. The event is free, although a donation of $10-20 is suggested if feasible for the participant.

New-York Historical Society’s Presidency Project (https://www.nyhistory.org/presidency- project)
Now through Presidents’ Day Week
A museum-wide educational initiative to explore the role, powers, and responsibilities of the presidency, “The Presidency Project” offers a series of installations and educational programs that examine the US presidency since the nation’s beginning.

Special installations include “Messages for the President-elect,” which was inspired but the highly Instagrammed “Subway Therapy” (http://www.subwaytherapy.com/) project in Union Square. Visitors are invited to leave messages for Trump on sticky notes in the museum’s entryway on Central Park West; the notes will become a part of the N-YHS’s permanent collection, along with thousands of “Subway Therapy” notes. Additionally, artist Nari Ward (http://www.nariwardstudio.com/) will be on site creating a new work that spells out the preamble of the Constitution in shoelaces.

Nasty Women Exhibition at The Knockdown Center (http://nastywomenexhibition.org/) January 12-15
Generated from a Facebook post by curators Roxanne Jackson and Jessamyn Fiore, the exhibition includes some 700 artists who identify with being a Nasty Woman in the face of threats to roll back women’s rights, individual rights, and abortion rights. All works in the exhibition cost less than $!00 and 100% of the profits will

go to Planned Parenthood (https://secure.ppaction.org/site/Donation2;jsessionid=F82FDAB0BE5D87C47A34CA77A1E47D75.app20110a? 23923.donation=form1&df_id=23923&mfc_pref=T).

Uprise/Angry Women at The Untitled Space (http://untitled-space.com/uprise-angry-women- group-show/)
January 17-28
“Uprise/Angry Women” features the work of 80 female contemporary artists who are responding to the current social and political climate in America in light of the recent presidential election. On view January 17-22, it opens the week of the presidential inauguration and closes on the 44th anniversary of landmark case Roe vs Wade. The exhibit is presented in partnership with the ERA Coalition (http://www.eracoalition.org/), a political organization working to support passage and ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, and a portion of proceeds will benefit their Fund for Women’s Equality.

Activist Artists Today at Galerie St. Etienne (http://www.gseart.com/)
January 18
Artists Mel Chin, Sue Coe, and Dread Scott, in conversation with moderator filmmaker Amei Wallach, will discuss the continuing tradition of activism pioneered by American artists in the 1930s, and how they use their work to inspire progressive political change. The panel discussion complements the current and timely exhibition on view at Galerie St. Etienne, “You Say You Want a Revolution: American Artists and the Communist Party,” (http://www.gseart.com/gse-pages/Current_Exhibition.php) on view through March 4.

art and politics: Dayanita Singh

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b088ddjs

From BBC RADIO 4 ‘Imagining the new truth’

The relevant part (for me) is that Dayanita Singh recalls her distaste for her job as a photojournalist. She says:

‘In my few years as a photojournalist, I realised that photography or art can’t change the world. I think it just doesn’t happen anymore. You know that was a different time, th time of Hiroshima when we didn’t see images. Now that is not the case.  But even when I was working as a photojournalist, I realised, very early on, especially because I was working with prostitutes, not just prostitutes but prostitutes children.  I couldn’t deal with being a photojournalist in these really dire situations in India that I couldn’t really change.   So I used to think I am actually no better than another pimp if I continue just photographing the children of the prostitutes,say. Either I become an activist If I care so much about these children, then I must become an activist. But I loved by that time photography more so I thought it is better to make family portraits till this became complicated. So then I started to make empty spaces  (cf Zoran Music and his post war landscapes).  And then I started to go to factories and then archives.’