Tag Archives: Gilles Deleuze

WHO MURDERED ROLAND BARTHES ?

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For his second book THE SEVENTH FUNCTION OF LANGUAGE—a highly comedic murder mystery about French Theory in the 1980s in which the death of Roland Barthes was not an unfortunate accident but a deliberate hit carried out in pursuit of that seventh function—Laurent Binet turns everything he loves and loathes about European intellectual life into irreverent satire.

Starring Michel Foucault, Julia Kristeva, Umberto Eco, Judith Butler (as a university student), Louis Althusser (and his uxoricide), François Mitterrand (Barthes’ lunch date just before his death), Valéry GiscardMichelangelo Antonioni and Monica Vitti at a fateful Logos Club meeting in Bologna, and Jacques Derrida, Roman Jakobson, Sylvère Lotringer, Camille PagliaFélix Guattari (but not Gilles Deleuze) at a linguistic symposium-turned-orgy at Cornell, the novel’s episodes are punctuated with a series of hilarious examples of the extreme logorrhea and irrepressible vanity of Philippe Sollers.

 

LAURENT BINET

THE SEVENTH FUNCTION OF LANGUAGE

Translated by Sam Taylor

(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2017).

us.macmillan.com/book

See: partisanmagazine.com/interview-with-laurent-binet

Roland Barthes. Image credit above: Éditions Grasset et Fasquelle.

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BOJANA CVEJIĆ ON WAR AND DANCE

Bojana Cvejić—philosopher, performance theorist, and author of Choreographing Problems: Expressive Concepts in European Contemporary Dance and Performance—will give a lecture this week at Redcat on war and dance.

“At what moment, in the post-war era, did war surface as the political unconscious of postmodern and contemporary dance for dancers and choreographers? This does not mean that dance or dancers were politically unconscious of war, but rather that dance articulated or demonstrated the impossibility to address war. What dance can do politically is limited, but it could reconfigure ideas through a form that conveys the contradiction between dance’s aesthetic expression and its immediate political context.” —  Bojana Cvejić*

 

BOJANA CVEJIĆ—DANCE-WAR: WHEN WAR WAS THE POLITICAL UNCONSCIOUS OF DANCE, Tuesday, November 21, at 7 pm.

REDCAT, Disney Hall, Music Center, downtown Los Angeles.

*redcat.org/exhibition/bojana-cveji-lecture-dance-war

See The Third Rail interview with Christina Schmid:

thirdrailquarterly.org/bojana-cvejic

Choreographing Problems: Expressive Concepts in European Contemporary Dance and Performance illuminates the relationship between the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and experimental dance and performance in the works of leading European choreographers, Xavier Le Roy, Jonathan Burrows, Boris Charmatz, Eszter Salamon, Mette Ingvartsen, Jefta van Dinther, and Jan Ritsema.”*

*goodreads.com/book/show/25666264-choreographing-problems

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Bojana CvejićSpatial Confessions, Tate Modern, May 2015, four photographs by Lennart Laberenz.

Bojana Cvejić, Choreographing Problems: Expressive Concepts in European Contemporary Dance and Performance cover. Image credit: Palgrave.

Bojana Cvejić.

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ANALIA SABAN AT SPRÜTH MAGERS

The title of Los Angeles-based artist Analia Saban’s new exhibition at Sprüth Magers, Los AngelesFOLDS AND FAULTS—is based on Gilles Deleuze’s concept of an “origami universe” that is forever expanding and unfolding. Saban sculpts with cracked concrete and folds it like paper, and treats paintings like fabric weavings. The show also includes a selection of her laser-sculpted paper-on-ink panels.

ANALIA SABAN—FOLDS AND FAULTS, through August 19.

SPRÜTH MAGERS LOS ANGELES, 5900 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles.

A concurrent exhibition of Saban’s work, PIGMENTE, is also on view at Sprüth Magers, Berlin.

ANALIA SABAN—PIGMENTE, through September 2.

SPRÜTH MAGERS BERLIN, Oranianburger Strasse 18, Berlin

Los Angeles:  spruethmagers.com/exhibitions/446

Berlin:  spruethmagers.com/exhibitions/452

Top: Analia Saban, from Pigmente. Bottom: Analia Saban, from Folds and Faults (detail).

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SCHIZO-CULTURE EVENT AT OOGA BOOGA

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Sylvère Lotringer was in conversation with Dorothée Perret in the Paris, LA #10 article ‘The Importance of Being Unfinished,’ with an introduction by Barlo Perry.

On Wednesday night he was at Ooga Booga’s second space at 356 Mission Road, to celebrate the launch of Semiotext(e)’s new publication Schizo-Culture, along with Semiotext(e)’s Noura Wedell and Hedi El Khot. For those of us who were only somewhat familiar with Semiotext(e), as an independent publisher inhabiting a lofty space in the art world (Semiotext(e) is included in the 2014 Whitney Biennial) and academia, and who brought the work of many French theorists to the United States, the evening was only somewhat informative. A basis of knowledge and understanding of the topic was already assumed, so the panelists dove straight in.

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Chris Kraus introduces Schizo-Culture at Ooga Booga

The Schizo-Culture conference took place at Columbia University in November of 1975. Lotringer described it as a complete shock. He had expected about fifty people to show up, but instead there were a thousand. He said the conference erupted into creative chaos. Of those who presented at the conference were French philosophers and thinkers Michel Foucault, Gilles Deleuze, Jean-Francois Lyotard, and Félix Guattari, and a wide range of Americans such as William Burroughs, John Cage, and Judy Clark. Lotringer said that when he thinks about schizo-culture, it is all about New York City, and the good energy that was felt there at the time. At the time it was joyful to be in New York City with all of the creative people there, the “old art world,” the punks, the young radicals, and the young academics. “People were afraid to go to New York back then, and they could have never predicted that 42nd St would turn into Disneyland,” said Lotringer.

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Noura Wedell, Sylvère Lotringer, and Hedi El Khot

Three years later, Semiotext(e) published the Schizo-Culture issue of their journal. He described the issue as being very fun to put together, and introduces it in the book as being “…not the same as the Schizo-Culture conference. The issue was put together three years after the conference in a very different context with very different intentions and with different material. …[It] doesn’t recount the shock encounter that took place between French and American philosophers and artists at ‘the Event,’ but instead consummated the magazine’s rupture with academe. It also took Semiotext(e) one step closer to the New York art world at an exciting and innovative time. No one could have anticipated that in just five years it would mutate into an art market, and then into an art industry. It was more than anyone had bargained for.” (v)

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Jack Smith, Jungle Island, 1967

Lotringer’s introduction to the Schizo-Culture conference and the Schizo-Culture issue of the journal was followed with Jack Smith’s film Jungle Island from 1967. Lotringer said that Smith knew nothing about French philosophy, yet he embraced the same ideas. He said he had a presence and a simplicity, that you just need to look at the world around you. His beautiful film was a jungle island dream, a layering of images of tropical plants, water, and a drag queen in heavy colorful makeup sparkling in the sun.

After the film, Noura Wedell and Hedi El Khot asked Lotringer a few questions, trying to start a discussion, but it was mostly Lotringer who spoke. The questions were opened up to the audience, and with each one, Lotringer became more and more impassioned. Towards the end he stated, “We are taught to be individuals, to draw attention to ourselves. That is how we are raised. Subjectivity is a false problem. You have to break from individualism by being mad.”