Tag Archives: The Accident of Art (Lotringer and Virilio)

FOR PAUL VIRILIO

The Brooklyn Rail—with the participation of McKenzie Wark, Thyrza Nichols Goodeve, David Levi Strauss, and DJ Spooky—will hold a tribute this weekend to the late Paul Virilio.

“The failure of the visual arts leaves open the possibility of the ‘optical correction’ of the world. By whom? By machines and businessmen, who happen to know how to work together quite well.” — Virilio, The Accident of Art, 2005

A special film by Sylvère Lotringer will be screened at the event.

A TRIBUTE TO THE WORK OF PAUL VIRILIO

Saturday, October 27, from 7 pm to 9 pm.

Brooklyn Rail, 253 36th Street, #C304, Brooklyn.

See The Genetic Bomb by Virilio and Lotringer.

Top: Paul Virilio, image from Bunker Archeology.

The Accident of Art image credit: Semiotext(e).

Below: Paul Virilio.

THE SQUARE

“Art doesn’t need interpretations. It has enough problems proving that it exists, that it still is legitimate. It’s all voracious cannibalization, cross-references, and cryptic connotations crying to be interpreted…

“Art history fronts for art, and often replaces it altogether. Everything is being historicized now that there is nothing left that’s worth historicizing, and the same goes for the pollution of exhibitions…

“Artists themselves become historians of their own impossibility to survive their art.” — Sylvère Lotringer*

From Lotringer’s lips to the big screen…

THE SQUARE—an uproarious look at at the supposed customs, pretensions, and fears of the inhabitants at the art world’s highest levels—is Ruben Östlund’s follow-up to Force Majeure, and a huge leap forward for the European director.

This farce of miscommunication is largely set in the Museum X-Royal, the former residence of Sweden’s royal family (who have been decommissioned), and derives its title from an actual artwork Östlund created in 2014.

 

THE SQUARE

Now playing.

Arclight Hollywood

6360 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles.

 

Landmark

10850 West Pico Boulevard, Los Angeles.

 

*Sylvère Lotringer and Paul Virilio, “A Pitiless Art?,” in The Accident of Art (New York: Semiotext(e), 2005), 33.

Elizabeth Moss (left) and Claes Bang in The Square (2017). Image credit: Magnolia.