Tuesday, March 26, 2013

SqEK Paris (It Begins)


I am back on the road this year. It began in Paris last week, the first leg of a year´s journey to re-explore the art of squats in Europe. Does that sound wild? I forgot to pack toothpaste, however, and European pharmacies don´t seem to stock travel sizes of anything. My insistence on buying a small tube of what might serve to clean my teeth – anything bigger you must throw away in security check-ins – led me to mistaken purchases: dry mouth gel in a Spanish airport (may someday be useful?), and denture adhesive near my hostel in France (“English spoken here”; well, not really). That brushing was the most danger I was in the whole trip. The anarchists, sans papiers, leather-clad punk moshers, drunken hostellers, pickpockets, confused students, suspicious squatters, chattering academics and importuning artists didn´t bother me at all. I was making my own trouble. I was lucky to get the brush out of my mouth.
I´ll call the Paris SqEK meeting of March ´13 a spectacular success – or, as it should be, anti-spectacular. We learned so much, saw so many places and heard so many stories some of us experienced blank attention passages, a kind of waking sleep where you know someone is telling you something interesting but all you really understand is that their mouth is moving and some sound is coming out. “Oh! What?” (Much of this week was recorded, of course, but it may take years to sift through all that real-time data in English and French.) It was an adventure: a five-day event that was at once scholarly, exciting, exhausting, passionate, enlightening, dehydrating, cold, ridden with gremlins, and politically effective. Also shot through with moments of rare beauty.
The show began in the garrett of Sciences-Po, a maze-like school of conjoined buildings. (They are real antiques, and thus have some excuse; for these confusing disjunctive passages clearly inspired the modern architects of numerous U.S. public university buildings.) Beneath the massive exposed oaken beams of the named attic meeting room, the SqEK group gloated over their first book, “Squatting in Europe.” Boxes of the Minor Compositions/Autonomedia title had been hand-carried from London by a few people who thereby sacrificed their luggage allowances, and had to wear the same clothes all week.
I brought the last proof of the new “House Magic” #5, along with copies of all the other issues. They evaporated into the crowd, and I was only paid for one. Even so… I grouse all the time about the inconvenience of making zines on the run. This #5 was a typical nightmare – I spare readers the hairy tale of my last-minute rush to Barajas airport with copies for the meeting… Even now I type this in a copy shop that is moving on tortoise time, yada yada. But as Edward of “Using Space” zine reminded me, print copies pass from hand to hand. They have a material reality, hand-made items with a kind of gritty integrity which items with slicker production values do not have. They are literal building blocks of the movement. Still, in the future, if they don´t contain hand-made editioned prints, I don´t want to mess with them any longer.
The beloved “squatter priest,” Frank Morales, arrived from New York with his partner Vanessa, bearing a passle of propaganda, including rare issues of Chris Flash's newspaper “The Shadow,” catalogues from the Bullet Space squat art gallery, flyers from the MoRUS (Museum of Reclaimed Urban Spaces), and silkscreened posters by Seth Tobocman.
After back-slapping and book signing, the conference began. Miguel Martinez described his conception of the “action research” collective which is SqEK -- “Qu'est-ce qu'un collectif de recherche-action?” (While his consideration is very well worked out (it is mostly drawn from a longer text), it strikes me that the operations of such a group – SqEK fr´instance – generate results that are unforeseeable. Well beyond the “observer effect,” or “participant observation,” “action researchers” or militant researchers (a self-conception I feel that SqEK has yet to fully embrace) are highly active agents. Gone is the academic fig leaf, the positivist pretense of scientific objectivity. (The real-world corollary is that many such researchers are ejected from the multiply compromised academy: “Don't let the door hit you…”) It´s the difference between making ripples in a pond, disturbing a system by your research activity, and driving a car into it.
After Miguel, conference co-coordinator Hédiman spoke about the Intersquat festival, an annual opening of the doors of the art squats in Paris. The festival began as a collective response or follow-along to a show at the new-fledged Palais de Tokyo museum around the year 2000, then under the directorship of Nicolas Bourriaud. The squatters of Paris were invited to show in whatever manner they wished. The “art squatters” and their political compatriots are nothing if not multi-various and contentious, so this project generated a lot of noise and heat. (The theorist Jean-Claude Moineau weighed in on this with a text then, and talked about it when I met him with Michel Chevalier in 2010, although my French is such that he might as well have been talking to a tree…) Hédiman has bravely soldiered on working on the organization of these festivals, besides catching more than his share of tomatoes in the face because of it. Next, Fulbright fellow Jacqueline Feldman spoke of her encounters with Paris squatters. She´s been blogging a lot of it. (Jacqueline also did a lot of translations throughout the week, for which she has the heartfelt gratitude of all us French-less.)
When the first day´s talking concluded, the indefatigable Hédiman took us on a squatter´s dinner – down to a food court near the Seine, where we bought chain-store vegetarian slop and beers at a supermarket. About a dozen hardy souls encamped in the cold on the stony banks of the river in the veritable shadow of Notre Dame cathedral. We waved at the tourists riding squat wide boats as they came surging up the Seine, blasting the night with their bright lights. (The passengers aboard seemed more interested in us than the cathedral.) A drunken guy joined us, and cadged a beer (or two). I felt as if I were following in the clammy footsteps of Guy Debord during the days of the derives… After that – well, I forget. Besides, we´re going to Athens tomorrow morning, and I can´t spare anymore time to write.
To be continued…

“Using Space” zine can be found at:
http://northern-indymedia.org/zines/2656
Jacqueline Feldman wrote of the Jeudi Noir group at:
http://www.theatlanticcities.com/housing/2013/01/pariss-power-squatters/4480
snap quote: “'I recognize property rights, but I don’t recognize the right to do nothing with one’s property,' says Gauthier Caron-Thibault, councilor to the city of Paris and a member of Hollande’s Socialist Party.” She also blogs at:
http://jacqueline-feldman.com/
Image from squat.net of UK squatters' demonstration against the recently enacted criminalization law.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

SqEK Meet in Paris, March 20-24


Waiting for the jpeg conversion to show you the program in English, but, SqEK is meeting next week in Paris. We´ll be joined in our unsafe European home by a contingent from NYC, from the MoRUS museum and O4O, Organizing for Occupation. Right now, the program is in French. But, using the Latin in your English, and a translate program, I am pretty sure you can get the gist of it!

20 mars -- Sciences Po
56 rue des Saints Pères, 5ème étage, Salle Goguel (métro 4 Saint Germain des Près, ou 10 Sèvres Babylone)
14h: Introduction, programme,et présentation du dernier livre SqEK (Thomas).
-"Qu'est-ce qu'un collectif de recherche-action? " (Miguel).
Certaines expériences parisiennes:
-"Intersquat Paris" (Hediman).
-«Récits de squatters à Paris " (Jacqueline).
Le grand débat:
-« squats et institutionnalisation »

21 mars -- La Gare XP
0bis rue Lucien Descaves (métro Cité Universitaire, RER B)
10h30: Présentation de la Gare XP.
-"Art + squat = X" (Alan M.).
-"Zomeeeee» (Eric).
14h: -«Relations dynamiques entre l'organisation spatiale, sociale et politique » (Luca).
-"L'absorption des mouvements de squatters dans les nouveaux conflits urbains (Berlin, Barcelone) " (Armin).
-"Le cycle de protestation squat à Madrid "(Miguel).
-«La diversité des squatters de Berlin "(Albatroz).

22 mars -- Le Transfo
59 avenue de la république, Bagnolet (métro 3 Gallieni ou 9 Robespierre)
11h: Présentation du Transfo.
13h: -"Le squat comme alternative au capitalisme » (Hans).
-«La criminalisation du squat en Angleterre et aux Pays-Bas " (Edward et Deanna).
-«Répondre aux expulsions: Liebig 14 (Berlin) " (Lucrèce).
"Occupations illégales à Buenos Aires: hétérotopie " (Harry).
Valenciennes
2 rue de Valenciennes (métro Gare de l’Est)
19h: -Présentation de valenciennes.
-«Les campagnes de squatters aux Etats-Unis " (Frank).

23 mars -- Le Shakiraïl
72 rue Riquet (métro Marx Dormoy)
10h: -Présentation du Shakirail.
-«Squat rural en Espagne "(Claudio).
-«Squat rural en France "(Margot et l'Automedia).
-"La ZAD et autres activités rurales contre les gros projets "(Margot et l'Automedia).
14H: Visite du quartier Marx Dormoy:
Ecobox, Jardin d'Alice, Theâtre de Verre, Arrière-cour 93, Bois Dormoy.
17 heures: "Autonomie et auto-détermination des immigrants clandestins dans les centres sociaux" (Sutapa).

24 mars
14 heures: Visite historique du 20e arrondissement (Tisba).
19H30: La Miroiterie
88 rue de Ménilmontant (métro 11 Pyrénées ou 2 Ménilmontant)
Jam session.

Photo: Brass band concert at a squat in Paris, 2008. I got from cafebabel.co.uk; they clipped it from ©Bookenligne/ flickr.com/photos/bookenligne/2613135419/
Logo of Macaq ("Ministry of the Housing Crisis") from rue89.com post of 2007.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Your Summer Plans May Include Hippies: A CFP


UPDATE: The dates have changed; noted below. The schedule has been announced; it is pasted at the bottomm of this post.
From 22 to 25 July this year, the free city of Ruigoord will hold their 3rd “Futurological Symposium on Free Cultural Spaces.” This coincides with the opening of the embassy of Christiania, the sister free city in Copenhagen, and a 40th anniversary celebration of Ruigoord. From the 26th to 29th, the community will host the annual Landjuweel festival.
This year's events celebrate the 40th anniversary of Ruigoord as a free cultural space. The organizers write that the climax of a year of activities will be “on the week before and the week after the 24th of July; the day the village was squatted.”
“Ruigoord has contacts with important free cultural spaces in Europe such as Christiania in Copenhagen, the UFA factory in Berlin, [the abandoned city of] Doel near Antwerp in Belgium, and the Boom festival in Portugal. Ruigoord has opened an embassy in Christiania, a consulate in Doel and has appointed an ambassador in the U.S.A/Canada. On top of this Ruigoord is part of the Cultural Fortress (Stelling) of Amsterdam; i.e. a network consisting of 30 free cultural spaces in and around Amsterdam.”
The symposium continues the work of two earlier symposia on free cultural spaces in the Netherlands which preceded the Landjuweel festivals of 2011 & 2012 in Ruigoord. The organizers invite participation in the upcoming symposium. The broad themes are “connection, collaboration and continuity.”
“We seek a number of speakers who are willing to approach the subject of the relevancy of Free Cultural Spaces from a global and a local perspective from different angles, or disciplines if you like (philosophy, futurology, entrepreneurism, politics).... The programme also includes a discussion on what the possibilities are for collaboration on a national, European and global level.”
If you are interested, please contact: ruthbader@hotmail.com with a cc to: symposium@ruigoord.nl.
Organizing committee: Rudolph Stokvis, Hans Plomp, Aja Waalwijk, Ruth Bader, Michael Kamp, Peter van der Wel, Rita Brakel, Gerben Hellinga.
Ruigoord online
http://www.cn20101172.p-client.net/index.php?pid=1

the free city of Christiania
http://www.christiania.org/

"The Doomed City of Doel"
http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/doel

photo by Monique Buurma of the Future Reggae festival encampment at Ruigoord, July 2011
Dear friends,
Sadly, we have to announce that Ruth Bader died. She did most of our mailings, so we ask you to send further correspondence c/o symposium@ruigoord.nl. We also want to point out that one date mentioned in the first invitation was incorrect. The reception for guests will be on Monday the 22nd of July 2013 at around 17.00 o’clock (5 pm Amsterdam time).
Questions: In view of sleeping arrangements, how many people will be coming with you and how long are you intending to stay? Could you tell us briefly what the topic of your presentation will be: will it have a theoretical or a practical focus?
Here is a preliminary program, including some points of attention that we’d like you to address: Monday July 22nd: Formal Guest Reception.
Tuesday July 23rd: The practice of free culture.
Points of attention: Past, present, and future of the community: historical coincidence, geographical setting, development of internal politics and the relationship to the outside world, the problems and opportunities.
Wednesday July 24th: The theory of free culture.
Points of attention: What does free culture have to offer to society? Creating free space, temporary/permanent autonomous zones; colonization, encapsulation of free culture through governmental legislation.
Thursday July 25th: opening of the Axis Mundi and the Christiania and North American embassies.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Saturday Live talk with Madrid in NYC 4pm 2/23/13

l5M Archive and OWS Archive, Live and Livestream from Madrid // Saturday, 4pm, 2/23/13 at Bluestockings Books & Activist Center
The program will begin with livestream video of the national protests #23F, “Tide of citizens against the coup of the markets.” (This demonstration takes place on the anniversary of the attempted rightist coup d'état of 1981.) The livestream will tie together the living movement and the job of archiving it. Live on-site (en vivo), Juan Escourido currently teaching at U. Penn will introduce and moderate. Amy Roberts of the Occupy Wall Street archive group will present, and later respond. Byron Maher and others of the Archivo 15M assemblea (assembly the the 15th of May archive group) will make a slide presentation. (With luck, we will netcast from the Patio Maravillas social center in Madrid.) After the presentations, a question and answer, and exchange of ideas between the movements.
Archivo 15M blog
http://archivosol15m.wordpress.com/
#23F – (en Espanol)
http://wiki.15m.cc/wiki/Marea_ciudadana_contra_el_golpe_de_los_mercados
http://mareaciudadana.blogspot.com.es/
Patio Maravillas CSOA
http://patiomaravillas.net/

Monday, January 21, 2013

The Hostage Archive... and Going On

Update – dialogue with Archivo 15M members and movement activists in Madrid via Skype at Bluestockings, NYC, February 23rd at 4pm. Facilitated by Juan Escourido and Occupy Wall Street archivist Amy Roberts.
In September of last year, the Casablanca CSOA here in Madrid was evicted. Inside at the time were the 15M Archive and the 10,000+ books of the BiblioSol, the expanded camp library of the movement. A re-occupation over the December holidays failed. (The hours-long CSO was called “Magerit,” after an ancient name for the city of Madrid.) Solidarity demos were held in New York and Copenhagen, and hopefully they made some bureaucrats nervous. Still, the old Casablanca was bricked up to the top windows.
Casablanca was evicted, many believe, because they hosted organizing meetings for the 25-S (25th of September) action group which organized the “Occupy Congress” demonstrations. (The giant CSA Tabacalera, which is legalized, was also closed throughout the period leading up to this demo.) The right-wing government reacted to that multi-day demonstration with a shocking display of force, and they have since called it an attempted coup, and tried to criminalize such actions. This isn't only paranoia; an early October poll showed 75% of Spaniards are substantially in agreement with the demonstators!
Today the material history of the 15M movement and its literary nerve center remain locked up. An exhibition of selected digital prints from the archive is currently installed at Bluestockings radical bookstore and activist center in NYC's Lower East Side through mid-February, an international solidarity event coordinated by the “House Magic” project.
Archivo 15M is also moving to raise the money to get their stuff out of the bricked-up former social center.
There are three new social centers in Madrid, so there are a few options for the 15M archive and library to reestablish operations when they succeed in springing their stuff loose.. ESLA Eko is a recent initiative of the Popular Assembly of Carabanchel. The place looks good in pictures, although it is outside the center of Madrid. The other two are not exactly new, only new locations. The group that ran Salamanquesa reoccupied in Chamberí. The place, CSOA La Morada, is big and clean, and looks great. (Rooms are named after other social centers, most of them evicted.) But the assembly of the evicted Casablanca refused to leave the center city.
They took a new building in the vibrant immigrant district of Lavapiés, kraaking CSOA Raíces. It opened this Saturday, in a building owned by the nationalized Bankia. It is surreal in there. Stores are open on the ground floor, while the entire inside of the building has been stripped to the bare brick and timbers as part of a massive, indefinitely halted renovation.
As the assembly of Lavapiés, some 30 strong, met in the large second floor room, the Archivo 15M group mounted more digital prints from their sequestered archive on the bare brick walls. It's a fine grand space, but cold in this unusually rainy January. (There's no windows in the holes.) Someday this will likely be a luxury loft. For now it's being used by the movement.
Back in October, the Archivo 15M group met with a bunch of art students who were passing through town for the “Perder la forma humana” exhibition of Latin American political art and activist culture at the Reina Sofia museum here. That show opened with an extraordinary gathering of activist artists flying over from America to join in discussions. At a noisy cerveceria cafe, the Archivo group spoke of their collection and their problems to a very interested group.
The newly fledged post-graduate program of the École européenne supérieure de l’image (EESI) is working a project on the “document and contemporary art.” It's consistent with the recent emphasis in art schools on research-based project practice. The students' questions to the Archivo 15M group were nearly all political. The “meta” did not seem to much concern them.
Occupy has been hot stuff in the world of archives in the U.S.A.. Numerous institutions quickly became involved in collecting Occupy Wall Street materials. Both the Smithsonian and the New-York Historical Society were johnny-on-the-spot. Many library and art students got into it as well. The Occupy Archive at George Mason University is a sustained effort, largely dependent upon individual uploads. While the report I am digesting states that this very democratic website has “compressed files of entire Occupy websites from around the country and hundreds of images scraped from photo-sharing sites,” it's not immediately clear how the site can be used. Similarly, the nice-looking blog for the Activist New York exhibition recently put on at the Museum of the City of New York is self-generating. The content is somewhat monotonous, however . Without some curation, it's not clear how such a democratically open site can maintain interest and serve an audience in the face of a) disinterest by its putative constituency, or b) excessive contributions by eager movement spammers. (Me too!)
A critique of some of these early efforts at archiving the new social movements appeared on the blog of the U.S. Library of Congress. The writer spotlighted the work of the Activist Archivists, which have spread information to help would-be self-archivers, and created a working group to save material history. That's what Archivo 15M is about. They are 100% self-organized and extra-institutional, unlike the AA's who are hooked up with NYU. The US-LC article gets wonky about the new challenges of archiving digital data, harvesting tweets and all that jazz.
All in all, this is a wonderful development, and I think it is something new. Most scholars travel the easy road, the one marked out for them by earlier sojourners, that leads through plentiful groves of archival materials. Movement activists and their sympathizers are starting to plant those orchards now. 15M and Occupy have generated no shortage of texts and histories, photos and comics as well. The international squatting movement also is starting to accumulate a significant scholarly literature.
But what kind of research and interpretation is it? This question concerns what is either a lovefest or a kind of quiet struggle between the highly educated and aware cadres of the new social movements and the soldiers of academe – curators, librarians and critics – for control over the materials and the levers of interpretation.
Visual culture maven Nick Mirzoeff blogged Occupy for all of 2012. He has recently cranked against the academicism of much Occupy commentary, observing that activists in the movement don't recognize themselves in a lot of this writing. (It's the same syndrome Thomas Frank railed against in his recent “Occupy is dead” text.) Mirzoeff is organizing what he calls “a militant research 'collective visioning'” conference in February at – naturally – NYU.
I'm happy to see that. Happy also to know that Occupy Research in London also conferences and meets regularly. SqEK (Squatting Europe Kollective) has had its own conniptions over militant research, but that is how the group likes to understand itself. It's a different sort of academia, and I am glad to participate


A rough set of links for this text:

New York: Solidarity with Casablanca
http://en.squat.net/2012/09/26/new-york-solidarity-with-casablanca/

Plataforma ¡En Pie! Ocupa el Congreso

http://plataformaenpie.wordpress.com/

9-minute film telling the dramatic story of the demos: "Madrid On The Brink: S25 → S29" is at
http://brandonjourdan.blogspot.com.es/

“Three out of four share spirit of Congress protests, says poll”
http://elpais.com/elpais/2012/10/07/inenglish/1349636244_022875.html

Spanish 15M Movement Archive Show at Bluestockings, 1/9/13 – 2/15/13
http://interoccupy.net/blog/spanish-15m-movement-archive-show-at-bluestockings-1913-21513/

Archivo 15M website
http://archivosol15m.wordpress.com/

Espacio Sociocultural Liberado Autogestionado EKO
http://eslaeko.net/

CSOA La Morada
http://csoalamorada.wordpress.com/

CSOA Raíces
http://csomesondeparedes15.wordpress.com/

Perder la forma humana. Conversaciones sobre los ochenta en América Latina
some of the conversation streams are archived here
http://www.museoreinasofia.es/redes/presentacion/conceptualismos-del-sur/pasadas/seminario-perder-forma-humana.html

École européenne supérieure de l’image / European School of Visual Arts • Angoulême & Poitiers
director Érik Bullot, Basekamp compadre Stephen Wright and Joan Ayrton accompanied the students
http://www.eesi.eu/site/spip.php?article531

Occupy Wall Street: Major Museums And Organizations Collect Materials Produced By Occupy Movement
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/24/occupy-wall-street-museums-organizations_n_1168893.html#liveblog

critique and comparative methodology at "The Signal: Digital Preservation"
blog of the U.S. Library of Congress

http://blogs.loc.gov/digitalpreservation/2012/10/activist-archivists-and-digital-preservation/
Activist Archivists and Digital Preservation / October 1, 2012 by Mike Ashenfelder

a self-starter: "Archiving the Occupy Movements from 2011"
http://occupyarchive.org/

vital networked and networking site of the Activist Archivists
http://activist-archivists.org/wp/

"Occupy Movement 2011/2012" since Nov. 2011; This collection documents and aggregates information related to the Occupy Movement
http://www.archive-it.org/collections/2950;jsessionid=F7DF05DEF4922649B27F18E9B23140B8

poster design by Archivo 15M
photo of Bluestockings installation by Taylor Moore

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

The Museum of Reclaimed Urban Spaces

The MoRUS was completely unexpected. Last February I saw the space these squatter museum-makers had to work with. It seemed like a broom closet or a large bathroom. But their landlords, the legalized housing co-op known as C Squat, finally ponied up their entire common space. On opening day, the MoRUS had a storefront, a basement, and a two-story high performance area which was used in the past for squatter punk music shows. They survived a fund drive to a poor community and NYC's most devastating storm in memory – the place was totally flooded – to open with a new-fashioned LES flair. Local businesses pitched in a steady stream of food platters – Barnyard, the locavor food place nearby, and sweets from the 4th Street Food Co-op (not a commercial business, but hey). You could tell times had changed deciseively from when those LES squats fought the law, because the food did not instantly evaporate to the hungry crowd. Left they may be, but this crowd is now well-fed.
So many things have changed since the times this museum commemorates. The East Villager community newspaper reported that a landlord notorious for evicting all his tenants so he could live in their building is a frequent visitor to the museum. He has integrated into the neighborhood quite well. And why not? The rents on the LES are some of the highest in the city. It is now a rich person's district, like it or lump it. Instead of diverse ethnic poor, immigrants from often hostile countries living together, it is now radically different income and class strata which must mix.
I was in town for the opening, but I almost didn't make it. In a very East Villagey sort of way, I had spent the night before drinking with Michael Carter at the 11th Street bar. Michael is an old friend, living in a formerly squatted building. Back in the day, he edited Redtape magazine and used a Basquiat painting as a bedsheet. The bar is a great old Irish family joint. Near the bar in front hangs a stone carved by sculptor Ken Hiratsuka, a stalwart of the late Rivington School which occupied numerous vacant lots with their assemblages. Ken's stone commemorates the Chico Mendez Mural Garden which once stood opposite the bar. (Michael's story about Ken's stone and a picture of it appears in House Magic #4.)
I spent the next morning in Brooklyn talking with my host Marc Miller, who a few years ago posted most of the ABC No Rio book we edited together in '85 online. Suddenly it was too late to get to the museum opening on time. Even so, I had incredible good luck with the subway trains, which are notoriously unreliable on weekends. The train in Manhattan was packed with weekend people going places. A homeless guy was stretched out on the bench, taking up four places. No one bothered him. In other parts of the city they would wake him and make him get up. Not in genteel Manhattan. At last he awoke and started to shout and howl. It was a good reminder of what things in NYC used to be like.
Finally, I only missed the opening remarks by Councilwoman Rosie Méndez. For three hours I roamed amongst the jolly crowds in the big storefront, down the twisty stairs to the basement (coat check and bar), then into the grand two-story theater-like space. Much of the floor is painted with designs commemorating the LES squatting movement, as are the walls. Displays are well organized into different sections – squatter tech (videos and cel phones), community gardens, the Critical Mass bicycle wars – and enlivened by photos contributed by people in the community. The museum is staffed by young enthusiastic volunteers.
I know a lot of these folks. Marlis Momber, the longtime Loisaida photograher and veteran of the '70s drug wars was photographing on the scene. Jeff Wright showed up, a poet and ex-publisher of Cover magazine ( my former client; I typeset it for years). While Jeff was not acttve in the squats, he has been a strong advocate for the community gardens, a vital part of this museum. I talked with Ben Shepard, the activist, writer and teacher. While Ben was talking to me, he was scheduled to be making an audience presentation downstairs, so clearly the schedule was kind of loose. I saw the venerable Adam Purple, whose amazing garden was destroyed in 1986, a victim of an early push by Rudolph Giuliani to eliminate the Lower East Side counterculture. Adam talked only occasionally, doing inserts and glosses on a prerecorded talk about the garden.
I chatted with Frank Morales after his rousing short talk. He's working now with Picture the Homeless and Organizing for Occupation (O4O), bringing the squatter movement politics into the present day crisis.
Seth Tobocman, artist and author of the epochal graphic work War in the Neighborhood gave his talk accompanied by jazz musicians. Fly Orr also talked. She's the original zine-making, “cement-mixing squatter bitch” (the title of one of her zines). Fly contributed a lot of material to the “Squatter Rights Archive” at the Tamiment Library of labor history at NYU. The late Michael Nash mentored the group of LES activists like Matt Metzgar who worked on this project. MoRUS is the final result of a long series of moves by LES squatters to preserve their histories and disseminate their stories.
The MoRUS opening was full of fun characters. I talked quite a while with Paul Garrin, a computer programmer, ex-video artist, who has a company delivering wireless internet service on the Lower East Side. Garrin chucked a fast track media arts career to become a free information activist. He's also very much a business man, with little patience for left political people. Lisa Kahane was there, taking pictures of course. She was the chief photographer for the innovative '80s art venue Fashion Moda, and an important documenter of many activist art actions.
I had planned to interview the peripatetic Peter Missing, whose band Missing Foundation terrorized the bourgeoisie moving into the LES during the '80s and '90s. Squatter researcher Amy Starcheski was going to sit in. But it just wasn't an interview kind of day. Since those days, Missing has spent years in the German squat scene, and was among the last artists evicted from the famed Berlin squat Tacheles. I talked to Andre, the French-born squatter who supported the House Magic project when it first opened at ABC No Rio. I also sat with Sarah Ferguson, who wrote the best text on the Tompkins Square Park riot of 1988, published in Clayton Patterson's book Resistance. She's now very active with the community gardens movement. She told me how she had salvaged copies of the 1985 ABC No Rio catalogue from a hurricane-flooded basement and dried them out in a microwave. As formerly rare books they're worthless, but she wanted people to be able to still read them.
Later in the afternoon, the event got crowded as students involved in the demonstrations against tuition at the Cooper Union came pouring in. I didn't stay for the dancing. Sill I saw many other friends and had many other fun chats. Finally Michael Carter showed up. A few people who didn't surprised me. Clayton Patterson didn't show, but he has issues with many squatters. Andrew Castrucci of Bullet Space, and Steven Englander, director of ABC No Rio and a squatter deeply involved with this movement did not come. That was surprising, given Steven's deep involvement with the movement. He sort of dances around his positions on the issue in a recent interview with Whitney Kimball, yet he does talk extensively about squatting. His thumbnail account of how the squatters of LES got their buildings is succinct:
“Because the city had a policy of not negotiating directly with squatters, a non-profit community development corporation called the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board sort of mediated it. The properties were turned over to UHAB, and UHAB, working with the squatters, did the required renovations to get them up to code. Then they were converted into low-income limited equity co-ops. The official name is a housing development fund corporation. There are income restrictions on who can live in the buildings, and there are resale restrictions on what people can sell the units for. So we can’t sell apartments at market rate. In my building sale is restricted to families at or below one hundred percent of the area median income. So the sale price is set at being affordable for somebody who is right in the middle of median in this census tract, assuming someone spends about a third of their income on housing. Once the renovations were completed the former squatters became shareholders in their building and self-manage them.”
Ben Shepard blogged the event fast and well, putting it in the context of other talks and events he'd attended this month. He stuck in a long account from his recent book, describing the notorious insect release which disrupted a city auction of community garden properties during the Giuliani years.
Later that week, I woke up in Queens, and took the subway into the city to recover my bike, parked at Lafayette and Bleecker. On the way to the East Village, I stopped off in the onetime Yippie! Café, where there was an installation of some 30 odd documents from the Yippie archives. This long-time venue of the counterculture movement linked to the late legendary activist Abbie Hoffman has reconstituted itself as a museum of resistance. I recall the place from when I used to live around there in the 1970s. It was the last citadel of hippie culture in New York City, the brain center of the marijuana smoke-ins. Always littered with young hitchhiking backpackers with rainbow-colored t-shirts, the place hosted music concerts and informal cultural events, in the Bleecker street storefront and the larger city-owned space they had use of around the corner. At that time, the age difference – and the thick fog of reefer smoke – did not make me a regular of the place. But I recognized their mission, and helped out a little from time to time on their newspaper(s), Yipster Times and Overthrow. (I was working as a typesetter.) The pater familias of the Yippie family is Dana Beal, a hard-bitten longhair and drug treatment activist who is currently serving time in a Wisconsin jail for pot possession. After decades of operating more or less openly as a pot-smoking countercultural hippie leader, it is simply sad that the law finally caught up with Beal. Especially since now the laws seem to be changing – if not nationally, then at least in a couple of western states.
For me, this trip to NYC has been a lot about recalling those old sites of – well, I can’t even call it a flourishing counterculture in lower Manhattan, but the remnants of a once almost general culture, a libertarian anything-goes culture which grew up amidst a brutal colonial war in Vietnam, and continued after the fall of Nixon. The end came with the ascension of Reagan and Bush. It is odd that under Mayor Bloomberg, who has done all he could to hyper-gentrify the city and make it like Singapore, there should be this resurgence of a memory of resistance. Maybe Occupy Wall Street put it back on the table.
Michael McKenzie is running the Yippie! Museum, “the museum of dissent.” He told me some of the OWS “kids” were meeting there, and read the Yippie manifesto. One young man said in amazement, “This has all happened before!” Meaning the arising of a U.S. movement aimed at liberation and against capitalism. Yes indeed, indeed it did. And there’s a lot of interest in the course of it.
McKenzie said that people had been bringing things over to add to the Yippie museum, old folks who’d been active in the ‘60s slipping envelopes through the door and delivering shopping bags full of stuff. They also have a large uninventoried collection of videotapes documenting all sorts of Yippie-ish activities over the years, including Beal’s own long running campaign for the plant-derived drug ibogaine as a cure for heroin addiction.
Finally, the opening of the MoRUS is very promising. I look forward as always to some sort of connection between the U.S. and European movements. The links exist, but the consciousness of squatters is always very local. Connecting with the long-lived deepset movements in Europe is only the first step. Linking with the Global South is the next.

Poster image by Eric Drooker
//////////////////////
Museum of Reclaimed Urban Spaces
http://www.morusnyc.org/

EV Grieve blog
http://evgrieve.com/2012/11/the-museum-of-reclaimed-urban-space.html
(includes a lively comment section about the alleged sexism of Drooker's image above)

“Squatters museum opens with chain-cutting celebration”; photos by Lincoln Anderson
http://www.thevillager.com/?p=9034

“Landlord who ‘reclaimed’ building a ‘big fan’ of new museum,” by Lincoln Anderson
http://eastvillagernews.com/?p=4042

Chico Mendez Mural Garden
http://www.notbored.org/chico.html

The ABC No Rio Interviews: Steven Englander
http://www.artfagcity.com/2012/12/20/the-abc-no-rio-interviews-steven-englander/

“From the Tenement Museum to Bluestockings, MoRUS and the Lower East Side's Radical History,” from Ben Shepard's blog Play and Ideas,
http://benjaminheimshepard.blogspot.com/

“Art of Activism” through February 9, 2013 at Yippie! Museum Café
http://www.9bleecker.com/

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Free-Dana-Beal-Release-Ibogaine-in-the-Midwest/120917661262232

http://abbiehoffman.org/

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Squat + Art

The “art part” of the House Magic zine is the most difficult part to assemble. So many creative people are turning political, there is an extraordinary wealth of materials to choose from. The case study in this issue focusses on the former “art squat” – a classic of the genre – in the ritzy London district of Mayfair in 2008. The “Da collective” did their work with and for artists, which sets them apart from the more recent movement-connected Bank of Ideas occupation, for example. Even so, the Mayfair squat was more traditional. The politicized international artworld – the substantial subset of institutionally supported artists who work in the social sphere – has been preoccupied with Occupy, trying to digest the implications and outcomes of the revolutionary year of 2011, and producing unuusual events in the attempt.

The Mayfair Squatters
A key recent example of a classic art squat was the 2008 action by the “Mayfair squatters.” Inspired by their experiences in Paris, this gang grabbed an empty mansion in London. It was a case of high-profile upscale squatting, the kind that can't be said to encourage gentrification, and the brazenness of it captivated the media.
Graeme Robertson set the scene, writing in The Guardian: “It is one of London's most exclusive addresses. Michelin-starred restaurants are just a block away, the US embassy is around the corner and Hyde Park is at the end of the road. To share the same postcode ought to cost millions. But the new residents of 18 Upper Grosvenor Street, a raggle-taggle of teenagers and artists called the Da! collective, haven't paid a penny for their £6.25m, six-storey townhouse in Mayfair.” Robertson also details the ownership of the building, one “Deltaland Resources Ltd, which is registered in the British Virgin Islands.”
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2008/nov/07/mayfair-property-art-squat
The Da! collective named themselves after a sign on the storefront window. They further cemented their media credentials by hosting the kind of fabulous dissolute parties that are a mythical part of the London city image. The Ravish London blog covered the project as “the realisation of an artistic vision, in the creation of a small piece of London Art history.”
http://www.ravishlondon.com/dacollective/index.html#mada
Sometime later, after their eviction, the leaders of the squat talked to Tallulah Berry of Libertine Magazine.
http://www.libertine-magazine.com/home/2010/11/21/the-founders-of-da-collective/
In this talk, they say they had met at, and been inspired by “Chez Robert” – that is the 59 Rivoli squat in Paris, squatted ca. 2000, and legalized today as studio space.
That history is told at: http://www.59rivoli.org/main.html

Showing Occupy
Next, “House Magic” takes a look at the “Occupy Bay Area” exhibition at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco over the summer of '12. The show included not only posters and photographs from Occupy SF and Oakland, but creative work for earlier political struggles, including the Black Panther Party, the International Hotel in Manilatown (1968–77); the ARC/AIDS Vigil at City Hall (1985–95); the Occupation of Alcatraz (1969–71); the Free Speech Movement at UC Berkeley (1964–65); and the San Francisco State University protests to gain programs in ethnic studies (1968–69).
http://www.ybca.org/occupy-bay-area

Occupy Meetings
There have been two prominent efforts this year to integrate elements of the global Occupy movements and art institutions. The Berlin Biennale’s 7th edition in the spring, and “Truth Is Concrete,” this year's version of the Steirischer Herbst in Graz, Austria, both took on the challenge of displaying (in the first case) and hosting (in the second) key movement participants. The Graz conference, “Truth Is Concrete,” was partially streamed, and now is archived. That event was much better funded than the Occupy part of BB7, and differently conceived. From all accounts, BB7 was a collision of activist and artistic cultures. TIC attempted a synthesis, but it was curated, a congress of invitees with an audience.

Berlin Biennale, Spring 2012
The 7th edition of the Berlin Biennale took place from April 27 to July 1 of 2012. This large exhibition engaged numerous specific political themes directly. It was curated by Polish political artist Artur Żmijewski together with Joanna Warsza and the Voina art collective of St. Petersburg as associate curators. (The Voina group, named from the Russian Война, or War, included Pussy Riot members, and is known for confrontational street actions.)
Artists' works in the BB7 had titles like “how would you like to die?,” “Germany gets rid of it,” and “Happy New Fear,” and projects like a giant “key of return” sculpture and a passport for Palestine, a “Club of Political Critique” in Kiev and Berlin, a “Self #Governing” newspaper for Belarus, a report on German arms trading and the Mexican drug wars, an “alternative parliament” for organizations labelled terrorist, and a program of solidarity actions between BB7 and other art institutions.
Among these were events in Rome produced by the Swiss Institute with activists from the LUM (Libera Università Metropolitana), which sprang up in the ESC occupation in Rome (including Claudia Bernardi, whose interview on this subject is included in this issue of “House Magic”). They wrote: “we found commonalities between the political collective ESC – Autonomous Atelier in Rome and the Polish group Krytyka Polityczna. We are supporting collaborative actions between them and Swiss political activists, especially those involved in the Occupy movement, as part of our 'Solidarity Action'.” This event may have been the most direct contact with an occupied social center and a cultural institution during this phase of art activity. (Jeudi Noir was invited and featured in Graz as well.) Another solidarity project was “Rebranding European Muslims,” produced by an Israel-based group at the Steirischer Herbst – (that's “Styrian Autumn,” Styria being southern Austria, formerly part of Slovenia) – which event is considered below.

BB7 Projects
http://www.berlinbiennale.de/blog/en/7th-biennale/projects

The Berlin Biennale 7 generated a raft of texts including a newspaper and a book. The show was most notable for giving over the largest exhibition space to activists from the 15M movement in Spain and Occupy Wall Street in the U.S. (mostly New York City). “House Magic” reprints some of the online texts, including the joint declaration of the “Indignadxs|Occupy” at the start of the BB7, parts of letters from Spanish, German and U.S. activists, and, finally, a set of instructions of “How to Build Up Horizontality.” These address a central concern of BB7 curator Artur Żmijewski. Because of the conflict and discontent in the cultural community around the development of Berlin, Żmijewski wanted the BB7 to be the place to draft “a new social contract” between artists, art workers, and politicians.

Website of the Indignadxs|Occupy project in Berlin
www.occupybb7.org

The occupybiennale blog on the official BB7 website
http://www.berlinbiennale.de/blog/7-biennale/indignadxs-occupy

The BB7 represented some serious political initiatives within the artworld. Nevertheless, the critical reception by the art press and many other artists was unsympathetic. A review published on the blog of Afterall, a joint publication of the Cal Arts (Los Angeles) and Goldsmiths (London) art schools, was a partial defense. Even so, the writer called curator Żmijewski's open call for proposals a “lame and populist tactic.” The Indignadxs|Occupy encampment was void of “political force,” since they were “sanctioned” in a gallery and taking public money. Żmijewski also sinned by including his own work in the show, indeed of making the show into his own “Gesamtkunstwerk” (total artwork). Visitors were annoyed at having to interact with people on the site – at “the unavailability of a well-oiled viewing machine.” She reflects on the ultra-ironic artistic strategies derived from Laibach – “which takes the system more seriously than it takes itself.” Finally, though, this reviewer realizes that with “the invitation to the Occupy Movement and the Indignados, with their artful resistance to appearing decisive or united, to take up residence” in the BB7 is part of a biennial that “leaves much room for working out what else art can do today” besides offer itself within a viewing machine.

Monika Szewczyk, “Courage, Comrades: The 7th Berlin Biennial”
http://www.afterall.org/online/courage-comrades-the-7th-berlin-biennial

“Truth Is Concrete,” this year's Steirischer Herbst, in Graz, Austria, September 2012
The art annual Steirischer Herbst produced a “24/7 marathon camp” called “Truth Is Concrete” for one week in late September. Around 200 artists, activists, and theorists were invited to “lecture, perform, play, produce, discuss, and collect artistic strategies in politics and political strategies in art. All day long, all night long. It is a platform, a toolbox, as well as a performative statement—an extreme effort at a time that needs some extreme efforts.” “Truth Is Concrete” was styled like a camp, after Tahrir Square or Occupy Wall Street.
What made BB7 interesting was the clash of cultures between the artworld and the democratic social movements, and the efforts of grassroots internal reform of an artworld system fatally entrained to the fast-moving invisible flows of global capital. The conference in Graz was more interesting in terms of content. The panel descriptions and the archived Livestreams are fascinating. But, in a sense, it was more normal. It was a conference, an expanded seminar with a novel form imitative of a protest camp or squatter convergence.
Gavin Grindon reported on the convergence – “not an exhibition but a cultural festival” – in his blog post “Protest Camps and White Cubes” at protestcamps.org. While the producers made a live-in camp, they invited and subsidized the participants, which is different from “groups willfully collaborating for their own strategic reasons.” Grindon criticized the frustration born of days of lecture presentations with inadequate time to discuss. The Graz TIC meetings seemed to borrow from, and expand upon, the format of Creative Time's Summit series, an annual large-audience event with international presenters giving brief talks. The records of both of these events – the “Truth Is Concrete” conference and the Creative Time Summit – offer a great resource for understanding the strong current of social and political work by artists today.
At this point, “House Magic” #5 is bulging, and it's not clear how much of this can go into the print edition. (There's more, besides, especially architecture...) Nor have I sifted the online conference materials thoroughly for squat-related, building occupation content. (Then there's the books!) It's a symptom of just how big this whole thing is getting. While it's hard to report, I'm happy to see it's far and away out of control.

Gavin Grindon, “Protest Camps and White Cubes” at:
http://protestcamps.org/2 012/09/28/793/
(Protestcamps.org is an excellent blog, coordinated by Anna Feigenbaum, which revolves around the camp formation, not only recently but in the past; there is, for example, a recent consideration of attacks on the Greenham Common women's peace camp in UK during the 1980s.)

“Truth Is Concrete,” the Steirischer Herbst cultural festival, September 21-28, 2012 in Graz, Austria.
Texts, commentary, and Livestreams of many of the talks – the tactic talks, particularly – are archived at:
http://www.truthisconcrete.org/livestream/videos.php

The Creative Time Summit is a conference “exploring the intersection of art-making and social justice,” a forum for “for the expanding global network of people who believe in the power of artists to make real social change.” Presentations at the four summits – “Confronting Inequity,” 2012; “Living as Form,” 2011; “Revolutions in Public Practice 2,” 2010; and “Revolutions in Public Practice 1,” 2009 – are online at:
http://creativetime.org/summit/presentations/

PHOTO: Occupy Berlin in the Kunst Werke, Berlin Biennial, 2012. Photograph: © Marcin Kalinski. Courtesy Occupy and Berlin Biennial. Clipped from http://www.afterall.org/online/courage-comrades-the-7th-berlin-biennial