Virtual Scholars
An imagined form of scholarship…Archive for July, 2008
Cicada Shells
Here is one thing our loveable copy-clerks Bouvard and Pécuchet might usefully have added to their archive: the song of the cicada!
There is a very beautiful metaphor of the ‘shell of the cicada’ in a series of poems in Genji Monogatari. Genji is infatuated with a woman, who we come to know as Lady of the Cicada Shell.
Despite many attempts, he is denied any access to her. In one instance, he creeps up on the woman. She, however, detects the scent of his robes and scurries away from the room, her own robe slipping to the floor. Genji takes possession of the robe, likening it, in this tanka he sends to the woman, to the shell of a cicada:
empty cicada shell
how different from the body
beneath the tree’s root
more and more I’m longing for
the one it personifies
Over the last few days I have been desperately trying to finish some writing about mobile phone text messaging. In the piece I suggest the phone as a collecting device for many such cicada shells – moments of reflection upon the time (and space) lost, inevitably discarded. Indeed, these little devices held in our hands, empty out all meaning as soon as our message is sent; we are left with only a shell of having sent it. Equally, we accumulate all number of reminders from the one we long for; brief messages, like empty shells of the one they personify.
However, having been sonically plagued each day by the ‘voices’ of these insects (which swirl in one’s head like a rampant washing machine on spin cycle), and having now seen one of their shells left upon a leaf (see below), I am beginning to wonder how they might seem quite so charming or poetic!
Walk-Through Library
It takes a very special pair of eyes to locate (from far far overseas) a tranquil spot amidst the maddness of a ‘Global City’ such as Tokyo. I’m very glad she did, as I was then able to go scouting for the location.
As it turns out the library of the Park Hyatt Tokyo is rather like a walk-in wardrobe: a glamorous moment in the confines of a relatively small space. Nonetheless, it was a pity, after much anticipation, to find the library was not ‘a room of its own’, but instead a decorative corridor on route to the lifts. Left to your own devices you’d probably be easily fooled by the photograph on the hotel’s website; as ever one must ‘learn to ignore what the photographer saw’. Needless to say I took the very same photograph – a ritual of the sightseer I guess (though this visit was always going to want to be a loving memento, the picture side of a ‘Wish You Were Here’ postcard).
As I arrived - dressed in just T-shirt and trousers – I was asked if I wanted my luggage taken. A little startled that my single bag could be construed as luggage, I must have let on to my lack of credentials. ‘Are you a guest here, Sir?’ – she asked. I had to be honest, but I pulled from my magic bag a printout of an email from the hotel saying how I was most welcome to visit. It was enough to get me in. The hotel’s main entrance and lobby is accessible from the street as you’d expect, but there is nothing more of the hotel until 41 floors up in the lift. Like Charlie in the Great Glass Elevator, I arrived into the hotel with a huge grin and with full recognition that this was not where I would normally be found.
I managed to wander about without causing any further suspicion and soon came upon the library which I had come looking for, but had not quite been expecting. I paced about the bookcases, looking in at the various and curious volumes contained. I caught sight of myself in the parallel mirrors, which gave an infinite set of reflections and I made an expensive call: an invitation to dinner (tbc), 41 floors up in the sky.
…finally I left for the now hum-drum streets of Shinjuku after many attempted goodbyes (like those false fades common to the pop songs of the 1980s, when the music just starts up again, sounding evermore fresh and necessary). The light was fading as I entered this more quotidian, yet alternative ‘library’; full, as it is, of a vast array of materials and media.
…and just as I had experienced the library at the Hyatt in the mode of hyperspace, it was perhaps fitting that upon one of the many ‘library’ shelves of the department stores I was finally able to locate more appropriate (virtual) luggage. Yet, like the books in the cabinets of the Hyatt, these too were behind glass, awaiting an affluent onlooker.

…but all is not lost. The trip has surely afforded me the occasion of a vacilador, which – as previously noted – Steinbeck describes as one who is ‘going somewhere but doesn’t greatly care whether or not he gets there, although he has direction’. The beauty of such trips would seem to be you come away with far more than you might expect. So, like Steinbeck, who goes in search of potatoes, ‘it turned out I saw almost more potatoes than I needed to see’ – for I got to my library and then its experience stayed with me over long-distance, as well as when I then fell back into the streets outside. As one result of my virtual visit, I have some new thoughts for the ‘Project’ supposedly unfolding here. Like quaint library index cards, I think the sections of the book (to come) should be divided by simple, single words. A sort of idiosyncratic filing system. One word can be ‘Library’ – to be filled out with various associations, manipulations and of course liaisons that occur in such ’neutral’ surrounds. Another, I suspect, can be ‘Fabric’ – just because it is simultaneously both such a tactile and textual word and because it seems various items under this label are already underway. ’Luggage’ (not baggage) might need to be another one…
Umi-hotaru (Postmodern Classic #26)

Umi-hotaru (海ほたる), or ’sea firefly’, is a bizzare artificial island at the mindpoint of the Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line (東京湾アクアライン), a bridge-tunnel connecting the city of Kawasaki in Kanagawa Prefecture with the city of Kisarazu in Chiba Prefecture (with an overall length of 14 km, a 4.4 km bridge and 9.6 km tunnel underneath the bay - the longest underwater tunnel for cars in the world).

Air is supplied to the tunnel by a distinctive tower in the middle of the tunnel, called the Kaze no tō (風の塔), which uses the bay’s almost-constant winds as a power source.
The Aqualine was built to reduce traffic through the center of Tokyo, and to link the two important industrial regions of Chiba and Kanagawa. The road opened on December 18, 1997 after 31 years of construction at a cost of 1.44 trillion yen (11.2 billion USD at the time of opening). It is a very ‘modern’ project – all about mighty engineering, progress and efficiency. Where previously it had been necessary to drive 100km or so along the shores of Tokyo Bay and pass through the center of Tokyo, the bridge-tunnel takes just 15 minutes. Yet, arriving at its mid-way point, I felt as if I had reached one of the last decaying remnants of a postmodern age. It was like arriving at the disused theme park that is the opening for Miyazaki’s much lauded anime feature Spirited Away. Except, where the tunnel led Chihiro to a mysterious town, which comes to life in a very surreal fashion, the island of Umi-hotaru is listless and fascinatingly tacky and banal.

The island is essentially a car-park and rest area consistng of restaurants, shops and amusement facilities. It bleeps and sells fast-food and ice-creams like any other motorway services stopover. Looking out over the water there was nothing to see – just the mist of what I guess was the smog of Tokyo and its surrounds on a summer’s day. It was an eerie, quiet artificial space, with no sense of where you were or where you had come from (since the tunnel obviously keeps you from seeing anything at all until one arrives).
It is, to use Marc Augé’s term, a ’non-place’; one of those interstitial places between the ’significant and meaningful’ spaces he calls ‘place’. One can immediately get a sense of these ‘non-places’ from the descriptive prologue of his book, Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity (1995): A man is traveling from Paris by airplane. He draws money from the ATM, waits on the highway, enters the airport, then the airplane itself. His reality is made up entirely of advertising, the bright lights, digital displays, glass and polished walkways. All are places that are not quite places, but which acquire their identity from their being on the way to other places, near or far. Augé’s thesis is of three kinds of accelerated transformations: (1) of time, an ‘acceleration of history’ (p. 26) leading to an overabundance of events; (2) of space: ‘the excess of space is correlative with the shrinking of the planet’ (p. 31) leading to spatial overabundance; and (3) of the individual, ’the figure of the ego’ (p. 36). All three would seem to exist at Umi-Hotaru. The accelerated journey time between Kawasaki and Kisarazu, cutting out all that you might see on route otherwise and turning the whole ‘crossing’ itself into an event. The creation of a whole new place (in the middle of a bay) and in the process shrinking a little corner of the planet and all that goes with re-engineering the environment. And the individual – the many individuals who arrive here with nothing but themselves to satisfy. Some even take the trip solely to visit the island, turning back into the tunnel instead of continuing on across the bridge as you would expect. The whole improbability of the place brought to mind The Restaurant at the End of the Universe: ‘…run by an incredible arrangement of life forms from everywhere, and is the one place anywhere that serves a talking food. One of the restaurant’s major attractions is that diners can watch the entire universe end around them as they eat. The terminal moment is followed by dessert.’

Fredric Jameson, in his well-known essay, ‘Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism’, writes of the Westin Bonadventure Hotel (Los Angeles, California), describing it as a complete world, a mini city with no obvious entry. Its ‘glass skin’, he notes, ‘achieves a peculiar and placeless dissociation of the Bonaventure from its neighborhood: it is not even an exterior, inasmuch as when you seek to look at the hotel’s outer walls you cannot see the hotel itself but only the distorted images of everything that surrounds it.’ The building has become the ‘classic’ example of postmodern architecture (and largely because of Jameson’s essay), of which he writes: ‘…this latest mutation in space – postmodern hyperspace – has finally succeeded in transcending the capacities of the individual human body to locate itself, to organize its immediate surroundings perceptually, and cognitively to map its position in a mappable external world’.
After dessert, which happened to be a rather lavish ice-cream, it was time for me to leave Umi-Hotaru, to complete the crossing over the bridge and leave behind its strangely absent horizon. However, as the car left on its prescribed route I wondered if perhaps the human body has finally caught up with these so-called non-place or hyperspaces. As the paint begins to peel and the glamour of the entertainments rapidly fade, the capacities of the human body to map these spaces does not seem so difficult (we are too well versed in a network culture now), yet this fact still does not make them any less postmodern, for where else is there to go? (..even turning back into the tunnel, only takes you out into more of the same).

InterCommunication Communique
I am sat drinking green tea in the InterCommuncication Center in the Tokyo Opera City Tower. Except I won’t be there now as I upload this, as I am not able to get an internet connection. Despite the cafe being a wi-fi hotspot, I need a subscription to one of the main mobile phone service providers. So, this Open Space - described as ‘a community space that is free of charge and open througout the year’ – dedicated entirely to new media art and culture, has not afforded me the opportunity to write my blog in situ as I had hoped. As an incident of participant observation, I had thought I’d be able to experiment with the open office, to sit here and write online, to create my own digital works, to realise those creative heights we believe new media technologies offer.
Video and new media technology arts both intrigue and disappoint me. The ICC aims ‘to create an environment where one encounters and engages with the progressive experimental activities dervied from the dialogue between technology and art’. It is perhaps one of the best places to go to be inticed by such art. Typically there is a minimal, functional feel to the gallery. As I climbed to the main gallery space, each step on the stairs issued different, playful sounds. It brought a smile to my face and seemed a good start. However, I found myself moving quickly between the exhibits. Any initial appeal seems to last only nano-seconds with me. I ‘get it’ – how it works at least – and then I’m looking on to the next item. What I never seem to find is anything subtle, engulfing, slow, gentle, loving. Except perhaps some of the more static, visual pieces.
It strikes me there are three generic forms:
(1) Mechanical/Sculptural – 3-dimensional exhibits. They tend to use traditional sculptural materials, combined with electronics to make something, which perhaps moves or glows (either according to its own pattern, or related to the viewer’s actions).
(2) Visual – mainly 2-dimensional exhibits, though also often placed as an installation. These works tend to use electronics to re-engineer the formal picture space, making it glow and animate. Bill Viola’s work is perhaps the best example of this kind of work, which is made using fairly traditional video technology. However, it is also often the case that visual works are made through the use of new technologies, such as imaging softwares. As part of the Open Space exhibit at the ICC I saw some work by Keiko Kimoto which interested me (and a fabulous book entitled Imaginary Numbers).
(3) Interactive – environments within which the particpant can manipulate the work of art. Typically these pieces change according to body movements or simple touch sequences. Often there is a screen that the participant is watching, perhaps seeing themselves in the screen or at least some visual element that is identifiable as reacting to their presence.
Whilst the interactive forms would seem to suggest a more dynamic and interesting kind of work, I tend to find these the most disappointing. They might be fun and/or slightly disorientating, but generally they seem only a glorified pavlovian game – ‘look what happens when I do this’, ‘look I’ll do it again, see it does the same’! At best these works can at be stylish and aesthetically pleasing, but generally they are just gadgets waiting to be disgarded. The mechanical, sculptural items tend to be similar, though they can have a little more grace as an exhibit, since they work more within their own formal terms. For me, however, it is frequently the static, or slower visual pieces that I am attracted to.
However, concentrating on the pieces in themselves is perhaps the wrong thing to do. One of the strengths of new media arts is its history, the on-going attempts to bring such an art form to fruition. On entering the gallery there is a lovely timeline exhibit. Glass panels on the floor in the centre of the main gallery space (with the decades listed along the side) hold all sorts of items, books, tapes, gadgets etc, that have accrued – in the name of new media arts – since the early 20th Century. This intrigues me, and the same happens in the bookshop downstairs. All sorts of obscure and usually beautifully designed publications are on the shelves, along with DVDs and magazines. There is a whole intellectual, creative community behind these works and the aspirations they represent. But who are these people and how do you get to meet them!? I was drawn to two books. One, mentioned above, was Keiko Kimoto’s Imaginary Numbers (a beautiful book full simply of freely drawn lines on black and on white) and the other, Ryuichi Sakamoto and Shiro Takatani’s LIFE – Fluid, invisible, inaudible. Just the titles tell of the subtle sensitivies at stake, but also these books bring out for me the obvious importance of process and immersion. It is more about experimenting and enaging with new technologies, being with them, which is why it is perhaps so difficult to exhibit the works. Perhaps there need not be such a thing as new media art works, just new media art work…
As I made my way to the gallery, full of expectation, I made a few little film pieces with my phone. They are pitiful in the face of the works I then went on to view, but for me they are meaningful – they are, for me, full of the hopes I had ‘before’ seeing the exhibits, before anything was formalised, before I could write this…
Micro-Shorts Gallery
ICC #1
ICC #2
ICC #3
ICC #4
ICC #5




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