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		<title>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan&#8217;s The Drowned World</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/simon-ocarrigan-drowned-world</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/simon-ocarrigan-drowned-world#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Mar 2010 07:01:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon OCarrigan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[animation]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Ballardian.com presents selections taken from artist Simon O'Carrigan's mixed-media series “The Drowned World", a title taken in reference to a speculative fiction that inspired much of the imagery in this work: J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>THE DROWNED WORLD</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.simonocarrigan.com.au">Simon O&#8217;Carrigan</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_bedroom.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_bedroom.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Study for “The Drowned World”. 2007. Digital montage. Dimensions variable.</em></p>
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<p><em>Selections taken from Simon O&#8217;Carrigan&#8217;s body of work “The Drowned World&#8221;, a title taken in reference to a speculative fiction that inspired much of the imagery in this work: J.G. Ballard&#8217;s The Drowned World.</em></p>
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<p><strong>ARTIST STATEMENT</strong></p>
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<p><em>[Note: the quotes throughout, from Ballard's The Drowned World, were not included in the artist's original presentation -- SS].</em></p>
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<p>“The Drowned World” is a body of work focussed on the making of images. Coming from a painterly approach to the construction of images, parallels are drawn between the layered nature of the oil paint medium, and the layering prevalent in digital imaging software. The premise of a fragmented nature of vision in a ‘deluge’ of visual culture leads to an image in tension: striving for the unity of traditional modes of painting but simultaneously embracing the fissures and tears embodied in the construction of the image. The flood became the keystone of the work’s subject matter in relation to several concerns: climate change, mythical creation floods, apocalyptic forecasts, inspiration taken from J.G. Ballard’s novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>, and a certain atmosphere of unstoppable movement (a parallel with digital and wireless technologies).</p>
<p>Formally, the flood holds a unique form of surface: a surface that can shift and create unexpected combinations (by literally displacing debris, also by the nature of reflection on the surface). This surface that is temporary, mobile, and fragmented translates to the surface of the painted works. Many images in the body of work are sourced from photographs both found and newly made. The flat surface and particular characteristics of different kinds of lenses, cameras, and printing technologies are closely observed in the reworking of each image. Thus, some images sourced from 1970s National Geographic magazines have a slightly less saturated colour and a more grainy image than those taken in 2007 on a digital SLR and printed with advanced digital technologies.</p>
<p>The combination of the image fragments is often firstly a digital process, but always mimicking traditional knife-and-glue collage. In this way, the digital production uses the trompe l’oeil mode of painting. This is extended by the literal use of trompe l’oeil in some of the works, and the addition of neatly ‘cut’ projected video to act as another layer of montage, as if the projected light could be cut and glued into place. </p>
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<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Iguana (from The Drowned World). 2008. Mixed media cel animation. 15 sec.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>All the way down the creek, perched in the windows of the office blocks and department stores, the iguanas watched them go past, their hard frozen heads jerking stiffly&#8230; Without the reptiles, the lagoons and the creeks of office blocks half-submerged in the immense heat would have had a strange dream-like beauty, but the iguanas and basilisks brought the fantasy down to earth. As their seats in the one-time board-rooms indicated, the reptiles had taken over the city. Once again they were the dominant form of life.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The body of work depicts the flood both as peaceful, cleansing bodies of water and as destructive, apocalyptic events. The apocalypse figures in the final body of work only as an allusion or a hidden layer of meaning, though the research focussed largely on this apocalypse as a parallel of the ‘Death of Painting’. The ‘Death of Painting’ was prefigured by photography’s invention, and then more directly by the expansion of artistic practice to include found objects, installations and performances. In “The Drowned World”, the aim was to answer the question not of painting’s vitality (a question which is often asked, but to my mind misses the point) but of its ontology. Like any art form, painting can never completely die, but its modality can change and evolve.</p>
<p>Digital imaging and its collusion with marketing and consumer culture have greatly changed the methods and significance of image construction, and image transmission. This shift in visual culture is arguably as significant for painting as the invention of photography was: at a time when fewer artists work with images (choosing rather to focus on conceptual works, performance, or time-based mediums), the creation of visual representations are left to open for commerce to dominate. It is my feeling that those of us who choose still to paint, and to do so in a representational manner, have a responsibility to take the images back, and to investigate the ramifications of the changing modes of image construction and consumption.</p>
<p>Parts of my research focussed on a handful of texts – Rosalind Krauss and subsequent commentary on the ‘expanded field’ of arts practice, and Jacques Lacan on visuality and subjectivity. These lines of inquiry are not central to the finished work, nor need the audience even be aware of them, though they were central in focussing and clarifying what was being achieved in the work. The ‘expanded field’ discourse speaks of a ‘technical support’ as replacing the traditional medium – in this case, all the works may become resolved as oil on canvas, but the production method is a combination of traditional and digital ideas (composition, layering, colour theory, blue-screen and matting effects). The works that combine projection and painting most obviously fit this schema, though all the works shared a focus not on the materiality of one particular medium, but on the crossing points between different ways of working.</p>
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<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Burnley Hotel (from The Drowned World). 2008. Mixed Media, stopmotion, &#038; digital. 1 min 37 sec.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;this morning he found himself reluctant to leave the cool, air-curtained haven of the hotel suite. He had spent a couple of hours over breakfast alone, and then completed a six-page entry in his diary, deliberately delaying his departure until Colonel Riggs passed the hotel in his patrol boat, knowing that by then it would be too late to go to the station. </p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Lacan’s notion of visuality and ‘geometral perspective’ clarified for me the reality of fragmented perception and questions the truth of the image. Just as much, it questions the truth of sight and the reliance on light. The projector inverts the usual working of viewing a painting, projecting out and onto rather then looking and ‘taking in’. The layers of imagery and the surface of the flood (or canvas) came for me to symbolise Lacan’s Imaginary, Real and Symbolic; the final painting taking the position of the Lacanian image-screen which shields the subject from reality. In this way, the works function as the tuché (the missed encounter with the Real) – a seemingly obvious parallel to the eking out of lives forever barraged by images which shelter us from objectively or literally experiencing their depicted events.</p>
<p>Finally, the notion of nachtraglichkeit (deferred action) taken from Sigmund Freud engages with a kind of deferred conclusion. Most explicitly referenced in the work Deferred Rapture, I took this notion of deferral to relate to a post- poned Apocalypse. I developed a sense of the ‘punctuational apocalypse’ – meaning that as a period at the end of the sentence, the Apocalypse gives meaning to what has come before. In this way, the end of painting, whether it eventually arrives as a final judgement or just as another deferral along the way, pushes forward the painter to create images of depth and significance as much as possible. The images finally displayed for assessment read quite clearly as images aimed at unity, aimed at a sense of the sublime, but falling short – rendered out of fragments plucked from the deluge, there is an impossibility of ever completing that perfect image, and possibly of ever recovering the sought after depth and significance of the image.</p>
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<p><em><a href="http://www.simonocarrigan.com.au">Simon O&#8217;Carrigan</a>.</em></p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_final_days.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_final_days.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Final Days. 2006. Oil on canvas. 120 x 160 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Was the drowned world itself, and the mysterious quest for the south which had possessed Hardman, no more than an impulse to suicide, an unconscious acceptance of the logic of his own devolutionary descent, the ultimate neuronic synthesis of the archaeopsychic zero? </p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_progress1.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_progress1.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Louisian Ha Long (3121). 2007. Oil &#038; mixed media on canvas. 80 x 60 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>The Mediterranean contracted into a system of inland lakes, the British Isles was linked again with northern France. The Middle West of the United States, filled by the Mississippi as it drained the Rocky Mountains, became an enormous gulf opening into the Hudson Bay, while the Caribbean Sea was transformed into a desert of silt and salt flats. Europe became a system of giant lagoons, centred on the principal low-lying cities, inundated by the silt carried southwards by the expanding rivers.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_surfacing.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_surfacing.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Surfacing (Cataract). 2007. Oil on canvas &#038; acetate. 76 x 51 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>The bulk of the city had long since vanished, and only the steel-supported buildings of the central commercial and financial areas had survived the encroaching flood waters. The brick houses and single-storey factories of the suburbs had disappeared completely below the drifting tides of silt. Where these broke surface giant forests reared up into the burning dull-green sky, smothering the former wheatfields of temperate Europe and North America.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_acid_lake.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_acid_lake.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Acid Lake (Tidal Fold). 2007. Oil on canvas. 60 x 101 cm (two panels).</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Many of the smaller lakes were now filled by the silt, yellow discs of fungus-covered sludge from which a profuse tangle of competing plant forms emerged, walled gardens in an insane Eden.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_deluge.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_deluge.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. After the Deluge (First Light Over Neo Atlantis). 2007. Oil on canvas &#038; foamcore. 91 x 122 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>When the first of the storm-belts moved off the visibility cleared, and he could see the southern edge of the sea, a line of tremendous silt banks over a hundred yards in height. In the spasmodic sunlight they glittered along the horizon like fields of gold, the tops of the jungle beyond rising above them.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_effusion.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_effusion.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Ef(fusion). 2007. Oil on canvas, digital lambda print, foamcore. 66 x 75 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Only fifty miles to the south, the rain-clouds were packed together in tight layers, blotting out the swamps and archipelagos of the horizon. Obscured by the events of the past week, the archaic sun in his mind beat again continuously with its immense power, its identity merging now with that of the real sun visible behind the rain clouds. Relentless and magnetic, it called him southward, to the great heat and submerged lagoons of the Equator.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_rip_tide.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_rip_current.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Rip/Current (We&#8217;ll Burn That Bridge When We Come To It). 2007. Oil on canvas. 61 x 61 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Huge pools of water still lay about everywhere, leaking from the ground floors of the buildings, but they were little more than two or three feet deep. There were clear stretches of pavement over a hundred yards long, and many of the further streets were completely drained. Dying fish and marine plants expired in the centre of the roadways, and huge banks of black sludge were silted up into the gutters and over the sidewalks, but fortunately the escaping waters had cut long pathways through them.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_please_dump.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_please_dump.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Please Dump Garbage. 2008. Mixed media, solvent transfer on Arches archival paper. 40 x 60 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>As the sun rose over the lagoon, driving clouds of steam into the great golden pall, Kerans felt the terrible stench of the water-line, the sweet compacted smells of dead vegetation and rotting animal carcasses. Huge flies spun by, bouncing off the wire cage of the cutter, and giant bats raced across the heating water towards their eyries in the ruined buildings. Beautiful and serene from his balcony a few minutes earlier, Kerans realized that the lagoon was nothing more than a garbage-filled swamp.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_rain_dogs.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_rain_dogs.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Rain Dogs. 2008. Mixed media, solvent transfer on Arches archival paper. 60 x 40 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>With the reappearance of the submerged streets and buildings his entire manner had changed abruptly. All traces of courtly refinement and laconic humour had vanished; he was now callous and vulpine, the renegade spirit of the hoodlum streets returning to his lost playground. It was almost as if the presence of the water had anaesthetized him, smothering his true character so that only the surface veneer of charm and moodiness remained.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_alter_piece.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_alter_piece.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Alter-Piece (Flow). 2007. Oil on canvas &#038; acetate, projected video. Dimensions variable, 51 x 64 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Down the side-streets they could see the great viscous mass lifting over the rooftops, flowing through the gutted buildings&#8230;  Here and there the perimeter of the dyke moored itself to a heavier obstruction &#8211; a church or government office &#8211; and diverged from its circular path around the lagoon.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_fissure.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_fissure.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Fissure (Under the Weather Projection). 2007. Oil on canvas, projected video. Dimensions variable (120 x 120 cm).</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Perhaps these sunken lagoons simply remind me of the drowned world of my uterine childhood &#8211; if so, the best thing is to leave straight away. Everything Riggs says is true. There&#8217;s little hope of standing up to the<br />
rainstorms and the malaria&#8217;.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_lagoon.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_lagoon.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Lagoon. 2008. Mixed media, solvent transfer on Arches archival paper. 30 x 60 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Soon it would be too hot. Looking out from the hotel balcony shortly after eight o&#8217;clock, Kerans watched the sun rise behind the dense groves of giant gymnosperms crowding over the roofs of the abandoned department stores four hundred yards away on the east side of the lagoon. Even through the massive olive-green fronds the relentless power of the sun was plainly tangible.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_lagoon2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_lagoon2.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Lagoon #2. 2008. Mixed media, solvent transfer on Arches archival paper. 60 x 40 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Many of the lagoons in the centre of the city were surrounded by an intact ring of buildings, and consequently little silt had entered them. Free of vegetation, apart from a few drifting clumps of Sargaso weed, the streets and shops had been preserved almost intact, like a reflection in a lake that has somehow lost its original.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_studies1.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_studies1.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Study for “Lagoon”. 2008. Mixed media on paper. 15 x 20 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Behind the building was an enormous bank of silt, reaching upwards out of the surrounding swamp to the railings of the terrace, on to which spilled a luxurious outcrop of vegetation. Ducking below the broad fronds of the fern-trees, he raced along to the barrage, fitted between the end of the building and the shoulder of the adjacent office block. Apart from the exit creek on the far side of the lagoon where the pumping scows had been stationed, this was the only major entry point for the water that had passed into the lagoon. </p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_studies4.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_studies4.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Study for “Lagoon”. 2008. Mixed media on paper. 15 x 20 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>With a dull rumbling roar of collapsing buildings, the sea poured in full flood.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_studies5.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/soc_studies5.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Simon O'Carrigan" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Study for “Lagoon”. 2008. Mixed media on paper. 20 x 15 cm.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Too many of the other buildings around the lagoon had long since slipped and slid away below the silt, revealing their gimcrack origins, and the Ritz now stood in splendid isolation on the west shore, even the rich blue moulds sprouting from the carpets in the dark corridors adding to its 19th-century dignity.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><em>Simon O&#8217;Carrigan. Lagoon (from The Drowned World). 2008. Paper cut out &#038; oil on acetate. 12 sec.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Slowly the interval of water widened to a hundred and then two hundred yards, and he reached the first of the small islands that grew out of the swamp on the roofs of isolated buildings. Hidden by them, he sat up and reefed<br />
the sail, then looked back for the last time at the perimeter of the lagoon.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard. The Drowned World (1962).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>+</strong> More info: <a href="http://www.simonocarrigan.com.au">Simon O&#8217;Carrigan</a></p>
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<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ambiguous-aims-a-review-of-crash-homage-to-j-g-ballard">“Ambiguous aims”: a review of Crash: Homage to J.G. Ballard [NSFW]</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-office-park">The Office Park</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ann-lislegaard-crystal-world-after-jg-ballard">Ann Lislegaard: &#8216;Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard)&#8217;</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/drained-london">Drowned London</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/flooded-london">Flooded London</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/paradigm-of-nowhere-shepperton-photo-essay-1">&#8216;Paradigm of nowhere&#8217;: Shepperton, a photo essay</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute">J.G. Ballard: the Visual Tribute</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jon-cattapans-drowned-world">Jon Cattapan&#8217;s Drowned World</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Future Ruins</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Review: Jeremy Reed&#8217;s West End Survival Kit</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/review-jeremy-reeds-west-end-survival-kit</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/review-jeremy-reeds-west-end-survival-kit#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Feb 2010 04:15:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[biology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[boredom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CCTV]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A review-essay of Jeremy Reed's latest collection of poetry, West End Survival Kit. The review also discusses the long and enigmatic relationship Reed has with Ballard, who wrote the foreword to the collection, where he paid tribute to Reed's 'extraterrestrial talent'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /></p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed at the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/rick-mcgraths-letter-from-london-jg-ballard-memorial">JG Ballard Memorial</a>, 2009. Photo: Rick McGrath.</em></p>
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<p><em>West End Survival Kit, by Jeremy Reed. Furze Hill, Hove: Waterloo Press, 2009. ISBN: 978-1-906742-07-2.</em></p>
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<p><strong>JEREMY REED IS A HUGELY PROLIFIC</strong> poet, novelist, biographer and spoken-word musician, the author of 15 novels, 16 poetry collections and 14 works of non-fiction since 1984. Yet despite that phenomenal output, he remains an exile in British letters. <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">According to Reed</a>, ‘People have reacted so nastily to me and tried to airbrush me out of the picture…  The establishment never forgave me, because I used to give readings in heavy make-up’. That’s not a working method that was ever going to appeal to Sir Andrew Motion, the former Poet Laureate, who famously dubbed Reed ‘that effete little pseud’. He also sledged him as the ‘David Bowie of the poetry circuit’, an especially backhanded insult, given Reed’s sartorial style and the fact that among his back catalogue are biographies on Lou Reed, Marc Almond and Brian Jones. In fact, the latter provided one very revealing insight into the mind of Jeremy Reed. Once asked what he thought was the defining moment of the 60s, <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">he replied</a>: ‘I&#8217;d say it was the first time Brian Jones wore a girl’s polka-dotted blouse. It had never been done before’. In the same interview, he derided ‘the barbiturate poetry of Andrew Motion and those post-Larkin poets. Very grey, very drab’. And so the stage is set.</p>
<p>Following the pattern of this exile, whenever there is talk about the latter-day British writers who enjoyed the friendship, patronage or thematic repertoire of J.G. Ballard, invariably the same names are mentioned: <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/this-most-astonishing-penumbra-will-self-on-jg-ballard">Will Self</a> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/his-personal-horizon-sinclair-and-self-on-ballard">and</a> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">Iain Sinclair</a>. Not Reed. Yet Reed and Ballard enjoy a long and very intriguing relationship. Reed’s science-fiction novel <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FDiamond-Nebula-Jeremy-Reed%2Fdp%2F0720609224%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265596967%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Diamond Nebula</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> (1994), set in the 23rd century, even featured a film-director character obsessed by Bowie, Ballard and Warhol:</p>
<blockquote><p>Her eye was arrested by an open photograph album … David Bowie at the Rainbow Theatre, 1972; at the LA Forum in 1976; Hiroshima, 1973; LA Amphitheatre, 1974; Wembley, 1976: the images seeming to have been chosen for their visual diversity and metamorphoses. Over the page were weirdly angled shots of Ballard getting into his car at Shepperton after the publication of Crash; and then the publicity photographs of him that had appeared on the jackets of High-Rise and Myths of the Near Future, together with a series of solarized images in the manner of Man Ray, in which the writer’s head was superimposed on Brancusi sculptures. Cindy flicked through the obsessive preoccupations: Warhol screened by black glasses on a couch at the Factory, and then seen filming Edie Sedgwick and Gino Persicho in Beauty 2; and a few pages on, isolated, filming Chelsea Girls.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, Diamond Nebula.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>These aren’t the ordinary images of Ballard (let alone Bowie) that get bandied about. They are cult snapshots, taken by a writer with a fan’s eye for obscure detail surrounding the object of worship. As an alternative biography, then, of its three avant-garde celebrities, Diamond Nebula is a tantalising work, drawing on Reed’s main obsessions: style, flashy pop, mutation (both psychic and physical), cult fame, inner space … and Ballard.  In the preface to the book, Reed describes ‘Ballard as the chief proponent of the futuristic novel … seen as the person most receptive to occupying a colony that looks towards the arrival of mutants from another galaxy’. Reed talks of creating an environment in which ‘the external world provides a backdrop to the exploration of inner space, a vanishing-point rather than a structure for continuous reference’, and with further reference to the ‘geography of the unconscious’, it’s easy to realise the superficial similarities with Ballard’s own working methods and obsessions.</p>
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<p><em>Jeremy Reed speaking to Nicky Singer at the ICA.</em></p>
<p>In interview, too, Reed always pays his dues, <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">recording his writerly debt</a> to Ballard’s ‘visionary present’ – an especial act of linguistic engagement that ‘transform[s] the universe into its imagined equivalent’ and provides an instruction manual in ‘blowing up the social structure’. <a href="http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/2005/dec/interview_jeremy_reed.shtml">He sees</a> Ballard’s work as a hotwire to the pure, uncut imaginative spirit that also powers the work of Stephen Barber and Edmund White:</p>
<blockquote><p>They all have that very charged language. When I began as a writer, Ballard was the writer who had a new language that I was looking for, the way he crystallised the modern world into images. It’s something that he has never lost. Ballard is not part of literature at any level, he’s got no concern about it at all. He&#8217;s a rogue gene which is what attracted me to him from the start. And work is all he is, what he writes is so integral to him. That’s all he does all day, write all day and live in Shepperton.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/west_end_kit.jpg" class="picleft" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /> But the admiration cut both ways. According to <a href="http://www.jgballard.ca">Rick McGrath</a>, Ballard provided blurbs for 12 of Reed’s books and wrote forewords to two others, more JGB endorsements than for any other writer. One of the forewords was for Reed’s latest collection of poetry, <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk/pages/poetry-shop.php">West End Survival Kit</a> (2009), possibly the last writing Ballard had published, in which he enthuses about Reed’s ‘talent … almost extraterrestrial in its brilliance’. For Ballard, Reed is ‘Rimbaud reconfigured as the Man who fell to Earth, a visitor from deep space whose time machine was designed by Lautréamont and de Sade, and powered by the most exotic fuels the imagination has ever devised’. That’s a very dense sentence, pricking imagistic sensors of recognition in almost every one of its 36 words: Bowie, Roeg, symbolism, science fiction, surrealism, film, sadomasochism, inner space…</p>
<p>And so it is with these poems, which are compacted like diamonds, an intent signalled by this excerpt:</p>
<blockquote><p>firing ideas at me like big hitters<br />
for work we do<br />
shape-shifting architecture into words,</p>
<p>the way 10 million atoms colonize<br />
an inked full stop.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, ‘Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream’, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The back cover gives no real description of the contents, save for general endorsements from a stellar cast: Ballard, David Gascoyne, David Lodge and Seamus Heaney. We are led to believe that this is a collection of free-standing poems, and reading them is simultaneously exhilarating and exhausting. Reed is obsessed with both surface flash and the hidden layers of meaning inherent in modern urban life, with which we constantly negotiate and are in dialogue with: the meaning of ‘junk DNA’ and the enigma of Michael Jackson, the sigils in corporate signage, the mental cross-chatter engendered by rapid communications technology. His street-level descriptions are often as unfathomable as conspiracy theory, and shot through with a selection of barely glimpsed, constantly rotating characters (including a first-person narrator), invariably described within a mesh of techy jargon:</p>
<blockquote><p>meditating in front of his mezzanine.<br />
His girlfriend paints her toes<br />
in Howard Hodgkin moods,</p>
<p>reads Holy Anorexia and grooves<br />
at being air<br />
she&#8217;s molecules wired to neuronal drive.</p>
<p>He&#8217;s into &#8216;dark matter&#8217;, lab neutrinos,<br />
thermonuclear fusion<br />
generating energy in the sun.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, ‘Astroparticle Physicist Chills’, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The writing is a rush, a blur. It&#8217;s slippery, emphasised by quick-fire, three-line stanzas:</p>
<blockquote><p>They share headphones on the new R.E.M.:<br />
a shimmering slice of post-modern pop,<br />
impersonal as an airport lounge,</p>
<p>riffy, mid-tempo anomie<br />
for the 21st century.<br />
He wears a Titian red Gucci jacket,</p>
<p>as though it&#8217;s cut out of the sun,<br />
and she two dollops of mauve eye shadow<br />
co-ordinating with her top.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Endgames&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Certain motifs begin to gestate a picture in the mind as you gradually learn through half-remembered, diaphanous glimpses that Mars and the moon have been colonised; dispossessed astronauts wander the Earth; drugs are rampant; and technological virtuality is encoded into the very fabric of everyday life. By the end, you are left with the inkling that the poems are perhaps not free-standing, but part of a continuous (albeit fractured) narrative, illuminated snapshots of a mordant near-future world seen from multiple, cross-linked perspectives. They could be interior hallucinations, or the exterior unspooling vision of CCTV cameras all over the city, but whatever they are, they are engendered by Reed’s very effective trick of repeating a motif, phrase or word from one poem to the next, but never more than two poems in a row. Subliminally, you become aware of a deep, unfolding narrative, even if consciously you assess that you are reading two poems with very different characters:</p>
<blockquote><p>ten miles above Cape Canaveral.<br />
He journeys back in his neurology<br />
to pink skies over the oxygen plant,</p>
<p>graffiti discovered on a rock face &#8211;<br />
RAD51D &#8212; the king&#8217;s returned &#8212;<br />
and gantried higher up a gold statue</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Red Planet Blues&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Someone&#8217;s got the dangling hexagonal<br />
molecule RAD51D<br />
under scrutiny for cell death</p>
<p>like a registration number<br />
on a top security Jeep.<br />
She&#8217;s paid to disinform. Each day</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Drug Giant PA&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Given all the Ballard associations, it’s tempting to read Ballardian themes into the work (the damaged astronauts fit well) and the densified prose method strives to convey as much meaning as the ‘condensed novels’ in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>. Vaughan from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> (and Atrocity) even makes an appearance, enmeshed in a shady deal with the clone of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/chariot-of-fire-death-diana-princess-of-wales">Princess Di</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>H.R.H. has a contract out<br />
on this blonde afterlife simulacrum:<br />
Di as an endlessly repeatable clone.</p>
<p>Vaughan knows he&#8217;s watched. The Jeep outside<br />
has on-board machine guns, a snoop<br />
positioned in it with a cold black eye.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;The Reckoning&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed3.jpg" class="picleft" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /></p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed &#8211; photograph courtesy Waterloo Press.</em> </p>
<p>But in the end, the most obvious reference point seems to be the glistening, cypher-filled, pop-artefact worlds of William Gibson. The characters in West End Survival Kit come on like Case from <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FNeuromancer-William-Gibson%2Fdp%2F0006480411%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265598487%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Neuromancer</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> crashlanding in London (which has merged with Tokyo, as it did in Reed’s 2008 novel <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FGrid-Jeremy-Reed%2Fdp%2F0720613035%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265606462%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Grid</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />), as if Case was too burnt out to even care about fixing his damaged neurosystem, too jaded to even muster up any more passion for his beloved cyberspace. In <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-grid-by-jeremy-reed-942328.html">her review</a> of The Grid, Bidisha wrote that ‘one wishes Reed would produce a scholarly work about Jacobean theatre instead of an inexpert cyber-romp. His next work should be excellent, but it shouldn&#8217;t meddle with the future. Reed&#8217;s seriousness and intelligence emerge when he drops his coolness and cleaves to the past’. But this sounds more like the kind of genre snobbery Ballard was forced to endure when he, too, dared to write science fiction. Reed does post-cyberpunk very well: he has a real feel for the imagery, the characters and the worldview, and like both Gibson and Ballard, he is interested in the next 5 minutes rather than the next 500 years. For Reed, too, science fiction is the sociological study of the present. Yet he infuses this with his own ‘extraterrestrial’ brand of theatricality, poetic sensibility and mutant, gender-bending attitude to create a hybrid form. As science-fiction poetry, it recalls the work of <a href="http://www.aural-innovations.com/robertcalvert/index.htm">Robert Calvert</a>, the late Hawkwind lyricist and lead singer, and another tortured anti-hero whose own life story could easily inhabit the Reed pantheon. </p>
<p>Towards the end of West End Survival Kit, Reed ties it all up with two poems about, of all things, the history of Pink Floyd. And given all of the above, it makes perfect sense. As the poem identifies, the classic-era Floyd, despite being saddled with what people assumed was an intergalactic persona, was always more about inner space than outer (like Ballard’s anomie-infested astronauts), producing a brace of albums that reflected with sensitivity on battered individuals like their founder Syd Barrett, as in Wish You Were Here, and the assorted lunatics in the cast of Dark Side of the Moon. The Floyd poems make a fitting coda to Reed&#8217;s painful folio of snapshots from a numb world. They solidify his eulogy to people too disconnected, too exiled in their own minds to ever tread ‘meaningful’ paths through life, but who nonetheless retain a unique sense of self allied to their damaged intelligence:</p>
<blockquote><p>
Barrett’s the rock astronomer<br />
boating the Cam’s lime green spine,<br />
wristing downriver like a water-boatman</p>
<p>listening to voices, his schizophrenia<br />
big in the mix<br />
like invasive radio.<br />
…<br />
Echoing slide. It’s paranoia synthesised –<br />
their moon trip – dark side in reverse.<br />
Barrett’s still running through a corridor</p>
<p>As undertow, a brain damaged psycho.<br />
The music road maps inner space.<br />
It’s like a river knocking at the door.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, ‘Brain Damage: a short history of the Pink Floyd&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>It&#8217;s out there somewhere, while the London rain</p>
<p>slashes the light-polluted scuzz,<br />
wacks down fried leaves, keeps me inside<br />
this rainy, orange October day,<br />
retrieving the Floyd&#8217;s mission to locate<br />
the alien in the psychopath.<br />
Outside my window a wet jay</p>
<p>jabs at a red berry gash.<br />
I go out on their dimension,<br />
beamed by the music&#8217;s escalating curve,<br />
back to my youth and Apollo<br />
cargoing human hardware to the moon &#8211;</p>
<p>their weighted boots grating on dust,<br />
Pink Floyd the terrestrial soundtrack<br />
to space conquest, a white plateau<br />
opening out to three astronauts<br />
learning by hesitant degrees to trust.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Wish You Were Here&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>West End Survival Kit is not wholly successful (although it&#8217;s pretty close). It briefly falls flat, for example, when Reed makes reference to ‘psychogeography’, a loaded concept degraded through cultural overuse that, although undoubtedly inherent within the work, sounds inauthentic when actually named and nudged up against his own dream geographies. Yet mostly, Reed’s innate ability to explore new genres, new forms and new plans of attack in the hope of creating something extreme and unique makes the work well worth reading. As Bidisha implies, it is probably this genre slippage that is the real cause of Reed’s exile, but somehow, given the figures with which he identifies, you get the impression that on some level that&#8217;s how he likes it.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Video surveillance sights the street. The city leaks pathology&#8230;’ We know exactly what Jeremy means, though we may never have thought of our everyday world in these terms. The poet is our extraterrestrial visitor, calmly surveying everything, the highspeed neural networks of his poetic gift assessing the landscape, making only the most important connections, linking the present moment to the most vital possibilities of itself … Use this volume of poems as a guide-book to the present, to the real world of possibility that most of us ignore. It&#8217;s the poet&#8217;s job to be a seer, to seize us by the shoulders and force us to out-stare the mirage. Reading these poems, I find myself marvelling at their cleverness and brilliance, and saying: ‘&#8230;yes, yes, absolutely.’</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, foreword to West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
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<p>West End Survival Kit can be purchased <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk/pages/poetry-shop.php">direct from the publisher</a>.</p>
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<p><em>Jeremy Reed performing with Itchy Ear as The Ginger Light, &#8216;a progressive poetry act&#8217;.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /> <img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /></p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed &#8211; photographer(s) unknown.</em> </p>
<p><em>Thanks to Shane for help with research for this article.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: More information:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.jeremyreed.co.uk">Jeremy Reed</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk">Waterloo Press</a></p>
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<p><strong>REFERENCES</strong><br />
Bidisha (2008). <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-grid-by-jeremy-reed-942328.html">&#8216;The Grid, by Jeremy Reed&#8217;</a>. The Independent, 28 September.<br />
Carter, Randolph (2006). <a href="http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/2005/dec/interview_jeremy_reed.shtml">&#8216;Dreaming with his eyes open&#8217;</a>. 3am Magazine.<br />
Lachman, Gary (2006). <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">Jeremy Reed: A supernova in orange and purple ink</a>. The Independent, 30 July.<br />
Reed, Jeremy (1994) <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FDiamond-Nebula-Jeremy-Reed%2Fdp%2F0720609224%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265596967%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Diamond Nebula</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. London: Peter Owen.<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;- (2008). <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk/pages/poetry-shop.php">West End Survival Kit</a>. Furze Hill, Hove: Waterloo Press.</p>
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		<title>Edward Burtynsky: Oil &#8211; A Ballardian Interpretation</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/edward-burtynsky-oil-a-ballardian-interpretation</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/edward-burtynsky-oil-a-ballardian-interpretation#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:29:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Roth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Edward Burtynsky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Edward Burtynsky's photographs of quarries, factories, mining pits and railcuts are extraordinary for their depiction of mankind's organisation of the land for resource-extraction and profit. Paul Roth makes the case that Burtynsky is one of our most Ballardian artists. Adopting a style in overt homage to Ballard, the essay honours his legacy as the foremost imaginative interpreter of the world Burtynsky documents. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>Paul Roth</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_coldlake.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_coldlake.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Oil Fields #22, Cold Lake Production Project, Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada,  2001. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>I recently organized an exhibition of photographs by Edward Burtynsky, bringing together 12 years of his imagery on the subject of oil at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Burtynsky, a Canadian born of Ukrainian heritage in 1955, is respected internationally for his 25-year focus on industrially-transformed landscapes. His photographs of quarries, factories, mining pits, and railcuts are extraordinary for their depiction of mankind&#8217;s organization of the land for resource-extraction and profit. Jennifer Baichwal&#8217;s 2006 documentary Manufactured Landscapes is an excellent portrait of Burtynsky, and I highly recommend a viewing of both the DVD and his great books, which include Manufactured Landscapes (2003); Burtynsky – China (2005); and Edward Burtynsky – Quarries (2006). </p>
<p>In organizing the exhibition, it occurred to me that Burtynsky is one of our most Ballardian artists. His intense concentration on the technological sublime; the precisionist geometries of his images; and his evocation of a rationalist (yet mysterious) automatism at the heart of the relationship between man and nature: all seem absolutely the inheritance of Ballard’s insightful understanding of our times.</p>
<p>In writing an essay for the book that accompanies the Corcoran exhibition, I adopted a style in overt homage to Ballard &#8212; in hopes that such a literary strategy might help illuminate this great body of work. I also wanted to honor Ballard’s legacy as the foremost imaginative interpreter of the world Burtynsky documents. The editors of Ballardian.com have graciously agreed to reprint the essay here as an extension of that homage. Readers of this site will recognize the tropes, the ideas, and the specific sources I’ve drawn from Ballard’s oeuvre; I hope they will forgive any lapses, or excesses, as my own error.</p>
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<p><em>Paul Roth<br />
Senior Curator of Photography and Media Arts, Corcoran Gallery of Art</em></p>
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<p>To learn more about the Corcoran exhibition Edward Burtynsky: Oil: <a href="http://www.corcoran.org/burtynsky/index.php">http://www.corcoran.org/burtynsky/index.php</a><br />
To learn more about the book: <a href="http://www.steidlville.com/books/968-Oil.html">http://www.steidlville.com/books/968-Oil.html</a><br />
To learn more about the artist: <a href="http://www.edwardburtynsky.com">http://www.edwardburtynsky.com</a></p>
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<p><em>All images can be clicked to enlarge.</em></p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_chittagong1.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_chittagong1.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Recycling #2, Chittagong, Bangladesh, 2001. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>The subject is not oil. </p>
<p>In these pictures, Edward Burtynsky shows the man-made world—the human ecosystem—that has risen up around the production, use, and dwindling availability of our paramount energy source. The mechanics and industry of extraction and refinement; the development, products, and activities associated with transportation and motor culture; and the wreckage, obsolescence, and human cost that lies at the End of Oil. These photographs are about man, and what he has made of the earth. </p>
<p>Burtynsky starts at the center of the subject, at oil’s source; then moves outward around the world, showing its use. By their arrangement, the photographs survey a life cycle. Each black drop follows a path; following the pictorial sequence, we can imagine ourselves trailing in its wake. </p>
<p>The journey is an unusual one. We have rarely seen images of these places. Some, we didn’t know existed; others, we never thought we’d see. Has any artist ever documented this manifold subject in such depth? </p>
<p>This is a new form of epic history painting. Turning his camera lens to a fever dream, Burtynsky forges a new mythology for the 21st century from the lexicon of realism. With stunning detail, from improbable perches, in strange and beautiful colors, these pictures show their subjects with clinical accuracy, and with definitive force. But they also tell a parallel and more inchoate tale: a critique of civilization, and a foretelling of human ends. </p>
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<p><strong>Extractions</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_westley.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_westley.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Oxford Tire Pile #9ab, Westley, California, USA, 1999. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>Some visual experiences test our capacity for explanation—our ability to extract meaning, or convey affect, through existing vocabulary. </p>
<p>In particular, photography can provoke this failure of translation. The old notion—that a picture is worth a thousand words—implies a trade. It suggests that we cannot have both image and meaning at once; possessing a picture, we must barter for its logic. When we are in the thrall of a photograph, we surrender its equivalent in language. </p>
<p>The most powerful photographs, in fact, steal our words. They resist explication or a resolution, refuse our comprehension, render us speechless. Stilling time, preserving the ghost of a moment to be revisited in perpetuity, photography conjures the past, feeds the present, and hints at the future. Mere words can hardly contend with the magic of its revelation. </p>
<p>Again and again, Burtynsky’s images of oil provoke this mute, uncanny exchange. Documentary scenes of crystalline description, of staggering scale and complexity, they nevertheless have a composed, unblinking authority. They resound with a perfect silence. </p>
<p>One might argue that the real force and meaning of these images is not readily apparent in the scenes Burtynsky photographs. Rather, it bubbles from beneath, emerging from an enormous oceanic swell: the remnant energy of a younger sun, compacted by eons of time and pressure into the geologic strata, far below the surface. </p>
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<p><strong>The Unseen Reservoir</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_alberta.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_alberta.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Alberta Oil Sands #6, Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada, 2007. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>These places are curiously familiar, as though inscribed in our synaptic gaps. </p>
<p>You look down from above. Inscribed on the scene below are the shapes and contours of commercial organization. You look past machinery and roads, large tanks and angled pipelines, to see the ground: quickly you sense what lies embedded in the earth, the object of the activity above. </p>
<p>A river system, of black viscous streams and oily tributaries, extending in every direction, not on a single plane but dimensionally up, down, left, right, a surround. A hidden root system leading to a vast reservoir. Veins, spreading through a body. Not contained by borders. Flowing everywhere, touching everything, affecting all. </p>
<p>Among Burtynsky’s images of the oil sands of Alberta, Canada, in scenes of the surface mining that yields bitumen, vast pools of crude oil swirl and eddy: littoral zones of the apocalypse. They offer a strange double mirror, reflecting both the clouds floating above and the reservoir below. Astonishing, beautiful even, they are the discharge of abscesses, man-made sores in the skin of the earth. The ruptures of oil’s forced disclosure. </p>
<p>In this artist’s envisioning, oil derricks near Bakersfield, California become great mechanical mosquitoes. Standing obediently in rows, they suck at the earth, desiccating their surroundings in service of an unlimited thirst. Arresting the metronomic rhythm of these drilling machines, Burtynsky’s lens conveys an impassive threat: a slow-moving industrial vampirism, perhaps, or the glacial decline of a junkie, reaching deeper to hit a vein. </p>
<p>The submerged river of oil has its conscious match in the aboveground structures devised to prepare it for use. In his images of refineries, Burtynsky tracks the labyrinthine pipe systems that guide oil through its many intermediate process streams. Like capillary beds, or the neural pathways that fire our brains, these industrial tangles are oddly biological. </p>
<p>We cannot shake the sense that we have seen these places in our dreams. The details are of course rooted in reality; but they suggest a hidden psychology, a liminal space channeling between the images. A terra incognita—a boundless, technological biome—united by a psychopathology of oil. If these are visions of our shared subconscious, they seem to foretell the future. </p>
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<p><strong>Invisible Seer</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_walcott.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_walcott.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Trucker’s Jamboree, Walcott, Iowa, USA, 2003. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>In these photographs, as in dreams, the viewpoint is a disembodied one. We hover out of sight, watching from a remove: our perspective, that of an invisible seer. Sojourning witnesses to extraordinary scenes, we are present at critical moments, in hidden places, from impossible positions. Each is revealed in broad scope, and with abundant detail both familiar and unrecognizable. The tone is bipolar—intense and dispassionate; disoriented, yet strangely taciturn. </p>
<p>Burtynsky’s overhead views of motor culture events reflect this schizophrenia. At Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats and South Dakota’s Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, spectators mill about blankly: automata, dutifully performing their roles in a big budget film. Pictured at a remove, their reactions to their peculiar surroundings go unseen. </p>
<p>As a trucker’s jamboree in Iowa falls under dusk, visitors navigate a parking lot by the warm light of underbody neon, emanating from the tractor units. On the asphalt, yellow stripes radiate outward from a central line, guiding our eye from one shiny machine to the next. Positioned at angles and spaced for inspection, the semi cabs glow with sterile festivity. </p>
<p>The artist’s outlook assumes a cold authority, a depersonalization. Through the lens, we assume his viewpoint. Absent overt mediation, we are simply present, watching. We sense no filter, no interpretative voice to cloud our knowledge. No camera to bring us the view. Our insight seems total. </p>
<p>This is, in fact, a trope of landscape art. A naturalism of “view” offers the illusion of an unmediated self-presentation. Authoring itself, a place simply rises up before our eyes. (Burtynsky would also recognize this verisimilitude as a characteristic pretense of photographic documentary.) The implication is that our experience is definitive. Our vantage is that of an impassive bird, flying invisibly overhead, surveying the world with stately reserve. </p>
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<p><strong>The Overlook</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_tucson.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_tucson.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, AMARC #5, Davis-Monthan AFB, Tuscon, Arizona, USA, 2006. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>Or is it a god’s eye view, the perspective of a deity or monarch? </p>
<p>Burtynsky’s photographs are often made from the sky. Lifts, cranes, and helicopters provide the perch; but his vistas have an aura of impossibility. Even when standing on the ground, Burtynsky’s perspective seems one from on high, ordering and immutable. The detachment of his view imparts a seductive, undeniable power. </p>
<p>Gatherings, interstate highways, landscape mutations: all unfold below like prophecy. Despite their physical remoteness, and their ambiguous mood of alienation, we feel we have seen them before; and now, passing overhead, we are revenants, returning to the scene with a glimmer of insight. </p>
<p>For example: homes, cars, and airplanes, parked in rigid alignment by the dozens or hundreds, recede into the distance, an inventory of shelter and transport. A tanker ship, floating by a refinery depot, tells the whole story of oil’s distribution in its massive bulk. In an industrial subdivision, sun-bleached rooftops appear like chips on a computer motherboard, captured from above by satellite imaging. </p>
<p>The photographs have an evidentiary quality, in the manner of crime scenes. Clues are embedded in the details. Looking down from above, we see the indicators of mastery and control. The land divided, the elements negotiated, resources marshaled: nature coexisting with the promise of its own destruction. An invisible grid overlays each locale—a diagram of exploitation, the vectors of progress.</p>
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<p><strong>Mapping the Unknown</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_belridge.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_belridge.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Oil Fields #19ab, Belridge, California, 2003. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>Like his progenitors, the great American expeditionary landscape photographers of the 19th century, Burtynsky surveys the territory. His camera is the instrument of a visionary cartography. </p>
<p>While Timothy O’Sullivan, Carleton Watkins, and William Henry Jackson photographed an undeveloped landscape (the “American West”) in the early stages of its colonization, this artist maps a world that has already been radically shaped and ordered, rendered into submission. The place of his geovisualization is a psychological zone, previously uncharted—a vast, discontinuous “Petrolia” of the mind—encompassing events, locations, and people under the sovereignty of oil. </p>
<p>This visionary terrain opposes utopias we’ve seen before in landscape art. The painted vistas of the Hudson River School, for example, imply a permanent future of uncorrupted nature (“virgin spaces,” in the term of art historian Barbara Novak) despite the encroachment of mankind. A harmony prevails, between the transcendent beauty of nature and the civilizing development once thought to honor God’s creation. </p>
<p>Burtynsky’s atlas of dystopia exposes such fantasies. The deceptions of manifest destiny are revealed in the bright light of day. </p>
<p>In one image, we see a pipeline, directing recovery from the oil sands of Alberta, Canada, through a clearing in a forest. Its sinuous channel follows the contours of the woods; only on second glance do we realize the tree line has been re-shaped, altered by the placement of the conduit. Honoring the herculean effort that brings energy to the surface, nature bends to our will. </p>
<p>The place being mapped is really a complex system, and its topography, a connective network. Burtynsky renders his Petrolia as a set of relationships, organized for production: an autopoiesis, the interlocking elements of a cybernetic organism. His images reveal the mechanisms of our world of oil. </p>
<p>The gridlines of this imaginary territory connect at the vanishing points evident in many of the photographs. They become a pivot for our vision, an axis on which our understanding turns. Hidden meanings become evident as we look from one image to the next: places, people, their transport and leisure, all are united by oil as it is taken from the ground, refined, used, and then filters back into the earth, leaving a sediment of scrap and offal. </p>
<p>We navigate Petrolia through the branching passages of a maze; even when our route is circuitous, it unfolds by a fixed logic. We slide into a labyrinth. </p>
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<p><strong>Vertigo</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_losangeles.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_losangeles.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Highway #1, Intersection 105 &#038; 110, Los Angeles, California, USA, 2003. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>In many images, Burtynsky’s mapping evokes both the abstraction of remote sensing and the vividness of ground truth. As our eyes shift from distant elements to the startling clarity of the foreground, an imbalance takes hold. There is a vertiginous quality, a tipping-forward in our view. </p>
<p>The totality of the artist’s scope results in a kind of visual bewilderment, an insistent voiding of perspective. What is nearby, directly below, rushes toward us, as though we were falling into it; by contrast, the horizon recedes into the distance, as though we were backing away. This schism has a powerful effect. At first the eye trips up, abstracting subject elements into a field of patterns. Then, just as quickly, we experience a visual argument between foreground and background that evokes other more consequential debates: between near and distant, center and periphery, present and future, the known and unknown. </p>
<p>This is not unintentional, nor is it mere stylistics. Burtynsky’s technique consistently provokes a crisis of vision. The elevated and the lowly (a dialectic common to landscape art) collide in the warring of perspectives. There is a strange volume to scenes viewed from on high: real places flatten into forms, space recedes in diagonal lines, and ground and horizon oscillate a magnetic field, one that both attracts and repels the eye. </p>
<p>If the word “landscape” implies a remove, the polite framing of a scene, Burtynsky—by contrast—attacks with the vertical imbalance of his view. Leaning forward, falling back, we are in the grip of fate. Our vantage conveys a sense, a submerged realization, that what we see, and where it will lead, has been foreordained. </p>
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<p><strong>A Certain Lucidity</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_baku.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_baku.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, SOCAR Oil Fields #1ab, Baku Azerbaijan, 2006. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>One historic purpose of landscape art is the representation of remote places. The landscapist—our visionary surrogate—ventures into the world, returning with scenes of faraway and inaccessible locales. The outside, if you will, is brought inside. The inhabitants of one realm, curious, experience another: a place of fascination outside their frame of reference. </p>
<p>Burtynsky’s photographs of unknown sites and obscure industrial activities exercise a startling authority. Remarkable scenes—vistas of junk, vast motorways, toxic labor conditions, tribal vehicular gatherings, strange colors loosed from the earth, and the wholesale reordering of nature—so irrationalize our sense of what surrounds us that they can hardly be believed. And yet there they are. </p>
<p>The artist’s images of derelict oil fields at Baku in Azerbaijan exemplify the uncanny means by which he depicts his Petrolia. Here is a place we were never meant to see: a remnant sea of oil, bubbling from the spend depths of a deposit. Ancient derricks cluster like dark herons, stuck in tar. </p>
<p>A whole new terrain emerges from the discards of the oil economy. Bluffs are formed from piles of densified oil filters, crushed fuel barrels, and the stamped cutaways of electrical system parts. In one diptych, Burtynsky confronts a massive wall of tires, rising up to form a new mountain range. Even this panoramic view can’t contain the astonishment of the scene; dark circles pile past the image edges, the strata of an automotive geology. </p>
<p>Burtynsky’s world of oil is beyond comprehension and outside our control. Industrial sites of extraordinary complexity and public works of remarkable scale severely test our suspension of disbelief. A profusion of detail overwhelms. The safe ground we normally stand on is pulled away. How is this possible, we wonder? Our minds strain at the shock of what we see. </p>
<p>The chief landscape tradition Burtynsky assays is that of the sublime. Edmund Burke, in his treatise A Philosophical Enquiry Into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1756), described the sublime as an evocation of anxiety in the face of nature, an exhilarating but fraught recognition of its illimitable power over humankind. When confronted by the sublime in the natural world—a raging flood, a hurricane, a precipitous cliff—man is overcome by an ecstasy of terror; thus awakening to the limits of his own dominion. </p>
<p>Many artists (most famously Caspar David Friedrich) have tried to represent sublime experience in the natural world. But Burtynsky draws his terrifying sublime from the world of order rather than the forces of the wild. The shock of his images derives from unimaginable scale, from crushing power; but not from God’s Nature. Rather: from the organization of resources for profit, from the plumbing of the earth to extract value. </p>
<p>Observing the machine, the electric light, the combustion engine, the dammed river, factory and city, airplane and car, we can imagine that man’s forward motion, from the Industrial Age on, has occasioned a new variation of the sublime. In the rise of modern technology, with its intimations of human mastery over time and space, the natural world has been rendered and contained; its force, dispersed; and our fear of God, tempered. The power of the environmental cosmos surrenders to the monstrous vacuity of science, mechanization, and progress. If, pace Nietzsche, God is dead; then it is man we must fear—and his creations. </p>
<p>In his book The Machine in the Garden (1964), historian Leo Marx describes 19th-century reaction to that era’s emerging marvels of industry and engineering: “The awe and reverence once reserved for the Deity and later bestowed upon the visible landscape is directed toward technology, or rather the technological conquest of matter.” The rise of the machine— and its subjugation of our surrounding environment—has engendered a new “technological sublime.” </p>
<p>This modern form of sublimity is more complex than mere technophobia. It acknowledges our dependence on automation, its betterments and pleasures; our astonishment at its extremes; and finally, our creeping terror at its consequentiality. We see no simplistic villainy in Burtynsky’s pictures—no industrial Golem, no homicidal Frankenstein. Rather, we see the ordering force of man, and the chilling, corrosive, penultimate threat that lies at the black heart of our rationalism. </p>
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<p><strong>Precipice</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_chittagong.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_chittagong.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Shipbreaking #13, Chittagong, Bangladesh, 2000. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>At the edge of the world, where the land falls inward and the sea drags at the sand, Burtynsky discovers an epic scene of industrial demolition: a portent of our coming extinction. </p>
<p>On a Bangladeshi shoreline, we see a netherworld of beached tanker ships, dismantled for scrap. The sky, a blank white, contrasts with the deep black of remnant oil, clinging to storage compartment walls. Workers cluster about their labors, their raiment stained a toxic brown. Looming up from the mud, jagged hulls tower like crumbling monasteries. We envision the dying-out of an old order. </p>
<p>In these scenes of shipbreaking, Burtynsky, with his mixture of awe and dispassion, his combination of wide-field view and dizzying detail— in short, his calm approach to the edge of the cliff—has marshaled all the elements common to representation of the sublime: obscurity, darkness, silence, vacuity, magnitude, vastness, infinity, difficulty, magnificence. We are immersed in a shadowland. Overcome, in the words of J.G. Ballard, by a marriage of reason and nightmare. </p>
<p>We will never visit this place. But we sense that Burtynsky has led us, inexorably, to crossroads of insight. We stand transfixed. Exposed, implicated: haunted by complicity. We are not, as we once may have thought, passive observers. Rather, we are the co-authors of what we see. This is the world of our making. </p>
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<p><strong>Inexorable</strong> </p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_oakville.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/burtynsky_oakville.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Edward Burtynsky" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a> </p>
<p><em>Edward Burtynsky, Oil Refineries #23, Oakville, Ontario, Canada, 1999. Chromogenic color print. Photograph © Edward Burtynsky, courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery, Toronto; Hasted Hunt Kraeutler, New York; and Adamson Gallery, Washington, DC.</em></p>
<p>A profound fate shapes human ends, and in turn we write that same fate onto nature. Destiny inscribes long scars on the earth. Our own undoing is visible in Burtynsky’s orderly grids of housing and cars, martial arrays of discarded planes, and highways that snake like asphalt rivers: the seeds of our self-destruction. Industry forges a new wilderness, and our civilization, a more efficient—and murderous—state of nature. We are not the fittest; humanity will be transcended over time; and we too, like our evolutionary forebears, will be obviated. </p>
<p>The gravitational pull of Burtynsky’s viewpoint derives from its revelation of consequence. The landscape is shown both as a source of wealth, and as a locus of overreach; oil, as the fuel of progress—and the dark promise of an ultimatum. The safe remove of the camera’s high perspective is mitigated by our near terror of falling. We back away from the edge, even as we realize that it is too late: we’ve already gone over. </p>
<p>The places Burtynsky takes us to are unfamiliar, obscure to our knowledge, but on some level they are no surprise. His images astonish largely because they give shape to our dread, to a suppressed realization of what our lifestyle has wrought. They articulate a secret truth. </p>
<p>These photographs suggest that what lies beneath the surface has far greater value than what lies above: to such an extent that the earth has been devastated to get at the black river below. Shaped not by time, erosion, or the weathering winds, but by the ordering force of the economy, the land has been etched by our avarice and our need. The lines radiate outward, a geometry of revelations, from where we stand at this place and time, to all places, and to our future. </p>
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<p><em>Paul Roth<br />
Senior Curator, Photography and Media Arts<br />
© 2010, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC</em></p>
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		<title>Ann Lislegaard: &#039;Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard)&#039;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ann-lislegaard-crystal-world-after-jg-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ann-lislegaard-crystal-world-after-jg-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Dec 2008 12:58:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[animation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fredric Jameson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=1032</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A slew of information on Ann Lislegaard, the brilliant artist behind 'Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard', the mesmerising animation that showed at the recent JGB exhibition in Barcelona. Includes links to an interview, video excerpts and stills.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_crystal2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_crystal2.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Ann Lislegaard" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_crystal3.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_crystal3.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Ann Lislegaard" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>&#8216;Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard)&#8217;, screening at Autopsy of the New Millennium, Barcelona. Photos: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>For you, I have unearthed a trove of information about &#8216;Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard)&#8217;, Ann Lislegaard&#8217;s digital interpretation of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">Ballard&#8217;s novel</a>. Recall that in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-landing-gear">my Barcelona report</a>, I raved about it &#8212; as an undisputed highlight in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/letter-from-barcelona-exquisite-corpse">an already outstanding exhibition</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://lightproject.pulitzerarts.org">The Light Project</a> in St Louis, USA, recently staged this work as part of a series of site-specific commissions that illuminated the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts at Grand Center in St Louis, USA. By all accounts, the show was a great success and I only wish I could have seen this mesmerising work projected onto urban space; the Light Project <a href="http://lightproject.pulitzerarts.org/artists/progress/ann-lislegaard">has archived photos and background information</a> of the setup and subsequent audience reactions, and there&#8217;s <a href="http://lightproject.pulitzerarts.org/interviews/ann-lislegaard">an interview with Ann</a>, in which she discusses Ballard and the inspiration she drew from the book. (Also available are <a href="http://lightproject.pulitzerarts.org/completed-work/ann-lislegaard">sound bites</a> from the interview.)</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_crystal1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ann Lislegaard" /></p>
<p><em>Ann Lislegaard preparing the Light Project staging of her work, &#8216;Crystal World (After J.G. Ballard)&#8217;.</em></p>
<p>I fully agree with her view of the novel: it&#8217;s a &#8216;mental space, a state of mind&#8217;, and that is really emphasised by her iterative work, which constantly chases its own tail. It&#8217;s shown on two screens, side by side, and takes place inside a modernist hotel which residually succumbs to the crystallising process described in the novel. Scenes loop back and subsequently fade and buckle from screen to screen under supersaturation of light, forcing you to constantly question the veracity of what&#8217;s come before, and where you are in the loop. Mirror images from one screen to another split off into parallel worlds/scenes, the same but not quite. It&#8217;s simply beautiful.</p>
<p>From the Light Project interview with Ann:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>ROBIN CLARK</strong>: What is it about this text that inspired you to create your installation?</p>
<p><strong>ANN LISLEGAARD:</strong> I was fascinated by the scenario, by the jungle location, and by the notion of a place in a constant state of transformation. Ballard is very much a conceptual writer and I think his idea for this novel is related to entropy, since the crystals are completely taking over, creating a sameness, a sort of all encompassing world of light and mirrors. Also, I see the Crystal World as a mental space, a state of mind.</p>
<p><strong>RC:</strong> In different ways, the novel and your installation both circle around the idea of light as medium, as a scientific phenomenon that also has psychological and conceptual aspects. How are you using light as a material in Crystal World?</p>
<p><strong>AL:</strong> I&#8217;ve worked with light in my sound installations, but light has never been the subject matter itself. In the past I always used light as an element in relationship to ideas of space, narrative and gender. Crystal World plays with the notion of too much light. The crystallization of the environment is expressed through light that becomes so bright that it bleaches out and creates its own kind of blindness.</p></blockquote>
<p><embed src="http://blip.tv/play/AYu7a5lo" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="480" height="350" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></p>
<p>If you&#8217;d like a feel for the piece, watch the video above &#8212; I don&#8217;t know much about its providence, except that it was uploaded to blip.tv and is described thus: &#8216;Backstage footage from Ann Lislegaard&#8217;s &#8220;Crystal World&#8221; at SMK, Copenhagen 20.03.2007. Condensed and dreamy, electronic soundtrack from un escargot vide&#8217;. Now, while this footage is low quality and hard to make out, it does give you a sense of the incredible, dislocating sense of perpetual motion that Ann achieves through her work. But I really don&#8217;t think that soundtrack is part of the original piece &#8212; I saw it at Barcelona in complete silence, and in my opinion it was much, much more powerful that way for obvious reasons to do with the psychological autonomy of interior, inner space etc etc. For a taste of that experience, <a href="http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2008/12/artist_ann_lislegaard.html">follow this link</a> for a four-minute excerpt of the work over at New York Magazine (sneaky NY Mag have encoded the vid in such a way that I can&#8217;t rip it and embed it here on Ballardian, so a link will have to do).</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_lefthand.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ann Lislegaard" /></p>
<p><em>Lislegaard&#8217;s Left-Hand of Darkness. Photo courtesy Murray Guy.</em></p>
<p>Ann <a href="http://www.murrayguy.com/current/index.html">recently staged a visualisation</a> of Ursula Le Guin&#8217;s The Left Hand of Darkness, along with &#8216;Crystal World&#8217;, at Murray Guy in New York. This ended today, sadly, but hopefully both works will exhibit again in the near future.</p>
<p>From Murray Guy:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Murray Guy is pleased to present two major digital animations by Ann Lislegaard: Crystal World (After J.G. Ballard), 2006 and Left Hand of Darkness (after Ursula K. Le Guin), 2008.  These works comprise the second and third parts of a trilogy of 3D animations based on science fiction novels that began with Bellona (After Samuel R. Delany), exhibited at Murray Guy in 2005.</p>
<p>This trilogy continues Lislegaard’s longstanding investigation into spatial perception and cognition and, in particular, divergent forms of narrative. She draws here on science fiction not to illustrate its imaginative content but rather, as Frederic Jameson articulates it, because of science fiction’s potential to provide “something like an experimental variation on our empirical universe.” The works reference modernism and historical visions of the future to reflect on our present triangulation of space and knowledge and temporality; as a whole, they comprise a far-reaching investigation into the structuring of cognition in the digital age.</p>
<p>Crystal World (After J.G. Ballard) is a looping double screen animation showing a modernist glass hotel in a tropical jungle that is slowly invaded by crystalline growth. Text drawn from Ballard’s 1966 novel, which describes a viral crystal found deep in the rainforest that petrifies all organic matter, mingles intermittently with shifting digital images of shadows and the jungle seen from vague interior spaces. Taking the glass house as conceit for a modernist structuring of knowledge, Lislegaard’s animation directly references the Brazilian architect Lina Bo Bardi’s 1951 Glass House, and the work of Robert Smithson and Eva Hesse, who investigated crystalline and organic structures as a means of articulating nonlinear time.</p>
<p>Set in a similarly extreme climate, Left Hand of Darkness (After Ursula K. LeGuin) is a three-channel projection that draws on LeGuin’s 1969 novel describing an icy planet populated by a single sex of androgynous humanoids. Pages of the novel are inscribed on top of another and rotoscopic images spin next to drawings of male and female genitalia.  Here identity and behavior seem at once both paralyzed and in a state of constant flux; the novel’s radical re-imagining of gender is inscribed in a fluid space between cinema, architecture and writing.  As in The Crystal World, Lislegaard works to reconfigure polarities—between interiority and exteriority, male and female, organic and inorganic—in an explosively horizontal digital terrain, where nothing aligns as we would expect.</p>
<p>Ann Lislegaard lives and works between Copenhagen and New York.  Crystal World (After J.G. Ballard) was recently on view as an outdoor installation in The Light Project at the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, and was originally commissioned for 27th Bienal de São Paulo in 2006.  Lislegaard has had numerous solo museum exhibitions, including presentations at the Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo, Norway (2007); Statens Museum fur Kunst, Copenhagen, Denmark (2007); Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT (2004); Dundee Contemporary Arts, Dundee, Scotland (2002); and Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden (1999), among others.  She represented Denmark at the 51st Bienniale di Venezia in 2005 and will be the subject of a solo exhibition at the Henry Art Gallery in Seattle opening in May 2009.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Dubai Ballard World</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/dubai-ballard-world</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/dubai-ballard-world#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Dec 2008 00:19:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dubai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[theme parks]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Announcement of the new Ballard World theme park in Dubai, following on from the Egypt, London and Shanghai versions.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dubai_ballardworld1.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Over at the Transatlantis blog, there is <a href="http://www.transatlantis.net/blog/archives/2008/11/the_drowned_wor.html">an announcement</a> of a new theme park patterned after Ballard&#8217;s work:</p>
<blockquote><p>A new theme park is coming soon to Dubai. Named The Ultimate City, its theme will be the the world refracted through the many faceted crystal-like mind of writer J.G. Ballard. It will be distributed throughout the city to make it&#8217;s experience as much part of the urban fabric as possible. Some of the attractions will include:</p>
<p>• The Drowned World water park where guests can experience the rising sea levels of global warming as an aesthetic pleasure of the first order.<br />
• As oil rapidly becomes a scarce commodity, Crashland will become the only place to partake in the visceral and intoxicating power of the internal-combustion engine.<br />
• Get closer to the nuclear power of the sun over the ozone free Terminal Beach, or descend into the cool shade of vintage Bikini Atoll concrete nuclear blast bunkers scattered among it&#8217;s sandy dunes.<br />
• In a special arrangement with the Burj Dubai, a large section of the world&#8217;s tallest skyscraper has been reserved for High Rise: a paint-ball arena where guests struggle for advantage as they try to reach the top of the building.<br />
• Other attractions will include: The Burning World, Concrete Island, and more.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dubai_ballardworld2.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Of course, this is not the first Ballard Park. As Ballardian readers will be aware, the original in Egypt <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-world-set-for-2008-opening">closed due to entropy</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Egyptian Ballard World, developed by loyal Ballard fans for loyal Ballard fans, had everything the discerning JGB fan could possibly require: abandoned water bodies; derelict technology; dead monorails hanging against the sky like guillotines; construction works half finished, as if some terrible disaster had wiped out all traces of human life; masses of rubble and twisted metal forming complex cryptograms, their meaning inscrutable and remote, as if they were designed not for man, but for man’s absence…</p></blockquote>
<p>More recently, however, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-angle-between-two-worlds">British and Chinese versions are being planned</a> to fill the void:</p>
<blockquote><p>Ballard World will be the perfect day trip for stressed out Londoners. Advertised as “Families exploring inner space”, there’s enough going on for every age group; The little ones play hide and seek in an abandoned Shanghai mansion and roam around the inevitable empty swimming pool. Dad fingers the dented side panel of Jayne Mansfield’s crashed 1966 Buick Electra, while mom has a pina colada in a cocktail party that’s permanenently on the brink of getting out of hand.</p>
<p>Another Ballard resort on the outskirts of Shanghai, expected to open its doors in 2009, will consist of a minute replica of the London suburb Shepperton, with the Heathrow Hilton atrium as an entrance building. Other cities as diverse as Detroit and Rome have shown interest in opening a Ballard Park&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>With all of these Ballard Worlds in development, the future is looking not so bleak after all: dystopia as aesthetic pleasure of <em>the highest order</em>, indeed.</p>
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		<title>Spanish Ghost Cities</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/spanish-ghost-cities</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/spanish-ghost-cities#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 09:59:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drained swimming pools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=847</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Solveig Nordlund's Ballard adaptation, Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude, is rooted in reality, as this report on Spain's ghost towns demonstrates.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/spanish_ghost_city.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Spain&#8217;s economic downturn means that its rampant property development is galloping way, way ahead of potential buyers. And this means ghost cities &#8212; in one instance just 750 people living in a development  comprising 13,000 residential units. It&#8217;s a trend across the Iberian peninsula: Solveig Nordlund filmed Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude, her <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/like-alice-in-wonderland-nordlund-on-ballard">2002 feature-film adaptation</a> of Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;Low-Flying Aircraft&#8217;, in and around a similar development in Portugal. This was a very canny move on her part, welding this real-world urban slipstream with Ballard&#8217;s own disconnected un-reality in a story about dwindling population levels and the high strangeness of techno-capitalism.</p>
<p>Watch this <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7584458.stm">BBC video report</a> for more background on the current state of Spain&#8217;s ghost cities. The lack of company wouldn&#8217;t bother me. I&#8217;d move in there in a heartbeat. Imagine the <em>solitude</em>.</p>
<p>[thanks, Joe McNally]</p>
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		<title>Drained London</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/drained-london</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/drained-london#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 08:39:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drained swimming pools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=802</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Drained swimming pools are a staple in Ballard's work, and also the subject of photographer Gigi Cifali's latest series.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cifali_elthamlido.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gigi Cifali" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Eltham Lido, by Gigi Cifali.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Curiously, the house we moved to had a drained swimming pool in its garden. It must have been the first drained pool I had seen, and it struck me as strangely significant in a way I have never fully grasped. My parents decided not to fill the pool, and it lay in the garden like a mysterious empty presence. I would walk through the unmown grass and stare down at its canted floor. I could hear the bombing and gunfire all around Shanghai, and see the vast pall of smoke that lay over the city, but the drained pool remained apart. In the coming years I would see a great many drained and half-drained pools, as British residents left Shanghai for Australia and Canada, or the assumed &#8216;safety&#8217; of Hong Kong and Singapore, and they all seemed as mysterious as that first pool in the French Concession. I was unaware of the obvious symbolism that British power was ebbing away, because no one thought so at the time, and faith in the British Empire was at its jingoistic height.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a> (2008).</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Here are some more <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/flooded-london">Ballard-evoking images</a>: drained swimming pools as photographed by Gigi Cifali in his Absence of Water series.</p>
<p>Via <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/06/london-is-swimming.html">BLDGBLOG</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>The photos here are all by Gigi Cifali, who originally trained as a topographer, from a series called &#8220;Absence of Water.&#8221; The images document the disused pools of London – and there are many more of these photos to be seen over at <a href="http://www.polarinertia.com/june08/water01.htm">Polar Inertia</a> or on Cifali&#8217;s <a href="http://www.GIGICIFALI.COM/gigi/index12.htm">own website</a>.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m reminded, though, of a great line from J.G. Ballard&#8217;s novel Empire of the Sun:</p>
<p>&#8220;Jim watched Mr. Maxted sway along the tiled verge of the empty swimming pool, curious to see if he would fall in. If Mr. Maxted was always accidentally falling into swimming pools, as indeed he always was, why did he only fall into them when they were filled with water?&#8221;</p>
<p>Why, indeed. </p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cifali_erithpool.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gigi Cifali" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Erith Pool, by Gigi Cifali.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Royal, eyes almost closed, one hand gripping Laing&#8217;s shoulder, pointed towards the swimming-pool.</p>
<p>In the yellow light reflected off the greasy tiles, the long tank of the bone-pit stretched in front of them. The water had long since drained away, but the sloping floor was covered with the skulls, bones and dismembered limbs of dozens of corpses. Tangled together where they had been flung, they lay about like the tenants of a crowded beach visited by a sudden holocaust.</p>
<p>Disturbed less by the sight of these mutilated bodies &#8212; residents who had died of old age or disease and then been attacked by wild dogs, Laing assumed &#8212; than by the stench, Laing turned away. Royal, who had clung so fiercely to him during their descent of the building, no longer needed him, and dragged himself away along the line of changing cubicles. When Laing last saw him, he was moving towards the steps at the shallow end of the swimming-pool, as if hoping to find a seat for himself on this terminal slope.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> (1975).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cifali_uxbridgepool.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gigi Cifali" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Uxbridge Pool, by Gigi Cifali.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>For the next ten days the expedition pressed on down the New Jersey Turnpike, heading south-west towards Washington. The endless ribbon of the highway unwound into the haze, lined with mile after mile of abandoned cars and trucks. Each evening they left the road and spent the night in one of the hundreds of empty motels and country clubs along the route, resting around the drained swimming-pools that seemed to cover the entire continent.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a> (1981).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cifali_weldstonepool.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gigi Cifali" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Weldstone Pool, by Gigi Cifali.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>During the night the swimming-pool had drained itself. Jim had never seen the tank empty, and he gazed with interest at the inclined floor. The once mysterious world of wavering blue lines, glimpsed through a cascade of bubbles, now lay exposed to the morning light. The tiles were slippery with leaves and dirt, and the chromium ladder at the deep end, which had once vanished into a watery abyss, ended abruptly beside a pair of scummy rubber slippers.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> (1984).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cifali_londonfieldslido.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gigi Cifali" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: London Fields Lido, by Gigi Cifali.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Car parks surrounded a shopping mall lined with stores and restaurants, and I pointed with surprise to the first pedestrians we had seen, unloading their supermarket trolleys through the tail-doors of their vehicles. To the south of the plaza lay a marina filled with yachts and powerboats, moored together like a rnothballed fleet. An access canal led to the open sea, passing below a cantilever bridge that carried the coast road. A handsome clubhouse presided over the marina and its boatyard, but its terrace was deserted, awnings flared over the empty tables. The nearby sports club was equally unpopular, its tennis courts dusty in the sun, the swimming pool drained and forgotten.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a></em> (1996).</p></blockquote>
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		<title>The Light-Painter of Mojave D: An Interview with Troy Paiva</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/light-painter-mojave-d-troy-paiva</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/light-painter-mojave-d-troy-paiva#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jun 2008 14:37:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deep time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[flying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philip K. Dick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surrealism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban ruins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Troy Paiva's desert photography evokes the crumbling, decadent resorts and enervated cityscapes of Ballard's <em>Vermilion Sands</em> and <em>Hello America</em> stories. Enjoy this interview with Troy, the Light-Painter of Mojave D.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_joshua_go.jpg" alt="Balalrdian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/216268747">&#8216;Joshua Says GO!&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;A 30s twin-tail Lockheed Electra does the big sleep at Aviation Warehouse. Night, full moon, red-gelled strobe flash. Canon 20D.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_troy_pic.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" class="picleft" /> <strong>The <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/lostamerica">photography</a> of <a href="http://www.troypaiva.com">Troy Paiva</a> treats us to canted visions of a crumbling, post-industrial America — decommissioned military bases, aircraft ‘boneyards’, abandoned desert towns. The scenarios are all shot at night and the work is presented straight out of the camera, mostly untouched by Photoshopping or other post-processing techniques. Troy uses available light, such as moonlight or sodium light (the latter of course plentiful in the modern-day archaeological ruins he haunts), but he also uniquely marks the shots with his light-painting skills (the introduction of hand-held, hand-applied light during the exposure) and the unearthly effects of red, green and blue-gelled strobe flashes. The cumulative effect is startling: like stills from a David Lynch film in a parallel universe in which Lynch, instead of adapting Barry Gifford&#8217;s novel <em>Wild at Heart</em> for his twisted desert noir masterpiece, had chosen Ballard&#8217;s <em>Vermilion Sands</em> instead.</p>
<p>Although Troy began to read Ballard only comparatively recently, his photography fits the definition of &#8216;Ballardian&#8217; in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/about">the dictionary sense</a>: &#8216;resembling or suggestive of the conditions described in Ballard’s novels &#038; stories, esp. dystopian modernity, bleak man-made landscapes &#038; the psychological effects of technological, social or environmental developments.&#8217; But it also mirrors a significant strain that seems to fly by those consistently emphasising the &#8216;bleak&#8217; in that dictionary statement. This is the &#8216;carnival in suburbia&#8217; atmosphere that has always bubbled below the surface in Ballard but which flowered forth so vividly in books such as <em>The Unlimited Dream Company</em> and <em>Hello America</em> and in stories such as &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, the latter two featuring abandoned American cities of the near future brought back to life virtually by sheer dint of imagination. Similarly, Troy doesn&#8217;t so much wallow in decay and entropy as he <em>reanimates</em> the ruins, surging new power through the bones of post-industrialism.</p>
<p>This interview has taken a bit of time to happen. I first made contact with Troy late last year, leaving <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/lost-america">a placeholder</a> for a possible future interview. It was only recently, when a visitor to this site, Henry Swanson, left some interesting comments about Troy&#8217;s work that I was reminded of my duty. I subsequently invited Henry to help me out with the interrogation and the results of our survey into the world of Mr Paiva are here below for your scrutiny. But after all that, it was good timing in the end: Troy&#8217;s second book of photography, <em>Night Vision: The Art of Urban Exploration</em>, is due for publication in early July.</p>
<p><em>Simon Sellars</em></strong></p>
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<p><em>NOTE: Although I have tried my best to include a representative selection of Troy&#8217;s photos, I found it almost impossible to do justice to the scope, beauty and sheer volume of his work. If after reading this interview you find yourself wanting more examples, my advice is to start either at Troy&#8217;s <a href="http://www.troypaiva.com">official site</a> or his <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica">flickr page</a> and work your way from there.</em></p>
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<blockquote><p>I had arrived in Vermilion Sands three months earlier. A retired pilot, I was painfully coming to terms with a broken leg and the prospect of never flying again&#8230; I found a shallow basin among the dunes&#8230; The owner had gone, abandoning the hangar-like building to the sand-rays and the desert, and on some half-formed impulse I began to drive out each afternoon.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, &#8216;The Cloud-Sculptors of Coral D&#8217;, first published in 1967, collected in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-vermilion-sands">Vermilion Sands</a> (1971).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Troy, when we first talked about your photos, you said, &#8216;People constantly refer to my photography as &#8220;Ballardian&#8221;.&#8217; I can certainly see the connections, especially with <em>Vermilion Sands</em> and its sense of decadent ruin, a lurid, near-future civilisation lost in the desert sands. But is Ballard actually an influence on your work?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> No. I came to him much later. I enjoyed the <em>Vermilion Sands</em> stories very much when I read them a couple of years ago and I can see why people connect my work with his writing. There is that sense of desolation and isolation, the fetishism of decay and destruction and a general sense of being outside the realm of normal society, as well as the melancholia of straggling on after everything has ended.</p>
<p>Same thing happened with Kerouac&#8217;s <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FRoad-Penguin-Great-Books-Century%2Fdp%2F0140283293%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1212675570%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">On the Road</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;"</em/>. After reading it recently I thought, &#8216;Wow, no wonder people keep saying that to me.&#8217; Much of my photography stems from massive, epic road trips that criss-cross the southwest, where I cover thousands of miles in a couple of very surreal days. The mythology of The Road figures in a lot of my work. I guess these similarities show that human experience is roughly the same for all of us, we just have different ways of expressing it. See also <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/category/philip-k-dick">Philip K. Dick</a>.</p>
<p>The books of my formative years were George Stewart&#8217;s pastoral apocalypse classic </em><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FEarth-Abides-George-R-Stewart%2Fdp%2F0345487133%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1212675659%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">Earth Abides</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, Hunter S. Thompson&#8217;s surrealist freak-out, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FFear-Loathing-Las-Vegas-American%2Fdp%2F0679785892%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1212675747%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, and <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FStand-Modern-Classics-Stephen-King%2Fdp%2F0517219018%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1212675708%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">The Stand</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, Stephen King&#8217;s pop-epic story of The End. Those three books kinda say it all about where my approach to the road, abandonment and the &#8216;post-everything&#8217; world lies. And the movie <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FVanishing-Point-Barry-Newman%2Fdp%2FB00013RC8O%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Ddvd%26qid%3D1212675807%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">Vanishing Point</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> – that encapsulates my own road-trip mythology perfectly.</p>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> &#8216;And there goes the Challenger, being chased by the blue, blue meanies on wheels. The last American hero, the electric Shinta, the demigod, the super driver of the Golden West.&#8217;</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> &#8216;And beans, lotsa beans.&#8217; Man, I love that movie. It&#8217;s totally what the desert is about for me.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_color_television.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/2094591184/in/set-72157594322589050">&#8216;Color Television&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;Behind an abandoned restaurant in the sleepy Mojave Desert town of Yermo, CA. The density of the sky was caused by the October Fires in SoCal. You could taste every breath. Night, full moon 2 minute exposure, natural, yellow and red-gelled strobe and flashlights. Composite of 2 images.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> There are other things your work brings to mind, like the <a href="http://deuceofclubs.com/moj/mojave.htm">Mojave Desert Phone Booth</a>.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Love it. Wish I&#8217;d had a chance to shoot it! I got lost on a series of endless dirt roads trying to find it, many years ago. Almost got stuck and had to give up. It&#8217;s been gone for at least five years now.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> What exactly is it about the desert that appeals?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I just love the expansiveness and isolation – it’s primal and uncompromising. I love that you can go for days without talking to anyone. It’s a land of outcasts and oddballs, where non-conformists can thrive. An incredible volume of American mythology is based on the desert and Western expansion, from the Gold Rush to Route 66. I’ve even heard my photography described as an epitaph for the mythology of the American West.</p>
<blockquote><p>Dr Paul Ricci was thinking: So this is New York – or was. Greatest city of the twentieth century, here you heard the heart-beat of international finance, industry and entertainment. Now it’s as remote from the real world as Pompeii or Persepolis. It’s a fossil, my God, preserved here on the edge of the desert like one of those ghost towns in the Wild West. Did my ancestors really live in these vast canyons? They came on a cattle boat from Naples in the 1890s, and a century later went back to Naples on a cattle boat. Now I’m making another stab at it.</p>
<p>Still, the place has possibilities, all sorts of dormant things might be lying here, waiting to be roused.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a> (1981).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> <a href="http://www.lostamerica.com/about.html">Your bio</a> says your work is about &#8216;the evolution and eventual abandonment of the communities, structures and social iconography spawned during this country&#8217;s 20th century western expansion&#8217;. How did it come to be this way?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> It’s simply who I am. When I was 13 my family went on a road trip, one of many, and we somehow found ourselves bouncing down 15 miles of bad dirt road to the classic ‘wild west’ ghost town of Bodie, arguably the most authentic ghost town in America. Today Bodie is kept in a state of ‘arrested decay’ and is a major tourist destination. Much of the road is paved and the parking lot is filled with tour buses, and in the summer the town is crawling with thousands of tourists from around the world. But back in the early 70s you could drive right into the centre of town and park. When we climbed out of the car we found we were the only ones there! I wandered that town alone for hours, slack-jawed at the thought that people would just walk away from furnished houses and businesses, a whole city, and never come back. I was hooked for life.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_texaco_marine.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/109835459">&#8216;Texaco Marine&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;North Shore Marina, Salton Sea, 2001. Most, if not all, the letters are gone by now. Night, 100% full moon/star light, 8 minutes, f5.6.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> I understand it&#8217;s your <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/sets/72057594078020352/">Salton Sea work</a> that gets most of the <em>Vermilion Sands</em> comparisons.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Yes. The <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0438327">Salton Sea</a> is an enormous, accidentally created salt lake in a remote corner of the SoCal desert. In the 50s developers built elaborate resorts and golf courses around its shores and the department of interior stocked it with game fish. By the 60s it had become an idyllic combination of Lake Tahoe and Palm Springs, half outdoorsman’s paradise, half retreat for the Hollywood elite. By the 70s, however, two years of record rain caused massive floods and the lake, which has no outlet, began to fester and decay. The smell became unbearable as massive algae blooms died off. Anyone who could afford to move away did. By the 90s fish and birds were dying on a biblical scale – in the millions – triggered by the algae blooms. It’s a horrible, filthy place rimmed with rotten modernist resorts, marinas and trailer parks (most of which have been torn down now), and decaying dead fish and birds. Today the Salton Sea feels very much like the epicentre for the end of the world, a poster child for mankind’s failure to tame nature.</p>
<p>Ballardian for sure!</p>
<blockquote><p>Ronnov-Jessen: [In your novella 'The Ultimate City'] one could say that the dynamism represented by New York is actually the dynamism of decay.</p>
<p>Ballard: No, I don&#8217;t accept that. The city is abandoned, and with it, suspended in time, is a whole set of formulae for expressing human energy, imagination, ambition. The clock has stopped, but it will be possible for the boy to start it up again, just as in the novel <em>Hello America</em> where the young hero does precisely the same &#8212; except he attempts to do it on a continental level.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/against_entropy_1984.html">&#8216;Against Entropy&#8217;</a>, a 1984 interview with Peter Ronnov-Jessen.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_precis.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/262319844">&#8216;Precis&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;A flipped Mitsubishi Precis, run over by a tank, in the abandoned base housing at George AFB near Victorville, CA. There were several smashed cars left in strategic lines of sight used for infantry cover during wargames exercises. The engine block in this thing was crushed like an egg. Shot March 2001, 160T film. Night, about 8 minutes, full moon, but overcast, yellow and purple-gelled strobe-flash.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> Do you think your photos suggest a cryptic &#8216;signs of passing&#8217; of American Culture from the world stage?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I suppose it can&#8217;t help but be interpreted that way‚ but I must also say the rest of the world has more ruins and debris left behind than America does. The internet is overflowing with amazing photography shot in the abandoned places of the 21st century. Spend an hour <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q='urban+exploration'&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">Googling ‘urban exploration’</a> and you&#8217;ll see that the culture is exploding worldwide, so whilst you got the concept right, it&#8217;s important to see it as a human, post-industrial thing rather than purely American.</p>
<p>UrbEx is as old as mankind. Humans have always been obsessed with both building <em>and</em> exploration. I’m sure primitive man explored the abandoned caves of <em>his</em> ancestors too. We’re drawn to ruins. It’s just how we’re wired as a species. Whereas the 20th century saw an unprecedented worldwide explosion of construction, by the dawn of the 21st century much of this expansion had failed or become obsolete, leaving the world littered with an amazing array of every type of ruins imaginable. Today we are experiencing a true golden age of abandonment.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> You describe it as a &#8216;culture&#8217;. That suggests it&#8217;s more than simply the illicit thrill of sneaking into abandoned or forbidden territory.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Yes. UrbEx, or Urban Exploration, is the pastime of visiting TOADS (temporary, obsolete, abandoned and derelict spaces), but not for scientific, anthropological or nefarious purposes. It’s about absorbing the atmosphere and wabi sabi soul of these places. A ‘finding beauty in decay’ aesthetic. I visit these lapsed spaces for several of the same reasons that normal people visit a serene mountain glen: the soul-cleansing quietude and the sense of feeling very small in a big universe. But ultimately it is an entirely different sensibility. Where most people see waste and blight in TOADS, Urban Explorers see elegant devolution and the weight of time.</p>
<blockquote><p>Found the man Traven. A strange derelict figure, hiding in a bunker in the deserted interior of the island. He is suffering from severe exposure and malnutrition, but is unaware of this or, for that matter, of any other events in the world around him … He maintains that he came to the island to carry out some scientific project &#8212; unstated &#8212; but I suspect that he understands his real motives and the unique role of the island … In some way its landscape seems to be involved with certain unconscious notions of time, and in particular with those that may be a repressed premonition of our own deaths. The attractions and dangers of such an architecture, as the past has shown, need no stressing …</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories">&#8216;The Terminal Beach&#8217;</a> (1964).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> Ballard has a strangely acute, Triassic sense of &#8216;deep time&#8217; in his fiction‚ especially in short stories like &#8216;The Terminal Beach&#8217;. Similarly, in your book <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FLost-America-Abandoned-Roadside-West%2Fdp%2F076031490X&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">Lost America</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, you wrote, &#8216;The stars pinwheeling overhead and clouds smearing across the sky mirrored the compression of time created by the relentless pace of the trip.&#8217; You said you were seeking to &#8216;heighten the unreality&#8217; of these bizarre, spectral non-places.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> It <em>is</em> a different reality. UrbEx night photography is very far removed from normal life, and my goal is to accentuate this surreal, otherworldly atmosphere in the work. One of the big attractions of night photography is this weird time-space distortion thing. Most of the night shooters I know are philosophical about the process. The exposures are minutes long, giving you time to sit in the dark and absorb the scene. Regardless of whether you are shooting cranes in an abandoned shipyard, or you&#8217;re on the top of a windswept mountain shooting thousand year old trees, it&#8217;s a wonderfully zen, contemplative experience.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_hot_seat_2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/278306372">&#8216;Hot Seat 2&#8242;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;Shot at the abandoned Fort Ord Army Base in Monterey, CA. I recently learned that most (soon to be all) of the barracks and entire laundry have recently been bulldozed. Hundreds of buildings. Gone. Night, full moon, pink and green-gelled strobe-flash, 3-4 minute exposure.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> You must get scared sometimes.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I don&#8217;t really worry about stuff very much. I have yet to see a ghost or the undead, although I’ve had thousands of weird experiences. I’ve shot in many supposedly haunted locations and seen and heard things that some people would pass off as paranormal, but nothing that couldn’t be attributed to wind, settling or vermin in the walls. What I have seen a lot of are big poisonous spiders, three-storey drop offs into the yawning darkness with no railings, copper thieves, rattlesnakes, rotten floors and wasted teenage vandals. I’ve come out of buildings crawling with spiders (I’ve had some very bad spider bites over the years), missed a rattlesnake bite by inches and been chased back to the car by a pack of wild dogs. I’ve been run off by crazy, desert-rat property owners racking shotguns. I’ve been swarmed by a heavily armed platoon of border agents in southern Arizona while I was shooting in a pet cemetery. I’ve had countless cuts and bruises and sprained and twisted ankles, and I once gave myself an excruciating second-degree burn while light painting with fireworks in a sandstorm.</p>
<p>Doing this is a whole lot of fun, but there are a lot of very real ways to get hurt or killed.  The dangerous aspect of UrbEx night photography is just not something I dwell on.  If I did I’d never leave the house.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> In <em>Lost America</em> you wrote about coming across a sacrificial altar used in an occult ceremony.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Yeah, that was nasty. They had sacrificed a sheep on a makeshift altar in an abandoned Air Force fire station in a remote corner of the Mojave desert. Blood and entrails were smeared everywhere, lots of evil graffiti about how much fun it is to kill. It was a miserable sight. Sad.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> You said it was part of the &#8216;growing evidence of downright creepy stuff&#8217; you&#8217;ve encountered. Are you implying that this kind of activity is on the rise?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Is it on the rise, or has it always been there, bubbling away under the surface? I don’t have the answer for that. Remember what I said earlier about the desert being the last place where oddballs can thrive? Some people are just bigger oddballs than others, what can I tell you?</p>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> I enjoy reading your interior highway dialogues [Troy wrote 12,000 words to accompany the photos in <em>Lost America</em>]. You should definitely do more existential travel essays – you seem to have a feel for it.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Thanks, but I clearly don&#8217;t have as much to offer as a writer that I do as a photographer. Urban Exploration needs a new young writer, this generation&#8217;s version of Lester Bangs or Hunter S. Thompson, who can bring it into a modern pop-culture context. I&#8217;m not that writer, but I&#8217;ll gladly play the photographic role of Ralph Steadman.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_danger_zone.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/346823412">&#8216;Danger Zone&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;Building 4900, abandoned. Decommissioned Fort Ord Army Base. It&#8217;s all in the details. Shot 1/07, night- totally dark space, red-gelled strobe and ungelled strobe through fenced room.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Do you know about the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/jun/05/news.terrorism">recent hysteria in Britain</a>, with people being questioned and harassed by police for using a camera in public places under suspicion of terrorism? There has been a huge backlash from ordinary people demanding the right to take pictures in public without being branded a terrorist.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I’ve heard rumblings about that sort of thing here too, especially in big cities. No question, the climate for photographers has changed since 9/11. The police have all of us on a shorter leash. Here in western America everything is spread out though, so it’s much easier to fall between the cracks if you get out of the big cities. That’s why I like shooting in rural locations. You are a lot <em>less</em> likely to be hassled by the police or unsavoury characters.</p>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> Ballard has described Shanghai as &#8216;cruel and lurid, polluted and exciting&#8217;. Except for &#8216;cruel&#8217; this seems an apt description of your photography (I find your work too surreal to be genuinely malicious). Do you feel this same kind of frantic, otherworldly rush as you travel the land in search of… of what, exactly?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Ghosts. Not Hollywood movie ghosts-actors under sheets waving their arms, but the ghosts of technology, a slice of amazing human history that is already being forgotten as we rush headlong towards… whatever the hell it is we are rushing towards. I don&#8217;t believe in ghosts in the traditional sense, but these places carry a spiritual weight that is unlike occupied places or nature. The stillness and atmosphere, especially alone at night, can be an emotionally overwhelming experience. No question, it is a rush.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_canted.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/330138794">&#8216;Canted&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8217;1959 Buick at a nameless high desert junkyard near Lake Los Angeles, CA. Night, 2 minute exposure, full moon purple and green-gelled strobe-flash. Big and rusty.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Is America really changing as rapidly as your work suggests?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Yes, it’s changing faster and faster. America is all about speed and ‘the new’ so we’re always replacing things that don’t really need replacing. It&#8217;s interesting how the places and objects I find have changed over the years. Twenty years ago it was all about the debris left behind by the finned atomic-age, but now the focus has shifted to the debris of the 70s and 80s: junkyard minivans and wide-body airliners are replacing the big-finned station wagons and 707s. Disposable plastic replacing chromed steel.</p>
<p>Who knows where it’s headed? Surely we’re into another period of contraction in the West as gas tops $4 a gallon, which only means junkyards filled with giant SUVs and more abandonments to explore, but I have no idea where it will ultimately end up.</p>
<blockquote><p>When Los Angeles is forgotten, probably what will remain will be the huge freeway system. I&#8217;m certain the people in the future &#8212; long after the automobile has been forgotten &#8212; will regard them as enigmatic and mysterious monuments which attested to the high aesthetic standards of the people that built them. In the same way that we look back on the pyramids or the mausoleums in a huge Egyptian necropolis as things of great beauty &#8212; we&#8217;ve forgotten their original function. It&#8217;s all a matter of aesthetics. I think that highways for the most part are beautiful. I prefer concrete to meadow.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/jgb_cbc_ideas_interview.html">&#8216;How to Face Doomsday without Really Dying&#8217;</a>, a 1974 interview with Carol Orr.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> How did you get interested in night photography?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> In 1989 I was working as a designer/illustrator for a major toy company, drawing and painting every day in a heavily art-directed environment. After several years of that I lost any sense of the artistic fulfilment I was originally getting from the job. The last thing I wanted to do was draw and paint at home too, so I was desperate to find a new personal creative outlet. At the time my brother Tom was a full time photography student at the Academy of Art in San Francisco. One of his classes was in night photography. Being my brother, he knew I’d be fascinated by night shooting on a conceptual level, so he snuck me along to some lectures and shoots with the class in the decaying industrial sections of SF. It instantly dawned on me that this was the perfect way to photograph the abandoned roadside towns I was already exploring. After one trip to the desert to shoot at night I became totally obsessed and consumed by it.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_tom_alameda.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tom Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Alameda Corridor&#8217; by Tom Paiva.</em></p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Do you see any similarities with <a href="http://www.tompaiva.com">your brother Tom&#8217;s work</a>?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> When we were both learning the ropes in night shooting we frequently shot at night together. Now Tom lives in Los Angeles and he has a commercial photography business shooting large format architectural and industrial work. Living 500 miles apart, we seldom get the chance to shoot together anymore. Tom’s aesthetic is the complete opposite of mine; he doesn’t light paint, he doesn’t do the UrbEx-style locations, and his complex and meticulous – and ultimately gorgeous – large-format work is the exact opposite of my quick and dirty, guerrilla-style shooting. My compositional style tends towards a pop-surrealist, melodramatic and cartoony look, whereas his is a more stately and formalist style. His work is cool and elegant, mine hot and visceral. Yes, we’re both night photographers, but our styles couldn’t be more different. We’re very careful to avoid doing similar work specifically because we are both named ‘T. Paiva’ and we both make a conscious effort to avoid stepping on each other’s artistic toes. One way we’re similar though is that we’re both loners, but I think that is a trait that runs strong in most night shooters. It’s funny to watch a group of night photographers descend on a location – they usually say something like &#8216;meet you here at 1am&#8217; and head off in opposite directions.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Who else can you recommend in the field?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Jan Staller, Richard Misrach, Michael Kenna and Steve Fitch for sure. Studying the lighting work of O. Winston Link, William Lesch and Chip Simons back in the late 80s was really important for me, too. I’d sit there for hours, deconstructing their images trying to figure out how they lit their subjects. But maybe I owe more to David Lynch, Roger Deakins, Vittorio Storaro, Juan Ruiz Anchía, Emmanuel Lubezki, Tim Burton and a trillion other movie artists. I watch a lot more movies than I read photo books.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> What kind of equipment do you use?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I shot on film from 1989 to 2004 using cheap, outdated flea-market 35mm gear. It felt right for me to be shooting this forgotten junk <em>with</em> junk. This old work has a Holga-esque, toy-camera lo-fi quality that many find endearing today. I guess I was unintentionally ahead of the curve there too. I stopped shooting for a year in 2004 as the film era fizzled out, frustrated by lab closures, the lack of quality film processing and the low yield of acceptable work with my ancient equipment. In 2005 I moved to digital once I saw that camera technology had advanced enough to allow me to do noise-free time exposures. I now shoot with a Canon 20D and a 12-24mm Tokina zoom lens. I use a heavy, solid Slik tripod because I do a lot of work in wind and rough conditions and I need as stable a platform for the camera as possible. Regrettably, I was forced away from the ‘shooting junk with junk’ ethos by changing technology, but with the 20D already being superseded by several newer models in the past few years, maybe the 20D is already ‘outdated junk’ gear too.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_speedlines.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/2536737211">&#8216;Speedlines&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;Mid &#8217;70s Chevy Monte Carlo at the Pearsonville, California Junkyard. This is the last of the Pearsonville work, I wanna try to head back soon tho. Night, 2 minute exposure, full moon, blue and green-gelled flashlight.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> You&#8217;ve described your technique as &#8216;low cost/high impact lighting&#8217;. Is it therefore accessible for amateurs and people beginning to experiment with photography?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Absolutely. The advent of digital photography and the ability to chimp the shot on the back of your camera as you work has revolutionized night photography and light painting. In the film era you could shoot a whole roll of film and not know that the leader on the film never got picked up by the sprocket, let alone that your exposures were incorrect or your lighting was not bright enough.</p>
<p>All my lighting is done with a single 20 year old Vivitar 285 strobe flash and a collection of flashlights from a tiny keychain LED to a 1,000,000 candlepower spotlight. I have a set of theatrical lighting gels cut to small swatches that I just hold over the light source. Because the exposures are minutes long, I have plenty of time to do multiple flash pops and take my time with my flashlight work. Observers are often surprised by my low-tech lighting technique, asking &#8216;Is that really all there is to it?&#8217; I have to keep it simple because this is frequently a guerrilla-style of photography. Travelling light is critical, so all my gear except the tripod fits in a small daypack, allowing me to get in, set up, shoot and get out quickly.</p>
<p>You can buy a flash like mine second-hand for $50. All of my flashlights could be bought at any drugstore like Target or Walmart. Every halfway-large city has at least one theatrical supply store where you can buy gel material. It costs about $10 a sheet. The reason for not trying light painting is not because of cost! Look at any of the myriad <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/nightphotography">night photography</a> or <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/lightpainting">light-painting</a> groups at a photo-sharing site like flickr and prepare to be overwhelmed with amateurs doing this kind of work in all sorts of locations. It’s everywhere now. I seem to have created a Frankenstein.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Do you work fast?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I work incredibly fast compared to other night shooters. A lot of that is a product of having almost 20 years of experience, but I am a seat-of-the-pants type of artist in any media. The less thinking and planning and fussing over the piece, the more relaxed and natural it will be.</p>
<p>It’s kind of like a pianist playing a song with thousands of notes without sheet music: if they think about every note, they can&#8217;t possibly play the song. Rather, they turn off the conscious part of their mind and just let it flow. Same for painters and other artists. It&#8217;s no different for photography. The more you think, plan and try to get the shot, the more likely it will elude you.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_vegas_sign.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/412680559">&#8216;Las Vegas Club&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;The YESCO sign boneyard, Las Vegas, NV. Shot May, 2000. Night, 160 Tungsten film, full moon, sodium and mercury vapor lights, red-gelled strobe flash. That&#8217;s the Luxor hotel spotlight. Legendary location seen in many TV shows and movies containing hundreds of old signs. Almost everything here was donated and moved to the Las Vegas Neon Museum across town shortly after I shot here, this lot was turned into more manufacturing/warehouse space.&#8217;</em></p>
<blockquote><p>Had they any idea that Las Vegas was defended by a rag-tag army of children? In an attempt to blind their camera lenses, Manson continued to turn up the electric power flowing into the city. The neon façades of the casinos and hotels were now so many cataracts of white lava, walls of incandescent pink and purple that seemed to set alight the surrounding jungle, turning the Strip and the downtown casino centre into an inflamed, shadowless realm through which the occasional armoured car would appear like a spectral dragon on the floor of a furnace.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, Hello America (1981)</em>.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Funnily enough, given that your signature style is this unnaturally vivid primary-colour palette, I always picture purples and reds when I think of <em>Vermilion Sands</em>, more so Ballard&#8217;s <em>Hello America</em>. The gels you use irradiate your scenery – for me it really does evoke the near-future sheen of <em>Hello America</em>&#8216;s abandoned United States, in which whole cities are buried in the desert, a vast continent paved over with accreted hyperconsumerism. But in photography at least, this seems an unusual approach to take with urban ruins – many would rather focus on the grey, rusting aspects of abandoned towns. Perhaps, like Ballard, you are breathing new life into these ruins, recombining them in new and unexpected ways.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Yes, you nailed it. Most UrbEx photography is a pure documentation of locations weathered to dreary and monochromatic greys and browns, but I’m taking it someplace else entirely by reanimating these places with light. Some say I’m bringing a festive, circus-like atmosphere to these dead places. It’s done in a sort of Mexican &#8216;Day of the Dead&#8217; spirit. My colour choices are usually predicated on the actual colour of the subject and location, not because of some premeditated &#8216;I must use green tonight&#8217; mentality.</p>
<p>I see it as embracing the idea of death rather than fearing it. It’s about accepting it and having fun with this darker side of the human condition. My work tends to inspire melancholia, especially in older people, because they remember these places from their youth. It reminds them of their own mortality, but I think that palpable sense of transience and loss in these places is actually exciting and inspiring rather than sad or futile. I suspect that feeling runs strong in many urban explorers.</p>
<blockquote><p>Personally, I&#8217;m not that opposed to pollution – I think the transformation of the old landscape by concrete fields and all that isn&#8217;t necessarily bad by definition. I feel there&#8217;s a certain beauty in looking at a lake that has a bright metallic scum floating on top of it. A certain geometric beauty in a cone of china clay, say, four hundred yards high, suddenly placed in the middle of the rural landscape. It&#8217;s all a matter of a certain aesthetic response. Some people find highways, cloverleaf junctions and overpasses and multi-storey car-parks ugly, chiefly because they are made of concrete. But they are not. Most of them are structures of great beauty.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, &#8216;How to Face Doomsday without Really Dying&#8217;, a 1974 interview with Carol Orr.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>HENRY:</strong> Ballard has said that his fiction is the &#8216;dissection of a deep pathology&#8217;. Do you also see your own work as a kind of surgical procedure, laying bare the arid and often post-apocalyptically tinged dreamscapes of the USA in all its mythical glory? Or is it more intimate, personal and emotional than that?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Jeez, these are hard questions. It is a very personal and emotional process for me. It is an artistic process more than an intellectual one. My photography is about these places as they are now, not as they were. It&#8217;s not socioeconomic commentary, an anti-technology or anti-military-waste rant, or a warning about rampant consumerism and conspicuous consumption, though it has been interpreted as such by others. Put simply, I love these places. I am laying bare this rotten underbelly, but I&#8217;m doing it because these places simply move me, not necessarily because of what they were, but because of what they are now. It&#8217;s all about the atmosphere and feeling, and I try to enhance this surreal vibe with my time exposures and light painting.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_night_vision.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The cover of Paiva&#8217;s Night Vision: The Art of Urban Exploration, published by Chronicle Books.</em></p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> I see that Geoff Manaugh of <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com">BLDGBLOG</a> has written the foreword to your forthcoming book, <a href="http://www.chroniclebooks.com/index/main,book-info/store,books/products_id,7135"><em>Night Vision: The Art of Urban Exploration</em></a>. As we&#8217;ve <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/politics-of-enthusiasm-geoff-manaugh-interview">previously seen</a>, Geoff shares a Ballardian approach to architecture and urban exploration.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> My editor at <a href="http://www.chroniclebooks.com">Chronicle Books</a> introduced me to Geoff. He was a last-second addition to the project when my original essayist fell through at the 11th hour. Geoff immediately ‘got it’ and wrote a very eloquent and flattering forward, quoting from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition"><em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em></a> among several other books. I enjoy Geoff’s blog tremendously, especially when the subject of ‘the philosophy and aesthetics of abandonment’ comes up.</p>
<blockquote><p>Paiva&#8217;s images of airplane graveyards, in particular, are all the more evocative and gripping when you consider that his father was a flight engineer, hopping planes from country to country. In his book <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em>, J.G. Ballard describes a surreal landscape of crashed bombers, abandoned air warfare ranges, and disused runways. He refers to such images as &#8216;the nightmare of a grounded pilot,&#8217; or &#8216;the suburbs of Hell,&#8217; a &#8216;University of Death,&#8217; across which people wander, stunned by the ruins all around them.</p>
<p><em>Geoff Manaugh, foreword to Night Vision: The Art of Urban Exploration.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Tell us more about the book.</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> It’s broken down into five chapters: ‘Byron Hot Springs Hotel’, about an abandoned early 20th century resort; ‘16th Street Station’, about a derelict Beaux Arts inner city train station; ‘Decommissioned’, which covers over a dozen various abandoned military and industrial complexes; ‘Desert’, about the abandoned roadsides of the desert southwest; and ‘Boneyard’, a high-desert graveyard comprised of hundreds of junk aircraft.</p>
<p>While it&#8217;s as similar to <em>Lost America</em> as you&#8217;d expect two volumes of ‘light-painted night photography in abandoned places’ to be, this new one is about specific locations rather than general overviews of types of places. I have the first production copy sitting on the desk in front of me and it really looks sharp. It’s a much higher-quality piece than <em>Lost America</em>. The layout and design is much more sophisticated and refined and the print quality is a vast improvement. I’m frankly floored by it and I’m my own worst critic, so I’m pretty optimistic that other people are going to be floored by it too.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> What sort of research do you do, in terms of finding out sites to visit and photograph?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> I drive around in the desert and scout locations. I have a collection of old road maps from the 50s, which I’ve studied at length. It’s fascinating to see whole towns on those maps that no longer exist. In the last few years I’ve had a lot of email from people telling me about great locations and I’ve been acting on some of these tips with great results. I’ve also been shooting with a lot of local UrbEx photographers who have introduced me to some spectacular spots very close to home.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_wind_slice.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/245855054/in/set-72157594233060737">&#8216;Wind Slice&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8217;1930s airliner in storage at Aviation Warehouse in El Mirage, CA, a Mojave Desert aircraft boneyard that services the film industry as well as recycles aircraft parts. Night, full moon, red-gelled flash. 2-3 minutes.&#8217;</em></p>
<blockquote><p>He welcomed this journey into a familiar land, zones of twilight. <em>At dawn, after driving all night, they reached the suburbs of Hell. The pale flares from the petrochemical plants illuminated the wet cobbles. No one would meet them there</em>. His two companions, the bomber pilot at the wheel in the faded flying suit and the beautiful young woman with radiation burns, never spoke to him… Who were they, these strange twins – couriers from his own unconscious? For hours they drove through the endless suburbs of the city. The billboards multiplied around them…</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, &#8216;The Atrocity Exhibition&#8217; (1970).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> And your favourite shoot so far?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> The <a href="http://www.lostamerica.com/aircraft.html">aircraft boneyards</a> are still my favourites. I’m an airline brat so I grew up around planes. There is nothing that can prepare you for walking up to half of a 747 laying on its belly in the sand. It’s just epic. I shot the derelict ocean liner ‘S.S. Independence’ earlier this year, days before it left to be towed to the breaker beaches of Asia. That was an amazing, <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/sets/72157603894811759">once-in-a-lifetime shoot</a>.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Do you have a desire to shoot outside of America?</p>
<p><strong>TROY:</strong> Oh sure: the abandoned industrial cities of Eastern Russia, Gunkanjima – that completely abandoned island city in Japan – the half-finished hotels of the Sinai, the abandoned Formula 1 racetrack at Reims, France… the list goes on and on. Realistically, though, there is more than enough in the American Southwest to shoot for a lifetime.</p>
<p>It’s mainly a money issue. Being a freelance artist in the 21st century is a low-budget lifestyle. Still, with a few deep-pocket patrons I’d be happily winging my way across the globe next week!</p>
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<p><em>Night Vision: The Art of Urban Exploration is shipping on 2 July, 2008 and is available for preorder via <a href="http://www.chroniclebooks.com/index/main,book-info/store,books/products_id,7135">Chronicle Books</a> and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FNight-Vision-Art-Urban-Exploration%2Fdp%2F0811863387%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1212583230%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">Amazon.com</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />.</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/paiva_clipped_headless.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Troy Paiva" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica/252458861/in/set-72157594322589050">&#8216;Clipped and Headless&#8217;</a> by Troy Paiva. &#8216;A mutilated Delta 727 fuselage on its belly at Aviation Warehouse in El Mirage, CA, a Mojave Desert aircraft boneyard that services the film industry as well as recycles aircraft parts. Night, full moon, red-gelled strobe flash. 2-3 minute exposure.&#8217;</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: MORE INFORMATION</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> Troy&#8217;s <a href="http://www.troypaiva.com">official site</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> Troy&#8217;s <a href="http://www.lostamerica.com">Lost America site</a><br />
+ Troy&#8217;s <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostamerica">flickr stream</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.designshed.com">Design Shed</a>, Troy&#8217;s freelance design and illustration site</p>
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		<title>Ballardian Home Movies: The Final Cut</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-festival-the-final-cut</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-festival-the-final-cut#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Mar 2008 06:14:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[competitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gated communities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[humour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychopathology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[suburbia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[suicide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surveillance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-festival-the-final-cut</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here are the entries in the 1st Ballardian Festival of Home Movies. Congratulations to the winner, Ben Slater.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>THE 1ST BALLARDIAN FESTIVAL OF HOME MOVIES</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crashed_motorola2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Mobile Phone Competition" /></p>
<p><em>Illustration by <a href="http://johncoulthart.com/feuilleton">John Coulthart</a>.</em></p>
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<p><strong>WINNER</strong><br />
<strong>Ben Slater; &#8216;Vista 8&#8242; </strong></p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/JWPk7AWbF_4"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/JWPk7AWbF_4" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> Monochrome location scouting inside a high-rise hotel that looks half-finished. Remnants of an affair litter the piece: photographs, a high heel and the cutting to two cars so close together it would be difficult not to predict a Crash. As Christopher Brookmyre said, beware half-finished places, you know, the Death Star, Jurassic Park, Nakatomi Plaza&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Ben&#8217;s film, shot among the Vista 8 high-rise in Singapore, seems to me like it&#8217;s recording the last moments of a suicide. You chance upon a mobile phone discarded in the high-rise&#8217;s courtyard; you press &#8216;play&#8217;, and this is what you find&#8230; I do like the snatched inclusion of Bowie&#8217;s man-machine classic, &#8216;Always Crashing in the Same Car&#8217;.</p>
<p><em><strong>MORE ENTRIES BELOW&#8230;</strong></em></p>
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<blockquote><p>I&#8217;d like to organize a Festival of Home Movies! It could be wonderful &#8212; thousands of the things&#8230; You might find an odd genius, a Fellini or Godard of the home movie, living in some suburb. I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;s coming&#8230; Using modern electronics, home movie cameras and the like, one will begin to retreat into one&#8217;s own imagination. I welcome that&#8230;</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, quoted in &#8216;Interview with JGB by Graeme Revell&#8217;, RE/Search No. 8/9, 1984.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>We had eight entries in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/1st-ballardian-festival-of-home-movies">our little competition</a> for 1-minute-or-less films shot on cameraphones, modelled after Ballard&#8217;s 1984 call for a &#8216;festival of home movies&#8217;. A reminder of the requirements:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>+</strong> Shoot a film using your mobile phone’s video function, no more than one minute in duration, and using no post-production or processing — the film must be shot entirely ‘in camera’.<br />
<strong>+</strong> The theme: anything at all to do with either one or both of the Collins English Dictionary definitions of ‘Ballardian’:</p>
<p><strong>BALLARDIAN</strong>: (adj) 1. of James Graham Ballard (J.G. Ballard; born 1930), the British novelist, or his works. (2) resembling or suggestive of the conditions described in Ballard&#8217;s novels &#038; stories, esp. dystopian modernity, bleak man-made landscapes &amp; the psychological effects of technological, social or environmental developments.</p></blockquote>
<p>Mounting this exercise was hugely enjoyable for me and I was delighted to discover some real gems among the eight. I have been inspired by those Ballard &#8216;home movie&#8217; quotes ever since I first read them years ago, and just the very the idea of unearthing &#8216;a Fellini or Godard of the suburbs&#8217; has always excited (and humoured) me. So have we found one? Perhaps not. But we just may have discovered, finally, what lies in the angle between two walls&#8230;. (not even John Foxx, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/john-foxx-interview">you may recall</a>, could crack that conundrum).</p>
<p>To determine a winner, <a href="http://fifthestate.co.uk/author/johnrivers">John Rivers</a> from HarperCollins assigned points to each film, as did I. We then combined our rankings. The result is that Ben Slater, with &#8216;Vista 8&#8242;, came out on top. Ben wins a copy of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a>, plus these HarperCollins reissues: <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drought">The Drought</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-unlimited-dream-company">The Unlimited Dream Company</a>.</p>
<p>The runner-up is Pablo Sgarbi from Brazil, with &#8217;120 Days of an Angle Between Two Walls&#8217; (see below), and he receives a copy of Miracles. Congratulations to Ben and Pablo, and many thanks to all entrants and to everyone who supported and promoted the festival. Extra special thanks to HarperCollins UK for getting behind the idea, and to JGB for everything: always and of course.</p>
<p>Next year, who knows? Perhaps we&#8217;ll get entrants to simulate the filmed <em>ratissages</em> in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a>, or Bobby Crawford&#8217;s home porno movies in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a>&#8230;</p>
<p>Here now are the remaining entries direct to you from <a href="http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=716DE043D09BC61B">BallardoTube</a>, the Net&#8217;s only dedicated <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/ballardiandotcom">Ballard TV channel</a>, where &#8216;history is just a first-draft screenplay&#8217; (according to JGB in &#8216;The Greatest TV Show On Earth&#8217;), and where &#8216;premium subscribers can experience transexualism, paedophilia, terminal syphilis, gang-rape, and bestiality (choice: German Shepherd or Golden Retriever)&#8217;, as decreed by JGB in &#8216;A Guide to Virtual Death&#8217;.</p>
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<p><strong>RUNNER UP</strong><br />
<strong>Pablo Sgarbi; &#8217;120 Days of An Angle Between Two Walls&#8217;</strong></p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/bxHnqyKGrrE"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/bxHnqyKGrrE" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> A voice simulator spews forth graphic prose like a poetry machine from Vermillion Sands. Juxtaposed with images of ordinariness, a ceiling corner, a kettle, a cup of coffee. Reminding us what lies in the dark psyches of people everyday.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Beautiful and hilarious: a robot reads a passage from the Marquis de Sade&#8217;s The 120 Days of Sodom, dispassionately intoning squirting buttocks and jets of blood, while common household objects &#8216;star&#8217; on the screen: those elusive wall angles, a coffee cup, and so on. In its juxtaposition of  extreme and violent sex with banal home appliances, this is perhaps the most &#8216;Ballardian&#8217; film of them all. I love this entry a lot.</p>
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<p><em><strong>..:: Remaining entries (not ranked; in alphabetical order)</strong></em></p>
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<p><strong>Shahin Afrassiabi; &#8216;Home&#8217;</strong></p>
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<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> A static shot, half composed of white, with red material intruding beneath. A seemingly random collection of sounds from talk radio or television are heard, slowly snatches emerge. Mopeds, a body found on a golf course. Murder on the roads, in the suburbs. &#8220;They shouldn&#8217;t be here,&#8221; claims a politician or letterwriter and as if to answer the listener appears to move away.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> An effective study in boredom, the psychological blank slate against which all manner of deviant behaviour is exposed and spontaneously generated, like flyblown maggots on rotting meat&#8230;</p>
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<p><strong>Mike Bonsall; &#8216;Day of Creation&#8217;</strong></p>
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<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> Machine noise, loud and abrasive. A tool kit, saws, cutting tools. The slow reveal of a pile of Ballard titles leads you to wonder if here JG&#8217;s works are being recut, sliced, diced and served again. The Day of Creation is the final title to appear. The maker has taken Ballard and chopped him up.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Mike B. is the creator of the <a href="http://www.mikebonsall.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/concordance">JG Ballard Short Story Concordance</a>, and he is currently working on a concordance of Ballard&#8217;s novels. These projects required him to buy extra copies of Ballard books and to razor their pages for easily digestible scanning under the all-powerful OCR software, before they could emerge out the other side as digital mulch. This film, then, is a delightful little in joke aimed squarely by Mike at his own obsessiveness, but it also functions as a sly and clever appraisal of Ballard&#8217;s entire ouevre, which has always relied on repetition, recycling, détournement, collage, bricolage&#8230;</p>
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<p><strong>Julian Gough; &#8216;Flesh Frame&#8217;</strong></p>
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<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> Micro-entertainment, as flesh is exposed on a computer screen. That it only takes up a quarter of the screen makes it look like the body has been filmed and is being edited. Only to blur into a sunset. Consumerism takes over as the computer screen turns and pulls away to a credit card rectangle ready to accept your chip and PIN.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> This film chases its own tail, eventually disappearing into the black hole of inner space. Utterly beguiling.</p>
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<p><strong>Russell Miller; &#8216;A Journey Through A Distant Land&#8217;</strong></p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/rkRtU3Tt8qM"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/rkRtU3Tt8qM" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> Concrete, bleakness, a travelator that moves vs. a river refusing to run. CCTV-positioned footage of a seemingly empty street lined by lock-ups hiding ephemera, memory junk, yesterday&#8217;s crashes. Daylight as harsh as the artificial strip lighting. In a denial of creation we return to the water from which we emerged.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> Classic Ballardian imagery, here: the flyovers, the apartment blocks, the obsessive stalking of nothing in particular. An artificial eye scanning the ruins of a humourless Earth, perhaps&#8230;</p>
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<p><strong>Jack Strain; &#8216;Ballardian&#8217;</strong></p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/s_dA4jMfjaI"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/s_dA4jMfjaI" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> An urban warrior applies his warpaint in slow-mo before a projection of traffic is destroyed in a  deliberate act of vandalism.  The whole process seems to be watched or logged.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> A fabulously evocative film, menacing and dark, and making full use of the competition&#8217;s &#8216;in camera&#8217; editing stipulation. The burning frame is a wonderful touch, and the glimpse of madness at the very end is bizarre and unsettling, behaviour that is perhaps the only response to the crushing insanity of the outside world.</p>
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<p><strong>Supervert; &#8216;Superego&#8217;</strong></p>
<p><object width="425" height="355";<param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/8oaka0958uo"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8oaka0958uo" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>JOHN:</strong> Big Ballard is watching you! And joined by a smaller version of himself. Ballard argues with himself over an unheard question. As we watch, we are given permission only to be refused a second later. We are eventually told &#8216;no&#8217; twice and our audience is over. That the responses are from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/sam-scoggins-unlimited-dream-company">Sam Scoggins&#8217;s movie about The Unlimited Dream Company</a> and the &#8217;90 questions from the Eyckman Personality Quotient test&#8217; give the film a different meaning, that you&#8217;re being fed the results of a psychological experiment, while appearing to participate in one yourself.</p>
<p><strong>SIMON:</strong> This film manipulates footage from the Scoggins film and is just a little disconcerting. It&#8217;s like being given a glimpse into a malfunctioning brain, with its psychopathology unashamedly on show, brandished like a weapon. Ultimately the synaptic process is unfathomable and the viewer, like all readers of Ballard, is left on the outer, able to only impotently guess at the intent, forced to fill in the dots herself&#8230;</p>
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<p><strong>..:: <em>Previously on Ballardian&#8230;</em></strong></p>
<p><strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/competition-winner-starsky-hutch-by-jg-ballard">J.G. Ballard Pastiche Competition</a></p>
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<blockquote><p>Everybody will be doing it, everybody will be living inside a TV studio. That&#8217;s what the domestic home aspires to these days; the home is going to be a TV studio. We&#8217;re all going to be starring in our own sit-coms, and they&#8217;ll be strange sit-coms, too, like the inside of our heads. That&#8217;s going to come, I&#8217;m absolutely sure of that, and it&#8217;ll really shake up everything&#8230;</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, quoted in &#8216;Interview with JGB by Andrea Juno and Vale&#8217;, RE/Search No. 8/9, 1984.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>The mobile phone can be seen as a fashion accessory and adult toy as well as a break-through in instant communication, though its use in restaurants, shops and public spaces can be irritating to others. This suggests that its real function is to separate its users from the surrounding world and isolate them within the protective cocoon of an intimate electronic space. At the same time phone users can discreetly theatricalize themselves, using a body language that is an anthology of presentation techniques and offers to others a tantalizing glimpse of their private and intimate lives.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, &#8216;Impressions of Speed&#8217;, in Speed : visions of an accelerated age / / edited by Jeremy Millar and Michiel Schwarz (1998).</em></p></blockquote>
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		<title>&#8216;You are Hochhaus!&#8217;: Ballard in Berlin</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/you-are-hochhaus-ballard-in-berlin</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/you-are-hochhaus-ballard-in-berlin#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jan 2008 23:13:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dan OHara</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Marker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Cronenberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gated communities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Germany]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steven Spielberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban revolt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban ruins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[utopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/you-are-hochhaus-ballard-in-berlin</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dan O'Hara interviews the creators of Hochhaus, a German mixed-media radio play based on High-Rise. Transposing the novel to Berlin in 2013, it references Nazism, notably Speer’s social engineering through architecture, on its way to exploring Ballard’s relevance to speculative models of German life.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><em>An Interview with Paul Plamper and Niklas Goldbach</em><br />
by <strong>Dan O&#8217;Hara</strong></p>
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<p><strong>In July on the roof terrace of the Ludwigsmuseum, the major museum of modern art in Cologne, I attended a &#8216;screening&#8217; of a radio play. I say &#8216;screening&#8217; because a film had been made to accompany the play, the combined effect of audio and film a little like Chris Marker&#8217;s <a href=" http://www.ballardian.com/la-jetee">La Jetée</a>. Called <em>Hochhaus</em>, the play was a three-part adaptation of J.G. Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-High-Rise">High-Rise</a>. A faithful rendition in terms of plot and themes, it transposed the action of the novel to Berlin in the near future. The programme described the play as follows:</strong></p>
<blockquote><p>Berlin, 2013. A star architect has built in the capital the tallest residential building in Europe. There he wants to create a social Utopia: the Neokommune K 13. Nothing is wanting in this autarchy, a completely self-sufficient closed system. But the high-rise becomes a pressure cooker of neighbourhood enmity and rampant, uninhibited class warfare. In the blink of a camera&#8217;s eye, this modern super-community regresses into a biotope of primitive lifeforms. Based on J. G. Ballard&#8217;s science fiction novel, Paul Plamper has produced a horror radio play of pressing sociological relevance, which could take place in every German home. &#8220;Never forget: <em>You</em> are Hochhaus!&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>With the Kölner Dom looming behind the roof terrace, and a panorama of the city stretching away towards the west, some fifty or sixty people settled down to listen for three hours to the German version of <em>High-Rise</em>. At nine in the evening, the sky was at first still too bright for the audience to see much of the film, so many of them sat with their heads down or eyes closed, concentrating on listening. In any case the film appeared to be merely a static image of a huge skyscraper, a carbuncle of a compressed city, a futurist mockery of the Gothic Cathedral at our backs.</p>
<p>As the sky darkened above and as I followed the familiar opening patterns of Ballard&#8217;s novel,  it became apparent that the film projected in front of us was not static at all, but almost imperceptibly changing. The audience only realized that the image in front of them had altered when they raised their heads or opened their eyes – and what became clear was that the slow-motion metamorphosis on screen mirrored the actual transition from dusk to night. Over the space of the first hour, the film zoomed into the skyscraper, the image darkening until all that could be seen were the lights of the high-rise; and in uncanny synchronicity, this was also all we could see of the Cologne skyline to the west.</p>
<p>There were some very interesting angles taken in terms of adaptation – the film was made in parts of the old GDR, and there were persistent echoes of and references to Nazism, Speer&#8217;s social engineering through architecture being one of the more telling ones. I spoke to the author, Paul Plamper, and his colleague Niklas Goldbach, a video artist who made the accompanying film. Radio plays or &#8216;Hörspiele&#8217; are hugely popular in Germany – the original broadcast, on WDR in November 2006, reached around 100,000 listeners – and Ballard is relatively unknown, so this radio adaptation would introduce Ballard&#8217;s name to an audience that had hitherto encountered him only through Cronenberg and Spielberg&#8217;s films. I wanted to find out why Plamper and Goldbach had chosen to adapt <em>High-Rise</em>. What relevance did Ballard&#8217;s 1975 novel have, in their view, for the Germany of the near future?</strong></p>
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<p><em><a href="http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/englisch/abteilungen/berressem/ohara/cv.html">Dan O&#8217;Hara</a> teaches English &#038; American Literature at the University of Cologne. He is currently working on a monograph on J. G. Ballard.</em></p>
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<p><em>NOTE: Performances of Hochhaus are due to restart on 12 January 2008 at the Theater Mannheim. See the endnote for more information.</em></p>
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<p><strong>DAN: Can I ask you first of all why you chose to adapt <em>High-Rise</em>? Because, as far as I&#8217;m aware, Ballard&#8217;s not very well known in Germany.</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> No, he&#8217;s not that well known, actually. At least not when I was searching for a German translation of <em>High-Rise</em> a few years ago. There were some rare copies of an old edition being traded on the internet. I got hold of one of those and was immediately attracted. In Germany, the cultural establishment builds up a strong frontier between what they call &#8216;culture&#8217; and what they call &#8216;entertainment&#8217;, and I think some, uhm, stupid intellectuals put Ballard more in the &#8216;entertainment&#8217; Schublade, the entertainment category. But on the other hand you also have thinkers like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heiner_Müller">Heiner Müller</a> being admirers, so…</p>
<p><strong>DAN: Really? I didn&#8217;t know about that. Heiner Müller, the &#8216;Hamletmaschine&#8217; author?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Yes, the dramatist. He liked science fiction and he liked crime literature. So, as you see, you find Ballard in different cultural circles. The science fiction and fantasy communities read him, and from time to time an open minded intellectual. That&#8217;s what I like about Ballard, he&#8217;s not easy to put in just one bracket.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: So what was it particularly about this one novel? What did you have in mind when you adapted it?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Well, concerning the themes, I was looking for material for a &#8216;horror&#8217; radio play. I wanted to do a monster radio play without monsters, but with humans. I discovered that Ballard is rather a specialist in this subject, and that his well-cultivated and very sensitive paranoia really makes him somewhat of a prophet; you know, he wrote the novel in 1975, and now the novel is being slowly caught up by reality. He was paranoiac enough to know what was going to happen.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m also looking for interesting acoustical situations for my radio plays. In <em>High-Rise</em> there&#8217;s a small society in a very condensed space. If you just look at social interaction: when it&#8217;s silent, you hear your neighbours in your room. The wall is something that separates you from them but the level of audio is really what separates you the least. You don&#8217;t see them but you hear them. So the sort of social pressure which has to be related is really well-suited to a radio play. I&#8217;m always searching for interesting topics, but most of all for subject matters that <em>must</em> be a radio play and no other medium, film, or whatever.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: You move the action to future Berlin; I&#8217;m very intrigued by this shift.</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Well, since Ballard wrote <em>High-Rise</em>, things that happen in the novel now really happen in the middle of society, in public, in the media. So we thought, we won&#8217;t put the building in a suburb, as Ballard does – in the novel it&#8217;s in the outskirts of London, hidden away, where these terrible things can happen because nobody takes notice of it. We put our house right in the middle of Berlin, and it&#8217;s a prestigious project run by an architect who is a very adept publicist. He&#8217;s played by Martin Wuttke and we named him Philip del Ponte, a character like Daniel Libeskind or similar, you know, people who make grand architectural gestures and yet who are at the same time extremely clever in developing cute ideas to sell their architecture and to be in the public eye. We moved the whole story to the border of the Spree – this is actually 100 metres from here, where I live. Where before, there was the Wall, now there&#8217;s a gap at the river, and there are vast areas where a new centre is being developed for the media, MTV moved there for example. And there are gated communities. They&#8217;re like a virus spreading in Berlin. They have all these phony names like &#8220;Prenzlauer Gärten&#8221;. Well-to-do creative people start these projects like community projects; everybody has his financial interest, buys part of the building and thinks he invests in a social project.</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> But there&#8217;s a new meaning to &#8216;social&#8217; for these people. It doesn&#8217;t have anything to do with the social vision of Ballard or anyone in the &#8217;70s for example…</p>
<p><strong>DAN: It&#8217;s not to do with community?</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> No. Well, maybe it is, but not with the idea of a social system where the stronger help the poor, for example. I don&#8217;t think you could find anything like the social system Ballard presents in <em>High-Rise</em> nowadays in Berlin.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: When I think of gated communities in England, the ones that Ballard&#8217;s talked about for example in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-running-wild">Running Wild</a>, his 1988 novel, in which some children living in a gated community kill their parents, such gated communities are very upper-middle class, and people choose to live in them apparently because of fear. These are high-security environments with surveillance cameras, private security guards… I wonder if it&#8217;s the same sort of thing in Berlin?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> We&#8217;re talking about something new. This certainly exists, but what interests us right now even more is that you have such gated communities combined with the fact that you can buy being a &#8216;good person&#8217;. You can purchase a good feeling by moving into a living community of house owners. In the 60s and 70s there was the start of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kommune_1">Kommune</a> in Germany, Kommune Eins and so on. Now it&#8217;s part of the market, and there&#8217;s no contradiction at all. Communal feeling has been absorbed by the market. It goes together with the fact that, yes, of course these people live gated, because they say &#8220;ok, I&#8217;m moving near Kreuzberg, how exciting, a <em>real</em> ghetto, so I have to protect our stuff a little bit. Generally I&#8217;m open minded, come on, I was punk in the 80s, but still, I don&#8217;t want to get robbed.&#8221; They&#8217;re not really frightened, they think they&#8217;re just rationally pragmatic.</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> And also I think what&#8217;s kind of key for Berlin, I mean, you live Dan in Cologne, right?</p>
<p><strong>DAN: I do now, yes.</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Cologne has a completely different structure as a city from Berlin, obviously, because of the separation and the Wall. Berlin was for such a long time a kind of playground for people to try out new social structures, but lately there&#8217;s this gentrification process in Berlin that&#8217;s really overwhelming. In Kreuzberg, which was or which still is an alternative quarter of the city, now there are rich people moving in and all these condominiums being built. I saw one house where you can park your car in front, on the same level as your apartment, to make it safer for you. So there are all these weird architectural ideas popping up, and then there are other areas like Prenzlauer Berg which is in former East Berlin, where you have a real gentrification melting point, where only families live and everybody behaves as if they live in a small village. So especially from that point of view, it makes total sense to put <em>High-Rise</em> in Berlin. Where else in Europe right now? Probably in East Europe soon, but right now this is the place where most of the gentrification is happening, or where it&#8217;s visible. A lot of money moved to Berlin because it&#8217;s the capital, and there are so many <em>real</em> gated communities: there&#8217;s one right in the middle of the city for example, next to a park, the &#8216;Volkspark Friedrichshain&#8217;; and they have a doorman. You can only get in if you pass the doorman, and then you have a street, and a pool, and little houses, like a suburb. And this is happening in 2007 &#8211; in the center of Berlin; Paul makes <em></em><em>Hochhaus</em> happen in 2013, not that far away. And I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s that much of a utopia.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> We have a doorman called Weingarten in the radio play, played by an old actor from the East who I met at the Berliner Ensemble, Heinrich Buttchereit. He has a Stasi pass in the play; he&#8217;s been hired by del Ponte because he has the best techniques in surveillance and security… They&#8217;re just very well trained. At one point, when there&#8217;s an escalation of the situation in the house, Weingarten says: &#8220;it&#8217;s just as before: we don&#8217;t have the Wall in a vertical sense anymore, now it&#8217;s horizontal, in the house, between the upper class and the lower class.&#8221; He says &#8220;ok, now I have my Wall back!&#8221;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: There&#8217;s a great deal of political content in your adaptation; and with these references to Weingarten being ex-Stasi and, also, Niklas, I think you said you&#8217;d filmed some parts in the ex-GDR, was that right?</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Yeah, that&#8217;s true.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: There are echoes – deliberate echoes? – of the GDR, of the Stasi and of Nazi Germany. What&#8217;s the point of these echoes for your audience? What are you trying to say to them?</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Well, Berlin has changed so much, at least for me. My background is that I&#8217;m a visual artist, a video artist, and most of my work is about the role of the individual in a world on the edge of dystopia. Maybe this is a very pessimistic view – let&#8217;s say it&#8217;s an artistic view, it&#8217;s maybe not only my personal view. I&#8217;d worked  with Paul before, on another radio play called <a href="http://lieblingslied-records.de">Release</a> that actually took place in a prison. He told me about his new play, and invited me to a pre-listening session, and I thought about images that could occur within the three acts of the audio play. First of all I went straight to the point where Paul&#8217;s fictional high-rise would stand, between Kreuzberg and Friedrichshain, right on the border where the Wall was. I went and took photos. It&#8217;s a vast area, and I thought, well, what kind of architecture could be in this area?</p>
<p>All the three parts of the radio play are filmed in the former GDR, there&#8217;s not a single West German building. I think there are several reasons for that, but one reason is for example that the GDR system seems like a mixture of dystopia <em>and</em> utopia to me – it started as a utopia – of a social project. Del Ponte, the architect in the radio play, his idea is to make a social project that combines different classes of people. And this is actually what the GDR system had in common with del Ponte – maybe. His idea is to get rid of classes in this building; and that was also an idea of the GDR – West Germany never had that idea.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> You know, Ballard puts a big focus on the social classes in his novel, and at first you think, oh, the social classes, nowadays those concepts sound really seventies, but actually my thoughts are the exact opposite. West Germany since WWII has tried to have this <em>soziale Marktwirtschaft</em> – a social market economy – and until the beginning or the middle of the &#8217;90s, it worked quite well. Do you have this expression, the &#8216;social scissor&#8217;? It&#8217;s a like a scissor that&#8217;s wide or narrow: you have the classes drifting apart from each other or closer to each other. Up to the `90s, the scissor was half closed, but in the last ten years, this has been completely, outrageously reversed. Now you have the underprivileged again; you have a small upper class getting richer and more powerful. I thought that we had to start talking about classes again. Ballard wrote about them in 1975, and now it&#8217;s back, it&#8217;s a very hot topic again.</p>
<p>Part two of the radio play is really about this. And at the same time it&#8217;s like a fast-forward history of the extreme Left in Germany. From the initial spontaneous protests in the sixties, the fun <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutionary_spontaneity">Sponti</a> actions, up to the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Army_Faction">Red Army Faction</a> in the late seventies, which got to be rather violent and militarily organized. The camera-man Andreas Lang – in the novel he&#8217;s called Wilder – lives on the ground floor. Lang, played by Milan Peschel, is accused of having killed the first human in the house, the second victim after the dog. Lang&#8217;s first reaction to the accusation is to gather people around him, to play <em>Skat</em>, a card game. As an act of political protest, they play cards in front of the supermarket on the 23rd floor, and then their protest gets more violent. Lang moves from being a buddy of the underprivileged, to being their leader. He leads a <em>Feldzug</em>…</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus5.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Like a battle, a campaign.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> They go up the high-rise, trying to burn the food stores of the upper class. Barricades  have already been built from sofas and so on, so that there&#8217;s no access to the upper floors anymore. Lang and his followers succeed in burning the food stores, and in a very irrational moment they announce hunger for the whole house.</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Their slogan is &#8220;Solidarity with the hungry people in this world&#8221;.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: When I&#8217;m looking at your original blurb for the Ludwigsmuseum, it&#8217;s called a &#8216;Horror Hörspiel&#8217;. And yet…</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> A sociological horror Hörspiel…</p>
<p><strong>DAN: … yes. And yet there&#8217;s a huge amount of political content here.</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Ballard is a political author for me. Many pages in the novel are about the class system. I like his political content; but at the same time I fear that we sound like a couple of humorless Germans now, who do heavy, grey, intellectual type stuff, but don&#8217;t get us wrong, the radio play is meant to be pure entertainment; it has the rhythm of an action movie&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> This is what we said in the beginning about Ballard himself, that this is an entertaining book which also has the quality of political comment. It&#8217;s supposed to be entertaining, but there&#8217;s obviously a deeper meaning to it. For example, look at the function of del Ponte, the architect, as opposed to Andreas Lang, the leader of the revolution. Especially in 2007, I think a lot of different types like del Ponte are out there, you know, private people or private investors who take over functions of the state. He&#8217;s a private person sponsoring the lower class like, for example, some celebrities or rich people today give some of their earnings back to the lower class. So it&#8217;s a bit ambivalent, what he&#8217;s doing. To the outside world he looks like he&#8217;s a really good guy but in the end, he&#8217;s the one who&#8217;s living in the penthouse.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: I wondered if you also had a sense of the fact that, in the book, there&#8217;s a very specific relationship between Wilder and Anthony Royal – between Andreas Lang and del Ponte in <em>Hochhaus</em> – there&#8217;s this Oedipal backstory in the novel. In a sense it&#8217;s as if Ballard&#8217;s using that psychological backstory to make a political point.</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Well, we have the same two characters – the big antipodes – and we pretty much go along with Ballard&#8217;s narrative. In the end, Andreas Lang, our Wilder, when he&#8217;s already quite animal-like, mounts to the upper floors and kills del Ponte. It&#8217;s almost the same story. And then he gets eaten by the women, by the Matriarchat.</p>
<p>When I read the novel, I felt that Ballard really likes to develop the characters and their steps in a psychologically logical order. He has plenty of time to explain what could be the psychological background of Wilder doing what he does, and of his regression into animal status and so on. But in a radio play you don&#8217;t have that much time; and also I had the sense that in 2006 you don&#8217;t have to explain why people freak out, it&#8217;s so obvious, that utopia is, I don&#8217;t know&#8230; I have the impression that Ballard still felt some sort of friction with a positive utopian vision of a society, and so he described its regression into a barbarian state. Sometimes I thought that Ballard in the novel places his figures in a kind of sociological chess game. This figure moves from here to there because of this and that. I didn&#8217;t feel it necessary to explain so much in our radio play. The dynamic is a musical dynamic.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus6.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN:</strong>I can see that perhaps you don&#8217;t need so much narration. But you did introduce a narrator, didn&#8217;t you? There&#8217;s an extra-diegetic voice.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Yeah; the great Volker Spengler is the narrator. You might know him from his films with Fassbinder. Like in Greek tragedy where you have the person who sees things and advances them, his narrator seems to know everything. He&#8217;s the transcendent voice. Volker just does it merely by his great personality and his destroyed voice, which breathes a lot of what he has lived.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: Yeah, he has a wonderful voice. What specific narrative changes did you make in the adaptation? You introduce an external narrator; you shift to a straight chronological narrative…</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> A listener can&#8217;t grasp 30 people like in the novel, he has to concentrate a lot to get to know even 10. So my co-author, Kai Hafemeister and I tried to take as few characters as possible, so that we still could see this as a small society that evolves. We have eight or so main characters, and not many very small parts, because I personally have a big aversion to this &#8216;protagonist and many small parts&#8217; thing. We try to create an  emotional involvement with each character. We wanted to have characters that you want to get to know better with each episode, because they were broadcast on three consecutive Fridays. So we had to make you want to continue to spend your time with these horrible people.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: And what function does the voice-over narration serve?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> He&#8217;s telling as much as is needed, as seldom as possible. When we call it a sociological horror radio play, he&#8217;s the horror part – supported of course by the soundtrack, which is by <a href="http://mirrorworldmusic.com">SchneiderTM</a>. Spengler&#8217;s  voice… It&#8217;s so difficult to describe it. Like a field in which an atomic bomb exploded… He has a post-World War Three voice…</p>
<p><strong>DAN: It reminded me of Vincent Price or Christopher Lee…</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> He&#8217;s the same kind of character…</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> At the end-credits, Volker always says, &#8216;And remember: You – are High-rise…&#8217; This is an allusion to <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bq_MRWewv80">a recent campaign</a> of the CDU government in Germany. They wanted to try to impose more national feeling on us. You had all these stupid billboards – saying &#8216;You Are Germany&#8217; everywhere. So Volker concludes each part – they get more and more horrifying – with &#8216;You Are High-rise&#8217;.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus7.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: Are you concerned about nationalism at the moment? In Ballard&#8217;s latest novel, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, he&#8217;s turned his attention towards specifically English nationalism.</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Yeah, I understand that. We recorded our radio play right before the soccer World Cup in 2006. There were young Germans with flags and the national colours on their faces, a new kind of &#8216;pop nationalism&#8217;. After what happened in the Nazi era, Germans thought they could finally show an non-violent national feeeling, just as in other countries. They had the feeling that everybody steps together, that we are a stronger society. This also infected our way of telling <em>High-Rise</em>, that people are trying to create this new community. And then you see what happens to it. Which would lead you, as a society as a whole, to the next war. In <em>High-Rise</em>, it leads you to the terrible end. I don&#8217;t know; I look at history as something cyclical, and not so much as a regression into a barbarian state. We tell the story of only one high-rise, and in the end we put a bigger accent on the fact that the women take over, as after WWII it was the <a href="http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trümmerfrauen">Trümmerfrauen</a>, the &#8216;rubble women&#8217;, in Germany who rebuilt society, and really started the German <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wirtschaftswunder">Wirtschaftswunder</a>, the economic miracle. After WWII, it was the women who cleaned up the men&#8217;s mess. Like the Matriarchat in the novel. We emphasized this; you see there&#8217;s a new order evolving; it starts again, a cycle.</p>
<p>We have a saying, <em>vor der eigenen Tür kehren</em> – to take the brush and clean in front of your own door – and that&#8217;s what Kai and me are trying to do. We&#8217;re trying to tell the story as close as possible to us, as if it could happen next to us, as if it could happen within us. Of course that&#8217;s something that is much bigger than the rise of nationalism right now. It&#8217;s like <em>High-Rise</em> being an image for a deliberate prison, and this prison which is self-chosen just displaces your view of another prison, which is Homo sapiens not getting out of his monstrous skin. Homo sapiens has this trait of this monstrosity; let&#8217;s face the fact. It&#8217;s a very Ballardian thought. Goya once said &#8216;I don&#8217;t fear witches, or poltergeists, or ghosts, or braggers or giants, or evil men; I fear no creature but one – the human.&#8217; He said that in 1790, and I think Ballard could have said the same thing. It&#8217;s really about human nature, <em>High-Rise</em>. All these allusions in <em>Hochhaus</em> to the downfall of the socialist system, or how they killed their own ideals in socialist realism – all of these elements are products of, and evolve from, human nature.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: I don&#8217;t know if you came across <a href="http://www.ballardian/com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>, the novel before <em>High-Rise</em>? For a later edition, Ballard wrote a new introduction in which he refers to both <a href="http://www.ballardian/com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> and <em>High-Rise</em>. He says something very close to what you&#8217;re saying, and what Goya said; he writes: &#8220;[A]s well as the many physical difficulties facing us there are the psychological ones. How resolute are we, and how far can we trust ourselves and our own motives? Perhaps, secretly, we hope to be marooned, to escape our families, lovers and responsibilities. Modern technology, as I tried to show in <em>Crash</em> and  <em>High-Rise</em>, offers an endless field-day to any deviant strains in our personalities.&#8221; Which is precisely the point you&#8217;re also making, no?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Yeah. And he also talks in <em>High-Rise</em> about the <em>suppression</em> of anti-social behaviour; the anti-social as something we have to suppress. But regarding Philip del Ponte, our architect, why he&#8217;s called that. It&#8217;s because there is an original for <em>High-Rise</em>. It&#8217;s called the Ponte Tower in Johannesburg. This is why in the beginning I was talking of Ballard as a prophet, because in Johannesburg you had in reality what Ballard&#8217;s story depicts. The Ponte Tower is 173m high, 54 floors high, with 2500 people living there and 470 apartments, and it was founded in the seventies too, as the most prestigious tower in town. Up to 2004 it was the biggest building south of the equator. In Johannesburg, you can see it from everywhere. It&#8217;s round, and in the middle you have this cylindrical space; it&#8217;s like a gigantic trash bin. After a while the Ponte Tower was full of drugs, gang wars and people throwing themselves from the floors – many, many people killed themselves by jumping into the building, into the middle – and everybody threw his trash in the middle so that there was three floors of trash. The whole building stunk terribly. Things were out of control at the Ponte, completely out of control. People trying to hire other people who owned guns to go out and do their shopping for them, because it was too dangerous; the elevators not functioning; child prostitution – it was incredible. You think, ah, Ballard must have known about this, but then the Ponte was founded in 1976 – Ballard wrote <em>High-Rise</em> only one year before. So our architect is called Philip del Ponte because of this tower; though he has an aristocratic &#8216;del&#8217; in front of the &#8216;Ponte&#8217;…</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus8.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: To correspond with the &#8216;Royal&#8217; of Anthony Royal, I suppose, yes?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Yes.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: It&#8217;s an unusual format; a radio play with a film accompanying it. Is this part of a bigger project, or a general direction you&#8217;re taking with your own work?</strong></p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> We did the radio play first, and then I thought of how to present it in public because I thought it could be interesting to show it at the Hörspielzentrale, in a series of radio play events at <a href="http://www.hebbel-am-ufer.de/de/intro.html">the Hau</a>, a theatre in Kreuzberg. Then of course I thought of Niklas, because he&#8217;s a specialist in architecture. We should describe the videos, no, Niklas?</p>
<p><strong>DAN: I did want to ask you about the film for the first episode. There&#8217;s a sentence in <em>High-Rise</em>: &#8220;They would film the exteriors from a helicopter, and from the nearest block four hundred yards away – in his mind&#8217;s eye he could already see a long, sixty-second zoom, slowly moving from the whole building in frame to a close-up of a single apartment, one cell in this nightmare termitary.&#8221; Which is more or less exactly your first film, no?</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Yeah it is. But to be honest this is a coincidence… When Paul asked me to join <em>Hochhaus</em>, my first intention was to read the book, and then we decided, maybe it&#8217;s better if I don&#8217;t read the book… So instead I tried to concentrate on the characters in Paul&#8217;s version of <em>High-Rise</em>. And, as Paul said, most of my work is about the human environment and urbanism, and it has some formal characteristics. In my video work, for example, one of the characteristics is the manipulation of time and the control of the image, and the use of of post-production. It&#8217;s mostly about personal feelings of alienation or mass cultural fantasies; the key themes of the latest works are the contradictions between public and private spheres. I try to examine how this comes down to a personal level, and try to use video – this is a cheesy metaphor, but maybe it&#8217;s allowed – to use video as a temporal microscope, trying to capture the moment where the subconscious shifts objectivity. This is why I was completely blown away when I listened to the first version of <em>Hochhaus</em>, because what Paul had done on the audio level was actually what I&#8217;m trying to do on the video level in my work, because <em>Hochhaus</em>  is highlighting the political tensions between these visions of utopia and the subjective experiences of individuals. Also, I think that humans mostly use architecture to express their power, in every form of society, and some of my videos are about the failure of architecture, about the failure of a utopia and its turning into a dystopia.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus9.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: Could you describe the three films, which accompany the three episodes?</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Ok. The first one, where you just said that there&#8217;s this zoom that&#8217;s described in the book. First of all it was a weird process to visualize this building because it should be mostly in the head of the audience, you know, you should imagine this building and it could have all different associations, but then I found the buildings at Ernst-Thälmann-Park, which is a socialist building park in former East Berlin. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernst_Thälmann">Ernst Thälmann</a> was the leader of the Communist party during, I think, much of the Weimar Republic and his buildings are actually like a small version of what&#8217;s described in <em>High-Rise</em>. They were like small high-rises, but with a park around them and the buildings were on a hill so that everyone who was living in that building had a very good view, which is a kind of social idea. Obviously there are also bigger apartments on the very top and you had to be member of the socialist party to live in them, so there&#8217;s again this hypocrisy; I guess it&#8217;s a very hypocritical way to invent a social structure, when there&#8217;s power involved, anyway. I went first of all to the area where Paul&#8217;s version of <em>High-Rise</em> was supposed to take place, and Paul had already said that it&#8217;s close to this area where MTV and other big companies have started to have their flagship stores or their company buildings. I took pictures of one vast area where there was previously a club,  and where now they&#8217;re building a big, multi-functional stadium. This is right where our imagined high-rise is, in the image in the first video. So what I did is I went to Ernst-Thälmann-Park and just stacked the buildings there on top of  each other. This is obviously a metaphor: stacking these socialist buildings on top of each other to get a bigger idea of the whole thing.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> He did it almost like a plastic surgeon – from one house he makes a Tower of Babylon; it&#8217;s beautiful.</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> It changes a lot of the content, I think. Regarding the technical aspects: at the beginning, the zoom, it&#8217;s a digital zoom, because the whole building itself is a Photoshop building. It&#8217;s combined with video in the background: the sky that&#8217;s shading from daylight into night is real; and also you see the skyline of Berlin, you see the TV tower in the background of the video, just to make the whole thing look a bit more real but also a bit like a comic. It looks like a fantasy building but it has this weird mixture of reality because it&#8217;s made from real images. The concept of the first part is that it begins in daylight, whilst in the radio play we&#8217;re listening to a TV show where the architect is talking about the building. He&#8217;s describing what you can see in the video; you look at my building, and listen to what Del Ponte says about his building. There are some parts where it&#8217;s really fitting and some others where it&#8217;s not fitting, which is good because then you have the idea that this is not <em>the</em> building: it&#8217;s just a placeholder for the building, in a way. When the first part of the audio play ends, it ends in the dark, at a party, and the first human dies. But this is happening at night, and so as the video image slowly zooms into the building, you end up at the entrance hall of the building, so metaphorically by the end of the first part you&#8217;re <em>in</em> the nightmare. It starts as a TV show, and in the end you&#8217;re in complete darkness, surrounded by the light of the windows &#8211; and you&#8217;re part of that building.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Yeah, and the camera is right in front of the building, you know, in the entrance where the first dead person is thrown from the top floor…</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> …out of the window…</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> … that&#8217;s where the image ends…</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> …yeah. And the people in the audio play are also looking out of the window, so they look down to the ground. This is where you find yourself at the end of the video.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus10.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p>The second part was filmed in a building on the German island <a href=" http://www.thirdreichruins.com/prora.htm">Rügen</a>, a Nazi seaside resort. I think it&#8217;s the longest building in Europe: it&#8217;s 4.5 kilometers long, and it was the KDF building, which was built by the Nazis. It was part of the Nazi <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraft_durch_Freude">&#8216;Strength through Joy&#8217;</a> programme. It was supposed to be a hotel for so-called &#8216;good Germans&#8217;. It was never finished; it actually ended up as a ruin, but then after WWII the GDR used it as an army barracks, where the army of the GDR was stationed. And then after the Wall came down it was used as a youth hostel, and it still is – they had stopped using it as a youth hostel, but I read recently in the news that it&#8217;s re-opened, which is such a weird idea. When you listen to the audio play, the second film corresponds to what is really happening <em>in</em> the building, whereas the first film is derived just from the structure of the audio play. The first part introduces us to the house and the people, whereas the second part is where everything is turning from a utopia into a dystopia, or from a funny audio play into a horror scenario. In the audio play when a new chapter starts, you hear the sound of the elevator. So, in the second film, the audience is actually stuck in this elevator that you hear all through the audio play. It&#8217;s actually spectating what&#8217;s happening in the building, and you can see how everything&#8217;s falling apart literally in the image, when there&#8217;s this very slow fade from the intact floor of the building, which was actually Photoshopped, to how the building in Rügen looks today. So it fades from a fictional image into a real image, whereas the audience is just stuck in the elevator, and through the elevator doors, they&#8217;re forced to watch the process of decay.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> There are several buildings in Prora-Rügen, that are exactly the same size and so on. Some are well-kept, because there&#8217;s the youth hostel inside, then there are others which are just ruins, at least on the inside, you have all these cables sticking out. I think Niklas broke into one of those…</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> …yeah, I did break in, I brought an axe…</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> …to film the ruin, and so you see in 50 minutes a fade from a nice long, intact, well-kept floor, to the same floor as a ruined chaos of cables. The video does nothing but that.</p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> But in fact I used three images, because the floors that are intact where the youth hostel was don&#8217;t look as nice as the high-rise should look before the revolution or the battle starts. So I photoshopped it; the very first image when the elevator opens in the video is pure photoshop. And then it goes to the real image: how the intact floors look today. And then I fade into the parts of the building that are completely falling into disrepair.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus11.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>DAN: And then the third film, which reminded me of bits of Chris Marker, or Tarkovsky…</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> I was really happy when I read that, because both of these visionaries are like real heroes of mine. So thank you for that…</p>
<p><strong>DAN: Well, it&#8217;s a very clear visual echo. Ballard himself is a real fan of Chris Marker.</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Yeah, I can totally believe that. So, the third part is filmed in Rechlin. It&#8217;s a very, very small village in the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania), so also former GDR. The houses you can see in the video were model houses for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welthauptstadt_Germania">Germania</a>, built by Albert Speer. They&#8217;re four or five-storeys high, and they look like miniatures of high-rises. You find them completely abandoned in the woods, and there are no signs for how to find them. I knew about the buildings from a documentary, so I went with a car, and I really had to search. There are no signs because there are still a lot of mines in that area from the war. What happened is that the Nazis used the buildings as test buildings, and they dropped bombs on them, because the buildings themselves were a mixture of a house where people were supposed to live and a bunker. They&#8217;re massive, made out of concrete. So that was their function; and now you find these four buildings in the middle of the wood, completely abandoned.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a wild garden on top of the filmed ruin – and the end of the audio play is also taking place on the roof – this is where the women build a new society, a Matriarchat. But the video actually starts in the ruins of the building, whereas the audio play starts in this Circus Maximus arena, when Andy Lang is fighting against all the others and becomes the leader of the lower class by physical violence. Then the architect, del Ponte, comes downstairs and says, well, if you are a gladiator, I am Caesar. So there are all these references to ancient Rome; and these ruins in the film, if you look really close at them they have a similar kind of patina. But when you zoom out you see that they are part of a vision of another time in history. The building on Rügen and Speer&#8217;s buildings were part of a vision that didn&#8217;t include the human being. So for me they are an architectural metaphor of a society, or a reference to a model of society in which the human actually can&#8217;t survive.</p>
<p><strong>PAUL:</strong> Because Niklas uses these extremely slow-motion fades, you look at the image, but you don&#8217;t see the change. It&#8217;s a very dramatic change, but it&#8217;s not obvious when you look at it in real-time. You feel that something changes, but you can&#8217;t really grasp it. It&#8217;s so perfidious, it&#8217;s subtle, and it&#8217;s absolutely not Hollywoodesque. It has a different kind of tension. Because the radio play is so dense – yet the videos give you the freedom to have your own image of the characters. At the same time the videos show the big process, what I talked of as the evolutionary cycle.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hochhaus12.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Hochhaus" /></p>
<p><em>Image from Hochhaus, © Paul Plamper &#038; Niklas Goldbach, 2008.</em></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> When I made the videos, there was this question about how you do a video to a radio play and not turn the whole thing into a movie. When I first listened to the radio play I wrote down a lot of images, but they&#8217;re all just details. In the end there was the decision to in fact just show one image in each video that&#8217;s slowly changing. 55 minutes is quite a long time for a video – and I think if you just use one image, and  look at it for a long time, it kind of disappears and gets replaced by other images. Warhol said that if you look at one image and you think it&#8217;s boring, just look at it for ten minutes and if it&#8217;s still boring, look at it for like 20 minutes and so on… In our case, you&#8217;re looking at one image for 55 minutes, and there&#8217;s a change happening, but you also have the audio that&#8217;s guiding you through a completely different world. I noticed that some people during the shows were closing their eyes; it was fun for me to watch their reaction when they opened their eyes again because all of a sudden the video was at a completely different point. I think some people thought, oh, it&#8217;s just one image, I don&#8217;t have to look at that, and then after a while they noticed that a lot has changed.</p>
<p><strong>DAN: Absolutely. I actually rather enjoyed the fact that, during the first part, it got dark on the video as it was getting dark in Köln.</strong></p>
<p><strong>NIKLAS:</strong> Yeah, it was. I was really happy that the screen itself was not on the side of the Dom, because that would have been really tough competition…</p>
<p><em>Dan O&#8217;Hara, 2008</em></p>
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<p><em>Hochhaus is currently touring Germany; the next dates will be on the 12 January 2008, <a href="http://www.nationaltheater-mannheim.de">Theater Mannheim</a>, and in February 2008 at the <a href="http://www.kampnagel.de">Kampnagel Hamburg</a>. Eventually it will be available to buy at Paul Plamper&#8217;s future outlet for radio plays, <a href="http://www.hoerpark.de">Hörpark</a>.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: MORE INFO</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href=" http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Plamper">Paul Plamper</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href=" http://www.niklasgoldbach.de">Niklas Goldbach</a></p>
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		<title>J.G Ballard: The Visual Tribute, Part 2</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute-part-2</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute-part-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Dec 2007 02:34:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute-part-2</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s a selection of visual art that we&#8217;ve previously featured on this site, all directly inspired by or referencing themes in Ballard&#8217;s work. See Part 1 for more recent discoveries. Image from &#8216;Future Ruins&#8217; by Michelle Lord Inspired by author J.G. Ballard’s literary visions of modernist architectural design and his prophetic views on the technological [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s a selection of visual art that we&#8217;ve previously featured on this site, all directly inspired by or referencing themes in Ballard&#8217;s work. See <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute">Part 1</a> for more recent discoveries.</p>
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<p>Image from <strong>&#8216;Future Ruins&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Michelle Lord</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_lord2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Ultimate City" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Inspired by author J.G. Ballard’s literary visions of modernist architectural design and his prophetic views on the technological demise of the urban environment, Future Ruins is a photographic critique of the urban planning of the 1970s and Ballard’s novels of the same period.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Image from <strong>&#8216;The Drowned World&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.abc.net.au/rn/exhibita/stories/2006/1698282.htm">Jon Cattapan</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cattapan_drowned.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Drowned World" /></p>
<blockquote><p>I suppose it’s got two points of genesis. The first is that it came from a body of work I started in the early 90s which has become known as the City Submerged and that body of work came about literally because I was thinking very much about the idea of the city as a place that was deluged with information. So it was the start of that framework that’s been in my work for some time. The second genesis of the title is that I’m a complete JG Ballard nut, and the curator has known that and he also is a very big fan, and Ballard’s book The Drowned World actually…it was for me a fairly seminal text in a lot of ways and it pinpoints a lot of the ideas that I’m kind of interested in.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Image from the <strong>Metro-Centre website</strong><br />
by the <a href="http://metrocentre.wordpress.com">Harper Collins design team</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mad_bad_bad_good.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kingdom Come" /></p>
<blockquote><p>A site for the book Kingdom Come by J.G. Ballard.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;Matteo Bittanti&#8217;s Crash&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://mbf.blogs.com/mbf/2006/11/gamics_experime.html">Matteo Bittanti</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bittanti_crash.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Crash" /></p>
<blockquote><p>I love the idea of gamics, but I&#8217;m not really interested in storytelling, so for my first experiments, I decided to cut-and-paste various popular artifacts. &#8220;CRASH&#8221; is what happens when you play too much Burnout while reading JG Ballard&#8217;s stories&#8230;</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;High-Parkade&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/competition-winner-starsky-hutch-by-jg-ballard">Rick McGrath</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/starsky_poster.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Crash" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Announcing the winner of our J.G. Ballard Pastiche competition, sponsored by the kind people at Harper Collins. Picture an alternate universe where Jim Ballard achieved his early goal of becoming a screenwriter, becoming so successful that he relocated from Shepperton to Hollywood. The task: write an imaginary 500-word extract from an imagined novelisation of Starsky and Hutch…as written by J.G. Ballard.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>J.G. Ballard Flickr Pool</strong><br />
various photographers</p>
<p>And finally: here&#8217;s a slideshow that loops images from the incredible <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/jg_ballard/pool">J.G. Ballard pool</a> over at Flickr &#8212; over 2000 photos and counting. Click an image for photographer details etc.</p>
<p><iframe align="center" src="http://www.flickr.com/slideShow/index.gne?group_id=35747904@N00&#038;user_id=&#038;set_id=&#038;text=" frameBorder="0" width="500" height="500" scrolling="no"></iframe><br /><small>Created with <a href="http://www.admarket.se" title="Admarket.se">Admarket&#8217;s</a> <a href="http://flickrslidr.com" title="flickrSLiDR">flickrSLiDR</a>.</small></p>
<div class="hr">
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>..:: FURTHER<br />
+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute">J.G. Ballard: The Visual Tribute, Part 1</a></p>
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		<title>J.G. Ballard: The Visual Tribute</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Dec 2007 01:10:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Cronenberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here’s a selection of visual art I’ve recently come across, all directly inspired by or referencing themes in Ballard’s work.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/design-a-cover-for-crash">As promised</a>, to mark HarperCollins&#8217; Ballard design comp, here&#8217;s a selection of visual art I&#8217;ve come across, all directly inspired by or referencing themes in Ballard&#8217;s work. Note the prominence of The Drowned World and The Crystal World, and the short story &#8216;The Drowned Giant&#8217; &#8212; and Crash, naturlich. Oh, and Atrocity, too. Let me know what I&#8217;ve missed &#8212; purely what&#8217;s available online &#8212; and I&#8217;ll add them to this list.</p>
<p>This gallery is in two parts: 1) Work that hasn&#8217;t been featured on this site (below); 2) and work <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute-part-2">previously featured</a>.</p>
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<p><strong>&#8216;Crystal Forest&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://maiavalenzuela.blogspot.com/2007/11/crystal-forest.html">Maia Valenzeula</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/maia_crystal.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Crystal World" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Based on the book &#8220;The Crystal World&#8221; by JG Ballard.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;Crash&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://sigma.typepad.com/tigerlily_illustrations/2007/02/crash.html">Marie Meier</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/meier_crash.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Crash" /></p>
<blockquote><p>A little tribute to J.G. Ballard and David Cronenberg.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;The Drowned Giant&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://shafeenalam.blogspot.com/2007/03/drowned-giant-revision.html">Shafeen Alam</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/shafeen_drowned.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Drowned Giant" /></p>
<blockquote><p>This is a story moment I chose to illustrate in which the main character, a young librarian, sees the Giant for the first time, days after it had washed ashore and the excitement over it had died down. I submitted my work on ACME and have gotten some really helpful comments from the pros. So here is my revision as a result.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Illustrations by <a href="http://www.jamesnicholls.net/portfoliodrowned1.html">James Nicholls</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/nicholls_terminal.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Terminal Beach" /></p>
<blockquote><p>ABOVE: &#8216;The Terminal Beach&#8217; by J.G. Ballard.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/nicholls_drowned_bill.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Terminal Beach" /></p>
<blockquote><p>LEFT: &#8216;The Drowned Giant&#8217; by J.G. Ballard. RIGHT: &#8216;Billennium&#8217; by J.G. Ballard.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;In Memory, VI&#8217;</strong> by <a href="http://www.artgroove.com/captions.html">Carolyn Ellingson</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ellingson_memory6.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Crash" /></p>
<blockquote><p>On February 3, 1997 Bill Bateman was struck from behind by a car as he was walking on Skyline Drive in Oakland&#8230; The impact threw him up over the hood of the car &#8212; the back of his head hit the car&#8217;s windshield, causing irreversible brain injuries. &#8230; Bill never regained consciousness &#8212; he remained in a coma for 17 days. When it was agreed there was no hope of recovery, life support was withdrawn. He died February 20 at the age of 49. This series of prints was created in his memory. Captions under first eight prints are from the book Crash by J. G. Ballard, 1973. J. G. Ballard has granted the artist permission to use these captions here.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Image from <strong>&#8216;Post Premonitionism: JG Ballard&#8217;s The Drowned World&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.groundfloorgallery.com/tracey_clement/exh_07.htm">Tracey Clement</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/clement_drowned.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Drowned World" /></p>
<blockquote><p>In 1962, JG Ballard&#8217;s The Drowned World was a prescient warning; wilfully ignored. Forty five years later, the causes may be different, but we seem to be spiralling into an ecological melt-down straight out of Ballard’s vision. What do you do when you have already seen the future? Apparently nothing. In Post Premonitionism, Clement’s fragile steel structures seem to mimic the skeletal remains of an abandoned city. Twisted, rusty and ephemeral, they eventually will disintegrate completely, vulnerable and helpless against nature’s patient omnipotence. Clement has transposed Ballard’s premonition of The Drowned World on to the reality of Australia; salt takes the place of water in a continent characterised by drought.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Image from <strong>&#8216;Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard)&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.smk.dk/SMKNews.nsf/64600efe50cdbc0dc1256979005e743a/9020603f03bc8fb38025728400622b64!OpenDocument">Ann Lislegaard.</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lislegaard_crystal.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Crystal World" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard) is an evocative and silent 3-D animation. A journey to an abandoned hotel situated in a slowly crystallising dense wilderness. There are traces of a catastrophe. Water is forcing its way through the architecture. Chairs, beds and cupboards are displaced, drifting through the rooms. The crystalline world that emerges is one of infinite reflections. It is sci-fi scenario of change and destabilisation. In Crystal World (after J. G. Ballard) Lislegaard investigates the possibility of creating an alternative reality. A new structure that challenges our usual preconceptions of time and place. Lislegaard uses the crystal as a metaphor to describe how the experience of the present and the physical surroundings are filtered through previous accumulation and breakdown of memories and experiences. A mental state in decay and change at one and the same time &#8211; a super-crystalline structure.</p>
<p>Crystal World (after J.G. Ballard) invokes an entropic future that is both a physical state and a state of mind. The artist’s poetic, yet disturbing work slowly transforms the xrummet into a universe where spectators glide into a timeless stasis of a parallel world.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Image from <strong>&#8216;You Me and the Continuum&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.peteykins.com/Continuum/index.htm">Peter Huestis</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/huestis_continuum20.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Atrocity Exhibition" /></p>
<blockquote><p>The following images are an adaptation of J.G. Ballard&#8217;s short story &#8220;You and Me and The Continuum.&#8221; The images contain the complete text of the short story, originally published as part of Ballard&#8217;s 1969 experimental novel The Atrocity Exhibition. The original story consists of an intro and 26 &#8220;chunks&#8221; of text, each with a header, a word or phrase in alphabetical order. Ballard often referred to such stories as condensed novels.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;The Atrocity Exhibition&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com/pantechnicon/ballard.html">John Coulthart</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/coulthart_ballard.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Atrocity Exhibition" /></p>
<blockquote><p>One of the earliest works of mine I can stand to see displayed in public is my drawing from 1984 intended to accompany the story (as opposed to the book) of The Atrocity Exhibition. Was going to be part of a series of drawings illustrating each chapter of The Atrocity Exhibition collection with each picture joining to the next to form a single long work. I completed the second one, The University of Death, then ran out of steam, and the whole idea was completely negated by the superior RE/Search edition of TAE. The University of Death drawing isn’t on the site since the rendering of James Dean was pretty shameful.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;Crash&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://ganzeer.blogspot.com/2007/12/crash-by-jgballard-cover-mock-up.html">Ganzeer: Experimental Arts Unit</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ganzeer_crash.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Crash" /></p>
<blockquote><p>So when Times Online, together with Harper Collins, announced a competition to design a new limited edition of J.G.Ballard&#8217;s best-selling 1973 novel CRASH, I jumped at the chance and put together a little somethin&#8217; somethin&#8217; before reading the guidelines which clearly state that the competition is only open to residents of the UK. Sob. Silly me.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>&#8216;Crash&#8217;</strong><br />
by <a href="http://tendegreesbelow.livejournal.com/19474.html">tendegreesbelowzero</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crash_subcoma.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Crash" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Currently there&#8217;s an online contest to redesign the cover of J.G. Ballard&#8217;s novel, Crash&#8230; I probably won&#8217;t enter the contest since the prize is &#8220;your cover gets published&#8221; which is basically violating everything that I feel graphic design should stand for (ie, don&#8217;t work for free), but I did want to tackle the design challenge. I wondered why so many people had failed at creating a compelling image for such a wonderfully interesting book. So yeah, here&#8217;s mine. If you haven&#8217;t read the book, it&#8217;s just a car crash, which is fine, since the book is about car crashes. But it&#8217;s also about fetishizing the moment of impact, the injury, the destruction. It&#8217;s beautifully written, erotic and brutal at the same time. It&#8217;s gross, in many ways, as well. I hoped to bring across the feeling of sex and destruction with my design. It&#8217;s still a rough work in progress, and I&#8217;m probably going to do a couple more after a reread of the book again.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>..:: FURTHER<br />
+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-visual-tribute-part-2">J.G. Ballard: The Visual Tribute, Part 2</a> </div>
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		<title>&quot;A fierce and wayward beauty&quot;: Waste in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard, Part III</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-part-3</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-part-3#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Dec 2007 10:38:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William Viney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jean Baudrillard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/httpwwwballardiancoma-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-part-3</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[According to William Viney, Crash presents a barrage of images that expresses collapse, dereliction, and waste; a seemingly endless carnival of sex and destruction; intoxicating, perverting, and desensitizing the reader, while Empire of the Sun can be seen as the terminus of Ballard's treatment of waste, the epitome of all that has gone before. Although Ballard's other works deal with the subject of death and the disposal of corpses, Empire of the Sun attempts to cope with this disposal on a mass-scale, or rather, during both war and peace, it explores the complex transition between the valued human being and lifeless, disposable cadaver.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>William Viney</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_lord4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: J.G. Ballard &#038; Waste" /></p>
<ul><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Future Ruins</a>: Michelle Lord © 2007. Used with permission.</em></ul>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>NOTE: This feature was published in two installments: <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-parts-1-2">Parts I &#038; II last week</a>, Part III this week.</p>
<p>William Viney, © 2007.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>III. Ultimate Waste: <em>Crash</em> and <em>Empire of the Sun</em></strong></p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a></em> presents a barrage of images that expresses collapse, dereliction, and waste; a seemingly endless carnival of sex and destruction; intoxicating, perverting, and desensitizing the reader. Towards the beginning of the novel, Ballard records James&#8217; thoughts on the sexual possibilities of the everyday <a href="#1">[1]</a>. James imagines plane-crash victims whose minds have become a &#8216;brothel of images&#8217; <a href="#2">[2]</a>. This phrase neatly draws together the union of sex and destruction that is the novel&#8217;s obsession: not only does it suggest the perversions that lurk in the hidden transcript of daily life, but also an attendant destructiveness built into the etymological roots of &#8216;brothel&#8217;. The word originates from the Middle English; <em>broðen</em>, &#8216;ruined, degenerate&#8217; the past participle of <em>breoðan</em>; &#8216;to go to ruin &#8216; <a href="#3">[3]</a>. This intense and paradoxical portrayal of generative destruction is arguably the novel&#8217;s central preoccupation, as Ballard himself has noted, the car crash is where the &#8216;twentieth century reaches its purest expression [...] Here we see, all too clearly, the speed and violence of our age, its strange love affair with the machine and, conceivably, with its own death and destruction&#8217; <a href="#4">[4]</a>. The crash is inconceivable without laying waste to both man and machine.</p>
<p>With its brutal collision of violence, technology, and desire, <em>Crash</em> represents a distillation of imaginative obsessions, characterised by some as uniquely Ballardian <a href="#5">[5]</a>. Nowhere else in Ballard&#8217;s <em>oeuvre</em> is the human body treated with such sustained, clinical, and graphic representation. The raw violence of the car crash allows the secret or forbidden aspects of the body to become visible. The corporeality of <em>Crash</em> might seem unrelated to ideas of rubbish and refuse, but, as I hope will become clear, Ballard&#8217;s bodies are defined by their waste; made flesh by their vulnerable viscosity.</p>
<p>The definition of the human body through its constituent fluids has a long history. Since Galen (A.D. 130-200?), people have believed our physiological complexion to be the product of four fluid humours: blood, phlegm, choler (yellow bile), and melancholy (black bile). The letting of one or more of these fluids can directly affect an individual&#8217;s health. In this ancient conception, the body is borderless, neither bounded nor defined, a state of continual flux predicated upon the extraction and renewal of fluids. For Dalia Judovitz, Descartes reversed this process, making the body rigid; a machine inhabited by the ghost of consciousness <a href="#6">[6]</a>. Ballard&#8217;s Crash finds itself at the very juncture of Galen&#8217;s and Descartes&#8217; theories of the body. The novel catalogues the body&#8217;s oozing fluids with meticulous detail, they are, in fact, often the only physical attributes of what are, in the general, rather hollow characters. On the other hand, Ballard&#8217;s bodies incessantly threaten to become machines, blending into the cars with which they collide. The wastes of body and car are frequently commingling, confusing the relations between human and machine, natural and synthetic.</p>
<p>Vomiting proves a regular reaction to a car crash. James vomits across his steering wheel after his crash with Dr. Helen Remington and her husband (<em>C</em>, 14), whilst Catherine and Vaughn both vomit after separate collisions (<em>C</em>, 3, 8). It is well known that one of the body&#8217;s instinctive reactions to shock, trauma, or disgust, is to vomit; a seemingly involuntary act that can appear to envelop ones entire being. For Kristeva, the importance of bodily fluids relates to the threatened individual, a safeguard against both a loss of self and a loss of affect. Rather than signifying loss, the excretion of bodily fluids can register a means to &#8216;compensate for the collapse of the border between inside and outside [...] Urine, blood, sperm, excrement then show up in order to reassure a subject that is lacking its &#8216;own and proper self&#8217; <a href="#7">[7]</a>. From a more anatomical perspective, vomiting is a sign of the sympathetic nerve at work: the aspect of the nervous system that autonomically regulates the body&#8217;s organs. The sympathetic system is closely associated with a primitive &#8216;fight or flight&#8217; response to bodily trauma <a href="#8">[8]</a>. From either the psychoanalytic or the anatomical standpoint, vomiting is a clear signal of bodily threat; to excrete is a powerful statement of corporal vulnerability.</p>
<p>James vomits again when in hospital, the beginnings of a series of illuminating passages that deal with the body&#8217;s propensity to excrete various solid and viscous waste materials. This propensity, luridly and voyeuristically imagined by James, becomes an obsession: &#8216;did small grains of faecal matter still cling to [the nurses'] anuses as they proscribed some antibiotic for a streptococcal throat, did the odour of illicit sex acts infest their underwear [...] traces of smegma and vaginal mucus on their hands [...]?&#8217;(<em>C</em>. 19). James becomes transfixed by the lurking filth beneath the sterile exterior of the hospital staff. In the same way, he realises that the nurses are also constantly preoccupied with the &#8216;unclean&#8217; aspects of his body: &#8216;all these women only seem to attend to my most infantile zones [...] commissaries guarding my orifices&#8217; (<em>C</em> .22). James&#8217; subjection to the maternalistic waste management of his nurses finds direct parallel in the creation of the body&#8217;s boundaries during infancy. Kristeva has argued that the mother has a primal role in mapping the body, using her maternal authority to order the child&#8217;s body into &#8216;clean&#8217; and &#8216;unclean&#8217;, &#8216;waste&#8217; and &#8216;want&#8217;: &#8216;[t]hrough frustrations and prohibitions, this authority shapes the body into a <em>territory</em> having areas, orifices, points and lines, surfaces and hollows, where the archaic power of mastery and neglect, of the differentiation of proper-clean and improper-dirty, possible and impossible, is impressed and exerted&#8217; <a href="#9">[9]</a>. James has this process rehearsed in the hospital, his orifices, points, lines, surfaces, and hollows are again placed under the &#8216;commissar&#8217; of female prohibition, giving him a sharpened view of his own body, and a fresh perspective on its waste. Sensitised to the processes of self-creation that the body&#8217;s waste inspires, James describes how he &#8216;saw my own reflection, a mirror of blood, semen and vomit.&#8217;.. (<em>C</em>, 9). With an ironic allusion to Narcissus, James realises that the body&#8217;s waste can hold up a mirror to the self.</p>
<p>Vaughn&#8217;s car is always described as dirty. Its first appearance in the novel is anonymously described as: a &#8216;dusty American car&#8217;, as Vaughn watches James and Catherine through his &#8216;mud-spattered windshield&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 43). Elsewhere, it seems Vaughn&#8217;s car cannot appear in the text without the presence of accompanying filth: &#8216;dusty Lincoln&#8217;, &#8216;unwashed windshield&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 68, 86). The dirt that constantly attaches itself to Vaughn&#8217;s Lincoln comes to mark the dangerous and unpredictable character of his obsessions. However, it is the bodily residues that most indelibly mark Vaughn&#8217;s car: &#8216;with mucus from every orifice of the human body&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 111). Vaughn&#8217;s brutal obsession with the car crash and the eroticisation of wounds is intimately bound to the residues left on the crashed car: &#8216;the perverse logic of blood soaked instrument panels, seat-belts smeared with excrement, sun-visors lined with brain tissue&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 5). Later in the novel, James discovers a &#8216;black gelatinous material&#8217; that covers &#8216;the muddied disc of the whitewall tyre&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 129). These &#8216;gummy residues&#8217;, perhaps evidence that Vaughn&#8217;s has been actively hitting pedestrians or animals, remark upon the often ambiguous circumstances by which waste material attaches itself to another surface, and by doing so, competes for fresh meaning and significance. To avoid suspicion from the police, Vaughn suggests they clean the car, an act that provokes one of the most ruthlessly powerful scenes of the novel. The episode becomes a ritual in cleansing and defilement, a sardonic automobile-baptism.</p>
<p>James sits passively whilst his wife and Vaughn copulate on the rear seat, giving way to a series of dramatic yet playfully ambiguous juxtapositions: &#8216;the white soap sluiced across the roof and doors like liquid lace. Behind me, Vaughn&#8217;s semen glistened on my wife&#8217;s breasts and abdomen. The rollers drummed and battered at the car; the streams of water and soap solution jetted over its now immaculate body&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 134). Elsewhere, Catherine is also described as having &#8216;immaculate cleanliness&#8217;, &#8216;as if she had reamed out every square centimetre of her elegant body, separately ventilated every pore&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 89–90). She appears so clean to James, so untainted, that he wonders whether &#8216;her whole identity was a charade&#8217;, leading him to deliberately inspect &#8216;every orifice&#8217;, to find some trace of dirt or filth that will verify her existence (<em>C</em>, 90). The central question is this: is Vaughn&#8217;s semen analogous to, or at odds with, the soap that jets across the body of the car? Who, or what, is being cleaned? Semen, here and elsewhere in the novel, is entirely divorced from its generative potential. In a similar episode James and Catherine have sex that is &#8216;empty and sterile, a jerking away of waste tissue&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 97). Ballard prevents any association in <em>Crash</em> between semen and its common life-giving properties. New associative arrangements are therefore fostered. With the car-wash context in mind, we might question William Miller&#8217;s argument that semen is &#8216;the most polluting of male substances&#8217;, its contaminating power rising from its sticky fecundity, misogynist threat of instant feminisation, and a complex process of defilement linked to post-coital shame <a href="#10">[10]</a>. Miller&#8217;s overtly heterosexual reading of the body&#8217;s fluids emphasises the possessive or polluting aspects of the body. In contrast, <em>Crash</em> is decidedly neutral in its response to both bodily fluids and the sexual acts that provoke them; no clues are given to guide our response. We are left guessing as to whether the cleaning of the car is an ironic metaphor for the ethical degeneration of the central characters, or that, by having sex with Vaughn, Catherine is actually being cleansed of her corporeal unreality. However morally ambiguous these passages are, the corporeal residues nevertheless provide provocative and arresting images, the reader is allowed an uncompromising vision of the body&#8217;s waste.</p>
<p>By repeatedly commingling the fluids of humans and cars, Ballard achieves a certain hybridity of waste, a union of the organic and synthetic that perfectly encapsulates &#8216;the nightmare marriage between sex and technology&#8217; <a href="#11">[11]</a>. As James and Helen have sex in his car for the second time, the equivocal use of pronouns exaggerates the possibility of this marriage:</p>
<blockquote><p>The nail of her forefinger scratched at this fretline, which rose diagonally from the window-sill at the same angle as the concrete ledge of the irrigation ditch ten feet from the car. In my eyes this parallax fused with the image if an abandoned car lying in the rust-stained grass on the lower slopes of the reservoir embankment. The brief avalanche of dissolving talc that fell across her eyes as I moved my lips across their lids contained all the melancholy of thisderelict vehicle, its leaking engine oil and radiator coolant (<em>C</em>, 61)</p></blockquote>
<p>The key aspect of this passage is the structural position of &#8216;this derelict vehicle&#8217;, the obscure reference to talc, and the fragmented interaction between &#8216;her&#8217; and &#8216;my&#8217; that blurs the object of dereliction. Because engine oil and radiator coolant so easily correlate with fluids of the human body (blood and sweat), the themes of sex, technology, and destruction are precisely rendered in a single ambiguous sentence. The commingling of human and technological wastes, becomes the principal image that draws together the novel&#8217;s ambitious thematics: &#8216;[t]he passenger compartment enclosed us like a machine generating from our sexual act an homunculus of blood, semen, and engine coolant&#8217; (<em>C</em>, 63). In the mixing of fluids, death, sex, the body and the machine become inextricably linked.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_lord5.jpg" alt="Ballardian: J.G. Ballard &#038; Waste" /></p>
<ul><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Future Ruins</a>: Michelle Lord © 2007. Used with permission.</em></ul>
<p>When blood, semen, and vomit are mixed, the novelty of the image dulls our familiar reflexes. The blurring of the organic and inorganic undoes our ability to clearly see the abject material, obscuring the relationship between the wastes of the body and the violent event that produces them. Some have tried to argue that the &#8216;death of affect&#8217; Ballard&#8217;s characters experience is due to a media-drenched Baudrillardian hyper-reality <a href="#12">[12]</a>. Although this might explain <em>their</em> apparent affectlessness, it does not fully explain <em>our</em> states and levels of abjection; our responses to a book that is often uncomfortable to read. And yet, several things numb the senses when reading <em>Crash</em>, the most obvious being stylistic. Crash lacks Kristeva&#8217;s &#8216;<em>crying-out theme</em>&#8216;, what she goes on to define as &#8216;the theme of suffering-horror [that] is the ultimate evidence of such states of abjection within a narrative representation&#8217; <a href="#13">[13]</a>. The repetitiveness of Ballard&#8217;s narrative tone, with its endless brothel of images, never reaches this state of hysteria; <em>Crash</em> has, as Luckhurst has noted, a &#8216;remorseless monologism&#8217; <a href="#14">[14]</a>. It is because Ballard&#8217;s prose style is so clinical, so obsessively repetitious, and so immersed in the idiom of the scientific, that it fails to conform to Kristeva&#8217;s theory of the abject. Moreover, Ballard&#8217;s refusal to employ a lurid vernacular idiom places a clinical filter between image and revulsion. It is through this clipped and distant narrative tone that Ballard can allows the body&#8217;s waste to be so wholeheartedly examined, as if dissected in an urban operating theatre. Ballard has described his studies in medicine as &#8216;minutely paring away the skin and muscles and nerves, carrying out this extremely detailed study of what was once a human being&#8217; <a href="#15">[15]</a>. In a similar way, he pares down the descriptive flesh of conventional narrative, leaving a disparate littering of waste material. <em>Crash</em> sees Ballard at his most ambiguously provocative. The obsessive descriptions of organic of inorganic waste serve as both a voyeuristic invitation to share in these gruesome fantasies and a warning against the psychologically deranging combination of technology and late capitalist individualism. The novel was always intended as a &#8216;cautionary tale&#8217; <a href="#16">[16]</a>, but a cautionary tale to be voyeuristically enjoyed. The moral ambivalence of the narrative, and the explicit commingling of fluids, prevents our full and unreserved revulsion. <em>Crash</em> allows us to view the body&#8217;s waste without the distraction of disgust or the perversity of hedonistic acceptance.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a></em> is a novel of indeterminate ends and beginnings. It inaugurates Ballard&#8217;s partially autobiographical account of war-torn Shanghai (continued in <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a></em>). As such, it creates the opportunity to map the abandonment, dereliction, and half-empty swimming pools that recur throughout his fiction, marking the psycho-literary genesis of the Ballardian idiom, an enlightened vantage point from which to reread his entire <em>oeuvre</em>. Furthermore, the novel can be seen as the terminus of Ballard&#8217;s treatment of waste, the epitome of all that has gone before. Although Ballard&#8217;s other works deal with the subject of death and the disposal of corpses, <em>Empire of the Sun</em> attempts to cope with this disposal on a mass-scale, or rather, during both war and peace, it explores the complex transition between the valued human being and lifeless, disposable cadaver.</p>
<p>Jim&#8217;s confrontation with death is irrevocably intensified by the war. Corpses begin to appear to him as litter, just another object made derelict by bombing: &#8216;[t]he verges were littered with the debris from the air attacks. Burnt-out trucks and supply wagons lay in ditches, surrounded by the bodies of dead puppet soldiers, the carcasses of horses and water buffalo&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 291). As the occupation begins, Jim observes: &#8216;[b]odies of Chinese lay everywhere, hands tied behind their backs in the centre of the road, dumped behind the sandbag emplacements, half-severed heads resting on each other&#8217;s shoulders&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 76). Ballard&#8217;s matter-of-fact tone, so reminiscent of <em>Crash</em>, remarks upon the self-evident nature of death: through the eyes of a young boy, death is without mystery or terror.</p>
<p>Jim&#8217;s proximity to death has always been a close one; corpses are a regular sight even in peacetime. At the beginning of chapter three, Jim plays on a burial tumulus, peering and poking at the sun-warmed skeletons inside: &#8216;Jim felt his cheeks and jaw, trying to imagine his own skeleton in the sun, lying there in this peaceful field within sight of the aerodrome&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 29). Jim&#8217;s intimacy with the deceased allows his imagination to erode the barrier between the dead and the living; he positions himself within rather than beyond the grave. With &#8216;the rotting coffins project[ing] from the loose earth like a chest of drawers&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 29), these re-emerging corpses have an implicitly symmetrical relationship with the novel&#8217;s numerous others:</p>
<blockquote><p>Every night in Shanghai those Chinese too poor to pay for the burial of their relatives would launch the bodies from the funeral piers at Nantao, decking the coffins with paper flowers.Carried away on one tide, they came back on the next, returning to the waterfront ofShanghai with all the other debris abandoned by the city (<em>ES</em>, 41).</p></blockquote>
<p>Here is a theme that will literally haunt the reader throughout the novel: the uncanny return of the dead. In fact, the novel ends with a vision of inevitable return:</p>
<blockquote><p>The flowers formed a wavering garland around the coffin as it began its long journey to the  estuary of the Yangtze, only to be swept back by the incoming tide among the quays and mud- flats, driven once again to the shores of this terrible city (<em>ES</em>, 351).</p></blockquote>
<p>It is as if the dead, like memory itself, have an unpredictable capacity to powerfully revisit the living. In the camp graveyard Jim observes: &#8216;[h]ere and there an arm or a foot protruded from the graves, the limbs of restless sleepers struggling beneath their brown quilts&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 205–206). Burial is a deeply contingent form of waste disposal; a change of weather conditions is all that needed for the discarded to reannounce their presence. Just as a change of wind can bring an unpleasant smell, so heavy rain can exhume the dead. As long as they refuse to be out of sight, the dead continue to ruthlessly occupy our minds.</p>
<p>The ritual of mourning often involves an intricate process of objectification, once the body has been made object it can be made absent, discarded, making death&#8217;s absence complete. This is not done purely for emotional reasons. Just as food waste can become hazardous to one&#8217;s health if it is not discarded, so the rotting corpse presents a threat. So when Jim drinks from the river, with the corpse of a Chinese woman only fifty yards away, he &#8216;[c]autiously, [...] decanted a little water from one palm to the other, then drank quickly so that the germs would have no time to infect him&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 90). Nevertheless, the corpse also poses a threat to the psychological health of the living. For Julia Kristeva, the corpse is the absolute essence of the polluting abject, the &#8216;decaying body, lifeless, completely turned into dejection, blurred between the inanimate and the inorganic, a transitional swarming, inseparable lining of a human nature whose life is indistinguishable from the symbolic-the corpse represents the fundamental pollution&#8217; <a href="#17">[17]</a>. In a similar vein, Françoise Dastur has argued that &#8216;the corpse occupies a disconcerting intermediate position between persons and things and, on account of its corruptibility, is regarded as a source of pollution&#8217; <a href="#18">[18]</a>. If the cadaver is the &#8216;fundamental&#8217; object of abjection and pollution, then it follows that it must represent a form of fundamental or &#8216;ultimate&#8217; waste, an act of disposal that maintains both the physical and psychological health of the living.</p>
<p> Flies swarm and buzz about them about the corpses that fill the final chapters of <em>Empire of the Sun</em>, greedily profiting from the lack of organised burial or disposal. As both prophets of and fanfares for the physical presence of death, flies enjoy a structurally integral position in the novel&#8217;s unique taxonomy of waste. When Jim first meets the wandering Kamikaze pilot he observes: &#8216;[t]he flies hovered around the pilot&#8217;s mouth, tapping his lips like impatient guests at a banquet [...] the Japanese made no move to brush them away. No doubt he knew that his own life was over .&#8217;.. (<em>ES</em>, 280–281). When he meets the pilot for the second time, dead on the riverbank, Jim must see him through a &#8216;swarm of flies&#8217;, one of whom &#8216;drank from [the pilot's] pupil&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 339). Counterbalancing this sense of enormous waste, Ballard&#8217;s flies are ferocious feeders. The corpses encourage &#8216;a plague of a thousand glutted flies&#8217;, flies who devour the very air (<em>ES</em>, 309, 336). In a scene that undeniably contains echoes of the 10th floor swimming pool in <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a></em>, Jim returns to Lunghua camp to discover that &#8216;a cloud of flies enveloped him [...] Brushing the flies from his mouth, Jim walked into the men&#8217;s ward. The decaying air streamed down the plywood walls, bathing the flies that fed on the bodies piled across the bunks [...] like sides of meat in a condemned slaughterhouse&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 302). Flies profit from the decay of humans. As detrivores they are dependent upon on our discards: one creatures waste is another&#8217;s want, and disturbingly, flies will not let us &#8216;go to waste&#8217;. Our carefully constructed divisions between clean and unclean, waste and want, become sullied under the promiscuous attention of the fly. More than simply disrupting categories of value, flies wield the power to locate waste and, most unsettling of all, the capacity to identify humans as waste. As Steven Connor has written: &#8216;[f]lies and humans are asymmetrically deterritorializing [...] Flies and humans are each other&#8217;s parasite or interference. Each gives the other its unbeing&#8217; <a href="#19">[19]</a>. If the human corpse announces a form of ultimate or essential waste in <em>Empire of Sun</em>, then flies, the very species that profit from this waste, constitute a means of conceptualising a form of &#8216;impossible&#8217; waste. The fly is one of the few species that remains entirely intractable to human mastery or design: &#8216;for humans, there is no disposing of or dispensing with flies&#8217; <a href="#20">[20]</a>. The fly ridden corpse provides a consummate image of human powerlessness, expressing the essential transience of human life; the waste we all become in the Christian burial service: &#8216;ashes to ashes, dust to dust&#8217;.</p>
<p><strong>IV. Conclusion</strong></p>
<p>As Jim lies in the stadium with Mr Maxted&#8217;s corpse, he makes an implicit judgement about exactly when Maxted&#8217;s body becomes waste: &#8216;[l]ong after Mr Maxted had grown cold, Jim had continued to massage his cheeks, keeping away the flies until he was sure that his soul had left him&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 272). We have already been told that Jim is an amateur soul-spotter, &#8216;[h]e often watched the eyes of the patients as they died, trying to detect a flash of light when the soul left&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 207). When Maxted&#8217;s body becomes vacant, the flies are permitted to feed. In a profound way, the &#8216;flash of light&#8217; that announces the moment when Maxted&#8217;s body becomes waste resonates with the consequences of the atomic age. The phrase is tellingly repeated when Jim sees the atomic flash from the Nagasaki bomb: &#8216;a flash of light filled the stadium&#8217; (<em>ES</em>, 276). If a &#8216;flash of light&#8217; is all that prevents Maxted from becoming waste, then Ballard emphasises how the whole human race teeters dangerously on the brink of absolute destruction, in one flash of light civilisation can be laid waste.</p>
<p>  In this way, <em>Empire of the Sun</em> marks the beginning of the atomic era, inaugurating the possibility that the human race can come to a sudden and violent end. With their shared interest in abrupt and unexpected renegotiations of value, <em>High Rise</em>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island"><em>Concrete Island</em></a> and <em>Crash</em> all share this revelation of potential apocalypse. The minute and the enormous, the antique and the everyday, the built environment and the natural, the organic and the inorganic; Ballard allows every aspect of modernity to be transferred into waste. Ballardian waste is so ubiquitous that what we ordinarily view as secret and hidden becomes the abundantly normal, a permanent feature of our lived environment. Far from being a useless nuisance that we would prefer to discard as our past, the figure and the figuring of waste provides the central metaphor for our present. Ballard&#8217;s work stands in the indelible afterglow of the flash, the flash of waste creation that is the very hallmark of our age.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>NOTE: This feature was published in two installments: <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-parts-1-2">Parts I &#038; II last week</a>, Part III this week.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>Endnotes</strong></p>
<p><strong>[1]</strong><a name="1"></a> To avoid confusion between J. G. Ballard the author and James Ballard the central character of <em>Crash</em>, I will refer to the character as &#8216;James&#8217;.</p>
<p><strong>[2]</strong><a name="2"></a> J. G. Ballard, <em>Crash</em> (1975; London: Vintage, 1995), 19. Hereafter, cited in the text as <em>C</em>.</p>
<p><strong>[3]</strong><a name="3"></a> Interestingly, there is an additional sense of abandonment and worthlessness, see &#8216;Brothel&#8217;, <em>The Compact Oxford English Dictionary</em>, 2nd Ed, 2002).</p>
<p><strong>[4]</strong><a name="4"></a> J.G. Ballard, <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-a-users-guide-to-the-millennium">A User&#8217;s Guide to the Millennium: Essays and Reviews</a></em>, (London: Flamingo, 1997), 262.</p>
<p><strong>[5]</strong><a name="5"></a> See Roger Luckhurst, <em>&#8216;The Angle Between Two Walls&#8217;: The Fiction of J. G. Ballard</em>, 119–50, for an account of <em>Crash</em>&#8216;s place in the long thematic and narratalogical development of Ballard&#8217;s fiction.</p>
<p><strong>[6]</strong><a name="6"></a> Dalia Judovitz, <em>The Culture of the Body: Genealogies of Modernity</em> (2001; Michigan: U of Michigan P, 2004), 67-82.</p>
<p><strong>[7]</strong><a name="7"></a> Julia Kristeva, <em>Powers of Horror</em>, 53.</p>
<p><strong>[8]</strong><a name="8"></a> See Henry Gray, <em>Anatomy: Descriptive and Surgical</em> (1858; Bristol: Paragon, 1998), 546-56.</p>
<p><strong>[9]</strong><a name="9"></a> Julia Kristeva, <em>Powers of Horror</em>, 72.</p>
<p><strong>[10]</strong><a name="10"></a> William Ian Miller, <em>The Anatomy of Disgust</em>, 103, 103-104.</p>
<p><strong>[11]</strong><a name="11"></a> J. G. Ballard, &#8216;Introduction&#8217;, <em>Crash</em>, n.p.</p>
<p><strong>[12</strong><a name="12"></a> For two excellent overviews on the relationship between Ballard and Baudrillard, see: Emma Whiting, ''Abject Literature': Disaffection and abjection in <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em> and <em>Crash</em>, ' unpublished essay, 2007; Roger Luckhurst, '<em>The Angle Between Two Walls': The Fiction of J. G. Ballard</em>.</p>
<p><strong>[13]</strong><a name="13"></a> Julia Kristeva, <em>Powers of Horror</em>, 141.</p>
<p><strong>[14]</strong><a name="14"></a> Roger Luckhurst, &#8216;<em>The Angle Between Two Walls&#8217;: The Fiction of J. G. Ballard</em>, 123</p>
<p><strong>[15</strong><a name="15"></a> J. G. Ballard, interview with Melvyn Bragg, <em>The South Bank Show</em>, ITV1. 17 Sept. 2006.</p>
<p><strong>[16]</strong><a name="16"></a> J. G. Ballard, interview with Melvyn Bragg, <em>The South Bank Show</em>, ITV1. 17 Sept. 2006.</p>
<p><strong>[17]</strong><a name="17"></a> Julia Kristeva, <em>Powers of Horror</em>, 109.</p>
<p><strong>[18]</strong><a name="18"></a> Françoise Dastur, <em>Death: An Essay on Finitude</em>, trans. John Llewelyn (1994; London: Althone, 1996), 8.</p>
<p><strong>[19]</strong><a name="19"></a> Steven Connor, <em>Fly</em>, (London: Reaktion, 2006), 182, 183.</p>
<p><strong>[20]</strong><a name="20"></a> Steven Connor, <em>Fly</em>, 183.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>Bibliography</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>Primary</strong></p>
<p>Ballard, J. G. <em>Concrete Island</em>. 1973. London: Vintage, 1994.<br />
&#8212;. <em>Crash</em>. 1975. London: Vintage, 1995.<br />
&#8212;. <em>Empire of the Sun</em>. 1984. London: Panther, 1985<br />
&#8212;. <em>High Rise</em>. 1975. London: Flamingo, 2000.<br />
&#8212;. Interview with Melvyn Bragg. <em>The South Bank Show</em>. ITV1. 17 Sept. 2006.<br />
&#8212;. &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;. <em>The Complete Short Stories</em>. London: Flamingo, 2001.<br />
&#8212;. <em>A User&#8217;s Guide to the Millennium: Essays and Reviews</em>. London: Flamingo, 1997.</p>
<p><strong>Secondary</strong></p>
<p>Appadurai, Arjun. &#8216;Introduction: Commodities and the Politics of Value&#8217;. <em>The Social Life of Things: Commodities in a Cultural Perspective</em>. Ed. Arjun Appaduri. 1986. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1999. 3-63.</p>
<p>Brigg, Peter. <em>J. G. Ballard</em>. Mercer Island, WA: Starmont House, 1985.</p>
<p>Connor, Steven. <em>Fly</em>. London: Reaktion, 2006.</p>
<p>Derrida, Jacques. <em>Of Grammatology</em>. Trans. Gaytatari Chakravorty Spivak. Baltimore: John Hopkins UP, 1976.</p>
<p>Douglas, Mary. <em>Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concept of Pollution and Taboo</em>. 1966. London: Routledge, 2002.</p>
<p>Foucault, Michel. <em>The Archaeology of Knowledge</em>. 1969. Trans. A.M. Sheridan Smith. London: Tavistock, 1972</p>
<p>Gasiorek, Andrzej. <em>J. G. Ballard</em>. Manchester: Manchester UP, 2005.</p>
<p>Hawkins, Gay, and Stephen Muecke. &#8216;Introduction: Cultural Economies of Waste&#8217;. <em>Culture and Waste: The Creation and Destruction of Value</em>. Ed. Gay Hawkins and Stephen Muecke. Oxford: Rowman &#038; Littlefield, 2003. ix-xxvi.</p>
<p>Jencks, Charles. <em>The Language of Post-Modern Architecture</em>. 1977. London: Academy, 1989.</p>
<p>Joedike, Jürgen. <em>Architecture Since 1945: Sources and Directions</em>. Trans. J. C. Plames. London: Pall Mall Press, 1969.</p>
<p>Judovitz, Dalia. <em>The Culture of the Body: Genealogies of Modernity</em>. 2001. Michigan: U of Michigan P, 2004.</p>
<p>Kolnai, Aurel. &#8216;Disgust&#8217;. <em>On Disgust</em>. 1929. Ed. and Trans. Barry Smith and Carolyn Korsmeyer. Chicago: Open Court, 2004. 29-92.</p>
<p>Kopytoff, Igor. &#8216;The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process&#8217; <em>The Social Life of Things: Commodities in a Cultural Perspective</em>. Ed. Arjun Appaduri. 1986. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1999. 64-91.</p>
<p>Kristeva, Julia. <em>Powers of Horror: An Essay in Abjection</em>. 1980. Trans. Leon S. Roudiez, New York: Columbia UP, 1982.</p>
<p>Marx, Karl. <em>Capital: A Critique of Political Economy</em>. Trans. Samuel Moore and Edward Aveling. Ed. Fredrick Engels. Vol.1 .1954; London: Lawrence &#038; Wishart, 1977.</p>
<p>Miller, William Ian. <em>The Anatomy of Disgust</em>. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1997.</p>
<p>Luckhurst, Roger. &#8216;<em>The Angle Between Two Walls&#8217;: The Fiction of J. G. Ballard</em>. Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 1997.</p>
<p>Rathje, William, and Cullen Murphy. <em>Rubbish! The Archaeology of Garbage</em>. 1992. Tucson: U of Arizona P, 2001.</p>
<p>Rubin, William S. <em>Dada and Surrealist Art</em>. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1980.</p>
<p>Shohat, Ella, and Robert Stam. &#8216;Narrativizing Visual Culture: Towards a Polycentric Aesthetics&#8217;. <em>The Visual Culture Reader</em>. Ed. Nicholas Mirzoeff. 1998. Abington: Routledge, 2006. 37-57.</p>
<p>Short, Robert. <em>Dada and Surrealism</em>. London: Octopus, 1980.</p>
<p>Scanlan, John. <em>Garbage</em>. London: Reaktion, 2005.</p>
<p>Thompson, Michael. <em>Rubbish Theory: The Creation and Destruction of Value</em>. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1979.</p>
<p>Trigg, Dylan. <em>The Aesthetics of Decay: Nothingness, Nostalgia, and the Absence of Reason</em>. New Studies in Aesthetics 37. New York: Peter Lang, 2006.</p>
<p>Whiting, Emma. &#8221;Abject Literature&#8217;: Disaffection and Abjection in <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em> and <em>Crash</em>&#8216;. Unpublished essay, 2007.</p>
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		<title>&quot;A fierce and wayward beauty&quot;: Waste in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard, Parts I &amp; II</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-parts-1-2</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-parts-1-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 2007 13:54:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>William Viney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-waste-in-the-fiction-of-jg-ballard-parts-i-ii</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[William Viney explores how High-Rise, Concrete Island, and “The Ultimate City” contain familiar visual landscapes. However, each of these recognisable aspects of urban experience is rendered unfamiliar through the pervasive renegotiation of waste categories.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>William Viney</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_lord1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: J.G. Ballard &#038; Waste" /></p>
<ul><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Future Ruins</a>: Michelle Lord © 2007. Used with permission.</em></ul>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>NOTE: This feature was published in two installments: Parts I &#038; II here, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-part-3">Part III there</a>.</p>
<p>William Viney, © 2007.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>I. Waste and Value.</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>Waste undeniably concerns notions of value and meaning</strong>: what is retained and preserved is valued; what is discarded, banished, and abjected is devalued <a href="#1">[1]</a>. Waste therefore marks implicit boundaries, articulates dynamic categories, and stratifies objects into orders of value. Yet these orders of meaning and significance are by no means static. Rubbish, refuse and litter are expressions of complex systems in perpetual motion: representing different things, to different people, at different times. This semantic contingency is the product of an aesthetic, economic, biological, and socio-political &#8220;discursive constellation&#8221; <a href="#2">[2]</a> that is forever in flux. The subject of waste requires therefore an interdisciplinary approach. We must adopt a critical apparatus flexible enough to trace the intricately intersecting discursive nodes that generate and maintain value.</p>
<p>Though cultural order and taste might at first appear to be rigid and long established, it in fact requires endless renewal and recreation, re-enacted through individual and collective forces. From a structural anthropologist&#8217;s point of view, rubbish is a dynamic social force. For Mary Douglas, it is the clean and orderly that represents the static and immobile, whilst dirt, rubbish, and refuse contain a covert revolutionary potential, harbouring a power to contest the static stability upon which order depends. As Douglas has noted, &#8220;[d]irt offends against order. Eliminating it is not a negative moment, but a positive effort to organise the environment&#8221; <a href="#3">[3]</a>. Waste or rubbish (synonyms of dirt for Douglas) maintain order, through the binary logic of the devalued Other. Simultaneously, waste contests that order, as it threatens to become a valued object. As this brief theoretical excursion illustrates, the value of waste is far from absolute. The changing values given to objects lend them tumultuous life, making possible a &#8220;cultural biography of things&#8221; <a href="#4">[4]</a>. If we begin to think about J. G. Ballard&#8217;s cultural biography of objects, we are immediately struck by his unerring focus on the final chapters, the closing pages that mark the transition into, and out of, the category of &#8216;waste.&#8217; Even more peculiar, Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;biography&#8217; of things never fully ends, his waste frequently returns as want, merging end and beginning, creation and destruction.</p>
<p>Michael Thompson, one of the earliest theorists of waste, has divided objects into two categories: &#8216;transient&#8217; objects (e.g. a car) with a finite life span which decrease in value as time progresses; whilst &#8216;durable&#8217; objects (e.g. antique furniture) have prolonged life spans, and their value increases as time progresses. Our attitude towards an object greatly depends on our ability to place it into one of these categories; our financial energies will be thrown into the conservation (through insurance, maintenance, presentation etc.) of the durable object, whilst we will happily destroy or discard the transient object. Thompson goes on to argue that there is a shadowy and covert third term: &#8216;rubbish.&#8217; Although a transient object may fall into the &#8216;rubbish&#8217; (or waste) category it may, by good fortune, fortitude, or human intervention, re-emerge with durable credentials. Waste as a social category of value is therefore intimately bound to fluid transfers of value, a category of flexibility and mutability <a href="#5">[5]</a>. Most notable in Ballard&#8217;s fiction is the absence of Thompsonian durability, to borrow another phrase from Thompson; Ballard&#8217;s world is a &#8220;world of transience.&#8221; For Ballard, waste registers a process, a cycle, a movement, and system in transition: durability and permanence have no place in a fictional world that revels in the power of waste to negotiate and renegotiate value.</p>
<p><strong>II. Architectures of Waste: <em>High-Rise</em>, <em>Concrete Island</em>, and &#8220;The Ultimate City&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>The changing character of the city, and the casual effects these changes have upon the individual and collective psyches of its populace, are powerfully rendered in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>, and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete=short-stories">&#8220;The Ultimate City&#8221;</a>. All three contain familiar visual landscapes: the high-rise apartment building, the roadside waste ground, the empty Central Business District. However, each of these recognisable aspects of urban experience is rendered unfamiliar through the pervasive renegotiation of waste categories. Unexpected reversals propel each narrative on unknown trajectories: the brand new high-rise becomes derelict, the waste ground becomes habitable, the abandoned city centre thrives once more. In each case, values and priorities transform themselves, giving way to new orders of social organisation and new systems of commerce. What is considered rubbish finds itself similarly reconfigured, as radical new ecologies of consumption and rejection are tried and tested. Waste hovers at the fringes in a ubiquitous and deeply ambivalent manner, at all times it threatens to upset traditional categories of value. As waste becomes accepted, even loved, Ballard shows how our environment conditions notions of waste, want, and value.</p>
<p>In <em>High-Rise</em>, Ballard questions the bold ambition of high modernist architecture. These building projects implicitly communicate concepts of cleanliness and waste management, furthering a techno-modernist form of social engineering <a href="#6">[6]</a>. At the core of post-war redevelopment were notions of reclamation and redevelopment. Progressive ultramodern housing rose from the derelict slums and industrial wastelands. This is a context with which Ballard&#8217;s fiction patently interacts:</p>
<blockquote><p>Together [the apartment blocks] were set in a mile-square area of abandoned dockland and warehousing along the north bank of the river [...] The massive scale of the glass and concrete architecture, and its striking situation in the bend of the river, sharply separated the development project from the rundown areas around it, decaying nineteenth-century terraced houses and empty factories already zoned for reclamation <a href="#7">[7]</a>.</p></blockquote>
<p>Dominating the architectural scene of 1960s and 1970s Britain, the Brutalist school confronted inner city decline, bombed-out post-war dereliction, and industrial decline, with a clinical rationalism. As Jürgen Joedike has made clear, the Smithsonian-Brutalist movement privileged ethical and social architectural principles over the aesthetic. Precise geometry, &#8216;honest&#8217; (i.e. visible) use of materials, and a dedication to the striking &#8216;image,&#8217; were seen to create buildings both progressive and pure, in function and form <a href="#8">[8]</a>. The ultra-rationalist/behaviourist ideals that the Brutalists inherited from architects such as Le Corbusier and Mies Van Der Rohe meant that the high-rise was intended as a means to cleanse post-war Britain of its social ills, literally cleaning up the neighbourhood through a minimalist economy of space. A utopian relationship with technology fostered a correspondingly technocratic architecture:</p>
<blockquote><p>for the machine supported present-day cities, only a live, cool, highly controlled, rather impersonal architectural language can deepen that base-connection, make it resonate with culture as a whole <a href="#9">[9]</a>.</p></blockquote>
<p>Peter Smithson&#8217;s Futurist aesthetic becomes playfully inverted in Ballard&#8217;s high-rise. Whilst the building begins as &#8220;a huge machine designed to serve [...] a never-failing supply of care and attention&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 10), the &#8216;machine&#8217; comes to a shuddering collapse, taking with it the moral stability of its residents. The absolute failure of the high-rise permits the exploration of previously repressed psychological phenomenon: tribal violence, sexual promiscuity, and open vandalism.</p>
<p>The high-rise&#8217;s aggressive environment encourages a competitive decadence that allows valuable objects to become transformed into waste &#8211; shows of wealth, irresponsibility, and indifference gather around acts of disposal. Drinking &#8220;a brand of expensive imitation champagne&#8221; in the morning, and throwing a full bottle, &#8220;still with its wired cork and foil in place,&#8221; off the balcony, powerfully demonstrates the violent waste-making of the affluent classes (<em>HR</em>, 11, 12). It is this self-conscious <em>creation</em> of waste that is endlessly paraded throughout the novel. Laing&#8217;s mild annoyance towards his inconsiderate neighbours is far less interesting than his decision to dispose of the remnants of the champagne bottle in an identical manner as the revellers above, by throwing it over his balcony&#8217;s balustrade. Individual waste becomes socialised, the category of waste is contagious.</p>
<p>Fittingly, Laing&#8217;s first altercation with a fellow resident is over a blocked rubbish-disposal chute. He and Steele soon unite however, as they unblock the chute and discuss the peculiar waste disposal habits of the upper floor residents. At this early stage in the novel, the presence of waste is already expressing the transient relations people hold with their refuse:</p>
<blockquote><p>Steele stood back as the column of garbage sank below in a greasy avalanche. He held Laing&#8217;s arm, steering him around a beer can lying on the corridor floor. &#8216;Still no doubt we&#8217;re all equally guilty &#8212; I hear that the lower floors people are leaving small parcels of garbage outside their apartment door&#8217; (<em>HR</em>, 39). </p></blockquote>
<p>The telling manipulation of language here suggests a deliberate, perhaps ritualistic, negotiation and renegotiation of waste values, and this merely marks the beginning of what becomes an obsession. Ballard&#8217;s incessant cataloguing of rubbish becomes a towering feature of his narrative. A careful balance is struck between waste avoidance (clearing the chute and steering round the beer can) and waste acceptance (parcels of rubbish left in communal spaces), a balance that will steadily break down through the course of the novel. Any quaint delicacy that &#8220;small parcels&#8221; might suggest becomes obliterated as the rubbish heaps up, inside and outside the building. Anthony Royal, the building&#8217;s architect, observes from his top-floor apartment a &#8220;sea of rubbish that spread[s] around the building like an enlarging stain&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 76). This spreading sea, for Royal and the reader, is a &#8220;visible index of the block&#8217;s decline,&#8221; a physical measure of &#8220;the extent to which its tenants accepted this process of erosion&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 76). At first tolerated, then accepted without acknowledgment, and finally embraced as a truer state of being, the residents&#8217; changing relations with rubbish is an important barometer of social change; a mirror that reflects the collective mental health of the high-rise.</p>
<p>The steady accumulation of rubbish is symptomatic of an eroded boundary between &#8216;inside&#8217; and &#8216;outside.&#8217; The high-rise retains an inexplicable hold upon the psyches of the residents, they reject the outside world entirely. For example, despite growing hardships, Royal observes: &#8220;they would not be leaving either the following morning or any other&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 78). He dreams of an architecture with &#8220;no possibility of escape&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 81). In their rejection of the outside world, Royal and his fellow residents testify to the success of self-containment. The waste and dirt of the high-rise insulate the residents against an outside that has become increasingly unattractive, detached, unreal. After attempting to go to work and getting only as far as the car park before turning back, Laing realises he will never again try to leave (<em>HR</em>, 104). Coupled with the bizarre psychological control the high-rise holds over its residents, the physical properties of the high-rise means that waste cannot escape either. An architecture that prioritises the vertical over the horizontal means that spatial boundaries are reordered. The high-rise has no discernable centre, or rather, the whole building is a giant centre. Similarly, each apartment has no discernable periphery, the front door simply leads further into the main building. The &#8220;small parcels of garbage&#8221; left outside the apartment door speak of the contested nature of private space in a high-rise apartment block. With this space contested, the sense of &#8216;inside&#8217; and &#8216;outside&#8217; become similarly obscured. With a clearly identifiable &#8216;outside&#8217; lost, the boundary between &#8216;core&#8217; and &#8216;periphery&#8217; is blurred, complicating the spatial distinctions implicit in &#8216;throwing things out.&#8217; Even though the residents might try to throw their rubbish off their balconies, Royal still observes waste that appears as a &#8220;sea&#8221; and a &#8220;stain.&#8221; Both words express the impossibility of disconnecting the building from its waste: &#8220;[a] greasy spray hung across the face of the building, the residue of the cascade of debris now heaved over the side without a care whether the wind would carry it into the apartments below&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 97). Laing tries to clean his flat only to discover that &#8220;all he was doing was rearranging the dirt&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 100). With its complication of spatial divides, the high-rise renders waste uncanny &#8211; in perpetual circulation, forever threatening to return to sender.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_lord2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: J.G. Ballard &#038; Waste" /></p>
<ul><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Future Ruins</a>: Michelle Lord © 2007. Used with permission.</em></ul>
<p>If waste defines space (and <em>vice versa</em>) through the generation of physical and conceptual boundaries then the sense that refuse has lost its &#8216;correct&#8217; place registers the renegotiation of these boundaries, and perhaps the renegotiation of waste categories in general. The most intimate and domestic spaces, such as the kitchen and bed, become unexpected rubbish tips. In fact, Laing finds himself in his kitchen bedding down on bags of rubbish:</p>
<blockquote><p> [H]e realised how derelict it had become. The floor was strewn with debris, scraps of food and empty cans. To his surprise, Laing counted six garbage-sacks &#8212; for some reason he had assumed there was only one [...] Reclining against this soft bed of his own waste he felt like going to sleep (<em>HR</em>, 100).</p></blockquote>
<p>Laing&#8217;s indifference to these heaps of rubbish are neither the signs of laziness or the failure of the buildings&#8217; technology, but rather, proof that his values are at a considerable remove from those that prompted him to throw the broken wine bottle off his balcony. His dramatic change in attitude towards waste is &#8220;to be welcomed [it] helped to expose a more real vision of himself&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 100). Similarly, Royal observes the unwillingness of his residents to dispose of their sacks of rubbish:</p>
<blockquote><p>Presumably they held this rubbish to themselves less from fear of attracting the attentions of the outside world than from the need to cling to their own, surround themselves with the mucilage of unfinished meals, bloody bandage scraps, broken bottles that once held the wine that made them drunk, all faintly visible through the semi-opaque plastic (<em>HR</em>, 137).</p></blockquote>
<p>It is difficult to say when exactly our waste ceases to belong to us. The residents believe that by throwing their rubbish over the rails they lose an aspect of themselves. In this sense, when we discard an object we in fact give birth to, or create something, that we can cherish, creatively expressing an aspect of ourselves. Put simply: a truer connection with one&#8217;s waste offers a truer sense of the self, a reversal of the unreal disposable society that dominates the metropolis beyond the buildings&#8217; limits. The logical conclusion of this attitude is a richer relationship with one&#8217;s own bodily wastes: &#8220;the stench gave him confidence, the feeling that he had dominated the terrain with the products of his own body&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 107). As will become clear in <em>Concrete Island</em>, <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a></em>, and <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a></em>, Ballard uses the body as a site and object of &#8216;ultimate&#8217; waste &#8212; the <em>Alpha</em> and <em>Omega</em> of the discarded. <em>High-Rise</em> has its own peculiar twist on this theme, a twist only fully appreciated if, bizarrely, we go via the swimming pool.</p>
<p>Perhaps the most Ballardian of images, the declining status of the swimming pool is a dependable measure of narrative progress: it provides a flexible and mobile metaphor that leaps from narrative to narrative. Almost all of Ballard&#8217;s novels contain a swimming pool in one form or another. In <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a></em> the crowded swimming pool is symbol of violent regeneration. The empty pools of <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a></em> powerfully represent the shortage of water that has left the twentieth century empty and derelict, making Western civilisation seem laughably futile. In <em>Empire of the Sun</em> Jim&#8217;s crystal clear pool empties itself at the same rate that the expatriate community are evacuated: &#8221; [t]he water was covered with leaves and dead insects, and the level had fallen by almost three feet, draping a scummy curtain on the sides. Cigarettes ends lay crushed on the white tiles, and a Chinese packet lay under the diving board&#8221; <a href="#10">[10]</a>. In a subtle way, the refuse that the Chinese soldiers have left suggests a form of colonisation, a politicised reclamation of space through rubbish.</p>
<p>In a more startling correspondence, the changing fortunes of the high-rise and the relative cleanliness of the building&#8217;s swimming pools are directly correlated. Apart from the waste disposal-chute incident analysed above, the swimming pool is the original place of conflict in the high-rise, where the separate levels begin to divide themselves into a series of primitive castes. The first incident involves an argument between a cost-accountant from the 17th floor and Mrs Wilder. The cost-accountant accuses Mrs Wilder&#8217;s children of repeatedly urinating in the pool. Aside from the comic images this evokes, it sets in motion a spiralling series of additional incidents, culminating in the death of the jeweller. As the children are banished from the sullied swimming pool the lower-levels retaliate by drowning an Afghan hound owned by an upper floor resident. What Ballard terms the &#8220;contamina[tion]&#8221; and &#8220;profanation&#8221; of the pool again announces a more specific objective correlative for the psychological health of the high-rise. The pool, like the building as a whole, is already progressing from a space of decadent leisure to one of violent contamination and waste.</p>
<p>The decline of the swimming pool is gradual yet entropic; &#8220;a half-empty pit of yellowing water and floating debris&#8221; (HR, 75) soon becomes &#8220;yellowing water [...] filled with debris, the floor of the shallow end emerging like a beach in a garbage lagoon. A mattress floated among the bottles, surrounded by a swill of cardboard cartons and newspapers&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 88). After this, the 35th floor pool has a lengthy absence until it reappears: &#8220;[t]wo bodies, he noted, floated in the pool, barely distinguishable from the other debris, the kitchen garbage and pieces of furniture&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 159). Both pools have become established unofficial dumps, places where both kitchen waste and human bodies can be discarded with equal ease. This disturbing image acts as a mere prelude to the climactic description of the 10th floor swimming pool:</p>
<blockquote><p>In the yellow light reflected off the greasy tiles, the long tank of the bone-pit stretched in front of them. The water had long since drained away, but the sloping floor was covered with the skulls, bones and dismembered limbs of dozens of corpses. Tangled together where they had been flung, they lay about like tenants of a crowded beach visited by a sudden holocaust (<em>HR</em>, 170).</p></blockquote>
<p>This is perhaps the &#8216;ultimate waste&#8217; generated by the high-rise&#8217;s harsh environment. With the Jewish Holocaust as a historical intertext, we are reminded how easily humans can discard one another on an unthinkable scale. True to the earlier observation that, &#8220;for all their descent into barbarism, the residents remained faithful to their origins and continued to generate a vast amount of refuse&#8221; (<em>HR</em>, 134), the numerous bodies that fill the pool are the systemic waste products of a building, a community, and the individual, in a state of absolute collapse. In a more sinister way, the body pit presents an extension of the unshakeable late-capitalist tendency towards disposability. Ballard&#8217;s dystopian vision of architectural modernity suggests a salient and unrelenting feature that transcends seismic social change: the generation of waste.</p>
<p>With the precise details of an autobiography, <em>Concrete Island</em> situates itself very specifically within time (at exactly 3 o&#8217;clock April 22nd 1973) and place (six hundred yards from the junction of the Westway and the M4). Richard Maitland&#8217;s car tyres explode and send him careering into a forgotten wasteland, setting forth a narrative imbued with the indisputable force of possibility. This piece of derelict land has been created and disremembered, hidden and neglected. Its true origins are made deliberately ambiguous, an ambiguity provoked by Ballard&#8217;s enigmatic and exacting style: &#8220;a small traffic island, some two hundred yards long and triangular in shape, that lay in the waste ground between three converging motorway routes&#8221; <a href="#11">[11]</a>. Whilst the familiar term &#8220;traffic island&#8221; suggests the immediate designs of motorway planners and municipal bureaucrats, &#8220;waste ground&#8221; creates a contrary and implicit opposition, a sense of chance and contingency: an incidental systemic by-product of humanity&#8217;s need for transportation. This concrete island is not only &#8220;sealed off from the world around it by the high embankments on two sides and the wire-mesh fence on its third&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 13), but is also &#8220;a forgotten island of rubble and weeds&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 5). With &#8220;the world around it,&#8221; the waste ground is a non-space, deliberately sealed and excluded from the social and economic norms of the everyday. Yet Ballard&#8217;s insistence on the term &#8220;island&#8221; presents a powerful force of naturalisation, with all the associated notions of colonisation and empire, primitivism and pioneer living. As these brief extracts already suggest, <em>Concrete Island</em> is a novel obsessed with the junctures between the created and the artificial, natural and unnatural, the familiar and unfamiliar, the valued and the discarded.</p>
<p>Compounding an endless flux between binaries is the lingering remnants of the island&#8217;s archaeology, which has been described by Andrzej Gasiorek as a &#8220;physical palimpsest&#8221; <a href="#12">[12]</a>. Maitland traces the outline of what was once a Victorian terraced street, discovering the ruins of an abandoned church, graveyard, and print shop, with the littered type of an old letterpress still scattered on the ground (<em>CI</em>, 41, 65). We glimpse traces of the island&#8217;s hidden history, a history made archaeology by post-war demolition squads and an emerging desire for high-speed travel. All this Victorian certainty has become waste, both by design and neglect. The durable old world has been replaced by a transient new world. The shifting fortunes of what was once a habitable and thriving environment, stable enough to support a church, print shop, and cinema, gives emphasis to the ephemeral nature of land use and value. An uncertain duality between the created and the forgotten is tirelessly reinstated, Maitland&#8217;s environment becomes loaded with both a benevolent domestic potential and a desolate wasted malevolence, and it is between these binaries our traditional valuations of wastelands are wilfully disrupted.</p>
<p>What is so remarkable about the island on which Maitland finds himself is its resistance to straightforward categorisation. By successfully existing as island, waste ground, Victorian ruin, &#8220;unofficial municipal dump&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 13), and the home of Jane and Proctor, this space retains a robust semantic multiplicity. If we choose to agree with Ballard&#8217;s speculative observation that &#8220;this triangular patch of waste ground had survived by exercise of guile and persistence, and would continue to survive, unknown and disregarded, long after the motorways had collapsed into dust&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 69), then we must also acknowledge its semantic undecidability as an important contributing factor to this persistence <a href="#13">[13]</a>. Maitland&#8217;s grim assessment of his island as an &#8220;abandoned ground,&#8221; no more than &#8220;meaningless soil&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 32), does not merely express his frustration with being marooned, rather, it communicates his thwarted desire to give his environment meaning; to give this space a proper language, and a proper name.</p>
<p>If Maitland&#8217;s island represents a sort of non-space, without unequivocal value, then we should be unsurprised by the catalogues of seemingly formless refuse piled at the island&#8217;s boundaries. With these, Ballard gives his 1970s wasteland a sense of impossible borderlands, populated by the miscellaneous and discarded. The following passages are typical:</p>
<blockquote><p>[a] wire-mesh fence sealed off the triangle of waste ground from the area beyond, which had become an unofficial municipal dump. In the shadows below the concrete span were several derelict furniture vans, a stack of stripped-down billboards, mounds of tyres and untreated metal refuse. (<em>CI</em>, 12-13).</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>No grass grew under the overpass. The damp earth was dark with waste oil leaking from the piles of refuse and broken metal drums on the far side of the fence. The hundred-yard-long wire wall held back mounds of truck tyres and empty cans, broken office furniture, sacks of hardened cement. Builder&#8217;s forms, bales of rusty wire and scrapped engine parts were heaped so high that Maitland doubted whether he would be able to penetrate this jungle of refuse even if he could cut through the fence (<em>CI</em>, 39).</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_lord3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: J.G. Ballard &#038; Waste" /></p>
<ul><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">Future Ruins</a>: Michelle Lord © 2007. Used with permission.</em></ul>
<p>Although both extracts technically describe an area <em>beyond</em> the small triangle ground that Maitland inhabits, this is no less instructive. As the eastern end of the triangle is the only side not lined with a solid, insurmountable motorway embankment, it presents the only viable means to escape, yet Maitland observes a &#8220;jungle of refuse&#8221; that forms a third embankment, a wall of waste that effectively completes his isolation. Paradoxically, the waste ground is given boundaries through heaps of refuse, but the inherent chaos of these heaps serves only to obscure the islands&#8217; beginning and end. The wire fence can only form a tenuous and explicitly porous screen between the &#8216;wanted&#8217; and the &#8216;wasted&#8217;; the leaking oil signifies their fragile, if not impossible, division.</p>
<p>Just as discarded objects pile up in <em>Concrete Island</em>, so too does socially discarded people. Richard Maitland, a successful architect, is thrown into a wasteland, perhaps never to escape. Proctor, after injuring himself in the circus, has been made mercilessly unemployed: &#8221; &#8216;They just threw him out&#8217; &#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 98), whilst Jane, once wealthy, married, and pregnant, has become a drug-using prostitute <a href="#14">[14]</a>. It is through the island&#8217;s three inhabitants that we are made aware of the fluid movement between success and failure, the harsh downside to a socially mobile population. Ballard describes them as &#8220;[t]hree derelicts&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 109), and &#8220;outcasts&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 114). Their social identities become fused with the status of the island:</p>
<blockquote><p>Identifying the island with himself, he gazed at the cars in the breaker&#8217;s yard, at the wire-mesh fence, and the concrete caisson behind him. These places of pain and ordeal were now confused with pieces of his body. He gestured towards them, trying to make a circuit of the island so that he could leave these sections of himself where they belonged (<em>CI</em>, 70).</p></blockquote>
<p>The island harnesses a powerful ability to fragment, making Maitland wish he could discard the aspects of himself that have become useless: in a similar passage, frustrated with his damaged leg Maitland wishes &#8220;he could disconnect&#8221; and &#8220;throw it away&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 127). In Ballard&#8217;s deeply critical manner, Maitland has become fully absorbed into disposable culture; a culture that has made and populated the island, a culture that is predicated on throwing away anything that is inconvenient or uncomfortable. Along with the haunting reminders of Jane&#8217;s aborted child, Ballard strikes deep into a society that complacently accepts the human body as a form of waste, as something to be discarded along with the cigarette packets and empty bottles.</p>
<p>Although the pervasive culture of the disposable may shape and populate the island, this should not detract from the fluctuating categories of value that prevents rubbish from becoming an entirely static order of meaning. Instances of scavenging and recycling galvanise <em>Concrete Island&#8217;s</em> Crusoe-like &#8216;survival-narrative,&#8217; connecting the novel to a long history of travel fiction. But unlike the great majority of canonical shipwrecked heroes, Maitland must rely on an artificial and redundant landscape for sustenance. His need to recycle gives great testimony to the dynamic aspects of Thompsonian rubbish theory, a subtle implosion of categories that suggests a continuous renegotiation of value.</p>
<p>The novel&#8217;s first instance of recycling occurs where he wrenches off a piece of exhaust piping from his wrecked car to fashion a crude six-foot long crutch. In a peculiar way, his car continues to give him mobility, or rather, it is recycled waste that makes his hobbling exploration of the island possible (<em>CI</em>, 32). No less remarkable are Maitland&#8217;s desperate attempts to catch the attention of passing drivers, firstly by setting the car alight to make a beacon, and secondly by using the car&#8217;s blackened wiring as writing material (<em>CI</em>, 51, 61). Although he fails to attract anyone&#8217;s attention his recycling is nonetheless successful, transforming the wreck into a crutch, a torch, and a pen.</p>
<p>As Maitland establishes himself on the island, the opportunities to utilise its rich resources multiply. Proctor shows him the island&#8217;s main food-source, the fly-tipped kitchen waste of a local restaurant:</p>
<blockquote><p>[A]n amorphous mass of gleaming mucilage which lay in a three-feet-high heap across a stack of tyres. The nearest edge of this sludge-pile was already oozing through the mesh [...] Proctor picked at the slices of wet bread, lumps of fatty meat and vegetable scraps embedded in the greasy avalanche (<em>CI</em>, 128).</p></blockquote>
<p>This complex (and comparatively rare) use of consonance and assonance indicates a clear intention to shock. Phrases such as &#8220;gleaming mucilage,&#8221; &#8220;sludge-pile,&#8221; and &#8220;greasy avalanche,&#8221; emphasises the decaying viscosity of this &#8220;illicit garbage dump&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 128). Yet this fetid feast leaves Maitland profoundly unaffected: &#8220;he felt no sense of revulsion&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 128). The episode is remarkable for a number of reasons. Firstly, it allows the island a habitable benevolence, with a moderately reliable source of food Maitland&#8217;s colonisation becomes possible. Secondly, it illustrates an important revolution in value. The fatty lumps and sodden dregs register the excesses of Western consumerism, at first considered waste, once again finds value in the mess tins of Maitland and Proctor. Finally, it provides a significant example of how powerful emotions of disgust can act as organising principles behind categories of value. William Miller has argued that disgust is an emotion that &#8220;ranks people and things in a kind of cosmic ordering&#8221; <a href="#15">[15]</a>. Therefore, Maitland&#8217;s loss of disgust announces a cosmic, or rather, a holistic reordering of value. His rotten heap of food scraps corresponds to what the German phenomenologist Aurel Kolnai has called the &#8220;prototype of all disgusting objects&#8221;; the sight, smell, or taste of putrification; &#8220;the tactile impression of flabbiness, sliminess, pastiness, and indeed anything soft&#8230;&#8221; <a href="#16">[16]</a>. Similarly, Julia Kristeva argues that food loathing is &#8220;the most elementary and most archaic form of abjection&#8221; <a href="#17">[17]</a>. But, if we accept that the abjection of objects in part constitutes the Lacanian &#8220;I&#8221;, where the expelled object affirms and consolidates the formation of the self-becoming subject, then Maitland&#8217;s <em>acceptance</em> of waste suggests the reversal of this process, signifying both an unravelling and restructuring of the self. Via the consumption of waste, an emerging identity is therefore articulated. Through the assimilation of previously abject(ed) material Maitland becomes waste, and waste becomes him.</p>
<p>The novel&#8217;s powerful depiction of &#8216;wasted living&#8217; &#8212; the domestication of and through waste &#8212; finds climactic resolution when Proctor creates Maitland a &#8220;pavilion of rust&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 162); a crude house made of the discarded sections of cars. In a deeply ambivalent way, Jane observes: &#8220;I can see that you&#8217;re a real architect&#8221; (<em>CI</em>, 163). Has Maitland achieved a truer sense of &#8216;reality&#8217;? Does a recycled eco-architecture present a viable antidote to the unreal high-rises that dominate the urban skyline? Are Jane&#8217;s words a sarcastic commentary on Maitland&#8217;s dramatic fall from grace? The presence of waste makes these questions both possible and irresolvable. The fluid transactions between categories of value obscure a critical overview. Critics have often preferred to stress the dystopian aspects of the novel. Gasiorek writes that the island is a &#8220;symbol of the waste and destruction modernity leaves in its wake,&#8221; Peter Brigg calls the work a &#8220;disaster novel,&#8221; and Roger Luckhurst writes of the &#8220;uncanny wasted margins or ruins of a forgotten twentieth century history&#8221; <a href="#18">[18]</a>. Ballard&#8217;s <em>Concrete Island</em> typically engenders thematically negative readings; nowhere is the novel&#8217;s latent utopian content, seen in the regenerative treatment of waste, given an opportunity to redress this imbalance. The tragi-comic ambiguity of Maitland&#8217;s fate depends on our acceptance of the island as a viable space in which to live. Should we accept this, as Maitland certainly does, then we must radically reappraise our hierarchies of value and acknowledge the hidden potential to be found in the discarded.</p>
<p>If <em>High-Rise</em> and <em>Concrete Island</em> generate and explore myths of the present, &#8220;The Ultimate City&#8221; tells a myth of the near future, an exploration of how the future will look upon our present. Raised in the post-industrial &#8216;Garden City,&#8217; Halloway becomes captivated by the world his parents left behind. Using the flying competition as a thinly veiled excuse, he builds a sailplane and reaches the other side of the sound to explore the metropolis: &#8220;an abandoned dream ready to be re-occupied&#8221; <a href="#19">[19]</a>. He discovers systems of waste built upon an aggressive use of power and materials, an economic unsustainability predicated upon massive overproduction and consumption, only to be abandoned on an equivalent scale. Not only does Halloway reoccupy a wasteland and a derelict high-rise, but an entire metropolis. He re-inhabits a discarded twentieth-century.</p>
<p>The defining contrast of the novella opposes the docile pastoralism of the Garden City on the one hand, and the aggressive petroleum-driven industrialism of the abandoned metropolis on the other. The Garden City&#8217;s manufacturers are so exact that &#8220;everything [is] so well made that it last[s] for ever&#8221; (<em>CSS</em>, 879), what refuse is produced is efficiently recycled. The metropolis is an enormous monument to the culture of the discard, a wasteland strewn with abandoned cars, televisions, washing machines, and other commodities. Through Halloway&#8217;s regeneration of the long abandoned city, the narrative asks crucial questions about the material legacies of technologically advanced societies, the transient nature of material culture, and the futile ambitions of Western industrialism. His ability to playfully master the systems of a distant twentieth-century tie into processes of reconciliation and self-exploration, allowing him to come to terms with his insatiable desire for power and waste.</p>
<p>The aptly named Buckmaster, the ageing industrialist Halloway meets in the metropolis, represents the industrial glut of Fordist production. With an emphasis upon disproportionate material accumulation, surplus and excess, Buckmaster describes his golden age:</p>
<blockquote><p>During the war I built thirty thousand fighters for the government, we were turning them out so fast the Air Force kept the war going just to get rid of them&#8230; [and] &#8230; enough spare parts to give every man on this planet his own robot-assembly kit (<em>CSS</em>, 896).</p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard gives us a clear sense of the motive and morals of the old world, constantly reflected in the enormous volume of discarded goods: &#8220;[i]n the open fields a local manufacturer had dumped what appeared to be a lifetime&#8217;s output of washing machines&#8221; (<em>CSS</em>, 879); &#8220;[t]housands of cars lined the streets, their flamboyant bodywork covered with moss&#8221; (<em>CSS</em>, 882). The size of production and consequent abandonment is enigmatically captured in Miranda and Buckmaster&#8217;s waste sculptures:</p>
<blockquote><p>As he stepped down from the pedestrian exit, he noticed that a nearby parking lot had been used as a municipal dump. Old tyres, industrial waste and abandoned appliances lay about in a rusty moraine. Rising from its centre was a pyramid of television sets some sixty feet high, constructed with considerable care and an advanced geometry (<em>CSS</em>, 883-884).</p></blockquote>
<p>With their direct association with the monuments of ancient civilisations, these heaps of consumer durables hold an arresting power <a href="#20">[20]</a>. Although they represent objects drained of use and exchange values and made useless through abandonment, they demonstrate a nostalgically aestheticised form of memorialisation. This is most powerfully demonstrated in Buckmaster&#8217;s &#8220;cathedral of cars&#8221; (<em>CSS</em>, 897), a four hundred foot monument made entirely of cars, and the largest of the city&#8217;s pyramids of waste. Halloway observes that this pyramid &#8220;resembled a gothic cathedral&#8221; (<em>CSS</em>, 895). These physical epitaphs to Western civilisation hold an implicit relationship with Dada, and to Marcel Duchamp&#8217;s &#8216;readymades.&#8217; Like Dada, these towering monuments of rust express a clear rejection of rationalist humanist principles, elevating mundane objects as works of art and debasing works of art to the level of mundane objects <a href="#21">[21]</a>. Duchamp argued that his readymades were created to inspire &#8220;a reaction of visual <em>indifference</em> [...] a total absence of good or bad taste, in fact, a complete anesthesia&#8221; <a href="#22">[22]</a>. Of course, the last thing Duchamp&#8217;s shock-tactics inspire is critical affectlessness, his <em>Bicycle Wheel</em> (1913) and <em>Fountain</em> (1917) still attract debate. More accurately, Duchamp&#8217;s readymades challenge our traditional tools of analysis, obscuring the distinctions between art and the everyday, the aesthetised and the ordinary <a href="#23">[23]</a>. Buckmaster&#8217;s &#8216;cathedral&#8217; represents an extension of Duchamp&#8217;s Dadaist ideals, generating something far more elaborate than an &#8216;architecture of waste.&#8217; The pyramid allows a complex network of competing uses and meanings to collide, a nuanced mixture of <em>object d&#8217;art</em>, monument, memorial, and deification of waste. Rubbish, rather than the simple by-product of a forgotten economic system, is figured as the very symbolic locus of that system. All this is achieved through the very materials that the monument seeks to celebrate, waste is used to glorify waste. A very specific brand of <em>mise en abime</em> is created, collapsing important interpretative binaries such as the relationship between part and whole, end and beginning, subject and object: the physical and semantic centre of the edifice is therefore rendered disturbingly ambivalent.</p>
<p>The pyramids trigger in Halloway an appreciation for waste that goes far beyond nostalgic mourning, he begins to see the aesthetic desirability of waste. The following extract is arguably one of the novella&#8217;s most powerful:</p>
<blockquote><p>Far from disfiguring the landscape, these discarded products of Twentieth-Century industry had a fierce and wayward beauty. Halloway was fascinated by the glimmering sheen of the metal-scummed canals, by the strange submarine melancholy of drowned cars looming up at him from the abandoned lakes, by the brilliant colours of the garbage hills, by the glitter of a million cans embedded in a matrix of detergent packs and tinfoil, a kaleidoscope of everything they could wear, eat and drink. He was fascinated by the cobalt clouds that drifted below the surface of the water, free at last of all the plants and fish, the soft chemical billows interacting as they seeped into the sodden soil. He explored the whorls of steel shavings, foliage culled from a metallic Christmas tree, rusting wire whose dense copper hues formed a burnished forest in the sunlight. He gazed raptly at the chalky whiteness of old china-clay tips, vivid as powdered ice, abandoned railyards with their moss-covered locomotives, the undimmed beauty of industrial wastes produced by skills and imaginations far richer than nature&#8217;s, more splendid than any Arcadian meadow. Unlike nature, here was no death. (<em>CSS</em>, 915)</p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard steers us towards a peculiar version of the Kantian sublime: the common flower can no longer hold Halloway&#8217;s attention, only a &#8220;fierce and wayward&#8221; bricolage of waste can provoke his &#8216;fascination&#8217; and &#8216;rapture&#8217; <a href="#24">[24]</a>. Whereas in <em>High-Rise</em> and <em>Concrete Island</em> rubbish was embraced for typically utilitarian ends (for food, shelter, domination), Halloway&#8217;s appreciation of waste operates on primarily aesthetic terms, abstracted beyond a crass division between &#8216;good&#8217; and &#8216;bad,&#8217; &#8216;right&#8217; and &#8216;wrong.&#8217; It might be tempting to dismiss the final line of this extract as mere Ballardian hyperbole. To do so would be to miss the source of wastes unique aesthetic properties. If a bomb were dropped on <em>La Gioconda</em> it would become worthless, if a bomb were dropped on a rubbish tip its visual nature would be altered, but its value would remain unchanged. The visual attractiveness of industrial waste is one that can never be tarnished &#8212; its steady decline is the very source of its arresting beauty.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>NOTE: This feature was published in two installments: Parts I &#038; II here, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/a-fierce-and-wayward-beauty-part-3">Part III there</a>.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>ENDNOTES</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>[1]</strong><a name="1"></a> I believe Ballard&#8217;s treatment of waste runs contrary to John Scanlan&#8217;s between garbage and the <em>complete</em> absence of meaning and value; see John Scanlan, <em>Garbage</em>, (London: Reaktion, 2005), 97-98, 112. For Ballard, waste lies on a flexible spectrum of value, ever fluid, mutable, and capricious.</p>
<p><strong>[2]</strong><a name="2"></a> Michel Foucault, <em>The Archaeology of Knowledge</em>, trans. A.M. Sheridan Smith (1969; London: Tavistock, 1972), 66.</p>
<p><strong>[3]</strong><a name="3"></a> Mary Douglas, <em>Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concept of Pollution and Taboo</em>, (1966; London: Routledge, 2002), 2</p>
<p><strong>[4]</strong><a name="4"></a> Igor Kopytoff, &#8220;The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process,&#8221; <em>The Social Life of Things: Commodities in a Cultural Perspective</em>, ed. Arjun Appaduri (1986; Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1999), 64-91.</p>
<p><strong>[5]</strong><a name="5"></a> Michael Thompson, <em>Rubbish Theory: The Creation and Destruction of Value</em> (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1979), 9-10.</p>
<p><strong>[6]</strong><a name="6"></a> Ballard&#8217;s <em>High-Rise</em> is set in 1970s London Docklands, at the very cusp of gentrification which only gathers its full pace in the 1980s. It is commonly believed that the West End grew to be a desirable and exclusive district because it lay up wind of the slums in the east, the colonisation of the East End by the affluent professional classes in <em>High-Rise</em> supposes a solution to this problem; a solution the novel wilfully destroys.</p>
<p><strong>[7]</strong><a name="7"></a> J. G. Ballard, <em>High-Rise</em>, (1975; London: Flamingo, 2000), 8. Hereafter, cited in the text as <em>HR</em>.</p>
<p><strong>[8]</strong><a name="8"></a> Jürgen Joedike, <em>Architecture Since 1945: Sources and Directions</em>, trans. J. C. Plames, (London: Pall Mall Press, 1969), 110-23.</p>
<p><strong>[9]</strong><a name="9"></a> Peter Smithson, quoted in Charles Jencks, <em>The Language of Post-Modern Architecture</em>, (1977; London: Academy, 1989), 23.</p>
<p><strong>[10]</strong><a name="10"></a> J. G. Ballard, <em>Empire of the Sun</em>, (1984; London: Panther, 1985), 62. Hereafter, cited in the text as <em>ES</em>.</p>
<p><strong>[11]</strong><a name="11"></a> J. G. Ballard, &#8220;Introduction,&#8221; <em>Concrete Island</em>, (1973; London: Vintage, 1994), 11. Hereafter, cited in the text as <em>CI</em>.</p>
<p><strong>[12]</strong><a name="12"></a> Andrzej Gasiorek, <em>J. G. Ballard</em>, (Manchester; Manchester UP, 2005), 113.</p>
<p><strong>[13]</strong><a name="13"></a> Scanlan argues that symbolic and linguistic undecideability is an inevitable characteristic of waste. See <em>On Garbage</em>, 11-53.</p>
<p><strong>[14]</strong><a name="14"></a> The fallen fortunes of the islanders are reflected in Ballard&#8217;s appropriation of establishment names. &#8216;Maitland&#8217; may well be a reference to jurist and historian Frederic William Maitland (1850 &#8211; 1906), whilst &#8216;Proctor&#8217; might refer to astronomer and philosopher Richard Anthony Proctor (1837 &#8211; 1888). If this is so, then Ballard takes two eminent Victorians, who worked to uphold legal and natural law, and places them at the mercy of the twentieth century.</p>
<p><strong>[15]</strong><a name="15"></a> William Ian Miller, <em>The Anatomy of Disgust</em>, (Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1997), 2.</p>
<p><strong>[16]</strong><a name="16"></a> Aurel Kolnai, &#8220;Disgust,&#8221; <em>On Disgust</em>, ed. and trans. Barry Smith, Carolyn Korsmeyer (1929; Chicago; Open Court, 2004), 51, 52.</p>
<p><strong>[17]</strong><a name="17"></a> Julia Kristeva, <em>Powers of Horror: An Essay in Abjection</em>, trans. Leon S. Roudiez, (1980; New York; Columbia UP, 1982), 2.</p>
<p><strong>[18]</strong><a name="18"></a> Andrzej Gasiorek, <em>J. G. Ballard</em>, 108, Peter Brigg, <em>J. G. Ballard</em>, (Mercer Island, WA; Starmont House, 1985), 68, Roger Luckhurst. <em>&#8216;The Angle Between Two Walls&#8217;: The Fiction of J. G. Ballard</em>, (Liverpool; Liverpool UP, 1997), 132.</p>
<p><strong>[19]</strong><a name="19"></a> J. G. Ballard, &#8220;The Ultimate City,&#8221; <em>The Complete Short Stories</em>, (London: Flamingo, 2001), 876. Hereafter, cited in the text as <em>CSS</em>.</p>
<p><strong>[20]</strong><a name="20"></a> New York&#8217;s &#8216;Fresh Kill&#8217; landfill site towers at 505ft tall and 2.8 by 3.8 miles diameter; twenty-five times the size of the Great Pyramid of Khufu at Giza. Ballard&#8217;s pyramids of waste are therefore closer to reality than they at first appear. For more on Fresh Kill see William Rathje and Cullen Murphy, <em>Rubbish! The Archaeology of Garbage</em> (1992; Tucson: U of Arizona P, 2001), 3-9.</p>
<p><strong>[21]</strong><a name="21"></a> For an overview of the many different varieties of Dadaism, see Robert Short, <em>Dada and Surrealism</em> (London: Octopus, 1980), 7-52.</p>
<p><strong>[22]</strong><a name="22"></a> Marcel Duchamp, quoted in William S. Rubin, <em>Dada and Surrealist Art</em>(New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1980), 37.</p>
<p><strong>[23]</strong><a name="23"></a> See Scanlan, <em>On Garbage</em>, 89-115. Although Scanlan ignores the <em>excess</em> of meaning Duchamp&#8217;s aesthetics of waste inspires, he nevertheless is right in noting that the use of rubbish by Duchamp is fundamental to an art that &#8220;has no objective meaning&#8221; 96.</p>
<p><strong>[24]</strong><a name="24"></a> Dylan Trigg has written that an encounter with decaying modern buildings prompts an experience of the &#8220;post-industrial sublime,&#8221; proving &#8220;reason to be fictitious.&#8221; See <em>The Aesthetics of Decay: Nothingness, Nostalgia, and the Absence of Reason</em>, New Studies in Aesthetics 37 (New York: Peter Lang, 2006), 141-153.</p>
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		<title>Cousin Silas: Another Flask of Ballard</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Oct 2007 22:00:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Brian Eno]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Moorcock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[paranormal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban ruins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[William Burroughs]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Cousin Silas has created two albums inspired by the works of J.G. Ballard. Simon Sellars spoke to Silas about Ballard, Lovecraft, Forteana, Moorcock, Eno, Tarkovsky — all the essentials.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cousin_silas.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" /></p>
<p>Interview by <strong>Simon Sellars</strong></p>
<p><strong>Cousin Silas is a producer of dark-ambient soundscapes. He has five albums to his name and a few EPs, spiking the vein of glacial electronica. His work evokes Edward Artemiev and Brian Eno. In fact, for afficionados drawing inspiration from Eno&#8217;s most influential ambient works (<em>Music for Airports</em>, say, through to <em>Thursday Afternoon</em>), pleasure may very well be derived from the work of Silas. These textured pieces can be gently iterative, building ambience and atmosphere systematically; they can be as tenuous as ectoplasm, barely there; and they can be dramatically reductive, sloughing layers to reveal roiling depths beneath, echo sounding in waves of sound.</p>
<p>Lately Silas has created not one but two albums inspired by the works of J.G. Ballard: <em>Ballard Landscapes</em> and the recent release, <em>Ballard Landscapes 2</em>, available as <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/cousinsilas_ballard_landscapes">free downloads</a> at Earth Monkey, a web-only label devoted to experimental, electronic and improvised music that has made the zeitgeistian decision to give away its entire roster for free.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/silas_button.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" class="picleft" /></p>
<p>The mood of these is horizontal. Listen, close your eyes, the sun rises, staining the rusting gantries, the weed-encrusted car wrecks and the abandoned missile bases. It&#8217;s a telescoped present, in hazy bas relief, the immeasurably slow suspended descent of entropy, a flat time dilation, rendering the spatial data generated by the classic Ballardian landscape, with its tangle of organic and inorganic forms.</p>
<p>But perhaps the best way to gauge the Silas Ballard albums is with a simple anecdote. Outside my window there was a faulty generator that had been emitting a very low electronic hum for days, almost on the edge of consciousness, but enough to seriously disturb my peace and concentration when writing. To drive me to the edge of sanity, in fact. When I played <em>Ballard Landscapes</em> it began to blend in, appearing to take on different tonal qualities and colour, until I&#8217;d completely forgotten it was from an external source and had re-attributed it to the &#8216;Ballard Landscapes&#8217; themselves. It was still that unvarying hum, but placing it in a different psychological context imbued it with perceptual qualities that seemed to bend and reshape it. To me, that&#8217;s a good result &#8212; finally, I could get some work done.</p>
<p>I spoke to Cousin Silas about Ballard, Lovecraft, Forteana, Moorcock, Eno, Tarkovsky &#8212; all the essentials. </strong></p>
<p><em>Simon Sellars</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cousin_silas2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" class="alignleft" /></p>
<p><strong>SS: What inspired you to create <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/cousinsilas_ballard_landscapes">two volumes</a> of Ballard Landscapes?</strong></p>
<p>CS: I&#8217;ve read a lot of fiction over the years, mainly science fiction. I began with Mike Moorcock&#8217;s <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FElric-Stealer-Stormbringer-Millennium-Masterworks%2Fdp%2F1857987438%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1191322131%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Stealer of Souls</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="; style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, and then it was the odd name-dropping of Ballard that intrigued me. My first Ballard book was <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition"><em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em></a>, and I haven&#8217;t looked back, really. Out of all the authors I&#8217;ve read, Ballard is the only one who consistently hits the mark when it comes to events, situations and descriptions that I can relate to. A good example is his story, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories">&#8216;Low Flying Aircraft&#8217;</a>. When I read that, I think I was &#8212; still am &#8212; more impressed with the colours rather than the full picture. I was totally enmeshed &#8212; it didn&#8217;t take any imagination whatsoever to go deeper into the landscapes of that story, due to my childhood.</p>
<p>As a kid I spent a lot of time at my Grandma&#8217;s caravan. Being an only child, much of that time was spent playing on the dunes and beach. Out of season, the local Lido pool was always empty. There were always busy shipping lanes off the beach, mainly oil tankers, and on the way to and from the caravan we passed a place called RAF Binbrook, an air force base which had been abandoned. Empty caravans and beach huts, disused coastal railways, the fog drifting in from Immingham &#8212; it made isolation a byword. Also, in the Colne Valley, a lot of the textile industry went into slow decline. As a result the valley became full of empty mills, stagnant canals and rusting equipment &#8212; all the Ballardian icons were there. Plus the M62 was being built around the time I began to take notice of things happening off my street!</p>
<p>The short answer is that there&#8217;s something that inspires me in almost every paragraph of Ballard, let alone the chapters or novels, and the hard part was making a conscious decision to stop (maybe) at two volumes.</p>
<p><span id="more-509"></span><br />
<strong>SS: Why not &#8216;Lovecraft landscapes&#8217;, after another of your literary influences?</strong></p>
<p>CS: Lovecraft can&#8217;t be read quite the same. Sure, there&#8217;s the odd story that contains some marvellous moods &#8212; for example, his description of Innsmouth, or the landscapes he describes in &#8216;Dagon&#8217; or &#8216;Dunwich&#8217;. Damn, those things inspire some amazing images. But a lot of Lovecraft&#8217;s imagery has dated &#8212; well, it&#8217;s his writing style &#8212; whereas Ballard&#8217;s is just so &#8216;now&#8217;, and yet so retro in some respects.</p>
<p>Lovecraft was a writer I really had to work at. A few years ago I used to write SF, and among the circle of friends and co-writers I became involved with, some were always going on about him. I eventually read a Lovecraft short-story collection and found it pretty damn good, and then I read <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FAt-Mountains-Madness-Modern-Library%2Fdp%2F0812974417%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1191321580%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">At the Mountains of Madness</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, which took some time to get going. I think it was my third or fourth attempt. I kept saying that there simply MUST be something here&#8230; Anyway, I did eventually finish it and I really did enjoy it. Since then I&#8217;ve read more or less all he wrote. Some of it is terribly dated, but when Lovecraft was on form, he was simply astounding. Like Ballard, though, it was the geography and landscapes that inspired me, rather than the characters. Unlike Ballard, Lovecraft&#8217;s hit rate isn&#8217;t as high.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/silas_bl_1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" /></p>
<ul><em>Image from Ballard Landscapes cover art</em>.</ul>
<p><strong>SS: Your <a href="http://groups.imeem.com/l2vcpYP6,cousin_silas">online bio</a> says, &#8216;When the occasion arose, he found that sound alchemy was more expressive and exploratory than writing.&#8217; That&#8217;s intriguing &#8212; can you elaborate? </strong></p>
<p>CS: As I said, I used to write a few years back, same as I still (try) and play the guitar, but I found that the Silas material was far more expressive and creative. With Silas there&#8217;s only one real limitation, and whilst it might sound pretentious, it&#8217;s imagination. With writing there are certain basic rules and with a guitar, to be good, you have to be absolutely brilliant. With &#8216;sound alchemy&#8217;, you don&#8217;t even have to know the first thing about writing music, or even reading music, only &#8216;does it sound &#8216;right&#8217; for what you&#8217;re doing?&#8217; If the answer is &#8216;yes&#8217;, go for it. Obviously having a basic understanding of chords and pitch with the guitar does help, but it&#8217;s not essential. Much like the punk ethos, get up and have a go!</p>
<p><strong>SS: Was your SF writing influenced in any way by Ballard?</strong></p>
<p>CS: Initially I was inspired by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/angry-old-men-michael-moorcock-on-jg-ballard">Moorcock</a>, but gradually I drifted into Ballard territory. I did two stories that were directly influenced by J.G., one was called &#8216;The Song Of The Shapes&#8217; and I can&#8217;t remember the title of the other one. &#8216;The Shapes&#8217; was basically about floating sounds, like bubbles. The other story was basically an exodus of humans going back into the sea. And to my credit, they were both published. To be fair, though, it wasn&#8217;t &#8216;strictly&#8217; Ballard, but the whole <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Worlds_%28magazine%29">New Worlds</a> thing. I loved the freedom and no-holds-barred that existed in the fiction. I haven&#8217;t really written fiction for years now. I find I don&#8217;t have the imagination for actually writing like I had, or the time.</p>
<p><strong>SS: It&#8217;s no surprise to learn you also draw inspiration from <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Forteana">Fortean events</a>. Listening to your soundscapes is very much like tuning into some kind of spectral presence, or even something less metaphysical but still intensely dislocating, like voices drowned in static. There&#8217;s that steady hum in your work, and then something unsettling going on in the background, hustling in at the edge of consciousness.</strong></p>
<p>CS: I&#8217;ve always had an unhealthy interest/curiosity in most things Fortean. I&#8217;m an avid reader and subscriber of <a href="http://www.forteantimes.com">Fortean Times</a>, and I&#8217;ve even got two CDs worth of material currently being considered/reworked and going under the working title of <em>The Fortean Project</em>. There&#8217;s material there that&#8217;s been inspired by unidentified underwater objects, objects landing in remote woods, Borley Rectory, poltergeists, strange sounds, EVP, all the usual suspects. Also, &#8216;Necropolis Line&#8217;, the title track on my <a href="http://www.earthrid.com/catalogue/CS01CR.html">Earthrid CD</a>, was inspired directly by an article in Fortean Times. There are quite a few other tracks of mine that have been inspired either directly or otherwise by Forteana.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m inspired by the strangeness, the mystery, and the downright weirdness of all these unexplained and odd happenings. I don&#8217;t especially enjoy reading about the whole world of Forteana, but I am interested in things like Electronic Voice Phenomena, strange moorland lights, places where ill feelings occur, anomalous artefacts. Some stuff I find a little tedious and totally uninspirational, like crop circles and UFO abductions. Even though I inherently know that some of the topics and situations that come under the slowly expanding umbrella of Forteana is bollocks, it can still create certain feelings. The inspiration is rather difficult to describe really &#8212; again, it&#8217;s moods and feelings and trying to convey these into sound. Naming these pieces does hopefully help the listener to &#8216;attune&#8217; to what I&#8217;m aiming for.</p>
<p><strong>SS: The presence of the paranormal in Ballard is something I&#8217;ve been <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/myths-of-things-seen-in-the-sky">taking an interest in</a>.</strong></p>
<p>CS: Oddly, I&#8217;d never really seen the parallel. Then again, thinking about it, these Fortean themes crop up in any number of SF stories, they&#8217;re not the exclusive domain of J.G. People out of place, or displaced momentarily in time, visions of Godlike entities, time travel, and even resurrection can be found all over the place. I suppose it&#8217;s because of the way these &#8216;ideas&#8217; are presented. If they&#8217;re presented as fact, then it opens all kinds of doors for discussion, study and speculation. However, if they&#8217;re in fiction, then, well, it&#8217;s fiction! Perfect example is <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FWar-Worlds-H-G-Wells%2Fdp%2F0141441038%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1191322819%26sr%3D1-2&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">War of the Worlds</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. Anyone who&#8217;s read the book hasn&#8217;t rushed out to find if they&#8217;re there, or packed the family and belongings into a car and set of for the hills. And yet, when Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre did a &#8216;play&#8217;, and produced it for radio in a documentary, on-the-spot <a href="http://members.aol.com/jeff1070/wotw.html">news type thing</a>, there was mass panic. Same story, different presentation.</p>
<p><strong>SS: With the tracks on <em>Ballard Landscapes</em> 1 &#038; 2, did you choose the title first and fit the music to suit, or did the music suggest a title?</strong></p>
<p>CS: If I remember rightly, I think with the majority of the Ballard tracks I had an idea of the titles first. Some are direct, others less so. It was a case of trying to convey in sound what these images mean to me. Obviously the titles are like an aide memoir, and it could be argued that if &#8216;Rusting Gantry&#8217; had been called, oh, I dunno, &#8216;Formless Clouds&#8217;, then the imagery and imagination of the listener would be taken somewhere else. I like to think that the titles and the pieces work well together.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/silas_bl_3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" /></p>
<ul><em>Image from Ballard Landscapes cover art</em>.</ul>
<p><strong>SS: Judging from those titles, it&#8217;s clear you place equal importance on Ballard&#8217;s worth as a short story writer. There seems to be as much, if not more, reference to his shorts than his novels.</strong></p>
<p>CS: Probably more. Being inspired by Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-complete-short-stories">short stories</a> is easier than novels. With a short story, they&#8217;re usually on one level, and get to the point and conclude relatively quickly. A novel is obviously longer, and has a lot more going on. But for me, Ballard&#8217;s short stories are more essential than his novels for a variety of reasons &#8212; from the late 50s to the early 90s they are just stunning and contain some of the most powerful, experimental and genre-melting fiction this side of the Big Bang. A lot of the ideas that went into his novels were played out in short story form. Plus, in some short story collections such as <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-vermilion-sands">Vermilion Sands</a> and <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em>, the boundaries between shorts and novels are somewhat blurred.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, since <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>, which put Ballard firmly in the &#8216;general&#8217; public arena, especially after <a href="http://ballardian.com/dreams-ransom-steven-spielbergs-empire-of-the-sun">the film</a> arrived, his short stories seem to have been somewhat ignored. Plus, his actual output of short stories has abated over the last decade. Mind you, there isn&#8217;t really the market now that there was back then.</p>
<p><strong>SS: An oft-stated criticism of Ballard, especially his later novels, is that they would have worked better as short stories.</strong></p>
<p>CS: Short stories and novels are two quite separate forms of story telling. Some would argue that a short is never &#8216;allowed&#8217; to develop, whereas a novel requires more skill in keeping the reader interested. For me there&#8217;s just as much skill if not more with a short story. You have to have more acute pacing, deviations from the &#8216;main&#8217; story aren&#8217;t as flexible and there&#8217;s not as much time for full character-building as such. As I said above, some of his short stories were developed into novels, so in some respects you can judge the two mediums and the difference between them.</p>
<p><strong>SS: When I <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/simon-reynolds-on-the-ballard-connection">interviewed Simon Reynolds</a>, he said that Ballard and Brian Eno are ‘the two greatest British thinkers of the second half of the 20th Century.’ Given that Ballard and Eno are two of your major influences, do you agree with him?</strong></p>
<p>CS: I&#8217;ve never really considered Ballard or Eno as thinkers. To me one writes incredibly atmospheric music, the other writes incredibly atmospheric fiction. Both Ballard and Eno are probably my strongest influences, but their influence is very tenuous, difficult to explain. They both invoke that certain mood of isolation. Isolation is a funny thing: it can be forced upon one, or be self-invoked. It seems in today&#8217;s world, the last thing you&#8217;d really expect is isolation, and yet even in the busiest of places, there are attributes and situations where one can feel it totally. Self-invoked isolation is where the person chooses to step back, away from all the social interaction and so on, to become, in some respects, a suburban exile. I can relate to a lot of Ballard&#8217;s fiction and it&#8217;s much the same with Eno&#8217;s music, although to a lesser extent &#8212; Eno isn&#8217;t as consistent, and his vocal albums are something else. I don&#8217;t mind them, but for me it&#8217;s stuff like <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FMusic-Films-Brian-Eno%2Fdp%2FB0007GFFVQ%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191323211%26sr%3D1-2&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Music for Films</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FApollo-Atmospheres-Soundtracks-Brian-Eno%2Fdp%2FB0007GFFUW%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191323267%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Apollo</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Another-Green-World-Brian-Eno/dp/B00022M51I/ref=sr_1_1/026-5334538-1534834?ie=UTF8&#038;s=music&#038;qid=1191323323&#038;sr=1-1">Another Green World</a></em>, plus a couple of his ambient albums and <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FPearl-Brian-Eno-Harold-Budd%2Fdp%2FB0009Y33JM%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191323375%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">the two</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> he did <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FAmbient-Harold-Budd-Brian-Eno%2Fdp%2FB000003S2M%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191323375%26sr%3D1-3&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">with Harold Budd</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> that contain some of the most moody and atmospheric music there is.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You have two albums <a href="http://www.fflintcentral.co.uk/MusicCousinSilas.htm">available for purchase</a> at Fflint Central and <a href="http://www.earthrid.com/catalogue/CS01CR.html">one at Earthrid</a>, but <em>Ballard Landscapes</em> is <a href="http://d61514.u27.dc-servers.com/earthmp/EMP_Net_Label/Artist_Biogs/Cousin_Silas/body_cousin_silas.html">available for free</a> through Earth Monkey. Do you occupy similar ideological ground to <a href="http://www.craphound.com">Cory Doctorow</a>, who makes his stories and novels available for free online, justifying it like so: &#8216;Most people who download the book don&#8217;t end up buying it, but they wouldn’t have bought it in any event, so I haven’t lost any sales, I’ve just won an audience.&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>CS: Simple answer: he&#8217;s hit the nail on the head. A while back I got an email from Earth Monkey, basically asking for contributions to a new net label. I simply thought, &#8216;why not&#8217;? If accepted, it would underline the fact that there&#8217;s not just maybe six people who like Cousin Silas, but also, it may well bring in a few more sales for the guys at Fflint and Earthrid. Plus, I&#8217;m not exactly in it for the money, but for the simple fact that even if one person &#8216;got&#8217; or enjoyed Silas, then for me that&#8217;s a good return. It does sound awfully clichéd, but it&#8217;s how I feel.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Tell us about the process of making the Ballard Landscapes. Do you use field recordings? I hear water drips, factory sounds, electrical hums and glitches.</strong></p>
<p>CS: On some of the material I&#8217;ve done, I&#8217;ve used the odd field recording: a steam train on &#8216;Necropolis Line&#8217;, a dog barking on &#8216;John Wayne Gacy Contemplates&#8217;, plus a few tracks here and there have had either rain, or drops or a gunshot. The glitches, machinery and hums are all created with synths, editing or processing. You&#8217;d be quite surprised at what some of these sounds started as!</p>
<p><strong>SS: A bit like Ballard, then, where you&#8217;re never quite sure what&#8217;s simulation, what&#8217;s &#8216;authentic&#8217;.</strong></p>
<p>CS: I guess I could try and be clever by saying that there are a lot of real vs. artificial oppositions in his fiction, but again, it&#8217;s the geography, the &#8216;feel&#8217;, the atmosphere, moods and landscapes I try and convey. A kind of aural texture.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/silas_bl_2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" /></p>
<ul><em>Image from Ballard Landscapes cover art</em>.</ul>
<p><strong>SS: I&#8217;ve absorbed a lot of Ballard-inspired music and I see two distinct strands in sonic interpretations of his work. There&#8217;s the <a href="http://www.the-edge.ws/mo-boma/myths1.html">world-music camp</a> that picks up on the lush, exotic, jungle tropes. Then there&#8217;s the ominous, insidious, unsettling, isolationist elements that appeal to a whole <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-music-mike-ryan-interview">other subset of musicians</a>. You&#8217;re aligned with the latter: do you see Ballard as an essentially dystopian, dark fantasist? Or do you, like Ballard himself, see something affirmative in this darkness &#8212; a willingness to &#8216;embrace the catastrophe&#8217; in order to fulfil personal psychological needs?</strong></p>
<p>CS: Maybe I&#8217;m just a superficial reader, maybe I don&#8217;t really go too deep in what writers are &#8216;saying&#8217;. Then again, if I did, would I lose that certain magic that writers like Ballard give me? I certainly pick up on the isolationism, and the alienation. With Ballard I think he totally disseminated the phrase &#8216;One Man Against The World&#8217;. He created situations where the man was turning his back against the world, or the world was turning its back on him, many variations that basically culminate in isolation. And sure, there are many dark areas in Ballard&#8217;s writing &#8212; that&#8217;s what inspires! To me, though, there&#8217;s a point where fiction and music (indeed, most of the &#8216;arts&#8217;) become lost in translation, as it were. I think when ‘deep’ questions are asked about the whys and wherefores, and &#8216;what does he really mean&#8217;, the whole point seems to become lost and diluted.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Do you have a favourite Ballard novel or short story?</strong></p>
<p>CS: That&#8217;s a really difficult question to answer. It&#8217;s like favourite music and albums &#8212; they change weekly, if not daily. Plus, due to his developing writing style, it would be unfair to choose. His earlier period was pretty different and whilst some of his icons and fixations were there, books like <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind From Nowhere</a></em> are more akin to John Wyndham. More often than not, I can rest assured that anything by Ballard will get my attention. I have recently been digging out a load of his novels to reread, some I haven&#8217;t read in over twenty years. At the time I bought it, I wasn&#8217;t too taken with <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a></em>, but after reading it again I realised what a fine book it is. I was probably overdosing on Ballard back then. I guess, if pushed, I&#8217;d have to pick either <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em> and/or <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FTerminal-Beach-Science-fiction%2Fdp%2F0140024999%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1191324026%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Terminal Beach</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, purely for nostalgia, as they were the first ones I read and perhaps had the biggest impact. Then again, <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-unlimited-dream-company">The Unlimited Dream Company</a></em> was a voyage through one hell of a strange landscape&#8230; Must read that again soon.</p>
<p><strong>SS: As far as your compositional style goes, were you inspired in any way by Ballard&#8217;s experimental techniques, for example, the cut-up nature of <em>Atrocity</em>, or the <a href="http://www.holli.co.uk/JGB/other_media.htm">collages and fake ads</a> he produced around the same time?</strong></p>
<p>CS: I have done the odd cut up, using a variety of sounds. I must be honest, though, I was probably thinking of Burroughs rather than Ballard, although I&#8217;ve never been too happy with the results. My new CD on Earthrid is a collaboration with Kevin Busby, recorded under the name Abominations of Yondo, named after a short story by Clark Ashton Smith. I used isolated and combined phrases from that story as inspiration when recording, and I guess that could be classed as a kind of cut up (although I left the &#8216;cutting up&#8217; to Kevin!). However, I have often been accused of writing pieces which are too short. In my defence I have always maintained that these pieces say it all &#8212; any longer and it would lose its way. I guess the same could be said for the pieces in <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em>: any longer and they wouldn&#8217;t be condensed novels. It wouldn&#8217;t be <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em>!</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/necropolis_line.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" class="alignleft" /></p>
<p><strong>SS: Is the composer Edward Artemiev an influence? You have a track called &#8216;Leaving Solaris&#8217; on the <em>Necropolis Line</em> album, plus the Ballard track &#8216;Flight over Abandoned Village&#8217; reminds me of that very displaced feel that Artemiev achieved in his soundtracks for Tarkovsky.</strong></p>
<p>CS: Edward Artemiev hasn&#8217;t inspired me as much as his son, Artemiy, who has a label called <a href="http://www.electroshock.ru">Electroshock</a> &#8212; I keep threatening to send him some material! <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Solaris-Natalya-Bondarchuk/dp/B00005UCZL/ref=sr_1_2/026-5334538-1534834?ie=UTF8&#038;s=dvd&#038;qid=1191324228&#038;sr=1-2"><em>Solaris</em></a> was a film that did kind of inspire. I remember Brian Aldiss saying it was one of his fave films so I made a note and can remember watching it many years ago late one night. <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FStalker-Aleksandr-Kajdanovsky%2Fdp%2FB000065BZ8%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Ddvd%26qid%3D1191324273%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Stalker</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> was on around the same time as well but I find it difficult sometimes with films like these, especially <em>Stalker</em>. The imagery is just outstanding, but you&#8217;re flitting between that and the subtitles so the full impact isn&#8217;t what it should be.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You take your name from a <a href="http://www.seeklyrics.com/lyrics/King-Crimson/Happy-Family.html">Pete Sinfield lyric</a> for King Crimson (&#8216;Cousin Silas grew a beard, drew another flask of weird&#8217;). But you&#8217;re such a minimal stylist &#8212; so how did you name yourself from one of the most bloated songbooks in rock?</strong></p>
<p>CS: It goes back to my mid-teens. I&#8217;d picked up a copy of (I think) <em>Sounds</em>, a music mag. With it came a free flexi disc, featuring Emerson Lake &#038; Palmer. The first track was called &#8216;Brain Salad Surgery&#8217;, and then there was a fairly long piece with a load of cut ups/highlights of tracks from the <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FBrain-Salad-Surgery-Emerson-Palmer%2Fdp%2FB000IY0G4S%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191324418%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">actual album</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>. It was my first foray into &#8216;proper&#8217; rock music. I bought the album a couple of weeks later and then began a quest! I read up all there was on ELP, and began buying their previous albums. Along this voyage of discovery it came to light that Emerson had been in The Nice, Greg Lake in King Crimson and Carl Palmer did a brief stint with Arthur Brown. I bought some Nice, and Crimson, and then discovered Sinfield had been involved with early Crimson. These days I still listen to Crimson, and still reckon that those first few albums, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FCourt-Crimson-King%2Fdp%2FB00065MDRW%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191324474%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">In the Court of the Crimson King</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> through to <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FIslands-King-Crimson%2Fdp%2FB00064WSNC%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191324520%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Islands</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, are peerless. I even bought Pete Sinfield&#8217;s only solo album, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FStill-Pete-Sinfield%2Fdp%2FB00004S8M2%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191324579%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Still</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>. Halcyon days! So, because I am an avid Crimson fan, and one of my fave albums is <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FLizard-King-Crimson%2Fdp%2FB00065MDS6%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191324652%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Lizard</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> (which contains &#8216;Happy Families&#8217;, the song featuring, albeit briefly, Cousin Silas) it was a natural choice. To be fair it wasn’t me who chose the name. I had been ‘named’ something else, I can’t remember what it was but I know I wasn’t too keen on it. Cousin Silas was mentioned and I thought what the hell!</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/silas_lilliput.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" class="alignleft" /></p>
<p><strong>SS: I like Crimson, but I&#8217;ve never been able to get on with Sinfield&#8217;s imagery. A bit too pompous for me.</strong></p>
<p>CS: Ironically enough, a few mates and myself were on about this the other night! Comparing Sinfield&#8217;s lyrics to Jon Anderson&#8217;s on <a href="http://www.nfte.org/yesworld/lyrics/CloseToTheEdge.html">&#8216;And You And I&#8217;</a> and <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FTales-Topographic-Oceans-Remastered-Expanded%2Fdp%2FB00007LTIA%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191325640%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Topographic Oceans</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, we wondered what &#8216;really&#8217; was going on in those songs. I always think of Sinfield along the same lines as Fred Frith. On some releases, at face value, Frith &#8216;sounds&#8217; like he&#8217;s not quite got the grip of how the guitar works, and yet on others he plays like a genius. Both of them experiment with their art (indeed, like Ballard in his condensed novels). And, to be fair to Sinfield, he has been behind some incredibly beautiful lyrics. His first foray, <em>In The Court Of The Crimson King</em>, has some great ones, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FWake-Poseidon-Remastered-King-Crimson%2Fdp%2FB00064WSN2%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1191325511%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">In the Wake of Poseidon</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> less so, and then we get <em>Lizard</em>, which is an album of opposites: some make sense, some don&#8217;t. <em>Islands</em> is kind of back on track again. Out of context (sometimes even in!) some make very little sense, but it&#8217;s the &#8216;whole&#8217; that works. And don&#8217;t forget, he did write lyrics for Bucks Fizz and Cher!</p>
<p><strong>SS: He even made <a href="http://www.progreviews.com/reviews/display.php?rev=se-ialocc">an album with Eno</a>, based on a Robert Sheckley book.</strong></p>
<p>CS: Here, did you know Brian Eno has only ever acted once, and it was in <em>Father Ted</em>! He played, originally enough, Father Brian Eno.</p>
<p><strong>SS: He did not!</strong></p>
<p>CS: He did. I was watching a batch of <em>Father Ted</em> (the whole three series, actually) and in the last episode, &#8216;Going to America&#8217;, I saw his name on the final credits. I ran it back, and there he is, very briefly. I thought, well, I know he&#8217;s done a lot of soundtracks, I wonder how many times he&#8217;s actually acted. And if you go on IMDB, there&#8217;s only the <a href="http://imdb.com/title/tt0578509">one entry for him</a>, in <em>Father Ted</em>. I was going to say that this was another thing that Ballard and Eno shared: that they&#8217;ve only ever acted the once. But with Ballard, on IMDB, there&#8217;s no entry for &#8216;acting&#8217;. However, I remembered the early <em>Crash!</em> thingy&#8230; it isn&#8217;t even mentioned on IMDB. I was sure he appeared (maybe as himself or a very, very close character) in an old black and white film. I remember him stood near a car, and an actress slightly out of shot in the background. So I looked on YouTube, and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAll1HZi_Tc&#038;feature=PlayList&#038;p=B0B379F3271DDD8D&#038;index=2">there it was</a>. Followed <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/crash-full-tilt-autogeddon">the link</a>, and had a good read on some website or other&#8230; Ballardian.com, I think it was. Tee hee.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Will there be a <em>Ballard Landscapes 3</em>?</strong></p>
<p>CS: Don&#8217;t tempt me! I honestly could spend the rest of my Silas years doing nothing but pieces inspired by Ballard. I feel as though I&#8217;ve only scratched the surface. Trouble is, where do you stop? With folks wanting more, and with no more on offer, would that enhance the stuff that&#8217;s already there? It&#8217;s the <em>Fawlty Towers</em>/<em>Father Ted</em> question: would more have diluted the lasting impact?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballard_landscapes.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cousin Silas" /></p>
<p><strong>..:: TOP 5 BALLARD-RELATED TRACKS FROM COUSIN SILAS, AS CHOSEN BY SILAS HIMSELF</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>CS: When asked to name a top 5, I chose two and picked three others that are the most popular, <a href="http://www.last.fm/music/Cousin+Silas">judging by Last.fM</a> and other download sites.</p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Vermilion Drift&#8217; (from <em>Ballard Landscapes 2</em>)</strong></p>
<p>CS: Obviously inspired by <em>Vermilion Sands</em>. I loved the way that you could go from the large dunescapes to being shut away inside one of those beach properties.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Concrete Islands&#8217; (from <em>Ballard Landscapes 2</em>)</strong></p>
<p>CS: The whole obsession with roads, motorways and cars has featured a lot throughout Ballard&#8217;s fiction. As I mentioned, I can remember them building the M62, and once in Madame Tussauds in Blackpool, as a kid, I went into the horror section and saw a mock up of an accident. It left a terrible impression on me for years. I think a motorbike had come off a flyover and hit a car. Nasty&#8230; For all that, there is a dark beauty about major roads and motorways when they&#8217;re quiet.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Empty Airport&#8217; (from <em>Ballard Landscapes 1</em>)</strong></p>
<p>CS: If I remember rightly, there are only two &#8216;sounds&#8217; on here. I felt that any more would destroy the mood. Indirectly inspired by Ballard&#8217;s obsession with airports, and my idea of what one would be like when it&#8217;s empty.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/re7QJs8QFvY"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/re7QJs8QFvY" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Bikini Atoll&#8217; (from <em>Ballard Landscapes 1</em>)</strong></p>
<p>CS: I was well into the whole mystique of atomic bombs as a kid, where the results were contrasting in complete opposites: the destruction, with the strangely beautiful blast clouds (check out the mushroom blast of the first H bomb). The secrecy, the technology, the complete warping of nature was fascinating. It was only afterwards when the dust, literally, had settled, that it was revealed how these early tests had totally devastated these small islands of paradise. Earth Monkey put visuals to this track and it&#8217;s <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=re7QJs8QFvY">on Youtube</a>. They did a phenomenal job.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Crashed Bomber With Weeds&#8217; (from <em><a href="http://www.archive.org/details/emp_falling">Falling: An Earth Monkey Sampler</a></em>)</strong></p>
<p>CS: Okay, so this isn&#8217;t on either of the Ballard albums. However, as you might gather from the title, it does have links with ol&#8217; J.G. The Pennines run close to where I live, and from Sheffield, over towards Manchester, that whole backbone has, like iron filings to a magnet, attracted hundreds of air crashes over the years. In the valley, one of these sites witnessed the crash of a flying fortress. I remember looking at the crash site on a web page, and it was literally, a crashed bomber with weeds.</p>
<p>Also, it might be worth mentioning the <em><a href="http://www.archive.org/details/cousinsilas_geographies">Geographics album</a></em> on Earth Monkey [also a free download]. I feel there is a definite link between the Ballard albums and Geo. As I said in the interview, a lot of the empathy I have towards Ballard&#8217;s landscapes (airports, airfields, roads, dune, beaches, etc.) come from my own experiences and memories. I try and &#8216;realise&#8217; these on <em>Geographics</em>. Tracks like &#8216;The Fog From Immingham&#8217;, &#8216;Abandoned Airfield&#8217;, and &#8216;Cathedral Arch Of Trees (Lincolnshire)&#8217; are all in effect realities, whereas by definition, the Ballard soundscapes are fictions&#8230;of a kind.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>..:: MORE INFO</strong><br />
+ Cousin Silas <a href="http://www.myspace.com/cousinsilas">at MySpace</a>, including six unreleased tracks.</p>
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		<title>Review: Grave New World</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/review-grave-new-world</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/review-grave-new-world#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Aug 2007 23:23:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rick McGrath</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[death of affect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jean Baudrillard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The basic tenet in Dominika Oramus' new book on Ballard is that since the end of World War II western civilization has been merrily racing down the Highway to Hell in a white Pontiac; and all the evidence you need is in the fiction of J.G. Ballard.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/oramus_grave.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Dominika Oramus" /></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>Dominika Oramus. Grave New World: The Decline Of The West in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard. University of Warsaw Press, 2007.</strong></p>
<p><em>review by <strong><a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">Rick McGrath</a></strong></em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Dr Roger Luckhurst somewhat shocked the gathering of academics at last May&#8217; <a href="http://www.uea.ac.uk/eas/events/ballard/welcome.html">first international conference on JG Ballard</a> when he suggested all types of literary and cultural theories would find a productive home in Ballard&#8217; open-ended fiction.</p>
<p>It may be somewhat ironic that Luckhurst then pulled out <em>Grave New World</em> and waved it at his audience, because Dominika Oramus&#8217; new book on Ballard is based on the cultural theory that the West is in precipitous decline; her basic tenet in <em>Grave New World</em> is that since the end of World War II western civilization has been merrily racing down the Highway to Hell in a white Pontiac; and all the evidence you need that we&#8217;re quickly approaching that gate where Hope is the toll is available in the fiction of J.G. Ballard.</p>
<p>According to Oramus, it all started in 1932: Aldus Huxley published <em>Brave New World</em>, Oswald Spengler published <em>The Decline of The West</em>, and Arnold Toynbee began work on <em>A Study of History</em>. It was not until 1949, however, that Oramus&#8217; theoretical bedrock would be laid in an essay Toynbee wrote called &#8216;The International Outlook&#8217;, in which he noted: &#8216;The self-inflicted wounds from which civilizations die are not those of a material order. In the past, at any rate, it has been the spiritual wounds which have proved incurable”. No, that’s not religious. In Toynbee’s vernacular, “spiritual” means “internal”.</p>
<p>There you go. For Oramus, “In both his fiction and non-fiction J.G. Ballard describes the dire spiritual changes that have been taking place since the war and have transformed the West”. That’s what this book is about.</p>
<p>It’s All In The ‘Scapes.</p>
<p>One of the most intelligent aspects about <em>Grave New World</em> is the way Oramus organizes her approach. The book starts with a lengthy Introduction in which she lays out her theme, pays polite homage to all the main Ballard critics, from Merrill to Gasiorek, and then offers up a fascinating account of how JGB has publicly remythologized himself over the years, finally emerging as an “orientalist” after the success of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of The Sun</a>, novel and movie. Oramus successfully identifies the two main problems prior Ballard critics have faced: his “classification” as a writer, and his proclivity to continuously create and recreate his own public image. The former she dismisses by treating “all of his oeuvre synchronically, as descriptions of different vistas”, and the latter she negates by carefully explaining and then ignoring Ballard’s autobiographical fantasies, trusting the tale and not the teller in the main body of her book.</p>
<p>However, the 11 pages Oramus devotes to Ballard’s self-fiction are some of the most compelling in the book: “The impressions and descriptions of the contemporary world and post-modernist culture mingle with personal memories and ciphered allusions to his books. The devoted reader of Ballard is now faced with a maze of cross-referential allusions and remarks, which together form his imaginary autobiography”. Most of which has been dutifully collected and published by RE/Search Publications.</p>
<p>The next chapter, &#8216;Grave New World&#8217;, is equally interesting, although perhaps mistitled, as the content is a close study of Ballard’s intellectual themes and his theoretical sources. Oramus carefully begins with Huxley, and then moves to a discussion of historians Toynbee, Spengler and Gibbon and their theoretical influence on the young Ballard. Equally influential are concerns of the mind, and Oramus next examines the ideas of Freud, Jung, Laing and the Surrealists, and shows how they, Freud foremost, are essential to understanding Ballard’s fiction. She then moves to mass culture, and examines the ideas of McLuhan, Debord and Baudrillard before finishing the chapter with the weakest links: Toffler, Fukuyama and Huntington in their roles as dire warning futurists. Personally, I’ve never seen much of this trio’s influence in any Ballard, but Oramus probably included them because of their necessary role in her overall thesis of the spiritual (internal) death of the West.</p>
<p>The next five chapters are devoted to Ballardian themes: &#8216;Battlefields&#8217;, a study of war; &#8216;Cityscapes&#8217;, the urban landscape; &#8216;Mediascapes&#8217;, the mass media; &#8216;Mindscapes&#8217;, the inner world; and &#8216;Wastelands&#8217;, the entropic end.</p>
<p>Each of these important themes is intelligently discussed, with conclusions based on close readings of the major novels and short stories. &#8216;Battlefields&#8217;, for example, offers a look at war and violence as “one of the most important motifs in J.G. Ballard’s oeuvre, and surrender to aggression and the death drive are basic characteristics of his vision of contemporary culture.” Oramus treats us to revelatory readings of <em>Empire of the Sun</em>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>, ultimately linking war, violence and a human mind conditioned to self-destruction with Freud and the A-bomb as a turning point in history with Spengler, to bring it all back to her thesis of decline.</p>
<p>And so it goes through each chapter: a Ballardian landscape is analyzed through its fictional usage in various works, Ballardian sources are applied, conclusions are drawn; the point is made. Sometimes Oramus amuses us with an unusual reading of a Ballard classic, the most daring being her reading of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> as an hallucination by the protagonist, Maitland, during the seconds that elapsed between the accident and him dying behind the wheel.</p>
<p>On the other hand, in her reading of a lesser work, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-day-of-creation">Day of Creation</a> for example, while astutely recognizing the blend of media and memory Mallory uses to create his tale, she seems to miss the point of it being yet another variation in “creative” autobiography -– a story about writing a story &#8212; and veers towards the more sinister reading of the tale being a sign of the power of the media, and how visual culture ensnares its victims.</p>
<p>But this, of course, is the downside of <em>Grave New World</em> &#8212; it exists to prove an “external” point, and really, what could be easier than choosing Ballard to substantiate the Ballardian belief that our civilization is slipping into a psychopathological dystopia?</p>
<p>The problem is, a very great part of Ballard’s fiction is not pessimistic, but individually optimistic. Nor are his characters apparently even slightly concerned about changing what’s going on around them &#8212; all objects tend to be ciphers, anyway &#8212; and they tend to deal with their situations in highly imaginative (“spiritual”) ways that offer personal, not social, psychological relief. There’s also Ballard’s use of humour, which Oramus completely disregards. If we’re all in that Pontiac and Ballard’s driving, there’s a comedy CD playing intermittently on the stereo.</p>
<p>One other aspect of this book I found exasperating is the lack of novels and short stories in the Index. What? Yes… you can’t look up all the times, say, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> is mentioned. There’s an index or listing for damn near everything else, but nothing for any of the books (Ballard &#038; otherwise) Oramus mentions. Hopefully another edition will solve this serious oversight.</p>
<p><em>Grave New World</em> is a sort of one-trick pony with ornate dressage. The whole decline of the West thing, although interesting and surely an idea with merit, does begin to pale after awhile, and Oramus almost seems to gloat slightly as she lovingly describes our culture’s long list of woes. It’s almost like complaining about teenagers. However, when she gets into the novels and stories her inner literary critic takes over, and she delivers up many satisfactory readings, links, insights and ideas about most of Ballard’s oeuvre, including, I might add, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind From Nowhere</a>, in which we agree many of Ballard’s later stylistic ideas were developed.</p>
<p>What I personally appreciated most about <em>Grave New World</em> is Oramus’ work to establish Freud as perhaps Ballard’s greatest intellectual influence. Her outline of Freud’s Ballard-appropriate theories is clear and succinct, and should help any non-Freudian reader expand their appreciation of all Ballard’s work.</p>
<p>As well, her knowledge of Ballard’s “imaginary” self is extensive and illuminating. Perhaps no other modern writer has created such an extensive mock biography, which he no doubt created to hide behind &#8212; a concept Oramus chose not to follow in this work.</p>
<p>At the end of our civilization, I’d rate this as a bifurcated book. The thesis is basically subjective &#8212; are we really on the way out? &#8212; but the analysis is highly objective, relying basically on the source material. It’s well written, understandable, acknowledges the critical field, and develops a number of Ballardian themes in a way no other critic has attempted. Well worth reading, even if the end is nigh.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>Grave New World: The Decline of the West in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard has been produced in a limited quantity. If you&#8217;re interested in obtaining a copy, please <a href="mailto:usosweb@mimuw.edu.pl">contact</a> Dominika Oramus at the University of Warsaw.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/500_line.gif" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><strong>..:: MORE RICK McGRATH</strong><br />
+ <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">Terminal Collection</a>: Rick McGrath&#8217;s JGB site<br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/rick-mcgrath-jg-ballard-cover-art">&#8216;Woefully Underconceptualised&#8217;:</a> Rick McGrath on JG Ballard&#8217;s Cover Art<br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/its-an-ad-ad-ad-world">It&#8217;s An Ad, Ad, Ad World</a>: Rick McGrath&#8217;s review of Kingdom Come</p>
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		<title>Territories Reimagined</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/territories-reimagined</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/territories-reimagined#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Aug 2007 15:21:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ballardian</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychogeography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban revolt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban ruins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[utopia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Please forward to anyone that may be interested &#8230; TRIP: Territories Reimagined: International Perspectives Manchester, 19-22 June 2008. Call for Papers and Projects * * Psychogeography * * * Neogeography * * * Deep topography * * * Urban interventions * * * Locative media * * * Collaborative Mapping * * * Between June [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Please forward to anyone that may be interested &#8230;</em></p>
<p><strong>TRIP: Territories Reimagined: International Perspectives</strong><br />
Manchester, 19-22 June 2008.</p>
<p><strong>Call for Papers and Projects</strong></p>
<p>    * * Psychogeography *<br />
    * * Neogeography *<br />
    * * Deep topography *<br />
    * * Urban interventions *<br />
    * * Locative media *<br />
    * * Collaborative Mapping *</p>
<p>* * Between June 19 and 22, 2008, TRIP brings together artists, academics, movers, shakers, do-ers and dissenters in a unique event combining an interdisciplinary conference with a city-wide series of  actions, exhibitions, and screenings. TRIP enables the previously separate worlds of theory and practice to interact, initiating new approaches and energies, and furthering techniques to take on and alter the physical environment.</p>
<p>* * Beginning as a reaction to the industrial revolution, the re-imagining of the city by romantics, bohemians, and avant-gardists evolved into a diverse range of strategies, practices and arguments, from the psychogeographic drift or derive to the artistic intervention. By the 1990s these were being utilised by artists, writers, activists, and historians, attempting to negotiate urban and rural space in the post-modern world. But practices developed in the twentieth century encounter a different world in the twenty first &#8211; a more observed and policed world on the one hand, a more corporate, globally-connected world on the other. Increasingly the body, social, individual and political, is the site of contradictory demands &#8211; the demands to consume versus the demands of control.</p>
<p>* * TRIP will be based at Manchester Metropolitan University, on the city&#8217;s main southerly corridor, Oxford Road. But we want events to take place throughout Manchester, in as wide a variety of spaces and venues as possible. Like many northern cities, Manchester is changing fast. Perhaps you want to critique the implications of &#8220;regeneration&#8221;, or perhaps you want to stimulate new ways of engaging with an increasingly consumerised environment. Maybe you&#8217;re passionate about the possibilities of inventive walking and drifting, or maybe you&#8217;re a performance artist aiming to change the energy of a public space. Wherever you&#8217;re coming from, TRIP wants to hear from you with your ideas.</p>
<p>* To submit a paper, you should send an abstract outlining your subject and the key points of your presentation.</p>
<p>* To submit an idea for an intervention, performance or a walk involving members of the public, please outline in one paragraph the aims and ideal locations for your project.</p>
<p>* To submit an idea for a gallery-based project, please outline in one paragraph the thinking behind your installation or work..</p>
<p>Please try to keep your paragraphs to a maximum of 200 words. And don&#8217;t forget your contact details.</p>
<p><strong>Deadline for submissions:</strong> October 1st 2007.</p>
<p>Submissions should be emailed to: <mailto :TRIP@mmu.ac.uk></p>
<p>* And for further information on festival announcements, walks, talks and events, please access <a href="http://trip2008.wordpress.com">http://trip2008.wordpress.com</a></p>
<p>The festival proceedings will be fully documented and recorded, and an edited volume of essays, art and photography will be published at a later date.</mailto></p>
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		<title>&#039;Magisterial, Precise, Unsettling&#039;: Simon Reynolds on the Ballard Connection</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/simon-reynolds-on-the-ballard-connection</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/simon-reynolds-on-the-ballard-connection#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Jun 2007 07:25:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Brian Eno]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philip K. Dick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salvador Dali]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[William Burroughs]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Interview by Simon Sellars. Simon Reynolds is one of the most recognisable music critics around &#8212; or at least his style is, not least for its willingness to tackle pop music as an art form worthy of sustained intellectual discourse rather than as a fleeting moment of adolescent flash. Reynolds breaks new ground, melding unbridled [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Interview by Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/simon_reynolds.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Simon Reynolds" class="alignleft" /> <strong>Simon Reynolds is one of the most recognisable music critics around &#8212; or at least his style is, not least for its willingness to tackle pop music as an art form worthy of sustained intellectual discourse rather than as a fleeting moment of adolescent flash. Reynolds breaks new ground, melding unbridled enthusiasm with a robust theoretical framework in a body of work that is thrilling for its eclecticism alone: he&#8217;s never less than compelling writing about hip hop, Britney or rave, as he is about grunge, prog or grime.</p>
<p>Reynolds reached a peak of sorts with the publication of Rip It Up and Start Again, a deliriously good excavation of the postpunk era, the generation of musicians that broke immediately after punk: Cabaret Voltaire, PiL, Magazine and so on. What&#8217;s more, J.G. Ballard was a thread throughout the book, as Reynolds charted the influence of JGB &#8212; and The Atrocity Exhibition, especially &#8212; on this particular era.</p>
<p>Reynolds has also invoked Ballard in past interviews regarding his own formative influences, so the stage seemed set for Simon to appear here on Ballardian. I wanted to chat to Reynolds when Rip It Up was published, but the moment slipped away for various reasons. But now, with the release of Simon&#8217;s latest collection, Bring the Noise, here&#8217;s a chance to put that right.</strong></p>
<p><em>Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p><span id="more-440"></span><br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballard_green.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Simon Reynolds" class="alignleft" /> <em>LEFT: Ballard (photo courtesy <a href="http://finelinefeatures.com/crash/cmp/ballardqt.html">Fine Line Features</a>)</em>.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You were into Ballard before you were into music. What attracted you to his writing? </strong></p>
<p>SR: A better emphasis would be to say I was into science fiction before I was into rock music, and that Ballard was one of my favourite SF writers. Obviously I always loved music but it was things my parents had introduced me to, like Beethoven, or Hollywood musicals, plus stray things I&#8217;d heard on the radio like the Beatles. And then aged fifteen or so I was inducted into that whole rockist apparatus of taking music – pop culture, youth culture, rock criticism – seriously. And the thing I was into on a fanatical level immediately before entering rock culture was science fiction; the new fanaticism displaced the prior fanaticism &#8212; not immediately, there was an overlap &#8212; but eventually totally. At one point I wanted to be a SF writer and then the next major ambition I had was to be a music journalist. Which is where I stuck!</p>
<p>I kinda half-forgot about Ballard along with other SF writers that were key for me: Frederick Pohl &#038; CM Kornbluth, Alfred Bester, John Brunner, Philip K. Dick, to name just a few. Ironically this was at a time, the very end of the 70s and the early 80s, when Ballard&#8217;s influence was as strong as it&#8217;s ever been in music, with postpunk.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Are you still sweet on Ballard today?</strong></p>
<p>SR: It&#8217;s quite a common syndrome for people to grow out of SF and suddenly drop it as juvenile, and I&#8217;d always swore I&#8217;d not be one of those, but it happened. Really though it was because a whole set of other obsessions crowded SF out: music, rock journalism, politics and philosophy, critical theory. It&#8217;s really in the last decade or so that I rediscovered an interest in SF and particularly in Ballard, who now seemed to me to be clearly the most advanced writer and thinker in that field. I also read more of his critical thinking, his interviews and journalism, and become more and more impressed by him. He seems a much more towering figure now than he did when I first read him as a teenager.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/wind_drowned.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Simon Reynolds" /><br />
<em>The coveted Penguin editions (designer David Pelham).</em></p>
<p><strong>SS: Which of his books rocked your world?</strong></p>
<p>SR: In some ways the one that grabbed me most and has yet to relinquish its hold was the first one I read, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>. Penguin used to do these great paperback editions of SF and they had one series with really evocative paintings – glossy, garish, almost hyper-realist – on the covers. The Drowned World, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-burning-world">The Drought</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind From Nowhere</a> were <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/rick-mcgrath-jg-ballard-cover-art">all in that series</a> and looked particularly good [ The Terminal Beach was in there too; SS ]. But with The Drowned World, the severity and fixatedness of Ballard imagination was what hooked me, and just the idea of the protagonist who – as with all the Ballard cataclysm novels – is perversely drawn towards the heart of the catastrophe, goes the opposite direction to everybody else, and really finds his true self in the transformed landscape. That really grabbed me. Also, the whole idea of the world you knew being drastically transformed… I lived near London, in a commuter town thirty miles north of the capital, and went up to the city quite frequently, so to imagine it submerged was exciting.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Has he influenced your work in any way &#8212; as a cultural critic, say, rather than stylistically?</strong></p>
<p>SR: Not really. The influences on my writing and thinking come from a totally different place, although there&#8217;s certain affinities maybe. A sense of the power of the irrational, these atavistic drives pulsing inside culture. I&#8217;ve long felt that pop music is driven by some pretty ambivalent, sometimes outright antisocial or malevolent energies. But I&#8217;ve probably derived that more from various French thinkers and Nietzsche, also from certain rock writers. And also just listening closely and honestly to my own responses to music. Still you could see that idea of music as fitting a Ballardian worldview to some degree. The idea of human culture as fundamentally perverse.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s another parallel actually, which applies to SF in general as well as Ballard in particular: that&#8217;s the extreme degree of self-reflexivity that you get within rock criticism. Or at least the zone I move within and which has now broken out into the blog world. It&#8217;s very similar to SF, or at least how SF was when I started reading it, which would have been in the years coming out of the whole New Wave of SF. SF writers seemed to have been really into analysing the genre, talking about what defined it as a field of writing and how that related to other forms. And that was largely because – just like rock criticism – its status was contested, it was very much an underdog genre that didn&#8217;t get the respect or acceptance from the literary establishment, give or take a Kingsley Amis or an Anthony Burgess who talked about being SF fans and had a go at the genre themselves now and then.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/new_worlds_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: New Worlds" class="alignleft" /> <em>LEFT: New Worlds; new wave.</em></p>
<p>So SF, like rock writing, had this mixture of inferiority complex and superiority complex. SF writers loved to see SF as the one really crucial, relevant, truly contemporary form of literature. A literature of ideas, which was exactly what drew me to, the element of speculation, as well as the estrangement effect. Rock critics are just the same: they both crave that validation from the mainstream of arts criticism but they also kinda like being the renegade form. As well as novels and story collections, I would sometimes read books of critical essays by SF writers. It seemed like an exciting little subculture, especially the New Wave writers who always seemed to be having workshops and conferences! Ballard exemplifies that meta aspect of SF, although he goes beyond it to be just a great cultural critic.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You&#8217;ve remarked elsewhere that his short stories have more appeal to you than the novels.</strong></p>
<p>SR: After the disaster novels I think I read the mid-Seventies urban breakdown ones like <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a>, both of which I liked a lot, and also a couple of collections of short stories. And it&#8217;s the Ballard shorts that, with my critic&#8217;s hat on, I think are his supreme achievement – so magisterial, so distilled and precise and atmospheric and unsettling. In fact, my getting back into Ballard came about through a collection originally published in 1978 but reissued by Picador USA in 2001, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FBest-Short-Stories-J-Ballard%2Fdp%2F0312278446%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180754707%26sr%3D1-2&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Best Short Stories of J.G. Ballard</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. My wife was working as a book reviews editor and it turned up in her mail and I was like, &#8216;I&#8217;m having that&#8217;. So many of the classic Ballard short stories are in there, some I&#8217;d read before in <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FTerminal-Beach-Science-fiction%2Fdp%2F0140024999%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180754811%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Terminal Beach</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> and similar collections I&#8217;d have got out of Berkhamsted Library as a teenager. There was one called <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FLow-flying-Aircraft-Other-Stories-Ballard%2Fdp%2F0586045031%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180754904%26sr%3D1-4&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Low-Flying Aircraft</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> I particularly liked, especially the first long story in it, almost a novella [ 'The Ultimate City' ], about a young man who lives in a near-future where it&#8217;s very green-conscious and placid and dull so he goes to the deserted city and starts up urban life again, gets the generators going, and misfits start to flock in from the eco-communes and garden towns, but of course it all goes haywire.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_best_shorts.jpg" alt="Ballardian: J.G. Ballard's Best Short Stories." class="alignleft" /></p>
<p>The Best Short Stories collection has a few things from the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">Atrocity Exhibition</a> era, and writing and reading them as a thirty-something I appreciated them more. But it wasn&#8217;t so much the experimental Atrocity-era stuff as the stories he did that are quite close to conventional hard-science SF, but with that extra dimension of interiority and the collective unconscious – all the inner space, psychological aspects that you associate with the New Wave of SF. Back in the day, I didn&#8217;t really get on with the experimental writing side of Ballard. I still haven&#8217;t read all of The Atrocity Exhibition I&#8217;m ashamed to admit, and only a few years ago finally read <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> all the way through. I&#8217;d had a go as a teenager but failed. The impetus to finally read it came from doing the book on postpunk, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FRip-Up-Start-Again-1978-1984%2Fdp%2F057121570X%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180755074%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Rip It Up and Start Again</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, wanting to understand why it was such a big influence on certain bands. And for sure, it&#8217;s fantastic writing, and fantastic as thought, too.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s certain SF writers I can&#8217;t get on with, like Samuel Delaney, often the ones who are doing overtly experimental writing. Nor am I that crazy for the side of Philip K. Dick that&#8217;s all about multiple levels of reality, what is real and what&#8217;s hallucination. So similarly I prefer Ballard&#8217;s post-cataclysm novels and his short stories to the Atrocity Exhibition type stuff.  I think maybe it&#8217;s that I like that thing where realism as a literary mode is applied to something with a SF or alternate history premise. In a way, I prefer the side of Ballard that relates to a writer like John Wyndham than the side that relates to Burroughs. I like that dour, flat Britishness confronted by something alien or catastrophic.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You mention the influence of Ballard on postpunk. As someone who grew up with this music, Ballard was always a vague referent on the edge of my consciousness, glimpsed through obscure Cabaret Voltaire or Ultravox! interviews, so I appreciated the way Rip It Up took the time to unpack the connection. But what about today&#8217;s crop?</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/rip_it_up.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Simon Reynolds" class="alignleft" /> SR: Ballard allusions had become a bit of a cliché by the time I started writing about music professionally in the mid-80s – I did a piece on this post-Cabaret Voltaire, Sheffield outfit called Chakk and gave the singer a slightly hard time for overdoing the Ballardisms. Since then I&#8217;m hard pressed to think of Ballardisms coming through in music, although this very year The Klaxons put out an album called <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FMyths-Near-Future-Klaxons%2Fdp%2FB000LXSM7Y%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1180755552%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Myths of the Near Future</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> [ also the title of a Ballard short-story collection ]. But the Ballard homage seems fairly cosmetic in this case.</p>
<p><strong>SS: But there&#8217;s also kode9 and Burial, right? Every second review I read of their albums last year seemed to invoke the dreaded word &#8216;Ballardian&#8217; – it seemed to become as much a cliché as it was during the postpunk period.</strong></p>
<p>SR: That relates more to Spaceape&#8217;s contribution to the Kode 9 album, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FMemories-Future-Kode-9%2Fdp%2FB000IHZJ4C%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1180755649%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Memories of the Future</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. His lyrics and delivery – they&#8217;re a bit like Linton Kwesi Johnson reading excerpts from The Atrocity Exhibition. With Burial, the connection is that <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FBurial%2Fdp%2FB000FA55X2%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1180755701%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">his album</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> is supposed to be a concept record about South London becoming flooded when the Thames Barrier breaks in the global warmed near future. I think Katrina and New Orleans is more likely to be the inspiration, but there&#8217;s an obvious parallel there with The Drowned World.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kode_space.jpg" alt="Ballardian: kode9 and the Spaceape" class="alignleft" /> <em>LEFT: Spaceape and kode9 (photo via <a href="http://3voor12.vpro.nl/artiesten/artiest//30887533">3Voor12</a>).</em></p>
<p>There is also an urban psychogeography thing going in Burial&#8217;s music (and dubstep generally) that recalls Ballard in Crash. The album draws a lot from South London, this interzone of semi-suburbia between Brixton, where the tube line stops and Croydon which is on the periphery of London, maybe a dozen miles from the centre. So it&#8217;s a hinterland probably not unlike the outer London areas near Heathrow where Ballard situated Crash. A real anomie zone, but possessed of a certain desolate beauty. Burial has also talked of putting his tunes through &#8216;the Car Test&#8217;, driving around South London playing the music in his car to see if it has the atmosphere he wants, the &#8216;distance&#8217; in the music he&#8217;s looking for.</p>
<p>People have also compared Burial to Joy Division in terms of that bleak urbanism thing, and Martin Hannett, their producer, used to do a similar thing: drive around Manchester&#8217;s most brutally industrialised zones in his car, stoned, listening to Joy Division, PiL, Pere Ubu.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You casually injected something interesting into our correspondence &#8212; that you see Ballard and <a href="http://www.moredarkthanshark.org">Brian Eno</a> as &#8216;the two greatest British thinkers of the second half of the 20th Century.&#8217; I&#8217;m now going to pin you down and ask you to elaborate.</strong></p>
<p>SR: That&#8217;s slightly over the top, isn&#8217;t it?  I wonder if it really stands up. Then again,<br />
as thinkers specifically about culture, in the British context, I can&#8217;t honestly think of too many rivals. Certainly as people who came out of the Sixties but came into their prime – as artists and as influences – in the Seventies, they are these towering figures, I think.</p>
<p>One of my fantasy projects that I toyed with for a while was a book on Ballard and Eno. They do seem of a type in some ways and they are patron saints of postpunk to an extent. But the project founders immediately owing to the fact that they are so eloquent about what they do and such brilliant writers, that there&#8217;d be zero role for any critic or commentator. There&#8217;d be very little to mediate or interpret, as they&#8217;ve said it all, so much better. They know what they are doing. I suppose you could historicize them, contextualise them. Ballard with the milieu he emerged out of in the Sixties, which was based around the ICA, right? And Eno with the UK art schools.</p>
<p>In some ways the affinity seems as much temperamental as anything ideas-based. There&#8217;s this wonderful Englishness. You imagine they would get on like a house on fire, trading ideas over whisky and soda in the Shepperton living room. One thing they both do is take ideas from science and set them loose in culture, find applications. Ballard is like a British McLuhan, except much better because he&#8217;s a far better writer, and a better thinker too – more original, more convincing. Eno is almost like a British Barthes, in some ways.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Explaining his collage method in The Atrocity Exhibition, <a href="http://www.solaris-books.co.uk/Ballard/Pages/Miscpages/interview4c.htm">Ballard said</a> he wanted to produce &#8216;crossovers and linkages between unexpected and previously totally unrelated things, events, elements of the narration, ideas that in themselves begin to generate new matter.&#8217; To me this seems strikingly similar to Eno&#8217;s formulation of generative music.</strong></p>
<p>SR: I&#8217;m not sure about that. It seems more related to Burroughs and perhaps also to Ballard&#8217;s artistic debt to Surrealism, which I really appreciated a few years ago when I read him talk about it in that RE/Search collection of interviews. I liked the fact that J.G. would stick up for Dali and the rest. Surrealism and Dada is big teenage impact thing for a lot of us I think, until we learn to say &#8216;ooh Chagall, so much better than Dali.&#8217;</p>
<p>Eno&#8217;s generative music is much more cybernetics meets Zen, emptying out the authorial ego, setting up a process and then withdrawing. I don&#8217;t think with Ballard there&#8217;s that Eastern mystical aspect. With Ballard&#8217;s there&#8217;s always more of a violence bubbling up from below aspect, even though the writing is cold and controlled. Actually if Eno is a British Barthes, a languid sensualist, I&#8217;d say that Ballard is a British Bataille.  I can also imagine Ballard enjoying Camille Paglia&#8217;s writing, which I can&#8217;t imagine Eno doing – it would be too passionate for him.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/one_brain.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Brian Eno" class="alignleft" /> <em>LEFT: One Brain (Eno portrait by <a href="http://www.moredarkthanshark.org/eno_by_paris.html">Paris Rebel Richens</a>).</em></p>
<p><strong>SS: Alright, then, try this: both Ballard and Eno inverted, retooled, then abandoned the genre they started out in. As <a href="http://www.eyeweekly.com/eye/issue/issue_09.22.94/ARTS/bo0922a.php">Richard Sutherland wrote</a>, &#8216;to call Ballard&#8217;s work SF is a bit like describing Brian Eno&#8217;s music as rock &#8216;n&#8217; roll.&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>SR: Yes and no. Eno is like the culmination or extension of certain ideas within rock to the point where they verge on un-rock. But when he started out there were obvious debts to Syd Barrett&#8217;s Pink Floyd, a certain English kind of psychedelia. And he could do the &#8216;idiot energy&#8217; thing with &#8216;Third Uncle&#8217;. I think he shifts the emphasis so it&#8217;s the noise or the mechanistic insistence of rock that&#8217;s retained and amplified, but he sheds the passion, the ego drama, the theatre of rebellion. Later there is the entropy of ambient, which as much as it&#8217;s un-rock is also the furthest extension of the psychedelic principle.</p>
<p>As for Ballard and SF – I see him having lots in common with the best people in the genre.  I mentioned John Wyndham, who&#8217;s under-rated I think, and then people like Dick, Bester, Pohl. But really there are lots of SF people, especially in the Sixties and Seventies, who weren&#8217;t doing corny pulp nonsense. To elevate Ballard by divorcing him from his genre is unnecessary. The methodology in the disaster stories and the bulk of the short stories is totally SF.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Spoken like a true SF fanboy! OK, as you said earlier, people tend to drop SF as &#8216;juvenile&#8217;; similarly, people often say that writers should grow out of writing about music. How do you maintain your interest?</strong></p>
<p>SR: It doesn&#8217;t take any effort! It&#8217;s a compulsion, nothing I can do about it.  Although there are lull years – and indeed the last few years have been slimmer pickings than for a long while. The Nineties were an insanely exciting time and that spilled over into the early part of this decade but now it feels like a number of sonic-cultural narratives have petered out. Hip hop in particular seems to be in deadlock. But still I can&#8217;t shake this gut belief that popular music is the place where the most exciting cultural energies and ideas get played out.</p>
<p>But maybe this feeling is just a hangover from having grown up during the postpunk era and then living through the hip hop Eighties and rave Nineties. Maybe that conviction can no longer be substantiated by what music is coming up with. It could be the &#8216;vibe&#8217; has moved elsewhere. Certainly the art world seems to have resurged as a place where there&#8217;s a lot of energy and a lot of really interesting conversations are taking place. And television I think still has that function where it is where the society examines itself and talks about the issues. It generates an insane amount of rubbish but it&#8217;s always interesting, revealing rubbish. And the quality television is really our modern high culture I think, stuff that nearly everybody is plugged into and where a collective conversation goes on.</p>
<p>But if this is the case – that pop music is no longer where it&#8217;s at – I would be saddened because I think it&#8217;s a much more democratic zone than the art world or films or TV. The start-up costs are so much lower.</p>
<p><strong>SS: You mentioned the blog world earlier; all-pervasive connectivity means that everyone&#8217;s a critic, these days. Any thoughts on that? </strong></p>
<p>SR: Blogging&#8217;s too huge a subject really, because it goes into the whole nature of what music criticism is and what it&#8217;s for, and also the whole scarily transforming nature of the media, the future of magazines. But I was very excited about the music blogging scene when it emerged in the first years of this decade, and got even more excited when <a href="http://blissout.blogspot.com">I joined in</a> – there was some really great energy flowing back and forth in this circuit of blogs that I participated in, which is really just one small &#8216;hood in the universe of music blogs, itself a modest galaxy in the vast blogosphere.</p>
<p>Now I&#8217;m significantly less excited, while still finding more to read and be inspired by in the non-professional blog world than in music magazines. What I enjoy most, and what has dimmed quite a bit since &#8216;the golden age&#8217; a few years ago, is the conversational aspect – people riffing on other people&#8217;s riffs, that whole argumentative side. But with a few exceptions people seem to have retreated back into a more solitary, monologue-like thing.</p>
<p><strong>SS: As someone who has successfully integrated critical theory with writing on music, what do you think of the growing incursion of theory into blog-based music criticism?</strong></p>
<p>SR: Is it growing? The only music blogs I can think of that go for real hardcore theory are <a href="http://k-punk.abstractdynamics.org">k-punk</a> and… that&#8217;s it really. There are blogs that are primarily philosophy and/or art blogs who also deal with music now and then, like <a href="http://nastybrutalistandshort.blogspot.com">Sit Down Man, You&#8217;re A Bloody Tragedy</a> or <a href="http://codepoetics.com/poetix">Poetix</a>, but I don&#8217;t think people would think of them as music blogs. Actually k-punk isn&#8217;t just a music blog either, although music is a privileged area of culture for Mark. You get music blogs that do music criticism in a high-powered form or go deeply into the minutiae of subgenres and esoteric knowledge. But I can&#8217;t think of that many who are applying concepts from critical theory.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d make a distinction here between theorising about music and using critical theory and applying it to music. The former goes on a lot, obviously – and you could argue that any critical position is at some level theoretical, it relates to an idea of what music should be and how it works. But there is plenty of theorisation about music going on. What I don&#8217;t see a lot of is people using ideas from critical theory or philosophy and so forth and using them to explicate pop music. Even I don&#8217;t do nearly as much as I used to. But I certainly still generate theorems and analytical ideas that go beyond the thumbs up/thumbs down consumer guidance aspect.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ghost_box_flyer.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ghost Box" /></p>
<p><strong>SS: OK, but it wasn&#8217;t so long ago that if you mentioned the word &#8216;scopophilia&#8217; in a film review, for example, people would have thought you were referring to what Richard Gere allegedly did to <a href="http://urbanlegends.about.com/od/celebrities/a/richard_gere.htm">some unfortunate gerbils</a> (this actually happened to me &#8212; the misunderstanding, not the gerbil abuse). Now, if you drop it in a review, people groan because they&#8217;ve heard it all before; the word&#8217;s become such a cliché that you&#8217;re automatically a bit of a poser for using it. In music criticism, &#8216;hauntology&#8217; seems to be gaining similar mass. But you were there from the start. So, what is hauntology, in musical terms, and why has it <a href="http://academitasse.blogspot.com/2006/11/hauntology-revived.html">lit up the blogosphere</a> the way it has?</strong></p>
<p>SR: Well I think it was me who first broached the idea of &#8216;hauntology&#8217; as a rubric for this loose network of contemporary bands who were playing with the cultural imagery of ghosts, spectres, the uncanny, the return of the cultural repressed, memory, and so forth, while also trying to make genuinely eerie music. But I didn&#8217;t particularly intend for there to be a tight correlation between Derrida&#8217;s concept of hauntology and what these bands were trying to do. It was just a convenient and cute term, &#8216;haunt&#8217; referencing ghosts and &#8216;-ology&#8217; suggesting the image of crackpot scientists working in the sound laboratory. There are certain affinities with Derrida&#8217;s ideas as elaborated in Spectres of Marx.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mordant_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ghost Box" class="alignleft" /> <em>LEFT: Mordant logo.</em></p>
<p>Some of the groups – specifically The Focus Group and Belbury Poly of the <a href="http://www.ghostbox.co.uk">Ghost Box label</a>, and <a href="http://www.mordantmusic.com">Mordant Music</a> – are concerned with ideas of a lost futurism, a spirit of utopian idealism that seems to have faded away in recent decades but which they associate with post-WW2 modernism in architecture, the early days of electronic music, grand public works of amelioration and edification. So there&#8217;s a kind of radical nostalgia, a looking back to looking forward. But Spectres of Marx was a very specific intervention in a tradition of philosophy and political thought, and I feel there&#8217;s nothing to be gained by aligning what these groups are doing with Derrida&#8217;s ideas in some tight doctrinal way. Especially as none of them have read Derrida as far as I can tell!</p>
<p>The word &#8216;hauntology&#8217; has got a lot of traction, though, because it chimes in with things that are going on in modern art (the trend for work based around the concept of the archive and dealing with questions of collective memory) and in academia (with the boom of studies related to the spectral and uncanny, work on ruins, remains and rubbish, mourning and memory work, nostalgia for the future). Even just on the level of the word ghost or its homonyms popping up across popular culture in countless band names, album titles, novels and non-fiction books, et al &#8211; something is going on.</p>
<p>With the ghostified bands specifically, I think what has grabbed some of us (apart from the music, which is fantastic) is that these are musicians who have tons of ideas both musical and non-musical. They tend to be very well read and thoughtful, real autodidacts with a passion for esoteric knowledge and bizarre historical arcana. They are making connections between music, film, books, TV, the occult, history, design… and their records also have a highly developed visual aesthetic. For me personally, a big thing is the Britishness of Ghost Box and Mordant Music, the way they are plumbing the nation&#8217;s collective unconscious. I&#8217;m become very interested in nationality, which is not to be confused with nationalism.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bring_noise.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Simon Reynolds" class="alignleft" /> <strong>SS: To close, let&#8217;s discuss your latest collection, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FBring-Noise-Simon-Reynolds%2Fdp%2F0571232078%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180755914%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Bring the Noise</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, which has just been released. It collects your writings on alternative rock and hip hop &#8212; why did you bring these disparate musical enclaves together?</strong></p>
<p>SR: I felt it was time to do a collection of all this stuff I&#8217;ve been writing for the last 20 years, but there was a problem in that <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FBlissed-Out-Simon-Reynolds%2Fdp%2F1852421991%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180755978%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Blissed Out: The Raptures of Rock</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, which is an essay collection published in 1990, corralled a lot of the late-80s stuff I did, and then <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FEnergy-Flash-Journey-Through-Culture%2Fdp%2F0330350560%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1180756065%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Energy Flash</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> (aka Generation Ecstasy), while not a collection, is based on the rave and electronic music journalism I did in the Nineties, there&#8217;s a lot of remixing and sampling from my own pieces. So I didn&#8217;t want to overlap too much with Blissed Out or Energy Flash, and what was left was all the writing I did on alternative rock and on hip hop, which I wrote about almost the moment I started out professionally in 1986 – I wrote about Schoolly D, interviewed LL Cool J and Public Enemy, and so forth. And then a theme leap out at me, looking at the relationship between bohemian rock and black street music &#8212; this alternately fraught and fertile relationship, with the white underground sometimes trying to catch up with or incorporate ideas from hip hop, and sometimes going its own way. And hip hop referring to not just rap but the whole spectrum of street sounds: dancehall, R&#038;B, grime. There are some pieces on rave in there but usually where it relates to the black/white theme. So it&#8217;s Bring the Noise: 20 Years of Writing About Hip Rock and Hip Hop. The &#8216;hip&#8217; before &#8216;rock&#8217; is kinda jokey but also accurate, in a way, since nearly all the rock bands in the book are or were hip in some sense, like Nirvana or PJ Harvey. Whereas I&#8217;ve nothing on, say, Bon Jovi in there!</p>
<p>It&#8217;s actually longer than 20 years since the first piece is from Monitor in 1985 and the last is from 2006. I have been around for ever, churning the stuff out. This book is 400 pages long and it is truly a tiny fraction of my output. But this particular slice through the corpus tells a story; it does work as a kind of history of the last couple of decades of pop culture. I&#8217;ve brought out the narrative and the theme by having little commentaries after the pieces that make connections and thread things together. So I think you could read it and get a pretty good picture of what happened in music, starting from when Rip It Up and Start Again ends, 1985, and going up to the present.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br />
<em>Thank you, Simon Reynolds.</em><br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p><strong>..:: MORE INFO</strong><br />
+ <a href="http://blissout.blogspot.com">blissblog</a>: Simon&#8217;s blog<br />
+ Simon&#8217;s <a href="http://ripitupandstartagainbysimonreynolds.blogspot.com">Rip It Up blog</a><br />
+ Simon&#8217;s <a href="http://bringthenoisesimonreynolds.blogspot.com">Bring the Noise blog</a><br />
+ <a href="http://members.aol.com/blissout">Blissout</a>, Simon&#8217;s dance-music archive</p>
<p><strong>..:: INTERVIEWS IN THIS SERIES</strong><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/sterling-on-ballard">Bruce Sterling on J.G. Ballard</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/john-foxx-interview">John Foxx on J.G. Ballard</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">Iain Sinclair on J.G. Ballard</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-stuff-of-now-toby-litt-on-jg-ballard">Toby Litt on J.G. Ballard</a></p>
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		<title>Ballard World Set for 2008 Opening</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-world-set-for-2008-opening</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-world-set-for-2008-opening#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Apr 2007 01:54:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[theme parks]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-world-set-for-2008-opening/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Egyptian Ballard World: dead monorails hanging against the sky like guillotines (photo by Dubai Dave). Dickens World is set to open next week, according to this report. It&#8217;s a recreation of &#8216;a dark, dirty and dank London&#8230;populated by thieves, murderers and ghosts&#8230;[with an] air of authenticity as it was built in consultation with experts from [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dead_monorail.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Egyptian Ballard World" /><br />
<strong><em>Egyptian Ballard World: dead monorails hanging against the sky like guillotines (photo by Dubai Dave).</em></strong></p>
<p>Dickens World is set to open next week, according to <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/news/travel/what-the-dickens/2007/04/13/1175971304483.html">this report</a>. It&#8217;s a recreation of &#8216;a dark, dirty and dank London&#8230;populated by thieves, murderers and ghosts&#8230;[with an] air of authenticity as it was built in consultation with experts from the Dickens Fellowship&#8217;.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the first in a series of literary theme parks set to open within the next few years. Next is Ballard World in 2008, which beat off a host of popular favourites to be second in line (most pundits drearily predicted Shakespeare World would follow the Dickens simulacrum). According to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-angle-between-two-worlds">our sources</a>, &#8217;166 acres of a former B52 airbase near Cambridge is being turned into the first J.G. Ballard entertainment park, the first in a world-wide chain of themed resorts based on the work of the infamous British SF writer.&#8217;</p>
<p>As the publicity trumpets:</p>
<blockquote><p>Ballard World will be the perfect day trip for stressed out Londoners. Our slogan is &#8216;Families exploring inner space&#8217;, with enough going on for every age group. Picture it: the little ones play hide and seek in an abandoned Shanghai mansion and roam around the inevitable empty swimming pool. Dad fingers the dented side panel of Jayne Mansfield’s crashed 1966 Buick Electra, while mummy has a pina colada in a cocktail party that’s permanently on the brink of getting out of hand.</p>
<p>There will be another Ballard resort on the outskirts of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Shanghai</a>, expected to open its doors in 2009 and consisting of a minute replica of the London suburb of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-unlimited-dream-company">Shepperton</a>, with the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/heathrow-hilton">Heathrow Hilton atrium</a> as an entrance building. Other cities as diverse as Detroit and Rome have shown interest in opening a Ballard World, possibly due to the relatively little investment needed for turning a derelict highway overpass or abandoned airforce base into a first-class authentic theme park.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Is this a dream come true? You would think so. But I&#8217;m not so sure, especially considering the ham-fisted nature of the advertising. I mean, come on: families exploring inner space? It&#8217;s just *too* slick, especially considering the real world is so very Ballardian &#8212; and a lot, lot meaner.</p>
<p>As everyone knows, this is the second attempt at starting up the Ballard World concept, after <a href="http://www.themeparkreview.com/fantazyland/fantazyland.htm">an Egyptian version</a> in Alexandria closed due to entropy. Egyptian Ballard World, developed by loyal Ballard fans for loyal Ballard fans, had everything the discerning JGB fan could possibly require: abandoned water bodies; derelict technology; dead monorails hanging against the sky like guillotines; construction works half finished, as if some terrible disaster had wiped out all traces of human life; masses of rubble and twisted metal forming complex cryptograms, their meaning inscrutable and remote, as if they were designed not for man, but for man’s absence…</p>
<p>As Ballard himself insists, you can&#8217;t breed out the deviant strains in our personalities without succumbing to totalitarianism, so is it too much to ask that the new chain maintains the high standard of the ramshackle, anarchic and exhilarating Egyptian Ballard World, without smoothing out the necessary roughage inherent in our daily lives?</p>
<p>Only time will tell&#8230;although time sickness, as Ballard fans know only too well, is the No. 1 curse of the modern age.</p>
<p><em>With thanks to Clem Dorbeck for <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-angle-between-two-worlds">the original report</a>.</em></p>
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		<title>Can We Ever Escape This Death Drive?</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/can-we-ever-escape-this-death-drive</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/can-we-ever-escape-this-death-drive#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jun 2006 11:59:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andres Vaccari</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[death of affect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[terrorism]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/can-we-ever-escape-this-death-drive/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the sources for the death of affect is the distancing from community and a sense of shared existence brought about by the technological management of reality. There is a central paradox here: while the technical construction of collective time (through the engineered events in the media) tends to produce an instant &#8216;real-time&#8217; that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the sources for the <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/jgb_death_of_affect3.html">death of affect</a> is the distancing from community and a sense of shared existence brought about by the technological management of reality. There is a central paradox here: while the technical construction of collective time (through the engineered events in the media) tends to produce an instant &#8216;real-time&#8217; that narrows the gap between perception and reaction (creating a kind of permanent present, and a social condition of amnesia and of the irrelevance of history and the past), this instant, intense mediation (which has more to do with the time of machines than with phenomenological time) produces a distancing rather than a being in the moment, or a &#8216;full&#8217; experience. There is a critical disjunction between what we see, and what we feel and think. The global village is not a place of shared experience, but on the contrary, a surface effect further distancing us emotionally from this mythical, instantaneous present we are all supposed to be connected with. So we have two complementary directions: an entropy and withdrawal, and an acceleration, a hyperconnectedness that doesn&#8217;t really &#8216;connect&#8217; anything.</p>
<p>In that sense, there is a strong link between 9/11 events and the fiction of J. G. Ballard, inasmuch as they both concern a &#8216;staged&#8217; reality, a manufactured space-time (particularly in Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;mid-period&#8217; novels, <em>Atrocity Exhibition</em> onwards). In early Ballard this sense of deep, geological, ancient time is usually more of a natural fact (as opposed to technological), a deeper &#8216;voice&#8217; of reality that comes to claim the characters, undoing the more superficial cortex structure of the ego. Ballard&#8217;s characters are upper middle-class individuals, absorbed in a state of emotional alienation that can only be broken by the most spectacular transgressions.</p>
<p>In Ballard, however, we only get the point of view of the ubiquitous disaffected individual, but never from the point of view of the engineers of this staged reality. I can think of the architect in <em>High-Rise</em>, perhaps. But he himself is only unlocking a deeper layer of the unconscious through the language of architecture.</p>
<p>This is what annoys me a bit about Ballard: his POLITICS. What are the politics of Ballard?</p>
<p>Ballard, it seems to me, subscribes to a kind of naïve Freudianism. The technological landscape can only unlock what already pre-exists in the human mind. Or the key can be a liberating violence, an absurd violence beyond rationality. There is always a death-drive powering the characters and events. New &#8216;psychopathologies&#8217; and configurations can, of course, be created (so, it is not a simple regression, or return to the primal scene, or whatever). But there is no sense of real human interests or other historical, social factors driving the manufacturing of these realities (for example, the enclave-resorts ubiquitous in the latest Ballard novels). There is always a sense of withdrawal, of entropic regress, which perhaps is (as R. D. Laing might have put it) a sane reaction to an insane society. Yet, there is no way out of this lock, except a resort to some transcendental mental structure; a natural, essential, pre-social drive. Ballard espouses a certain fatalism born out of a psychological reductionism. Can we ever escape this programming, this death-drive?</p>
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