Society

20181104: Innere Stadt | Schaumbad

I committed a cardinal Austrian sin: I was late. Really late. An hour late. And for no good reason. I'm sure there's a word in German for this situation (arschlochspäter?)

The feeling of Sunday (because it was Sunday) took over my whole being today. I leisurely went downstairs and photographed the Priesterseminar building. I reviewed the images; I edited them; I wrote. I leisurely did some exercise in the gym. I felt my body; I got my mind inside the muscle, the movement. I leisurely prepared to film the footpath along the Mur. I set up the gimbal, I set up Magic Lantern. I leisurely ate lunch, departed and, transversing Hauptplatz, I suddenly remembered that there was something, only one thing, on my calendar for the next weeks: I had a meeting at Schaumbad at 2pm. I looked at my clock and it was already 2:38pm. Fuck. I needed a tram ASAP, but first I needed a ticket, but before that I needed exact change first. I dug in my pocket: Luck. Tram ticket, tram, I confirmed the route several times, considered an alibi or excuse, but tossed them all out. Thinking of all my friends, mostly artists, who, while traveling, had arrived an hour or more late. Considering the perspective of the artists at Schaumbad who were waiting, my heart slumped. Would they be as impatient as I have been with my tardy colleagues? Coming to terms with the reality that there was nothing I could do to not be late today, I had only to seek their forgiveness; I would be at their mercy.

But the artists were all very courteous and didn't even seem to care about my late arrival, although after my apologies, the formal introduction promptly began, so it was clear that they were waiting for me. I told the group about my project on the Speicherkanal and how it related to my larger interest in urban ecology and solid waste management; I shared the anecdote about the journey of the Mobro 4000 to dump its waste in different states and several countries, before finally returning to Long Island; I noted how New York City declares a state of emergency each time it rains due to the flooding on the impermeable concrete, and combined rainwater in the sewer system. Water management and movement have a symbiotic relationship in the city, since the surface creates a firm path for walking in a wet environment, but the water has to go somewhere and how and where it moves has often been a collision with our biological dependence on water that is hygienic.

When my introduction was over, each present artist introduced him/herself and what he had been working on. Everyone's interests were clear and appealing. I was surprised by the number of artists at Schaumbad who were working with trash, recycled materials, or environmental topics. But the exchange was rather short because the organization was in the middle of their annual programming meeting, and many people needed to leave soon. I made my exit and watched a documentary about the Mur that was on exhibit downstairs. The film structure followed the Mur from its glacial runoff to its confluence with the Drava.

20181108: Schaumbad | Künstlerhaus

Iris offered to lead a tour through the Districts of Puntigam, Graz-Neuhart and Gries. Schaumbad was located on Puchstraße, named after Johann Puch's manufacturing company, most well-known in the U.S. for the 49.cc Puch Maxi mopeds that were popular for existing in a legal gray zone between human-powered and motor-powered conveyances, which required different licenses and road usage. The southern neighborhood was the original industrial center, it should be noted that pollution generated from this area and disposed into the Mur was known to impact towns downstream in southern Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, etc., on the tribulation to the Drava and Danube.

The industrial past and present were evident. Near Schaumbad were distributors of industrial material, landscaping supplies, kitchen decoration, but also a few recycling companies, which could be thought of as the next industrial revolution: once it was less expensive to repurpose refuse than manufacture from raw material.

Walking up Puchstraße we saw the monuments to an industrial past: the towers of concrete about ten stories high, with windows broken and doors missing. The towers were covered in solar panels, which were hung so well that they appeared to be part of the original building design. On the ground floor a modest revival was underway in the form of a rock climbing gym, Crossfit studio and squash court. Around the back was a literary space and a new building to house artists. Graffiti and murals filled in where there weren't solar panels

We saw Caritas Ressidorf, a men's homeless shelter before turning down Auf der Tändelwiese to see Dr. Schlossar-Park where the Grazer artist Hartmut Skerbisch had built a garden labyrinth. The garden was not in the best shape; autumn had not treated it well and most of the phytowalls were in decay. But a gesture of the city's support for local artists, as well as a sign that it had changing its mind.

The buildings in this area, many of which were social housing projects from the beginning of the 20th Century, formed walls along the street and guarded the green space within the block. Other developments were rows of two and three story homes with spacious backyards.

We continued down Kapellenstraße and saw the Urnenfriedhof Graz, one of the older cemeteries in the city. Iris told us that it was very expensive to be buried there and that, unlike plots in the U.S., in Graz they were leased and not permanently owned. When one's descendants no longer paid the lease to the plot, the body was exhumed and the plot leased to a newly dead. Cemeteries were more for the living to remember the dead, than for the dead to have company.

Turning up Payer-Weyprecht-Straße we came to Kunstgarten, a familiar cultural institution in the backyard of Irmi and Reinfrid Horn. They programed film screenings, concerts, exhibitions and residencies, and maintain a botany library. Pure generosity and endurance. Reinfrid was in his overalls, toiling away at the computer, and Irmi welcomed us over tea and Früchtebrot. We chatted for a few hours but the highlight of the conversation was learning of the 23 years of tension that had existed between their institution and their missionary next-door neighbors. Reinfrid portrayed them as rural conservatives who moved to the city, treated their pets like farm animals and didn't appreciate culture nor community. The called the police in response to concerts, and their dogs barked at guests. The long game.

The next stop was the Graz-Karlau Prison, seated on archduke Karl II's summer hunting grounds. From the street we could see the silhouette of two people, whom I presumed were inmates watching the evening traffic. The complex had a central tower with four radial arms, and an adjacent structure running parallel to the street. The grounds are walled off and decorated by public art projects on the side bordering Triester Straße. As one of the larger prisons in Austria, it was the holding cell of the mass-murder Jack Unterweger, who became the icon of prison rehabilitation after he became a writer and journalist. Having used his imprisonment to craft short stories, poems, plays and an autobiography, he gained the respect and admiration of Viennese cafe intellectuals.[1] He recanted his psycho-sexual homicides; his signature works were strangulation of sex workers with their own bras. After serving his first sentence, he became a minor celebrity, international journalist, but soon resumed killing, was re-imprisoned and committed suicide. Terrorists and nationalist terrorist were also held, together, at Graz-Karlau.

The tour brought us past a slaughterhouse, just across the street from a Tierkorper Sammelstelle, or dead pet depository. It was not clear which site was the origin of the foul smell.

We continued across the river over Karlaugürtel, past Peepshow, a laufhaus, and up Neuholdaugasse, when I looked up Leitnergasse and saw a large tree in the sidewalk, seemingly oversized and out of place. I realized that, due to the narrow width of the sidewalks, there were not many sidewalk trees. Instead, the green areas were set behind buildings in the center of the block. Since many sidewalk trees have short, difficult lives due to soil compaction, pet excrement and urban activity, perhaps it was better that trees were centralized on blocks.


[1] "Killer Prose," Rick Atkinson, Washington Post, August 3, 1994.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1994/08/03/killer-prose/796b8f84-0ee1-437e-9cd6-6496cbecbbe6/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.d06ca07aafc1

20181110 Schloßberg to Freiheitsplatz

Abraham invited me to scale the Schloßberg. The day was clear, the air was crisp but not yet cold. The topic of our discussions always slips into the gutter of geopolitics and economics, two themes we are both unqualified to discuss. He's a smart guy but I was curious to know where he got his information and what formed his perspective. As if in response and affront to our last conversation about the influence of media outlets on social perception, and alternative ways to learn about current events, he told me that he has no choice but to get his information from news media; he has no time to become an expert on the topics. That was his phrasing. He wouldn’t disclose the exact media names, which I noted in absentia. Still, he feels strongly about his perspective on geopolitics. It was a time when we all were expected to have a perspective.

Abraham recounted an anecdote about one of his colleagues gloating about being possibly hired by an American startup. Ultimately nothing ever formalized for her, but I got the impression that there is implicit prestige or explicit high-earnings in Silicon Valley were something that was both attractive to and disdained by him. As a mathematician, statistician and tri-lingual Mexican, Abraham could be a competitive candidate for many Silicon Valley startups. I suggested that he looked into jobs in the U.S. He retorted with the textbook answer of young men: “I never really think about making money. That’s not what interests me.”

I didn’t flinch at the answer because I’ve said the same thing, and still believed the same thing. I still gravitate toward the belief. But isn’t having a moonlight career the inherent excuse for not caring about money? But he isn’t moonlighting as a mathematician, he works as a mathematician. I mean, if you don’t have a passion that you’re pursuing while you gig and you’re just working, isn’t money exactly what you’re interested in, given the tasks being the same? Having walked away from my job, I demonstrated my belief. But I can’t lie to myself and say that money is not a high-priority in my life, not only in the lifestyle to which I’ve grown accustomed but the fact that, once I’d acquired some money, my perspective has shifted on many topics. (The latter is as predictable as Abraham’s and my answer.) But returning to the answer I wondered if he, or I, really could “not think about money.” As if, not having it excused him or I from the world around us.

Equally, I wondered, as Abraham had admitted, how much a luxury it was to not have to prioritize money. I contemplated this not only on an individual level–since both he and I are part of a small part of the world’s population that has completed post-secondary education–but also on a national level. The existence of some infrastructure–social, medical, environmental, criminal–allows us to not to seek out life-saving financial support. And if the capricious variable of where you are born offers this luxury, are there constituents to the geopolitical world that are requisite for this condition? More succinctly: What is wealth?

A siren sounds at 12 noon every Saturday, which dates back to the war days, as a test of the emergency communication program. The rooftop horn was at eye level as we descended the Schlossberg. The tone reminded me of the fire siren that sounded in Goldendale summers as a child. One long scream meant a fire in town; two long screams meant a fire out of town, and the volunteer firefighters would report for duty. I would always look out the sliding glassdoor to the porch, cast yellow by the corrugated plastic roof, to the backyard grass brown by summer sun, to the hedges and Rhet’s backyard, through the fence to the horizon for a distant signal. Sometimes I saw smoke.

The European Balcony project was scheduled at 16h at Freiheitsplatz in Graz. It is an international project intending to make European countries more united, the Freiheitsplatz was chosen in Graz due to its historical significance. Allegedly, a politician made the announcement from the balcony of the Schauspiele that the country of Austria was born, 100 years before, on November the 12, 1918. [1]

At the event I saw a few familiar faces: Marleen and Michael from Studio Asynchrome, Heidrun from Forum Stadtpark, and Stefan Schmitzer from Kork cafe. About forty people congregated and read from a page-length statement in German. For posterity, I filmed a few people who didn’t seem self-conscious of being recorded. After the short reading, Stefan generously explained the project and calculated its value and relevance in the larger European political context. The ensuing exchange, or rather expression of Stefan’s anxieties, about the future of Austria, the political right was entertaining. Some of his accusations were expected: the right-wing’s ignorant, anti-immigrant perspective; their cutting of social welfare programs; ethno-nationalist fervor. But his anxiety for his daughter’s future equality was unexpected and he explained it to me as part of the political right’s journey back to a traditional social arrangement with women pregnant in the kitchen, barefoot.

[1] "Zur Erinnerung an die Proklamation der Republik vor 100 Jahren," Tag Des Denkmal

https://tagdesdenkmals.at/de/objekte-2018/steiermark/graz-schauspielhaus-balkon-zum-freiheitsplatz/

20181111: Puntigamer | Dom im Berg

I went out to explore the city. Exploring an area that is already inhabited is essentially getting lost and locating oneself. Seeing things that many people have seen before, but vibrate with novelty to your eyes.

The southeast side of the city of Graz becomes Euro-suburban very fast: houses, some farm plots, automotive-dependent with islands of megastructures, inconsistent sidewalks, fences and driveways. It's quaint in size and aesthetic. It's tidy. It's sparsely populated by structures and I saw just enough people to not notice that it was abandoned.

I visited the Puch Museum, which is essentially a large garage of the myriad of the Puch products–mopeds, trucks, cars, bicycles–jammed into the center of the space, with little narrative consideration of how visitors actually see the works. This was a collector's museum, not a curator's museum. When Hitler annexed Austria, industry such as Puch was his primary target. That may explain the absence of the pedagogic narrative in this garage. Just imagine the third wall sign: "And here is when we made Nazi trucks." Not exactly a heart warmer. I was the only visitor, so maybe I was over-thinking the institution's rationale to obscure their past. The sole attendant occupied himself by spray painting something at the far north end of the garage. The fumes made their way to the middle of the garage around the time I decided to leave.

I stopped by Schaumbad to look at Eva's studio as a possible site for interviewing Steve Weiss or Martin Regelsberger and Romana Ull. The studio was filled with epochs of art projects, research, production and life. It was hard to believe that Eva had been there less than a decade. A large light fixture with the word "over" sat perfectly in the corner. From what I'd gathered about the protest against the Murkraftwerk, "over" continued to bitterly loom over Romana and Martin. The space would do.

I made haste to another art event. The event in the Schlossberg was described to me as an artist who was going to bring together a descendant of the Archduke Ferdinand and the descendant of the Archduke's assassin, Gavrilo Princip, for a handshake. The location was a room in the Dom im Berg, a space that was hollowed out of the hill; it had to served as a bomb shelter during World War II. It was too fitting, too perfect to not attend.

The event began with a trio playing Serbian music followed by other musicians playing a royal Habsburg melody.The stage was set with the Austrian musicians stage left and the Serbian musicians stage right. In the center were two black leather, Scandi-chic couches. Igor F. Petković, the artist, sat in the center. After the music conclude he gave a long, contextualizing speech, of which I could only understand him mentioning the two songs, and made several references to "Kultur." It felt almost like he was giving a benediction for the music. He then invited two interlocutors on stage to discuss Kultur, immigration and how Central Europe is a mixing pot of cultures. By the time the third person had answered a question, it began to feel like a talk show. There was so much talking and lecturing that I wondered how this would be different as an "art event" in the U.S., or even if this was billed as an art event. Was this the performance? What introduction did such a symbolically-loaded gesture need? Austrian art events, I would learn, are usually predicated with a long, verbal introductions.

Part of the event included the ceremonial recognition of winners of the Alfred Fried Photography Award 2018, which had a theme of "What does peace look like?" The presenter, Lois Lammherhuber expounded on the topic of photography and peace at length, before a ceremonial lecturer, spot lit, reading from a clear acrylic podium, announced the winner with pomp. The ceremony went on and on and I was running out of abstract footage to film; I had thought the event may be visually interesting so I had brought my camera, but nothing visually interesting was happening on stage. I was shooting the ceiling lights, the wall, hands of people. Ultimately, I couldn't take it anymore. I had to leave before seeing what I thought would be money shot–the descendants shaking hands.

More interesting than the symbolic act was the intentional production of history-making, as opposed to placemaking, or (thing)making, which may be indicative of the kulturzeitgeist. There is so much talk about "Europe" here, which I'd taken as a juxtaposition or affront to what is "Austrian," given the Chancellor Kurz's politicking. Compounded with Brexit, Hungary, Poland, the perpetual and near concern of Russia, Crimea, and the Ukraine, striving for a critical distance, a point from which this whole mess–in its wholeness and messiness–can be seen, was comforting. As the liberal left–artists–contend against the populist (mostly non-creatives)–the importance of holding onto the production of history increases. The creation or recreation of historical events, the mode of producing history–texts, online archives, photos, video and social media can be a strategy to not only moralize about a historical past, but situate a historical present and predict a historic future. History is written by hands trembling to be shaken by the infirm memory of an Alzheimer future.

20181112: Desk | Kitchen

I resumed my work for OSF today and Murphy's law ruled the morning. All of the most recent Premiere and After Effects files were not uploaded to the cloud, nor copied to my hard drive. To recreate all of the work necessary to be in a position to complete what I was intended to finish this week, would itself require a week of work. I searched everywhere three times before contacting my supervisor and inquiring about the possibility of him logging into my laptop and copying all the .aep and .pproj to box. Afterward, I changed my Okta password.

The time difference meant that the morning was spent researching exactly what was left outstanding and the evening, after I had received the files, were conforming the tasks to the current files. I worked 16 hours Monday.

Later in the evening Dr. Steven Weiss, a marine biologist from Uni Graz, met me at Preisterseminar to talk about the Murkraftwerk and the Zentraler Speicherkanal. Since my project was an extension of the Illinois River Project, I started by asking him about carp. Native to Central Europe, carp were part of the local sport fishing as well as holiday carp recipes. Weiss didn't have a recipe that he personally enjoyed; the recipes he did enjoy consisted of heavily disguising the flavor of the fish with something else. As bottom feeders that can thrive in toxic waters, the carp topic framed the following question about the condition of the Mur.

Historically river had been very polluted, even to the point that some people avoided it, or warned others to stay away from it. But an aggressive clean up had started in the 1980s, in part by ecological movements that have gotten hold after the postwar period when food, subsistence and class were at the forefront of sociopolitics in Austria. But the river was still heavily polluted, although huge improvements had been made.

There was already a chain of hydropower plants on the Mur, so the ecology had already been greatly altered. But the little life that persisted was going to be squeezed out. Each accumulation of life that formed behind the dam would be washed away each time the locks were opened. Steve’s concern was for life, biodiversity and he was open about his indifference to wastewater entering the river through overflowing sewer pipes; that was where the biggest fish were. When a river is polluted, it can be cleaned up and life will return, if the headwaters are still functional. But once a river is dammed, its amputated until that structure is removed.

In the minds of most Austrians hydropower was considered a clean, renewable energy. Although late getting out the door, when the information about the Murkraftwerk was publicized it was sold as cleaning up the river. Weiss saw this as a deliberate misrepresentation, contesting that the amount of organic matter that would diverted from the Mur was less than 2% of what was already in the river when the waters were in Graz.

The term “water rich” doesn’t just describe having water as a natural resource. If that were the case, every coastal city would be water rich. When Austria is referred to as ‘water rich’ it more accurately describes the value that pure water has to the people but also the wealth that has been extracted from water ways, such as through hydropower. Weiss stated that hydropower has a long history in Austria: since the beginning of the 20th century, not a single year has passed without the construction of a hydropower plant. At one point most of the electrical power used in Austria came from hydropower. In 2018, it produced about 60% of the electricity consumed. And, as wealth grows in Austria, consumption is expected to grow.

In Steve’s opinion the biggest environmental problem in Graz was not the management of the Mur river, but he air quality. The fine particulate matter in the air collected in the city center with wind stagnating due to the surround hills. And as the city population grew due to Austria urbanization and immigration initiatives, traffic would increase and the condition would become worse. The fact that the Murkraftwerk felled thousands of trees pinpointed his opposition to the project.

The representation that Austria is green is, by Weiss’ metrics dishonest or at least misleading. The image was really about being tidy or clean, but not environmental. He noted a number of regressive practices that included very poor encouragement for organic farming from the central government, and outdated management techniques of fisheries and wildlife, and a general disregard for biodiversity. Local protections were flawed and companies held considerable influence over their regulations that should have governed them. The Murkraftwerk summarized these poorly order priorities.

Steve joined the protest by accident and was reticent to get involved in a small country in which everyone knew everyone. But he became one of the faces of the protest, due to his scientific background as a marine biologist. But when the trees were finally downed, and the Speicherkanal and hydropower plant moved forward, he was devastated. The city had been ripped apart, governmental coalitions broke up, people’s lives were smothered. He had to come to terms with the mantra of never giving up while being prepared to lose.

What was amazing about talking with Steve was that his perspective was at once informed both from the very local, the very specific case study, but also by the larger cycle. He thoughts flowed fluidly between the technologies that were yet to be adapted and the very old. He used the notion of the swamp as the core of medieval fear to demonstrate how our perceptions of nature and cities have changed. He framed the pursuit of modernity in terms of how Mur had been straightened, motivated by normalization property lines, but the example gave a visual reference to how this pursuit had played out: When a river is channelized, the riverbed deepens because the currents move more quickly, the water digs at the earth. The water table sinks. Erosion at banks occurs, sometimes destabilizing bridges and roads. The Banks towered over the surface of the Mur by at least four meters. But his general point was why should the city be concerned about a small improvement in the water quality of a polluted river if the entire ecosystem in the water would be destroyed?

20181114: Innere Stadt | Puchstraße

Martin arrived punctually, wearing lederhosen, a black suede sports jacket, fashionable pointed-toed leather shoes, and long, thick socks. I didn’t notice the entire outfit until he was behind the lens; my attention was on his frizzled white beard; each hair seemed to be dislodged, present only by a range of knots that kept it from falling to the floor. His spirit was a brisk as a walk over the hills to a neighbors house for dinner. He exudes positivity; he glowed. Romana arrived shortly after; reserved and concise, she counter-balanced Martin perfectly. I had positioned a light fixture comprised of the letters "over" next to the futon on which they sat.

The Zentraler Speicherkanal (ZSK) along with the powerplant and other secondary constructions are collectively part of what’s referred to as the Murkraftwerk. My operating knowledge of the ZSK was primarily taken from my discussion with Steven Weiss. Martin and Romana were selected by Eva as representatives of the "activist" side of the ZSK story. Steven too had worked with them, and I was cognizant that the project so far was being propelled into a domain of political utility. Whom I was supplied as interlocutors would invariably bend the project into a realm of instrumentality from which I’m characteristically opposed.

The questions that I formulated in advanced were: When did their participation begin? What's the issue for Rettet die Mur? What's the goal of Rettet die Mur? Talk about tiny particulate matter. How did you feel when the hydropower plant was finally pushed through? What are the primary urban ecological issues facing Graz? Does sewage leaking into the Mur bother them? Is conservation or remediation occurring in Graz? What is the relation between industry and environmentalism in Graz? I was prepared but too ambitious.

With these question at hand I simply asked: What was Rettet die Mur trying to save? That is, what is the Mur to them? A river? Water? An ecosystem? A location? An entity frozen in time?

Romana recounted the deal protesters made with the hydropower plant. The power plant would replace 1.5 trees for each felled tree. But there was disagreement between the protesters and the power plant company as to what constituted a tree. The final decision was only trees larger than a certain diameter would be counted and replaced; understandably, the protesters felt cheated. 20,000 trees were cut, but only 6,000 old trees were counted.

The other problem was where the new trees would be planted. In order to filter air particulates and fulfill some of the function of the felled trees, the new trees must be near to where the pollution occurs, or where the polluted air is being inhaled by people. Since the Mur runs through the city, the area where the original trees were was ideal, for want of change: central, accessible and useful. It's expected that the new trees will be planted at the periphery of the city where they would be less instrumental for cleaning air.

The importance of "cleaner" water, i.e. less untreated sewer and storm water entering the Mur was unimportant to them in light of the trade offs. To them, the fact that the Mur had quite high organic matter in the water upstream of Graz didn’t rationalize a program for improving water quality. Paper mills, industry, and sedimentation from other dams meant that the untreated sewage water contributed only 2-3% of the organic load of the water. Nor were they convinced that the European Water Directive encouraged Graz to improve the Mur. On this point, I wondered again what it was that was trying to be saved.

The hydropower plant would also change the run of the river, dam up the water 6 meters. The habitat of the huchen salmon would be impacted, or destroyed. A snake that is near extinction may be quelled. So while the profit of the energy would be private; the destruction would be collective. Because the introduction of a hydropower plant would make the current sewer overflows non-functional as they would be below the raised level of the water, a suspicion of dependency arose: was the hydropower solving a problem of the sewer by partially paying for the Speicherkanal, or was the Speicherkanal necessary to solve the problem caused by the hydropower plant? The total cost of the Speicherkanal was 160 million euro, half of which was paid by the hydropower plant and half was paid by tax dollars. So this logistical order of operations was congruent to the financial suspicion of dependency: were tax payers bailing out a corporation or was a corporation paying for civil infrastructure? 


Martin opposed “end of pipe” solutions for collecting and treating water and believed that the amount of water that was to be collected by the ZSK could be percolated around the city. Historically, this is true for much of the time, but centennial floods, including the 1860 flood that took lives and motivated the covering of the Graz rivers, contests his calculations. Essentially, Martin and Romana thought of rainwater as a resource, not a problem. And it’s hard to argue with his main critique of urban life: Cities operate on linear relations to energy, food, water, and people, taking it all in and spewing it out. In contrast to the cycles with which nature works, which are local, the city itself sounds like a bad citizen, a dated machine or an insatiable digestive tract. “The city is a parasite on the landscape,” Romana told us.

Collectively, the characteristic of the Murkraftwerk gave everyone something to which to be opposed; concomitantly the storage sewer became a target of the activists as well. In a divergent strategy of divide and conquer, the activists multiplied their opponents from one, the hydropower plant, to four: Holding Graz, which was the city-owned private company that manages waste and sewage, Technische Universität Graz, which designed the Speicherkanal, Verbund, the electrical company who will operate the hydropower plant, and the Mayor Siegfried Nagl, who supported the projects.

There were four big demonstration of the opposition to the power plant and the Speicherkanal, in which 2-4,000 people participated. A public surveyed was conducted and revealed that the majority of the signatories were not in favor of the power plant. People protested the tree cutting by climbing the trees, building tree houses and gathering support. The mental image of people in trees reminded me of 1980s protest in USA (was this when and where the expression 'tree hugger' was developed?). But the day after a special election in which the Green Party separated from the reigning party, the Social Democrats, and another party joined them, the trees were cut in a militant manner. The protests were over.

But there were severe legal hurdles that plagued both sides of the project. The water rights of the river exist in a problematic juridical gray zone, having been passed from days of monarchic oversight directly into private hands without a presumption of public good, public use, or public access. They are bought and sold by hydropower companies who can only compensate fishing clubs whose river will be forever changed. The fisherman have no legal standing. Another regulation requires that a hydropower plant make use of the entire breadth of the river, rather than just half of the river. The interface of what’s legal and what’s political meant that Rettet die Mur could not find a law office that would take their case in Graz, so the protesters went all the way to Vienna for legal aid. For the powerplant, the local laws being bent by the Mayor could be corrected by Austrian or EU regulators. The evacuation of the tree protesters was subsequently determined to have been illegal.

Amidst the ecological questions in which both Romana and Martin were experts, and under the banner against which they had fought the project, they returned again and again to the political element: suspected corruption and blatant undermining of democratic processes. Later I learned that Romana was in the midst of a legal battle that could have a toll on her personal finances.

The tree cutting made timber of the public trust. The city’s own future planning had not included a power plant and the plan had been believed by its citizens. The communication of the Murkraftwerk was tardy, and when information was finally released, it was perceived as propagandistic and one-sided. Indeed, even the exhibition and informational space in Holding Graz was opened to the public, my first observation was that there was no mention of anything detrimental to the environment, as if the entire project had existed without serious opposition. The news media – Kleine Zeitung – television and radio is suspected of being an extension of city hall, ruled by money and personal interests.

Although the hydropower plant is, as of 2019, almost finished and expected to open in the spring, and that the Speicherkanal is nearly completed, Romana and Martin do not believe the fight is over. They hope to win in court and force the hydropower plant to pay for the entire storage sewer, and/or get Mayor Nagel pushed out of office. Even such a partial victory would be a smoke signal against future endeavors and a pivot toward the green and blue future that Romana hope to see grow.


http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/water-framework/index_en.html

Graz has the Stadtentwicklung-Konzept

https://www.graz.at/cms/ziel/7758015/DE

2018115: Manhattan | Graz

An arts atelier may not be the best indicator of technological inclination, but I couldn't help but notice the technology that people were using. iPhone 4, which was eight years old, PCs instead of Macs, or old Macs, instead of new Macs, cabled headphones and websites that look old enough to vote. So when Iris wanted to have a conference about my project and I proposed a Bluejeans® conference or Skype® because I needed to be editing for George, her aversion to connect to VoIP just reiterated my observation: Austrias aren't at the cutting edge of consumer technology. Ultimately she acquiesced and allowed me to be her first bluejeans meeting host. The art of existing two places at once is made possible by voice over Internet protocol.

Within this question of tech is at least a highly sophisticated manner of restraining the members of an affluent country from consuming techno-trash at the rate of New Yorkers, including myself, and generating techno-waste. At most a question of what exactly does “affluent country” mean. The trend of higher standards of living being synonymous with rates of consumption/waste production seems to not be true in the case of Graz (I noticed a similar de-teched presence outside of Schaumbad). The most obvious answer is that higher taxes have curbed a rate of consumption by lowering expendable incomes. This is social welfare society in which desires are suspended by a prescribed way of living that offer social and urban infrastructure instead. If this is the case, then the Murkraftwerk is even more dubious, using tax money for a prescription that is not only reprehensible to the paying citizens, but aimed to cheapen electrical consumption, which is already a decade behind consumer levels.

But it's not as simple as the Grazers just keeping up with the Joneses. Graz has a parallel technosphere. In some ways its boldly local. For example, everyone has a @mur.at email address, which was described to me as a company that supported the arts but was today an actual business. Later I learned that it was founded by a group of net artists during the 1990s who now rely on annual donations in order to offer this exclusive (isolated?) service.

In another aspect, the tech world hadn't fully reached Graz. Google maps failed to give accurate directions in Graz, outside of walking and biking routes. Qando was an alternative maps app that encompassed the extensive public transportation system, but it was wonky. Uber didn't operate in Graz. One had to call 878 taxi to get picked up. Lime, Bird and Tier scooters, which were extensive in Vienna were absent in Graz. There was no Apple store in Graz.

20181118: Altlerchenfeld | Stammersdorf

It was too cold to kill time outside before our breakfast with Russell and Diane so we rode the tram out to Stammersdorf. Signs of mid-century urban development projects: modernist complexes big enough to form and house a community. I saw an advertisement for a new Lakeside Smartcity development near Donaustadt.[1] How soon will these Smartcity projects look as dated as these modernist blobs?

Russell and Diana were on the way back to NYC after his show opening at Bäckerstraße. Seeing friends outside of your city creates the illusion of a time-driven deepening. Compounded with the extra 20 minutes of looking for a cafe that was open, we did indeed bond in the cold.

In Austria, everything is closed on Sunday. Legally, many stores are obligated to be closed on Sunday. Establishments for food, drinks, gifts, bookstores, and museums are the exception. However, even stores that sell items outside of these categories have to obstruct sale of certain items by pulling a curtain over those products on Sunday. The Counter-reformation.

If you work at a job you don't like, everything being closed on Sunday is a blessing. I recall two decades ago, loving the idea of less work hours, of free Sundays, of some non-consumerism, non-productivity ideal. But if you enjoy your occupation, i.e. if you are part of a class of people who are pursuing their passion, the limited hours are a hindrance to self-actualization. The theory of competency in something requiring a certain number of hours – 10,000 or more – requires these evening and weekend contributions. Does Sunday necessarily obstruct this? No. One may be able to adequately plan their Sunday in advance by buying materials on Saturday, but an unforeseen hindrance may arise; Saturday may be a day of travel; or you may be obligated to work on Saturday. The limit to business hours on Sunday is not just to prohibit buying, it may also be to prohibit one’s productivity or self-development.

Limits to Sunday aren't the only variable in this quest of self-development; limited weekly work hours also play a role. And whether it is legally mandated that work stop, or simply socially encouraged, the pursuit of extra hours is impeded. The reverse is also true: I’ve feel compelled to work even during vacations, at the beach, at the spa. I have a sense of enjoyment and pride from this incessant toil.

From the perspective of an aspiring artist, actor, writer or even start up company, the culture of aggrandized free-time should be seen with suspicion. In the context of a world in which one is, or aspiring to become, their own boss, pursue a passion, the 35-hour work week something to be avoided. The distinction is whether the limitation is on working hours, or hours of vocation. Are you a subordinate, escaping orders on Sunday, or are you an entrepreneur – or realistically have a potential of transitioning to be an entrepreneur – and Sundays are slowing your progress?

It's no coincidence that my perspective on this question has reversed in the last decade. At age 25, I relished in the idea of more free-time; the European approach to labor and quality of life seemed ideal. At 35, I'm trying to get the last hours of production, while a mid-life gate is closing and quality of life is not as important as lifestyle. That is, my perspective isn't useful for people at every stage in life. I’m talking about an hour of ambition, an hour before sunset, an hour after the zeal of relaxation has worn away, an hour when play has become tiresome. And yet I have to admit why, even at age 25, I left Spain to return to the U.S.: the pace. Barcelona is an amazing city, but I found that I simply could not work, produce, create and pursue my art in Barcelona at the pace that I could in Seattle. And now being accustomed to the pace of New York, Seattle nor Europe are simply not an options.

Another question is for whom are shuttered Sundays benefit? The most obvious is the institution that mandated the closure in the first place – the Catholic Church – but today it's divided on socioeconomic grounds as well. Even non-believers defend Sundays as a day-off. After institutions, one has to look at the classes that benefit from days off. The few things that stay open – entertainment, fitness, cafes, restaurants, museums – are places frequented by the class of people with disposable income. Parks are free, but what about in winter? By requiring that all social classes take a day of leisure, a leisure-class maintains a custom of leisure, while those outside the leisure-class have one day without work and maybe leisure. (It should be noted that countries with higher income inequality have been found to have lower intergenerational social mobility; I.e. the U.S. has less intergenerational social mobility that Denmark, although the U.S. is "open for business" more days that Denmark.)

Another group that is benefitting from shortened work hours are those whose productivity is connected to technology. As technological advances occur, white collar workers are becoming more productive in shorter amounts of time, garnering higher wages, while blue collar workers whose time away from the table equates to greater losses of productivity and stagnating wages.

The variable of competition between countries is also important. Rather than seeing this simply as “if your neighbor is working seven days a week, and therefore you must also, in order to keep up with the Jones,” we have to ask if your distant cousin, on another continent is working. And while many developing countries are shortening their work week, I wonder how much of the progress that was made in the late 20th century in China and India was due to overworking; i.e. is "catching up" possible, if work equates to productivity and productivity equates to wealth. In the four decades, China brought 500 million people out of poverty, which is the greatest wealth generation in human history. That wasn’t due to a 35 hour work week. And, when the standard of living and wealth of China surpasses that of Europeans, will people really believe that going to the park on Sunday was worth trading economic dominance?

Conversely, does leisure necessarily equate to non-productivity? If a developed country transitions from production, i.e. blue collar jobs, to white-collar society, does the productivity goes down or just move to the service sector? [2]

Thankfully I like museums and Vienna is abundant with great institutions and more importantly great collections.

The first show I saw was at a Kunsthalle, which by definition don’t have a collection, but I had thought "Antarktika Eine Austellung über Entfremdung" at Kunstahalle Wien was about climate change and the resulting alienation. I read the pamphlet for insight as to why the exhibition was about everything other than climate change:

"In the 1960s the director Michelangelo Antonioni described Antartica in a sketch for a potential film as a condensed image for ongoing social glaciation. It metaphorically refers to the paradoxical experience of inclusion and, at the same time, isolation: recalling theories of alienation. The exhibition "Antarctica" gathers art that probes the ramifications of this cold vision of society with particular emphasis on recent positions in contemporary art. The participating artists portray insightful relations between the subject and contemporary modes of being, bringing the eroded boundaries between labor and leisure into focus with photo and video works that oscillate between documentation and performance. Other works in the exhibition illustrate the hallmarks of contemporary consumer culture in perfectly composed imagery."

What could be a better example of the world as societé? Taking a quadragenerian metaphor, which today can't even be contemplated without the broad knowledge and acceptance of Antarctica as an indicator of our melting existence as a species and overriding the metaphor, that reduces the physical and natural world into a preoccupation of social interactions? I hated the show title, but there were works that I found interesting. Maybe the artworld has already grown tired of shows about our pending doom; maybe giving it a break will give space to reconceive of it, or reconcile our fate.

It was surprising to see a show that was touted for videos and photographs to still have a large number (~30%) of paintings. Jana Schulz’s documentary of the social interaction between of young boys was interesting. It was reminiscent of Fredrick Wiseman style: no narration, no narrative. Burak Delier's video, “The Bells,” with a theater group performing corporate trust building exercises was almost as interesting as his "Crisis & Control.” [3] Isabella Fürnkäs's video comparing machine fabrication to dance culture was visually interesting for exactly 120 seconds. I liked the hypothesis. Many of the other works in the show were sophomorish obsessions with the unimportant, which was refreshing for me to be reminded that there are European artists who make completely meaningless artworks that get exhibited in the same nepotistic style as that which occurs in New York. Maybe that is the “positions in contemporary art” that the curators were referencing.


[1] https://smartcity.wien.gv.at/site/en/aspern-viennas-urban-lakeside
[2] "White Collar Productivity: Not Necessarily a Contradiction in Terms" http://thecfoconnection.com/white-collar-productivity-not-necessarily-a-contradiction-in-terms-2/
[3] Burak Delier home page
https://burakdelier.wordpress.com/

20181126: Wasserwerkgasse | Waste Treatment Plant

Werner Sprung greeted us in his office at 9 am. Two plates of pastries, a jar of water taken directly from the groundwater, and an espresso. The onsite lab at Holding Graz tests the groundwater daily for pollutants. The site is a water protection area. The building is new, compartmentalized with electronically locked doors and nearly no overhead lights required. Floor to ceiling windows illuminated the hallways. A modest two stories but thoughtfully laid out with a parking garage partially below ground level.

Before we began filming Werner stated that he trusted we wouldn't use the video for the Green Party, who would rather "throw Molotov cocktails" at him. I assured him that my interest was artistic and not propagandistic and that, while I intended to express the concerns of members of the activist group, my aim was to show the ZSK as an urban design project. I was transparent about my intention to ask him about the protest during the interview and he agreed.

Sprung showed us a presentation of the Zentraler Speicherkanal on powerpoint that included the profile of the city and the sewer system. The extent of the catchment area, the age and history of the sewer system. The statistics that he drew out, one of which was repeated, was that the combined sewer overflow would reduce 70% of the untreated wastewater entering the Mur. Prior to the ZSK only 30% of the combined sewer overflow is treated when there was rainfall. A few minutes into the presentation I realized that the only thing more mind-numbing than a powerpoint presentation is a powerpoint presentation on video. It’s not the content nor presenter, it’s the format. The audio into the C100 had reset to microphone rather than XLR when I unplugged it for transport and most of the footage was unusable. Amateur mistake.

The rainwater diversion was a motivating factor that I had heard again and again. But the benefits of the ZSK were not just reducing untreated wastewater entering the river, but the additional storage that would allow for Holding Graz to clean and renovate the existing sewers, some of which are over a century old. Currently, in order to renovate sewers, a line would be closed and the wastewater would be diverted to the Mur, increasing contamination.

The origin of the sewers in Graz followed a deadly flood in 1880 (1860?), the creeks were covered to reduce flooding; subsequently the pipes of homes were connected to the covered creeks. The idea of connected a rainwater runoff to the existing covered creeks was to wash away the smell that accumulated in the sewers.

Werner's response to the protest was that he could not understand why anyone would be against the improvement of the water quality of the Mur. He described how brown streaks can be seen on either side of the Mur during rainy days, and how anything, even bicycles, can be found in a sewer. He laughed at the suggestion of ignoring the organic waste that entered the Mur because fish liked it. His role at Holding Graz was system optimization. It was in his essay that I had first learned about the ZSK.

After the presentation, Sprung offered to show us the wastewater treatment plant.

The great thing about a city employee is they usually know a lot about random information about the built environment that would be otherwise difficult to obtain. While visiting the Schloßberg I had noticed that buildings in Graz are almost uniformly capped at four stories. The explanation, Sprung said, was that the building regulation was informed by the air quality concern for stagnating pollution that is typical for the geographic location of a city at the base of a mountain range. That is, the concern for the tiny particulate matter that the tree defenders were describing was already inscribed into the city code. But if growth was underway and height is capped, then the result is sprawl.

We passed through a 10 km long tunnel, part of the freeway that passed under the city. The design of this tunnel, Sprung noted, was a compromise between planners who wanted to add a freeway through the city and opposition that worried about the effects of automotive amputation. (It reminded me of an alternate universe in which Robert Moses’ Cross-Bronx Expressway had been designed with an iota of compassion for community.) Fortunately, tunneling is a specialty of the Austrians, and can be seen in the Schloßberg tunnels, which were used as bomb shelters in WWII. Under the Graz Hauptbahnhof there are tunneled wine cellars, no longer in use, and of course the sewer and combined sewage overflow, which are also tunnels, though constructed differently than the technique Sprung described, that is produced through the use of explosives, allowing the surrounding rock to collapse to a certain distance to increase the load pressure, like a keystone arch, before being reinforced with metal and then covered in cement. The Montanuniversitaet Leoben is one of the institutions that specialize in this peculiar form of engineering.

At the treatment plant, Werner walked us through the stages of purification, from untreated water to initial solid suspension and separation, large and small sand and gravel, bacterial treatment in anaerobic digesters (which predate New York’s Newtown Creek facility by three decades), into another holding tank and out to the final stage before being sent into the Mur. The water isn’t potable, but there are plans to implement higher purification, such as pharmaceuticals, in the coming decade. I asked Sprung about the impetus to create the wastewater treatment plant, whether the European Union Wastewater Framework directive included mandatory renovation of the sewer system. It did not, he answered, because such a directive could not be enforced across the continent, due to a lack of funding. We saw only two other people while on the tour; most of the processes in the plant must be automated.

20121203: Graz | Berlin

I met with Eva and Iris at Schaumbad to discuss the logistics of my art brunch. Iris had suggested I invited Steven Weiss to talk about the Murkraftwerk while I had suggested Günter Gruber and Romana Ull. After a lot of back and forth, proposing variations and possibilities, we settled with Iris’ suggestion. Tangentially I tried to improvise some of the conclusions I had reached about the ZSK, the first being the power play between city hall and the protesters. Rather than it being a voluntary situation, I proposed that it may have been a function of the West’s declining power in the world and that the right-wing austerity measures were a larger example of the situation with the power plant: a desperate grapple at a projected value in a near-future in which things are getting more expensive. Eva replied that Austria was one of the richest countries in the world.

After the conference Franz drove me to Flughafen Graz and I tried to ask him basic questions in German on the ride. Franz has such great energy–so funny and positive–that even a person who doesn't speak the language feels ok making mistakes in front of him, or at him.

At the airport a guard there gave directions on separating luggage and checked tickets and passports. The metal scanners were guarded by two happy security guards, and the waiting room was spacious and clean. There were three people in the line for security. Flughafen Graz was what every airport should be, and I feared not even it can continue to be much longer. I expected it would devolve into what most airports are: a crowded perpetual crisis-situation that aspires to monetize traveler's fatigue rather than address the levels of anxiety that the air travel industry mandates.

I returned to thinking about what Eva mentioned about Austria being one of the wealthiest countries in the world. What did she mean? Why did she say it?

In response to my remark about the decline of America and the supposed decline of the European Union, her remark seemed to claim that "they could afford it," "it" being the social welfare that the right-leaning government was cutting.

But wealth is a funny thing. It's inaccurate because it doesn't mean the same thing to different people who are wealthy, and it doesn't mean that everyone is in a country is wealthy. There are different metrics for wealth; the metric to conclude that Austria is one of the wealthiest countries in the world is median net worth, which is the total country's wealth divided by the number of inhabitants. At 8 million people, that's not hard to imagine. In fact, most small European countries land toward the top of that metric. In terms of average income, the US nears the top, which may explain the smartphones. But it curious that most countries that are wealthy have a way of calculating their country is the wealthiest.

My point about economic decline referred to wealth as a function of power, in the context of political and economic bargaining. When the metric is total wealth, and the US sits discomfortable at the top, about double the wealth of China. Japan is third. Austria barely makes the top 20, but really maintains bargaining power as function of its membership to the European Union. My point of decline was also intended to relate to the known and explicit American withdrawal from foreign affairs that otherwise shield Europe; specifically militarily, and the subsequent swing of left-leaning countries to the right, in order to fill the void. German had already begun to rebuild its army over the prior two years. Merkel openly stated that Germany could no longer rely on American military protection. [1] Which other countries will follow suit? The militarization of Europe clearly a recall on America carrying the White Man's Burden, a costly role from which America has at other times retreated.


[1] Germany's Merkel calls for a European Union military. Router's November 13, 2018.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-eu-politics-merkel/germanys-merkel-calls-for-a-european-union-military-idUSKCN1NI1UQ

20181208: Ukraine | Japan

Even after more than a month, I still met new Austrian students in the kitchen, so when Kseniya emerged I simply thought she was another timid student whom I hadn’t crossed paths. Ukrainian, bubbly, and talkative, the first conversation I had with her, and most of which that would follow, included a comparison of Austrians to Ukrainians and a reference to a YouTube video. Growing up in the post-USSR, she was pro-West, pro-NGO, pro-Gay Rights, pro-Social Media Millennial. She worked as a journalist but had made a detour in the video arts. Topically she worked like journalist; her most recent project was a series of videos and photos about sex-workers in Poland. The photos were of prostitutes wearing a second-hand wedding dress, but their identity was disguised by a spotlight on their face that left details of the face over-exposed. The accompanying video was the mouths of these woman, close up, talking about their experiences. She showed me a video about the first gay rights parade in Kiev and how the police had to restrain and arrest people who attacked the activists.[1] That was in 2016.

I met Tetsugo Hyakutake while at the ISCP in Brooklyn in 2016. During the residency, curator Walter Seidl saw Hyakutake's work and invited him to exhibit in Camera Austria. In 2018 and Tetsugo invited me to his opening in Graz via Facebook. Like many others from around the world, I accepted the invitation and marked my status as "going." There were two types of “going” on Facebook: physically going and emotional-support going. So when he saw me through the crowd at the opening last night, the red flush that I presumed was his allergy to alcohol blossomed. He was swept away by a manic coordinator of the museum, but before he was, we agreed to meet for a walk through Graz.

Tetsugo work concerned with "the controversial debate concerning the responsibility of Emperor Hirohito, now called Emperor Shōwa, for the wartime atrocities committed by Japanese forces. The media hardly covered the topic of his leadership and responsibility during the war, which was generally considered taboo despite the fact that he had full power over the Japanese military according to the imperial constitution of Japan." Seidl goes on to state,"Tetsugo Hyakutake analyzes moments of Japan’s history since World War II and how they have affected current identity formations within the country, which, for many decades has been under the influence of the United States and, for some, still is."[2]

I recalled seeing these large scale urban photos of bridges and canals in Tokyo in his studio in Brooklyn, as well as his photos that had been treated in chlorine to appear more dated. But the relation that Camera Austria had with Japan was more extensive than just Seidl's Japanphilia; the magazine and organization was co-founded by Seiichi Furuya, a Japanese ex-pat who's lived in Europe since the 1970s and is known for his work about his late wife's suicide, "Christine Furuya-Gössler, Mémoires 1978-1985." [3] The outsider had become an insider, or changed the inside.

Our walk went through the Schloßberg tunnels, down to the Freiheitsplatz, turned through the Stadtpark and ended at Posaune. We ordered a pfandl and talked about the travel, photos, videos and how to live in a city like Tokyo or New York but working abroad. How to stake claims.


[1] “Big turn out for Gay Pride in Kiev,” Associated Press Archive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=585ctLgtwK8
[2] "Tetsugo Hyakutake Postwar Conditions," Walter Seidl, Camera Austria, Graz, Austria, 2018.
https://camera-austria.at/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/ca_ausstellung_hyakutake_folder.pdf
[3] "Biography," Seiichi Furuya
http://www.furuya.at/biography.php



20181210: Wet | Dry

We met Holding Graz at 9am near the Technische Universität. The tour was led by Herr Neumeister who explicitly asked not to be filmed, though he was happy to allow me to mic him for the audio tour, which he led in German. Martin Regelsberger acted as translator and Doubting Thomas. Two additional Holding Graz employees bookcased our tour group, which was about eight artists in total. Almost everyone had a camera with them.

We descended a flight of stairs into the sewer; a wide, channelized stream of clean, clear water flanked on either side by a pedestrian walkway, almost the width of a sidewalk, each flanked by a narrow, 20 cm stream of channelized wastewater, bordering the walls which arched at five meters. Overhead lights cast 4400 kelvin daylight into the segment for the tour. A wooden plank bridged the Grazbach, and Mr. Neumeister began his performance on the sewer stage.

“Das ist schmutzwasser.”

The sewer had been made in response to a fatal flood in 1860.

We came to two channelized rivers that merged into one. The name of one river was named Krabbe, referring to the once abundance of crabs found therein. Mr. Neumeister leapt over a tree branch that partially blocked the the stream and stood at the edge of the Krabbe. Graffiti on the walls explained how bikes could be found there. The tour lasted about 45 minutes and we traveled about five city blocks before surfacing through a door that rose from a sidewalk.

In the evening, Joachim Hainzl starting drawing a map of the city on a notepad. First the old city, east and adjacent to the Mur, walled with a southern gate. The green ring, now the Stadt Park, around the Innere Stadt, was once an open area necessary for defense. Jakomini Platz, developed by a benevolent landowner from what is now Slovenia, was a suburban expansion of the city for a new merchant class. Across the river a series of transportation corridors developed: for a road to Trieste, which had been the Habsburg port, extended up to Vienna. Those working in the profession stayed in the hotels and frequented brothels, both of which were still found in that part of the city. A railway was laid next to the highway, which explained the location of the Hauptbahnhof outside of the city center. The goods that were transported were produced in the industrial centers outside the expanding city, then found in the north, Andritz, west and south. The rail line snaked around the center. The workers for these jobs were housed in the urban developments still found in the neighborhoods, Graz-Neuhart and Puntigamer, which border the industrial zones. This was how Joachim began talking about Foucault, power, and the separation of wet and dry.

Joachim had a massive collection of cigarette boxes. The 55,000+ boxes were his material guide through cultural and colonial history. The collection took up one large, front room of his flat, covering one wall from floor to ceiling and several stacks of cardboard crates through which one must navigate upon entering the room. He showed me several from Vietnam. I was happy to explain the brand Thủ Đô, which commemorated the movement of the capital to from Huế to Hà Nôi, 1954-1964. To collect the packages he looks into garbage bins whenever he travels. Airports were the best.

Joachim explained his love for garbage dating back to his childhood in which he and his sister would wander over the landfill on their family’s property looking for toys. He wore his upbringing on his sleeve and made no apologies for his aspiration for middle class status, power, all the while attempting to subvert the same echelons to which he clambered. He talked about trash in the same way an unattractive man who is adored by a volatile woman finally finds his pride in being pursued. There was an emotional connection, as if the disregard of society were his relative, an abusive step father who sent him to military academy where he had found order, discipline and the animosity of other children but still revered his father.

Joachim described the landfill as ten toy shops, where everything was free. The estranged material had been his artistic material for decades. He aimed to imbue value back into waste by naming it ‘art’ and certifying its authenticity.

The parallel between material waste and social waste is not just in the vernacular used to describe entities that reside in the sphere of disutility, but also targets that demonstrate the power it is to determine something or someone useless. Just as the recycled plastics and metals must be re-used, the criminal must be re-socialized. In the contemporary context, Joachim saw the jobs which were given to immigrants as a repetition of these practices. They were park bathroom cleaners, servants. This was the thesis of Joachim’s study and the trajectory that his work has taken, or rather the reality against which he orientates his work. Joachim reminded me how much I enjoyed reading Michel Foucault.

“...the same walls could contain those condemned by common law, young men who disturbed their families’ peace or squandered their goods, people without profession, and the insane.” [1]

In order to apply the correct treatment, materials–wet or dry–must be separated. Similarly criminals in the 18th century were separated to inhibit the veterans from fostering the novices. The Eastern State Penitentiary is the manifestation of this rationale, the first prison intended for redemption through a direct relation to God, expressing penitence, of course possible only through solitary confinement. 1811.

The plan to separate rain and wastewater from the Mur, in order to treat it was being extended through the development of the Speicherkanal.

Joachim was suspicious toward the mantra of modernity, which he identified as part of the urge for the Zentraler Speicherkanal. In his recounting of the history of sewers in Graz, and the sinkholes which caused contamination of the groundwater, I heard the layers of his disdain and jealousy that his vast research had uncovered; the blatant prioritization of urbanites over the villages downstream; the exercise of political and social power over the less fortunate; and the calcification of these intangible realities in the progress and contestation of the Speicherkanal. “Everything that is culture is good. Everything that is nature or natural urges, desires, is bad.” If one eats too fast, farts or belches–all natural impulse–the person is deemed uncultured, impolite. Perhaps even worse, they were against modernity. Each time Joachim uttered the word ‘bourgeois’ I thought we were nearing the conflagration.

Within the homes of the middle and upper classes, hollow shoots led from interior toilets, down into the cellar where barrels stored the excrement. Laborers hauled these barrels up wooden ramps, which could still be seen Joachim’s apartment. Into my mind came the image of a scheduled worker, hauling drums of heavy human waste, stinking, slopping and spilling onto the street. Shit and piss dripping down the stairs of the basement. Perhaps a servant had a partial duty to clean up the shit, toiling down in the dark, damp cellar. Industries of fertilization and recycling of the excrement arose from the biosolids, but the middle class retaliated by questioning why they should have to pay for a service of hauling away barrels of shit if someone else were profiting from it, and through their protest the middle class forced these companies into bankruptcy. Later the barrels were hauled to a peripheral part of the city, where everything that was unwanted and everything that stank–the slaughterhouse, the cemetery–were dumped off bridges into the Mur. These bridges were still used for dumping snow into the Mur. This was the same part of the city in which Schaumbad was located. Most pointedly, all of these peripheral operations occurred across the Mur, the original, natural and current dividing line of class and culture in Graz.

Later hotels and the homes of upper class introduced water closets, which emptied into the same barrels. But the amount of the fluid used to flush the toilets filled the barrels too quickly. Holes were punctured in the barrels so as to let the water escape, and again the groundwater was contaminated. Again in the name of ‘modernity.’ The water closets were outlawed in response to the contagions, but the power of the upper class, driven by the urge to modernize, changed the law and connected the technology to the channelized sewers. The anecdote illustrated the the hierarchy of power and the position of the upper class, which exude power and legislation for their own convenience, toward their biological functions. Joachim implied that again, the upper class–the business owners, the hydro-power and the mayor–were rehearsing their social renovation under the name of ‘modernity.’ In practicality it was for their own position of benefit. Again modernity had brought back old problems that required new solutions. In the creation of the hydro-power plant, the existing combined sewer overflows cannot drain, so the ZSK must be built.

The waste management industry has de-pressurized the concern for landfills, although our consumption and production habits have only worsened. Joachim’s explanation was that by merely making waste productive, the scrutiny has been alleviated from the capitalist society. The creation of the population as abstract statistics, rather than numerous persons, was a movement toward bureaucratization, which occurred from 1880 to 1910. With the dehumanization of the person to a case number, the separation of mental illness grew exponentially. Everyone had some defect, some abstract ailment manifested in their personality.

All of this discussion, or talking rather, occurred in Joachim’s library, a room opposite his cigarette collection, with floor to ceiling books, all salvaged, organized and treasured by him. The work was ongoing, having been presented as a free library to the citizens of Graz. For him the books represent his aspirations for the middle class, to be in academia, his journey from a humble landfill to a middle-class landfill, organized and stacked to the ceiling.


[1] “Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason,” Michel Foucault, Vintage Books, New York, 1988. pp. 45

20181211: Euros | Dollars

After a third email reminder, I retrieved my 850€ stipend from Afro-Asiatische Institute. For some artists whose standard of living or monthly earnings were lower than mine, thed stipend could have been a substitute for a monthly salary. And if the artist traveling to Graz were able to sublet her apartment, this residency could even be a profit-making endeavor. While I was grateful for the stipend and subsidized housing, as many residencies did not pay a stipend, for me this was not a financially-motivated experience. It was an existential endeavor, a trip buttressed by my concern for my continued survival in a world of environmental collapse.

The double-edged sword of living in an expensive city like New York, London, Singapore or Tokyo was that almost everywhere I travel things were cheaper. But if I was receiving pay, I was probably getting paid less than in my hometown. If the travel was temporary, less than a month, there was the shopping spree experience, a sense that everything was on sale. For example, a beer in a bar in Graz was around 2-3€. In New York, unless it was during happy hour, it was double; $8 if the place wasn’t a dive. If I stayed longer, the period can become a serious economic draw. Regardless of the duration of the residency, income, rent, savings and cost of living were always a topic of conversation with artists.

Regularly I heard that it was better for artists to live in a city with a lower cost of living, like Berlin or Leipzig, Cleveland or Baltimore. Those may have been a good advice if the artist didn’t plan to have an income, or even sell their artwork. (With the lower cost of living was a lower pay rate, and usually a lower price tags on artwork for sale.) The problem with this approach was one became economically stranded: if one lived in an inexpensive city, traveling to major cultural capitals would be prohibitively expensive. One was limited to the places where some income, like a stipend, could offset the travel. Those were lotteries. (Cutting corners by sleeping on a friend’s couch was something that was common in the creative world, but most people who live in popular and expensive cities got this solicitation so frequently that it was a burden to host artist friends who were perpetually broke and perceived as dependent on friends who actually worked to pay rent. After graduate school, I had a different friend ask to sleep on my couch every month. It got old, especially for my roommates. When I stopped accepting them, I stopped see them.)

Whether living in an inexpensive city was a good choice depended on one’s age, or stage in life. Living in an inexpensive city while one experimented with what they learned in school as it related to the world could have been fruitful. But a decade out graduate school, I was quite happy that New York was my home, and not LA, Berlin or San Francisco (although San Francisco is expensive, it lacks a large contemporary cultural art scene). Less expensive cities usually had less competition, which may have been rewarding for younger artists to gain experience with exhibitions or grants, but the glass ceiling was defined by the number of mid and late-career opportunities. Most serious, historically relevant artists had a presence in New York, Paris, London, or Tokyo, because that was where the major galleries and institutions were located and that was where historical discourse was produced. It was almost tautological. Inexpensive cities, or even towns, may have been a good choice after one had established a relationship with galleries or institutions in cultural hubs. But going to the woods as an early and permanent solution for creative output paralleled how retirees went to inexpensive cities to lower their cost of living precisely because they were not earning money. However, if one didn’t have the relationship with a cultural hub and planned to mimic the urban flight of retirees, he was overlooking the point that retirees planned to die soon.

The question of whether to try to live in an expensive or inexpensive city was largely influenced on whether an artist was earning money or not. There was a stigma of mid-career artists working day-jobs, as if one was less of an artist if a day-job was required to offset a cost of living that couldn’t be sustained by the artist’s creative output. Strangely, teaching was perceived as an exception to this stigma. The argument I’d heard by teaching artists was that they are still near to what they loved, they talked about art, or thought about their artwork more by teaching it. I didn’t see the distinction. Yes, there were benefits to teaching, but there were also drawbacks, and the demise of tenure-track positions to adjunct teaching, paired with the salary caps one found in higher education, teaching appeared more like an past alternative, at least in New York and other major cultural capitals. The time off during each summer sounded great, but I noticed more and more colleagues used that time teach in other programs rather than focus on personal creative output, which made me wonder about how they are being compensated in the first place. Compared to not working, teaching sounded like a great idea, but I disagreed with teaching being a preferred alternative to other day jobs, especially if the gig outside of academia had a better pay rate. More importantly, I disagreed with the stigma of day-jobs for artists all together.

A rarely discussed reality was the abundance of trustafarians, people who didn’t have to work because of their family’s affluence. The artworld was full of trustafarians. They competed for the same art studios, awards, prizes, residencies, exhibitions and galleries as artists who came from more modest backgrounds, even though the trustees didn’t need the money. The motivation was prestige, exposure, and meeting other artists. Trustafarians could hire craftsman to produce their work, travel to exhibition openings or talks, buy better equipment, and spend more time socializing with gallerists and curators. Living in a more expensive city, with a higher pay rate, was the closest one compete with a trustafarian, if the parents didn’t leave you a nest egg.

Unless you’re a trustafarian, it was best to strike the idea of living off of your art out of your mind because choosing to not earn money was the opposite of creative freedom. Yes, you could make money from your art, but if making art was motivated by economic freedom, as opposed to using creativity as a tool for a job or enjoyment, most artists who lived off their art were replicating a cottage industry without a sense of market saturation: was making paintings that different than making handbags, horseshoes or hummus, in terms of labor, distribution models, time management and daily life?

Even for those who weren’t trustafarians, like adjunct professors or freelancer, having a temporary or part-time gig offered an advantage in competing for resources over those who thought they could survive strictly on art sales. Income and family wealth were not part of the art award, residency, exhibition selection processes, but were mistakenly thought of as disadvantages by younger artists who had some preconceived notion of what art was or what an artist’s background should be. The art world was not a meritocracy; it was an oligarchy.

Thinking that an income was optional, was a meta-trap; not having an income was an even bigger trap than living in an inexpensive city. How did this play out? Initially, living in an expensive city was a net-loss. Some of the initially losses could be reduced by living in unpopular areas, or suburbs that of inexpensive cities. But as one’s skills and age increased after graduate school, the rate of income should have outpaced the increase of the cost of living, making expensive cities more affordable. This was true even for artists. The creative economies were hungry for talent, and if you were an artist, you likely had some skill that could, with practice or training, become valuable. Larger cities tended to have more industries on which artists could rely for income.

Knowing when to stop earning money and focus on creative output was another double-edged sword. I met many artist who, during a residency, were already using the time to apply to the next residency. In a way, that defeated the point of the residency, but it was a function of attempting to live off the meager infrastructure that was an artist residency. Practically speaking, this was a way to convert a potentially creative occupation with a job of paperwork. Instead of a cottage industry, this was a secretarial position.

20181214: Bathroom | Glühwein

Once a month, the cleaning women (they are all women) of Priesterseminar, in their blue aprons and white pants, cleaned the bathrooms of all the residents. The allotted time was about two and a half hours. If you wanted your bathroom sanitized, you had to be sure to take your keys out of the lock in your door. I considered filming these women in order to make visual Joachim’s claim of the immigrants who clean their bathrooms, but I was fairly certain that these women were locals, and very certain that they were not refugees.

ESC MedienKunst had a small holiday party with cookies and glühwein. Essentially mottled wine that is traditionally consumed outdoors in the freezing cold evening, glühwein facilitated these nachtmarkt stands that popped up near the historic center of Graz, making my walk from my apartment to Hauptplatz almost unbearable. Hundreds of local tourist hung out near the Glockenspiel, laughing and having a good time, swinging their arms, or worse, not moving at all. It made me borderline suicidal. Bah, humbug.

ESC’s party took the best of orange-infused wine with other spices like cinnamon, and paired it with the no-nonsense reality that indoor heating was more comfortable than tradition.

Austrian Recipe

Ingredients
2 bottles of good quality red wine
2 cups of water
juice of 2 lemons
5 oz sugar
6 cloves
2 cinnamon sticks
2 oranges - cut into bitesize pieces
oranges for decoration

How to make it:

Put all ingredients in a pot and bring it close to boil

For additional taste cut 2 oranges into bite size pieces and add to the wine

Let simmer

Remove clove, cinnamon stick before serving it into lightly pre-warmed glasses

Decorate glasses with a slice of orange

Stand outside to clutter up the public space and bring the holiday cheer.

20181219: 1493 | 2019

According to the trifold brochure:

"The Graz Double Spiral Staircase was erected in 1499/1500 by an unknown master builder in the reign of Emperor Maximilian I, the ‘Last Knight.’

The numerous signs of work on the structure attest to the stonemasons who participated in the the construction of the staircase.

The Graz staircase is not the only one of its shape in the architecture of Central Europe, but one of the most significant.

The new reference to antiquity on the threshold to the Renaissance Era is expressed on the staircase facades in the walling of two Roman gravestones from the nearby Roman town of Flavia Solva.

AEIOU Emperor who signed everything but no one knows what AEIO means.”

This was where the tour with Werner began on Wednesday morning. I didn’t expect a cultural trip; actually I expected just a meeting in his office. But he showed me the double spiral, which was just across the street from my apt. I walked past it almost everyday. But I never learned about it because I hadn’t opened the orientation folder that was given to me on the first day at Afro-Asiatische Institut.

The next stop, the Graz Plague Mural, I had seen before and had included in my film. A fresco on the outside of the cathedral recounted God’s message to his disciplines, the church’s role in educating men, the invasion of the Turks into Europe and Graz, and the death toll of the Black Plague on the citizens.

In the Graz Cathedral we looked at the red and cream-colored floor tiles; stones from Salzburg. The Cathedral is a mixture of styles: a gothic ceiling with ceiling skulls replaced with wooden paintings of the Styrian leopard, an Italian Renaissance backdrop behind the altar, which is flanked by two ivory boxes, which I supposed held the sacred remains of saints; the boxes themselves are encased in glass, which itself may be encased in something else in the future. The roof of the cathedral is pierced at the head and aft of the roof with copper turrets, one for air, one for a clock. Both were likely additions around 200 years ago. The doors to the cathedral open with an automatic sensor, introduced in the last five years.

We walked down to the Glockenspiel, which first chimed on Christmas eve of 1905. We had breakfast at Frankowisch, where he told me that you can always see if the an establishment in Austria is serving bad coffee when they serve sparkling water along side. The sparkling hides the bad aftertaste. But with good coffee still water is served, so one can rinse the pallet and enjoy the flavor anew.

When the coffee was almost done and the pastries eaten, almost two hours since we met, Werner mozied to the purpose of the meeting: Holding Graz was not happy. Actually, Werner framed it this way: “You’re lucky. You’re the last person who will be allowed to film at the wastewater treatment plant.” There had been a meeting with the higher ups and Werner had taken some flack.

I was not entirely surprised; in fact I was a little surprised that Holding Graz had allowed me to film there in the first place. It’s completely forbidden in New York. I asked if they were still going to lead students there, for educational purposes. He said yes, but in general Holding Graz was tightening their grip on their image and would not allow Steve Weiss’s college class to tour their Andritz facility.

I understood with their impulse to try to reduce the risk of public criticism, but I disagreed with their approach. The impulse for Holding to decrease transparency was a mistake, I told Werner. Rather they should increase transparency in certain areas. Opacity was the reason these three parties of environmentalist Austrians were at each other’s necks. Openness, dialogue and cross-collaboration was the only way to gracefully produce the democratic future.

The Landezeughaus was the next stop on the tour, an enormous, historic building, the largest armory in the world, storing enough weapons and armor for 10,000 men. It was right behind the Mayor’s building in Hauptplatz and closed in the winter, except for guided tours. Visually, the Landezeughaus is stunning: all dark wood structures holding mostly dark wood muskets, swords and armor. It served as the stockade against Napoleon’s men in 1809; the more expensive armor expressed the wealth of its production but also the current owners.

During lunch at Schmankerlstube I perfected the rhythm and patience of Graz. No question can be answered in more than two sentence and between the answer and the next question a duration of silence that is at least as long as another question must endure. It was an excruciating pace, but it allowed both parties to essentially eat at the same rhythm.

We both ordered Halbbeuschel, veal lungs stew with a dumpling in the middle. Toward the end of the meal, Werner invited me to join him and some other water enthusiasts to sail the Adriatic sea in the summertime. I was flattered. We paid, walked to Hauptplatz where I began to apologize for any trouble I may have caused him with his superiors. He answered that he was an old rabbit and knew how to carry on. Then, under the Weikhard Uhr, we shook hands and he dashed off to catch a tram back to work.

Halbbeuschel

Innards can be found very often in the Viennese cuisine and are highly estimated amongst gourmets. The Beuschel (veal lungs) supposedly is a Jewish dish and is that prominent in the Viennese cuisine that the term has found its way even into everyday speech and is colloquially used as a synonym for „lungs“. Therefore, a „Beuscheltelefon“ (literally: lung telephone) is the medical diagnosis tool stethoscope. Enjoy!

Serves: 4
Ingredients:
Beuschel:
600 g (1,4 lb) veal lungs
1 veal heart
1 root vegetables (parsley, carrots, celery stalk)
6 peppercorns
3 allspice corns
1 bay leaf
1 spring thyme (small)
1 onion (small)
salt
Final stage:
40 g (1/8 cup) butter
30 g (1/4 cup) flour
1 cooking spoon capers
1 onion (small) , halved
1 anchovy fillet (finely chopped)
1 clove garlic (chopped)
lemon rind (grated)
1 tbsp parsley (finely chopped)
dash of vinegar
sugar
pinch of ground marjoram
smidgen of mustard
2 tbsps sour cream
2 tbsps cream
dash of lemon juice
salt
ground pepper
4 tbsps goulash sauce (for serving)

Preparation:

Separate the veal lung from the windpipe and gullet. Soak well, piercing several holes in the lung so that water can get into the cavity. Fry the onion, cut surfaces down, in a pan until golden brown. Fill a large pot with cold water, add lungs and heart and bring to boil. Add to the pot the root vegetables, peppercorns, allspice corns, bay leaf, thyme, salt and onion. Simmer until meat is tender.

Remove the lung after about 1 hour and rinse with cold water to cool. Leave the heart in the stock for at least another 30 minutes, until very tender, then remove. Heat some of the stock in another saucepan and bring to boil. Meanwhile, cut the lung and heart finely, removing any cartilage.

For the final stage, heat some butter in a casserole dish. Sprinkle in the flour and sauté until light brown. Add the finely chopped ‘innards seasoning': capers, onion, anchovy fillet, garlic, lemon rind, and parsley. Let draw on low heat for a few minutes. Add the reduced stock, stir well and cook for 15-20 minutes until thick. Add the innards and season with salt, pepper, vinegar, sugar, marjoram and mustard. As soon as the ragout is thick, stir in the sour cream and cream. Simmer for another 5-10 minutes. Add lemon juice to taste and serve with a few drops of hot goulash juice and serve with bread dumplings.