ARTICLES
DEAF 2003: DATA KNITTING
By Sarah Cook , 4 July 2003
Featured in Mute Vol
1, No. 26
(Summer/Autumn
2003)
During the DEAF evening programme curated and hosted by Sadie Plant, artist Brian Duffy showed
us the secret, electronically musical, lives of toys he’d purchased for a pound or less at car boot sales
and flea markets in and around Birmingham. I couldn’t help but feel a ‘Eureka’ moment wash over me
as I watched him solder wires together to get new melodies out of the preprogrammed functions of
the old Casio keyboard he was handling. It was as if the elusive feminist cybertheorist had unearthed
for us a national treasure: Duffy’s work and thought process reads as a perfect contemporary personification of the
Heideggerian philosophy of technology that which was readyathand can, with the flick of a switch, be made
presenttohand, revealing the third mind of the material with which one is ‘collaborating’. The festival as a whole
seemed to be almost entirely concerned with this type of weaving (obvious analogy, sorry). Philosophies of the
latent and implied use values of technologies (casio keyboards, databases, archives, the Internet, software) were
interlaced with their practical and socioeconomic applications (the generation of new knowledge, new sounds,
pictures and even communities). On one side, in the symposium, stood Manuel de Landa and Scott Lash, deftly
explaining the theoretical differences between classical and contemporary archives (the former are symbolic,
uphold tradition, and classify truth, the latter are semiotic, collective, and hence indexical to the real). On the other
side, in the exhibition, stood the art works of Josh On & Futurefarmers (They Rule, 2001) and Jonah BruckerCohen
(Policestate Carnivore Client, 2002), each mining data networks for information on the structure of multinationals or
the FBI’s blacklist of ‘terrorist’ triggerterms.
Sadie Plant stated that she hoped to demonstrate William Gibson’s adage that ‘the street finds its own use for
things’, but at the same time continually reflect on the fact that we live in a world not of ‘things’ but of ‘relations’. This
opening gambit proved useful for a reading of most of the works in the exhibition, ‘From Wunderkammer to
Metadata’. Some demonstrations of this field of relations were downright awful: Jeffrey Shaw’s travelling production
Web of Life (2002), which is lauded as an interdisciplinary networked generative project but appears as a fancy
scanner and 3D projection of ‘organic patterns’, giraffes and landscapes imperceptibly based on the lines in the
visitor’s hand; and Geert Mul’s 100,000 Streets (2002), another ‘kaleidoscopic’ ‘honeycomb’ of images (this time of
cities around the world), found via an alternative web browser but triggered across the bank of TV screens by the
visitor stepping repeatedly on a black rubber platform. Others were charmingly obvious if dated: the now seminal
cumulative and nonhierarchical database of everyday objects, Pocketful of Memories by George Legrady (2001) or
Thecla Schiphorst and Susan Kozel’s V2produced project Whisper (2003), which allows six participants wearing
‘intelligent garments’ to interact with one another and through their proximity, movements and breath patterns
make visible and audible their digital effects on the network linking them together.
Taken together, these works, presentations, and the comments of the symposium invitees (who included Brian
Massumi and Arjun Appadurai) showed the rift in the weft of the discursive fabric around data knitting: can
technology be both latent (i.e. have inherent characteristics which we seek to expose and make manifest) and
modifiable? Or, more accurately, are we really modifying and changing the structures of the technologies when we
knit them together into a network, or is this process one of necessary collaboration with technology’s latent
potential? More research is clearly needed.
Dutch Electronic Art Festival (DEAF) 3: Data Knitting // 25 February – 9 March 2003 // Various locations in
Rotterdam and Eindhoven, The Netherlands
DEAF [http://deaf.v2.nl]