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~ understanding the in-between.

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Tag Archives: Jane Grant

Mise-en-blog. Part III.

19 Friday Apr 2013

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Darrin Verhagen, Haco, Jane Grant, Joseph Nechvatal, Jussi Parikka, Kane X Faucher, Robin Rimbaud

IMG_1223The final instalment of this series brings us face to face with the insane brilliance and verbal and neural pyrotechnics of Kane X Faucher. I can’t pretend to understand parts of what Kane’s on about much of the time, and  here he’s outdone himself. It’s certainly fun trying to keep up though. Massive thanks to everyone who has been a part of this.

Mise-en-blog. Part II.

14 Sunday Apr 2013

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Darrin Verhagen, Jane Grant, Joseph Nechvatal, Jussi Parikka, Robin Rimbaud

IMG_1407With a predictable url to boot, for anyone following the thread of course. On which more later.

33 1/3 Blog: Noise Matters. Part II of III. 

With amazing contributions from Darrin Verhagen, Jussi Parikka, Jane Grant, Joseph Nechvatal, Robin Rimbaud.

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Mise-en-blog. I of III.

13 Saturday Apr 2013

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Darrin Verhagen, Haco, Jane Grant, Joseph Nechvatal, Jussi Parikka, Kane X Faucher, Robin Rimbaud

IMG_1398Mise-en-blog. I of III.

In what is undoubtedly a somewhat perverse move, here is a link to another blog that I was asked to do by Bloomsbury for the release of THE BOOK. Slightly odd to read your own words filtered through a PR specialist / marketing department.

My opening gambit really only a means to get to the good stuff from good friends and colleagues who were generous enough to offer musings. Thanks to them all. Parts II and III to come.

Jane Grant, neural noise, ghosts.

15 Friday Mar 2013

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Daniela Cascela, ghost, Jane Grant, John Matthias, neurocognitive, noise, philosophy, signal, thought

I’ve recently had the extreme good fortune of corresponding with Jane Grant. Some of her work can be seen here, here and here. Really great stuff.

She also shared with me a paper written with John Matthias, Between signal and noise: potency, potentiality and the uncertain moment. They write:

Between signal and noise is a space between something but not nothing. The signal to noise ratio is a measure of desire and its opposite. The signal, clean, clear and crisp speaks of precision, of information transferred, understood and explicit.

Noise however is its chaotic partner, an undercurrent of information, not yet formed, mutable and implicit. Signals are measured, removed of noise, their code, employed and translated as information, as the opposite of nothing, or nothing structured enough to be factored in. The signal must be a singular stream, a positive, the binary 1 to noise’s 0. And yet it appears that noise is the underlying endogenous stimulation of the brain and many other biological systems. Sensory neurons are extremely noisy.

And later:

Between the signal and noise are the ghosts of memories resonating, coming into being, aside and between sensory information, they are implicit, felt, ripples of affect, oscillating at frequencies both endogenous and exogenous.

This comes in a discussion of Grant’s work “Ghost” at the Instanbul ISEA 2011.

It’s a fascinating work that really lays out some of the things that have been working my mind for a while in relation to the link between spectrailty horror and noise, but it adds a really complex neuronal aspect to the argument. For me the link comes precisely because noise evades our taxonomic categories, it prevents us from being able to entertain a transcendent relation to something in which things would be “in their place”. Where i perhaps differ from many people is in thinking that this doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s “chaotic”. I think that the idea of noise only as some kind of anarchic, chaotic force has led people down the wrong garden path for quite some time. I think on the contrary, as I see Jane doing here, that it’s both the background out of which things are formed, and everything, not just sound, but at the same time it is carried into those forms as they start to take shape. This is not to say that noise becomes signal, though, rather that signal contains noise within it, can never actually separate itself off from the plane of noise out of which it is born, and that what the trace of noise talks to us of is precisely the process of formation, of forming, of figuration that takes place in any deployment of an expression (i.e. everything if ontology is expressive).

So following Jane’s lead here… what if the whole idea of a ghost, linked to memory, might in fact be a noisy manifestation of the brain’s own processes. In other words, what happens (and i profess to be very far from qualified to answer this question) when the brain’s processes and operations are deployed / experienced without one being aware of the manifest content of the thought process in place. Can one be aware of a brain activity that isn’t sublimated underneath a representation of some THING, of the contents of thought, underneath something that we could actually call a thought? In relation to music, for instance, I would say that noise is not just the Futurists and John Cage, but rather noise is present in all music but we often don’t hear it because precisely we adopt a transcendent relation to other parts of music, to melody for instance that leads us to believe that a line just had to be that way, but of course it doesn’t, any musical line is just an arbitrary collection of different sonic intensities that seem to fall into a necessary order because of a long process of cultural over coding and habitus of listening. And so perhaps with thought. We are used to having ‘thoughts’, and to thinking through what they seem to be telling us; but what if one doesn’t concentrate on what they are telling us but on the telling, they would be manifesting themselves in far stranger ways, they would be like your ghost i imagine, at a cerebral level, a kind of semi-formed body without a body, something that seems to have some distinguishable contours yet which evades us. And herein would be perhaps a link to the art of listening. Must get my hands on Daniela Cascela’s new book.

Recent Posts

  • Empty Gallery, HK: “Times Like These: Philippe Grandrieux in Hong Kong”
  • At times like these, let beauty strengthen our resolve.
  • MEUTRIÈRE. Text by Manuela Morgaine. Translation by Greg Hainge.
  • Radio noise.
  • Copie conforme.
  • Mise-en-blog. Part III.
  • Mise-en-blog. Part II.
  • Mise-en-blog. I of III.
  • Machine art.
  • Dead Silence.

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