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In this essay I will explore the anthropological notion
of “non-places”, with reference to the related
essay by Marc Auge Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology
of Supermodernity . I will apply this notion specifically
to the theme of travel, and how this is engaged within the
selected works of art by contemporary visual artists.
As a vessel for this exploration I will use one story from
Italo Calvino’s collection of surreal short stories
Invisible Cities :
CONTINUOUS CITIES - 2
“ If on arriving at Trude I had not read the
city’s name written in big letters, I would have thought
I was landing at the same airport from which I had taken
off.
The suburbs they drove me through were no different
from the other, with the same little garnish and yellowish
houses. Following he same signs we swung around the same
flower beds in the same squares. The downtown streets displayed
goods, packages, signs that had no changed at all.
This was the first time I had come to Trude, but I
already know the hotel where I happened to be lodged; I
had already heard and spoken my dialogues with the buyers
and seller of hardware; I had ended the days identically,
looking through the same goblets at the same swaying navels.
Why come to Trude? I asked myself. And I already wanted
to leave.
“ You can resume your flight whenever you like,
“ they said to me, “ but you will arrive at
another Trude, absolutely the same, detail by detail. The
world is covered by the sole Trude, which does not begin,
nor end. Only the name of the airport changes.” (Italo
Calvino “Invisible Cities”)
About Continuous Cities:
This collection of short stories is written in the form
of dialogue between Marco Polo, one of the iconic figures
of travel, and Kublai Khan, the famous emperor. Each time
Marco Polo returns from his travels, Kublai Khan invites
him to describe the cities he has visited. Marco Polo is
delighted with this task and describes the various cities
he has passed through, all of them unique as well as similar
to each other.
The story I have chosen to employ for this essay is Marco
Polo’s story of city of Trude titled Continuous Cities-2.
Italo Calvino’s story depicts a world of continuous
uniformity. Despite the sense of movement in the story,
and the prominence of travel, which might usually suggest
a process of discovery, wonder and insights in new places
or ways of life, we are left with an overall mood of stagnation,
rather than such a productive and fulfilling activity. The
sense of familiarity in the city of Trude is negative and
far from comforting; it is almost oppressive. Instead of
the excitement of new sensations through change, we are
left with a numbness of repetition.
This disillusionment of travel, leading to a very bleak
view of the world we inhabit, a world devoid of variety
and inspiration, may seem extreme or exaggerated, but it
is nevertheless an idea so powerfully presented that it
is difficult to ignore. To say the least, there is an undeniable
sense of recognition, in the haunting sentence “The
world is covered by a sole Trude, which does not begin,
nor end. Only the name of the airport changes”.
This core idea of Continuous Cities 2 is described by Calvino
as his own observation of a common contemporary lifestyle
characterised by continuous speed and movement, so much
so that “cities are turning into one single city;
a single endless city where the differences which once characterized
each of them are disappearing. This idea…came to me
from the way that many of us now live: we continually move
from one airport to another, to enjoy a life that is almost
identical no matter what city you find yourself in.”
Calvino is, of course suggesting, that the easy capacity
of movement makes for a neglect of activity and identity
within the grounding of a single, once individual place,
precisely because this is more difficult that travelling
between such places. He exemplifies this with an observation
of Paris, the city he once lived in.
“You could say that at the rush hour when the city
streets are blocked by traffic, I can get to Italy more
quickly than, say, to the Champs Elysees. I could almost
commute; we are now close to a time when it will be possible
to live in Europe as though it were one single city.
At the same time, we are close to the time when no city
will be able to be used as a city; you waste more time on
short trips than on long journeys.”
The following conclusion Calvino makes, on the current
nature of travelling internationally, addressing the common
cliché` that the world is getting smaller through
modern technology and ease of movement, conveys an increasing
sense of limbo in the defining notions of ‘place’.
“That's it: international journeys as much as short
journeys in the city are no longer an exploration of a series
of different places; they are simply movements from one
point to another between which there is an empty interval,
a discontinuity, a parenthesis above the clouds if it as
air trip, and a parenthesis beneath the earth it is a city
journey.”
This sense of limbo, suggests a homogeneity of cities;
cities reduced to mere templates of cities, which leave
little room for individual recognition. This is the indeterminate
state, which is addressed and defined by Mark Auge.
ABOUT NON-PLACES:
‘If place can be defined as relational, historical
and concerned with identity, then a space which can not
be defined as relational, or historical, or concerned with
identity will be a non-place.’
Marc Auge in his book Non Places – Introduction to
an anthropology of supermodernity argues that supermodernity
creates non-places. The main characteristic of supermodernity
is excess, so non-places are results or perhaps some kind
of side effects of the excess of time, excess of space and
excess of ego. Hence supermodernity is created through the
logic of excess.
Excess of time, Auge argues, is result of the extension
of life expectancy which has brought social changes so that
the coexistence of three generations changed into the possible
coexistence of four generations.
Similarly, the excess of space is correlative with the
shrinking of the planet and its change of scale, caused
by technological advances set off by rapid means of transport
and communication such as flying, satellite communication
and the internet - the means that offer fast and sometimes
even instant access to information or events.
Excess of ego is the result of both of the other two excesses.
It is particularly enhanced by the contemporary liberal
political language of individual freedoms as well as by
advertising apparatus.
Furthermore, Marc Auge defines non-places as having no
identity, no history and no urban relationships. Non-places
are temporary spaces for passage, communication and consumption;
the motorways seen from car interiors, motorway restaurants/service/petrol
stations, large supermarkets, duty-free shops and the passenger
transit lounges of world airports.
Non-places are contrary to places. They represent the decline
of the public man and the rise of the self-obsessed man.
Non-places are such due to their solitary arrangement, shielded
by pin and credit-card numbers, as well as passwords that
create safety as well as solitude and alienation.
As non-places are created by excess of time, space and ego,
the distinctive examples of non-places can be found in relation
to travel as human activity. Expansion of the travel industry
is mainly attributed to the development of new technologies.
For example, the air traffic industry is based on the progress
of aircraft technology, the car-hire trade is based on the
advancement of the car industry, while fly-and-drive travel
business is based on both previously mentioned scientific
developments, and so forth. These new industrial developments
created the foundation on which, in the anthropology of
supermodernity, the excess of time, as well as excess of
space and ego is shaped by new possibilities of fast (er)
travelling, possibilities of visiting larger territories,
and indulging in the whole process.
I aim to explore the significance of such non-places in
contemporary art, by addressing some of their artistic portrayals
against selected examples that Auge identifies, in order
to present a related view of a modern urban landscape and
a sense of existence within such a landscape.
The AIRPORT
“ If on arriving at Trude I had not read the
city’s name written in big letters, I would have thought
I was landing at the same airport from which I had taken
off.”
The airport is a distinctive non-place of travel. It is
just a provisional space on the worldwide network of air
travel. There is no history in the airport’s commercial
identity at all. The memory in the airport lounges go back
merely to the previous 24 hours of flight arrivals and departures,
sometimes even less, depending on the frequencies of the
flight and the availability of free airport runway slots.
The car parks, access infrastructure and subways, which
often surround large world airports, are all non-places
too.
Thomas Hirschhorn’s installation World Airpor’
is an artist’s recreation of the caricature that public
spaces at airports have become. In this humoristic and ironic
depiction of large airports, including all the accessories
one expects: airplanes, television monitors, airport lounge
chairs, car park and so forth, all made in everyday craft
materials such as foil, wood, cellophane, paper-mache, baking
foils or sellotape… Thomas Hirschon gives us his statement
on the suspension of national boundaries in a world connected
by air flights and fast exchange of information.
Despite its humour, Hirschhorn's work is sad, mourning
the loss of identities through technological advance and
globalisation as one of the results. This artwork is an
allegorical reminder of the loss of identity in places like
this and some kind of memorial and triumph of travel as
a commodity, rather than a unique personal journey.
Another artist which work is connected with the world airport
is Julian Opie, whose work Imagine that You Are Moving was
installed at Heathrow Airport.
This work is represented by four large light boxes of stylised
British landscape displayed in airport’s transit passengers
lounges - the large hall where international passengers
wait for their connection flights to different countries
or perhaps continents.
As transit passengers don’t actually ever enter Britain,
but just use the airport as a convenience and the airport
lounge to wait for their connecting flights, the title of
the work addresses the viewer to make their waiting time
easier, perhaps inviting the viewer to take this opportunity
to see the British landscape which otherwise will not be
seen, making it significant as public work as it aims to
fill a void in a non-place, without claiming to be a realistic
replacement of an actual place, as its stylised pictorial
quality demonstrates.
Video work Threshold to the Kingdom by Mark Wallinger is
again inspired by the airport, but this time it is the London
City airport doors that automatically open and close and
allow arriving travellers to gradually and weightlessly
walk toward the camera and out of view followed by gaze
of a suspicious airport official, sitting in the left corner
of the lounge… The sound that accompanies the video
is Giorgio Allegri’s Miserere mei [Latin: have mercy
(!)]. The sound draws the viewer’s attention to the
allegory of arrival to Heaven, God’s Kingdom - in
this case the United Kingdom (thus the title).
‘’ Every air traveller knows that behind the
airport's doors are the beady eyes of the state's border
controls and - a small step away, at least for the imagination
- the apparatus that devises and manages the UK's immigration
and asylum laws. The desperate people who don't make it
across the threshold into the Promised Land (by air or any
other means) are screened from view, literally and metaphorically.
In most cases, one suspects, their sin is simply to have
been unlucky.”'
Mark Wallinger’s video of people walking through
‘International Arrivals’ door on the airport
remind us also of strange and bizarre sensation one experiences
at places like this – lost among numbers of other
unknown and probably lost people, looking for the right
door to enter while keeping your travel documents safe,
as these documents are the only proof of one’s identity,
rather than the place itself.
All three works raise the issue of travel both as a leisurely
and a non-leisurely activity, as some people travel for
leisure reasons, others for non-leisure and some even for
desperate purposes. The latter further emphasises the airport
as a non-place, an indication of possible displacement.
Although it essentially brings together a variety of travellers
and their purposes, Threshold to the Kingdom, leaves us
with a sense of the airport as a vast no-man’s land
as well as implying that it is nevertheless a place which
is a privilege to reach.
The Motorway:
“ Following he same signs we swung around the
same flower beds in the same squares.”
The Motorway is another typical non-place of travel; anonymous
and temporary. Along the motorway, places become the readings
of non-places and abstract direction signs. Large photographs
of motorways by Andreas Gursky, for example Ruhrtal , deal
with motorway as non-place of supermodernity. In these photographs
Gursky depicts the lost identity of the German idyllic landscape.
These monumental photographs show the huge fly-over of a
large motorway. On one of them it shows a fly-over that
diagonally wings over a tiny man that walks on calm and
tranquil green field underneath of it. Behind a giant post
of the fly-over, hides a leaf-less and seemingly small tree,
with only its outstretched branches visible, like two arms
gesturing surrender. The size of the man and the field compared
with the sheer size of the fly-over is unsettling. It is
addressing the issue of the size of the individual in comparison
with the gigantic products of technological development,
symbolising a sense of alienation.
These photographs gives no story at all – they just
document unnamed fields, unnamed man and, unnamed (and unbearable)
motorway. However, this sense of the unknown and the desolate
holds its own atmosphere, with an almost poetic quality.
Gursky is an example of contemporary artists who make use
of the non-place, and adopt it into their own artistic vision.
Another artist that deals with anonymous non-places is
Hans Op de Beeck. In his installation Location 1 he depicts
the night time on the vacant crossroads in a desolate landscape.
The installation is illuminated with a dark blue light and
wisps of mist to give the impression of night time. There
is no sign of human life although the illuminated traffic
lights carry out their duty like well-trained soldiers:
green, orange, red, green, orange, red … and keep
controlling the traffic that is not there.
This motionless and silent crossroads, signifying a sort
of eternal nowhere is probably the suburb of some ghost
town where, in spite that it is vacant, the world carries
on without anyone. The haunting mood of Calvino’s
Trude is echoed here. This could be any place, any town,
city or village; it may just be a crossroads on road between
them, as there are no people to characterise it, giving
the work an eerie limbo-like quality.
Thinking of motorways, one cannot avoid the images of Wim
Wenders’s film Paris – Texas with impressive
scenes of two tiny people in their tiny old car underneath
of enormous and nameless double fly-over of some American
spaghetti junction. This unusual road movie tells story
about an insomniac man lost in his own personal circumstances.
To add to the story itself, Wender is using a lot of images
of empty American motorways and junctions with many road
signs that only signifies places that Travis (the main character)
will not visit. The alienation of non-places is emphasised
here by his lack of settlement.
Wim Wenders did numerous photographs of American motorways
such as his collection of Haiku Photos .
In this collection of photographs, Wim Wenders also depicts
bare motorways (highways) with road signs and names of the
places one passes by and never visits. Those places are
only experienced by motorists as bare names written on the
metal road signs along the motorway, seen through the car
windscreen or through their rear view mirrors.
The motorists who pass by these motorways never visit those
places. Those places remain totally anonymous and will remain
in their memory as points on the map, the actual places
reduced to their written names only.
Julian Opie’s installation of paintings titled Roadscapes
depicts unidentifiable and unknown empty landscapes along
the unknown motorways and roads as well as around undistinguished
towns and cities.
The only element that connects these painting is the road
itself – each painting depicts a portion of the road
along which the viewer is (apparently) travelling. Some
of these paintings show trains and cars, some only trees,
fields and mountains, but none of those could be recognised
or identified. All of those are non-places too. Opie’s
stylisation of the landscape, his uncomplicated outlines
and block colours, are reminiscent of a children’s
picture book (indeed, the features of cars, trees etc. provide
subjects for the game “I spy”, a game famously
played in transit, to pass the time and avoid cries of “Are
we there yet?”) evokes the sense of travel as a detachment
from a grounded reality.
The Petrol ( Service ) Station:
“ The downtown streets displayed goods, packages,
signs that had no changed at all. “
Built as convenience stop along the motorway, the petrol/service
station is just as provisional and temporary space on the
global network of road travel, as airports lounges are.
There is no history in the service stations or identity
due to its solitary arrangement.
Service station is a dehumanising place, where all are
reduced to the stereotypes of traveller and consumer, and
individuality holds no currency. Being on the road, choices
for travellers are limited by necessity, so one is very
often forced to use and consume whatever is on the offer:
low-cost and unhealthy food and drinks, often unclean toilets
etc.
Thinking of petrol stations, as another non-place of travel,
the first artwork that springs to mind is Edward Hooper’s
painting Gas . The painting shows exterior of petrol station
in a deserted landscape at the very entrance of a forest.
“ The manager has left his cabin to check the level
of a pump. It is warm inside and the light is as brilliant
as that of the midday sun which washes across the forecourt
“
As most other Hopper paintings, Gas deal with the issue
of isolation that is enhanced with the approaching shadows
of the endless woodland in the background. Petrol stations
are often located in remote, far away places, like the ones
on motorways, which are part of service stations.
Anther work that deals with service stations is Hans Op
de Beeck in his installation Location 5. This installation
is actually a reconstruction of a motorway service station.
The moulded scenery includes a replica road with street
lamps that decrease in size to give the viewer a feeling
of perspective. The installation is set in the darkened
interior and includes an empty kitchenette, a large and
uniformed dining area with a couple of solitary persons
sitting around the table. They are staring through the restaurant’s
panoramic windows toward the night-time empty motorway.
The uncertainties and loneliness of travel hang in the atmosphere,
in the oppressive presence of darkness, either approaching
or already surrounding. The solitary human figures in both
works, like Gursky’s Ruhrtal are dwarfed and alienated
by these non-places.
The Supermarket
“I had ended the days identically, looking through
the same goblets at the same swaying navels.”
Supermarkets are also defined as non-places of travelling,
as to reach the supermarket one has to travel, since supermarkets
are usually located away from the centres of the cities.
They are located in large and often deserted industrial
and/or suburban areas, easily accessible only by cars and
almost completely unreachable by foot.
Designers of supermarkets were obviously trying to create
some kind of urban identity within these places. The intention
was most probably to convince the people to use them not
only for shopping purposes, but to socialise too. Most certainly,
this would result in the increase of supermarket’s
profit, as people, if socialising in the area, would also
consume more therefore spend more too.
Within supermarkets, the pedestrian areas and café’s
are often also included. As these places have no identity
of their own at all as they are as provisional as the other
mentioned spaces. They are actually mostly used by the homeless
or others who are perceived to be outcasts of society, sometimes
hanging around or begging, while other people just come
there, to buy their shopping and leave as soon as they can.
Global chains of supermarkets are also the places where
most of people recognises and often only buys the corporate
brand logos.
This particular issue is addressed in Andreas Gursky’s
photograph 99 Cent - an extra large photo of interior of
apparently American supermarket (I said American as prices
are displayed in cents and $). This photo is digitally over
saturated to accent the brightness and seduction of colours
of supermarket’s displayed goods. Everything is so
cheap that large posters of 99-cent prices are proudly displayed
in the background.
This image is at first sight pleasing to the eye, an interesting
and beautifully composed scene. The deliberate manipulation
to the image demonstrates his “painterly use of colour”.
He is making a non-space into a work of art, as well as
making a comment on our garish and mass-produced consumer
culture, as Reimschneider and Grosenick suggest of his work
as “…a kind of photographic stock-taking distilled
into symbols of Western Civilisation.” The significance
of this image lies in its recognition of the non-place as
a constant contemporary reality.
“Gursky’s images seem unreal and yet true at
the same time and this paradox between the familiar and
hyper real makes Gursky’s work a treat and wonder
to see.”
The non-place depicted as a subject worthy of conscious
artistic inspiration is an idea demonstrated by Wim Wenders’
Safeway. This photograph shows the back wall of an American
Safeway supermarket. An image of such a high wall, dwarfing
the small, single employee side door, may seem imposing
or forbidding, were it not for the sense of warmth generated
by the blue sky and the strong shadows of the Safeway letters
created by the sun. Even the detail of the yellow doorstep
of the side-door complements the warmth of the image. Although
this is indeed a view of a non-place, Wenders has chosen
it as a subject, not in order to convey a sense of alienation
or displacement, but in order to note and emphasise a pleasing
aesthetic and a meaningful quality. This is conveyed not
only by the prominent primary colours (the blue sky, the
red letters and the yellow doorstep), or the inviting and
secure sense suggested by the words Safe Way, but also by
the fact that this image was evocative to Wender’s
haiku poem which accompanies it.
A few moments ago,
someone probably stood on the yellow step
in front of that door,
smoked a cigarette,
flipped the butt into the hot street
and went back to work inside.
Behind the wall and its promise
of a safe way,
it was certainly nice and cool.
Despite this being part of just another supermarket, another
piece of anonymous architecture, Wenders has succeeded to
breathe life into it, giving this piece of urban landscape
its own character, bringing a different dimension by imagining
a story behind the wall.
This is an example of the sense of a subtle beauty that
exists within the seemingly mundane or desolate non-places,
alongside their alienating quality. This juxtaposition is
what makes them interesting subjects for works of art, as
Wenders himself has suggested: "The appearance of graphics
and writing and hieroglyphs and type-face, both in the city
and the desert landscape, is an enormous part of the American
culture, and extraordinarily unique. Americans seem to look
down on that. For me it's on a level with Rembrandt."
Conclusion:
Are all cities becoming the same as Trude in Calvino’s
‘Continuous Cities’? Do non-places diminish
our sense of identity? Should this increasing sense of animosity
be viewed as entirely negative?
The artists I have selected to convey a presence of non-places
all retain a sense of the alienation that these places generate.
But at the same time, they portray them as visionary landscapes
which create their own aesthetic, either through artistic
adaptation; a sense of poetic license or simply in the act
of choosing them as a subject for their art.
These artists choose them as subjects because, despite
their initial bleakness, these non-places have something
to say to us.
Although a non-place, a lack of place, may signify a loss
of identity, it simultaneously creates its own unique experience
of new and previously unexpected identities.
I am leaving this journey through the non-paces of travel
with one sentence on my mind:
“ You can resume your flight whenever you like,
“ they said to me, “ but you will arrive at
another Trude, absolutely the same, detail by detail. The
world is covered by the sole Trude, which does not begin,
nor end. Only the name of the airport changes.”
Edita Marelic (2005)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Auge, Marc
Non Places – Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity
London:Verso 1995
Berger, John
Ways of Seeing
London: Penguin Books 1972
Calvino, Italo
Invisible Cities
London: Vintage 1974
Cooper, Robert
Andreas Gursky
http://www.hackwriters.com/Gursky.htm
De Botton, Alain
The Art of Travel
London: Penguin Books 2002
De Oliveira, Nicolas, Oxley, Nicola, Petry, Michael.
Installation Art in the New Millennium-The Empire of the
Senses
London: Thames and Hudson 2003
Goldberg, Vicki
Wim Wenders and the Landscape of Desire
New York Times
http://www.wim-wenders.com/news_reel/2003/dec-landscape-of-desire.htm
Kwon, Miwon
One Place after Another-Site Specific Art and Locational
Identity
Massachusetts: Institute of technology, 2002
McLaughlin, Martin
The Hermit in Paris: Autobiographical Writings Italo Calvino,
(Translator),
http://rodcorp.typepad.com/rodcorp/2004/02/if_in_a_continu.html
Reimschneider, Burkhard and Grosenick,Uta
Art Now
Koln, Taschen, 2001
Wenders, Wim
Safeway, Corpus Christi, Texas
http://www.wim-wenders.com/news_reel/2002/pftsote1.htm
Withers, Rachel
Artforum,
Summer 2001
read also: ABOUT
MARCO POLO, INVISIBLE CITIES and VISUAL ART |