counter hit xanga

Home




About

The New Factographers is an evolving network of Boston-based sonic bricoleurs, moving image interventionists, experimental documentarians, urban dramaturges and critical theorists working across various media to re-interpret the particularity of place. The name is inspired by a strain of the 1920s Russian avant-garde.



Process

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Research

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Factography Background

Jesse / March 29th, 2008 / , ,

factography_october.jpg

Some material on factography, a strain of the 1920s Soviet avant-garde…

1) In Benjamin Buchloch’s 1984 essay “From Faktura to Factography,” he uses factography to generally describe the second-period of the Soviet avant-garde and its “descriptive, self-styled journalistic ideal of art” as opposed to the first period, characterized by Malevich and others whose experiments were focused on abstract painting.

2) The most comprehensive source on factography I’ve found is October 118 from Fall 2006, committed entirely to the movement and its main figure Sergei Tret’iakov. (Download entire 62 mb issue here). Soviet avant-garde scholar Devin Fore has a lot of relevant passages in the Introduction:

Despite indisputable filiations between factography and practices outside of Russia which were similarly engaged in the project of chronicling modernization and its concomitant transformations to the conditions of human experience, there are critical distinctions to be made between the Soviet factographic avant-garde and documentary as it is traditionally conceived. The chief divergence is one of epistemological disposition: if the term “documentary,” which was created in 1926 by filmmaker John Grierson (who derived it, it seems, from the French word “documentaire”), came to designate work that strives to create the most objective depiction of realitypossible, then this passive and impartial representational practice could not be farther from factography’s ambitions. Indeed, Sergei Tret’iakov, the most famous figure in the movement and the focal point of this issue of October, founded his entire praxeology on the notion of “operativity,” on the claim not to veridically reflect reality in his work, but to actively transform reality through it. The objectivism of an indifferent documentary had no place in the interventionist practices of the factographers….

As Benjamin H. D. Buchloh demonstrated in his formative essay “From Faktura to Factography,” the factographers engaged not just with physical and dimensional bodies, but also with bodies of collective social knowledge and networks of communication. Within this reorientation of artistic practices toward information and discourse, moreover, they conceived of signification not as a mere system of mimetic reflection, but as an act of productive labor….

This sweeping reconceptualization of the relationship between work and semiosis belonged to a specific historical moment in the 1920s, that of the precipitate transformation of the Soviet Union into a modern media society. It is indeed impossible to comprehend the factographic project without taking into account the concurrent explosion of new media technologies and their attending mass cultural formations. This decade not only underwent a media revolution effected by the advent of radio broadcasting, the introduction of sound into film, and the photomechanical procedures which enabled the proliferation of the illustrated press, but it also witnessed the emergence of popular photography organizations, widespread literacy campaigns that drastically changed the lived relationship to language, and a worker-correspondent movement which aspired to transform the consumer of information into its author. New media became ordinary facts of life. That factography began to reach the apogee of its influence and methodological cogency around 1927, the year which Guy Debord later established as the inaugural year of the society of the spectacle,4is thus in no way incidental, for factographic practices presupposed a society on the cusp of the modern media age. In this society, where the distinction between the object and its image grew increasingly tenuous, the factographers understood actsof signification not as veridical reflections or reduplications of an ontologically more primary reality, but as actual and objective components of everyday, lived experience. The era that saw the closure of the gap between life and its representation challenged the Soviet avant-garde to develop models of production and manufacture that encompassed physical and psychic experience alike….

By thinking through its objects rather than theorizing axiomatically about them, this empirical, sociological science reestablished points of contact between the chaotic contingency of material phenomena and the speculative logic of abstract cognition. Their efforts to redress the gap between abstract knowledge and lived quotidian existence situate the factographerswithin the current of “phenomenological Marxism,” which thrived in the 1920s and which undertook the construction of what Oskar Negt and Alexander Kluge have described as a comprehensive “context of living” [Lebenszusammenhang] — a framework for human experience that is cognitively coherent yet experientially concrete and sensuous….

Like Borges’s story about a seventeenth-century cartographer who tried to create a map of the Empire that was the exact size of the kingdom itself — a sprawling representation of the world that coincided at every point with it — the factographers went about constructing a vast archive that was coextensive with reality itself. Perennially “in search of the present tense,”20these projects engaged operatively in their own historical moment and expired with the passage of the reality to which these interventions corresponded.

This issue…will not advance a master theory of factography, nor will it even propose the actuality or direct applicabilityof these projects for the present day. The texts assembled here are as old as yesterday’s newspaper. But insofar as they uncover a forgotten response to the media of modernity, these fossils possess a certain archaeological value for us. They return us to a critical juncture in the development of spectacle society and point out a path that was not taken: in contrast to the technological determinism that today increasingly dominates contemporary theoretical perspectives on the media, factography insisted that these media are historically variable constructions that are the precipitates of concrete social and political systems; and against the positivist approaches that currently underwrite this determinism, factography recalls a moment when technologies of representation such as photography did not constitute a discrete medium or a stable genre. The case of factography reminds us that the information media which continue to structure experience to this day are in no way ontological givens, but are themselves generated through operative acts of congitive and perceptual labor. A production art fit for a media age, Soviet factography shows us that the consumption of information is never simply a passive act.

3) In his essay “The Sun without a Muzzle” on Russian art photography from the 1970s, Victor Tupitsyn writes about factography and what he’s calling neo-factography. He writes,

The neo-factographers of the seventies and eighties documented manifestations of marginal practices and activities. Moreover, if the fixation of the events of the twenties and thirties can appropriately be described in terms of factography as affirmation, then the neofactography under discussion here is factography as resistance. In essence, the neofactography of the seventies and eighties was an attempt to provide new answers to the questions: what is fact and what is reality? Is it whatever has received the grace of mass representation, or can phenomena pinned down by means of amateur snapshots, typewritten descriptive texts, letters, diary notes, and so forth, be referred to as true factuality? Adopting the latter viewpoint,”factography as resistance set out to implement the principle that, in becoming facts of linguistic reality and therefore communicable, idiomatic narratives are endowed with a destabilizing potential capable of shaking faith in the invincibility of the affirmative culture of Socialist Realism (read metanarrative) and in the totality of its self-representation. (81)

28 Comments »

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

  Projects



NF02 :: Paradosaurus Wreck

Friday, August 15th
9 pm
$10 :: 21 +
VFW Dilboy Hall :: Davis Square
371 Summer Street :: Somerville
Sponsored by WZBC

An exploration in fashionings (with awesome local independent designers), musiciananatings (with awesome and sometimes freaky bands), and boogalooganatings (with awesome DJs), complete with radio transmission couture, projective architecture, and so much fun you will be destroyed. see below. We hope you can make it!

BANDS!

Deer Tick - Providence, RI
Smoky Americana

Flaming Fire - Jersey City, NJ
Insane Psychedelic Cult Rock Music

Andre Obin - Boston, MA
Electro Popshock

DESIGNERS!

Stormcloud, Bring Rainbows!
Joy Adams!
Julia Ramsey!
BECKY*!
Karovan!

If yer on the facebooks, you can rsvp here



NF01 :: Union Square :: The Chirping Sidewalk

Wednesday, April 23rd :: 10 pm - 12 am :: Toast Lounge (70 Union Square)

We all know Boston is a sports town. And rightfully so. Of course, to watch our great teams, our bars must be outfit with ample televisions and rocking stereo systems. To a casual observer, Boston might even seem to have the most televisions per bar inch in the country, possibly the world. This is not a situation to bemoan, pining for the bohemian haunts of Brooklyn. This a fact that can be translated into an understanding of Boston as the city with the greatest number of multimedia galleries in the world. As such, The New Factographers aim to interpret this city's unique bar landscape with a series of site-specific bar installations.

"NF01 :: Union Square" is the first in this series of events using the platform of the Boston bar to create immersive audio, visual, and socio-sculptural installations about local neighborhoods and urbanism internationally. This initial experiment focuses upon the Union Square neighborhood of Somerville. For one evening, the many flat screens of Toast Lounge will be transformed with a montage of short videos portraying the details of this historic crossroads intermixed with footage from cities around the world. Sonically, bar-goers will be drawn into a series of local soundscapes interspersed between music by Boston bands.

"NF01 :: Union Square :: The Chirping Sidewalk" takes place starting at 10 pm at Toast Lounge in Union Square, Somerville. The event is presented in partnership with Union Square Main Streets and Somerville Community Access Television (SCAT) on occassion of the MIT-GSD-LSE conference Writing Cities.


People

The New Factographers is an open network. If you are interested in getting involved, write facts@newfactographers.org ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

As of 8/15/08, The New Factographers include:

Alex Kaufman, Andrew Barco, Anna Wexler, Anthony Ferrario, Antonio Petrov, Carol Yip, Deepa Ranganathan, Eli Sidman, Francisca Rojas, Ian Gray, Ilana Cohen, Jake Shapiro, James Burns, Jennifer Mack, Jesse Shapins, John Purcell, Joy Adamms, Julia Ramsey, Justin Grotelueschen, Kara Oehler, Katy Barkan, Lara Belkind, Lily Pollans, Margaret Singer, Mariana Mogilevich, Max Hirsh, Nessa, Nick van der Kolk, Nishima Chudasama, Nithya Raman, Phillip Dmochowski, Rekha Murthy, Robin Hessman, Sabrina Reed, Sean Cole, Sharlene Leurig, Susanne Seitinger, Thacher Tiffany, Toby Lee.

For more info on individuals, visit Facebook. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Some of our friends and affiliations include:

14 Second Solve, AnnKara, Association of Independents in Radio (AIR), Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Cafe of Shame, Harvard Department of Anthropology, Harvard Econ, Harvard Graduate School of Design, Hearing Voices, Knifeandfork, Love and Radio, Media Anthropology Lab, MIT Department of Comparative Media Studies, MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT Media Lab, PRX, Somerville Community Access Television (SCAT), Stadtblind, Toast Lounge, Uncarbonated, Union Square Main Streets, UnionDocs, Weekend America, WGBH, Yellow Arrow,

-->