Closed seminar | Media, Modernity, and the Public Sphere: Fin de Siècle Print Culture and Reading Practices in the Middle East with Hala Auji



This seminar examines the varied roles, uses, and forms of print media in the Arab world during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These publications were central to contemporaneous discourses on modernity—understood as the concepts of civilization and progress—which were being debated in the public realm in regional cities like Beirut, Cairo and Alexandria. Discussing conventional and contemporary theories on print commerce, reading practices, and the formation of public spheres, seminar participants will consider how these concepts (many of which stem from the work of Jürgen Habermas and Benedict Anderson, and pertain to European contexts) have been reframed and debated by scholars of the modern Middle East. In particular, this session will explore the varied approaches to “reading” during this period, including questions of orality and visual literacy, and the forms, media, and spaces in which these practices took place.



Hala Auji is an assistant professor of Islamic art at the American University of Beirut’s Department of Fine Arts and Art History. She is the author of Printing Arab Modernity: Book Culture and the American Press in Nineteenth-Century Beirut (Leiden: Brill, 2016), which examines the growing significance of the visual dimensions of print technologies for Arabic-speaking Ottoman audiences at a time when Arab intellectuals were debating their varied communal concerns, political motivations, and conceptions of a modern society. Her research interests also include nineteenth century material culture in Europe and the Middle East, the history of Islamic manuscript practices, the politics of exhibiting and collecting Islamic Art, design history and theory, and the arts of the book in Asia.



Seminar | Systemic vs Discrete Practices with Diann Bauer

Open to registration

Wednesday, November 9 | 2-6PM



This seminar will look at the ways artists can use their field’s purported intellectual promiscuity to leverage what art can be and do. Could it function otherwise and for what ends? Bauer will lead a discussion asking how a practice can use visual language as a means to develop thought, as well as use collaborative and systemic practices to shift the parameters of how and where art functions. Can we as artists use our skills of speculation and the anti-dogmatic claims of our field, to leverage knowledge produced by other fields, as a means to understand better what art now ought to be?



The structure of the workshop will be divided into two parts. In the first part, Bauer will briefly speak about her own practice and how it functions both visually and discursively. She will focus on recent collaborative work done through Xenofeminism, as well as work done as part of a Miami-based collaborative project called AST (Alliance of the Southern Triangle) that develops interdisciplinary projects to address global climate change, cities, real-estate development, taxation, insurance schemes, terraforming, statecraft and art.



In the second half of the workshop, she will look at an excerpt from Benjamin Bratton’s book The Stack, and think through how his proposals might be useful for art practitioners. What can art do when its main referent is a systemic condition rather than the individual subject?



Public Talk | Xenofeminsim in Alien Time

Thursday, November 10 | 7:30PM



In this paper, Bauer will speak about Xenofeminism (XF): A Politics for Alienation, a text collaboratively written by Laboria Cuboniks in 2015. Bauer will highlight XF’s endorsement of alienation, and how it can be helpful in thinking about what time is.



Bauer will introduce the idea of Xenotemporality (XT), which proposes that the human experience of time is not sufficient for how we organize, inflect and orient the systems on which we now depend. Realities of how time functions beyond human experience have a direct impact on us and our daily lives via our technology (GPS satellites, for example). The development of XT and a commitment to thinking ‘time’ outside of our experience (a further decentering of the human), will help frame how we are to think about what the human is and how best to orient our expedited evolution.



Diann Bauer is an artist and writer based in London. Her work spans a range of disciplines and has been screened and exhibited internationally, notably in London at Tate Britain, The Showroom and The Drawing Room; in Athens at Deste Foundation and Benaki Museum; in Melbourne, at Ian Potter Museum of Art; in Berlin at Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler and Die Neue Aktions Galerie, and in New York at The New Museum, White Box, The Dorsky Museum, OMI International Art Centre, and Socrates Sculpture Park.



Bauer is involved in several collaborative projects including:

-Laboria Cuboniks, a working group redefining a feminism adequate to a global 21st century with whom she wrote and published Xenofeminism, A Politics for Alienation in 2015 (laboriacuboniks.net);

-The Office for Applied Complexity (OfAC, http://officeforappliedcomplexity.com/) a platform for research and development that traverses conceptual terrains with an aim to construct new models for work between art, science, technology and power. This project is an expansion of Fixing the Future (fixingthefuture.info) of which she was also a member;

-AST (the Alliance of the Southern Triangle) a collaboration with 2 architects and a curator in Miami developing interdisciplinary projects that address global climate change, cities, real-estate development, taxation, insurance schemes, terraforming, statecraft and art.



Bauer has lectured at the Tate and the ICA (London), Yale University, Berliner Festspiele and Haus der Kulturen der Welt (Berlin), Halle 14 (Leipzig) Performing Art Forum (France), ACAF (Alexandria) and has taught in the US at Cornell University, Bard College, and Cooper Union, and in the UK at Goldsmiths University, Brighton University, University of the Arts London, amongst many others.



Seminar | What Can A Sonic Assemblage Do? The Biopsychosocial Condition of Listening and Sounding with Seth Ayyaz Bhunnoo

Open to registration

Wednesday, November 16 and Thursday, November 17 | 1-5PM



Over the course of two seminars, I want to think sound and to sound thinking. These two terms sit in uneasy relation, each complicating the other. For that reason, the two seminars will operate at variance with one another, the first positing a critical inversion of theory, the second preceding from sound into thought.



The first trajectory is to approach listening independently of any subject–relative givenness, chiefly by harnessing materialist insights into the conditions of listening through the cognitive sciences. This offers a pragmatic remodelling of the listening mind as practical, rather than ideal object. It becomes one of many cognitive nodes/objects; a fractionable mind-brain embedded in and emergent from the material conditions of biological, psychological and social systems.



The second seminar outlines a second escape route through unshackled sound, advocating an exploration of the world through electroacoustic means, jettisoning notions of ‘authentic’, ‘musical’ perception. Composed sound need not conform to aesthetic illusions, but can be unchained, anomalous and scope beyond the limits of perceptibility.



Seth Ayyaz is a London-based composer-performer, theorist and occasional curator. His sound work spans installation, live electronics, improvisation, noise, electroacoustic and traditional musics from the MENA region (Arabic, Turkish and Persian). His work is concerned with (dis)embodied perceptions and how these resonate across psychological and social spaces, offering counter-narratives to current metaphors of cultural exchange and hybridity, instead foregrounding issues of friction, displacement and translation. His main focus is on listening, and investigating what a sonic assemblage can do, while drawing on psychiatry, neuroscience and sound art. Specialising in live electronics and machine-listening, Ayyaz builds custom performance ecologies for specific situations.



Another key focus is extensive engagement with contemporary Middle Eastern experimental music, occupying the interstitial places between ‘Occident’ and ‘Orient’, and critically exploring the legacies of Islamic cultures (music, mathematics, medicine, literature, alchemy) that have been effaced in traditional, Western historical accounts.



Ayyaz has presented his work internationally, including: fig-2 at ICA, London, Cafe Oto, London; Kunsthalle Luzern, Switzerland; Irtijal Festival, Beirut; Maerz Music, Berlin; the World Forum for Acoustic Ecology, Finland; and the Haus Für Elektronische Künste in Basel, Switzerland. Ayyaz also writes on sound and has been published in The Wire, Organised Sound, and most recently in, On Listening. Live work includes the Usurp Chance Tour 2014 — Cage and Beyond. He also curated the MazaJ Festival of Experimental Middle-Eastern Music, London. Closed seminar |The Auto-Mobility of the Inanimate in Dance with Jalal Toufic

Dance, which, in the realm of altered body, silence, and movement into which it projects a subtle version of the dancer, makes possible immobilization, the genetic element of motion, allows all sorts of extraordinary movements, including an auto-mobility of the inanimate. The first couple of times when its winding mechanism came to a stop, the doll became again motionless; the third time the winding mechanism came to a stop, its faint sound no longer audible, the doll continued to move, having acceded to the auto-mobility allowed by dance in the realm of altered body, silence, and movement in which it projects a subtle version of the dancer. When the mechanical doll attains the state of dance, a cessation of its movement would be due to its becoming frozen in dance’s realm of altered body, movement, silence, and music. The notion of rewinding the doll’s mechanism occurred to its erstwhile master, but, being himself a dancer, he dismissed it—he must have sensed that he would not be able to do so since the doll was then frozen still, thus withheld from time, with the consequence that the action of rewinding it, one that takes place in time or is a form of time, could not be effectuated until the doll was no longer frozen but subject to time again. The doll resumed its movement on its own once the silence-over had receded.



Jalal Toufic is a thinker and a mortal to death. He was born in 1962 in Beirut or Baghdad and died before dying in 1989 in Evanston, Illinois. His books, many of which were published by Forthcoming Books, are available for download as PDF files at his website: http://www.jalaltoufic.com. In 2013–2014, he and Anton Vidokle led Ashkal Alwan’s third edition of Home Workspace Program. He has been the director of the School of Visual Arts at the Lebanese Academy of Fine Arts (ALBA) since September 2015.



Closed seminar | “I will not say, my brothers, what listening is, before I know who the listener is”: A collective listening session with Haytham el-Wardany

The title of this seminar is inspired by two verses from a poem by the Persian poet Saadi, where he links the act of listening to the (historical) subject who undertakes it. Listening for Saadi is thus not merely sensorimotor operation, but rather a process that can never be isolated from the process of constituting the subject. We find a similar notion in what the composer John Cage said in a television interview conducted with him in 1992: “When I hear what we call music, it seems to me that someone is talking, and talking about his feelings or about his ideas . But when I hear traffic, I don’t have the feeling that anyone is talking. I have the feeling that sound is acting, and I love the activity of sound.” Cage’s comment touches upon something profound: he doesn’t want to hear, in sound, someone talking to him. He refuses to listen, in sound, to a voice talking about personal feelings and ideas. But maybe he would have nothing against listening to another kind of voice in sound: the voice of no one or everyone, i.e. the silence. During this seminar, we will listen to some recordings, which we ourselves will have captured. Through listening to recordings and discussing them, we will try to explore different modes of listening and different modes of subjectivation. We will try to reflect not only on sound, but also on the listening subject.



Haytham el-Wardany is a writer born in Cairo. He recently published “How to Disappear”, on the different modes of listening and the social formations of sound. His forthcoming book is “Book of Sleep”, a literary treatise on the questions of politics and identity in sleep.



Closed seminar | Not I with Mirene Arsanios

You know the book “Iron and Silk” where the English teacher asks a class of Chinese students to describe their most memorable experience? One of the students hesitates and hesitates and finally says that his most memorable experience was when his wife went to Beijing and ate duck there.” Lydia Davis, Bomb Magazine, Summer 1997.



You have become trapped in an echo-chamber. But all you see and hear is you.” Adam Curtis



“I” is the matrix through which the lived world is apprehended, understood, sensed. Although at times necessary, the equivalence and occasional collapse between self and world isn’t of a natural order; selfhood is an assemblage, and an ideological product construed through interpellation, capital, social as well as sexual norms.



Fiction, poetry and the essay all inhabit a particular and relatively well defined “I”. Though the history of the first person and “techniques of the self” are beyond the scope of this seminar, we will be looking at the ways in which the “first personaI” operates within a text, how the subject is textual. What literary genres and conventions feed into the formation of the first person? Fiction, poetry, and the essay all inhabit a particular and relatively well defined “I”.



Some feminist and female authors have unsettled this seemingly cohesive and universal self (often male, white, Western) by experimenting with the categories that inform it, bending literary genres and by combining autobiography with fiction (Chris Kraus), using appropriation (Kathy Acker), and questioning the confessional as a true and authentic expression of the self.



We will read some of these authors closely, looking at how the techniques they use trouble the reader’s identification with the narrator, both by alienating and implicating the reader in the text. We will pay attention to the overlaps between reading, writing, and listening, as the authorial voice moves across and inhabits multiple selves. We will extend these questions to art; how is authorship produced and the artist self performed? How is the figure of the artist commodified, valued, and exchanged within a certain art economy? What “self” are they expected to perform? How are artists expected to speak, write, and articulate themselves in the world? Can this be re-written?



Mirene Arsanios is the author of The City Outside the Sentence (Ashkal Alwan: Beirut, 2015). Her writings have appeared in publications such as The Brooklyn Rail, The Rumpus, Enizagam and The Outpost, among others. She co-founded the collective 98weeks Research Project in Beirut and is the founding editor of Makhzin, a bilingual literary magazine. She holds an MA in Contemporary Art Theory from Goldsmiths College and an MFA in writing from Bard College. She currently lives in New York City.