Art in the Age of AI, the Anthropocene, and Geopolitical Conflicts
In fact, most of the monographs in the contemporary art world deal with only one of the above-mentioned crises. Few pieces addressing issues in contemporary art deal with two of the above-mentioned crises, and regrettably, none of the pieces in this context examine the above-mentioned three crises in an artistic way.1 For example, Heather Davis and Etienne Turpin (eds) in Art in the Anthropocene: Encounters Among Aesthetics, Politics, Environments and Epistemologies, after making an “extrapolation beyond geology,” discussing “aesthesis” and “perception,” demarcating “contested territories,” and “pondering over the survival of the worlds,” name the last section of their introduction “Futures Worth Imagining.”2 Giovanni Aloi, in his Speculative Taxidermy: Natural History, Animal Surfaces, and Art in the Anthropocene, after probing into the “taxidermy surfaces,” the “natural history panopticon,” and “animal visibility,” while neglecting the actual complexities of human/animal interconnectedness and the multi-dimensionality of “scientific/capitalistic optics,” ultimately show only the propitiative as well as perceptual-and-empathy-generative “symbolic imagination.” Jan Rogodzinski, in The Interrogating the Anthropocene: Ecology, Aesthetics, Pedagogy, and the Future in Question, awkwardly showcases the “imaginary” between the homological “media and artistic responses” and unprepared “capitalist framings.3” Susan Ballard in her magnum opus Art and Nature in the Anthropocene: Planetary Aesthetics, before poetizing the “Holocene,” the “Anthropocene,” and the “capitalistic acceleration,” mentions the “labor-doing,” “making-visible,”, and hence the “imaginative” power of the works of art.4 Salma Monani, in Cinema of/for The Anthropocene: Affect, Ecology, and More-than-Human Kinship, names the main title of his foreword “Created to ‘Dream’.5” Also, in the introduction of the same book, Katarzyna Paszkiewicz mentions that the main aim of the book is to challenge the dichotomy of our “natural exclusion,” henceforth to make us “aware” of our own roles in nature.6 Bill Gilbert and Anicca Cox, in Arts Programming for the Anthropocene: Art in Community and Environment, maintain the notion of the “utopia of the edge,” whose main goal is to uphold the “imaginative aftermaths” of whatever remains of rural and urban utopian ideals.7
The author of Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins, Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, along with Elaine Gan, Heather Swanson, and Nils Bubandt, call for the “imagination” of the “haunted landscape” of “the ghostly contours of a stone, the radioactivity of a fingerprint, the eggs of a horseshoe crab, a wild bat pollinator, an absent wildflower in a meadow, a lichen on a tombstone, a tomato growing in an abandoned car tire.”8 Jennifer Fay, in her Inhospitable Worlds: Cinema in the Time of the Anthropocene, provides the thesis of the “artificial-world making,” hence the “image-making” capabilities of film in the age of the Anthropocene.9 Kaya Barry and Jondi Keane, in Creative Measures of the Anthropocene: Art, Mobilities, and Participatory Geographies, celebrate and anticipate the “imaginatively leading” power of the processes of artistic creation.10 Julie Reiss, in her edited piece Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene, calls for “the potential for art to help us imagine other worlds and possible futures” as the most important task, stated in the introduction of the book. T. J. Demos, in his Beyond the World’s End: Arts of Living at the Crossing, before studying contemporary necropolitics, media ecologies, geoengineering, ghosts, visual politics, animal cosmopolitics, and the “radical system change,” opens the area of a “rift zone” that enables us to “re-imagine the worlds.”11 Last but not the least, Travis Holloway, in his How to Live at the End of the World: Theory, Art, and Politics for the Anthropocene, before proposing a “counterhistory,” “the transition from postmodern art to the Anthropocene,” and “Democracy at the End of the World,” abstractly and meaninglessly argues that we should invent and imagine the “zoocracy,” which is a kratos, or a rule of life over itself.12
The Importance of Drawing the Picture of the Structure of Digital Technical Individuation
Given these thinkers’ approaches, it seems that we all have already had a view to the consensus about the structure of individuation in the “Age of AI, Anthropocene, or Geopolitical conflicts.” Even so, we have continued to produce and are producing so many “based-on” books, pieces, monographs, leaflets, and exhibitions. In fact, we know nothing about the basic structure of our individuation; that is, the basic structure of our world society. Without the understanding of this basic structure, no books, pieces, monographs, leaflets, or exhibitions could really be thought. No efficacity of the books, pieces, monographs, leaflets, or exhibitions can really be assessed from this, let alone really making them.
The French philosopher Bernard Stiegler and his student Yuk Hui have stated that what we now endure is the so-called process of “disindividuation.”13 This is the result of a cultural abstraction and alienation, against which the great French philosopher they admire, Gilbert Simondon, has argued. In fact, what we endure now is the digital technical individuation, by which we individuate and differentiate from others in a digital technical way. This digital technical individuation forms the most fundamental course of our everyday life, on which the subjectivation and subjectification arise. We can draw a picture of the structure of this digital technical individuation by borrowing the “theory of line” extracted from the Manuscript on the Constitution of Spatial Things – from the D-Manuscripts of the German philosopher Edmund Husserl, especially his 1917-1918 article “The Multiple Relativity of the Phantom Thing. Normal and Abnormal Functioning Bodies.”14
The Miss of True Individuation Nowadays
However, no theoretician, philosopher, or curator has mentioned this digital technical individuation, let alone make any pictures of the structures of it. It seems like the digital technical individuation does not exist, and what we have is only successful or failed subjectivation and/or subjectification. We see this in the now famous Byung-Chul Han’s writings, which signify the forgetting of individuation. We read this in the monographs of Bernard Stiegler, which gave us the monotone of individuation. We read this in the works of Yuk Hui, which represent the confusion of individuation. We sense this in the pieces by Franco “Bifo” Berardi, which symbolize the mis-location of individuation. Finally, we also read this in the books of Benjamin H. Bratton, which manifests the misrecognition as well as the rigidity of individuation. Even the smart and brilliant Hito Steyerl, in her latest book, Medium Hot: Images in the Age of Heat, missed the “whatever Weberian iron cage” that we include, such as the engineers, CEOs, and shareholders, who have all been trapped therein.