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Events 11|2006
Paul Virilio and the Arts
Symposium and Exhibition
November 4th, 2006–January 7th, 2007
Exhibition in the ZKM | Media Museum, project space
Entrance fee
Opening: Fri, November 3rd, 2006, ZKM_Foyer, 7pm, admission free
Symposium :
Exhibition : Information auf Deutsch
Paul Virilio began as a universal artist, namely, as an architect. In the
late 1950s, together with Claude Parent, he designed utopian architecture
that remains astounding even today. His studies of space and space theory
led him from architecture to the military machine as the actual medium of
space and to technology as the actual medium of territory. Via the machine
and media he discovered the primacy of time over space, a crucial axiom for
modernity, from the art of the Futurists to the New Economy. With this axiom
he introduced a paradigm change that defined the media discourse (e.g., War
and Cinema, 1984) and had an enormous influence on Media Art from the
U.S. to Japan.
The dromocratic revolution: At the center of his activities—painting,
architecture, essays, exhibition, and publishing—are the themes of
war, speed, and accidents. He involved himself more so than any other contemporary
philosopher in debates in the field of art. Virilio’s thinking is first
and foremost aesthetic; his approach is one of »esthesis«, a
sensory perception of the world.
»We have to change our view in order to survive; just as we had to change
life to persist, « he says in the essay »Speed and Politics: An
Essay on Dromology«, 1977. For Virilio, art and aesthetics are primarily
perception.
Paul Virilio is well known as a Computer-mediated
communication »dromologist«Computer-mediated
communication» as a critical
pioneer of a »dromocratic revolution«. In Virilio’s »dromology,« the
history of technology, urbanistics, military strategy, physics, and metaphysics
are interwoven as an aesthetics, as a »logistics of perception«. Speed
is not only a phenomenon of movement. It is also primarily one of a populated,
that is, human environment. In light of future threats, Virilio is and will
remain our warning conscience. In his books, which have been translated into
several languages and sold widely, and in legendary exhibitions that he organized
for the Fondation Cartier, Paris, he presents this »dromocratic revolution«, which
reaches its climax in the design for a »museum of accidents«. The
exhibition will grasp Virilio’s philosophy in numerous pictures and
videos.
Curated by Peter Gente and Peter Weibel.
Project management: Bernhard Serexhe.
Guided tours: Sun 1pm
Recommended Links:
www.virilio.de
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