|
|||
|
|
|||
| + | |||
| < BACK - | |||
R. CALDURA, CONTRA-CIRCUITS OF THE REALITY, 2006 The electronic page which I’m typing on is framed on each side by functions offering a wide range of compositional variations. Frames, toolbars which can change in a flash the aspect of that which I’m typing. I know little about information technology. I’m a generic consumer, with little inclination about that which is ‘behind’ time saving techniques. More than 20 years ago writing systems which represent the daily dimension of working practice for an increasing multitude of people, underwent a radical transformation. More immediate visibility, fast modifiability and contemporaneous filing: the first Apple user-friendly machine, the Macintosh 128k, dates back to 1984. The emancipation from the initial and complex procedures necessary for the interaction between hardware and software was due to the extremely efficient system of icons and windows, a very simple and immediately understandable system. The enormous mistake made by Xerox belongs to the New Technology. The company management did not clearly understand what their laboratory was preparing and then allowed Steve Jobs to take possession of the enormous application potential of the icons system. Now my desktop, like that of millions of users, is made of folders and files organised on the background of a little light board, where the square icons seem to be suspended, waiting for the orders of the mouse. The simplicity of the geometry of the icons is extremely efficient. Strictly two-dimensional, it constitutes the graphic interface (GUI) making computer use accessible to a wide public. The question of the graphic interface is more pervading and extends the field of my electronic desk, including real existence and interlacing with it possible functions and operative controls made by means of the icons. The whole town seems to be an enormous desk, a desktop, a display where the icons are ordered for its use: road signs, logos, set courses. The pervasiveness, the ubiquity of the technology is made possible exactly because of the extraordinary efficiency of its graphical interface, without which the technique would be only a difficult, blind device, without windows. An airport, a highway, a railway station, a street, the goods distribution in a department store, the instruction handbook of a product are possible and feasible realities, thanks to the quality and precision of the icons on its surface. In a town without ‘icons’ which indicate buildings’ function, in a street without signals, we feel in unknown land, awkward and anxious as one who cannot decode his surroundings. We feel anachronistic and slightly incomprehensible if one gives us or if we give someone a handwritten sheet. Our reality is a kind of algorithm, divided in sub-algorithms enlarging its complexity. Maybe a handwritten sheet is becoming an outdated thing, meaninglessly complex for people who are more or less aware of living in the computational efficacy of a ubiquitous Turing machine. Is the graphical interface, developed to make the language of information more accessible to an enormous number of consumers, evolving along a similar escape line? Abstracting this from its original function, contra-constructing, as the works of Marotta & Russo show, a parallel system (from the city to the object)? The autonomy of the ‘visual’ is as though it were in ambush and waiting for the ‘right moment’ to deconstruct the remaining function that endures in the various graphical interfaces, starting the game again: from the functional efficacy of the algorithms solved by means of the icons, to the progressive independence from any operative function, delivering the icon from any concrete, ‘real’ operative reference. (Along the escape line of the ‘visual’, the reality seems forced to strike back becoming ‘image’, in order to be up to the new level of abstraction attained by the ‘visual’. Otherwise it is doomed to be ‘blind’ like a street without signs, or strange like a town made up of buildings without functional differences). A web page is similar to the front of a building, where a visual and informative dimension corresponds to every single space. The central area is surrounded by a circle of elements whose function is graphically solved in the two dimensional diagram. The central area represents the main contents of the web page. It is framed by the other informative functions. If the web page was to be emptied of its contents, and only the formal structure was kept, the two-dimensional and geometrical simplicity beneath it would become more evident. It is the formal structure used in Marotta & Russo’s research to contra-construct a new image: the image of a ‘city’ generated by the pure primary forms constituting the composition of web pages. This is the origin of the Under the Domain… sequence. The artistic contra-constructing begins to free the graphical interface from its function in order to generate a new paradoxical strict and exclusively digital urbanscape. This is constructed from elements taken from the computer page layout and the graphical interfaces, separated from their functional and informative specific ‘contents’. In the set following Under the Domain…, Marotta & Russo further increased the deconstruction and reconstruction of graphic interface iconic elements coming from the field of technological information and highlighted in the title of their work: ObjectKit. The last two works by Marotta & Russo show a movement to a more and more articulate organisation of the digital image. The interplay between the image and the real shows itself not only with the oscillation of the real to the image but also as the contrary oscillation of the image (digital) to the real. One of these last two works is a video projection with an indicative title, Timeline where it is the time of the image which scrolls to indicate the relation between the visual experience of the crossing of the urban space and its synthetic projection in the interplay of geometrical components coming from the visual digital codex. The other work, Outline, is a complex installation showing the architectonic and spatial tendency of Marotta & Russo’s compositional methods. Outline recalls a closed circuit system, with something of the components and the module architecture done by a modern data processor. At the same time it visually recalls maps, networks, wiring which constitutes the invisible dimension of a city pervaded by service technologies. The essential image in Outline dissects, deconstructs and reconstructs the idea of connection and wiring and underlines its visual side. Contemporary icon of data and information communication, it is contra-circuit of a reality which seems to be always more reliant on the image as its vehicle of justification. |
|||
| < BACK - | |||