State in Time
State in Time
Edited by IRWIN
Huang Chien-Hung
Other titles in the series: Eda Čufer
Precarious Rhapsody – Franco “Bifo” Berardi
Marina Gržinić
Imaginal Machines – Stevphen Shukaitis
IRWIN
New Lines of Alliance, New Spaces of Liberty – Felix Guattari and Antonio Negri
Tomaž Mastnak
The Occupation Cookbook
Conor McGrady
User’s Guide to Demanding the Impossible – Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination
Spectacular Capitalism – Richard Gilman-Opalsky
Viktor Misiano
Markets Not Capitalism – Ed. Gary Chartier & Charles W. Johnson Alexei Monroe
Revolutions in Reverse – David Graeber Ian Parker
Undressing the Academy – University for Strategic Optimism Avi Pitchon
Communization & its Discontents – Ed. Benjamin Noys Stevphen Shukaitis
19 & 20 – Colectivo Situaciones Jonah Westerman
El Martillo – Eclectic Electric Collective Slavoj Žižek
Occupy everything! Reflections on ‘why its kicking off everywhere’ – Ed. Alessio Lunghi and
Seth Wheeler
State in Time
Punkademics – Ed. Zach Furness
[Open] Utopia – Thomas Moore & Stephen Duncombe
Contract & Contagion – Angela Mitropoulos
Squatting in Europe – Squatting Europe Kollective
Artpolitik: Social Anarchist Aesthetics in an Age of Fragmentation – Neala Schleuning
The Undercommons – Fred Moten & Stefano Harney
Nanopolitics Handbook – Nanopolitics Group
Lives of the Orange Men – Major Waldemar Fydrich
Forthcoming:
FutureChe – John Gruntfest & Richard Gilman-Opalsky
Islam & Anarchism – Mohamed Jean Veneuse
A Very Careful Strike – Precarias a la Deriva
Art, Production and Social Movement – Ed. Gavin Grindon
Manifest(o)Mutations: Communist détournement of “communism” – Richard Gilman-
Opalsky
Hypothesis 891 – Colectivo Situaciones
Learn to Listen – Carlos Lenkersdorf
A Short Philosophical Dictionary of Anarchism from Proudhon to Deleuze – Daniel Colson
Communists Must Write! – John Hutnyk
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21 NSK: The State which Ran Away with Itself… Alexei Monroe
109 The 'First NSK Citizens’ Congress' in Berlin: A Summary Conor McGrady
147 The Self and Its Double: How I Use the NSK Passport Eda Čufer
173 Biographies
177 Illustrations
Introduction
We are pleased that this publication, which we began to contemplate five years ago,
has finally seen the light of day. We have taken our time over it. As a matter of fact,
we like to, and actually often do, allow ourselves the indulgence of constructing our
projects gradually, working on them until they are ripe and ready for presentation.
The reason we tackled work on this book is simple. The NSK State in Time pro-
ject, in which IRWIN has been engaged continuously for two decades, has raised a
number of questions that need to be answered. In response, we have resorted to the
practice which we introduced in 1992 with the NSK Embassy in Moscow: we have
turned to experts to help us elucidate particular issues.
The NSK State in Time has a double position – designed as an artwork, it is at
the same time a social formation – and even though the focus of this publication is
on the non-artistic dimension of the NSK State in Time, on its relationship with a
state occupying a territory, we cannot avoid its artistic aspect. In short, we are inter-
ested in the functional value of the artwork.
Some of the texts presented here were written before the book was conceived,
and are included in it due to their contextual relevance. The majority of these texts,
however, have been written specifically for this publication and are published for the
first time. Some of the topics raised, particularly the surge in NSK passport applica-
tions from Nigeria, deserve further analysis, and we are keen to address this in a
future edition.
We would like to thank all the authors for their contributions to this publication.
IRWIN Their deliberations are vital for the further development of the project.
5
NSK State in Time IRWIN
The NSK state came into being in 1992 as a result of the transformation of the Neue
Slowenische Kunst (New Slovenian Art) collective into the NSK State in Time. The
collective was formed in 1984 by three founding groups – IRWIN, Laibach and the
1 Besides these three, Gledališče sester Scipion Nasice theatre group1 – and within the framework of the
the following groups
were also active within former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Although each group was autono-
the framework of Neue
Slowenische Kunst: mous in its activities, we shared a free flow of ideas, a copyleft declaration (unlimited
design group New
Collectivism; Department by individual authorship), we offered mutual assistance and engaged in joint planning
for Pure and Applied
Philosophy; a group of
of particular moves and actions. Collaboration was key, and awareness of the specific
architects, The Builders;
and music groups
conditions in the field of art in Yugoslavia, which was at that time largely defined
Dreihundert Tausend by a closed valorisation process adapted to local needs, led to the concentration of a
Verschiedene Krawalle
and Germania. The first critical mass, and direct confrontation with the art system. This antagonism subjec-
two groups continue to
be highly active, the ap- tivised each group and delineated the contours of NSK as a whole. In these conditions
pearances of Dreihundert
Tausend Verschiedene of strained relations with the art establishment, the responsibility for art production
Krawalle are not so fre-
quent, and The Builders and its critical reflection lay solely with us, and it was therefore precisely through this
and Germania have dis-
banded. confrontation that we established our independence. In short, collaboration and the
sharing of common resources were both the basis and the inevitable consequence of
Neue Slowenische Kunst’s position in relation to the cultural and political reality of
the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
With the collapse of socialism in the beginning of the 1990s and the subsequent
disintegration of Yugoslavia, the conditions of our operation changed radically as
well. Along with the emergence of a multitude of new states, some of which, among
them Slovenia, achieved the status of an independent state for the first time ever in
history, NSK too objectified itself in the form of a state. Instead of to a territory, how-
ever, NSK assigned the status of its state to thinking, which alters its boundaries in
accordance with the movements and changes of its symbolic and physical collective
body. At the time of its formation, the NSK State in Time was defined as an abstract
organism, a suprematist body, installed in a real socio-political space as a sculpture
consisting of body heat, the movement of spirit, and the work of its members. In fact,
the NSK state exists primarily through appearances in a variety of projects, which
follow one another through time, drawing out its image and content. These projects
establish and multiply relations among NSK citizens, which gradually enable the ar-
ticulations of specific needs and state initiatives.
Thanks to the particular circumstances of the beginning of the 1990s, it was
possible for us to produce NSK state passports in cooperation with the Slovenian
Ministry of Interior Affairs. As a result, with regard to the mode and quality of pro-
Neue Slowenische Kunst, Ljubljana, 1986 duction, the passports do not differ from the usual standard for such products. So far,
6 7
several thousand people have applied for and obtained NSK passports and thereby primarily by victims of shipwrecks during expensive and dangerous illegal sea voy-
become citizens of the NSK State in Time, while also retaining their previous citizen- ages. Two worlds so far apart from each other that their encounter can only be under-
ship. Most of them come from the developed countries of Western Europe or the stood as a result of modern technologies, which enable the flow of information where
USA, and thus the majority of NSK’s population is from the so-called First World. there was none before.
Their reasons for attaining NSK citizenship are linked primarily to their understand- On a completely different level, though still in keeping with the above, the results
ing of and participation in the field of contemporary art. of the self-organisation of NSK citizens are increasingly visible. It is important that
Although numerous, participants in the ‘art world’ are not the only social group NSKstate.com, the key domain where one can find information about NSK , is organ-
among NSK passport holders. In the first half of the 1990s, when new states were ised and managed by NSK citizens and not by the original Neue Slowenische Kunst
emerging on a daily basis and we started issuing NSK passports, the war in the ter- collective. The communication among the citizens of NSK has developed around and
ritory of former Yugoslavia was still going on. As such, a lot of interest in NSK pass- through this site, and has recently grown into joint campaigns and projects. On not-
ports came from precisely this area. The largest number of passports was issued in ing this level of self-organisation, we proposed to the citizens that they hold an NSK
Sarajevo at the end of the war in 1995. Again, we issued the majority of passports to Citizens’ Congress and share responsibility for the state’s future development.
people associated with contemporary art, but the interest in our passports was not The ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’ was held in October 2010 at the Haus der
only art-related. At that time, the citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina had serious Kulturen der Welt in Berlin. Thirty delegates and twenty observers from all over the
difficulty travelling outside their country, and there are many stories of how NSK world, along with invited experts, analysed the operation to date, formulated conclu-
passports helped people to cross territories more easily than if using a Bosnian pass- sions and made decisions about the future of the operation. The Congress has since
port. Aware that the NSK passport would not entitle them to cross national borders, triggered a series of events, the impact of which is already noticeable. While future
that it cannot be a replacement for other documents, many individuals nevertheless developments are uncertain, it is clear that the Congress findings have concrete con-
took the risk of using it as a functional replacement of their official passports. sequences for the history of the NSK State in Time. If we keep in mind that the NSK
So, while NSK passport holders have so far been closely related to the field of art, State in Time was conceived as an art project, then it is necessary to admit that is
and although the reasons for possessing the passport differ according to the posi- Ljubljana, 2010 most unusual that an ‘artefact’ has become emancipated to such an extent as to for-
tion and status of particular passport holders, it is possible to maintain that the NSK mulate findings – a written declaration in which a high degree of agreement with the
passport is understood as an artefact which has, in certain cases, and out of neces- Translated by principles of its own coming into being is affirmed – and that the social body, at least
sity, been used for non-artistic purposes. Several years ago, applications for the NSK Jean McCollister so it seems, to a significant extent recognises itself as an artefact.
passport began coming from Africa, from Nigeria in particular, and specifically from
Ibadan. It started slowly, but over time the number of applications from Nigerians
exceeded 1,000. Since most of the applications came from the same city, it is possible
to conclude that the information spread from person to person by word of mouth.
The cost of the passport is not high but for inhabitants of the so-called Third World
it is hardly insignificant. It is also doubtful that the interest of people from Ibadan
in getting the NSK passport is related to art. It seems more likely that, in the Third
World, NSK passports have ceased to be artefacts and have become useful documents.
What is interesting is why, where, for whom and how they are useful.
How did a symbolic object, that had been sold in the First World for fifteen years
and is recognised – regardless of its ambiguity or precisely because of its ambigu-
ity – as an art object, become a functional document in the Third World? How did
the word become flesh? How are we to understand the close encounter of two totally
disparate worlds: the comparatively complex and abstract space of contemporary art
in the First World, and the politically, culturally and deeply economically destabi-
lised Third World, where mere survival is often a key issue and from where people
emigrate in masses driven by a desire for a better life? Europe is the most coveted
destination, and year after year the media report on the terrible tragedies experienced
8 IRWIN 9
IRWIN, NSK Embassy Moscow, 1992 IRWIN, NSK Embassy Moscow, 1992
10 11
NSK State in Time Eda Čufer & IRWIN
12 13
contains a social programme adequate to the needs of modern man and of commu-
nity. The NSK State in Time is an abstract organism, a suprematist body, installed in
a real social and political space as a sculpture comprising the concrete body warmth, Ljubljana, 1992
spirit and work of its members. NSK confers the status of a state not to a territory but
to the mind, whose borders are in a state of flux in accordance with the movements Translated by
and changes in its symbolic and physical collective body. Jasna Hrastnik
14 15
Es gibt keinen Staat in Europa Slavoj Žižek
For many long years in left-wing (and not only left-wing) mythology the State ap-
peared as the original source of Evil, as a living dead sponging off the body of the
community. The repressive, particularly ideological machinery of the state was
presented as the process of supervising and maintaining discipline, as armour shap-
ing the healthy body of the community. The utopian perspective, which henceforth
opened up towards both the radical left-wing as well as the antiliberal right-wing,
was the abolition of the state or its subordination to the community.
Today’s experience, summed up in the word ‘Bosnia’, confronts us with the reality
of this utopia.
What we are witnessing in Bosnia is the direct consequence of the disintegra-
tion of state authority or its submission to the power play between ethnic communi-
ties – what is missing in Bosnia is a unified state authority elevated above ethnic
disputes. A similar tendency can be observed in Serbia where we are again dealing
with a state which is not based on the modern concept of nationhood, but has fused
with the pre-state ethnic mix, and thus in Kosovo paradoxically in the same terri-
tory two states coexist: the Serbian state authority and the para-state agencies of the
Republic of Kosovo. The old left-wing disinclination towards the rule of law and
order has thus come face to face with its own truth, manifested in Bosnia and Serbia
where unsupervised local warlords are plundering, killing and settling private scores.
In contrast to expectations it has become clear that there is nothing liberating about
the breaking of state authority – on the contrary: we are consigned to corruption and
the impervious game of local interests which are no longer restricted by a formal legal
framework.
In a certain sense ‘Bosnia’ is merely a metaphor for Europe as a whole. Europe is
coming closer and closer to a state of non-statehood where state mechanisms are los-
ing their binding character. The authority of the state is being eroded from the top by
the trans-European regulations from Brussels and the international economic ties,
and from the bottom by local and ethnic interests, while none of these elements are
strong enough to fully replace state authority.
Thus, Etienne Balibar has altogether appropriately labelled the current situation
in Europe with the syntagma ‘Es gibt keinen Staat in Europa’ (‘There is no State in
Europe’).
From all this it is thus necessary to draw what at first glance seems a paradoxical,
yet crucial conclusion: today the concept of utopia has made an about-face turn – uto-
pian energy is no longer directed towards a stateless community, but towards a state
IRWIN in collaboration with the NSK Department of Pure and Applied Philosophy, NSK Territory Suhl, 1993 without a nation, a state which would no longer be founded on an ethnic community
16 17
and its territory, therefore simultaneously towards a state without territory, towards a
purely artificial structure of principles and authority which will have severed the um-
bilical chords of ethnic origin, indigenousness and rootedness.
As far as art, according to definition, is subversive in relation to the existing es-
tablishment, any art which today wants to be up to the level of its assignment must
be a state art in the service of a still-non-existent country. It must abandon the cel-
ebration of islands of privacy, seemingly insulated from the machinery of authority,
and must voluntarily become a small cog in this machinery, a servant to the new
Leviathan, which it is summoning like the genie from the bottle. Ljubljana, 1993
18 19
NSK: The State which Ran Away with Itself…
Alexei Monroe
How is it possible?
This text exists because in 1984 a small group of marginal artists gathered in
Ljubljana, a provincial capital in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and
created the conceptual movement Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK). Through NSK ,
artists from the groups Laibach, IRWIN and the Gledališče sester Scipion Nasice
(Theatre of the Sisters of Scipion Nasice) have shaped not only the politics and cul-
ture of Slovenia and (ex)-Yugoslavia, but also influenced numerous individuals (in-
cluding the author of this text) in radically varied and improbable contexts.
The outline of ‘the story of NSK’ is becoming well-known: a series of increasingly
monumental and ambitious actions generated some spectacular political and cultural
scandals and excitement, first in Slovenia, then in Yugoslavia, and then across the rest
of Europe and beyond. Rather than re-telling this story, this text attempts to trace a
parallel history of NSK via some of the unforeseeable reactions it has generated in the
most unlikely and improbable contexts.
Improbability was hard-wired into NSK from the outset. While an extremely
prescient observer might have foreseen that something like NSK could have emerged
from the (already improbable) Slovenian sub-cultural scene and the elements that in-
fluenced NSK members (Fluxus, Bruitism, Pop Art, Totalitarian Art, Religious Art,
Folk Art, Punk, Industrial Music, Yugoslav ideology, and more), it seems very un-
likely that anyone could have foreseen the eventual result (and no-one seems to have
done so). Examined coldly, a Slovenian formation calling itself Neue Slowenische
1 German for Kunst1 and combining these elements is inherently improbable. Its subsequent de-
‘New Slovenian Art’.
velopment and global spread is even more so (it’s easy to forget now that in the early
1980s few people outside Yugoslavia and the Slovenian diaspora were even aware
of Slovenia’s existence). The fact that initially NSK wasn’t taken that seriously in the
Western art world allowed an unmonitored subterranean development, at least partly
free of the usual ‘guiding’ influences that might have diluted its Sloveneness and so,
paradoxically, made it less internationalist and less globally resonant. Yet another de-
nationalised form of contemporary art would not have had the same type of impact.
It was following Slovenia’s break-away from Yugoslavia in 1991 (a process NSK
2 NSK played a paradoxi- both commented on and contributed to)2 that the most radical and improbable step
cal but important role in
opening up historical was taken. NSK re-launched itself as the NSK State in Time. It was established as
debate within Slovenia
and in the development of a response both to NSK’s own activity to date and to post-1989 political events. It
civil society and alterna-
tive viewpoints from the designated its own conceptual territory and began to issue passports and create citi-
mid-1980s onwards.
zenship upon its own authority. In the 1994 text ‘Concepts and Relations’ Eda Čufer
and IRWIN retrospectively claim that the creation of NSK already foresaw the estab-
NSK, NSK Electronic Embassy Tokyo, 1995 lishment of a ‘state’:
20 21
The aim of the association was the constitution of a transnational paradigmatic Volk Art
state, in which Laibach represented the ideological, the theatre, the religious
and IRWIN the cultural and historical impulse. The element shared by all Although it has only become apparent gradually, NSK’s inherent, catalytic improb-
three groups is the scientific factor; a tendency towards a formative, not only ability has always been present, determining both NSK’s actions and, crucially,
verbal, but also physical analysis of concepts on the basis of which states had people’s reactions to them. Even now that NSK is far-better known, and its state has
been constituted or dismantled throughout history. The 1980s were a period several thousand citizens, it continues to generate unexpected responses, some of
when the NSK body was formed, through a selection of concepts and symbols, which have been especially surprising to the artists themselves. These uncoordinated
relationships and structures. The body of the NSK state was built when an initiatives and responses are all inspired by the aesthetics or the concepts of NSK .
equilibrium was established between the syntax of images, musical and theat- As early as 1985, non-members were producing their own unauthorised NSK arte-
rical texts in relation to their media with the syntax of the NSK body in rela- facts and tributes (for instance the retrospectively authorised Laibach live release
tion to the social, historical and state context. 3 3 Eda Čufer, IRWIN, 7 See Laibach Neu Neu Konservatiw).7 In 1989, Donald Campbell produced the first printed edition
‘Concepts and Relations’, Konservatiw (Cold Spring
Zemljopis vremena, Records CD, 2003). This of a Laibach fanzine and in the mid-1990s created an unofficial Laibach website.8
Umag: Galerija Marino is a re-issue of the limited
In the mid-1980s IRWIN had already stated ‘We believe that our [NSK] structure is a Cettina, 1994. edition vinyl ‘semi-official In 2000, Haris Hararis initiated the Athens-based website NSKstate.com. As well
bootleg’ which for many
twin of the state, a revised repetition of the state.’4 Yet NSK was not just a repetition 4 NSK , Neue Slowenische years was one of the most as providing information on NSK activities, the website soon began to feature both
Kunst, Los Angeles: sought-after items among
but a massive and distorting amplification of the utopian and dystopian potentials AMOK Books, 1991, collectors and fans.
NSK-style graphics and un-sanctioned texts by fans and citizens. Some of the most
p.123.
contained within both the actual state they lived under (or which lived under them) 8 See http://www.gla. active of these writers are Nikica Korubin (Macedonia), Hanno Reichel (Berlin) and
ac.uk/%7Edc4w/laibach/
and within the notion of the state as such. laibach.html Christian Matzke (U.S.). While none are ‘professional’ writers or critics, and all are
(last accessed 20
NSK’s literally monumental deception was to seduce the state and the public into November, 2012).
openly pro-NSK , their texts do contain insights and new perspectives and perhaps
believing that it wished to possess, or was able to grant access to such power, even draw conclusions that art-historians, curators and critics might not be capable of. In
while contaminating it and taking it away from the sphere of actual daily politics. other words, some perspectives may be accessible only to those with an intimate rela-
This statist gesamtkunstwerk was a supreme example of the Soviet military doctrine tionship with the works. The site has grown to the extent that it is now viewed as the
of maskirovka – destabilising your enemy by creating the impression that you possess primary NSK information resource (a view shared by NSK). Also acting on his own
far more power than you actually do. NSK suggested it possessed more power than 9 See www. initiative, Christian Matzke has created the website Retrogarde Reading Room.9
reanimator.8m.com/NSK /
it actually had (or wished to have), and in effect demonstrated that the declining readingroom.html This is a type of ‘library’, listing NSK publications, interviews and more. It also
(last accessed
Yugoslav state lacked but still coveted such power. Similarly, the Nazi S.A. or the 20 November, 2012). solicits the help of other fans in solving some of the mysteries and inconsistencies
Bolsheviks had to embody more power than they yet (legally) possessed, acting as surrounding NSK (for instance identifying figures in photographs or listing bootleg
if already in possession of full state authority in order to present the actual govern- recordings).
ment as illegitimate. Laibach have described their performances as ‘… a ritualised Besides these semi-authorised information sources, NSK has also inspired a sec-
demonstration of political force’5 and the NSK state structure represents the ultimate 5 Ibid., p.44. ondary strata of pseudo or meta-NSK actions and objects. Acting in response to an
(abstract) embodiment of NSK’s symbolic power display (Laibach’s ‘systematic ideo- 10 See http://launch. online discussion on the Laibach-NSK mailing list,10 Christian Matzke created a
groups.yahoo.com/group/
logical offensive’). LAIBACH- NSK / Laibach stage tableau using Lego figures (this demonstrates what to outsiders might
(last accessed 20
The emergence of the NSK state was already spectacularly unlikely, and this de- November, 2012). seem a surprisingly playful streak among NSK aficionados). Haris Hararis created
stabilising quality of radical improbability is more relevant than ever in the present graphics and screensavers for his website in the style of NSK , combining NSK symbols
period of systematically programmed ‘kleptoculture’, which is designed either to pre- with other imagery. Amongst American fans there is a disorganised but frequent
vent or to pre-assimilate the unplanned emergence of cultural initiatives. Since uto- 11 Some examples are ‘sub-genre’ of Laibach and/or NSK tattoos.11 Other para- or pseudo-NSK items pro-
seen in the Laibach
pianism is now often seen as suspect and unfashionable, NSK’s continued existence film Divided States duced by fans include jewellery, posters and shirts. To promote NSKstate.com Haris
of America, Sašo
represents a defence of the right to an escapist imagination that critiques reality and Podgoršek, 2005. Fan tat- Hararis has produced a range of licensed ‘ NSK Virtual Embassy’ shirts, as well as
toos are also discussed
refuses to recognise the limitations imposed by any actually existing cultural, political on the Laibach- NSK on- others using NSK and Laibach motifs.
line discussion group.
and economic regimes. One of the most unlikely and improbable responses to NSK emerged from
Reykjavik, where a small group of long-term NSK followers took the initiative to or-
ganise a series of events, outside the usual structures. In 2006 they brought Laibach
to perform in Iceland for the first time. They subsequently declared the anniversary
22 Alexei Monroe 23
of this date (22nd March) as the annual state holiday of NSK in Reykjavik. In 2007 out of the specific conditions, which generated NSK’s art, but out of NSK as a system
they opened a one-day NSK Embassy event, featuring a lecture, a display of NSK in itself and into new and unforeseen zones of (un)reality.
artefacts and video screenings. This was the first (authorised) NSK Embassy event 15 Personal video In a filmed statement on his NSK citizenship,15 Christian Matzke compares the
statement prepared for
at which no original members of Neue Slowenische Kunst members were present. IRWIN, 2007. NSK state to the land of Oz, as described in the famous children’s story. For its citi-
It also featured two unauthorised artefacts. The first was an NSK Embassy shield in zens NSK can act as a fantasy zone which allows greater conceptual freedom than is
Icelandic, based on the official NSK Embassy shields used since the Moscow Embassy available to them through their ‘given’ national or state identities. The Oz comparison
in 1992. This same image also appeared on a commemorative bottle of wine sold at is apt because of the fact that, as in the story, the imagined ‘Wizard’ is an empty and
the event. More audaciously, the organisers displayed a previously prepared image deceptive figurehead who has no ‘programme’ to be implemented (and in NSK’s case
based on IRWIN ’s NSK Garda series. In these actions, IRWIN take photographic por- there is not even a ‘wizard’ figure). The moral of the two ‘stories’ is that even if the
traits of members of national armies, wearing black cross armbands and standing to fantasy zone described exists, or is accessible, there is no solution except that which
attention below the NSK flag.12 In the Reykjavik version, three uniformed members 12 Since 1998 this ac- the visitor-citizen can implement for themselves, and the lack of any programme to
tion has been staged
of the Icelandic Fishery Protection service stand at attention by an NSK banner. This in locations including follow leads people to generate their own narratives in relation to NSK .
Croatia, Albania, Kosovo,
image is more dramatic than the IRWIN originals in that it was shot during a fierce Georgia and Montenegro. For Matzke, the NSK state met a pre-existing ‘urge to find citizenship outside of
See photographs here:
blizzard and a visiting Danish warship is visible in the background. It is perhaps the http://irwin.si/works-and- 16 Christian Matzke, the land I was born in’16 and many citizens have expressed similar sentiments. This
projects/nsk-garda/ 2008 video statement on
most elaborate and ambitious example of a para-NSK work, which received a very (last accessed his NSK citizenship as urge connects with the way that NSK acts upon pre-existing nomadic impulses and
exhibited at the 'First
positive reception from IRWIN when they were presented with it after the event. 20 November, 2012).
NSK Citizens' Congress', activates them, and it is this that has carried the NSK meme to so many improbable
Berlin, 2010.
At this point, the British artists Jeremy Deller and Alan Kane’s concept of folk locations and generated even more improbable responses. To use another Deleuzo-
art seems relevant. In their exhibitions based on a continually developing archive of Guattarian metaphor, the NSK state is a type of ‘assemblage that makes thought itself
contemporary British ‘folk art’ they present a wide range of unauthorised and non- 17 Gilles Deleuze, Félix nomadic’.17 It activates unforeseeable associations and disassociations, setting the
Guattari, A Thousand
professional work ranging from folk festival objects to trade union banners to prison Plateaus: Capitalism and imagination (including its citizens’ imagination of what the state might be) onto new
Schizophrenia,
art and more.13 The NSK objects and actions discussed here represent a kind of NSK 13 For more information op. cit., p.24. trajectories. As a projective apparatus the state is actually dependent on this process,
see http://www.british-
folk art, which, borrowing from the title of a Laibach album, could better be termed council.org/arts-aad-folk- and on generating speculation and intrigue among those casually exposed to it. There
archive.htm
‘Volk Art’. Moreover, the range and growing extent of this activity also suggests the (last accessed are many possible NSK states in the minds of those it encounters. Its cryptic core fa-
20 November, 2012).
need for a Deller/Kane-style ‘Volk Art Archive’, which might take the form of an cilitates this and functions as a symbolic condemnation of programmed culture, and
exhibition and/or online resource. an incitement or even compulsion to go beyond the usual conceptual and geographic
The definition of [NSK] Volk Art would simply be un-authorised and unpredict- channels.
able works and actions made in response to NSK , which are produced primarily (but NSK works as a nomadic interrogation machine, which mutates and proliferates to
not exclusively) by NSK citizens. However, it is important to stress not just the wide bring everything into its scope; interrogating the systems that manipulate at every lev-
range of ability and motivation but, above all, the inherent improbability of the Volk el, from the psychic to the national. It attempts to transcend alienation using the very
Art style. Even after many years of exposure to fan and public responses, the mem- codes of alienation, and to create a line of flight away from the apparent inevitability
bers of NSK are still surprised by examples such as those from Reykjavik, which could of oppression. So both by active interventions and simply by its continued presence
hardly have been imagined at the start of the present decade, let alone when NSK was (inexplicable to many, irritating or perplexing to more), the NSK State in Time cre-
created in socialist Yugoslavia. ates momentum and illustrates previously unimagined trajectories. It suggests that no
matter how fixed or closed a regime/system/machine appears to be, it always contains
Geographical Displacement and Improbability within its coding possibilities of escape, superseding, obsolescence, disintegration or
mutation.
‘Territorialities, then, are shot through with lines of flight testifying to the presence This interrogative dynamic can be seen as a version of what Gerald Raunig de-
within them of movements of deterritorialization and reterritorialization.’ 14 Gilles Deleuze,
Félix Guattari,
scribes as a ‘technique of permanent questioning’ employed by the Zapatista move-
– Deleuze and Guattari14 A Thousand Plateaus: ment to prevent itself reifying into an oppressively hegemonic revolutionary move-
Capitalism and 18 Gerald Raunig,
Schizophrenia (trans. Art and Revolution ment.18 Something similar, though more implicit, is at the heart of the NSK dynamic
Brian Massumi), London: Transversal Activism
If we trace examples of Volk Art to their sources we can see an interrelated geographi- Continuum International in the Long Twentieth and has helped to keep it in flux. However, this same open dynamic also entails the
Publishing Group, 2004, Century, Los Angeles:
cal as well as conceptual improbability. NSK’s work generates ‘lines of flight’, not just p.62. Semiotext(e), 2007, p.43. possibility of an uncontrollable overflowing into reality: the opening up of the line of
24 Alexei Monroe 25
flight, which takes NSK beyond its own comfort zones or conceptual ‘home territory’ helps sustain the NSK state as a paradoxical reality. A reality which is both not real
and into unknown and unfamiliar territories. enough and too real for those who dream of it as a physical territory, which will grant
them access to a life in Europe for 24 euros.
Reality has sharp edges (When appropriation is re-appropriated by Returning to Deleuze and Guattari we can see this not as a Deleuzian re-terri-
(sur)reality) torialization (a moment when the destabilising dynamic ossifies) but as an unpre-
dictable re-de-territorialization (in other words as a moment when the line of flight
‘Which state you belong to can be a matter of life and death…’ unexpectedly veers off into even less controllable territory). Like the capitalist klepto-
– Christian Matzke culture within which and against which they operate, conceptual processes of the
type unleashed by NSK are so thoroughly improbable and surreal that they carry the
Just as NSK took utopian and dystopian elements of the state more seriously than the danger of producing a kind of delirium. The NSK passport as a symbolic device al-
state does itself, so the NSK state is (and will probably continue to be) taken more se- lows for the crossing of conceptual borders between daily reality and self-constructed
riously by its citizens than by the originators themselves. This applies both to ‘the ini- reality. As the improbability of daily life and of the NSK state accumulate, it becomes
tiated’ (those who ‘get’ the idea and produce ‘Volkish’ responses) and the uninitiated. harder for some to believe that it will not guarantee the crossing of physical borders
In this second category are those who have encountered the NSK state as an apparent between marginal and favoured territories.
reality rather than a consensually constructed conceptual space: as a fully-functioning What NSK has encountered in Nigeria is prophetic and symbolic of the ever more
rich Western state rather than an Oz-like autonomous zone. improbable encounters between ‘first’ and ‘third’ worlds which globalisation produc-
In recent years, the NSK state has collided with the sharp edge of reality. The es. The NSK state is by its nature universal but it is the product of extremely specific
perception of NSK as a physical European state has been spread virally to the extent local cultural and historical conditions. The question of what happens when an audi-
that NSK has received hundreds of applications for passports from Nigeria. Many ence with no knowledge of these nuances, and perhaps no understanding of Western
of the applicants refer to the NSK citizenship being equivalent to, or granting access concepts of irony, encounters a project like this is one that more and more artists are
to, Slovenian and EU citizenship, with attendant employment, social and travelling going to face. Once a project is online it is already global and the possibilities for
rights. The Slovenian authorities also received numerous queries and had to place improbable, destructive and creative misunderstandings are massively multiplied. In
warnings on the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs explaining that the pass- a sense, the Nigerian response to NSK is utopian. It is based not purely on despera-
port did not confer rights to visit or reside in Slovenia. tion but on the absence of Western cynicism. It asks ‘why wouldn’t this be real?’ and so
In order to understand the phenomenon, and in an attempt to explain that the perhaps demonstrates the possibilities of sincere and utopian responses to First World
passport was not actually what so many Nigerians wished it to be, members of culture emerging in the most unexpected contexts and forms. As unpredictable as
IRWIN met with several applicants in London in May 2007. These encounters raised that of the Zapatistas to Western revolution, or of early 1980s alternative artists in
questions about whether people genuinely understood that they were dealing with a Slovenia to punk, industrial or conceptual art. If the type of improbable cultural-
(semi)-virtual conceptual project rather than a ‘real’ state. While claiming to under- political response that NSK represents was possible in Slovenia, and if this response
stand this, many were incredibly grateful to receive the passports and seemed still to could then trigger even more improbable responses globally, then it can happen in
harbour dreams that it would grant them access to a new life.19 19 Some of these en- London, 2008 other equally unforeseeable ways in even more improbable locations.
counters were filmed
There are various factors behind this deliberate (mis)-perception. Firstly, NSK has and shown in the IRWIN
State in Time exhibition
created something so implausibly plausible that it has achieved a kind of reality. By in Aarhus, Denmark in
winter 2008. Examples of
now it has a sufficient reputation and history for it to seem credible. Secondly, the ac- Nigerian emails enquiring
cumulated improbability and surreality of the NSK state seems as nothing compared about NSK were incorpo-
rated in the web-based
to the structural unrealities of life in our ultra-spectacular klepto-democracies, and installation Words from
Africa by Haris Hararis,
this is even truer for those looking on eagerly from ‘peripheral’ territories. Is the idea also shown in Aarhus.
of a European state selling ‘citizenship’ over the internet really any stranger than the
day-to-day realities of globalised consumerist culture as experienced through the
prism of the specific conditions present in Nigeria? (Endemic corruption, poverty,
violence and ethnic tensions). Some of these applicants’ desperation to believe has
almost-fatally intersected with the initiated citizens’ intention to believe, which in turn
26 Alexei Monroe 27
IRWIN, NSK Office Graz, 1992 NSK, NSK Passport, 1993
IRWIN, NSK Passport Office Taipei, 2008 IRWIN, NSK Consulate Florence, 1993
28 29
Emergency Ambassadors to a ‘State of Emergency’: The
NSK Embassy and the Moscow Art Scene of the 1990s
Viktor Misiano
The NSK Embassy opened its doors on 10 May, 1992, in a private apartment
at 12 Leninsky Prospect in Moscow. Carried out in the framework of the pro-
gramme ‘APT-ART INT’, this NSK project was coordinated by Elena Kurliadseva,
Konstantin Zvezdochetov and myself; the gallery Regina, created shortly before this
event, also took an active role in its organisation.
The success of any project largely depends on its synergy with the time during
which it materialises and with the ideas that are concurrently being explored. IRWIN
happened to be in Moscow at a moment when the history of a new Russia was still
being counted in months rather than years; when the mighty reality of the USSR had
suddenly evaporated into the past, and the future overflowed with pure potentiality.
This was also a moment of collapse of public foundations and norms that could have
legitimately been described as catastrophic, with the caveat that during that time
many understood that this was the cost of renewal. In those days there was no routine
– any gesture or word carried an instigating tone, it held the status of a proposal, it
asserted something, which inevitably laid the foundation for an entire chain of cause
and effect, stretching into the future.
In September 1991, several months before the opening of the NSK Embassy and
around the time of the defeat of an anti-Gorbachev putsch, I organised a project
titled ‘Aesthetic Exercises’. Artists that were receptive to a situation of renewal were
brought together to work in the open air at the Moscow Kuskovo Museum, an eight-
eenth century palace and park, and a monument to the epoch of Enlightenment. In
this context I attempted to outline a new post-underground artistic perspective and
to make a call for art in Moscow to return to the open space of European history – to
overcome its rootedness in the everyday, so characteristic for the conditions of the
underground – with the goal of achieving its own autonomy. Somewhat later, in early
May 1992, during the time IRWIN was preparing for the opening of the Embassy
at 12 Leninsky Prospect, I took part in ‘Molteplici culture’, an exhibition organised
in Rome by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev and Ludovico Pratesi. Many international
curators of different generations were summoned to engage with the realities of the
multicultural world through modest projects. In my project, I continued my critique
of the underground culture of the Soviet epoch by stepping into a direct dialogue
1 See Carolyn Christov-
with its adherents. I implicated them in a collective sociological game and named
Bakargiev, Ludovico the project ‘Experimental Investigation’.1 These ‘experimental interactions’ with the
Pratesi, Molteplici culture:
Itinerari dell’arte contem- participants of the Moscow underground revealed that what had made it inadequate
poranea in un mondo che
30 31
as an enemy, whom one must destroy or from whom one must be safeguarded, but as expression), was not the stream of human interaction that I attempted to show in my
an Other with whom one must enter into a dialogue. From this moment on, I began projects, but the pulsation of life and death, the world of instincts and animal desires.
working with the idea and form of performative curatorship. It is significant that on proclaiming himself a ‘state artist’, and in this way presiding
Finally, in order to fully explain my authorial position during that period, I over the idea of a rebirth of the state, Kulik stages a ritual sacrifice. The right to make
should describe ‘APT-ART INT’, the programme within which the NSK Embassy a verdict of life or death is of utmost importance for a sovereign, an attribute of their
was produced. Despite my polemics toward underground Soviet culture during those state power – and what better way to represent sacral power than ritual, moreover,
years, I attempted to continue in its tradition by organising apartment exhibitions, ritual depriving life itself? Equally significantly, the place of sacrifice was a private
ironically and commonly known as ‘APT-ART’. During the same period that former gallery, which declared itself the power engine for the future of the contemporary art
underground artists actively participated in the life of an international artistic infra- market in Russia. For Regina, the end of an ideological government did not so much
structure, riding the wave of trendiness of Perestroika art, ‘APT-ART INT’ invited signal a society of social dialogue in which the subjects are brought together in the face
international artists to avoid institutional infrastructures and to make exhibitions in of history by a collective search for values – which would have followed from the argu-
private spaces – in the studios of Moscow artists. Thus, this project attempted to val- ment drawn out of my projects – as an encroachment of an economic state, in which
orise and preserve the primary legacy of the Soviet underground – the experience of desires and instincts are channelled by the market; in which the right to life or death
culture existing outside of the institutional context, its association with anthropologi- is privatised by the commanders of businesses; and in which the autonomy of art is
cal spaces of personal relations, connected by a collective, quasi-religiously-secular ritually sacrificed to the media industry. If, in describing the formation of a modern
plea for common principles. state, Émile Durkheim once contended that having reached the final process of its ra-
The Regina gallery, co-organiser of the NSK Embassy project, understood the tionalisation, religion becomes politics, then the experience of artistic processes in the
potentiality of this transitional epoch somewhat differently. Founded by Vladimir Moscow scene shows that with the crisis of the modern state, the process inverts – pol-
Ovcharenko, a successful pioneer of Russian business, Regina – which, by the way, 2 See Émile Durkheim, itics returns to the sacral in order to identify either with economics or with the social.2
The Elementary Forms of
successfully exists to this day – was one of the first, and undoubtedly most ambitious, the Religious Life (trans. The unique role that the NSK Embassy played in Moscow in 1992, was predeter-
Joseph Ward Swain),
private galleries in post-Soviet Russia at that time. Despite the fact that his sphere of London: George Allen mined by the fact that at the centre of its attention were the same problems that so
and Unwin Ltd., 1915.
expertise was far removed from the art market, and the art gallery was more a pas- deeply concerned the local art world. As a communitarian project oriented towards
sion for him, Ovcharenko refused to give Regina the status of a non-profit organisa- direct dialogue with the actors of the social and cultural process, IRWIN’s initiative
tion. And despite the fact that large-scale and vibrant projects put up by the gallery identified with the Muscovite artists’ ambitions to construct the foundations of a new
required significant investments, and the prospect of a profitable contemporary art art scene through direct public action. My curatorial projects were headed precisely
market in Russia was far away on the horizon, Regina was conceived by its creator as towards this problematic, and precisely this problematic engaged the liveliest artis-
an exclusively commercial venture. tic minds, including the leaders of the Regina gallery. The effectiveness of the NSK
Such an understanding of Regina’s mission was further developed by its art direc- Embassy pivoted on the fact that it revealed a well-articulated and constructed model
tor, or, as he was officially called, its ‘exhibitor’, the artist Oleg Kulik. In his public of project work, with problems and tasks that were hitherto unknown to the Moscow
statements on the large-scale activities of this private institution – the likes of which scene. To be more precise, the Moscow scene knew of something similar, but it chose
Russia really did not have at the time – Kulik gave it the status of a state gallery, and to omit it from memory. Almost a decade passed before the art circle of the 1990s,
proclaimed himself a ‘state artist’. At the same time, the nature of the projects car- having created the foundations for a post-Soviet art scene, rediscovered the artistic
ried out in the gallery was of a provocative and even transgressive nature. In March and social creativity of the artists of the so-called Moscow ‘conceptualist circle’ of the
to April, 1992, shortly preceding the NSK Embassy, Kulik carried out his most pro- 1970s and 80s.
grammatic project, an ostensibly titled, ‘Animalistic Festival’. The festival was a series Consonant with Moscovite artistic dispositions, so sensitive to the problem of the
of actions by different artists involving live animals in their work and concluded with dialectic of art and power at the beginning of the 1990s, it appeared that IRWIN’s
Kulik’s own work, a deliberately scandalous piece, which caused a stir in the media. project worked with the idea of state representation, presenting, through the embassy,
Piglet Makes Presents had two professional butchers slaughter a live piglet in the space the NSK State in Time. Moreover, once again the problematic was presented so pro-
of the gallery, and its meat, cut up into pieces, distributed to visitors in plastic bags grammatically, and formulated in such a focused manner, that the embassy’s influ-
with the Regina logo stickered onto them. ence was felt in much of what subsequently appeared in the Moscow art scene. For
Thus, Regina’s activities supposed that what was uncovered during the fall of a example Oleg Kulik’s previously mentioned contention for the status of ‘state artist’,
fettered state and what was also its ‘obscene underside’ (to use Slavoj Žižek’s favorite technically followed the conclusion of IRWIN’s project by several months.
32 Viktor Misiano 33
In presenting the idea of the state and all its attributes, IRWIN’s artists were sovereignty and to assert their own, autonomous power. He encouraged the return of
extremely particular. The coat of arms of the NSK state, as well as its state flag, was a real political power, a real state, preparing himself towards its service, and seeing
festively hung on the façade of 12 Leninsky Prospect. The respectable address, the therein a source of his own, powerful authority.
elegant appearance of the building, as well as the rigid black suits and white shirts All this being said, it seems that the idea of sovereignty at this particular histori-
adorned by the Slovenian artists residing in the space of the embassy – all this could cal moment was absolutely apparent in Moscow! Marching in the ‘Parade of State
not have been any more persuasive to provoke an unwilling reverence from the god- 5 During its last years Sovereignties’5 was not only the dissolved state of Yugoslavia, but the USSR as well.
the former Soviet Union
less and impoverished Muscovite art-intellectual public of those days. NSK’s whimsi- witnessed what has been Boris Yeltsin’s quip, ‘take as much sovereignty as you can carry’, directed towards
described as the ‘Parade
cal heraldry, as well as IRWIN’s icons displayed on the walls of the embassy, were of Sovereignties’, when 41 the regional subjects of the Russian Federation, grew wings, and it seemed to define
constituent units declared
suggestive of a ‘political theology’ of state power (to borrow Carl Schmitt’s term this themselves to be sover- not only the state construction of a new, sovereign Russia, but the orientation of
time). In other words, the ‘embassy’ – in its entourage, in the behaviour of its found- eign states. But only 16
of these actually aspired
its citizens, gaining autonomy as post-Soviet subjects. And, truly, as it is known in
ers and in its programme – lacked the irony that had informed the habitual outlook to independence beyond
sovereignty.
political theory, it is not only a sovereign declaring itself that introduces a ‘state of
on life, as well as a method of interaction with ideologised power, for the artists of emergency’, but also the conditions of catastrophic disruption to the state of affairs
the Moscow underground. creates the chance to obtain sovereignty by those who were previously deprived of
Nevertheless, the politics of over-identification with power, to use Žižek’s term, it. Significantly, the proclamation of sovereignty is not at all a judicial act, alienated
or of its subversive affirmation, to use Boris Groys’ term of a similar meaning, and from the life of a community. According to Carl Schmitt, if sovereignty is gained
the goal of critiquing and deconstructing power, were well known to Moscow artists during the conditions of a ‘state of emergency’, then it is a result of a ‘combination of
of the conceptualist circle. 3 However, in 1992, when neither communism nor a united 3 Slavoj Žižek applied the multiple, heterogeneous, organic factors, belonging as much to tradition, to the his-
term ‘over-identification’
Yugoslavia existed anymore, the politics of subversive affirmation had lost its mean- to NSK and Laibach in toric past, and to cultural constants, as to spontaneous consent, heroic achievement,
his text ‘Why are Laibach
ing for IRWIN. It had also lost meaning to the artists of the former Moscow under- and NSK not Fascists?’, in 6 Author’s translation passionate impulse, and a sudden manifestation of deep existential energies’.6 And
M’ARS: Časopis Moderne from Russian. For fur-
ground; although this was not fully evident to many of them at the time. It could be Galerije Ljubljana, Vol.3.4, ther reading in English thus, to erect and strengthen this dynamism through the declaration of sovereignty
1993, p.4, while Boris see Carl Schmitt,
said, paraphrasing Žižek, that there was already no system which should be consid- Groys refers to ‘subver- Political Theology: was entirely logical in the conditions of that epoch, branded by vigorous commu-
Four Chapters on the
ered more seriously than it considers itself.4 But the seriousness that was evident in sive affirmation’ in ‘More
Total than Totalitarianism’, Concept of Sovereignty nity dynamics erupting from under the lock and key of the state of affairs. Precisely
the NSK Embassy project was of a different nature – it was the seriousness with which IRWIN, Kapital (exhib. (trans. George Schwab),
Chicago: University of
the act of accepting sovereignty in critical situations, or, the situation as defined by
cat.), Ljubljana: NSK ,
NSK members were creating their own state. Irony in attaining such a goal seemed 1991. Chicago Press, 2005 –
Schmitt using his romantic lexicon, the True Decision, stems from a community’s
originally published as
inappropriate, not only in terms of ethical considerations, but also in sheer practical 4 S. Žižek, ‘Why are Politische Theologie: vier awareness of its ‘historical essence, its core, its hidden nature, which makes it what
Laibach and NSK not Kapitel zur Lehre von
ones. Throughout the Moscow scene a similar turn was happening, only in artists’ Fascists?’, op. cit. der Souveränität, Berlin: it is’.7 The NSK Embassy made an evident appeal to art history, to the history of the
Duncker & Humblot, 1922.
studios it was described in different terms: there was talk that instead of deconstruc- avant-garde so foundational for contemporary artistic creativity. In effect, IRWIN’s
tion, the politics of reconstruction were the most pertinent, and that instead of irony, 7 Ibid. ‘avant-garde icons’ displayed on the walls of the embassy, were signs of ‘historical es-
an epoch of ‘a new sincerity’ had begun. sence’, recognised by the artistic community after accepting sovereignty. The most
However, in the NSK State in Time project, there is an extremely important programmatic example of the manifestation of a sovereign community with a ‘pas-
peculiarity, which does not have any analogues in Moscow art, and which was not sionate impulse towards acquiring essence’, and with ‘a manifestation of deep exis-
fully recognised during the encounter with the NSK Embassy. What was at stake tential energies’ is IRWIN’s legendary performance, Black Square on the Red Square.
was IRWIN’s investment of reconstructive politics towards the project of construct- In this case, without acquiring official permission to carry out the action on the most
ing a ‘sovereign’ state. In fact, my interest in the phenomenon of community and sacred space in Moscow – on its Red Square – the citizens of the NSK state declared
in its collaborative artistic creativity, budding in my curatorial projects of that pe- 8 Ibid. their sovereignty publicly, ‘tearing up judicial and social norms’.8 In the process of
riod – in many ways synonymous with the social interaction undertaken by the NSK this act, there was seemingly so much inner confidence in their sovereign right, that
Embassy – had completely ignored the idea of state sovereignty. Moreover, the idea even the militia guard who were on duty at the Red Square helped the artists unfold
itself, of a clearly localised figure of authority – its disciplinary normative, its visual the ‘black square’, and to place it on the sacral cobblestones of the Red Square.
décor and attributes – was at the opposite end of my goal of dissipating and decen- What is characteristic of governments borne out of a ‘state of emergency’, is their
tralising power towards unsteady and slippery norms. As for the Regina gallery, capacity to preserve connections with communities that conceived them in a passion-
the idea of the state and of power relations, as mentioned above, were of particular ate impulse. They do not transform into judicial-legal or administrative-bureaucratic
interest. However, Kulik did not intend the artistic community to demand their own bodies, removed from the social creativity of the masses. State power does not break
34 Viktor Misiano 35
away from the social mass, from potenza, to use Spinoza’s term in this case, which communality and appeals to ‘‘human nature’’, and the practice of democratic equal-
has recently reappeared owing to Antonio Hegri and Michael Hardt. Consequently, ity, which requires a political moment to distinguish between ‘‘Us’’ and ‘‘Them’’.’ The
the NSK State in Time focused on the sustenance of the life of a community, on its creators of the NSK state as well as the Russian participants of ‘Interpol’ who had
reproduction and expansion. For that reason, it was radically different from many previously actively participated in the life of the NSK Embassy in Moscow, had all
other European and American art projects of the 1990s, working in one form or an- experienced the dissolution of a seemingly unshakable political community and the
other with the idea of the state. The NSK project was utterly devoid of decorativeness rigorous process of constructing sovereignties – to them it was obvious that political
and simulatedness: it really was reflexive; it recreated and adapted the experience of democracy could not be founded on the commonality of all humankind, and that it
life of a sovereign social community. needed to belong and be created by certain people through collective practices.
Essentially, the substance of what was happening on 12 Leninsky Prospect, at Thus it follows that the initiators of the NSK Embassy naturally accepted the figure
the premises of the NSK Embassy, stems from this. A scrupulously constructed pro- of the Other, which was apparent at first glance during discussions at 12 Leninsky
gramme of events was meant to present Ljubljana’s intellectual world and the life of Prospect. Any type of criticism, however ill-mannered, caused a neutral, or even
this rousing community. Discussions and presentations that were happening in the pleasant reaction from the NSK founders, which baffled Russian visitors to the embas-
embassy were not just an act of representation; they were important for NSK citizens sy more accustomed to confrontation and conflict. To IRWIN it was obvious that civil
themselves. Through collective work, through dialogue and confrontation with others society is constituted through dialogue, and a dissassociation with the Outsider. It fol-
– subjects and communities – the NSK people recognised themselves, and consolidat- lows from this that the first thing that took place after the foundation of the NSK state
ed, isolating themselves from others. Here, consolidation presumes a strengthening was an NSK Embassy in Moscow, and subsequently in other places as well. It could
of principles, as well as legal norms, since the proclamation of sovereignty through an even be said that because every ‘Us’ is born at the moment of discovering ‘Them’, the
act of transgression of rights, does not mean that an unlawful situation contradicts a NSK Embassy was indeed the real form of constituting state sovereignty.
‘state of emergency’. As Schmitt pointed out, new rights emerge within the param- In spite of all this, in reality, the interaction of the NSK Embassy with the sur-
eters of a ‘state of emergency’, which then acquire habits and memoranda, and which rounding context was somewhat more complicated and dialectical. The understand-
are then elevated to law. ing of sovereignty was not exhausted by Schmitt’s brutal modernist counterpoint of
The tendency of the group IRWIN to understand law creatively and, simultane- ‘enemy – friend’. Being the children of a different epoch, the Muscovites thought of
ously, their readiness to unfalteringly follow it from the moment when it becomes their sovereignty as part of a complex system of relations.
conventional and accepted, appeared most emblematically in the Stockholm exhibi- In part, as has already been mentioned, IRWIN absolutely did not see the figure
tion ‘Interpol’ in 1995-96. As is well-known, in the course of this project, which of the ‘enemy’ as an object of irreconcilable conflict followed by its certain and final
presumed several stages of interaction between its participants, one of the artists, obliteration. Quite the contrary, recognising the constituting role this figure played for
Aleksandr Brener, declared his transgressive right to physically attack other par- the NSK community, they understood it as part of the political structure of their state.
ticipants and their artworks. In fact, that is what he did at the opening, destroying Vanesa Cvahte noticed that in search of a new artistic paradigm on the cusp between
an installation by Wenda Gu that was central to the exhibition. Following Brener’s the 1980s and 1990s, IRWIN introduced the theorist Eda Čufer – whose strong in-
gesture, IRWIN disagreed with the ensuing criticism, which was, first and foremost, dividual position complicated their established internal communication, but precisely
criticism from the other participants of the exhibition. IRWIN acknowledged Brener’s because of this, broke its routine character, and made it extremely productive – into the
right to the destructive gesture owing to the fact that it was announced prior to the 10 Vanesa Cvahte, context of their communal work.10 Evidence for this may be found in the NSK Embassy
‘On the Communicational
exhibition, was not contested by anyone, and thus was accepted by the participants of Art of the Group IRWIN’, project itself, developed by them collectively. Thus, with the same insistence and metic-
IRWIN: Retroprincip
the project: the ‘Interpol’ community. 1983-2003 (Inke Arns ulousness that the artists of IRWIN were seeking associates who would become part of
ed.; exh. cat.), Frankfrut/
The fact that the conflict of ‘Interpol’ participants has geo-political symptoms was Main: Revolver – Archiv their inner community, they also sought the ‘other’, with the goal of keeping them on
für aktuelle Kunst, 2003,
fully comprehended and widely discussed by IRWIN.9 If one is to translate its mes- 9 See Eda Čufer, Viktor
pp.163-167.
the line of an external horizon. Aleksandr Brener belonged to such ‘admired enemies’,
Misiano (ed), INTERPOL:
sage into legal terminology, then it could be said that behind the conflict of Eastern The Art Exhibition Which despite his position of extreme estrangement from NSK’s moral and creative catechism,
Divided East and West.
European participants of the project and their Western colleagues, there is an unsolv- Ljubljana: IRWIN; Moscow: and regardless of his public criticism and even attacks directed towards IRWIN, he nev-
Moscow Art Magazine,
able contradiction between sovereign rights borne out of the framework of a ‘state of 2000. ertheless invariably received their support and solidarity.
emergency’, and neoliberal rights, based on the ideas of universality of human rights. However, another point is important. On confronting ‘Them’, NSK citizens did
Otherwise, as the political philosopher Chantal Mouffe has written: ‘Undoubtedly, not only construct their own associations, but also created new communities. In other
there exists a polarity between the liberal ‘‘grammar’’ of equality, which asserts words, ‘Us’ confronting ‘Them’ stimulated them to recognise themselves as a new ‘Us’.
36 Viktor Misiano 37
Thus, on 12 Leninsky Prospect, an entire group of Moscow artists, who had not ear- this is a mentally conceived and invisible sun of their communal existence. From this
lier identified with each other, reached an agreement on their collective responsibility approach, it follows that a state is what citizens create in the process of their interac-
and position. It was there that the consolidation of the first post-Soviet generation tion when they communicate because of a beautiful goal, and in the form of beautiful
of artists occurred, onto whom the mission of taking the first steps of art of a new activities. This signifies that there are no initially imposed canons; that the state is
epoch was bestowed. In a span of several months, Yuri Leiderman, Vadim Fishkin, not an example from some series, or a private case of a bunch of laws. Rather, it is an
Anatoliy Osmolovsky, Dmitry Gutov, Oleg Kulik, and some other distinct individu- initial, beautiful reality in and of itself in whichever form people create it. In other
als, became involved with the work of Regina gallery. Later on, they were the main words, it is a work of art.
figures involved in my projects of the 1990s, in which we were collectively developing Finally, in conclusion, I will note that the NSK state could also be evaluated as
the ‘APT-ART INT’ paradigm. Thus, having finally constructed their sovereignty in a complex, dialectical and, in this case, largely paradoxical case. Created in order to
Moscow during the span of their first international mission, NSK citizens were also form and strengthen friendship and collegiality, it initially exemplified what Max
simultaneously constructing the Moscow art community of the 1990s. Weber defined as a patrimonial state. However, a rationalised procedure of handing
Finally, a third point of significance. The sovereignty of the NSK State did not out citizenships and ambassadorial representation, a pre-built programme of events
close the loop of the NSK community on the circle of its founders. Quite the contrary, of the embassy and other initiatives of the NSK state, reveal the characteristics of a
from embassy to embassy, from project to project, the population of a new state was contemporary rational state. Moreover, by affirming itself through external dialogue,
growing. Having provoked the initiation of a new community in Moscow, IRWIN and by free inclusion of other actors and communities, the IRWIN project can be rec-
later included it in their work, inviting Yuri Leiderman, Aleksandr Brener and Vadim ognised in the ideal of a participatory state.
Fishkin to be participants in their subsequent project, Transnacionala. Overall, the The complex nature of the sovereign community of the NSK state has prompted its
recruitment of new citizens did not only happen through the experience of personal distinction from those communities with which it collaborated in Moscow in 1992.
interaction, but also following rational, bureaucratic and publicly accessible legal If, back then, at the very beginning of a post-Communist evolution, these distinctions
procedures. This led to the situation where the possessors of an NSK state passport, did not catch the eye, then subsequently, they became more and more obvious, draw-
having acquired autonomy from the founding fathers of the State, initiated the ‘First ing these communities further and further apart. Kulik’s projects in the Regina gallery,
NSK Citizens’ Congress’. As a result, IRWIN had to acknowledge that their project having laid the foundations for the contemporary art industry in Russia, had predis-
had suffered paradoxical collisions: posed its investment towards rationalised-industrialised production and representation
in art, which gained centre stage in the subsequent decade. This line of development,
If we keep in mind that NSK State in Time was conceived as an art project, pushing the belief of the effectiveness of alienated rational procedures to its very limit,
then it is necessary to admit that it is most unusual how an ‘artefact’ has was ready to preserve elements of patrimonialism, although, narrowed down to a system
emancipated itself to such an extent that it formulates congress findings, a text of backdoor strategic decisions and concealed under the superficial layer of formalised
in which a high degree of agreement with the principles of its own coming norms and procedures. Free participation was absolutely ruled out of place in this para-
into being is declared, and on the other hand, how a social body, at least seem- digm. The public was not imagined as an active participant in artistic dynamics, but as
ingly, recognises itself to a significant extent as an ‘artefact’.11 11 IRWIN, a mass formed from the outside, imputed the role of a passive consumer. The subsequent
‘First NSK Citizens’
Congress’, Berlin, evolution of this paradigm predisposed its initiators to withdraw from an exploring cul-
October 2010.
However, the contention that such a dialectic of the sociopolitical and aesthetic ture, and to subsequently disperse in the machine of industrial art production.
qualities must be seen as a paradox can be debated. In reality, the state identification Concerning those dialogical projects in which I was interested, along with other
with a work of art has a long history: skipping over Jacob Burckhardt, it transcends artists unified by the NSK Embassy, what distinguished them from the experi-
to Aristotle. According to him, a polis, a state, manifests itself because of free com- ence of the NSK State was a programmatic refusal of forming their communities
munication between individuals who find themselves on the other side of economics, through external formal-rational procedures. In my text, ‘The Institutionalisation
the family and all base necessities. Aristotle called that kind of interaction between 12 V. Misiano, of Friendship’12 written in 1998, I did not simply sum up the experience of IRWIN’s
‘The Institutionalisation
individuals striving to the top, to perfection, to immortality – the kind of communi- of Friendship’, project, on which the publication centered in the first place, but summed up the
Transnacionala (exh. cat.),
cation reminiscent of the one taking place on 12 Leninsky Prospect — political. This Ljubljana: Študentska experience of Moscow artists. An apologia of friendship as a constitutive force of
založba, Ljubljana, 1999.
is communication during which each individual ambition towards a common good, pp.182-192. social-artistic activities proposed in this text, was, in substance, an attempt to join
becomes everyone’s good. As a result, the common good becomes the sun around the elements of pre-modern patrimonialism and post-modern participation, thus
which everyone is centered, but in distinction to the sun, which everyone can see, avoiding involvement in a modern state altogether. It is obvious that such a model of
38 Viktor Misiano 39
project-based work could not recognise itself in the act of declaring sovereignty, pre-
ferring to stay in the sphere of fluid, self-perpetuating formation.
For this reason, in the subsequent decade, cultural production in Russia began to
be co-opted by art corporations, and the community once-consolidated in the NSK
Embassy, not protected by state sovereignty, could not foster an equitable diplomatic
dialogue with them, preferring to depart into alternative zones – the zones of ‘exodus’
and ‘disobedience’. Such a choice was a political one, and new dialogical communities
of the 2000s – for example, the platform ‘Chto Delat?’/‘ What Is to Be Done?’, were
consolidated by an activist practice. However, collaborative work in creating political
discourse could not be considered – in the Aristotelian sense – political, since people
participating in these works do not strive towards new heights, towards perfection Ceglie Messapica,
and immortality. As such, an association of political activists is not a political com- 2011, Moscow/
munity, and therefore, it is not a work of art. And that is why, if for IRWIN, the crea- Bangkok, 2012.
tion of a political community was, in fact, their work of art, then in the 2000s, in the
pursuit of activist communities, political and artistic practices became watered down Translated by
in order to attempt to unify again, with renewed force, in the future. Gregory Gan
40 41
New Collectivism, NSK Post Office Ljubljana, 1994 New Collectivism, NSK Passport Office Dublin, 2004
42 43
The State as a Work of Art Tomaž Mastnak
The state came into being ‘as a work of art’. This is Jacob Burckhardt’s famous dic-
tum in his classic study of Renaissance culture or – as the English translation has
1 Jacob Burckhardt, it – ‘civilization’.1 The Swiss historian, however, did not want to say that the state was
Die Kultur der
Renaissance in Italien: a work of what we call ‘fine art’. In his lectures on the study of history, Burckhardt
Ein Versuch, vol.3 of J.
Burckhardt, Gesammelte incorporated art, in the sense of fine art, into culture, which he in turn understood as
Werke, Basel: Benno
Schwabe & Co, 1955, p.2. one of the three great forces of history, along with the state and religion. 2 Art, in the
2 J. Burckhardt,
current and common sense, was therefore not inherent to the state.
Über das Studium der
Geschichte: Der Text der
Under the heading ‘Der Staat als Kunstwerk’ (‘The State as a Work of Art’),
‘Weltgeschichtlichen Burckhardt discussed a number of pre-Renaissance and Renaissance Italian prin-
Betrachtungen’ auf Grund
der Vorarbeiten von cipalities, which were inspired by Emperor Frederick II and Ezzelino da Romano.
Ernst Ziegler nach den
Handschriften (ed. Peter Frederick II was bitterly denounced by his papal enemies as the ‘baptized Sultan
Ganz), Munich: C.H. Beck,
1982, p.173 ff., p.254 ff. of Sicily’. 3 The kernel of truth in this accusation, as acknowledged by Burckhardt,
3 See Tomaž Mastnak, was that Frederick appreciated the administrative expertise of the Saracen former
Crusading Peace:
Christendom, the Muslim conquerors of Sicily and turned it into one of the resources of his own power. For
World, and Western
Political Order, Berkeley
Frederick II, the measures of effective administration were an accurate census, me-
and Los Angeles:
University of California
thodical exaction of taxes, monopolisation of the means of violence, and the crushing
Press, 2002, p.149. of any dissent. According to Burckhardt, Frederick II annihilated the feudal state
(characterised by overlapping jurisdictions and a plethora of privileges, exemptions,
rights and liberties) and transformed the people into a disciplined multitude: bereft of
will, unarmed and tax-paying. The entity that came into historical existence was the
4 J. Burckhardt, state as a calculated, consciously-made creature:4 the state as a work of art. A throne
Die Kultur der
Renaissance in Italien, was now founded neither on an actual or presumed hereditary or some other right,
op. cit., pp.2-3.
nor on the pretences of faith, but on the conscious use of all available means with
5 Ibid. pp.3-4.
the exclusive regard to the end: the acquisition and maintenance of power. Ezzelino,
whom Frederick II helped to firmly seize power in the March of Treviso (just across
6 Machiavelli used the
term ‘arte dello stato’ in a the border of today’s Slovenia), was a pioneer in founding power on mass murder
letter to Franceso Vettori,
10 December 1513, in and endless atrocities.5 This was art in the sense of the arte dello stato, in which
Niccolò Machiavelli,
Opere (ed. C. Vivanti), Machiavelli advised the prince:6 the art of power. The power of art, on the other
Torino: Einaudi-Gallimard,
1997-99, vol.2, p.297. hand, was quite limited. Artists in the fine sense of the word had a subsidiary role
7 J. Burckhardt, Die to play: tyrants loved to have a few of them in their entourage to increase their own
Kultur der Renaissance in
Italien, op. cit., p.5.
fame;7 they were an ornament, not the source, of power.
8 Richard Tuck,
The Baroque, too, knew of the state as a work of art. Thomas Hobbes was rightly
Philosophy and called the foundational philosopher of our – modern – political institutions,8 and his
Government, 1526-1651,
Cambridge: Cambridge Leviathan (1651) one of the greatest works of political philosophy. In the introduction
University Press, 1993,
p.xvii. to Leviathan, Hobbes wrote:
New Collectivism, NSK Information Office Helsinki, (Men’s choir Huutajat), 2003
44 45
NATURE (the Art whereby God hath made and governes the World) is by the 14 See, for example, scape, his torso composed of countless small human figures facing his crowned head;
Keith Brown, ‘The artist of
Art of man, as in many other things, so in this also imitated, that it can make the Leviathan Title-Page’, he is holding a sword in his right hand and a crozier in the left; in the right and left
The British Library Journal
an Artificial Animal. For seeing life is but a motion of Limbs, the beginning 4 (1978); Corbett and column of the tripartite lower half of the page are symbols of secular and spiritual
Lightbown, The Comely
whereof is in some principall part within; why may we not say, that all Automata Frontispiece, chap.20; power, and the title of the book and the author’s name appear on a curtain draped
Reinhardt Brandt, Das
(Engines that move themselves by springs and wheels as doth a watch) have Titelblatt des Leviathan between them. Above the giant’s head, at the very top of the page, a biblical verse is
und Goyas El Gigante,
an artificial life? For what is the Heart, but a Spring; and the Nerves, but so in Furcht und Freiheit:
written in cursive: Non est potestas Super Terram quae Comparetur ei. It is verse 41.24 of
many Strings; and the Joynts, but so many Wheels, giving motion to the whole Leviathan-Diskussion
300 Jahre nach Thomas
the Book of Job (in Vulgate’s numbering), and a description of Leviathan: There is no
Body, such as was intended by the Artificer? Art goes yet further, imitating Hobbes (ed. U. Bernbach power on earth that equals him.
and K. Kodalle),
that Rationall and most excellent work of Nature, Man. For by Art is created Opladen: Westdeutscher There is probably no visual image in, or of, modern political philosophy that
Verlag, 1982; Marco
that great LEVIATHAN called a COMMON-WEALTH, or STATE, (in Bertozzi, L’enigma del equals this frontispiece of Hobbes’s in impressiveness, power, profoundness or fame.
Leviatano, Bologna:
latine CIVITAS) which is but an Artificiall Man; though of greater stature and Italo Bovolenta, 1983; Scholars have worked on determining the identity of the artist, compared the engrav-
Reinhardt Brandt, Das
strength than the Naturall, for whose protection and defence it was intended.9 9 Thomas Hobbes, Tittelblat des Leviathan, ing with the original drawing, studied the frontispiece within the history of art and
Leviathan (ed. R. Tuck), Leviathan, Zeitschrift
Cambridge: Cambridge für Sozialwissenschaft 1 developed ideas about Hobbes’s ‘visual strategies’, and speculated about the relation-
University Press, 1991, (1987); Horst Bredekamp,
The state is a work of art, and again, this art is not ‘fine art’ but rather craft, the skil- p.9. Thomas Hobbes visu-
ship of this emblematic title page with Hobbes’s political philosophy, epistemology
ful employment of principles and methods gleaned from nature. But art, here, is elle Strategien. Der
Leviathan: Urbild des
or his views on art.14 But what matters here is simply that the frontispiece is a visual
the opposite of nature. Artificial is that which is not natural. And the meaning of modernen Staates, representation of Hobbes’s theory of public authority as laid out in the pages of
Werkillustrationen
the state as a work of art is that the state is the creation of man; that the state is the und Portraits, Berlin: Leviathan. As such, the frontispiece images are not, strictly speaking, an artistic ren-
Akademie Verlag, 1999;
other of nature the opposite of the state of nature. The state is a man-made ‘Artificiall Noel Malcolm, ‘The Title dering of the state but of Hobbes’s notion of the state. The state as a work of art is to
Page of Leviathan, Seen in
Man’, and since there was no higher authority on earth than the state, Hobbes also a Curious Perspective’, in be sought and found in Hobbes’s words, not in their visual representation on the title
idem, Aspects of Hobbes,
likened it to a ‘Mortall God ’. To that mortal god, he said, ‘wee owe under the Immortal Oxford: Oxford University page. This visual material is ancillary; art is the maidservant of philosophy. The title
Press, 2002, chap.7; Dario
God, our peace and defence’, that is, security, and hence obedience. Gamboni, ‘Composing the page is a work of art that depicts the philosopher’s notion of the state as a work of art.
Body Politic: Composite
Hobbes called the immortal god ‘the Artificer’, but he gave no name to the man Images and Politcal
Since central to Hobbes’s theory of the state in Leviathan is the concept of represen-
who, ‘by Art’, generated the state. He certainly did not call him an artificer, neither did Representation, 1651-
2004’, in Making Things
tation (and the related concept of the person),15 the artificial person dominating the
he call him an artist. But when he discussed the unmaking, the destruction of the state Public: Atmospheres of frontispiece is a representation of representation.
Democracy (ed. B. Latour
through civil war, he wrote that that destruction was brought about by ‘artifices’. The and P. Weibel), Karlsruhe: Unlike these illustrious precedents, the NSK state is a work of art in what is today
ZKM, and Cambridge,
word figures in the title of pirated editions of his Behemoth: the history of the causes of the Massachusetts: The MIT the common meaning of the word art – though it is not a common work of art. It is a
Press, 2005.
civil wars of England, and of the counsels and artifices by which they were carried on from the work of art, not of techne; made by artists, not by artisans or craftsmen. That a work
15 See Quentin Skinner,
year 1640 to the year 1660.10 Hobbes also used the word ‘artifice’ in the book itself. 10 Hobbes failed to ‘Hobbes and the Purely of art has come to be a state calls for attention and analysis. It may tell us something
obtain royal permission Artificial Person of the
‘Artifice’ has a Machiavellian air to it, but unlike Burckhardt’s interpretation, to publish the work, and State’, in idem, Visions about art as well as about our contemporary state.
in the last year of his life a of Politics, Volume III:
where the state-makers were ‘Machiavellians’ (avant la lettre), the Machiavellians in few pirated editions ap- Hobbes and Civil Science,
The artists, here, have outgrown their Renaissance role of a legitimising ornament
peared.
Hobbes were the un-makers of the state.11 In Hobbes’s explanation of the ‘Generation Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2002; cf.
of princely power. They are neither executing a political philosopher’s idea in a visual
of that great LEVIATHAN’,12 that is, of the making of the state, there is no artifice, 11 See T. Mastnak,
‘Making of History: The
Jean Terrel, Le vocabu- medium nor are they aestheticising the brute political power (as some artists para-
laire de Hobbes, Paris:
and actually no (fine) art either. If art is the imitation of nature (of God’s creation of Politics of Hobbes’s Ellipses, 2003, p.35. digmatically did in that time when Carl Schmitt laid his dirty hands on Hobbes’s
Behemoth’, in Oxford
the world and its governance), the social contract through which the state is created is Handbook of Hobbes 16 Carl Schmitt, Leviathan).16 Rather, to the extent that their state is a conceptual construction, they
(ed. K. Hoekstra and A.P. Der Leviathan in
an exit from nature: the leaving behind of the absolute freedom and total war of the Martinich), New York: der Staatslehre des have undertaken a work of political philosophy; and to the extent that this work of
Oxford University Press, Thomas Hobbes: Sinn
status naturalis for the artificial world of state-guaranteed safety (and of obedience forthcoming. und Fehlschlag eines art of theirs has produced political effects, they are politicians. They are, one may say,
politischen Symbols,
owed to the sovereign). 12 T. Hobbes, Leviathan, Hamburg: Hanseatische statesmen.
op. cit., p.120. Verlagsanstalt, 1938.
Hobbes, however, called on art for help with impressing on his audience his idea On the aestheticisa-
In a sense, this is not surprising. These particular artists have always spoken the
13 See Margery Corbett
of the state. In the best tradition of emblematic title pages, Hobbes commissioned and Ronald Lightbown,
tion of politics, see
Rainer Stollmann,
language of the state; and those words, that were there in the beginning, in due
the engraving of Leviathan’s frontispiece, which he almost surely helped design. (The The Comely Frontispiece:
The Emblematic Title-page
Ästhetisierung der Politik: course become a state. But the state that was there in that beginning, as one of the
Literaturstudien zum
frontispiece’s visual symbols were a second language in which writers of the period in England, 1550-1660, subjektiven Faschismus, externalities of the NSK – the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia – ceased
London: Routledge and K. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1978.
expressed themselves.)13 It features a gigantic man, who towers over a cultivated land- Paul, 1979 (introduction). to exist. The NSK state is not the heir of that deceased state; it does not relate to that
46 Tomaž Mastnak 47
state that is no more, like the papacy related to the Holy Roman Empire. (In the late autumn of 2011, either in the newly democratised Tunisia or in Italy, as well as
memorable words of Hobbes, the papacy ‘is no other, than the Ghost of the deceased elsewhere, the elected or imposed powers that be are turning to financial markets for
Romane Empire, sitting crowned upon the grave thereof ’.)17 In its relation to the state 17 T. Hobbes, Leviathan, legitimacy, not to the people. Worse still, the authorisation process has been simply
op. cit., p.480.
as it exists today, the NSK state is, rather, the heir of what the pre-state NSK was in sidestepped. Two European countries, Greece and Italy, have unelected governments
relation to the then existing state: an enactment of its vital principles, a spotlight on with emergency powers.
its blind spots. This time not on stage, but ‘in time’. The lack of authorisation is something the NSK state shares with the real and ex-
In its creators’ nod to absolutism, the NSK state bears relation to Hobbes’s state: isting democratic states. There is, however, a key difference between them. The NSK
the absoluteness of power is the key trait of sovereignty. But as ‘artificers’, the art- statesmen are authors; statesmen in what counts as the core of global democracy are
ists did not need to work out the mechanism of authorisation of the sovereign power, not. The former do not need authorisation, since their very act as artists is authorisa-
which in Hobbes marks the exit from the state of nature. Here, it was not the citi- tion; the latter do. Since they are not authors and act without authorisation, they are
zens-in-the-making – men exiting the state of nature – that created the state, and in usurpers. As to the NSK , one could say that political theatre is their métier; as to the
the act of creation authorised the sovereign; just the opposite, the state began to gen- latter, their political theatre is replacing the legislative and judicial process.
erate its citizens. As the authors, the artists acted by authority directly, ab initio. And The NSK state and the ‘really existing’ democratic states may be made of the same
as such, they bear responsibility for their action. stuff. Ultimately we come to realise that they are all made by artists. But a difference
These traits of the NSK state apply to existing states – with qualifications. remains. The NSK state, a creation of the artists who, as authors, cannot shed their
Sovereignty is a trait that is being eroded. What comes together with this erosion, or responsibility, makes it clear that the elected usurpers of the real and existing demo-
deconstruction, of sovereignty is a petering out of a clearly located and defined au- cratic states are to be seen not as artists but as con artists. The difference is crucial.
thorisation of supreme power. This, in turn, creates irresponsible power. Since the real and existing democratic states are not works of art but rest on artifices,
Nominally, the fundamental authorisation mechanism in our time is elections. New York, 2011 we are witnessing dictatorships emerging from the democratic chrysalis.
Through deliberation and exercise of their fundamental political right and responsi-
bility as voters, citizens constitute public authority, while the elected authorities are
responsible to the citizens’ electoral body. In fact, elections are being increasingly
managed by campaign money, marketing and PR virtuosi, and are losing their civic
meaning. On the one hand, citizens are being turned into smart shoppers, who spend
their currency in the act of voting without having much say in the making of politi-
cal vendibles and still less in influencing what comes out of the chosen merchandise.
(Voters are strange consumers since they are not choosing what they themselves will
consume – beyond the periodic consumption of their right to vote – but are choosing
the consumers of their choice and trust. Elections are clearly not modelled on trading
or transaction.) On the other hand, politicians who run for offices are being turned
into ‘tradefull merchants’,18 who primarily (but not transparently) owe their responsi- 18 Edmund Spenser,
Amoretti XV: Ye tradefull
bility not to those who have bought into their campaign but to the donors who made Merchants that with
weary toyle, in E. Spenser,
the campaign possible. Citizens’ votes are thus becoming negligible and the authori- Amoretti, London: H.L,
1617. For the broader con-
sation process (or act) inconsequential. text, see John McVeagh,
The authorisation process is not becoming inconsequential only from within, Tradefull Merchant: The
Portrayal of the Capitalist
through the political evacuation of elections, but also from without. Elected govern- in Literature, London:
Routledge & Kegan Paul,
ments are getting more willing or more easily coerced into acting by apparent or 1981.
obscure higher powers. Such higher powers may be stronger states, or associations of
states, or personified invisible powers such as ‘financial markets’. Elected European
governments have been, for the past ten years, a prime example of acting way be-
yond the mandate given in elections, whether one thinks of entering unprovoked
and undeclared foreign wars or appeasing big finance. As of writing this essay, in the
48 Tomaž Mastnak 49
IRWIN in collaboration with the:
Albanian Army, NSK Garda Tirana, 1998
Kosovo Army, NSK Garda Prishtina, 2002
Montenegrin Army, NSK Garda Cetinje, 2002
Bosnian Army, NSK Garda Sarajevo, 2006 IRWIN in collaboration with the Croatian Army, NSK Garda Zagreb, 2000
50 51
Contextualisation of the Notion of State and of
Contemporary Art in Global Neoliberal Capitalism
Marina Gržinić
I have been following the work of Irwin and the NSK from the moment of their very
first appearance in 1980. I have written several books with chapters dedicated to
1 See Marina Gržinić, their work and published numerous texts on different topics related to it.1 For me, the
‘Neue Slowenische
Kunst (NSK ): The question now is this: is global capitalism – prone as it is to circulation of texts and
Art Groups Laibach,
Irwin and Noordung information – capable of dealing with (and does it want to deal with) interpretations
Cosmokinetical Theater
Cabinet: New Strategies that were elaborated in the spaces where the productions first took place? Although
in the Nineties’, Slovenian
Studies Journal, vol.15,
we live in a world of communication that seems to be without borders, there are
no.1/2, Edmonton,
Canada, 1993, pp.5-16;
strong hegemonic processes of control by the First capitalist world on art, critique
M. Gržinić, ‘IRWIN & and also production coming from worlds that are not the First one. Centres of power
die Retro-Avantgarde
Bewegung = IRWIN & (wherever money circulates; private, semi-public and semi-private) that control the
the retro-avant-garde
movement’, Cooperativ : spaces of art, theory and criticism within the western institution of contemporary art,
Kunstdialoge Ost-West :
Stadthaus Ulm, 7. Juli - 3. and as well the organisation of big events of contemporary art (where power and capi-
September 2000 (ed.
Friederike Kitschen), Ulm: tal coincides), are made visibly hegemonic. Servitude to these centres is high; money
Stadthaus, 2000, pp.46-
55; M. Gržinić, ‘IRWIN: matters, power matters, circulation matters. Of course, those in power change, power
1983-2003’, Art-ist, no.7,
Istanbul, 2003, pp.5-39.
shifts, nevertheless the western power centres remain firm, and as such so does the
institution of contemporary art.
The key to understanding the changes in contemporary art, not least the contem-
porary art institution, and also to rethinking, historically and presently, NSK State in
Time – resides therefore in the analysis of capitalism. It is necessary to consider the
changes of capitalism not only historically, politically and economically (in terms of a
shift, proposed by Santiago López Petit, from the past unity of capital and power to
the present co-propriety of capital and power), but to also analyse the changes mani-
fested at all levels of neoliberal global, capitalist, social and cultural structures.
Thus the following text will not describe NSK State in Time but will focus instead
on a set of changes regarding the state and its ideology within global neoliberal capi-
talism, in order to conceptualise and contextualise these changes and their effect on
Irwin’s project.
1. Financialisation
2 Santiago López Petit, In his book Global Mobilisation: Brief Treatise for Attacking Reality, 2 Santiago López
La movilización global:
Breve tratado para ata- Petit states that if we think of globalisation as the result of a process, we imply a de-
car la realidad (Global
Mobilisation: Brief velopment and a progression (also, temporarily, a regression, a crisis), and therefore,
Treatise for Attacking
Reality), Barcelona: we are not capable of understanding the way capitalism functions. In such a situation
Editorial Traficantes de
Sueños, 2009.
we are ready to accept, almost naturally I would say, fake discourses of morality in
IRWIN in collaboration with the Georgian Army, Was ist Kunst Tbilisi, 2007 which capitalism tries to cover up the outcome of the crisis (the financialisation of
52 53
capital) by stating that it was all just some sort of a mistake; as capital is noble, fi- the absence of the world and simultaneously witness its overabundance. So it comes
nancialisation – making money from money without investing in production – is just as no surprise that most of the theoretical books that have been published recently
a single perversion, a mistake. No! Capitalism, as elaborated by Petit, is not an irre- deal with this oscillation. The limit of the postmodern discourse resides in the con-
versible process but a reversible and conflictual event. The core of this reversibility is templation of reality as neutral; that it has reached political neutrality. But what it is
presented in the following way. Petit states that in the world today all is brought back necessary to do today is to call for the repoliticisation of reality and to de-link our-
to one single event, and this is not the crisis, but what he calls the unrestrainment of selves from its political neutrality.
capital (in Spanish des(z)boc(ka)amiento), that can be more colloquially grasped as Modernity continues to be important, as it allows us to rethink two emancipa-
unrestraining or unleashing of capital. Neoliberal globalisation is nothing more than tive projects that failed: the Enlightenment and communism. For the first project
the repetition of this single event, that is, the unleashing of capital. The unleashing the failures are historically clear, not only do we have the brutal history of colo-
of capital creates a paradoxical spatialisation that requires two repetitions: on the one nialism but also, in the recent past, we have the Shoah and Srebrenica in Bosnia
hand, a founding repetition in which a system of hierarchy is re-established, leading and Herzegovina. We could go on and make a list of repetitions: Rwanda, Darfur,
to the constant reconstruction of a centre and a periphery; and, on the other hand, a Chechnya, Gaza, etc.; it is certain that colonialism led directly to Nazism and fascism.
so-called de-foundational repetition that presents itself as the erosion of hierarchies, The second big project of modernism, communism, has not been reflected well enough
producing dispersion, multiplicity and multi-reality. As argued by Petit, the unleash- either (as a revolutionary project that involves specific and radical changes in econom-
ing of capital implicates both repetitions at once. The unleashing of capital is the only ic institutions and relations of power, and not just an abstract idea of revolution), due
event that – being repeated in any moment and any place – unifies the world and to the past failure of Stalinism. The future of communism is paradoxical therefore, as
connects everything that is going on within it. According to Petit, repetition is also it is today emptied of its historical context in order to be presented as an infinite play-
de-foundational to the degree in which capital repeats indifference for equality. Thus, ground model of jouissance for emancipated Western intellectuals. I suggest, in rela-
not only does repetition produce the jouissance of minimal difference, but repetition is tion to Alain Badiou, a political act of forcing; an approach that insists on a continued
also a mechanism of control, subjugation and repression. analysis of knowledge/coloniality/modernity. This forcing should focus on the demand
I can put forward, therefore, three major fields in which Petit tackles global capi- to de-link contemporary art and theory from contemporary forms of epistemological
talism: reality, capital/power and democracy. These segments are linked together 3 See M. Gržinić, coloniality, as defined by Walter Mignolo and Madina Tlostanova.3 Why? Because
‘De-Coloniality’,
through two almost old-fashioned mechanisms that are evidently still operative today: Reartikulacija, contemporary epistemological coloniality emphasises and supports only the Western
Issue No. 6, 2009,
circularity by way of self-referentiality and empty formalism, on the one side, and tau- http://www.reartikulacija. matrix of the present (post)Enlightenment and (post)Historical world and does not
org/?p=114
tology that produces obviousness, on the other. This tautology, as argued by Petit, pre- (last accessed 15
take into consideration the epistemological breaks and shifts taking place in the so-
sents itself today as the complete and total coincidence of capitalism and reality. To say November, 2012).
called ‘exterior’, or rather, at the ‘edges’ of Western European scientific thought.
that capitalism and reality totally coincide means that today reality is reality. This is
precisely the result of a deadly obviousness of the tautological format (that capitalism 2. Abnormal content, normal form
and reality totally coincide) on which is based our life in neoliberal global capitalism.
The date of the event that made reality and capitalism coincide totally is, accord- I have presented the system of global capitalism, and its reality, to expose a logic of
ing to Petit, 11 September 2001. Petit states that the outcome of what occurred on repetition, that has as its outcome, circularity, obviousness and formalisation. These
‘9/11’ was the excess of reality; it was the moment when reality exploded. Petit warns exist at the core of the institution of contemporary art today. I name such a mecha-
us that in the global era, the debate between modernity and postmodernity has be- nism that simultaneously produces and eschews content, leaving us with an empty
come obsolete. The global era is a break with modernity and with the postmodern form, a performative repetitive mechanism. This mechanism will help us to understand
radicalisations of modernity that were developed by Giddens, Beck and Lash. Petit what it is that makes more or less all large contemporary exhibitions and projects
states that the classical concept of modernity is about modernisation. It is presented obsolete in terms of resistance and critique. To explain this differently: what we have
as an endogenous process; in other words, it is caused by factors within the system. today within exhibitions, especially big powerful exhibition projects (biennials, docu-
Modernity is presented as the work of reason itself. Likewise, modernity constructs a mentas, manifestas, etc.), is a myriad of art works that present unbelievable features
rationalist image of the world that implicates the duality subject/object, and the dis- of contemporary capitalist exploitation, expropriations, as content. These ‘features’
tance is, says Petit, that of man and the world. Postmodernism abolishes this distance are more and more visible, they show it all, tout court, without any mediation and are
and situates man inside a world that is made of signs and ahistorical languages. The increasingly intensified. They present art works that show capitalist corruption, police
global era oscillates this distance between zero and infinity. This is why we may feel repression, massacres of people and animals, all made visible with more and more
54 Marina Gržinić 55
drastically elaborated dimensions, reasons, connections of exploitation, expropriation, Content is abnormal and the form is normal; and moreover, form-misrecognition
executions, etc., though all stay, so to speak, impotent. is today presented consciously, snobbishly stylised, so to speak, out of all proportion.
A perfect example of the above is the 11th International Istanbul Biennial (2009) In such a situation, the knowledge that is ‘captured’ through scientific, or art, work
curated by What, How & for Whom (WHW), a non-profit organisation / visual cul- is transformed through a performative politics of repetition into a pure ideological
ture and curators’ collective formed in 1999 and based in Zagreb, Croatia. The bien- knowledge, but with a proviso saying that therefore we should not be preoccupied as
nial had as its title ‘What Keeps Mankind Alive?’ which is also the title of the song it’s all anyway just a pure process of performativity. As a result, what we get today is
that closes the second act of the play The Threepenny Opera, written in 1928 by Bertolt not just (turned) upside down, but an ideology made ‘unconscious’ and presented in
Brecht in collaboration with Elisabeth Hauptmann and Kurt Weill. the form of a game or a joke that is given a life of its own. To put it another way, what
As WHW’s introduction to the 11th International Istanbul Biennial states,4 Brecht 4 See What, How & for is clear on the level of content is on the level of form not sexy or obvious enough, to
Whom (WHW), ‘What
proposed with The Threepenny Opera a transformation of the ‘theatre apparatus’ through Keeps Mankind Alive?’ the extent of being redundant. What we have today is another misrecognition that is
http://www.iksftp.
an alteration of the existing notions of theatre ‘genres’ and the play’s relationship with com/11b.iksv.org/icsayfa_ not misrecognition at all, but a reflected cognition that takes as its basis the ideologi-
en.asp?cid=6&k1=conte
the audience. This transformation was based on Brecht’s assertion that ‘A CRIMINAL nt&k2=conceptual (last
cal misrecognition of the 1970s, and repeats it in a way to make it ridiculous. The ma-
IS A BOURGEOIS AND A BOURGEOIS IS A CRIMINAL’. This assertion was accessed 15 November,
2012).
teriality of ideology is taken as raw material to be integrated in performative repre-
also at the core of WHW’s concept for the biennial. WHW not only affirmed that sentations where this materiality is consciously set back to the level of the imaginary.
they were ‘working for the criminals’, but in doing so constructed a framework around Making reference to Petit, we can state that the repetitive performative mecha-
the biennial that took away the possibility to intervene critically; it transformed the nism functions as indetermination, indecision, irresolution or what he calls gelatinisa-
critical discourse ‘working for the criminals’ into a normalised fact, into a constative. tion. The materiality of intervention is now a process of multiplication that removes,
Global capitalism colonises life by appropriating language, not only at a colloquial empties, the ground from its materiality. The repetitive performative mechanism be-
level but also in its discursive formulations on which society and its different institu- comes opaque precisely through a process of transparency that is performed through
tions stand. Moreover, this ‘truth’ today is not hidden behind any global conspiracy; repetition. Gelatinisation corresponds today, as argued by Petit, to global capital-
on the contrary, it is brutal in the banal simplicity of its pseudo-logical surface, pre- ism as reification corresponded to modernity. If reification existed in relation to the
cisely as it is stated: ‘A CRIMINAL IS A BOURGEOIS AND A BOURGEOIS IS distinction between the living and the dead, gelatinisation requires a triadic model,
A CRIMINAL’. We could say: so what? Though with reference to Brecht, the profit according to Petit, of the living, the dead and the inert. Gelatinisation means giving
is less banal, and more divinized. Actually I could argue, paradoxically, using Boris an account of reality that presents itself as being occulted, abstract and transpar-
Groys’s thoughts, that what we get is contemporary art as pure commodity. Groys ent. Reality is at the same time alive and dead and, therefore, it is multi-reality. I
stated that commodity is a paradox that has lost its paradoxical quality.5 5 See Boris Groys, will claim that gelatinisation is the solid surrounded by the liquid that is the repeti-
The Communist
The content is, at the same moment of its presentation, made impotent through the Postscript, London: tive performative mechanism. As stated by Petit, it is a double process, of opening
Verso, 2009, p.4.
mechanism that I term performative repetition, which functions as a process of void- and closing. What is even more horrifying is that closing effectuates obviousness.
ing, emptying, extracting the meaning from content. What is left out of the discus- Gelatinisation means reality is covered with obviousness. Politically it presents, as
sion is precisely the ideological form in which the mentioned art works and projects argued by Petit, a catastrophe.
are presented. I claim that this form presents, or encapsulates, a process of not only di-
minishing, but also in many cases completely nullifying what in terms of content was 3. The control of migration in Europe
made visible. In the past, the social reality was presented as ‘normal’; it was displayed
precisely differently from the violence and dispossession that was occurring in every- In its most basic sense, Europe, according to Angela Mitropoulos, is today consti-
day life. Therefore, in terms of its reflection, on the level of (art) form, it was necessary tuted by ‘the problem of the legal form of value, of its imposition and perseverance’,
to produce something ‘abnormal’; as a formal invention or as an excessive surplus (in as well as by the problem of ‘origin and lineage’. Or, as was pointed out by Kwame
accordance with the social and political system in which they appeared, be it socialism Nimako, director of The National Institute for the Study of Dutch Slavery and Its
or capitalism), in order to say that what was in fact normality on the level of content, Legacy (NiNsee), Amsterdam:
was a lie. But what we have today is precisely the obverse; on the level of content the
world is captured as it is, in its full extension of abnormality, monstrosity, exploitation, Now that the Berlin wall (in 1989) had fallen, Western Europe had Eastern
expropriation, while on the level of form, this abnormality is normalised; is presented Europe to go to and they could do away with Africa. Africa was no longer
in such a way that the meaning of powerful content becomes empty, obsolete. relevant. African migration started to be controlled. This is the major
56 Marina Gržinić 57
preoccupation of Europe today – how to prevent Africans from coming to – deported hundreds of Roma back to Romania and Bulgaria) who find themselves
Europe; now Eastern Europe has become the source of full agricultural pro- caught in the ever-changing immigration laws established and reinforced daily by the
duction. Another factor is the civilization mission of the ‘former’ Western EU and implemented and adapted nationally.
Europe in Eastern Europe. They are going to civilize the Eastern Europeans, On the one side, through the foundational repetition, the system of hierarchy is
to teach them democracy, to teach them how to treat the Roma citizens, to being constantly reestablished, leading to a repetitive reconstruction of a centre and
teach them about race relations and human rights. Western Europe ‘solved’ all of a periphery. On the other side, the de-foundational repetition presents itself as the
these problems – the problem of education, the problem of development, the erosion of hierarchies, producing dispersion, multiplicity and multi-reality. This is
problem of freedom – and it is the rest that has to be taught. From the point of why, when somebody from let’s say Ukraine or Moldavia (I cannot say Slovenia, as
view of race relations, it also marginalises the black community, because once here we are the model of servitude to EU and global capitalism), talks about a centre
Europe becomes larger, the black community becomes small.6 6 See Kwame Nimako’s and periphery, the well-educated Westerners laugh about what they term ‘the old
talk at the workshop on
‘Education, Development, division’, as what they see (as the French would say) is ‘multiplicité, multi-réalité…’.
Freedom’, Duke
If we do not take into account this substitution of roles – or to be precise, this repeti- University, Durham, USA But from time to time, amidst this multiplicity and multi-reality, the police come,
(25–27 February, 2010),
tion of roles – the replacement of Africa by the former Eastern Europe (as a paradoxi- workshop organised by
as they did in Greece when the students protested, and, without any openness to-
cal and obverse repetition) – we cannot understand decoloniality in the European Walter Mignolo at the
Center for Global Studies
wards the multiplicity of the students’ multi-reality, imprisoned hundreds of them at
context. Why? Because decoloniality functions as/in/at the frontier where past co- and the Humanities, Duke the university campus; and look – we could see the foundational repetition working
University, http://trinity.
lonialism and the neoliberal colonial present meet. It is at this meeting place where duke.edu/globalstudies/ quite mercilessly, and even more being backed up by, yes, hundreds of EU laws from
education-development-
slavery, wage labour, aesthetics and political economy take place. In other words, as freedom (last accessed Brussels that are then ‘democratically’ used to advise the EU member states. In the
15 November, 2012).
stated by Mitropoulos, ‘origin and lineage are nowhere more disputed and uneasy case of France, the EU ‘protested’, but the point is that precisely because of the EU’s
than in the frontier’, or, it is ‘at the frontier that the boundaries of property law and multiplicity of hegemonic directions that support and reinforce EU institutional rac-
its tenure unfold, that legitimate labour (the very distinction between wage labour ism, France was able to deport hundreds of Roma families to the, as it is termed ‘non-
and slavery) and authorised reproduction (as with the master’s legally recognised and existent’, periphery of the EU.
bastard children) are decided.’ 7 7 See Angela Some of the processes of ‘vanishing’ Eastern Europe parallel the Latin American
Mitropoulos, ‘Legal,
The European Union functions in precisely such a way today by transforming Tender’, Reartikulacija, situation. Instead of recognising larger social, self-organisational and communal pos-
no.7, Ljubljana, 2009.
mostly migrant labour into pure slavery (and not only in Spain, Italy, France, Austria, http://www.reartikulacija. sibilities for new politics, Latin America was ‘sold’, sacrificed to the infrastructure of
org/?p=698
Slovenia, etc.). In Slovenia, migrant workers coming from the former republics of (last accessed 15
10 See Naomi Klein, The a capitalist mode of production.10 With such a move, a critical power was taken from
Shock Doctrine – The Rise
the common state known as Yugoslavia are today working in conditions of slavery; November, 2012).
of Disaster Capitalism, communities and a passage from public to private took place. In such a way, a per-
New York: Picador, 2008.
excluded from the law, they become ‘non-existent’, lacking the most basic human In this book Naomi Klein verse process of capitalist modernisation took over, one that expropriated the social
challenges the popular
rights. Or even more precisely, what occurs at the Schengen border (that is, the myth of Milton Friedman’s space and nullified indigenous revolutions and other systems of knowledge. The mo-
frontier between the European Union and the rest of Europe) can be put in paral- free-market economic
revolution movement’s
dernity in Eastern Europe has been and is still passing through similar capitalist vi-
lel with another border, the Tijuana border (32 km from downtown San Diego, the peaceful global victory.
Klein examines free-mar-
sions of modernity that are seen only as a historical repetition of Western modernism
busiest point of entrance into the USA from Mexico). At the frontier, according to ket ideologue Milton in the local (Eastern) framework. What ‘we’ have managed to bring to the present is
Friedman‘s connections
Mitropoulos, that is ‘a violent positing of the frontier as a space of exploration, cul- to the dictatorship of the old and dead conceptualism from the 1960s/70s, now rediscovered in the former
Pinochet, who overthrew
tivation and extraction of wealth – in the scarcities that are obliged as precondition the democratically- Eastern European context, but not as a political demand to change the ossified in-
elected leadership of
and condition of a market in labour, in the criminalisation and recapture of fugitive 8 Ibid. Chile with the help of stitutions of art, but as an individual ‘existential ethos’. Therefore, the social space of
the United States, which
and wayward (re)production … there would be a periodic recourse to the naturalising 9 See Araba Evelyn regularly took part in socialism is nullified through a Western individualism; Rambo politics is repeated in
Johnston-Arthur and coups throughout South
magic of genealogy to settle matters of orderly progression and authenticity’.8 Belinda Kazeem, America. the former Eastern Europe through the figure of the existentialist conceptual artist
‘Cafe Dekolonial: “Sag
Europe is reborn through a genealogy that excludes all those who are seen from Zur Mehlspeis’leise that fights for freedom in the totalitarian society.
Servus…”’ [Decolonial
its Western perspective as unimportant. Araba Evelyn Johnston-Arthur describes the café: ‘Say goodbye to
situation in Austria as twofold.9 Firstly, we have migrants who were invited into the the pastry silently...’],
Reartikulacija, no.1, 4. Former East and ‘Former’ West
country by the government in the 1960s to aid the post-war reconstruction, and sec- Ljubljana, 2007, http://
www.reartikulacija.
ondly, we have a new, vast group of refugees, fugitives, asylum seekers and deportees org/?p=418 (last ac- Former Eastern Europe and present Western Europe are no longer in opposition, but
cessed 15 November,
(as in August 2010, when France – supposedly legally, as it was based on EU laws 2012). in a relation of repetition. An excellent case of such a repetition is the project ‘Former
58 Marina Gržinić 59
West’ that was started in The Netherlands as an international research, publishing 5. From nation-state to war-state
and exhibition project, for the period 2009–2012, curated by Charles Esche, Maria
Hlavajova and Kathrin Rhomberg.11 ‘Former West’ is not at all a joke, although it 11 See http://www. At this point we have arrived at our penultimate stop. All these transformations,
formerwest.org
could be seen as such, but is a perfect example of repetition as the key logic of global (last accessed 15 presented in a very schematic way, have brought us to the main question: what are the
November, 2012).
capitalism today. What does the project do? It makes a claim on a perverse demand changes that are present in the current constitution of a contemporary state within
for equal redistribution of ‘responsibility’ and ‘positions’ between the East and global capitalism?
West of Europe. That is, it answers specifically to the demand, urgently imposed by The proliferation of new states after the fall of the Berlin Wall (in the so called
Germany after the fall of the Berlin Wall, that East Germany and West Germany post- post-Cold War era) was only possible because of the simultaneous disintegra-
become ‘equally’ outdated. This is of course substantially funded by new European tion of the Westphalian principle of the sovereignty of nation-states. What the 1648
cultural financial institutions. In the case of Eastern Europe, the ‘former’ means that Peace of Westphalia treaty had established was a way of working and managing the
the processes of evacuation, abstraction, expropriation, imposed by the West are ac- world almost until the fall of the Berlin Wall. The Westphalian model is recognised
tually ‘over’; as it was proclaimed by Germany in 2009, celebrating its twentieth an- by international relations scholars as the modern, Western-originated power princi-
niversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, with the slogan: ‘Come, come in the country ple that established an international system of states, multinational corporations and
without borders’ (and, I suggest, without memory as well). But in the case of ‘Former’ organisations as sovereign subjects. This ‘proliferation-disintegration’ mechanism
Western Europe (as it should be written), it implies a purely performative, empty, took place with the fall of the Berlin Wall and is based on the two processes working
speculative gesture. While the East is excluded more and more from the material- simultaneously but not necessarily visibly linked. Though entangled, these two pro-
ity of its history, knowledge, memory, etc., the West is just performing it. It plays cesses are perceived as disconnected, and it is this logic that enabled big international
with a speculative version of itself; it wants us to think that its roots of power and powers to succeed in maintaining order in the mass of new states ‘reborn’ with the
capital are fictional! But this is not such a strange move today, considering it comes fall of the Berlin Wall. The uneasiness provoked by the proliferation of new states
at a time when we talk about financialisation; the word ‘former’ in front of West, therefore was not solved as in the past with world powers’ direct and brutal force of
presents a speculative matrix that gives the West the possibility to not be conscious control. Rather, it was resolved through an intensified process of disintegration of the
of its own historical and present hegemonic power – and, therefore complicit with Westphalian principle of nation-states’ sovereignty and the transformation of the im-
the neoliberal capitalist speculative hegemonic matrix. This speculative character of perial nation-states into war-states.
‘Former’ Western Europe resembles, with perfect accuracy, the speculative character It is at this point that global justice enters the equation. What does global justice have
of financial capitalism at the present, as well as its crisis. Be sure that in the future we to do with these changes? It facilitated, initiated and implemented the transition of
can expect projects, symposia and statements in which the imperial colonising forces imperial nation-states to war-states and allowed for the proliferation of numerous
of Britain, France, Netherlands, etc., will try to prove how they were also colonised new states without the old nation-state sovereignty. In the trajectory of capitalism’s
in the past, and that what is happening to them in the present is the result of some development we can grasp the notion of a transition of sovereignty from nation-state
strange force that has nothing to do with the internal logic of capitalism itself, which sovereignty to transnational institutions of power and war-state politics. This transi-
has two drives only: making profit at any cost and privatisation. tion has curbed the sovereign nation-state since the 1990s. Until that moment the
‘Former West’ is presented as an unquestionable fact, not even as a thesis. old nation-state prevailed, but today nation-states can no longer give amnesty, at least
Former Eastern Europe is not an adjective, but a placeholder in time that is accel- theoretically, to those who have committed war crimes, crimes against humanity and
erated to such a degree that the politics of memory presents itself as a memory of 12 The following book is genocide.12 In fact, we can clearly see the development of a new sovereign entity – the
important for this section
what was once political. To put it another way, what was important at the level of of the text: see Pierre war-state.
Hazan, Judging War,
content (the materiality of a certain history) is now made simply obsolete, ridicu- Judging History: Behind Transitional justice and the demand for ‘universal’ respect of human rights played
Truth and Reconciliation,
lous. Alternatively, the now reborn Former West, the old colonial power, wants to Stanford, California: a key role in this process. Global justice was the framework in which these processes
convince us that it is capable of a process of decolonisation, but, as stated by Achille Stanford University Press,
2010. Cf. p.152.
were conceptualised and naturalised. This is why, within such a context, the question
Mbembe, without actually self-decolonising itself. Similarly to financialisation this posed by Hazan – whether the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, with the subse-
new decolonisation is a fictive decolonisation: without contesting its own infrastruc- quent de facto partitioning of Kosovo, and the 2003 Iraq War reflect higher princi-
tural exploitation, inequality and racism, these structures remain in the EU, in fact ples, or are simply the US and the West’s promotion of their political and economic
they are reinforced; the consequences are disastrous. interests – is of primal importance. Those without economic and military power have
to accept the global capitalism protocol of international justice that does not apply,
60 Marina Gržinić 61
however, when the interests of major power forces/war-states (the US, Russia and setting of a newly elaborated capitalism that needs markets, cheap labour and admin-
China) are at stake. In the case of Srebrenica it is therefore accepted by the interna- istrative frameworks.
tional community that the Dutch soldiers/UN have no need to show repentance.13 13 In the Bosnian silver- After 2001, criminalisation replaces the reconciliation and restoration that char-
mining town of Srebrenica
Pierre Hazan points out the genealogical shift in the principle of universal justice in July 1995, one of the acterised the 1990s. The war-states represent great power while the new nation-states
most notorious modern
from the 1990s to the present day, resulting from the second major reshuffling in the acts of gendercide took are transitional in their restricted (or lack of any) sovereignty, artificially constructed
place. While the inter-
international community brought about by the events of 11 September 2001. The national community and through a biotechnological process of military intervention and capital allocation.
U.N. peacekeepers/
major difference between post-1989 (the fall of the Berlin Wall) and post 2001 (the Dutch soldiers looked on,
The state of Kosovo was born in vitro, without any self-determination, but by a decree
attacks on the World Trade Center Towers in New York) is that the majority of cases Serb forces separated
civilian men from women
of international power(s), i.e., the U.S.
listed in the 2000s – unlike the 1990s ‘ethical wars’ (as they were called) – remain in and killed thousands of What Hazan describes with these stages is, in fact, the change of the biopolitical
Muslim men en masse, or
open conflict or prosecuted on the basis of acts of terrorism. The 1990s cases therefore hunted them down in the into the necropolitical, where acts of genocide and human rights violations are man-
forests.
involve societies themselves in transition: the ex-dictatorships of South America, the aged by ‘administrative sciences’. As Hazan notes, separating transitional justice into
ex-communist regimes of Central and Eastern Europe, the post-apartheid of South different periods also emphasises its successive reorientation. It reveals a purely in-
Africa – the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) – and the Rwandan holo- strumental vision – that of the ‘toolbox’ – that tends to hide the ideological changes:
caust. In 1995, the victims of gross human rights violations were invited to go before the intervention of new actors, the role of Great Powers – in other words, transitional
the South African TRC and give testimonies about their experience. This transition, as justice’s relation to politics.
Hazan says, was less about ‘criminalization’ than about a certain social reconstruction. If we look closely at South Africa, it presented the promise of restorative justice in
In the 2000s, Belgian, British, New Zealand and Spanish national courts, which act 14 On being exhibited in the 1990s and the new social engineering of transitional justice. In this context, the
1989, U.S. artist Andres
under the principle of global jurisdiction, hold tribunals and commissions of enquiry Serrano’s photograph contradictory demands for justice and amnesty – namely – resulted in a compromise,
Piss Christ (showing a
for international crimes (war crimes, crimes against humanity and acts of terrorism). small plastic crucifix and ‘it was a process with which the incapacity of rendering justice was transformed
supporting the body of
According to Hazan, the history of transitional justice has three principal stages Jesus Christ submerged 15 P. Hazan, Judging into the affirmation of a higher truth and justice’.15 In the South African case, com-
in a glass of the artist’s War, Judging History:
that frame a world we have been witnessing over the last twenty years. In these two urine) caused a scandal. Behind Truth and plete confession was necessary to get amnesty, and so suddenly amnesty was equiva-
Reconciliation, op. cit.,
decades we talk about the post-Cold War period that has changed the world radi- U.S. Senators Al D’Amato
and Jesse Helms ex- p.152. lent to a certain acceptance. Victims’ families obtained the information regarding the
cally. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, globalisation shaped a new world order to al- pressed outrage that the
piece was supported by
murdering of their family members through the perpetrator’s testimonies that would
locate capital and privatise public goods as well as to make profit. the National Endowment not have been available in a normal trial, and they did so without spending as much
for the Arts, since it is a
The first period described by Hazan focuses on the steps that satisfy the post- federal taxpayer-financed money as in a typical trial situation. The result was a coordinated national healing,
institution.
Fordist model of labour mobility and connects to waning dictatorship(s). It began Steve Kurtz is a founding occurring through the remembering of crimes as part of elaborating a new social
member of the theatre
with the Argentinean truth commission’s establishment and ended with the 1995 collective Critical Art 16 Ibid., p.36. contract.16 Another result was the association of Christian forgiveness with African
Ensemble (CAE). CAE has
South African TRC. If the first stage had a clear division, with perpetrators on the been frequently invited ubuntu (the very essence of being human). Unlike during the Cold War, amnesty was
by cultural institutions
one side and the victims on the other, the second stage was marked by a transition to exhibit and perform
17 Ibid., p.38. considered the catalyst for reunification par excellence.17 As South Africa illustrated,
and multiplication of ethnic identities. Occurring in the 1990s, the second stage projects around issues
on bio-technologies. In
the truth commission was no longer a default solution but, on the contrary, a positive
overlaps with the first, but radically differs from it. It covers the former Yugoslavia May 2004, Kurtz called
911 to report the death of
18 Ibid., p.33. choice – as much in moral terms as in political and strategic ones.18 Practically, the
and the construction of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former his wife, Hope Kurtz, from confessions and testimonials were concluded with the obligatory point of a certain
congenital heart failure.
Yugoslavia (ICTY ) in 1993 that failed to stop the 1995 Srebrenica massacre. At the time of her death social reconstruction. Truth, as emphasised by Hazan, is already part of the political
CAE were working on an
The second period stretches from 1992 to 2001. It is characterised by the govern- exhibit about genetically- and ideological mechanism, presupposing the adjustment of memory.
modified agriculture
mentalisation and judicialisation of international relations, placing post-Cold War for the Massachusetts This is why in 1996, Margalit and Morzkin, as reported by Hazan, suggested that
Museum of Contemporary
politics into administrative, legal forms. This period is described as multicultural- Art. Police deemed these the process through which ‘people are made to vanish has become a distinctive fea-
materials suspicious and
ist, but it hides its judicialisation of the entire global capitalist society, and even of notified the FBI, who
19 Ibid. ture of the post-war conceptions of what memory is’.19 But in the post-Cold War era,
culture, as the lawsuits against US artists from Andreas Serrano to Critical Art detained Kurtz for 22
hours without charge on
sacredness is transferred from the state to the victims. This shift very much follows
Ensemble illustrate.14 The second period ends in 2001, when global capitalism is en- suspicion of ‘bioterror-
ism’. What followed was
the functioning of a global capitalism, grounded in hegemony on one side and frag-
throned with a new format of the nation-state – the war-state (the US, Britain, etc.) 4 years of torturous law- mentation, multi-reality and multi-dispersity on the other. Following the 1970 shift
related mischiefs. In 2008,
that demands and shapes justice. If the first and second stages deal with the fall of the various indictments from Fordism to post-Fordist capitalism, this shift articulates a different relation be-
against Kurtz were ruled
the Berlin Wall, now it is time to get rid of the iron curtain and open up the full ‘insufficient’. tween capital and power. If there was a unity between capital and power in Fordism,
62 Marina Gržinić 63
today they stay in a co-propriety relation. Unity meant silence instead of justice that 6. The ‘missing’ link: the racial-state
is now changed into truth instead of justice, where truth is the proliferation of vic-
tims’ stories, measured by co-propriety of capital and power. This transition from I have tried to rearticulate in this genealogy of the state in neoliberal global capital-
silence to speech, from forgetting to recounting, is, according to Hazan, translated ism its major shift and this is the shift from nation-state to war-state. This is con-
into the resurgence of international relations’ morality, which seeks to expel violence nected with the new role that the nation-state plays in the current global system
from history. of capital accumulation. Global capital presses on the nation-state in order that it
The political is fragmented, while geopolitical influences grow unchecked, as we removes the legal-political barriers that prevent unconditional mobility of trans-
can see by considering how the 2001 Durban Conference conceptualised transitional multinational capital. This is one of the major functions of the European Union legis-
justice. A world conference ‘Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and lation that is made operative onto the whole space of the EU. The civilization mission
Related Intolerance’, the Durban Conference held on 31 August, 2001, was largely of the old bourgeois Western Colonial European indicates that at the core of the EU
overshadowed by 9/11 – a premonitory sign of the move from restorative justice to- is not a benevolent mission to help the Former Eastern European state to ‘progress’,
ward criminal justice that began to occur around 2000. it is the way new regulation is made effective. It worked in the past through ‘gentle-
In short, if the South African process of reconciliation offered the last hope of men agreements’ that kept concealed outlawed transactions and violent processes of
judicialisation as a restorative mechanism for a new social contract, then the Durban colonisations, and this is what is to be understood and implemented as well today.
conference was a flop and represents the accelerating logic of criminalisation. It Capital within global neoliberal capitalism specifically presses onto the legal-political
signals a radically changing perception of the whole judicialisation of international state barriers. The fact we live in this so-called neoliberal global world, is not that we
relations from reconciliation toward punishment. Hazan terms this process ‘amer- are exempted from borders, but that they are ‘removed’ in order that the mobility of
iglobalisation’, which indicates ‘the political weight of the American superpower and transnational capital flourishes, while at the same time other borders are reinforced.
the attractiveness of the cultural model of the “benevolent hegemon”’. 20 The result is 20 Ibid., p.44. The process started already in the passage from Fordism to post-Fordism. During
an Agambenian state-of-exception in which international justice becomes an act of the time of Fordism (whether we talk about capitalist Fordism of a Keynes type or
perverted benevolence, an exception of the law, yet guaranteed by the law. about Fordism in the socialist countries) the state was protecting national capital. In
Therefore I can propose a final thesis (based on Hazan and Petit) that if education doing this it had to establish a sort of class compromise with the trade unions (the
and religion were exported during colonialism, the time of (neo)coloniality evinces syndicates). This was seen in Fordism as a unity between capital and power that es-
another process. The West exports concepts of justice and the universal order to tablished a jurisdiction and a system of general employment, free public education,
smoothly safeguard its economic interests with a system of legally framed procedures. public health systems, social security and old-age care. In capitalism this was the
Culture and religion can be, as is the case with reform in present-day universities (the case of the welfare state in the Western European space. It is possible to also identify,
Bologna agreement to create European Higher Education), formalised and borderless with Foucault, a nation-state biopolitics that was meant only for the population seen
at the same time. What we have today is the ‘international community’s neo-Kantian as ‘natural’ citizens of the nation-state. The others inside the nation state and outside
vision of universal values defended by supranational legal institutions’. 21 21 Ibid., p.48. meant simply nothing. Racism was a specific inclusion with exclusion; it was a situ-
It is important to recall that this process impacts the role of NGOs in global capi- ation of apartheid within and outside the nation-state. Rastko Močnik has argued
tal. If judicalising international relations was spearheaded by the ‘new entrepreneurs that the function of the nation-state and its state apparatuses was to ‘coordinate’ the
of norms’ – the NGOs – these missionaries of humane globalisation have become interests of national capital (with state coercion, of course) and provide life benefits
moral guardian referees and mediators to the states that have developed a niche mar- to those being recognised (in blood and soil) as fellow nationals of the respective
ket in international relations, such as Switzerland, Sweden, Norway and Canada. 22 Rastko Močnik, nation-state. 22
‘The End of University,
Their exemption from WWII and lack of a colonial past privileges them as players on the Triumph of Higher But what do we have today? As I have elaborated we have not only a transforma-
Education: Will Theory
the field of international relations and human rights. Remain Without tion of the nation-state but a development of a new form of state that is the war-state.
Institutional Support?’
It is obvious that transitional justice with its judicial framework has served the (unpublished manuscript). Now it is the opposite (but not a binary) that we have in front of us. The task of the
purpose of protecting the interests of global capitalism. International justice has dual, war-state is how to maintain the illusion of society despite the more and more brutal
integrated aims: reconciliation between two violently opposed groups (between the logic of capital exploitation and expropriation (which was also brutal in the 1970s,
civil society and the state) and reconciliation between capitalism and its persistent ex- but in a different way). Using the machinery of war to profit just 1% of the global
ploitation. Hopelessly entangled with economy and culture, the future within the log- world while 99% of the population is increasingly pushed into poverty – although it
ic of the war-state and its established global judicial framework is far from promising. must be made clear that this 99% is still very much differentiated in its poverty and
64 Marina Gržinić 65
misery. This is why the unity of capital and power is no longer viable and instead we the Slovenian state, though all the time threatened by deportation. Benjamin Stora
have to expose the co-propriety of capital and power. The attack on the banks is not 27 Ibid., p.125. calls this ‘ethnoracial regulation’. 27
enough. It is necessary to also change the political structures that are caught in the Or, as in 1987 as reported by Ann Laura Stoler, when she sought with Frederick
relation of co-propriety with the centres of financial capital. So if we see a radical dif- Cooper to consider the ‘tensions of the French empire’ we could say that it resides in a
ference between the 1970s and today, we can reformulate it as having to do with two 28 Ibid. network that ‘joined liberalism, racism, and social reform’. 28 Similarly we can say for
different biopolitics, the classical one of the 1970s and the other that changes into a Slovenia that it acquired quasi-bourgeois EU identity as a malfunctioned copy of the
necropolitics. European colonial state, where Slovenia in a turbo way (in just two decades) joined
In the war-state the state apparatuses exist only to maintain the illusion of social neo/liberalism and racism, and moreover forgot about any social reforms.
harmony and not to take care of the life of a proper population. This measure means What is necessary is to put racism as a central category within the parameters of
that from its biopolitical perspective (the politics of taking care of the population the abstract state. This is not about making denunciations of racism and then saying
while systematically controlling it) the contemporary state changes into a necropoliti- that the repressive apparatuses of the state exacerbated the regulations against mi-
cal regime (into a politics of the state, which is only taking part in the war of trans- grants and youth of the second and third generations (though the consequences of the
national capital – abandoning the citizens to find a way of their own how to survive). war against terror launched in 2001 imposed a radicalised discrimination procedure
Therefore, as described by Rastko Močnik, the state in the past took care of the socio- against those identified as Muslims). It is to acknowledge that in Europe we have a
economic level of society, today it is only concerned with the socio-political one. 23 23 Ibid. fully constructed entity of a racial-state and global capitalism. Our task is therefore
Though the political in such a case is but the management of keeping order in society to raise the question of what kind of political, economic, social and cultural (as well
and presents therefore a total ‘de-politicization’ of politics. In reality, the agents of discursive) dispositions have made the racial coordinates of the nation-state and the
capital monopolise the political apparatus: a modern state policy, therefore, receives racial epistemic coordinates of contemporary neoliberal global capitalist govern-
an appearance of ‘general management’ and uses, as stated by Močnik, strategies of ance so legible. What has changed, perhaps, is not only what is known about racist
show business and mass media advertising, in order to manage the status quo. 24 24 Ibid. politics, but how normalised they have become in Slovenia and Europe today. The
The relation between capital and the state is therefore central to an understanding un-recognised, but palpably visible, though denied, racist history is then normalised
of the developments from the relations between the superpowers in the aftermath of within other topics of security and protection policy of the EU, that is nothing else in
the Cold War toward what is currently going on in the European Union and its rela- the end than the fortress of Europe with its racist epistemic context.
tion with Russia and the U.S., not to mention the new players in the world: China, Therefore the nation-state resides today on an infrastructural racism and it is a
India and Brazil. Therefore the project by Irwin is an important one, especially if it racial-state that has to be put at the centre of the analysis. So any kind of a performa-
will develop its future critical potential with analysis of the changes from the nation- tive symbolic edifice that conceptualises the contemporary state has to deal with
state to a war-state, taking into account the ‘missing’ link that is the racial-state. The these implications. Also we have to be alert to the fact, as stated by Stoler, that, ‘the
missing link is not missing at all, in fact, but it is not pronounced or named clearly! I racial states can be innovative and agile beasts, their categories flexible, and their
owe most of what follows to the brilliant analysis on this topic by Ann Laura Stoler. 25 25 Ann Laura Stoler, classifications protean and subject to change. They thrive on ambiguities and falter on
‘Colonial Aphasia: Race
What is the racial-state? We can take the the formation of the Slovenian state as and Disabled Histories in 29 Ibid., p.130. rigidities. (…) Racial formations have long marked differences by other names.’29
France’, Public Culture,
an example. At the foundation of the state that in 2011 celebrated twenty years of its no.23., Durham: Duke It is necessary to take a distance from the nation-state and its bourgeois sensibili-
University Press, 2011.
short existence there are 18,305 erased people. Who are they? They are the internal ties that are not capable of making proper reference to racist histories. But when these
immigrants from other republics of the former common state of Yugoslavia. They histories are looked at in relation to the imperial colonial pasts of Western European
were removed from the register of permanent residence in 1992 when Slovenia had states in the EU, they have to include at their centre analysis of colonialism and con-
already declared its independence and was not under threat. What happened to them temporary forms of coloniality.
under the auspices of the new state can be termed as a ‘particularly brutal’ policy of
dispossession and ‘regroupment’. 26 The Slovenian state also has an absence of a histo- 26 Ibid., p.134, note 39.
7. Conclusion
ry of internal-immigration from and to former Yugoslavia. It is necessary to acknowl-
edge the existence not only in Slovenia but also in the EU (in the passage of the EU I presented the shift or transformation from nation-state to war-state to warn, simi-
from a biopolitical to a necropolitical regime) of these ‘invisible’ workers of the world. larly as Ramón Grosfuegel pointed out, that focusing on the conquering power over
They are migrants, again from the former ex-Yugoslav republics, put under harsh pro- the juridical-political boundaries of a state, also over its cultural and artistic prem-
cedures of exploitation, discrimination and segregation and completely abandoned by ises, is not sufficient when we talk only about a nation-state. This became obsolete
66 Marina Gržinić 67
after 9/11. This means that it is necessary to open the whole analysis to different
parameters, even when it is about art projects that tackle the boundaries of such a
nation-state. As Grosfuegel said, ‘projects that focus on policy changes at the level of
the nation-state are obsolete in today’s world-economy and lead to developmentalist
illusions’. 30 30 See Ramón
Grosfuegel,
In such a situation it is necessary to incorporate in every art and cultural project ‘Transmodernity, border
thinking, and global
an analysis that deals with the conceptualisation of the three formations: nation- coloniality: Decolonizing
political economy and
state, war-state and racial-state. As I have tried to show in the case of Slovenia, al- postcolonial studies’,
though the state is only twenty years old, racism is at the core of its organisation. It is Eurozine, 2008, http://
www.eurozine.com/
employed in exclusions, violations of basic human rights and discrimination together articles/2008-07-04-
grosfoguel-en.html (last
with exploitations – think of the violated rights of the erased people, the invisible accessed 15 November,
2012).
workers of the world, and the exploitation of migrants and other precarious workers.
Racism is also central in the way Slovenia acquired its national history by silencing
histories of art and culture made by migrant intellectuals, by gay and lesbian groups
and alternative movements.
Therefore it is necessary to include a systematic presentation of racism and anti-
Semitism within the genealogy of a contemporary neoliberal state and all the projects
that counter it. This should be the next focus of the NSK State in Time project that
has the knowledge, history and potential to activate the positions, elements and forms
that will question the racial-state being the central link in the shift from nation-state
to war-state. Ljubljana, 2011
68 69
The Eye of the State Avi Pitchon
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, with the collapse of the Soviet bloc, the NSK col-
lective faced a paradigmatic challenge. After the war broke out, Slovenia was the first
to declare its independence in June 1991, leaving the battlefield ten days later. What
NSK did concurrently was to declare itself a state existing in time rather than in geo-
graphic space. The state was to rely on the memories and actions of its subjects, who
are not supposed to belong to any given nation or ethnic group. It was to furnish time
1 Žižek defined NSK’s
strategy as ‘over-identi- with visibility; time defined through experience and movement rather than through
fication’. He maintained
that overt criticism of
blood and soil. Against the backdrop of Yugoslavia’s dissolution into states fanatically
the regime was not as
effective as an act of
based on national and ethnic affiliation, the NSK state prophesied the grave results
masquerading which radi- of the absence of an ethnically impartial regulating organisation due to which the
calised the values of the
hegemonic centre, while region deteriorated into a blood bath. The NSK state introduced an alternative model
planting aesthetic and
ideological booby-traps in that sharply criticised the disastrous naïveté of libertarian emancipation theories
them. To be ‘more stately
than the state’, thus, is striving to dissolve the foci of authority, leading not to a free utopian society, but
a more subversive act
than to criticise it directly, rather to a much more dangerous and barbaric type of centralisation. Furthermore,
since this radicalisation
exposes the ‘hidden one may extract from this model a prophetic critique on the loss of liberties involved
reverse’, namely, the bare,
real intention behind the
in the transition to a political format operating within global (or pan-European)
ideological guise, the
transgression which is
capitalism, which supervises and controls in an ostensibly different, dynamic, flexible,
not discussed explicitly, mobile and boundless manner. A mode of behaviour that aims to enable the market
but nevertheless allowed
as a behavioural norm to flow undisturbed, and harnesses the state apparatus in its full force to confront
(just as the Ku-Klux-Klan
lynchings and the po- disturbances when needed (as opposed to constantly). In the dramatic transition from
groms which culminated
in Kristallnacht were not socialism to blatant nationalism and all-encompassing capitalism, NSK tried to rescue
overtly supported by the
authorities, yet were an the baby lest it be thrown out with the bath water, implying the possible existence of
outcome of the official
ideology, the ‘hidden a positive state structure.
reverse’). The strategy of
responding to the lan-
The logic of over-identification,1 which made NSK notorious, also implemented
guage of the system by
using this very language,
itself in the context of the artistic proclamation of independence; it was manifested in
of being more totalitarian the totality with which NSK adopted all the aesthetic, ritualistic, gestural and sym-
than totalitarianism, this
radical affirmation is sub- bolic features of states. NSK began to declare every event of the organisation as the
versive, embarrassing the
regime much more than materialisation of a transient state territory manifested in the shape of a full-fledged
manifestations of criticism
and opposition, which embassy and consulates which issued passports to anyone willing to fill out a form
are easier to deflect. (By
the same token, this may and pay the necessary fee. The passports appeared perfectly authentic, and could eas-
explain why the IDF was
embarrassed when the af- ily mislead a weary or slightly ignorant passport control officer. The NSK logo became
fair of the T-shirts printed
by IDF squadrons bearing
the state’s flag. What has happened with previous acts of over-identification, repeated
slogans and caricatures
depicting the killing of
itself in the new context: it was reported that an unknown number of citizens fled the
women and children was war zone in Bosnia-Herzegovina and crossed the border using the fictive passport.
exposed.) The hidden
reverse has a vampire-like In recent years, NSK found itself in a new front of the European stronghold as it be-
nature: its bringing to light
IRWIN, Procession Graz, 2008 alone can kill it. gan to receive thousands of passport applications from African citizens who thought
70 71
they had found a loophole and a legitimate admission ticket to the European Union. their strategy embeds such inclinations), NSK indicate the fragile, traumatic moment
In addition, IRWIN initiated the NSK Guards (NSK Garda) project – a photographic of transition from utopia to apocalypse because there is something to lose in that mo-
documentation of rituals during which soldiers of various armies (mostly from East ment, and therefore there is also something to salvage. They strive to enfeeble or even
European countries) wear an armband bearing Malevich’s cross, and stand to atten- neutralise apocalyptic forces threatening to repeat the pattern of the brutal past in the
tion at the foot of the NSK flag. This perfect emulation of a political apparatus and here-and-now, and they do so by indicating the aesthetics which sets them in mo-
the temporary conceptual conquest of real territories (embassies) and armies hint at tion, and the fact that their power stems from that aesthetic, and not from any other
the fictive element inherent to every state, centred on an accepted mythology based source. NSK’s gaze is far-reaching, pointing not at power relations based on coercion,
on symbols and forms. At the same time, it conquers a slice of reality as it tricks ac- law and obedience, but rather at the aesthetic-mythological glue holding these power
tual bodies, groups and individuals into acknowledging NSK’s legitimate existence. relations together, enabling them a-priori. This indication conceals a possibility both
When an army agrees to be conquered by a foreign flag and emblem, just because tempting and threatening, of harnessing this aesthetic and reclaiming it for the sake
they are ostensibly imaginary, this indicates the arbitrariness of the rules, values and of a new utopian element.
flag which it swore to defend. An absurdity inherent in all national aesthetics; na- The importance of this not all-negating approach is emphasised against the back-
tions whose struggles are based on a somewhat neurotic, narcissistic concentration on drop of the prevalent cynicism of the ideological discourse in the postmodern era.
nuances of difference. In an act of total theatre, which dissolves art and life, IRWIN The exposure and deconstruction by post-modernism’s prominent thinkers of the
make armies perform voluntarily what in any ‘real’ situation they would have done blind power-seeking and all-too-human interest underlying political views, ideo-
only following surrender at the conclusion of a bloody battle. logical narratives and founding myths have (mostly unwillingly) contributed to the
NSK’s first embassy was inaugurated in a private apartment in Moscow in 1992. creation of an atmosphere of widespread public heartbreak, bitterness, helplessness,
Since then, the NSK state has transformed into a parasitical, colonising spirit no long- passivity and a-politicism. Instead of neutralising or decentralising power, decon-
er focused on its foundational homeland, but rather generating its temporal heritage struction has awarded it the license to cynically admit that it is indeed motivated by
via the real and dynamic movement of its citizens in the world, and through encoun- self-interest, without paying the price. (In Silvio Berlusconi’s case, for example, his
ter, dialogue and interaction. From East Europe to West, from there to America and, image as a person who unwaveringly looks after his own interests is precisely part of
most recently, to the Middle East. In the opening of IRWIN’s first retrospective in what constructs his popular masculine image. In Israel too, the criminal allegations
the region, at the Israeli Centre For Digital Art in the city of Holon, a ceremony was against Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman combine with his nationalist aggres-
held during which the Israeli performance group Public Movement greeted IRWIN as sion to generate a positive image of a man’s man and no fluffy, lefty weakling. And
if it was the state of Israel greeting the state of NSK , complete with marching drills, of course, advocates of bank bailouts and austerity measures are faceless experts and
raising of respective national flags and playing of respective national anthems. not neo-con evangelists, justified by cold, rational ‘necessity’.) The subjects of power
implement egoism in their everyday life, excluding themselves from any political
‘The explanation is the whip and you bleed.’ involvement or discourse, since the centre is but another interest-motivated sector,
– Tomaž Hostnik, Apologia Laibach 2 ‘If we were to define devoid of values and care for the public at large, for the nation. Hence not only is it
the retroprinciple in a
nutshell, we might say it
irrelevant as a sphere of action, worse still it has de-facto become one of the groups
As long as we bear in mind that NSK is the outcome of an avant-garde tradition refers to an eclecticism
and a utilisation of works
with which the citizen competes for a piece of the pie. The daily administration of
that triumphed and prevailed, and therefore shifted from opposition to coalition, an by other artists as a way many Western capitalistic regimes no longer bothers to correspond with lofty ideals
of reinterpreting and, at
experience which is totally foreign to us as Westerners (but not as Israelis, a point the same time, reactu- or some shared ideological solidarity, but rather with a frosty, alienating dystopian-
alising them. Each time,
which will be elaborated below), it will be easier to understand that its retroprinciple2 however, the process Robocopesque jargon of maintaining order and nothing else, while cutting off
re-establishes itself on
and over-identification differ not only from approaches adhering to direct protest/ the basis of a concrete manifestations of extremism that may interrupt the flow of market forces. In this
task and new reflection.
criticism, but also from ironic, parodic, or satirical estrangement. They are truly and The retroprinciple is, then, atmosphere, the sole expression of solidarity is nostalgic and voracious, and as such
the endless process of
effectively subversive precisely because they do not purport to destroy, overcome, re-establishing one’s own it is radicalised, hysterical, fanatical and racist. It is the traumatic panic of the fall
position by reinterpreting,
evade or scorn ideological systems as such; NSK does not rely on mere negation and rejuvenating, and trans-
from the Eden of belonging and justice. The international Occupy movement (which
repudiation because the memory of victory renders them optimistic (even if the forming both the tradition
and one’s own work.’ Igor
recently infiltrated the art world) can seem like a proactive reaction to Robocop rule,
modern victory was short-lived and doomed to collapse into catastrophe, it was still Zabel, ‘Icons by Irwin’, however it is using the same hegemonic language of rational prioritising that leaves
http://irwin.si/texts/
worthwhile). As an art collective, they are placed firmly within history, within cul- icons-by-Irwin/ itself open to the emerging of rampant, fundamentalist regionalism and xenophobia
(last accessed 18
ture, within civilisation, not outside them. Neither iconoclasts nor anarchists (even if November, 2012). as evident in France, Switzerland and Greece.
72 Avi Pitchon 73
The power of the retroprinciple and of over-identification lies in learning the his- embarrassed by this act of informing and exposing of the hidden reverse and washes
torical lesson and avoiding repetition of the aforesaid destructive Marxist avant-garde its hands of the whole affair) and from the fascist and nationalistic heritage in general
processes of negation and deconstruction. There is something misanthropic, gloat- (since the symbols and insignia this heritage used existed before and continue to ex-
ing and anti-social about the act of disrobing the system of its ideological Emperor’s ist thereafter; they are eternal, and as such, they are never originated or introduced as
clothes, as carried out by the Marxist and postmodern left, a tendency (possibly a a monopoly in the hands of a given regime, but rather wait in their sacred orbit as a
neurosis) translated into a defeatist political programme. Rational deconstruction potential vessel for any regime that encounters it), and offers it to us. The accomplish-
alone cannot bring about a change because the very idea of change is romantic by ment is double because it changes something both in the public sphere and in the rul-
definition, and as such, it draws on the same mythological origin that the centre orig- ing consciousness. Primarily, the orgasmic experience is made possible in a ritualistic
inally grabbed for its own use. The alienation from the apparatus so central to Marxist space – the artistic space – and therefore does not involve bloodletting. At the same
lore is in fact experienced by the deconstructivists alone, obliviously operating as a time, one should emphasise that this is not a simulated, representational, mimetic
differentiated, extraterrestrial elite. The masses do not share this alienation in the first space, because the potential and will-to-power inherent to symbols and aesthetics is
place. They feel a belonging, they enjoy and take pride in it, and the eating from the real, and therefore always carries a promise for the future: otherwise there wouldn’t
Tree of Knowledge offered by the alienated scholarly elite only breaks their spirits have been an orgasm erupting out of it. NSK’s absurd and contradictory combination
instead of mobilising them. The call for the superiority of reason over emotion and of symbols indeed empties the existing ideological promise, exposes it as corrupt/
the patronising labelling of the yearning for flags, slogans, anthems and heroism as decadent, or simply neutralises it by the very use of mishmash; the paradoxical mix-up
an opiate of the masses, guarantee that the status quo will remain intact. Worse still (remix, mashup, cover version) neutralises the formula and the specific, momentary
the deconstructivists ensure an accelerated, hysterical recruitment of the masses to the compound chosen by the existing order, but it does not neutralise the symbols them-
centre’s aid precisely at the moment when it is laid bare. The centre is the public’s en- selves on which the compound is based. The symbols continue to emit the aura of the
emy on the material level, but it is its best friend on the mythical level (or, at least, it eternal flame, which cannot be dimmed or extinguished. Along with the abduction of
was so in the ‘past’, in the good old days, a golden age for which the public apparently an eternal essence from the heart of a decaying apparatus and its handing over to the
pines). The retroprinciple does not patronise or estrange itself from that ostensibly na- public, NSK does not hesitate to retrace its steps, to look back into the apparatus’s eyes
ïve past era in which there existed a cohesive collective made of a public that believed and smear that essence in its face. This gesture embarrasses the centre because it re-
in something. Over-identification exposes the system, but does not leave us empty- minds it of the time during which it was convinced, and swept itself after the myth it
handed in the process. It snatches the aesthetic-mythical power from the centre, dis- had constructed to control us. This is the profound reason why when Laibach and NSK
arms it, and hands it over to us. Namely, it generates a cultural, artistic, social space met with repression, banning and prohibition, they expressed their satisfaction with
in which we can rekindle and re-celebrate the paradise of a collective sense of justice, the regime’s awakening from its degenerate complacency, from the automatic pilot, de-
and of belonging to a movement which is greater than we are individually and larger termined to defend itself and its vitality. To get to the bottom line, what NSK achieve
than life; we already know that the original utopia led to trauma and heartbreak, that is a remobilisation of all parties involved towards the flag of myth, for remembering
the dream was flawed, but we emerge stronger because over-identification leaves us a belief in something beyond capital and coercive power. The centre is embarrassed
in a space which acknowledges and respects the utopian moment of grace. Since NSK and loses balance because it remembers that there is always a greater power around
does not stand outside, balanced on some theoretically abstract Archimedean vantage the corner, threatening/promising to sweep us all off our feet. And us? We are forced
point from which to criticise, they have no problem with being partners in this yearn- to choose whether we stand outside or inside the human experience, and whether we
ing, and with the fact that human history will always be inspired by it. join the party or condemn the hosts; this is the permanent risk taken by NSK , since
The hidden reverse of every ideology is epitomised by the ultimate transgression this is precisely the sole feature of totalitarian regimes left as an empty square – the
– war – as part of which people are sent to kill and be killed in its name with elation, scapegoat, the root of the problem, the propagator of the disease, the one betraying the
boundless devotion, an amazing outburst of superhuman stamina and unending soli- revolution, the inferior race.
darity. Those who survive the blood bath will remember the experience as a forma-
tive, once-in-a-lifetime peak. NSK take this murderous, barbaric, bestial excitement, ‘similia similibus curantor’ (‘likes are cured by likes’)
combined with feelings of inner enlightenment and purifying, absolute, religious truth. – The Homeopathic Axiom
They hold onto that collective orgasm, but instead of emptying it – as does the alienat-
ing, individualistic, urban-bohemian-decadent-erudite-misanthropic-patronising-meg- The aesthetics and world view held by IRWIN and NSK are vital not only as a lesson
alomanic-Judeo-Christian left – they snatch it from the banal political centre (which is in the history of art colliding frontally with a lesson in world history, but also because
74 Avi Pitchon 75
they offer a model for thought and action in Israel. It is a relevant and challenging fulfils its maximum potential (and is perhaps only possible) in a time of the hegemon-
model because it proposes a new perspective barely examined in Israeli art – a third ic narrative’s waning; it is precisely this fateful time span that allows for the creation
position which interrupts the paralysing duality of coalition and opposition, approval of a replica more beautiful and enthusiastic than the disintegrating original. Since
and criticism, integration and rebellion (most of local contemporary artistic practice the original has not yet collapsed, and since the governmental centre still speaks its
may be divided into two camps: pragmatic globalist careerism versus political activ- language (more and more grotesquely, and oblivious to the fact that for the younger
ism, both of them quintessentially post-Zionist) – while Israel is passing through a generation this language has long dissolved into the mere empty intonation of over-
sensitive and fragile intermediate state very similar to the situation into which IRWIN zealous television promos), the question begs itself: what disintegration exactly do the
and NSK emerged, and in which they operated, provoked reactions and made waves. buds of the over-identification tactic in Israel prophesy, and what future synthesis do
The State of Israel was spawned by a utopian, modernist, European idea – the roots of they herald?
which go directly back to the Volkist national revival of Eastern and Central Europe Over-identification has long existed in Israeli art, its roots possibly lie in Michal
in the mid- and late nineteenth century. To put it in somewhat more dramatic 3 After the occupation of Na’aman’s conceptual work in the 1970s. 3 The state monumentality of the 1990s
Mount Hermon in the Yom
terms, I shall say that in today’s world there remain two political experiments which Kippur War of 1973, Israeli installations by Erez Harodi and Nir Nader was designed and shaped to expose the
Television correspondent,
emerged from the modernist heritage: Israel and NSK . I shall further add that in Micha Limor, arrived on centre by mimicking its aesthetics of authority. Concurrently in Jerusalem, Anat
location and interviewed
the early days of a national movement, that strove to gather its citizens from all over Golani Brigade soldier Ben-David used Laibach’s music in her extrovert multi-media performances, which
Benny Massas, who
Europe (only much later did Zionism turn to the rest of the world), take them to an- explained that his com-
led her over time to a conceptually-devised infiltration into the world of the rock/
other continent as inspired by the bible, and set up a state there, the idea most likely mander had told them
that the Hermon outpost
pop concert based on an ongoing study of the totalitarian character of the stage per-
sounded far-fetched and imaginary at least as much as the idea of a ‘state in time’ was vital because it was former. Her brother, Yoav Ben-David, painted homeland vistas and historical Zionist
‘the eyes of the state’.
sounds today. Considering the ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’, which took place in One year later, Michal figures, using an impersonal technique of icon painting similar to that of IRWIN,
Na’aman installed a sign-
Berlin in 2010 and subsequently led to a proliferation of citizens’ activity and initia- board bearing the same producing postcard-like landscapes that are disturbing in their strange neutrality.
metaphorical expression
tives, there is room to speculate on ‘what if ’, while looking back at the chaos created on the Tel Aviv beach. In Ilya Rabinovich acted similarly in his photographs of haunted, deserted public and
the catalogue of the exhi-
by the implementation of the objectives of the Zionist Congresses. bition ‘Artist and Society national institutions. One may call the tactic employed by both these artists ‘over-
in Israeli Art, 1948-1978’
What’s important is that NSK’s aesthetics and symbols echo something distant (The Tel Aviv Museum, objectivity’: their cold gaze exposes cracks in the official aesthetics; the disconcert
1978), curator Sarah
in Israel, something blurred yet familiar, and that is because they originate in the Breitberg-Semal main-
and dread simmering under the surfaces of their works are somewhat reminiscent of
same background and employ the same heritage. What is doubly important is that tained that Na’aman’s
use of the national verbal
the way filmmaker David Lynch extracts horror from every inanimate element of the
NSK’s philosophical approach, strategy and modus operandi can contribute to Israel’s readymade indicated space appearing in his frames.
the nation as a living, yet
zeitgeist due to the aforesaid analogies. The most crucial being the one involving the monstrous creature. The aforementioned performance group Public Movement is currently the most
activity of NSK being made possible and scoring achievements because it took place vociferous and quintessential example of Israeli artists employing over-identification
in a paradigmatic transition period nearly identical in nature to the one experienced tactics. Their use of ritualistic aesthetics originated and enacted by the Zionist youth
in Israel, a time typified by the erosion of the original utopian idea and the solidar- movements, the IDF, and various state apparatuses is reduced into a salute to an ideo-
ity it created, giving room to fanatic nationalism and vulture capitalism. Israel, like logical vacuum centred around a flag that represents itself alone, the idea of a flag.
Slovenia, stood between East and West, between socialism and democracy, between When the list of collective aesthetic legacies courtesy of Zionism whose mobilising
mobilised collectivism and free-market individualism. NSK’s lesson is akin to a gaunt- power diminishes is supplemented with the only contemporary experiences which
let thrown down to artists in Israel; picking it up implies reconsideration of the col- generate a sense of togetherness – sex, terrorist attacks and road accidents (an array of
lective past and the aesthetic and mythological toolbox of Zionism. (And not only its triggers cherry-picked by the group like a football scout’s freshly acquired stars) – the
history in a hegemonic or post-Zionist interpretation. NSK proposes a third footing, resulting spectacle establishes an elusive, wild and intricately unnerving system of
which carries the potential of liberating the region from the dualistic loop in which it over-identification which laments the evil at the core of the mechanism, but also the
is stuck.) Picking up the gauntlet means recognising the privilege of living through a loss of the ability to take part in its rituals out of love and identification.
fateful transition period, when one ideological system becomes weakened, loosened, Public Movement does not operate in a vacuum. Artist Yael Bartana reconstruct-
corrupt and another ideological system capable of replacing or improving it has not ed photographs of pioneers from the early Yishuv days, but replaced some of these
yet emerged. It is a privilege facing both inwardly (more inward possibilities and Jewish role models with Palestinians (as part of the exhibition ‘Never Looked Better’
spheres of action vis-à-vis a degenerating centre), and outwardly (the world observing curated by Galit Eilat and Eyal Danon, which invaded the Diaspora Museum like a
us attentively, awaiting a loud and clear new voice). The tactic of over-identification Trojan horse of subtle over-identification), and became internationally acclaimed for
76 Avi Pitchon 77
her spectacular mobilising of Zionist pioneering gestures (most notably the ‘wall &
tower’ settlements of pre-independence Eretz-Israel) in order to make utopian state-
ments regarding the entangled future of Israel and Europe. Most recently she pushed
her fictitious organisation, The Jewish Renaissance Movement in Poland, one level
closer to reality and further from art by initiating a congress in Berlin that discussed
current political issues. Pil & Galia Kollectiv landed at the Israeli Herzliya Biennial
(2009), and erected, in the duration of a futurist performance narrated in revolution-
ary Russian dialect, a Real-socialist sculpture of a capitalistic yacht, mounted by a
crew dressed in Dadaist costumes. In his exhibition ‘Uzi’ (2010) in Tel-Aviv’s CCA,
Yochai Avrahami looked back at a personal story oscillating between Germany and
Israel, between the Bauhaus and the Taas (Israel Military Industries) factory, medi-
ated through an installation which imitates settlement and Zionist museums, centred
on the circumstantial argument that the Uzi sub-machine gun was shaped according
to the values of the German Bauhaus. Participating in the 2012 group exhibition
‘Where To?’ at the Israeli Centre For Digital Art, the author curated and produced a
compilation album entitled ‘Zion Sky’, collecting cover versions, interpretations and
meditations on the Zionist music and folk legacy.
Prior to the group’s arrival in Israel to mount their retrospective, IRWIN invited
the IDF to enlist its soldiers in the NSK Guards. The IDF flatly refused, echoing the
relationship between Laibach and the Yugoslavian regime in the early 1980s. Who
are the Israeli artists who will analyse the IDF’s refusal and draw operative conclu-
sions? Who will appropriate the aesthetic heritage of Zionism and thereby construct
a model that will change the past and remember the future? Who will prepare us
for the imminent dark recesses of the Kali Yuga, for the birth of a new cycle of life,
emerging from oblivion? London, 2010
Statement by Zoran Thaler, Slovenian Minister of Foreign Affairs (1995/96), for Slovenian TV (Studio City), 23 November,
1995, in which the Minister expresses his view that it is time for Slovenia and NSK State in Time establish mutual relations.
Presentation of NSK diplomatic passport to General Agim Çeku, Prishtina, 12 December, 2003
78 79
The Real Wince of the NSK State in Taipei
Huang Chien-Hung
Virtual Frontiers
The Slovenian art group IRWIN, part of the larger art collective and virtual state
called NSK (Neue Slowenische Kunst), rode into Taiwan on its reputation for tak-
ing applications, conducting interviews and issuing passports. Given the fact that
Taiwan cannot be called a concrete national entity, or at least cannot be represented
as such in the world, and that the NSK state has existed for a while in a unique con-
ceptual space, there are parallels between the two that are worth exploring. It could
be said that Taiwan is similarly a quasi-state in flux, or a ‘state in time’ as NSK fash-
ions itself, and furthermore the identity, if not the actual document, conferred by an
NSK passport embodies a common Taiwanese desire to adopt a third identity beyond
‘Chinese’ or ‘Taiwanese’.
Although the NSK State in Time is generally interpreted as an art project, its sig-
nificance extends beyond art and imaginative construction, approaching real nation-
hood. NSK’s frontier with reality reveals alternative notions of nation – both possible
and impossible – and suggests relationships between the individual and state that are
beyond existing systems. As a state in time, NSK manifests instability by juxtaposing
an art practice, which operates via virtuality and deploys dynamic imaginative states,
with an operation that verges on reality, namely the issuing of an NSK passport,
which is a symbolic document with ambiguous function. NSK uses art strategies to
create a nation that can change its own significance, has a fluid community base and
eschews symbolising any specific territorial borders. Comparatively, Taiwan has not
been conjured out of the imagination; it has, following its long and complex colonial
and post-colonial relationships, a definite territory and a genuine and independent
government. Also unlike NSK , Taiwan possesses a very real history of political and
economic development, and this has been continually hindered by a lack of interna-
tional recognition and the impossibility of declaring independence within the his-
torical context of China. Nonetheless, we can still draw parallels, as the Taiwanese
people are haunted by the perception that their country is merely floating somewhere
in time, and cannot be represented as a country existing in a real place. It is for these
reasons that in September 2010, IRWIN ’s deployment of its art practice in Taiwan
constituted a meeting of two states in time: NSK , which approaches the limit of na-
tional recognition through artistic imagination and provides an opportunity for its
IRWIN, NSK (Nacionalni Svet za Kulturo - National Board for Culture) meeting, 30 November, 2005, Delo newspaper, 1 December, 2005 citizens to occasionally come together; and Taiwan, which has had no choice but to
(Culture is an integral part of society
toss the reality of its existence into an imaginary black hole. While NSK is continu-
With some critical comments, the members of NSK backed up the projected, although modest, growth of the state budget for culture
over the coming two years, but expressed their reservations on the government's package of reforms, which reflects an underestimation ally in flux, Taiwan is forever forced to maintain the status quo.
of the social role of culture.) Since martial law ended in 1987, identity in Taiwan has been an either/or
IRWIN, Latest Information, 2007 concept, with China and Taiwan representing the two poles. Struggles between
80 81
Taiwan’s Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Democratic Progressive Party political authority along with an open political atmosphere and acceptance of avant-
(DPP) over the last twenty years have never been productive, nor have they resulted garde art.
in a feasible position for Taiwan as a political entity. Rather, each party has exploited
Taiwan’s extremely tense political atmosphere to create support for their election
An Operation of (De)nomination
campaigns. Due to feelings of indeterminate identity and long-term polarization, the
desire for a third place, perhaps symbolising a refuge or escape, arose in Taiwanese By taking a closer look at IRWIN’s art practice in Taipei, specifically the process of
society to shake off anxiety. holding interviews and issuing NSK passports, we get a clearer picture of the cir-
Prior to Chiang Kai-shek’s retreat to Taiwan in 1949, alternative places in the cumstances of life in Taiwan, the political awareness of the Taiwanese people, and
Taiwanese popular imagination were China, representing an ancestral home, and complex interactions between art and life. For the Taiwanese, following such a long
Japan, representing progress. Having these alternatives, however, did not divide period of passively accepting the political status quo, the arrival of IRWIN and the
society, nor at this point did the need for a third place as a destination for refuge NSK passport might have provoked new ways of thinking. The project certainly raised
arise. After Chiang Kai-shek’s arrival, however, Taiwan was squeezed between two a pertinent question: When used to look more closely at gaps in reality and its fron-
political entities, namely the communist party’s People’s Republic of China and tier, what kind of mechanisms are imagination, simulation and re-identification for
the Kuomintang (KMT)’s Republic of China. Both political entities claimed all of producing social action and trends?
China as their territory: the first, the PRC, certainly achieved symbolic and geo- When establishing their group, IRWIN initially made reference to Marcel
graphic unity; but the ROC was just a China based on ideas and claims. In other Duchamp’s self-adopted feminine pseudonym Rrose Sélavy by adopting the name
words, the KMT made Taiwan their temporary physical base for operations merely Rrose Irwin Sélavy. The name Rrose Sélavy suggests that love is a symbol for life
to suture the tear in what is normally the seamless integration of the symbolic and – since it sounds like eros, c’est la vie – and is also a figuration for the physical appear-
geographic. Taiwan, under these conditions, as a purely practical choice, has been ance of gender, and thus a mise en abime appears between the two. Rrose Irwin Sélavy
forced to embrace its symbolic representation from a geographic distance, and for was later shortened to R Irwin S, which is pronounced as real wince. Real wince,
many years now, people who make their lives in Taiwan have felt compelled to either with its self-mocking pain and discomfort, stands in ironical contrast to eros, c’est la
gloss over this contradiction or obfuscate not having a governmental identity. vie and, following the fall of the communist party, irony became a new and political
The combination of an unresolved position and continual political struggle has means of expression in IRWIN’s home of Slovenia. According to Duchamp, effect-
not only formed the political consciousness of Taiwanese people, but also created ing the pronunciation of written words is an ironic manipulation as it leads us away
anxiety over their name. Long-term ambiguity has resulted in a weakened concept from their meaning, thus constructing a different relationship between pronunciation
of nation, even to the extent that people are willing to abandon both political enti- and meaning. Duchamp used an irony similar to Søren Kierkegaard’s, but replaced
ties (PRC and ROC) to find refuge from anxiety in a third place – even though such logic with poetry. The pronunciation of Rrose Sélavy did not form a contrasting or
a place rarely confers a sense of national identity. For these reasons, when NSK came oppositional relationship with the written word, but rather constructed a poetic fis-
to Taiwan, a unique relationship between the two became evident. First of all, the sure. This fissure reoccurs in other works, such as the deferral created by transpar-
NSK passport raised national identity issues because Taiwan is not a country proper ency in The Large Glass, or even the attempt to construct a fourth dimension with
(perhaps it is a double country). The NSK passport did not immediately appear to be Étant donnés (Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas). So we could say that
a critique; it seemed to overlap with Taiwan’s situation, thus provoking desire for Duchamp’s ideological focus was on a conceptual dialectic rather than political issues
a third place or reminiscence of that desire in the people of Taiwan. Secondly, as embedded in social or historical contexts. Duchamp’s work produces its significance
an art action, NSK did arouse public response in Taiwan, but it was not regarded as through an imaginative transition over a gap between two unstable meanings, or even
politics floating between the real and imaginary, and therefore we could say it was between meaning and no meaning. In this way, the importance of the Duchampian
not regarded as contemporary art as such, nor as a global measurement of Taiwan’s does not lie in visual expression, but in how it liberates us through transitions. As
international political relations. Most people simply offered evasive assessments of Theodor Adorno put it, when the work of art is finished the process is always erased
the NSK project, such as ‘interesting’ or ‘very good’. Finally, on account of their real and the transformation of one thing into another, or deplacement en soi, is complete.
concerns and pragmatism based on uncertainty over safety and beneficial results, In Duchamp’s case, however, the traces of nominalism in his work do not constitute
Taiwanese people for the most part did not want to play NSK’s passport game, and so a clean break between the process of creation and finished artwork; they suggest a
it was very hard for the NSK passport project to challenge the frontiers of Taiwanese shift in consciousness, suspension of cognition and ambiguity, and temporal fluidity.
reality. Of course this situation reflects a temperament that wishes to uphold Furthermore, there exists a strange metonymic relationship in the ambiguity which
82 Huang Chien-Hung 83
produces imaginative space, so that what is referred to by the two poles becomes un- of art and even transformed the manner in which art is consumed. Micro-sensible art
attainable desire (objet a). magnifies subtle perceptions of ordinary events. New media art and lifestyle aesthet-
In IRWIN’s case there are also traces of this Duchampian irony, but the group ics, reinterpreted by cultural creative industries, have grown by leaps and bounds.
does not rely on conceptual gaps between words and their meanings, but upon Animation still maintains its commercial appeal by emphasising cheerful entertain-
conceptual transitions in symbolic visual elements. Since their 1992 performance/ ment. Like kitsch, new media art and lifestyle aesthetics mostly pander to popular
painting Black Square on Red Square Guerrilla Action, IRWIN has continually staged taste and are easy to enjoy. Although micro-sensible art attempts to encompass
art actions based on political parody. The signs they deploy are interesting if not pro- every possible perception in both internal and social realms, as well as create gaps
found. Communist slogans used for ideological manipulation during the Cold War in these various perceptions, perceptions are customised rapidly and combine with
were associated with sensory forms, thus rendering almost all the visual elements of commercial systems. Among these new developments, the dialectic formed by politi-
propaganda within a spoken language. Therefore, a change in the meaning of this cal art and frustration art is closest in spirit to IRWIN’s practice, but the former is
language could be effected by inflecting the meaning of symbolic visual elements. required by Taiwanese utilitarianism to solve actual problems, and the latter regards
Also, because visual expression and language had been highly politicised, shifts in the evasion of political problems as a symptom of Taiwanese society. The impossibil-
meaning became instrumental in dialectics, and meaning was reproduced in the ity of irony in Taiwan, regardless of whether it is the type deployed by Duchamp or
service of the political message of the time. So, in contrast to Duchamp, and due to IRWIN, is due mainly to the impossibility of gaps arising in an art marketplace that
the group’s experience of the Cold War in the Balkans, IRWIN sought to find mean- blindly assimilates difference, and in the 2008 to 2010 period of Taiwanese art de-
ing in symbolic visual elements. To avoid having their concepts linked to ideologies, velopment, (de)nomination was only deployed to package artwork. Although artists
IRWIN expands the possible gaps produced by their objects, using references to actual making micro-sensible and frustration art played word games, their works certainly
historical experience as cues in their art actions. In addition, IRWIN uses visual ele- didn’t produce the same kind of smile.
ments to construct meaning transformations in the gap between symbolic morphol-
ogy and what this morphology produces. Morphology in IRWIN’s projects has various
The Third Place
durations, and therefore designated historical symbols manifest loose meaning trans-
fers for these durations and complete the unique irony in IRWIN’s political art. For This different smile was the product of being hemmed in by China and Taiwan, spe-
Duchamp, things still had their material existence, which was stored in the essential cifically their divergent interpretations of history, as well as by the constraints that a
nature of the everyday and could be made to correspond with our desires and im- consumer society’s positivist tendencies place on imaginative projects encroaching on
pulses through art. For IRWIN the essential nature of a thing has always been tied to reality. Under the cover of its status as an invited, avant-garde, international art group,
its political specificity, and this nature is released through art by deploying irony on IRWIN avoided Taiwanese society’s expectation that it might be here to solve political
historic constructs existing in a systematised world. Duchamp’s utopia lay in a hidden problems with its NSK passport. This avant-garde status actually allowed locals apply-
world, while IRWIN’s lay in the ability to more freely confront history. ing for NSK passports to safely fantasise about a third place, thus making IRWIN’s visit
It seems Taiwan has yet to express the emotion real wince, which may be because a turning point in the development of contemporary Taiwanese art. I am suggesting
the contemporary art world becomes mired in a dialogue that can only express sup- that the commonly repressed desire for a third place among Taiwanese was released
port or opposition when addressing politics or its own inner conflicts and negativity. by IRWIN, and that putting it out into the open this way required intervention from
Creativity cannot dismantle this framework, nor can it generate a different signifi- abroad. It is interesting to note that this unique situation of repression in Taiwan was
cance for the production of irony or a gap. It seems we Taiwanese are too serious a necessary precondition for IRWIN’s release of desire for a third place, forming a cir-
due to certain losses, and even if these losses provide material for affecting tragedy, cuit with an extremely dense dynamic structure. We might ask, however, what were
they also have weakened our faith, worn away our desire to express our feelings, and the characteristics of this third place? Compared to other regions, what special sig-
left us weary and apathetic. Nonetheless, after encountering Duchamp and IRWIN, nificance was generated by the Taiwanese reaction to the NSK passport project?
and their irony-driven politics, we may wonder if it is possible for Taiwan to find a People from the city of Sarajevo have reported on being able to use the NSK pass-
way out through art. Since 2008, a variety of interesting themes, formats and ma- port to cross national borders, which either means the border agents only focus on
terials appeared one after another in the Taiwanese art world, including animation, forgeries or have been unable to identify illegal passports from atypical countries.
micro-sensible art, political art, frustration art, new media art and lifestyle aesthetics. Carried by these Sarajevo residents, the NSK passport became an art project that
These have all been produced and consumed by the younger generation of artists and permeated reality. At NSK passport interviews in London, which were primarily
backed by eye-catching new technologies. Animation has promoted the consumption conducted with Nigerian visitors, most interviewees wanted to know if NSK could
84 Huang Chien-Hung 85
actually provide a usable passport. In Berlin, perhaps since most of the applicants self-obscurantist, closed-minded attitudes. This is actually a domesticating strategy
were artists, the position of the NSK project was extremely clear: it was an art project that circumvents the necessity of consensus building or typical persuasion. In terms
intended to make people think. Of course the descriptions I have provided cannot be of individual rights and political authority, however, Taiwanese democracy is a kind
considered careful analyses, but these features are present in NSK’s documentary vide- of orderly chaos, where the people must accept a government that lacks apparent ef-
os and provide some interesting contrasts to how the project was perceived in Taiwan. ficiency, and expect disorder that arises from the intractability of political manipula-
Referring to Alain Badiou’s view of inter-subjectivity with topos, we see that the NSK tion. In this way, Taiwan’s transition differs from the chaos that overtook the region
passport interview process casts light on different worlds. In Berlin, for example, we that was Yugoslavia after it dissolved. That is to say, Taiwanese society, which is
see participants’ enthusiasm for art and an extremely precise shared perception. This governed by law that safeguards the interests of the ruling class, does not afford room
kind of perception generally arises from the ability of certain art concepts to perme- for so much flexibility; and this, along with the fact that Taiwan is an island nation,
ate sociocultural conditions, and is a manifestation of a super-organic art-world. contributed to the difficulty people had imagining actually using the NSK passport
Nigerian participants expressed an intense desire for assurances that the passport was to cross Taiwan’s borders. Because null and void, dispensable or a-political were the
genuine and were anticipating some kind of real utopia, which reflected their need impressions given by the NSK passport, Taiwanese people felt interacting with this
for a place to settle down and was a manifestation of their un-homely world. Sarajevo artwork was an opportunity to release political pressure or address politics in a more
participants, knowing the NSK passport was not valid, under unique historical cir- lighthearted fashion. Since the situation proposed by NSK’s passport was wholly im-
cumstances, were impelled to alter the possibilities of this document by trying to ac- possible, people felt free to think about politics in ways that were more creative and
tually use it, thus manifesting a chaotic world with a decision full of contingencies. carefree, and I think this was not only the main significance of the NSK passport in
Taiwanese participants applying for an NSK passport knew that it was part of a Taiwan, but also a breakthrough for Taiwanese society.
biennial art exhibition, but few thought it was a viable choice for an artwork, as they To some extent, this breakthrough has made it more possible for people in Taiwan
had little experience of art concepts permeating sociocultural conditions. Perhaps the to discuss current political issues. While Taiwan has consistently modelled its mod-
Taiwanese people still cannot recognise the possibility of fabricated reality. Although ernization on developed nations in North America and Europe, it differs from them
participants in Berlin acknowledged that the passport was not real, they directly with respect to the stability of its identity in international society. Introduced into re-
considered it to be a possible ideal or virtual concept. In contrast, Taiwanese people, gions where secure identity is the norm, the NSK passport is more likely to encourage
because of limitations caused by an undetermined foundation – Taiwan is neither an critical thinking rather than induce experiences of acute confrontation. A passport
independent organic entity, nor part of a unified, super-organic conception – were determines an individual’s freedom to move through international society, and pass-
inclined to raise more radically fundamental questions when confronted with NSK’s ports issued by more powerful countries accord more freedom in passing over borders.
project. Questions raised were related to world citizenship, one-world concepts, the Due to Taiwan’s dual identity, which is really no national identity in global circles,
necessity of the state, multiple national identities and the possible negation of the an intense desire for a third place has arisen among its people. This desire, however,
significance of politics. While many references to these questions can be found in stands in direct opposition to what people have been trained to believe is reasonable
late twentieth and twenty-first century theory, they are not embedded in the histori- under the given circumstances, so people turn to art for escape and amusement, or
cal fact of Taiwan’s conceptual dialectic, but are signs of utopian fantasies or phobias. even to collective fictions, games, multiple identities or the idea of a micro state.
Questions related to the concept of state or politics mostly arose from the fact that ‘ NSK’ looks as if it could be the name of a nation, yet bearing double meaning,
entities issuing directives never acknowledge Taiwan’s national identity. Dissociated is also an acronym for Neue Slowenische Kunst (new Slovenian art). IRWIN invokes
Taiwanese society has been bound together by media manipulation and the minimis- the topos ‘state in time’ in defining NSK , creating a nation that has done away with
ing of participation in politics. When it is difficult for a people to enter into dialogue national borders, as well as an image of a nation constructed both in the name of art,
with their government, power is unidirectional and the country only supervises citi- and with the name art. I hope this image will not remain separate from reality, but
zens. When the status of a nation is unclear, and there is distance between the govern- will intervene, so that the image manifests a double meaning in reality, becoming a
ment and its people, citizens cannot contact or trust those who govern. Nonetheless, precise concept and language operation. Neoliberal ideology has constructed a world
frigid reactions to politics cannot ensure independence, and the torrents of informa- of complete relativism in which the result of struggles between regional communi-
tion transmitted by the media based on their supposition of the people’s level of intel- ties are the last word, relationships between individuals are increasingly negotiated
ligence may conspire with consumer culture to make people even more ignorant. through consumer products, and interaction among individuals is restricted and
Political parties manipulate national and personal identities to make use of monopolised. In a world like this, imagination only survives when it is commodi-
society’s resources, such that citizens no longer trust politics and have adopted fied, and even then is severely restricted because it cannot become latent power when
86 Huang Chien-Hung 87
manifested in reality. Duchamp’s semantic system relied on appropriating the lan-
guage of objects to speak about art, and IRWIN appropriates the language of objects
and visual language to create political language. Neither are retinal art, but rather
jump into the fourth dimension, and so produce conceptual space and rarefied lan-
guages instead of a large quantity of easily digested commodity. Although people in
Taiwan can be open-minded and present a wide range of responses to art games, we
still allow our liberation to be governed by others. For example, many regions and
countries have lifted restrictions on Taiwanese travellers after advances due to glo- Taipei, 2011
balization. This may signal a new phase for Taiwan in the international community,
but this relative freedom to travel may cancel out the imagination that IRWIN and Translated by
Duchamp have inspired in Taiwan. Eric Chang
88 89
The Nigerian Connection: On NSK Passports as Escape
and Entry Vehicles1 Inke Arns
In late July 2010, Borut Vogelnik and Miran Mohar, two members of the IRWIN
group and representatives of the NSK State in Time, and myself, curator, artistic di-
rector of Hartware MedienKunstVerein (HMKV), and diplomat of the NSK State in
Time, set out on a trip to Lagos, Nigeria. Invited by the Centre of Contemporary Art
(CCA) Lagos, and supported by the Goethe-Institute, we travelled to West Africa for
the first time. Our reasons were diplomatic.
For some time, the NSK Država v času (NSK State in Time), a state without terri-
tory founded in 1991 as an artistic response to the independence of Slovenia and to the
subsequent war(s) in ex-Yugoslavia, had received a very substantial number of requests
1 Originally delivered to
the First NSK Citizens’ for citizenship, especially from Nigeria. When in 2006/2007 the requests manifested
Congress at the Haus
der Kulturen der Welt, in the form of e-mails and telephone calls to individual representatives and diplomats
Berlin, Oct 2010.
of the NSK State in Time, and to representatives of the Republic of Slovenia, a general
2 On the strategy
of overidentification
feeling of panic started to arise. What was going on? Why were Nigerian citizens sud-
see Inke Arns:
„Mobile Staaten /
denly so desperately eager to get NSK passports – and even to use them seriously for
Bewegliche Grenzen / travel? Was it possible that the Nigerian applicants took the concept of the NSK State
Wandernde Einheiten.
Das slowenische in Time more seriously than its founders, i.e. that they “overidentified” with it – an ar-
Künstlerkollektiv Neue
Slowenische Kunst tistic/political strategy developed to perfection by Laibach/NSK in 1980s Yugoslavia?2
(NSK)“. In: Netzkritik:
Materialien zur Internet- What if the Nigerians who already were in the possession of a NSK passport would
Debatte, ed. by nettime
/ Geert Lovink, Pit take the promise of the passport seriously and would really start travelling with it?
Schultz, Berlin: Edition
ID-Archiv 1997, pp. 201- What if they got into serious trouble at the border, possibly leading to their arrest? The
211; Inke Arns: Neue
Slowenische Kunst
NSK passport could either have been considered a fake document, or it could have been
(NSK) – eine Analyse
ihrer künstlerischen
considered an authentic document, i.e. a real passport. Using it in either way could be
Strategien im Kontext considered a criminal act; in the first case because forged documents are considered il-
der 1980er Jahre
in Jugoslawien, legal and in the latter because carrying two passports could, at times, create problems
Regensburg: Museum
Ostdeutsche Galerie for Nigerian citizens.3
2002; Inke Arns, Sylvia
Sasse: „Subversive Noticing the rising number of requests from Nigeria from 2005-2006 onwards, the
Affirmation. On
Mimesis as Strategy of Republic of Slovenia urged the artists to post information on the NSK website saying
Resistance“, in: East
Art Map. Contemporary that “NSK citizenship does not equal Slovenian citizenship” and that an “NSK passport
Art and Eastern Europe,
ed. by IRWIN, MIT Press
does not allow its holder to enter the Schengen zone”. However, publishing this infor-
2006, pp. 444-455;
“Subversive Affirmation”,
mation on the website did not improve the situation. The demand for NSK passports
ed. by Inke Arns / Sylvia kept rising
Sasse, Maska, Vol. XIX/
3-4 (98-99) / 2006,
Ljubljana 2006.
Inke Arns 91
Africa in Cultural Institutions in Germany. For two weeks, Hansi Loren Momodu, cura- intervals of 300 meters. “Police” Eddy said, “some years ago it was normal to get robbed
torial assistant of CCA Lagos, was a guest at HMKV’s offices, observing the practical on the street leading from Lagos airport to downtown. Things have gotten much better
work that is being done at a German Kunstverein with a focus on media based artistic lately.” I was very happy to hear this. It took me a moment before I realized the signifi-
practices. The Goethe Institute is always keen on follow-up projects (a kind of sustain- cance of what he just had said.
ability!) and at the end of Hansi’s stay we started thinking about possible options for Miran Mohar and Borut Vogelnik from IRWIN had arrived some days earlier, and
future cooperations. I said that unfortunately I had no links to Africa, and that there 4 Our hotel was had already familiarised themselves with the surroundings.4 They were in the midst of
equipped, like most
was nothing that connected me specifically to Nigeria. The very moment I said this it houses in Lagos, with conducting interviews with Nigerian NSK passport holders and applicants at the CCA
a high wall topped with
occurred to me that this was not true at all. There was indeed something that connected barbed wire (or, alterna- Lagos. The CCA is a truly amazing place – virtually the only place for contemporary
tively, topped with glass
me to Nigeria – even if only indirectly. But it made it all the more interesting. splinters), and two power
art in the entire city of Lagos. It exists thanks to the initiative of one single woman, Bisi
I told Hansi in detail about NSK’s ‘immaterial state’. In addition to its temporary generators running at
night in the courtyard
Silva, who not only generates the funds to run the centre but who also donated her en-
embassies and consulates materializing from time to time in various places, the NSK beneath the windows. tire library to the centre, transforming the upper floor into a small public library focus-
They were pretty loud
State in Time issues passports as a “confirmation of temporal space” (NSK) which can as were the neighbours’ sing on contemporary art and theory. The lower floor is usually used for exhibitions and
generators. Our hotel
be obtained by any person irrespective of citizenship or nationality. I told her about the was equipped, like most workshops.
houses in Lagos, with
fact that these passports were being printed at the same printing house as the real, au- a high wall topped with The one week CCA event Towards a Double Consciousness: NSK Passport Project
barbed wire (or, alterna-
thentic passports of the Republic of Slovenia, and how hugely popular NSK passports tively, topped with glass which took place from 26th – 31st July 2010 consisted of screenings, lectures and panel
splinters), and two power
had become especially amongst Nigerians. Holding one quarter of all NSK passports generators running at discussions. The final panel discussion on 31st July addressed the “Nigerian connection”
night in the courtyard
issued since 1991, Nigerians today represent the largest single group (approx. 25%) of beneath the windows.
of the NSK State and discussed the significance of the State created in Europe in the
citizens of the NSK State. I also told her that the state’s founder artists were extremely They were pretty loud
as were the neighbours’
1990s in contemporary African consciousness.5 The announcement and outline for this
worried that people might use the NSK passport for purposes for which it was not in- generators. discussion read:
tended and that people might have great expectations of being able to travel, to leave 5 Panel discussion on “Since the initial presentations around the world in the 1990s of State in Time the
the topic of „NSK State:
Africa and to come to Europe. I also explained that there were continuous e-mails and The Nigerian connection,“ project is currently receiving a substantial number of requests for citizenship of the
Saturday, 31 July 2010,
telephone calls from Nigeria asking for information how to organise, where to go and 3:00 pm. Speakers includ- NSK ‘State’ from Africa especially from Nigeria. This has resulted in many Nigerians
ed Dr Inke Arns, IRWIN
whom to contact once they arrived. Finally, that the state’s founding artists were afraid members: Miran Mohar assuming a dual identity as holders of NSK and Nigerian passports. In view of these
and Borut Vogelnik, and
that the NSK passports were traded on the black market and that people paid horren- Nigerian NSK passport new developments IRWIN conducted interviews with African/NSK citizens living
holders. Moderated by
dous sums to shady middlemen who were promising that this document would allow Loren Hansi Momodu.
in London, to ascertain their reasons for applying. Could it be in support of the initial
people to travel and that it was their entrance ticket to the First World. What a disil- 6 Leaflet produced for the
artistic purpose of NSK? Do they see it as an avenue with which to move from one ter-
lusionment it would be when they found out that this was not the case at all … Hansi event Towards a Double ritory to another? Or is it for other socio-political reasons? Towards a Double Conscious-
Consciousness: NSK
and agreed that it was time for the state’s founding artists to travel to Nigeria and see Passport project, CCA ness: NSK Passport project will allow further debate on both the artistic and political
Lagos, July 2010. The
the situation for themselves – and if necessary take measures to inform the unsuspect- passage omitted from this implications of the NSK State in Time action, offering an examination of their original
quote reads: „This project
ing Nigerian NSK passport holders. Provided there were any. forms part of CCA, Lagos’ artistic interventions within the Nigerian context. (...) Towards a Double Consciousness
year long programme On
Independence and The attempts to interrogate the way in which artists propose and individuals search for al-
Ambivalence of Promise
“Be home before sunset”: Lagos, Nigeria celebrating 50 years of in- ternative – real or fictional – possibilities that goes beyond notions of a fixed identity or
dependence by seventeen
African countries includ-
geography.”6
I arrived at Murtala Mohammed International Airport in Lagos more than one year ing Nigeria on the 1st
October 2010. It provides
The NSK Passport project which took place in the framework of On Independence and
later, at eight o’clock in the evening. It was pitch-dark. A city of 20+ million inhabit- an avenue to interrogate The Ambivalence of Promise, CCA, Lagos’ year long programme celebrating 50 years of
notions of nationhood
ants in one of the oil-richest countries in the world with no street lights at night. As I at a time when our ideas the independence of seventeen African countries, proved to be a truly intense and si-
of citizenship is continu-
learned later, Lagos is a megalopolis without a functioning electricity network. Eddy, ously being challenged multaneously ambivalent experience – certainly for the three of us, but also, in different
by state policies such
who would be our driver for the entire week, was waiting for me at the airport. He wel- as Nigeria’s contentious intensity, for the CCA Lagos team (Bisi Silva, Hansi Momodu, Jude Anogwih). Sud-
‘federal character’ system
comed me warmly. As we drove along the highway from the airport to the city centre, or through religious and denly in Lagos, two of the NSK State’s founders who had always thought of the State
ethnic disturbances such
pedestrians were constantly crossing the street in total darkness, suddenly looming up as the recent unrest in the as an abstract concept and an intellectual tool were confronted with a position that no
city of Jos, as well as the
in front of our car illuminated only by the headlights. At one point Eddy said: “See the perennial civic unrest of
longer maintained a ‘safe’, ironic distance to the promise made by a document like the
big cars at the side of the street?” Tank-like armoured vehicles stood half covered at the oil rich Niger Delta.“
NSK passport. They found themselves in a situation where they felt it was necessary to
92 Inke Arns 93
speak in a very clear and direct manner about what their state was and what it was not, legality of) the passport as a valid travel document which it was worth investing large
and what its passport could and could not do. Ambivalence and irony did not prove to amounts of money for on the black market.
be helpful tools in a situation where the genuine fear was that the expectations attached Miran Mohar and Borut Vogelnik very explicitly discussed the reason for creating
to a document – acquired directly from the artists or possibly bought on the black mar- the NSK State in Time in the early 1990s, and about what the passport was and was
ket for a huge amount of money – would soon prove to be false promises. not meant to do. They stressed that the NSK State in Time is not an existing country
During the two hour discussion at the CCA it became clear that what once had 7 Eda Čufer & Irwin, and that it should by no means should be confused with the actual Republic of Slo-
“Concepts and Relations”
venia which in turn is a member state of the European Union since 2004. Towards
been conceived as an ‘escape vehicle’ has – in the understanding of the Nigerian ap- (1992), in: Irwin, Zemljopis
Vremena / Geography
the end of the event we were convinced that the audience had ‘understood the initial
plicants and passport holders – transformed into something like an ‘entry vehicle’, or of Time, exhibition cata-
logue, Umag 1994. artistic concept’ of NSK. However, at the very end of the panel discussion, two memo-
at least the promise of such. Originally, the NSK State was founded as an alternative
8 The full quote reads: rable statements were voiced. “A friend of mine,” said a member of the audience, “has a
to an exclusively national (Slovene) identity the artists were confronted with when “The role of art and art-
ists in defining time which friend who knows somebody who has already been there. He said that it is a beautiful
Slovenia seceded from Yugoslavia. It was conceived as almost the opposite of the new belongs to them individu-
ally is more effective than
country.” Shame on us who had thought that the roller coaster of emotions had ended!
Republic of Slovenia which had declared its independence in 1991. As an artistic in defining territory. The The Irwin members once more explained patiently that the NSK State in Time is a
real, not imaginary, ‘fa-
state concept, it defined itself neither through a concrete geographical territory, nor therland’ of the individual state of mind rather than an existing state one can travel to in the sense that it is possi-
through an ethnically fixed Staatsnation (nation state). For the definition of a proper is limited to the circle of
the house in which he ble to travel to Slovenia, with which the NSK State in Time is not to be confused. The
‘spiritual’ territory the concept of NSK emphasises the notion of time. The notion of was born, the classroom
ultimate – and positively devastating – statement came from a young man with stylish
or the library in which
time was understood as a new productive category for the definition of space. Within he acquired knowledge, 1970s sunglasses who had been sitting silently through the whole event. He said: “Lis-
the landscapes in which
this terminology, time was equated with the individual accumulation of experiences. he walked, the spaces ten, I think that everybody in this room perfectly understood what you have been tell-
to which he is oriented,
Irwin and Eda Čufer defined this new “geography of time” as follows: “The real (...) to the circle of his own ing us over the last two hours [meaning: don’t you Europeans think we Africans are
‘fatherland’ of the individual is limited (...) to the circle of his own individual experi-
individual experience,
to that which exists and
stupid!]. But, still, I think that holding an NSK passport is a good thing. Because the
ence, to that which exists and not that he was born into.“ 7 Therefore, the “territorial
not that he was born into. NSK State in Time could come into being at some point in the future, you know?”
The territorial borders of
the NSK state can by no
borders of the NSK state can by no means be equated with the territorial borders of means be equated with
the actual state in which NSK originated.” 8 Rather, the NSK State in Time is defined the territorial borders of
the actual state in which “Lock your doors, I will not stop”: The NSK passport and
as an abstract body whose borders are in a state of constant flux, depending on the NSK originated. The
Nigerian 419 scam
borders of the NSK state
activities of its physical and symbolic body, and whose territory is situated in the con- are drawn along the co-
ordinates of its symbolic
sciousness of its ‘members’. Eda Čufer and Irwin define the State in Time as follows: and physical body, which Lagos Island, located just opposite Lagos Mainland, is a huge gated community for
at the time of its activity
“The NSK state in time is an abstract organism, a suprematist body, installed in acquired objective values the very rich - the upper class of Nigerian society as well as expats working for big
and objective status.” Eda
a real social and political space as a sculpture comprising the concrete body warmth, Čufer & Irwin, “Concepts international oil companies exploiting the oil wells of the Niger delta. The property
and Relations”(1992), in:
spirit and work of its members. NSK confers the status of a state not upon territory Irwin, Zemljopis Vremena prices are way beyond imagination – way beyond anything you know from Paris,
/ Geography of Time,
but upon the mind, whose borders are in a state of flux, in accordance with the move- exhibition catalogue, London, Tokyo or the like. The three highway bridges connecting the island to the
ments and changes of its symbolic and physical collective body.” 9 Umag 1994.
mainland are guarded by heavily armed police forces dressed in splendid uniforms.
The State issues passports as a “confirmation of temporal space”. There are many 9 Eda Čufer & Irwin, “NSK
One night, we stayed out until after sunset. Leaving the bar around 22:30, Eddy drove
State in Time”(1993), in:
instances where fiction crosses into reality – like the story about NSK using the same Irwin, Zemljopis Vremena us back from Lagos island to the mainland where our hotel was located. It was pitch-
/ Geography of Time, ibid.
passport printing house as the Republic of Slovenia . Telling this story in Lagos, Note: NSK makes a dis- dark, again. Suddenly, on Lagos Mainland, lit only by our car lights, we saw a group
tinction between its ‘citi-
Nigeria, during the panel discussion, with about twenty-five Nigerian applicants or zens’ and its ‘members’. of young men dancing onto the street in front of our car. “Lock your doors,” Eddy said
‘Citizens’ in practice are
passport holders eagerly waiting for any kind of proof for the ‘real’ potential of the anyone who can scrape calmly, as he closed the automatic car windows, “I will not stop.” He decelerated a lit-
together the money for
passport proved to be feeding exactly into the economy of expectations that the NSK a passport, while ‘mem- tle, but did not stop. Luckily, we did not hit anybody. A few days after this incident,
bers’ are specially fifteen
state founders originally came to Lagos to discourage. Also, telling these amazing people (paraphrasing an artist at the CCA told us that on that very night he had made the mistake of stop-
– and actually true – stories about people from Sarajevo who crossed international Michael Benson).
ping his car at the same spot. He was robbed – the thieves who used the exact same
borders during the second half of the 1990s with nothing other than the NSK ‘docu- 10 Bosnians did this
“dancing onto the street trick” and took his money and his photo camera.
because Bosnia was
ment’ would have been problematic.10That is why these stories were not mentioned not then internationally Imagine, if only one out of every five hundred cars stops. Possibly one car in five
recognized and so people
once in the panel discussion in Lagos. Even if these (few) cases really did happen, it had no papers that would hundred will also hit a body – but that’s the risk, I guess, of what Giorgio Agam-
allow them to cross inter-
just did not feel right to mention them, as they could easily be read as ‘proofs’ of (the national borders. ben has called ‘bare life’. That one successful car in a sea of failed attempts suddenly
94 Inke Arns 95
reminded me of the logic of e-mail spam, or more precisely of something called the
Public discussion following Inke Arns' presentation
“Nigerian Letter”, “419 fraud,”11 or “Nigerian bank scam”. Here, it is millions of e- 11 The number 419 refers
to the article of the Nige- October 22, 2010
mails that are sent out onto the Internet – and one of the recipients will answer, and rian Criminal Code (part
of Chapter 38: “Obtaining
will fall for the advance fee fraud.12 The 419 scam originated in the early 1980s as the Property by false pretenc-
es; Cheating”) dealing
oil-based Nigerian economy declined. Several unemployed university students first with fraud.
used this scam as a means of manipulating business visitors interested in shady deals 12 See http://
in the Nigerian oil sector before targeting businessmen in the west, and later the en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Advance-fee_fraud (last
19:00
wider population. Advance-fee fraud boomed in Nigeria as government corruption accessed 30 July 2011). Alexei Monroe: So, the photo from the Pentecostal Church made me think about
and an economic downturn during the 1990s fuelled poverty and disillusionment in belief and the contexts of the NSK State in Nigeria. And actually, if we compare
the country, says Insa Nolte of the University of Birmingham’s Centre of West Afri- coldly and unemotionally and, not as NSK citizens or people who are interested…
can Studies. To some, Internet scams looked like an easy way to bag some quick cash. Is Pentecostal belief any more ludicrous than the belief in the NSK State? And the
Scammers in the early-to-mid 1990s targeted companies, sending scam messages via new belief in the NSK State in Nigeria is simply another form of desperation, another
letter, fax, or Telex. The spread of e-mail and easy access to e-mail-harvesting soft- form for desire for the utopian escape. And it’s actually much closer to religion than
ware significantly lowered the cost of sending scam letters by using the Internet.13 13 In the 2000s, the 419 to a conscious political expression. That’s how it seems to me. What do you think?
scam has spurred imita-
„The availability of e-mail helped to transform a local form of fraud into one of Nige- tions from other locations
in Africa, Philippines, Ma-
ria’s most important export industries,“14 Nolte says. laysia, Russia, Australia, Inke Arns: I had the impression that the reasons for people applying for this passport
Canada, United Kingdom,
Is it possible that the NSK passport is read by local Nigerian audiences as some and the United States. are very diverse. There were certainly people who really misunderstood it for an ac-
kind of 419 scheme? As some promise of an unexpected fortune waiting out there – 14 Quoted after Robert
tual travel document.
which you just have to grab by advancing a small fee? Or, formulated differently, do Andrews, “Baiters Teach
There is even a huge black market that developed, so passports are being sold by
Scammers a Lesson”,
people believe in the NSK passport because one such passport could hit such a one Wired, 08.04.2006, http:// middlemen that are immediately there. I mean, passports are sold for 250 dollars on
www.wired.com/techbiz/
in five hundred improbable opportunity? Did the Nigerian applicants and passport it/news/2006/08/71387 the black market, because people don’t know they can become citizens for 24 euros,
(last accessed 30 July
holders seriously consider the NSK passports – originally conceived as escape vehi- 2011). and then at the same time there were people who seemed to make sense of this pass-
cles – as entry vehicles which would allow them to cross international borders? Ulti- port in a very different way.
mately, we did not find out. But we realized that the power of believing, even if only So for me, and I think also for Miran Mohar and Borut Vogelnik, it was a very
supported by rumours, is able to move mountains, even against better judgment, and ambivalent experience. If people are really taking it for an actual travel document,
that it is a force to be considered. then possibly, they will really face problems when they travel into a neighbouring
On our last day in Nigeria, a Sunday, Eddy invited us to attend church at Re- country; somehow we do not want to be held responsible for it. And it’s really a kind
demption Ministries, Lagos. Before the service, a business seminar addressing the of feeling of responsibility, so that nothing bad happens to people if they use it.
question “Where to find money?” took place between 8 and 9 in the church made up And that’s why there was this very explanatory approach within the seminar. It’s
of half-finished walls and a make-shift corrugated metal roof. When during the ser- not just that everybody is perfectly over-identified with it - there is really a big variety
vice – after the preacher had warned insistently against “witches in the household” of approaches.
– members of the parish got up one after the other with their arms raised and speak-
ing in tongues, it occurred to me that this was a pentecostal church believing not so Alexei Monroe: That was actually tried in London in 2007 with Nigerians there. At
much in Jesus or God the father, but in the Holy Spirit which takes possession of the the ICA, IRWIN spoke to Nigerian passport holders. I saw some of those conversa-
community members’ bodies and tongues during the service. And here, it occurred tions and again it was this kind of impermeable belief that no matter what you told
to me that in this context the NSK passport functioned not so much as a “confirma- them, or how you said it to them, they believed or even they knew people who had
tion of temporal space” but as a material vessel for something spiritual that by simply been there and, again that’s why I see the religious similarity, because it’s like some
believing in it can transform into something real. It is neither of these – or, rather of us believers know people who believe they know people who have spoken with the
something in between that does not need to take sides. It exists, simply because peo- Holy Ghost.
ple have heard rumours about it and because they are convinced that at some point it Written in late It’s that level of mystical belief as it seems to me, that it’s completely imperme-
might come in handy if they were already in the possession of legal travel documents. July / early August able to logic. I mean that’s why it’s also a good recapitulation of a totalitarian belief, a
A utopian-pragmatic position, so to speak, that trusts in the power of believing. 2011 doublethink, or of a true Stalinist who is able to ignore the facts totally, because their
Public discussion
96 following Inke Arns' 97
presentation
belief is so strong. It seems really unshakable. But Jude, having heard this, what’s I am an artist. It’s very simple for me to understand that this is an art project. I
your view on this? am possibly clearly involved with the reality of moving into some other possibilities.
Yes, I can travel with this if I want to. I mean, I am not doing it because I know it is
Jude Anogwih: I would like to go back to the statement she made much earlier about not a valid travel document, I am doing it because possibly I want to have that sense
people travelling with these passports. The basic problem is still the information of enjoyment, to see, to enjoy how it feels, to play on someone else’s ignorance, to
that the passport seekers get before applying for this passport. And eventually, after enhance my creative or artistic feelings, you know and, to actually see how functional
they’ve got the passport, there is this insistence or message that you can travel with this beautiful material is; with the colour, the form, the type, every element of it, how
these passports. it functions. It’s as basic as that. That it is for me as an artist. But for some other per-
And possibly there might be some information about people who have success- son I think it has a different meaning.
fully travelled to other parts of the world with these passports. The question is how
true are these fictitious stories? How much effort might have possibly been made to Alexei Monroe: Okay. So do we have any questions or responses from the audience?
inculcate in their minds that this is true, and is real, and it happens.
The information on the passports I saw in Lagos has a bold warning that tells Björn Quiring: This is more a question regarding the first talk [Kostis’] because it
you that this is not a valid travel document. Every Nigerian with a basic sense of rea- took me a while to sort it out. You developed that NSK Passport as an incidence of
soning should know and understand that sentence before moving on to the borders political or totalitarian enjoyment; a sort of nostalgic remnant of the time of seem-
or to the airport. Surprisingly, before coming here I also got several calls; someone ingly apolitical opposite market ideology.
requesting a cover letter to attend this programme with the NSK Passport and he And on the other hand this passport takes on a commodity form, doesn’t it? It’s
wanted a cover letter from the CCA Lagos, and possibly from me. subject to all the qualities of commodity fetishism. I mean it’s sold out there, at the
But the truth is that I was much perplexed, I was really surprised and also much desk, and with other NSK merchandise and I can buy it. So, if it’s subversive, isn’t it
worried. I’ve been worried all the while since we started this project because of the also by pushing the market economy to a limit like prefiguring a world in which you
several calls that came, several issues that were raised, both from the security system can buy citizenship like any other commodity? So it would be not only retro but also
or authority and individuals. But the truth is that there is some sort of persistent in- futuristic to some degree.
formation being related to this gentleman, that something can happen as long as you
have this passport. And that is a problem. Kostis Stafylakis: Thanks. Well, listening to your [Inke’s] talk and your replies, I am
just rethinking this notion of enjoyment that I attempted to bring into the conversa-
Alexei Monroe: Is it possible that there are organized criminal groups who are delib- tion and I figured out that despite the fact that various, unrelated sometimes, moti-
erately spreading this misinformation? vations lie behind these people approaching the desk of the [issuing of the] passports:
there might be some sort of a common denominator between all these aspects.
Jude Anogwih: I wouldn’t want to imagine somebody or some group doing some This is actually a fantasy, not exactly a fantasy, of something that lies beyond the
criminal activity with this. But I would rather see a situation where the circumstances fictional, a possibility of something lying beyond the veil of the fictional. But this
surrounding my country, whether political, religious or social, are possibly the major is exactly the structure of enjoyment that I am trying to bring in; it’s this kind of
factor that influences people’s interest to want to move on to a different place, a dif- surplus enjoyment, in the sense that it can only be attached to something, if there is
ferent state, irrespective of whether it’s true or not. something else behind it.
It’s usual and normal for people to capitalize on other peoples’ weaknesses. And And in the sense there is a structure here as a common denominator for me that
like we said earlier in our several deliberations, and my colleague Hansi also men- behind all these disparate experiences can help us to somehow formulates this. There
tioned there is a prolific use of the Internet in Nigeria. are probably some materialistic reasons for some people to pursue these particular
So most information that you might think is not necessary, people take in, and passports.
possibly try to see what they can get out of it, which is a very interesting imaginary Another reason might be commodity fetishism as our friend has just described.
state of the user himself. Another reason might be the artistic inclination of somebody like the one that you
We can’t really control some of these. But it is very important for NSK to come up [Jude] described for example.
with a very authentic and obvious statement and structure on how to communicate it But I think the common ground underneath all these reasons is exactly the
to the people that are interested in this organisation. idea or a possibility of something, in the future perhaps, lying beyond the veil
Public discussion
98 following Inke Arns' 99
presentation
of the fictional. This is exactly this form of surplus enjoyment that with Yannis and Kostis’ presentations. Kostis discussed quite in depth this idea of IRWIN, the
[Stavrakakis] we are trying to bring in, not as the ultimate way to understand this early years of IRWIN, the 1980s.
sort of activity we discussed, but nevertheless as an important factor of this process IRWIN embraced limitations very consciously so, that is to say if Laibach is for-
of understanding and deliberating what happened over there and that Inke described bidden in Ljubljana, Slovenia, then we are going to exhibit in private apartments. If
in so much detail. the themes of the Yugoslav partisans are untouchable, so yes, we are going to include
this sort of collaged pictures in a way of cheap reproduction. And so on.
Alexei Monroe: If you can conceptualize some sort of space beyond, but you can’t yet So the embrace of limitations was the very basis of the establishment of firstly
name it and in a way that’s an issue with the whole congress because at present the Laibach and then eventually IRWIN and then NSK itself. And the State of NSK
NSK State has no content, the only formulation of what lies at its heart is this formu- was established in 1992, when states in Eastern Europe were very much in retreat.
lation that they created themselves - the immanent consistent spirit -, which some of I see, if not a relation, then a certain parallel between what was happening in
our delegates were referring to in the discussions. the last, I guess, 4 years, 3 years with this influx of applications for passports from
And the immanent consistent spirit is a very good formulation for the type of Nigerians. They embrace the limitation that this passport is not good for travelling,
belief that we are discussing. So perhaps beyond the enjoyment, is it the belief that they embrace the limitation that they’ve never been to that state since it doesn’t exist,
makes it possible? but they strongly believe that it either does exist somewhere where they haven’t yet
been or, it will exist in some near future that is to say.
Kostis Stafylakis: Yes, but this is completely transcendental and not immanent. It In that respect I didn’t like Inke Arns’ formulation that they were more over-
lies in the heart of the conflict between the supposedly immanent bureaucratic state identifying with the NSK State than the NSK members when they created that state
and its transcendental idea which is always somewhere else. for the first time. So it is not so much of a question, but I am just trying to draw some
This is a constitutive character of every sort of political, national or community parallels between these processes that is to say, the establishment of IRWIN, and the
identification in every different context. It’s a presupposition, so the reason why NSK establishment of the NSK State and these developments of the last several years.
is always interesting for me is because it forces us to re-conceive this notion of identi-
fication beyond the mere globalist discourse of the moment, especially in the contem- Eda Čufer: In the Nigerian case I don’t see that they are over-identifying so much
porary art field which has turned out to be a globalist ideology in itself. with the NSK State, but they are over-identifying with the status a passport has as a
Of course I am a globalist as well, I don’t have much problem with globalization, legal document that provides certain rights that citizens in the so-called colonial or
this is not my problem definitely, but the abstraction of globalism we face in the art civilized world have. And in my presentation today I was trying to show how basi-
field is something that really frightens me and has always frightened me, and I, too, cally, the passport is an invention of colonial structure, internationalizing and glo-
conceive NSK as a vehicle of critique, and at this moment I can see critical roots in balizing itself from the early modern ages.
NSK that can help me, may help me articulate a critique of this abstract globalism of So in that sense the situation actually works like over-identification works in the
the art field, this “global romanticism” as Francesco Bonami, another famous curator way Žižek describes it, when for example, also in psycho-analysis, over-identification
would like to say. is described as a situation where you have a child who lives with an abusive parent
and because he has no other reference, he starts doubling, imitating that parent, but
Alexei Monroe: Okay, do we have any other questions from the audience? not only its consistent phase, but also some kind of hidden other side which basically
brings out the inconsistency and some kind of demonic or grotesque element.
Audience Member: I don’t have a question; I would just like to make a statement. It
was this ‘fiction becomes reality’, which I think is a suggestive phrase. I got my pass- Alexei Monroe: Okay, and another question here?
port four years ago, and to me that was a very exciting move to make. I didn’t really
know why I did it, but today I am sitting here as a delegate at the citizens’ congress, Alexander Nym: Well, I actually do have a question for Inke and Jude. Maybe I have
and to me that is fiction becoming reality. just missed this point, but the Nigerians owning the passports were so convinced
they can use it to travel to the NSK State. Was I mistaken, or…they were travelling
Alexei Monroe: Okay. Any other questions? to other countries and that worked, so is there a certain aspect of a dimension of
practical use for that? Or, did you mention that there were people who actually be-
Gediminas Gasparavicius: Not so much a question, but a comment on both, Inke’s lieved that somebody else had travelled to the NSK State as a territorial, an existing
Public discussion
100 following Inke Arns' 101
presentation
thing that you can actually visit? So, there are two varieties of rumours about the actually you are the person, you’re sort of the bearer of bad news, saying ‘Oh, the
usefulness of the passport. joke is on you’.
So actually there’s only so far such conversations could go and still remain quite
Inke Arns: Yes definitely, you know I mentioned the two remarks that really stuck in humane, and actually saying where do you think this place is …to a certain extent
my mind. After the discussion we had about the NSK State in Time being non-ex- wasn’t really appropriate. So, some of these things did come up in the questioning. I
isting, not being a real state you can travel to, the first one said: ’But I have talked to think it’s a really important consideration and I guess adds to the value of the symbol
people who had been there and said it was a beautiful country’. And this is, of course, of this passport, actually how people do have this genuine, very deep-seated emo-
a rumour that’s spreading. tional attachment they place on this document, whether it’s misplaced or not.
And also what you [Jude] have said earlier, I don’t know whether people from And I think in the context of Nigeria as Jude mentioned it; it does relate to wider
Nigeria have actually travelled with the document. I don’t know. It’s just when we issues, and somehow the issue of migration has adopted NSK, whether it was part of
talked about the NSK State in Time, I know that there have been cases of people the initial impetus or not. So now it’s time to come into the discussion.
travelling with the NSK State in Time Passports in the 1990s in Yugoslavia or in
Bosnia, at the time when those people, possibly from Sarajevo or from somewhere, Neil Rector: A number of us delegates are trying to think through what the structure
didn’t have any kind of documents that were internationally recognized, and there of the NSK State should be going forward and, also as a part of that, how to expand
were some cases - that’s what I have heard, perhaps it’s a rumour - who then man- the membership.
aged to cross international borders with this passport. Obviously, this discussion is very disturbing to me in that I certainly don’t want to
It’s really a tricky situation, you know. Because when you tell the story, first of all be part of something where people who don’t have much money are hoodwinked out
not being sure whether it has really happened, and secondly wouldn’t it be a kind of of money under pretences that turn out not to be true.
proliferation of rumours? I wonder if you have any thoughts for us, as delegates, on how we can try to keep
something like this from happening in the future as the state expands and as we try
Alexander Nym: That leads me to a follow up question. These rumours, the stories of to go about our collective business.
friends who have supposedly travelled to - I call it the NSK Country to make it dif-
ferent from the NSK State - but did you actually ask them about how they got that Manray Hsu: Actually, there are a few issues that actually touch on my lecture to-
idea from these friends whether it might have been just a simple mishap or mix up morrow [internal presentation to delegates only; on the 23rd October 2010]. At this
with some other really existing country which they visited, maybe Slovenia, and just moment I think it’s good to kind of bring it up because the context is right.
mistook that for the NSK Country in some way? I think the misunderstandings of the people are not to be argued, the misunder-
standings are very important because I think they tell so much about how we relate to
Inke Arns: No I didn’t ask. Possibly you [IRWIN] know, you asked this question a state, and particularly to something called passport. And you can imagine that the
in the interviews, I am not sure. I was not present when the interviews were being passport is something that gives you entitlement for citizenship when you are outside
done. I mean those interviews on the video. We didn’t ask the question in the discus- your country, not inside the country. So passport is actually a sign of citizenship, it’s
sion we had. actually a sign of protection, the protection that the state promised you to have, and a
passport also means - especially if you want to have another passport by some means
Jude Anogwih: I would like to make a comment on that, before I say something - another possibility of life or many possibilities of life, whenever your own, an origi-
about personal experiences with some of those passport holders... nal passport or an original citizenship cannot guarantee what you want.
Nowadays, through globalization, citizenship is getting more and more flexible.
Neil Rector: I’ve got just a very quick question; I guess it follows the same. Was A lot of rich people can just buy citizenship very easily and so in this case the NSK
there also a common understanding as to where the NSK Country was physically Passport is very affordable to the poor.
located? And what I am saying is the protection that is promised on getting a passport,
regardless whether it is an NSK Passport or not. And I think this issue is very im-
Hansi Momodu: I also wanted to make a comment on the kind of discussion that portant for NSK itself because it’s related to what we know about naked life or bare
we were having. And actually they were really very difficult. Because you are faced life, about a possibility of having no more protection and actually in Chinese we call
with an individual that actually has real emotional investment in something, and passport ‘protection certificate’ [huzhao].
Public discussion
102 following Inke Arns' 103
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The term protection certificate comes from a very ancient, warring state, where, if we didn’t know what exactly to do. Because how it works it is that people apply for
you wanted to go to another country, you needed this protection certificate in order to the passports, they pay 25 euros at the bank, and then they send their applications
travel. And so it has this meaning; that means that you basically, even in your coun- with two photos and the confirmation of the payment to us. That year, in 2006/2007,
try, you have the possibility of a bare life, the reality of a bare life. So the passport hundreds and hundreds of applications were coming from Nigeria. And there were
gives you an extension of this protection and I think this is a very important issue, for discussions of what to do, whether to stop it, or block it, or stop this project, or
when I see an NSK Passport it carries this kind of intention to say okay: it is univer- what… So we decided that to stop it, it would not be fair towards the people who ap-
sally affordable, I mean at the economic and financial level, and in that sense it is also ply for passports. So we decided to inform the people: to every passport that we sent
idealistic and, you know, utopian, because it means that we all long for protection, to Nigeria, or to some other part of Africa, we added the information that this pass-
the protection for the naked life and I think the two sides are much related, so we port was not intended for travelling. We sent hundreds and hundreds of mails to vari-
can’t ignore these misunderstandings. ous addresses, and we went to London for three days where we were discussing (the
situation) with NSK passport holders from Nigeria who were then living in London
Alexei Monroe: Okay, we have some more questions, one in the middle there. to explain to them that this passport was not intended for travelling, and that they
should send this information to their families. And there were still requests for the
Bertrand Thibert: Thank you. In addition to what was said: in 1951 a former passport, maybe three or four a month, not hundreds like before, so people must
American idealist called Garry Davis founded the World Government of World have got the message. In fact we felt we were responsible, and this was also the most
Citizens and he’s been issuing this World Passport for over 60 years with hundreds important reason why we so gratefully accepted the invitation from our friends from
and thousands exemplaries for free, for stateless people and refugees. And it costs Lagos, to go there and discuss the situation in situ, because then we didn’t really have
only 45 EUR for somebody who wants to buy it, but having said that, when rich peo- any channels in Africa; so now we are discussing about giving this piece information
ple buy this World Passport, there are three or four passports issued to stateless and to some Nigerian media, or even to the ones who have already got the passports, to
poor people in order to be granted some access. understand that it would be dangerous to use them for travelling, but we don’t know,
And it is important to say that six UN member counties have accepted this pass- what this will cause. Maybe just by publishing this information we will make a new
port on a de jure basis. Other countries recognize it on a case-by-case de facto basis, wave of passport requests, but basically, I believe that what we decided was right; it
but nearly almost all the UN member countries have accepted this passport at least was right that we let the Nigerians to decide for themselves if they would like to have
once in their history. But this is a successor of a passport issued in the 1920s. So NSK NSK passports or not. I think we felt responsible, but we didn’t know how exactly to
is going to be challengers for the World Passport in the effort for recognition and, as deal with it. But now we know better. Thank you.
you say, protection, because the identity is the most valuable protection for vulnerable
people. Audience Member: It’s not really a question, but more a remark. For me it’s not so
complicated: different approaches, different understanding of one object, and differ-
Conor McGrady: When so much of contemporary art is sanitized, isn’t or, is the ent needs from a different group or different people. It’s a kind of proof or witness
unpredictability of a situation such as the one that took place in Nigeria not to be that the world is not global, it is not one, and it is not understood in the same way.
welcomed to a certain extent? Here’s that document, that means of protection document, I think it’s quite an
I am not arguing for the potential you refer to, of harm coming to people through interesting term to use for a passport, and the other see it as an object of art, an object
trying to travel and coming in trouble with authorities because of the use of the pass- as a kind of symbol, and it’s quite clear; I think it is not so complicated.
port. More to the point of; is there really any reason for concern if an aesthetic pro- I mean one group of people needs it urgently and they see it more practically, as
ject takes on an unpredictable level that moves beyond the parameters of control? a document for travelling, because they want to move with it, and the other, like the
NSK commune, for you it’s part of much more, I mean it’s not a document for travel-
Alexei Monroe: Miran, behind ling, it is a symbol for a much wider idea of identity or collective or thinking differ-
ently, so I think it is not so complicated.
Miran Mohar: My name is Miran Mohar. I am a member of IRWIN and NSK, and
I would just like to say a few words about the group phenomenon of NSK passports, Nikica Korubin: Thanks for making this remark for I would also like to point to
when we had such a big request from Nigeria. When we found out what was going the thing of the need. For me as a European citizen I have this passport and I need
on, we had an NSK meeting where we discussed the whole issue very deeply, because to buy this passport. I would like to point out that there are two levels according to
Public discussion
104 following Inke Arns' 105
presentation
the need. Of course I wouldn’t say the people in Nigeria are more naïve than me for Alexei Monroe: Does anybody have any final questions or remarks on this?
wanting to have this passport or the power that can come with this passport, because
I also want to have it for my own reasons, let’s say art thing or something you have in Avi Pitchon: Just a thought that perhaps there’s another dimension concerning this
common with other people of this imaginary state, and so on and so on. process which is not strictly just the question of whether the passports are real or not
But coming to the notion of believing in let’s say the power of this passport, I or whether there is a misunderstanding or not.
think the people who really need it as a travel document, then they automatically
also have to believe in this power. For me it is a luxury if I believe in this NSK State In a way you could say that the statement that the passport is not real but it’s part
or not, or if I conceive it as an art document or, as a second citizenship or, how I can of an art project is some bizarre and exotic form of bureaucratic difficulty in the sense
deal with it in the future or not, for me it is, let’s say, a free will if I will believe or that it’s some part of a naturalization process. And I am not necessarily saying that
not. people who are more naïve might have this misunderstanding, because I can also
But for the people who need it, they have to believe, so that they can use it account for myself that sometimes I am trying to deceive myself to this kind of con-
somehow. spiratorial thinking.
You can always think there might be more to the process than you think you
Naomi Hennig: I am quite surprised by the level of anxiety that is connected to the know. But the point is that it is actual, not virtual; the process of naturalization
question of the large number of Nigerian citizens, because for me this fact, as it hap- is real, because you are actually familiarizing yourself with a strain or a current of
pened in the whole history, actually implies a huge promise for the future of the NSK thought or of behaviour, of cultural phenomena from a different civilization. So actu-
State as a platform where these issues can be discussed, and where through the shared ally this statement “this is not real” is real in the fact that it exposes you to a cultural
membership in this art project some sort of solidarity could be established, or a lot of phenomenon.
bonds for the future can be made. So I think that maybe the misunderstanding is on
the other side, maybe it’s on your side, maybe we can discuss this further. Stevphen Shukaitis: Earlier today Alexei used the phrase passing temporary hegem-
onic zone.
Alexei Monroe: On the side of the NSK State itself? Let me connect two histories that hadn’t been connected before. In the late 70s
there appeared this mysterious travel document called “Visit Port Watson”. It de-
Naomi Hennig: On the side of those who really have to deal with all these questions scribed a sort of idyllic utopia somewhere in the South Pacific that due to dodgy cli-
where there’s lots of insecurity coming up about the prospect of an art project, or the ents, capital deals, had managed to create an island with no work.
fear of having to excuse for the sort of power that is taken through the invention of The publisher of this document started getting all these letters saying “How do I
such a project. I think there is also a potential for solidarity. get to Port Watson, how do I get there, where is it?” Now the author of the document
was someone called Peter Lamborn Wilson who went on to write a little book called
Alexei: Okay, I’d like to return to Conor’s question about whether it is necessarily TAZ, Temporary Autonomous Zones and his answer was “Wherever you are when
such a bad thing when we get this reality/artistic crossovers. And I think you were you think that Port Watson can exist, is where it is.”
reaching towards, you know ... that there’s always a positive side to these misunder- So maybe, the question is now, the people who think they have heard that you can
standings and there is a disrupted potential, but then the question is what’s the cost actually visit the NSK Land; maybe whenever they thought it was possible, then, in
for the individuals who subscribed to the misunderstanding in the way of sharing it. fact they were there.
So it’s quite ... it’s a double-edged sword and in a way. I personally, I feel I play a
small part in this because in my book I always mention the stories about people trav-
elling from Sarajevo etc. [with NSK Passports] so a lot of this can contribute to this
mythology which people in Nigeria are taking for real.
But does that mean that we should censor ourselves or, that we should try to de-
mythicize and completely destroy it? And as Miran says to actually stop the project
because of this issue would also be incorrect. There is actually no correct ethical path
out of this. So all we can do is consider some of these questions.
Public discussion
106 following Inke Arns' 107
presentation
The 'First NSK Citizens’ Congress' in Berlin:
A Summary Conor McGrady
Introduction
The NSK State in Time emerged at a moment when a radical rethinking of the na-
tion state was necessary, yet this did not manifest itself geopolitically but in the
form of an art collective’s endeavour. Prior to the creation of the State in Time, the
NSK collective grew out of the social and cultural conditions of Yugoslavia in the
1980s. In the wake of long-time leader Marshall Josip Broz Tito’s death, Slovenian
youth and underground culture clashed with the Yugoslav authorities, while power
struggles and rising nationalism across Yugoslavia began to threaten the federation.
NSK founders Laibach faced censorship for their visual and aural reprocessing of
art, ideology and politics. As events in the 1980s accelerated towards the collapse
of socialism in Eastern Europe and the disintegration of Yugoslavia in war, NSK
emerged as a multi-faceted entity, with Laibach’s controversial and provocative
presence now framed within a broader collective structure encompassing painting,
theatre, design and philosophy. NSK’s characteristic embodiment of authoritarian-
ism merged nationalist, socialist and fascist iconography with the language of the
early twentieth century avant-gardes. Taking the idea of the state as a Duchampian
Readymade, NSK virtually seceded from newly independent Slovenia in 1992 to
become a state in time and without borders – a utopian social sculpture embodying
a symbolic transcendence of the nationalism engulfing the region. Shortly after its
founding, the state began to issue NSK passports and open temporary embassies in a
number of locations, including Moscow, war-torn Sarajevo, Berlin, Ghent, Glasgow
and Dublin.
Eighteen years after the founding of the state, the ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’
took place in Berlin. From 21-23 October 2010, delegates, founding members of
1 With the founding of the NSK1 and congress organisers met at the Haus Der Kulturen Der Welt, a signa-
State in Time, NSK ceased
to exist as a collective ture post-war modernist structure located in the heart of the Tiergarten, a short
body with a synchro-
nised strategy. Laibach, distance from the Reichstag and new Chancellery building. I attended the congress
IRWIN, Cosmokinetic
Cabinet Noordung, New as a facilitator, chairing presentations by guest speakers and observing the discus-
Collectivism and the
Department of Pure and
sions taking place in delegate working groups. The congress consisted of three days
Applied Philosophy (Peter
Malkar), the core groups
of intensive working sessions, augmented with presentations and film screenings
active in the collective up open to the public in the evenings. Throughout the proceedings, an exhibition of
until this point, continued
to develop their own NSK citizen-generated Folk Art was displayed on video monitors. These works,
trajectories, periodically
reuniting for NSK events which mainly reprocessed NSK’s aesthetic material, were shown alongside a series of
in Berlin, Sarajevo, Dublin
and at the 'First NSK citizen-designed congress posters. Intensive debate amongst the delegates resulted in
Citizens’ Congress'.
the generation of a declaration of findings and a list of five innovations to be applied
to the NSK state in its current form.
IRWIN, NSK Passport Holders, Berlin, Taipei, Sarajevo and Lagos, (2007-2010)
108 109
An Overview of the Process demand for the assumption of power. As a result, no such demand was formally is-
sued, though indications were present that, should it have been, the constituent NSK
The Congress Delegates represented a broad spectrum of political, aesthetic and groups would have responded positively. In lieu of this, the discussions tended to
philosophical opinion. Predominantly from Europe and the US but also including centre around the need for a more active citizenry, with suggestions that citizens con-
delegates from Nigeria and New Zealand, they were initially selected through an tinue to develop a project-based model, organising events and activities in their own
application process open to all NSK citizens. Ostensibly, their task was to critically locales or online. The question of maintaining a unity of vision across such citizen-
examine the formal and conceptual structure of the NSK state as a social sculpture or led initiatives was partially addressed in the production of the five innovations (see
collective gesamtkunstwerk, and to envisage potential avenues for its continuation and Appendix 1), one of which called for the establishment of a decision-making process
proliferation. Working in three groups, two days of discussion culminated in a final in coordinating such activities. Much discussion was also given over to citizen de-
day-long gathering when delegates elected to meet together to craft a concluding mography and recruitment. While no concrete resolutions emerged as to how to ef-
statement. Despite occasional tension, the dynamic was cordial and comradely, with fectively address a perceived gender imbalance amongst citizens (the majority tend to
delegates for the most part taking their role seriously, even if what was expected of be male), it was suggested (not without humour, given the complex iconography of
them from the outset remained somewhat indeterminate and open ended. NSK state aesthetics) that state propaganda be more directed towards the recruitment
Early in the proceedings, questions were raised on the role of NSK citizenship, of women.
and what it entailed in terms of the projection of values into a virtual, utopian social A full working group session also examined the question of whether the NSK
structure. From the passive consumption of the state through the act of owning an 3 For more on micro- state should or should not consider itself a micronation. 3 On this issue delegates were
nations, see: http://
NSK passport as an art object, to actually attempting to travel with it, citizenship en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ unanimous. It was argued that the NSK state transcends micronations, in that for
Micronation
is currently exercised across a number of platforms. Recent citizen-led initiatives, (last accessed 20 the most part they limit themselves to outmoded forms of government, mimicking
November, 2012).
including the production of Folk Art, maintenance of archive materials2 and discus- 2 See Christian Matzke’s fiefdoms, monarchies and other feudal structures. As the ‘first global State of the
Retrogarde Reading
sions on diplomatic relations, precipitated debate on strategies to further activate Room http://www. Universe’, it was suggested that the state relate to micronations in a paternal fashion,
reanimator.8m.com/NSK /
citizen involvement. One proposed action was the creation of an NSK Academy. readingroom.html rather than build fraternal ties. As a meta-nation or a meta-state, which is by defini-
(last accessed 20
Increasing academic interest in the NSK state was perceived as problematic by some November, 2012). tion all-encompassing, the establishment of bilateral relations with other macro or
delegates, based on the fear that its incorporation into the dominant art/historical/ micronations would contradict or challenge this status. In highlighting examples of
ideological canons could effectively neutralise its provocative aspects, including its similar social entities, one delegate compared the NSK state to the Catholic Church
universalist and totalizing aspirations. At the same time, there existed a broad desire (again, not without humour) due to its universality, embodiment of some relations
to centralise and disseminate theoretical research on the state, and to view academia with other states, and its embracement of a higher totalising force, the Immanent
4 Point 8 from the
as a vehicle for the proliferation of ideas that it embodies. This in turn, posed the Internal Book of Consistent Spirit.4 Yet as a transcendent totalising organism, the NSK state also con-
Laws: Constitution of
question of how aggressively the NSK state should present itself to the world. As a Membership and Basic ceptually encompasses and supersedes religion. In concluding the discussion it was
Duties of NSK Members,
social sculpture embodying utopian ideals, the state also manifests aspects of what reads, ‘Each membership proposed that the state not endorse or formally relate to other states or micronations,
candidate must believe
was referred to during the congress as the ‘dark side’ of history and politics (totalitari- in the hierarchical princi- but should not prevent citizens from maintaining such relations.
anism, authoritarianism, martial aesthetics etc.). In this sense, the power of the NSK ple and existence of the
supreme substance (ICS
state project exists not only in its ability to provide a point of identification for those – the immanent, consist-
ent spirit), occupying The Nigerian Question
who reject what congress presenter and NSK founding member Eda Čufer referred to the uppermost position
in the hierarchy of NSK .’
as ‘the cage of national culture’, but also to generate a sense of disquiet. New Collectivism, Neue Throughout the congress, guest presenters discussed issues pertinent to the social
Slowenische Kunst, Los
Discussions on the issue of decentralising NSK state power remained tentative. Angeles: Amok, 1991, p.4. and aesthetic function of the state. Students from Berlin’s Humboldt University’s
While some delegates proposed an actual transfer of control of the state apparatus 5 A psychoanalytic term Anthropology Department questioned whether the NSK state could pose a virtual
attributed to philosopher
(including passport production) into the hands of the citizenry, the idea seemed to Slavoj Žižek, in the con- threat to the existing social order. This in itself raises the question of how real the
text of NSK overidentifi-
generate a lukewarm response for the most part. Establishing accountability and cation is the strategy of
NSK state actually is in terms of politics. The Nigerian question, which was addressed
coordination in such a venture seemed to be as problematic as the thought of sever- interrogating a particular
ideology, aesthetic or
in a public panel discussion, posed the conundrum of prospective citizens taking the
ing the umbilical cord tying delegates to the state’s founders. As was to become clear political viewpoint though State in Time more seriously than it takes itself – a peculiar twist on the NSK strat-
adoption of their tenets in
during the discussions proposing innovations to the state, and later reinforced in exaggerated form, rather egy of over-identification 5 used in the run up to the dissolution of Yugoslavia. The
than critiquing them
the congress findings, the majority of delegates were not in favour of making a clear directly. thousands of applications pouring in from Nigeria, in the belief that an NSK passport
Part social experiment and part manifestation of the process of statecraft, the con-
gress ultimately represents a temporary distillation of the elements characterising an
ever-evolving work in progress. As a lens through which to examine and understand
the motivations of NSK citizens it raises a number of points for further discussion.
The absence of a radical re-conceptualisation of the direction of the state in all like-
lihood reflects the power of identification and the complex geometry of belonging
felt by the delegates to an imagined community hitherto shaped by the actions of
its founders. Perhaps the affirmation of a fanatical (a signifier raised throughout the
congress and enshrined in the findings) identification with this collective imaginary
was driven by the fear that decentralisation could dilute or remove the orienting
framework provided by current NSK signifiers and fixed points of reference. Yet at the
same time, the open-ended structure of the project, coupled with the willingness of
its founders to encourage its spontaneous and organic growth, actually calls for new
initiatives and ideas. In repossessing and reprocessing early twentieth-century uto-
pian idealism as one of multiple elements within its framework, the state represents a
conceptual alternative to the politics of alienation generated by contemporary politi-
cal systems and modern nation states. Somewhat akin to El Lissitsky’s Proun paint-
ings, which ‘denied a fixed perspective and embodied a strong orderly arrangement of
elements’,9 it is within the abstract conceptualisation of space engendered by the state 9 Victor Margolin,
The Struggle for Utopia,
that citizens have the ability to collectively re-create or simply create themselves as Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1997,
part of a de-territorialised social organism. At once total and yet devoid of the con- p.33.
trol mechanisms of the contemporary social order (what Elias Canetti refers to as the
‘stings of command’),10 the unlimited spatial dimension of the state encourages a dis- 10 Elias Canetti,
Crowds and Power,
solution of boundaries. In their place is a collective flux of ideas, free to move beyond London: Penguin, 1973,
p.351.
the constricting parameters of the ‘cage of national culture’ referred to earlier.
In the final analysis, would more contention and friction amongst the delegates
have ignited sharper debate, resulting in the production of a less benign and more
visionary final declaration? Perhaps the unifying ethos of NSK citizenship, taken to-
gether with the background presence of the founding members of NSK , fuelled the
desire to produce something that ultimately echoes the aesthetic and sociological
dynamics present in the work of NSK up until this point. Yet perhaps the physical co-
alescence of forces at the congress remains more important than the documents pro-
duced. While it did not result in citizens formally assuming control of the direction
Appendix 2
Findings (Final Congress Declaration)
The NSK State is a universal state in time, not a state of territory. Whether it remains
in potential form or manifests itself in actual form depends on the actions and beliefs
of those who are or wish to be its citizens.
The NSK State in Time is consistent with and evolves from the founding princi-
ples and strategies of Neue Slowenische Kunst.
The NSK State in Time becomes manifest when the following exist:
116 117
NSK: Allegiances, Ambiguities, Politics, Process
Ian Parker
The 2010 Berlin ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’ was an opportunity to reflect on the
articulation of NSK political practice within contemporary neoliberal democracy.
NSK , remember, had been forged in the crucible of decaying Tito-Stalinism in the
1980s, and the formation of the NSK State in Time was a radical response to the
shock therapy privatisation of Slovenia in the 1990s. An authoritarianism of one kind
– Yugoslav self-managed ‘socialism’ that incited competition between different state
sectors and national sub-components of the federal republic – had paved the way to
free-market wage slavery with the fall of the Berlin Wall. NSK’s ‘over-identification’
with the façade of ‘independence’ – bureaucratised differentiation from the Soviet
Bloc before 1989 and fake national independence within Western Europe from then
on – was designed to replicate and thereby question what had been offered and what
was promised as an alternative.
This strategy of over-identification required two elements held in tension: ambi-
guity and allegiance. There was, from the start, a necessary ambiguity about intention
and effects. This was played out in Laibach’s refusal to drop the mask and reassure
the audience that NSK’s collage of Soviet socialist realist and German national so-
cialist images were designed to challenge forms of authority, not endorse them. It
has evidently been difficult to hold this indeterminate place for three decades, and a
sense of exhaustion was apparent among some of the NSK founders participating in
the congress. And then, of course, allegiance to the project as such – which is crucial
to the enigmatic depersonalised nature of NSK – is put under strain. Allegiance was
always to a space of refusal, of negativity, rather than to a fully-formed alternative
ideal, and this also proves difficult to maintain when there is a suspicion that the
project has lost its way. Now, to ask ‘What next?’ of followers – our ‘citizens’ – was
to turn over the future of the NSK state to an audience constituted at a different time
and so bringing some different agendas to play.
Allegiance
Holding a citizens’ congress meant that the question of allegiance was put under
pressure, for these citizens are not at all, and have never been, the same as ‘members’
(as opposed to ‘citizen’ passport-holders) of NSK . The very loyal repetition of the state
mantra that this is a ‘state in time’ betrayed something of the difference between
the particular political moment at which the state was formed and the moments at
IRWIN, State in Time, London, 2012
which the citizens had engaged with it. One could hear from the delegates a variety
IRWIN, State in Time, Pristina, 2012 of different stories about when they had encountered NSK – five years, ten years ago,
118 119
rarely longer than this – and about what had drawn them to it, and there was unease running of a factory which always relies on a plethora of unspoken rules), for example,
about how they might be viewed. There were, for sure, fans (a label every delegate has time and again exposed the fact that more is required of an employee than what
I spoke to wanted to avoid), collectors (a self-description very cautiously and rarely they have actually been explicitly contracted to do. In addition, we also tended to avoid
offered), passport-holders (claimed by the majority of the delegates, though not all) an explicit discussion of political projects that might coincide or collide with NSK.
and fellow-travellers (of which some had passports as well). And they all knew, even However, I suspect that skirting around political differences was not what NSK and the
though some might have counted themselves out of such categories, that all of these NSK state had in mind when, in its early most radical interventions, it forced competing
kinds of folk were there. What it meant to show allegiance to NSK was refracted, ideological systems to face each other and made explicit some unpleasant mirror-like
then, through other kinds of life-projects. correspondences between them. Ambiguity is a tool of over-identification that, at its
What unfolded more slowly over the three days of the congress, were the different most effective (as in the 1987 ‘poster scandal’) renders visible the contrasting political
political allegiances of the delegates, and it become clear that we were not to experi- investments in state practice, rather than providing a polite veneer of false agreement.
ence first-hand some of the most intense ambiguities of NSK practice; specifically, the
appearance of anything close to the far right. Anxiety that fascists might be as inter- Ambiguity
ested in NSK as NSK is in them – a concern voiced by some NSK founding members
– gave way to not a little disappointment that there were rather too many of us gath- Again we need to take into account the difference between the specific historical
ered that thought the same way. It seemed that, despite the congress taking place in moment at which NSK was formed in the 1980s and the time of the congress in 2010
Berlin (and notwithstanding some edgy experiences with uniformed NSK citizens in (that we are a ‘state in time’ was another totemic phrase that obscured this kind of
Bavarian-kitsch beer cellars getting hostile looks from the regulars) we were actually political reflection in the congress itself). NSK does function now as an ambiguous
in a little liberal bubble in the Haus der Kulturen der Welt. Some there had no state space that addresses a crisis of allegiance and identity across the political spectrum,
allegiance (other than to the NSK state, of course), but quite a few delegates indicated though perhaps all the more so on the left (many of those attending seemed uncom-
in their online questionnaires and in the working sessions that they were proud of fortable with what are termed ‘labels’, which is a fairly common liberal rhetorical
their own nation. Some had no religious allegiance except to the state’s Immanent device for those who want to avoid political commitment). This crisis is compounded
Consistent Spirit (which became a rather empty totem for the delegates by the end of by suspicion of organisations that claim to represent or speak for a constituency – the
the congress), but others were happy to juggle this alongside other beliefs that they working class, women, ethnic groups – and NSK here is also able to key into that
decently kept to themselves. suspicion and offer something that is an alternative to organisation as such; it is an
There were some striking attempts to use NSK to step outside the impossible organisation that is, perhaps, no more than a semblance of organisation. However, it
deadlock of now hegemonic obedient and banal anti-fascism (the idea that you can was apparent that there was a tension between those who were drawn into NSK as a
only be appropriately suspicious of the Nazis if you also repudiate the socialist forces space that politicised them (and in this respect, politicised them to some extent to the
that combatted them, and that you can only be respectful of the Jewish victims if ‘left’) and those who were trying to escape politics altogether (and so were effectively
you endorse Zionism). Some such contradictions, however, were only opened up in being politicised, we might say, all the more to the ‘right’).
private conversation; a delegate of German family background showed a tattoo in The most potent indicator of the politically productive effects of such ambiguity
Hebrew on his wrist that reads ‘never forget’, a counterpoint to a Jewish Israeli del- concerns nationalism, which appeared as a topic of discussion in the congress around
egate with NSK tattooed around a nipple. These were the most dramatic of many at- the signifier ‘territory’ (as in the claim that NSK is a state in ‘time’ rather than defined
tempts to relate to history that also sidestepped any explicit revolutionary alternative by geography). Allegiance to the NSK State in Time is allegiance to a fiction, and so
to capitalism and Stalinism and, more so, any organisational forms that have already the political logic is to see all other state forms as constructions, as fictions. At the
attempted to transcend nationalism. An ‘international’ of any kind tended to be seen same time, and as a function of this same logic in times of neoliberal globalisation
as suspect as any ‘national’ body; at one session it was suggested that NSK as a global which feeds off specific local cultures in order to commodify what there is of them
state was accomplishing an over-identification with international conspiracy theories, that can then be exoticised and taken to the world market – neatly captured in some
effectively dismantling ‘internationalism’ as a reactionary motif. critical accounts of this process as ‘glocalisation’ – any alternative is also susceptible to
This also meant that there was a careful evasion of lessons that might be drawn being seen as no more than a construction, a fiction. Cynicism about nationalism as
from similarities between NSK over-identification and such like practices in the trade an ideal then once again gives way to cynicism about internationalism; another world
union and socialist tradition. The strategy of ‘work to rule’ in industry (in which is possible only to the extent that it is, at the same moment, unravelled as an impos-
workers follow to the letter instructions in the workplace and so sabotage the smooth sible mirage.
128 129
Delegates presenting the findings of the ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’, Berlin, October 2010 NSK members at the ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’, Berlin, October 2010
130 131
Interview with Ian Parker Eda Čufer
Eda Čufer: Ian, you are one of the few people at this congress whose name I im-
mediately recognised. I’ve read your texts about the work of Slovenian philosopher
Slavoj Žižek and your writings on over-identification and, with this in mind, I would
like to ask you what motivated you to get an NSK passport and to participate in this
congress, and also how do you feel in this environment?
Ian Parker: I suppose the answer to the first question, about wanting to join NSK , is
that before I went to Ljubljana in 2003 I thought that I knew what Laibach was. One
1 Metelkova mesto: evening I met Alexei Monroe and had a long argument in Metelkova1 about whether
a centre for alternative
culture, Ljubljana. Laibach was fascist or not. Alexei made me think again about what connections exist
between Laibach and the wider project of NSK , and about the way that the signify-
ing mechanisms in Laibach’s work operate. It was from this encounter, and thinking
through how Laibach functions, that I decided I wanted to know more about NSK .
The next opportunity was in 2004, when my book on Žižek was published in
Britain, and IRWIN visited Manchester at exactly the same time. I spoke to the
members of IRWIN about their work and tried to get a better understanding of what
the NSK project was. Now it seemed to me that the theoretical work that I had been
concerned with through Žižek was actually already being practiced in NSK . The con-
cept of over-identification was being applied through actively recruiting people in a
political project, which in some ways was closer to what I was interested in than the
theoretical work, so that led me to join NSK .
Eda Čufer: What do you expect from this event, here and now?
Ian Parker: I come here out of curiosity. I’m curious about the way the NSK state
is evolving and I want to be part of the process. But I was also very relieved when
Alexei invited me to participate as a facilitator and told me that I should not give my
own opinions in the sessions. So that’s what I have been doing. I have simply been
facilitating other people and listening to them. It has been a perfect opportunity to
hear a range of different ideas about NSK .
Eda Čufer: I wonder what were Alexei’s criteria in choosing facilitators? Your pre-
existing knowledge about the wider context?
Ian Parker: It is possible. I know something about the theoretical background to the
work, but there are many other delegates who also know something about the theo-
State of Emergence: A Documentary of the First NSK Citizens’ Congress, Alexei Monroe, Leipzig, 2011;
retical background. I can see that there are different theoretical frameworks being
book cover motif taken from the congress poster designed by Valnoir Mortasonge brought together by the delegates and they all have something to say.
132 133
Eda Čufer: I arrived yesterday without any preconceptions and observed that the who know exactly what is happening, that they each have full conscious awareness
outlook of many delegates replicates the vision of the NSK in the 1980s and early of what the consequences are of obtaining an NSK passport. But it seems to me that
1990s. During my talk today this first-glance perception changed. I realise that the the NSK passport process opens up something beyond the subject, it’s something
delegates are actually a heterogeneous group, and that they think and identify very that can’t be controlled, something that can’t be predicted.
differently. Would you like to say something about that? Or, to ask you more con- So there is an anxiety there, which tries to close things down, and there is an-
cretely: what is the dynamic between people who strongly identify with, let’s say, other anxiety about the relationship between art and politics, where some people
mythological aspects of Laibach and NSK , and people who have a more reflective or are trying to close things down around art. And it is when art touches politics – and
critical approach? possible political mobilisation – that it becomes problematic. I was very impressed
with Miran Mohar’s statement about why IRWIN and NSK went to Nigeria. It pre-
Ian Parker: I think in a way I’m more interested in participants who actively engage
sented an ethical response, which tried to keep the question open rather than closing
in NSK imagery and take it on, rather than those who take an academic or intel-
things down. So it is that political dynamic that I am interested in, and I suppose it
lectual distance from the phenomenon – who simply want to think about and talk
is because generally politics – radical, let’s say revolutionary politics – is very difficult
about and use it in an instrumental way. It seems to me that the second group is at
these days. Politics goes way beyond the old Marxist organisations. I am a member
risk of disavowing the libidinal attachment to this kind of phenomenon, or to any
of one of those organisations, a still-revolutionary Marxist organisation that is very
kind of national or political phenomena. So it’s with those in the first group, that are
small and isolated, and I recognise that politics is now happening in feminist move-
actively immersed, that I think it’s possible to have a discussion about how it is that
ments, queer movements, anti-globalisation movements, and I see NSK as one of
one becomes involved in a movement like this and what one expects of it.
those contradictory spaces where something is being opened up and I want to sup-
I think running across that there is another tension, which I also find interesting,
port that.
between those who are entering NSK and are becoming politicised by it and those
who perhaps have already been in politics for some years. The former group is learn- Eda Čufer: I most clearly perceive the change in context in which NSK operates,
ing something about the fragile nature of national identity and national attachment, and precisely in regard to the anxiety caused by the so-called ‘Nigerian problem’. If
and they move beyond that – let’s say to transnational or international solidarity Laibach or NSK had caused a similar controversy during the 1980s, there would be
of some kind – and in that process they become politicised. The latter have already no dilemma over whether this was exactly what we wanted to do. There would be no
been in politics for some years, left-wing politics, feminist politics perhaps, and in NSK without walking straight into the centre of an anxiety and letting it speak for
NSK they find a way of escaping from politics. So the tension is, I think, between itself, regardless of transgression of common ethics. But that story was taking place
those two different groups. Those who are finding politics, a radical politics of some within territories that we knew; we knew the symbolic relations, rules and emotions
kind, and those who are escaping politics and simply want to do the art practice – that governed them. In the case of Nigeria we don’t know much about the symbolic
and it’s the first group that I am more interested in now. or emotional nature of the relations into which we have involved ourselves through
global dissemination of the NSK state passport. And this is perhaps a general prob-
Eda Čufer: And why is that?
lem of globalisation and the ethics of our present time.
Ian Parker: Why is that? The NSK state passport looks very much like a real passport but you will get very
different things out of it if you use it as a functional, rather than a symbolic, object.
Eda Čufer: Actually, partly, you have already answered this question. But I would
NSK is of course interested in playing with this distinction, this border. The Nigerian
like to hear more about it because I am personally torn between the necessity of
case points to a controversial global situation, where millions of people have no ad-
dissolving the whole problem into rational, reflective categories and persisting stub-
ministrative ID and therefore do not technically exist within modern social organi-
bornly in recurring contradictions, which is exhausting after thirty years. I am curi-
sation. But those who don’t exist for us can still desire the same rights as anyone else
ous, what do you think this project opens up in this regard, if anything?
in the world, which is to be equal, to enjoy the same opportunities as those who can
Ian Parker: I’d rather say it’s pulsating in some way. It’s opening and closing; at travel, cross borders, go from one biennial to the other, and so on. Who cares if the
moments it opens to something, at moments it closes up. You can see it closing up NSK passport is real, or fake, or art, at this level of excitement, which, on the other
very clearly in some of the discussions about Nigerian NSK passport holders, where hand, produces unbearable anxiety? The anxiety in NSK members and NSK citizens
you have an attempt to sanitise art-political practice by making it seem as if you can stems from the sudden awareness of the real problems out there, which make our
do some kind of risk assessment – to make sure that the passports only go to people artistic games look so safe and bourgeois. In many ways, the ‘Nigerian problem’
136 137
Temporary Hegemonic Zones Stevphen Shukaitis
In the book Essays Critical and Clinical, Gilles Deleuze outlines an understanding of
aesthetics, primarily through literature, where the role of artistic production merges
1 Gilles Deleuze, Essays with that of diagnosis.1 This is a point where the task of literary criticism hybridises
Critical and Clinical,
Minneapolis: University of with that of critique, leaving both of them renewed, even if a bit unsettled by the
Minnesota Press, 1998.
process. While it is almost impossible to encapsulate what the Slovenian art move-
ment Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK) has undertaken, in all its manifestations, since
forming in 1983, we could perhaps describe it best as an aesthetic apparatus for col-
lective diagnosis. Its work – spanning music, theatre, philosophy, and statecraft – has
served to diagnose multiple forms of repressed and sublimated desires lingering in
the collective imagination: from the continuing but unacknowledged appeal of totali-
tarianism operating within the Yugoslav state, to the fascist dynamics found within
the dynamics of pop culture.
The activities of NSK over time have evolved towards a more general critique
and recovery of the aesthetics of the state form. While NSK’s oeuvre involves a high
degree of work with state aesthetics, this has been particularly pronounced since the
2 http://www.nskstate. launching of the NSK State in Time Project in 1992. 2 The State in Time was declared
com
to be an infinite state existing only in time, and thus lacking any physical boundaries
or territories. Thus it was claimed that this would make the NSK State the first ‘glob-
al state of the universe’, existing only in the workings of time, or perhaps in the ter-
ritories of the collective imaginaries animated by the various events NSK would hold,
such as setting up temporary embassies and post offices. Since its inception, the NSK
State now involves over 13,000 citizens, where the status of citizenship was conferred
by applying for a passport either at an NSK event or through its website. After years
of existing primarily as a virtual entity, the NSK State held the Congress in Berlin as
3 http://congress. a process to examine itself and evaluate its workings. 3
nskstate.com
The congress was held at the iconic Haus der Kulturen der Welt (House of World
Cultures), and was accompanied by a corresponding exhibition of materials created
as part of the State in Time project and a selection of NSK Folk Art, or materials
created by citizens of NSK and those inspired by it (some of which had previously
been displayed at the Taipei Biennale). The event was funded by the European
Commission Culture Fund (who apparently remarked that they understood the
congress to be a rather clever form of irony) along with the Berlin Capital Cultural
Fund and the Slovenian Cultural Ministry. Even if the NSK State only exists in
time, the territorial basis of its funding support seems to have grown appreciably.
The Slovenian state now regularly promotes the work of NSK and Laibach which,
aside from the writings of Žižek, is probably their most successful national export. I
NSKstate.com, Screenshots, 2003-2007
From the NSK Folk Art collection attended the congress as a delegate, one out of the 30 who had been chosen when all
138 139
NSK Citizens were contacted and invited to apply to participate in the congress in interest in turning the NSK State from a virtual aesthetic entity into an ongoing
2009. The application itself consisted of a fairly in-depth set of questions asking for project embraced by its citizens, or in turning that heretofore symbolic but empty sig-
impressions about the role and importance of the NSK State, how it had affected citi- nifier into something more substantive. Despite the somewhat uninspiring nature of
zens’ lives, and possible routes for its future development. the outcome, the final statement did include several interesting reformulations of the
It is difficult to characterise the conference as whole. The days consisted mainly of relation between states and time, the conjunction of depersonalized aesthetics and
working sessions for the three smaller groups the delegates were divided into, and the governance, as well as the paradoxically clever idea that ‘Freedom of choice creates
evenings were filled with public talks, film screenings, and other events. While I had trauma; lack of freedom of choice creates trauma. The NSK State acknowledges the
no idea what to expect, it quickly became clear that there existed a quite wide array of right not to choose.’
political and aesthetic perspectives held by those attending the event. The organisers, A similar dynamic of cautious but not overly striking innovation characterised
perhaps all too aware of this, cautioned against making assumptions about the per- the pieces in the NSK Folk Art exhibition and poster competition. While some of
spectives of others. While this is certainly sensible in a gathering involving attendees the pieces developed new iterations of existing themes, for the most part they stayed
from the far left and far right, it may have inadvertently led to an air of excessive close to the aesthetics that NSK has developed for several decades, meshing together
civility. The days’ debates vacillated between philosophical debate and model UN imagery from the history of the avant-garde with industrial, fascist/totalitarian and
session, or perhaps between a fan boy event for NSK/Laibach enthusiasts and a cul- Slovene themes. And while much of this was quite interesting, and perhaps even
tural theory conference. The constant presence of a Slovenian film crew also injected quite startling for individuals who first come across these re-workings and hybridisa-
the proceedings with an air of reality TV, as debates on the future of the NSK State tions with no background information, it did not seem to produce anything near the
trundled on. constant stream of creativity and innovation that is assumed to flow from crowd-
These ongoing sessions, while sometimes strained, also involved a number of quite sourced modes of participation and artistic production. By far the most interesting
interesting and (at least for me) unexpected points of debate. For instance, how does piece in the exhibition was a poster created by Bertrand Binois, which was a map
the NSK State relate to micronations? Is the NSK State a micronation? While mem- of the world where overlapping perpendicular layers of grey created darker sections
bers of the NSK State have previously participated in micronation themed events, that evoked the Rorschach ink blot test. This moves beyond recycling previous tropes
such as the 2003 Summit of Micronations in Helsinki, a consensus emerged that and hints toward ways in which the NSK State might function in the future: as a
the NSK State was not a micronation because micronations by definition are small, 5 For more on recent kind of critical-clinical diagnostic aesthetic for assessing the functioning of state
uses of overidentification
limited entities.4 Conversely the NSK State, being an infinite entity, could not be 4 For more information and strategies similar imaginaries.
on the Micronations to that employed by the
considered micro. Thus it was argued that to engage in diplomatic relations with mi- Summit see http://www. NSK, see the Cultural This idea emerged as a theme in a number of the congress sessions, that the role
muu.fi/amorph03. See Activism Today. The Art of
cronations would be to belittle the status of the NSK State, reducing it to marginal also the book published Over-Identification (2007) of the NSK State was less important in itself and more in how it developed tools that
after the summit, edited collection edited by the
phenomena, rather then continuing to proclaim its infinite and totalising nature. by one of the summit Dutch art group BAVO. could be used in different locations and situations to excavate suppressed, obscene
Although it is debatable
To some extent, attempting to reproduce such a debate outside its context renders it organizers: Oliver Kochta-
Kalleinen, (Ed.), Summit of whether some of the shared traumas. While this is an interesting proposition I am uncertain of how far
examples contained (such
absurd, although it does provide a small glimpse into the functioning of the kind of Micronations: Protocols.
as the Yes Men) are in-
this could actually go outside the original context and historical conditions marking
Helsinki: MUU Artists’
totalising, almost involuntarily Hegelian rhetoric that discussions of the NSK State Association, 2005. deed based on a principle
of overidentification. It
the formation of NSK. For instance, could such a strategy of overidentification be
take. Likewise there were extended discussions about the composition of the citi- is clear in their perfor- employed usefully within the US?5 While one argument about NSK’s role in 1980s
mances, for instance,
zenry and how it breaks down along demographic and geographic lines, and how it that they are not actually Yugoslavia is that by taking on and pushing right wing nationalist positions to an ex-
advocating the hyperbolic
might become a more inclusive project. But this begs the question of just how useful position that appears treme, particularly while combining them with ‘foreign’ elements, their performances
to be advocated under
it is for an artistic project, whose territory is time and the workings of the imagina- assumed roles. This was and aesthetics served to make these positions unusable, would this tactic work in the
not the case for the NSK
tion, one that rejects the operations of liberal democracy itself, to become more inclu- and Laibach whose work United States? It might be seen that any attempted ideological monkey wrenching of
was all the more unset-
sive in any more commonly understood sense. tling precisely because this kind, far from sabotaging a section of the political spectrum, could just as easily
one could never really
While a primary purpose of the congress was to produce new directions for the be sure if they meant it
end up creating new platform ideas for the Tea Party.
NSK State, perhaps something like crowd-sourced state planning, the outcomes or not, and thus resisted
easy interpretation. See
This also suggests a possible limit to the congress as a format for interaction,
reached were not particularly innovative. The statement produced, the ‘Findings’ as also Stevphen Shukaitis, particularly as a space for developing strategies for social and political intervention
‘Overidentification
they were called, were rather tepid, reading rhetorically as Laibach-lite. Is a tepid and/or Bust?’ Variant relevant beyond the context of the NSK State itself. Or to put it another way, if NSK
Number 37, 2010,
consensus any better or worse than a false consensus? The main outcome was basically http://www.variant.org. applies the principle of the monumental retrogarde to tease out the residual poten-
uk/37texts/10Overident.
to affirm the founding principles of the NSK State and that there would be further html tial of aesthetic and political movements long thought dead, how does this lead to
autonomous zones, but creates them precisely as what Alexei Monroe has quite clev-
erly termed ‘Temporary Hegemonic Zones’, or zones of autonomy created from hol-
lowing out state logic from within.11 11 Alexei Monroe,
‘Laibach Kunst and
However it is the word temporary in the concept of a Temporary Hegemonic the Art of Total Non-
Alignment’, Ausstellung
Zone that points both to the potential and the limits of the NSK State moving from Laibach Kunst
Recapitulation 2009,
a virtual to an actual entity. During the closing ceremony of the congress a member Lodz: Muzeum Sztuki:
of Laibach commented that during the 1980s they had very much wanted there to 2009, pp.135-138.
be a Slovenian state, but that once it actually came into existence it was much less
interesting or desirable. The formation of the State in Time was one way out of this
conundrum, shifting these desires to an impossible terrain. Which leads one to ask
whether the most disappointing move would not then be to actually try and cre-
ate the NSK State as an actual entity? Would this not then create another and even
deeper level of disappointment in the sense that any actual realisation of a total and
impossible state could only be partial? Perhaps the entire congress was doomed, from
the beginning, to failure. In that sense the most promising outcome was not the offi-
cial findings but, rather, the counter-statement that was also read at the closing state-
ment denouncing the whole process, (and paradoxically redeeming it through this
denunciation).
While it took the form of a rather caustically humorous invective, this so-called
Atomic Declaration of Dependence displayed a greater understanding of the event than
any other made during that entire event. A constituent assembly for an impossible
totalising state, by only being able to partially realise it, would thus necessarily betray
it. The only possible fidelity to be found in realising the project of an absolute state
would thus have to bring together its constitution and dissolution in the same mo-
ment or, better yet, to open a rip in time where the de-structuring force bends time
itself so that the State of Time collapses even before it has constituted itself: only
through an impossible act of constituent self-negation. And this is what is written
in Latin on every NSK passport, ‘Ama nesciri’, or ‘love the unknown, the obscurity’. 12 This statement is
from “Unitary Urbanism
If the simplest Situationist act was attempting to abolish dead time, the NSK State at the End of the
1950s,”Internationale
in Time realises that act by bringing together the absolute state form of time itself Situationniste #3
(December 1959).
with its simultaneous abolition, and by doing so the constituted state never actually Available at http://www.
cddc.vt.edu/sionline/si/
occurs.12 unitary.html
Christian Matzke, Exterior of the Retrogarde Reading Room, Brunswick Maine, USA, 2010
From the NSK Folk Art collection
I am no longer alone, when I attempt to contemplate the whole of my own life in the mirror
of history, just as I am not alone when I contemplate my own exterior in a mirror.
Mikhail Bakhtin2
1. (Green Leather Box)
1 This text is the second My first passport was issued by the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. I keep
part of an essay based
on notes from a talk I it as a memento of my childhood and of my former country that no longer exists.
delivered at the ‘First
NSK Citizens’ Congress’ Growing up in the 1960s, I was very proud that we were socialists; I cherished our
in Berlin in October
2010. (The first part,
friendly and glamorous president, Josip Broz Tito. When I once criticised my grand-
‘‘The State and Its
Double’‘ is published in
mother for not having Tito’s portrait in her living room, as everyone else did, she was
State of Emergence (ed. irritated by my comment. Shortly after, she went to her bedroom and brought out a
Alexei Monroe), Leipzig:
Ploettner Verlag, 2011. dark green leather box and put it on the table. The box was full of old coins and docu-
Although I am one of
NSK’s founding members, ments: passports, birth certificates, graduation papers, medical IDs and other things
this is not an official NSK
position paper, but an of that nature. I remember being attracted to a medallion bearing the face of a man
essay representing my
own views, as an NSK with a big moustache. That, my grandmother told me, was Franz Joseph, the former
State citizen, on the
meaning and function of emperor of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, ‘he was like Tito when I was a child’ she
our statehood.
explained.
2 Mikhail Bakhtin,
‘Author and Hero in
My grandmother, Maria Flajs, was born in 1910, four years before Franz Joseph
Aesthetic Activity’, Art declared war with Serbia, following the assassination of his nephew, Archduke Franz
and Answerability (ed.
Michael Holquist), Austin: Ferdinand, by a Serb nationalist (Gavrilo Princip) in Sarajevo, setting in motion the
University of Texas Press,
1990, p.105. events that eventually led to World War I. The borders between countries in our part
of the world radically changed after that war. Many previously nonexistent states
popped up in so-called ‘Middle Europe’. Between the two great wars of the last
century, my grandparents held Austro-Hungarian, Italian and German passports.
In 1945 they received what they called ‘a communist’s’ one. ‘Nothing lasts very long
around here,’ my grandmother pronounced as she shut her box and took it back to the
bedroom.
My grandmother lived to see the collapse of Yugoslavia. When she died in 1995,
she was a Slovenian citizen, and thus the holder of yet another passport. But needless
to say, she could not care less about that. She also outlived President Tito, who died
in 1980, just a month before I graduated from high school and moved to Ljubljana to
attend university and, four years later, to become one of the founders of an art collec-
tive called Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK). Between 1989 and 1991, the Yugoslav so-
cialist federation broke down, and Slovenia proclaimed its will to exist as a sovereign
3 Issuing NSK passports national state. Less than a year later, in 1992, NSK also proclaimed the existence of
actually began immedi-
ately after opening the an extra-territorial NSK state. Immediately after the proclamation, NSK began issuing
NSK Embassy in Moscow
146 147
The NSK passport, an object that anybody could apply for and obtain, became a key of a feeling in religious form. The office clerk, the blacksmith, the soldier,
critical instrument of an artistic and sociopolitical transformation. It was one of the the accountant, the general... these are all characters out of one stage play or
mediums by which the NSK of the 1990s started expanding into an unbounded entity another, portrayed by various people, who become so carried away that they
and embarked on the process of becoming a sovereign state, the NSK State in Time. confuse the play and their parts in it with life itself. We almost never get or
Ten years later, in the first decade of the twenty first century, NSK passport hold- see the actual human face and if we ask someone who he is, he answers, ‘an
ers began constituting themselves as a citizenry, initiating new modes of organisation 5 Kasimir Malevich. engineer’, ‘farmer’, etc.5
The Non-Objective
and socialisation. This in turn opened the NSK State in Time up to exploring literally world: The Manifesto of
Suprematism. New York:
unlimited possibilities in rethinking identity and citizenship in the formative century. Dover Publications, 2003, Malevich hints that this ‘actual human face’ (equivalent to Marx’s ‘essentially human
p.94.
This essay is my contribution towards meditating on these possibilities. nature’) that each of us carries beneath our ever-more specialised utility masks, exists
only as a potential (as non-objective feeling). A living person can burn with desire to
2. (Who are you?) express himself or herself beyond the determinations of the existing social scripts and
Karl Marx and Max Weber believed that modernity was made possible by the expro- their demands for particular, already established and socially-regulated characters.
priation and redistribution of authority and wealth over the four previous centuries. However, unless he or she translates this non-objective feeling into a concrete social
Building the strong centralised authority embodied by the modern state, Weber act, this desire will live within a person as his or her potential but undisclosed and
argued, required the state’s expropriation of the ‘means of violence’ from individuals therefore unknown self.
or unofficial groups. This was most effectively achieved by controlling people’s move-
ments. And for this, the invention of the passport was instrumental. Channelling 4. (I’m not who you think I am.)
their power through mediums such as ID papers and money, the modern state ap- The performative nature of identity and identification, which plays a crucial role in
paratuses set up exquisite criteria of identity and value. The translation of the active, the formation of social classes and in the maintaining of social hierarchies, at the
mobile individual into his or her unresponsive and static administrative double (who same time allows the possibility of their transgression: one might consciously distort
gazes back from a standardised photograph in a passport), epitomises the shift to- one’s identity, or disguise oneself as somebody else. As Valentin Groebner points out
wards modern social organisation and the subsequent appearance of a new type of in his study of early modern practices of legal identification – artists, spies, criminals
subjectivity commonly referred to as ‘alienation’. Marx described the alienation of and other eccentrics or ‘aliens’ – all share an interest in evading identification by uti-
people from their essential ‘human nature’ as the result of capitalist productive rela- 6 Valentin Groebner, lising theatrical means.6 A person who breaks the law doesn’t want to be recognised
tions.4 The alienation increases in reciprocity with social advancement, and functions 4 In Karl Marx, Economic
Who Are You?:
Identification, Deception, because her identity connects her to illegal deeds; the spy pretends to be someone else
and Philosophic
as a split between life and labour (or between workers’ physical activity – that is, what Manuscripts of 1944,
and Surveillance in
in order to trick and bypass the security of a rival state; ‘aliens’ might just want to
Early Modern Europe,
Amherst, New York:
they have to ‘do’ in order to survive when exchanging labour for wage – and their Prometheus Books, 1988.
Cambridge: MIT Press
settle down and find (illegal) work to survive. Artists, on the other hand, most often
(Zone Books), 2007.
basic humanity, their human desire). It also functions as a split in identity between play with performative mechanisms of identification and identity in order to expose
the self-aware, living and desiring individual person and his or her administrative, their arbitrariness and resist the inscription of ‘who they are’ that is imposed upon
socially inscribed double. ‘Who we are’ largely depends upon ‘what we do’ since ‘what them by an external force.
we do’ conditions the majority of relations that we have with each other and ‘the At the very outset of the modern era, Shakespeare exposed the theatrical as-
Other’ – represented by the net of modern institutions through which our lives are pects of establishing and transgressing the law, and made transparent the structural
organised and maintained. similarities between the ‘deeds’ of legal authorities, criminals (terrorists) and artists
(activists). But while their disguises, tricks, puns, hoaxes and lies at first might look
3. (I’m a bishop. I’m a soldier. I’m an artist.) the same, they have fundamentally different effects and meanings depending on the
position (status, identity) that the player occupies in the social hierarchy of the given
In the early twentieth century Kazimir Malevich posited a complex structure of iden-
symbolic order. The tricks of the artists (as Hamlet shows) became most telling when
tity: he asked the reader of his ‘suprematist’ theories to imagine his or her life as a
they managed to break through the myths and rituals of their day and expose the
theatre piece ‘in which non-objective feeling is portrayed by objective imagery’.
hidden narratives and true identities of other notorious tricksters (King Claudius,
Polonius, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern etc.).
A bishop is nothing but an actor who seeks with words and gestures, on an ap-
propriately ‘dressed’ stage, to convey a religious feeling, or rather the reflection
emerged on both the right and the left, and practiced the most horrendous types of 6. (‘Art is art. Everything else is everything else.’11)
alienated collective behaviors that one can think of. Twentieth-century society had
11 Ad Reinhardt, Art as Duchamp and Malevich produced their ‘empty signifiers’ at the beginning of the
developed to such an extreme that citizens were asked to search for their human- Art: The Selected Writings
of Ad Reinhardt (ed. century, as we have already noted, that introduced an eerie object capable of bring-
ity in their most sublime desires – but these desires (for ideal communities based on Barbara Rose, Documents
of Twentieth-Century Art), ing the spectral presence of the entire globe into people’s living rooms. Withholding
ethnic homogeneity or absolute equality ), especially when grafted to power, proved Los Angeles: University
of California Press, 1991, all content for positivist interpretation and identification, their empty icons shifted
to be destructive beyond imagination. Nothing could be taken for granted any more, p.51.
the entire discussion about the ‘state of art’ elsewhere. Instead of depicting an object
particularly one’s own autonomy. State propaganda fed on citizens’ inability to deal
to be looked at, Black Square and Bicycle Wheel depicted the dispositive, which would
with the ambiguities of existence and the multiplicity of choices that constantly con-
define the visual, fetish and discursive regimes of the twentieth century. Offering
fronted them. The methods of propaganda and thought-control used to influence and
themselves more as objects of interpretation than as objects of visual consumption,
infiltrate the public consciousness employed many techniques formerly developed
these two objects accumulated meanings that would fundamentally inform the dif-
within art, thus the function of ‘art as art’ (if we can still speak of it that way) became
ferences between two dominant and competing types of society as they viewed each
a kind of counter-insurgency. Art’s role was not anymore about facilitating its viewers
other through the mirror of the Cold War.
to experience beauty (to which they had become immune by immersing themselves
Boris Groys proposed looking at Black Square as if it represented a rite of passage of
in over-aestheticised constructed environments) but rather to critically and creatively
art, from the sphere of ‘positive reality’ (objective) into the sphere of ‘negative reality’
cultivate the internal experience of alienation. Art provoked feelings of distancing,
(virtuality), epitomising the immersion of Soviet avant-garde art into the virtual world
division, emptiness and loss, and enabled the re-appropriation of these feelings as
12 This idea was a central of Stalinist gesamtkunstwerk.12 Black Square, according to this interpretation, represents
forms of identity and enjoyment. subject of Groys’s early
work Gesamtkustwerk the world objectified in the Soviet totalitarian state known for its absorption of art (as
It was Walter Benjamin who first noticed and commented upon the internal logic Stalin, Munich: Carl
Hanser Verlag, 1988 an agency of the subject) and for the state itself becoming a subject and an artist instead.
of this significant historic reversal. He described it as, among other things, a struc- (see The Total Art of
Stalinism: Avant-Garde,
Bicycle Wheel, on the other hand, marks the absorption of art into an autonomous
tural reversal of the roles of art and politics permitted by new technologies of repro- Aesthetic Dictatorship
art system, which worships alienation and feeds on self-recursive criticism and nega-
duction and moving images. In 1936, a mere decade before the ‘synthetic conscious- and Beyond, Princeton:
Princeton University tion. By shifting attention away from the power of meaning and message inherent in
ness’ of television entered America’s (and later the world’s) living rooms,7 Benjamin 7 Full-scale commercial
Press, 1992). See also
television broadcast-
Groys’s 'Introduction' to the art object to the instrumental power of the value-creating art system, Duchamp’s
anticipated the uncanny future potentials of a world infused by moving images and ing began in the United
History Becomes Form:
States in 1947.
Moscow Conceptualism, body of work served to open the door to the art of conceptualism in the 1960s and
words by enunciating that: ‘all efforts to render politics aesthetic culminate in one Cambridge: MIT Press,
2010, pp.1-35. beyond. Living in the saturated tele-information society, artists of the second half of
thing: war. … Self-alienation has reached such a degree that it can experience its own
the twentieth century understood that as a consequence of the increased aesthetisa-
destruction as an aesthetic pleasure of the first order.’8 8 Walter Benjamin,
Illuminations, New York: tion and virtualisation of the living (public and private) environments (through which
Art and politics in the twentieth century became fused to the point that it was Schocken Books, 1988,
p.141-142. indoctrination is channelled and by which Western societies manufactured de-alien-
no longer possible to unambiguously locate the borders between them. The old art
ated and re-alienated identities in unlimited editions far beyond their State frontiers),
that we knew and loved, it was claimed, symbolically died in 1913, when Kazimir
13 The phrase belongs art could continue to signify as art only by ‘blurring the art and life divide’,13 that is
Malevich conceived the Black Square and Marcel Duchamp introduced his first ready- to Allan Kaprow and
his conceptualisation by reverting the definition of art and entering into a sphere of ‘life itself ’.
made to the world.9 9 I’m referring to the the- of happenings. See A.
sis of Gérard Wajcman’s Kaprow, Essays on the
With World War I, the disintegration of Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman and Russian L’Objet du siècle, Blurring of Art and Life.
Paris: Verdier, 1998. (Ed. Jeff Kelley). Berkeley: 7. (Undercover Politics)
empires, the October revolution, and the ‘spectre’ of communism which for decades University of California
Press, 2003.
had already haunted the world, the era of classical colonialism came to an end and an Western post-World War II democratic societies may think they always held a moral
entirely new era of expropriation and exploration began. Just as the Bicycle Wheel and advantage in relation to the cultural and scientific experiments of Nazi, Fascist and
Black Square marked a turning point in art history, so too did World War I represent Communist regimes, but in fact it took a special kind of political genius to figure out
156 157
Contesting Utopias: Individual Collectivity and
Temporal Hybridity in the NSK State in Time Jonah Westerman
'Between 1990 and 1992, with the emergence of a new political, ideological and eco-
nomic reorganisation of Europe … NSK reinvented itself, changing from an organi-
1 Laibach, ‘Laibach sation into a State.’1 This brief excerpt from Laibach’s description of how and why
WTC – NSK Passport’,
https://wtc.laibach. the Slovenian artists’ collective, Neue Slowenische Kunst, founded a state that exists
org/en/product.
cp2?guid=41428B1D- not in space, but in time, casts the inception of the state as directly responding to a
71D3-C1B1-3759-
A216BE5C888&linkid=15
new European society, one built after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The follow-
(last accessed 15
December, 2009).
ing analysis attempts to understand the structure, process and reception of the NSK
State in Time, especially as embodied by the NSK passport, and look to interrogate
the ways in which the project articulates the role of Eastern Europe’s communist past
2 Boris Groys, ‘The Post- in the context of what Boris Groys describes as a global, ‘post-communist condition’. 2
Communist Condition’,
Who if not We Should Try Through an engagement with Groys’s formulation of the specificity of Soviet utopian
and Imagine the Future
of All This? (ed. Maria temporality and Fredric Jameson’s suggestion that the exercise of cultural power in
Hlavjova and Jill Winder),
Amsterdam: Artimo, 2004, a globalised economy should be evaluated through Hegel’s dialectic of Identity and
p.164.
Difference, it is possible to see that the seemingly paradoxical mission of the NSK
3 Laibach, ‘Laibach WTC state to ‘keep Utopia real’3 produces the radical individualisation of its citizens, who
– NSK Passport’, op. cit.
come into being through the recognition of utopia’s impossibility.
In some crucial ways, the NSK State in Time closely resembles the earlier form
of Neue Slowenische Kunst. As an artists’ collective made of smaller artists’ groups
the founders of NSK worked deliberately and in concert to achieve an egalitarian,
horizontal organisation. This larger collective had no desire to direct the activities of
any particular group; rather, it was imagined and used as a practical tactic through
4 Interview with Borut which to wrest power and visibility from already established artists and venues.4 The
Vogelnik, member of
IRWIN, conducted by the member groups were also brought together by a shared interest in the historical stakes
author (Ljubljana, 24 June,
2012). of art/visual culture and its relation to identity and political imagination. While each
approached these questions in unique ways, the fact that the collective gave itself a
German name attests to the shared commitment to exploring how a ‘native’ identity
had deep roots in places supposedly elsewhere.
The NSK State in Time would attempt to create, for a wider pool of participants,
the same kind of non-hierarchical organisation that made possible their own explora-
tion of the relation between an individual and a collective, but it would also carefully
frame this renewed experiment as an analysis of how historical notions of ‘the state’
inform the present moment. According to Laibach, the NSK state:
has no formal ‘government’ and no central committee, only citizens, few bu-
reaucrats and some administrators. The last two only deal with technical issues
Poster announcing the ‘1st NSK Folk Art Biennale’, Leipzig, 2013, designed by Carsten Busse in 2012 – keeping the State formal. It is based on self-management and non-alignment
158 159
and it coexists as a parasite within existing, already established bodies in the and informed who they were (and hence who they could and should become). Nazi
entire area of Time.5 5 Laibach, ‘Laibach WTC propaganda shared this basic structure while advancing its own calamitous version of
– NSK Passport’, op. cit.
the necessary future, which stemmed from an equally forceful, but wildly divergent
Existing as what is sometimes called a ‘virtual state’ or a ‘micronation’, the NSK state and delusional historical mythology. The NSK State in Time seeks to individualise
is a voluntary association of NSK passport holders, ‘people of different religions, races, the collective, rather than to collectivise the individual, and it does so by voluntary
nationalities, sexes, and beliefs, people from all over the world. The right to citizen- citizenship and adherence to an idea, which is itself understood to be open to all and
ship is acquired through ownership of the NSK passport.’6 These passports are avail- 6 Ibid. constantly in flux. Or, again, in the artists’ own words:
able at NSK embassies or consulates temporarily established in actual physical places
(the state has materialised in Aarhus, Athens, Dublin, London, Taipei, Thessaloniki, Neue Slowenische Kunst defines its collectivism within the framework of an
to name a few locations) and online. autonomous state, as artistic actions in time to which all other spatial and ma-
The application for citizenship on the official NSK state website7 is purely formal; 7 NSK State, ‘The Official terial procedures of artistic creation are subordinated. This means that the pro-
Pages of the NSK State
one fills it out in order to supply the name, photograph, and so on that will appear Passport Office’, http:// cedure of the deconstruction and analysis of past forms and situations func-
www.passport.nsk.si/
on the passport. So in what sense, then, is this a passport to a state? According to the en/ (last accessed 31 tions as the creator of new conditions for the development of the individual
October, 2012).
members of IRWIN and Eda Čufer: 14 E. Čufer and IRWIN, within the framework of a collective.14
‘NSK State in Time’,
op. cit.
The NSK State in Time is an abstract organism, a suprematist body, installed The NSK State in Time is less a corporate body devoted to a mission or programme
in a real social and political space as a sculpture comprising the concrete body than it is an umbrella organisation under which – and through which – individuals
warmth, spirit and work of its members. NSK confers the status of a state not might explore their own definition. But exactly how might this work? And how are
to territory but to mind, whose borders are in a state of flux, in accordance we to understand the kind of utopia this might produce and why it would be different
with the movements and changes of its symbolic and physical collective body.8 8 Eda Čufer and IRWIN, from those of the past?
‘NSK State in Time’, http://
irwin.si/texts/nsk-state- With this emphasis on the reworking of the literal, historical past with an open-
in-time/ (last accessed 31
Before considering how the NSK state uses terms like ‘state’, ‘borders’ and ‘collective’, October, 2012). minded belief in the ability to create a new kind of utopia through the retrieval and
note that the language of the NSK State in Time’s mission and composition demon- rehabilitation of avant-garde practice, the NSK State in Time would seem to be ex-
strates a commitment to the ‘retroprinciple’ or, as the artists put it, ‘Retro avant-garde actly the kind of artwork under discussion in Boris Groys’s article, ‘Back from the
is the basic artistic procedure of Neue Slowenische Kunst, based on the premise that 15 B. Groys, ‘Back From Future’ which argues for the ‘special nature of the post-communist art-context’.15 For
the Future’, in Arteast
traumas from the past affecting the present and the future can be healed only by re- 2000+: The Art of Eastern him, ‘the true specificity of Eastern Europe can only reside in its communist past’.16
Europe (Vienna: Folio
turning to the initial conflicts.’ 9 The still-reverberating trauma under discussion here 9 Ibid. Verlag, 2001), p.10. Groys, however, realises that a statement like this one flirts with tautology, and, for
is how ‘Modern art has not yet overcome the conflict brought about by the rapid and 16 Ibid. this reason, he looks to move beyond ‘the language of trauma.’17 He dislikes this
efficient assimilation of historical avant-garde movements in the systems of totalitar- 17 Ibid.
mode of metaphor not just because, according to him, it is ‘the least interesting’ but
ian states.’10 10 Ibid. because ‘ultimately, the various forms of traumatization all begin to look remarkably
Further, according to Eda Čufer and IRWIN, the specific battleground of this as- 18 Ibid. similar.’18 Groys searches instead for ‘precisely what kind of past the communist past
similation concerns the nature of collective effort and identity. They write, ‘The most 19 Ibid. represents and what distinguishes this past from other pasts.’19
important and at the same time traumatic dimension of avant-garde movements is According to Groys, the unique situation of the newly opening, formerly com-
that they operate and create within a collective.’11 The trauma occurred, on their ac- 11 Ibid. munist context is that it was not closed to the wider world because it was pre-modern
count, when the state took this work of collective production as a ‘question of how (meaning insular by accident of history), but precisely because it represented an ‘out-
to collectivise and socialise the individual, whereas avant-garde movements tried to 20 Ibid., p.11. standing example of modernity’. 20 According to Groys, communist eastern Europe
solve the question of how to individualise the collective.’12 According to historian 12 Ibid. closed itself on purpose as part of its own formulation of modernity, itself modelled
Inke Arns, it is exactly this historical inversion that seemed to underwrite Stalinism’s 13 Inke Arns, ‘Avant-
on the avant-garde. He writes, ‘modernity has persistently spawned its own apoca-
assertion that socialist realism was the realisation of ‘the ideals and utopias of the garde in the Rear-View
Mirror’, Seven Sins:
lyptic sects, radical parties or avant-garde art movements that isolated or insulated
avant-garde.’13 Through its rigidly defined vision of the future Socialist realism at- Ljubljana-Moscow (ed. 21 Ibid. themselves against their respective contemporary societies.’21 Groys thus echoes NSK’s
Zedenka Badovinac,
tempted to collectivise the individual by claiming to comprehend entirely the es- Viktor Misiano, Igor emphasis on the role of collectives while shifting the focus. He continues, ‘ultimately,
Zabel), Ljubljana:
sence of the soviet citizenry, the history that had brought it to the present moment Moderna galerija, 2004. communism is nothing more than the most extreme and radical manifestation of
mode of prospective utopian modernism, is what makes the communist past different The NSK State is not an officially recognised country internationally, and
from other pasts. the NSK State passport is not a legally valid document. Holding an NSK
Despite disputes concerning the usefulness of the language of trauma, these are passport does not grant citizenship of the Republic of Slovenia or of any
the very terms employed by the NSK State in Time. The retro-avant-garde reformula- other country of the world. YOU CANNOT LEGALLY CROSS ANY
tion of collectively produced utopia is born of communist modernity’s prospective 24 NSK State, INTERNATIONAL BORDER USING AN NSK PASSPORT!24
‘The Official Pages of
orientation, which, according to Groys, should be understood as uniquely Eastern. the NSK State Passport
Office’, http://www.
Utopia, the future left behind, returns in the form of a collective whose very borders passport.nsk.si/en/ The profundity of this misunderstanding should suggest an interpretive warning as
important_message (last
are always shifting and, therefore, whose very collectivity is itself subjugated to the accessed 31 October, well. We should not think of the project as being solely about or as being exhausted
individuality of its members. This utopia, then, consists in reworking the notions that 2012).
by a discussion of the context that informs its inception and its preoccupations with
the modern, the avant-garde, needs to be both universalising (in levelling its mem- the retro-avant-garde retrieval of utopia. The idea of a state in time is, in fact, much
bership) and insulated from those who do not belong. Anyone can become a citizen more complex than that. The point is that we cannot underestimate the fact that the
of the NSK State in Time and doing so does not require one to toe a party line or do transnational utopia born of communist modernity’s particular temporality is often
anything in particular. And just as Groys maintains, we cannot understand all this if understood in the context of international relations. And Groys certainly realises
we do not take seriously the specificity of the former-communist context and the par- that formerly communist countries (and the artworks produced therein) exist within
ticular modernity of its unique temporal orientation. a much broader, global context. He writes, ‘the entire world … currently finds itself
But this is only yet half – and possibly less than half – of the entire constitution 25 B. Groys, ‘The Post- in a condition one could term post-communist.’25 For Groys, this means that the
Communist Condition’, in
of the state. One of the most important aspects of the NSK State in Time is the fre- Who if not We Should Try collapse of the Soviet Union and the resultant process of opening up needs to be un-
and Imagine the Future
quency with which passport holders, in interviews conducted and filmed by members of All This? (ed. Maria derstood as leading to an exacerbation of Cold War tactics on the part of the West.
Hlavjova and Jill Winder),
of IRWIN and collaborators, describe their relations to their passports in terms of Amsterdam: Artimo, 2004,
What’s more, these tactics concern a claim to utopia’s fulfillment. He writes, ‘The
space; not in terms of time. Even as they extol the virtues of a voluntary association p.164.
communist demand for the fulfillment of utopia on earth dealt traditional politics
of citizens, allowed to be alone in their striving to make something together (even 26 Ibid., p.166. a blow from which in all probability it will never recover.’26 He continues, ‘The true
if that something is simply the ‘space’ to be alone), citizens constantly imagine their challenge posed by the Soviet experiment was the claim … that the Soviet Union
passport’s relation to physical borders and geographical nations. represented the place and earthbound incarnation of utopia – if not in the sense of
In Sarajevo, early recipients of the passports relay stories of actual border cross- 27 Ibid., p.167. its total fulfillment, then at least in terms of its practical advancement.’27 Again, the
ings aided by the NSK passport. One man used his to travel from Ljubljana to Zagreb specificity of communist prospective temporality comes into play – for, ‘none of the
during the chaos that followed the breakup of Yugoslavia; another to enter Korea former ‘actually existing’ socialist countries ever claimed to have achieved commu-
when he arrived without a visa. A younger cohort of cosmopolitan Berliners and self- 28 Ibid., p.165. nism, but saw themselves merely as transitional forms’. 28 The Soviet claim to utopia
described ‘nomads’ describe not border crossings, but the way in which the passport consisted in the affirmation of its closer proximity to an ideal society, an ideal itself
itself is a critique of the nation-state and larger systems that fix borders. Taiwanese designed to be transnational, even if its actual historical articulation resorted to
NSK citizens half-jokingly describe how the NSK passport is like their own national avant-garde insularity, in the forms of both constant internal purges and closed exter-
passport in that it is effectively useless for international travel. And perhaps most dra- nal borders.
matically, and certainly most poignantly of all, in 2007, IRWIN travelled to London As a result, according to Groys, the West’s Cold War rhetoric propounded the
to conduct a series of interviews with Nigerians living there because NSK state had 29 Ibid., p.166. counterclaim that it was, in fact, ‘the true place of utopia fulfilled’. 29 ‘To win the
received over 1000 applications from Nigerians acting under the misapprehension competition against Soviet communism,’ Groys asserts, ‘its rivals felt compelled not
that the NSK passport guaranteed citizenship of Slovenia (and hence the ability to only to appropriate this claim as their own but even to outdo it – and thereby redefine
travel there and to other places their own papers – if they had any – could not take 30 Ibid., p.167. their own societies as universal political models.’30 The result (and best proof) of this
them). In addition to these interviews, which mostly feature members of IRWIN 31 Ibid. ‘protracted one-upmanship’31 is that the Soviet Union’s dissolution did not result in
formulate the dialectic and the NSK State in Time in meaningful and appropriate
terms. According to Hegel, ‘Something moves, not because at one moment it is here
and another there, but because at one and the same moment it is here and not here
… the ancient dialecticians must be granted the contradictions they pointed out in
motion, but it does not follow that therefore there is no motion, but on the contrary,
that motion is existent contradiction itself.’44 In other words, simply because the terms 44 G.W.F Hegel, Hegel’s
Science of Logic, op. cit.,
East and West are disclosed in one another, composed of one another, especially in the p.440.
post-communist condition, does not mean that they disappear. Rather, the existence
of the contradiction forms the very basis of the contest. If, then, we are to retain the
terms Former West and Former East, we always need to remember their fully dia-
lectical character – in fact, these terms are well-suited to doing this. The ‘Former’ in
front of each should be read not simply as ‘the place that used to be’ but rather as ‘the
place that in one moment is and is not’. The modifier ‘Former’, then, is a signal not
of the end of history, but of the exact opposite. It reminds us of the persistence of the
past in the present, the way that history continues to unfold in new ways (even while
these developing forms respond to parameters rooted in what has been).
170
Biographies
Eda Čufer is a dramaturge, curator and writer. In 1984 she co-founded the art col-
lective NSK , based in Ljubljana, Slovenia. She has collaborated with many contempo-
rary theatre, dance and visual art groups including the Sisters Scipion Nasice Theatre,
the dance company En-Knap, the IRWIN group and Marko Peljhan’s Project Atol.
She has co-curated several exhibitions for museums in Germany, Austria and Italy.
Her essays on theatre, dance, visual art, culture and politics have appeared in many
books and journals.
Biographies 173
one of the core groups within the artists’ collective Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK) Asylum: Magazine for Democratic Psychiatry collective, and a practising psychoanalyst
founded in 1984. In 1992 IRWIN co-founded NSK State in Time. The members of the in Manchester. His books include Slavoj Žižek: A Critical Introduction (Pluto, 2004),
group live and work in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Revolution in Psychology: Alienation to Emancipation (Pluto, 2007) and Lacanian
Psychoanalysis: Revolutions in Subjectivity (Routledge, 2011).
Tomaž Mastnak is director of research in the Institute of Philosophy, Scientific
Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Science and Art (ZRC-SAZU), Avi Pitchon is an Israeli writer, artist and curator based in London. Since curating
Ljubljana, and currently a visiting researcher in the Department of Anthropology, IRWIN ’s first exhibition in the Middle-East (‘The Eye Of The State’, Israeli Centre
University of California, Irvine. His research focus is on the history of Western po- for Digital Art, Holon, IL, 2010) he has been intensely involved in NSK-related
litical thought, and his publications include: Crusading Peace: Christendom, the Muslim initiatives: ‘Austellung Laibach Kunst’, Trbovlje (2010); the ‘First NSK Citizens’
World, and Western Political Order (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 2002), Evropa: istorija Congress’, Berlin (2010); ‘ NSK Rendezvous London’ (2011); and ‘NSK Folk Art’,
političkog pojma (Belgrade, 2007) and Hobbes’s Behemoth: Politics and Religion (Exeter, Ljubljana, Taipei, London (2010-2012). His recent writing focuses on the importance
2009). He is currently investigating the reception of Hobbes’s political philosophy in of the monumental within art.
the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Stevphen Shukaitis is a lecturer at the University of Essex, Centre for Work and
Conor McGrady is an artist from Northern Ireland whose work examines the rela- Organization, and a member of the Autonomedia editorial collective. Since 2009
tionship between ideology and conceptions of spatial control. He has had one-person he has coordinated and edited Minor Compositions (http://www.minorcomposi-
exhibitions in New York, Miami, Atlanta, Chicago and Zagreb. Group exhibi- tions.info). He is the author of Imaginal Machines: Autonomy & Self-Organization in
tions include the 2002 Whitney Biennial in New York. Editor of Curated Spaces in the Revolutions of Everyday Day (2009, Autonomedia) and editor (with Erika Biddle
the journal Radical History Review, his writing has appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, and David Graeber) of Constituent Imagination: Militant Investigations // Collective
Ruminations on Violence (Waveland Press, 2007) and State of Emergence (Plottner Theorization (AK Press, 2007). His research focuses on the emergence of collective
Verlag, 2011). imagination in social movements and the changing compositions of cultural and ar-
tistic labor.
Viktor Misiano is a curator and critic from Moscow. From 1980 to 1990 he was a
curator of contemporary art at the Pushkin National Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow, Jonah Westerman is an art historian and theorist based in New York, where he is a
and from 1992 to 1997 he was the director of the Center for Contemporary Art doctoral candidate at the Graduate Center, CUNY. His research focuses on the shift-
(CAC), Moscow. He curated the Russian contribution to the Istanbul Biennale ing political demands placed on the work of art in different times and places. He has
(1992), the Venice Biennale (1995, 2003), the São Paulo Biennale (2002, 2004) published on the relationship between artists and audiences in contexts ranging from
and the Valencia Biennale (2001). He was on the curatorial team for Manifesta I, the public asceticism of fifth-century Christian monks to those under discussion
Rotterdam (1996). He is a founder of the Moscow Art Magazine (Moscow) and of in the present volume. He has taught courses on modern and contemporary art at
Manifesta Journal: Journal of Contemporary Curatorship (Amsterdam). In 2005 he cu- Brooklyn College, CUNY and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
rated the first Central Asia Pavilion at the Venice Biennale. Since October 2010 he
Slavoj Žižek is a sociologist, philosopher and cultural critic. He is a senior researcher
is a chairman of the International Foundation Manifesta (IFM). He lives in Moscow
at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, a professor of philoso-
(Russia) and Ceglie Messapica (Italy).
phy and psychoanalysis at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland,
Alexei Monroe is a London-based independent cultural theorist and author of and a visiting professor at a number of American Universities (Columbia, Princeton,
Pluralni monolit Laibach in NSK (MASKA, 2003) and Interrogation Machine (MIT New School for Social Research, New York University, University of Michigan).
Press, 2005). He was programme director of the ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’ and Žižek is well known for his use of the works of Jacques Lacan in a new reading of
editor of the Congress document State of Emergence (Ploettner Verlag, 2011). His re- popular culture. In addition to his work as an interpreter of Lacanian psychoanalysis,
search interests include the aesthetics and politics of industrial and electronic music, he writes on subjects as diverse as fundamentalism, tolerance, political correctness,
and the stag as a cultural symbol. He has written for numerous publications including globalisation, subjectivity, human rights, Lenin, myth, cyberspace, postmodernism,
Contemporary Music Review, Central Europe Review, Kinoeye, Maska and The Wire. multiculturalism, David Lynch and Alfred Hitchcock.
Ian Parker, NSK State in Time diplomatic passport holder, was co-founder and
is co-director (with Erica Burman) of the Discourse Unit. He is a member of the
Official plaque of the NSK State Pavilion at XVL Venice Biennial, 1993
Robi Lesnik, Marko Peterlin, Aleš Prijon, Jernej Prijon, in collaboration with IRWIN,
The NSK Pavilion, 1996
IRWIN, NSK Electronic Consulate e-flux, New York, 2013. Photo: Irwin archive
42 New Collectivism, NSK Post Office Ljubljana, 1994. Photo: Jani Šporčič
43 New Collectivism, NSK Passport office Dublin, 2004. Photo: Darko Pokorn
44 New Collectivism, NSK Information Office Helsinki, (Men’s choir Huutajat), 2003. Photo: Darko Pokorn
50 IRWIN in collaboration with the Albanian Army, NSK Garda Tirana, 1998. Photo: Irwin archive
IRWIN in collaboration with the Kosovo Army, NSK Garda Prishtina, 2002. Photo: Igor Anderlić
IRWIN in collaboration with the Montenegrin Army, NSK Garda Cetinje, 2002. Photo: Irwin archive
IRWIN in collaboration with the Bosnian Army, NSK Garda Sarajevo, 2006. Photo: Igor Anderlić
51 IRWIN in collaboration with the Croatian Army, NSK Garda Zagreb, 2000. Photo: Igor Anderlić
52 IRWIN in collaboration with the Georgian Army, Was ist Kunst Tbilisi, 2007. Photo: Bojan Radovič
177
70 IRWIN, Procession Graz, 2008. Photo: Tomaž Gregorič
79 Statement by Zoran Thaler, Slovenian Minister of Foreign Affairs (1995/96), for Slovenian TV (Studio
City), 23 November, 1995, in which the Minister expresses his view that it is time for Slovenia and NSK
State in Time establish mutual relations.
Presentation of NSK diplomatic passport to General Agim Çeku, Prishtina, December 12, 2003.
Photo: archive of EXIT, Peja, 2003
80 IRWIN, NSK (Nacionalni Svet za Kulturo - National Board for Culture) meeting,
30 November, 2005, Delo, 1 December, 2005 (Culture is an integral part of society
With some critical comments, the members of NSK backed up the projected, although modest, growth
of the state budget for culture over the coming two years, but expressed their reservations on the
government's package of reforms, which reflects an underestimation of the social role of culture.)
108 IRWIN, NSK Passport Holders, Berlin, Taipei, Sarajevo and Lagos, (2007- 2010)
128 Delegates, NSK members, Congress team members and guests of the ‘First NSK Citizens’ Congress’,
Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, October 2010. Photo: Christian Ditsch
129 First NSK Citizens’ Congress’, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, October 2010.
Photo: Christian Ditsch
130 Delegates presenting the findings of the 'First NSK Citizens’ Congress', Berlin, 2010.
Photo: Christian Ditsch
131 NSK members at the 'First NSK Citizens’ Congress', Berlin, 2010
132 State of Emergence: A Documentary of the First NSK Citizens’ Congress, edited by Alexei Monroe; book cover
motif taken from the congress poster designed by Valnoir Mortasonge
138 NSKstate.com, Screenshots, 2003-2007. From the NSK Folk Art collection
145 Christian Matzke, Exterior of the Retrogarde Reading Room, Brunswick Maine, USA, 2010.
From the NSK Folk Art collection
146 Halldor Carlsson & Olafur Thorsson, NSK Garda Reykjavik, 2007. From the NSK Folk Art collection
157 NSK Rendes-Vous Lyon, 2011 (organised by NSK citizens, NSK Rendes-Vous events also took place in
Leipzig, London and New York, 2011-2012)
158 Poster announcing the ‘1st NSK Folk Art Biennale’, Leipzig, 2013, designed by Carsten Busse in 2012
Works on pages 50, 51, 52, 69, 70, 80, 125, and 126 are courtesy of Galerija Gregor Podnar.
178
State in Time
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