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NEW IN THE BOOKSHOP: FEAR INDEXING THE X-FILES by NORA KHAN AND STEVEN WARWICK (2017) For Fear Indexing The X-Files, Nora Khan and Steven Warwick combed through the first 9 seasons of The X-Files television series—which ran from 1992 to 2002—gathering and indexing the fears that occurred as themes throughout the show. The authors employ a documentary-style commentary to narrate how the show posited fear as an inherent quality of domestic life. The original run of the series aired in the period nestled between the end of the Cold War and the start of the War on Terror—a time in which enemies of the state shifted, with aliens replacing Communism, and a fear of ghosts and the paranormal prefacing our current climate of Islamophobia. Throughout the show, deregulated neoliberalism continually hovers, like an invisible man in the room. Khan and Warwick take this index and link it to the rise of the World Wide Web and the global internet, which emerged in the same era. As the show developed, its characters became more adept at using the internet, as did its fans, many of whom visited chat rooms and dedicated forums to discuss episode content, speculate on theories, and come up with urban legends of their own. This behavior provides a through line to the present, as conspiracy theories discussed on those vanguard message boards eerily echo today’s fake news stories perpetuated by the alt-right. Nora Khan is a New York City-based writer of criticism and fiction. She focuses on issues within digital art, the philosophy of technology, electronic music, and artificial intelligence. Steven Warwick is an artist, musician, and writer based in Berlin. Available via our website and in the bookshop. #worldfoodbooks #fearindexingthexfiles #norakhan #stevenwarwick #primaryinformation (at WORLD FOOD BOOKS)
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🏔️🏔️Some works installed at 'Relax-it’s all online' — a group show that took place at Galerie Lars Friedrich, Berlin, Germany w/ #MarieAngeletti #MilenaBüsch #MichaelFranz #ElisabethGreinecker #EnverHadzijaj #ThomasHesse #HULFE #SamuelJeffery #LisaJo #JuttaKoether #NinaKönnemann #TonioKröner #SimonLässig #SarahLehnerer #IlyaLipkin #FriedrichLissmann #VeraLutz #MichelediMenna #Christian-PhilippMüller #RobertMüller #AudePariset #JosephinePryde #FlorianRossmanith #JulianStalbohm #LucieStahl #MeganFrancisSullivan #MaleneListThomsen #MiriamVisaczki #StevenWarwick #AnnaSusannaWoof #AmelievonWulffen #SeyoungYoon #JuttaZimmermann Don't miss the documentation now on ofluxo.net 🏔️🏔️ #galerielarsfriedrich #berlin #berlinart #berlinexhibition #groupexhibition #groupshow #contemporaryart #scuplture #painting #installation #ofluxoplatform @ofluxoplatform https://www.instagram.com/p/CDg8l4PlUS4/?igshid=1u9ijhmoemyzr
#marieangeletti#milenabüsch#michaelfranz#elisabethgreinecker#enverhadzijaj#thomashesse#hulfe#samueljeffery#lisajo#juttakoether#ninakönnemann#toniokröner#simonlässig#sarahlehnerer#ilyalipkin#friedrichlissmann#veralutz#micheledimenna#christian#robertmüller#audepariset#josephinepryde#florianrossmanith#julianstalbohm#luciestahl#meganfrancissullivan#malenelistthomsen#miriamvisaczki#stevenwarwick#annasusannawoof
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@kunsthallewien #Museumsquartier #AnnetteKelm #TomatoTarget #Opening 13. Dezember 2018 | 19 - 22 H 20 H: #Live-#Set von #StevenWarwick Ausstellung: #Exhibition: 14/12 2018 – 24/3 2019 Museumsplatz 1, 1070 Wien http://www.kunsthallewien.at/#/de/ausstellungen/annette-kelm-tomato-target https://www.instagram.com/p/BrUqGmzB_u-/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=175ix5i7pp1mc
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Steven Warwick
It feels like an airport, the difference is… at any plane you can choose to leave.
Nadir is the opposite of Zenith. The latter refers to a high point, the first to the lowest point. It’s also the intriguing title of Steven Warwick aka Heatsick’s new release. The album is conceived as a conceptual mixtape. It deals with contemporary issues as dislocation, emotional fragmentation and intermediation — or the tension between the so-called ‘real’ or material and the virtual world. Every song is a collage of seemingly banal fragments out of (his?) daily live. The lyrics could be random snippets derived from newfeeds, or Peréc-like observations devoid of meaning.
Somewhere he sings: ‘The mezzanine is your dancefloor. It is your Chessboard’ and ‘It feels like an airport, the difference is… at any plane you can choose to leave.’
— by Jannis Van de Sande & Joeri Bruyninckx
The mood of Nadir is melancholic, the sound artificial and synthetic. It’s an open record that mixes the literality of pop art with modernist dandyism. It provides a complex of clues, leaving you confused in a most compelling way.
Together with Luke Younger, Warwick formed one of the UK’s finest noise outfits Birds of Delay. As Heatsick, he moved towards dance oriented music, influenced by 80ties and 90ties techno and house.
“I don’t think in those terms to be honest. It’s not like when I was in Birds of Delay that I only listened to “noise music”. To be honest, I probably listened to more dance music then than I do now. You could easily argue that a lot of dance music is way more noisy or weirder than a lot of supposed “experimental” music” (I despise that term). I look for moments in music off all genres which was peculiar or that are interesting to me. Part of the reason I became disinterested in the noise scene is I kept experiencing homophobia and got fed up with it.”
Recently he decided to leave behind the Heatsick moniker.
“I wanted to have a change. The record is sonically different. I use different equipment. Also, I wanted to spend more time making visual work again under my own name so I thought it was simpler to have everything under one umbrella.”
Warwick conceived the record outside the conventions of ‘the album’, as he added a visual, digital counterpoint in the form of a website.
“’Nadir‘ ideally exists on the delinear site (http://delinear.p-a-n.org/e09103c302), which was created by artist Harm van der Doerpel as part of his practice. I created and directed the images on the site whilst the stream plays so you can navigate through the images at your own pace, creating your own film as it were. The visuals are photos and short vids that I took in different locations where I was residing. Some are more beautiful while others are more mundane everyday images. I wanted to have both in to mix up the emotions.”
The mixtape format, goes against the excessive focus on the physical aspect of releases, which seems to be so common these days, especially in underground music.
“Releasing it as an “album” felt too much of a statement. Also I wanted to release something digital ideally experienced on the website. The songs are more sketches which is what some mixtapes are, I wanted to have tracks which were simple, direct and didn’t feel the need for them to be so complicated.” Warwick doesn’t see this way of distribution as a critical response on the contemporary way people create sense and meaning through virtual peergroups. He feels like “the internet started out with virtual peergroups connecting online as they were isolated offline. They tended to be marginalized and still are, especially now”.
But there is more to it than a formal experiment. Whereas his earlier records explore intellectualized forms of music, Nadir shows a heightened awareness for emotion and is overtly melancholic. He reveals himself as a late night crooner, reflecting on the micro dramas of contemporary commodities. The record stands as a masterpiece in which minimal electronic, drunken karaoke tunes and off beat techno display a beautiful insight in today’s Western anxieties. It suggests a post-2000 expression of the German notion of Spleen. On the question if the technological and communication revolutions are the reason for this general feeling of loss and boredom he replies:
“Nadir was created from a personal loss, dealing with that and also the conditions of 2016, which were dark, isolating and frightening. It isn’t a record *about* that, rather I would say it definitely comes out from those conditions. Rather than focus on technology, I would say it is important, especially in this time to feel like they can come together as world powers attempt to isolate, confuse and create a sense of fear via division.”
Nadir is contemporary in its core. Apart from dealing with feelings of loss, detachment and fragmentation, the record deals with dislocation, not only emotionally, but also geographically. It was produced during residencies in LA and New York.
“I felt all the locations had an influence on the outcome, be in lyrically or musically. When I was in LA I spent a lot of time driving in by car so I started to listen to the radio or music and a lot and think about how cinematic everything seemed and also the amount of space there is, especially once you leave the city. The endless expanse of desert was captivating, as was driving around the hills. Whilst I was there I got a lot of work done, it was good to have a change of scenery and focus.”
Living this kind of life effects his work:
“You are definitely out of your comfort zone, so I agree you pay attention to different things. Also this can run in conjunction with being in a different time zone, which is also disorienting. I would also say that so called ‘non spaces’ also inform our contemporary landscape more and more. When you grow up with them, you might find them less alienating as you don’t know any difference.”
When bringing up the complexities of being an expat, who can freely move between cities, especially in a time where refugees are prohibited to enter a country, he exposes a politically awareness.
”I think that the idea that people supposedly travel around easier really depends on who you are and is also too complex to reduce to a simple sentence. I also think there is an incredibly huge and complex difference between a expat and a refugee which I don’t think I should have to explain.”
Warwick adds his own distinct voice to the new electronic wave, who operate in a virtual world of bandcamp releases. Maybe you can call it post-millennial’s first classic.
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Heatsick 'Ice Cream On Concrete' (PAN 19)
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NEW IN THE BOOKSHOP: FEAR INDEXING THE X-FILES by NORA KHAN AND STEVEN WARWICK (2017) For Fear Indexing The X-Files, Nora Khan and Steven Warwick combed through the first 9 seasons of The X-Files television series—which ran from 1992 to 2002—gathering and indexing the fears that occurred as themes throughout the show. The authors employ a documentary-style commentary to narrate how the show posited fear as an inherent quality of domestic life. The original run of the series aired in the period nestled between the end of the Cold War and the start of the War on Terror—a time in which enemies of the state shifted, with aliens replacing Communism, and a fear of ghosts and the paranormal prefacing our current climate of Islamophobia. Throughout the show, deregulated neoliberalism continually hovers, like an invisible man in the room. Khan and Warwick take this index and link it to the rise of the World Wide Web and the global internet, which emerged in the same era. As the show developed, its characters became more adept at using the internet, as did its fans, many of whom visited chat rooms and dedicated forums to discuss episode content, speculate on theories, and come up with urban legends of their own. This behavior provides a through line to the present, as conspiracy theories discussed on those vanguard message boards eerily echo today’s fake news stories perpetuated by the alt-right. Nora Khan is a New York City-based writer of criticism and fiction. She focuses on issues within digital art, the philosophy of technology, electronic music, and artificial intelligence. Steven Warwick is an artist, musician, and writer based in Berlin. Available via our website and in the bookshop. #worldfoodbooks #fearindexingthexfiles #norakhan #stevenwarwick #primaryinformation (at WORLD FOOD BOOKS)
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@kunsthallewien #Museumsquartier #AnnetteKelm #TomatoTarget öffnung: Opening: 13. Dezember 2018 | 19 - 22 H 20 H: #Live-Set von #StevenWarwick Ausstellung: Exhibition: 14/12 2018 – 24/3 2019 Museumsplatz 1, 1070 Wien http://www.kunsthallewien.at/#/de/ausstellungen/annette-kelm-tomato-target https://www.instagram.com/p/BrVABA8B1zu/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1hjo1h7ml2ma1
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NEW IN THE BOOKSHOP: FEAR INDEXING THE X-FILES by NORA KHAN AND STEVEN WARWICK (2017) For Fear Indexing The X-Files, Nora Khan and Steven Warwick combed through the first 9 seasons of The X-Files television series—which ran from 1992 to 2002—gathering and indexing the fears that occurred as themes throughout the show. The authors employ a documentary-style commentary to narrate how the show posited fear as an inherent quality of domestic life. The original run of the series aired in the period nestled between the end of the Cold War and the start of the War on Terror—a time in which enemies of the state shifted, with aliens replacing Communism, and a fear of ghosts and the paranormal prefacing our current climate of Islamophobia. Throughout the show, deregulated neoliberalism continually hovers, like an invisible man in the room. Khan and Warwick take this index and link it to the rise of the World Wide Web and the global internet, which emerged in the same era. As the show developed, its characters became more adept at using the internet, as did its fans, many of whom visited chat rooms and dedicated forums to discuss episode content, speculate on theories, and come up with urban legends of their own. This behavior provides a through line to the present, as conspiracy theories discussed on those vanguard message boards eerily echo today’s fake news stories perpetuated by the alt-right. Nora Khan is a New York City-based writer of criticism and fiction. She focuses on issues within digital art, the philosophy of technology, electronic music, and artificial intelligence. Steven Warwick is an artist, musician, and writer based in Berlin. Available via our website and in the bookshop. #worldfoodbooks #fearindexingthexfiles #norakhan #stevenwarwick #primaryinformation (at WORLD FOOD BOOKS)
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