A City without Advertising?

São Paulo No Logo by Tony de Marco

© Copyright Tony de Marco

Out of context, the photo is not very remarkable: all we see is a billboard, bare between ad campaigns, impatiently awaiting some new four-color apparel. Every city or cross-country trip offers an empty billboard like this one. The billboard could so easily be part of any landscape that we may even risk labeling it “universal.” But put into a new context — Tony de Marco’s “São Paulo No Logo” Flickr photoset — and the picture is something else entirely. It becomes one example of dozens depicting São Paulo’s recent citywide advertising ban, something that, outside of the remaining communist countries, is far from universal. In fact, the photograph’s context is so unthinkable that it borders the fictitious.

The ban is really only five or six months old, even though the city’s conservative mayor Gilberto Kassab initiated it last September. Contrary to stereotype, Kassab, a conservative trying to become a centrist, saw advertising as many leftists do: as “visual pollution.” (Actually, as Pansouth reports in his excellent and informative video on Current.tv, the initiative was a remnant of a former socialist mayor.) It’s hard to know what really motivated Kassab, but the popularity of the law seems to be its own best selling point. According to the International Herald Tribune, only one city councilman voted against the bill, and that one holdout was a former adman.

In the meantime, São Paulo is in a transitional state, with no ads but many billboards, and during this interim the city has become unexpectedly more photogenic, transforming itself into a kind of hugely scaled urban curiosity. With these blank squares, unused chassis, and half-familiar logotype traces, there is something almost apocalyptic about Tony de Marco’s photographs. Subliminally morbid, the city is now, as the one Brazilian designer remarked, a “billboard cemetery.”

But what about other forms of public expression such as political advertisements, public art, and service announcements? Somehow the city’s assurances that these forms of speech are still protected ring untrue. They certainly can’t find their ways onto public billboards. Adbusters mentions that pamphleteering is also banned, but it fails to note whether this includes political pamphlets. None of the articles answers very basic questions about the law, such as is banning a pamphlet from a clothing chain the same as banning a similar pamphlet from a clothing charity? And who does this policing? Would every ambiguous instance see its day in court, thus creating a backlog of judicial cases of an unmanageable scope?

In his somewhat dated but still mostly relevant, Culture, Inc, Herbert Schiller mentions how since the 1950s, the Supreme Court increasingly understood corporate advertising in the United States as being constitutionally protected speech. Despite being a book written against the “corporatization of culture” Shiller admits that the Supreme Court did not always side with big business along the way, and, in fact, many of the laws protecting corporate speech were championed by civil rights and consumerist groups that also saw their work threatened by laws banning ads.

If there is a reason why this law will not last, it is to be found in the mayor’s own statements. Kassab has contradictorily stated in the above-mentioned Current.tv video that he is not against advertising at all. What he is against is the illegal ads that constituted the majority of advertising in São Paulo. He considers such activity to be equivalent to tax evasion. It appears that a total ban reduces the city to zero, and slowly, over the next few years, the city can build up tax-revenue generating “official” billboards. A few years after that it’s probably back to business as usual.

The law is indiscriminate about what kinds of speech are banned in public, but it is even more naïve concerning what could be advertising. Without billboards, companies can move to other forms of viral and guerrilla marketing, and according to Adbusters, they already have. Stripped of the usual forms of communication, Citibank has begun painting São Paulo walls with its trademark blue fade, hence creating the most paradoxical reversal of all: by outlawing big media, big media have reinvented themselves as a kind of oppositional subculture, not unlike avant-garde artists in the Soviet Union, or anti-corporate activists in the states. For as much as it might hurt to say, the only thing the laws seem to have accomplished is to turn multinational corporations into the new cultural underground.

The beginnings of a post-industrial mountain range

From Yahoo News. One is art, the other, not. Maybe.

Christo, The Mastaba of Abu Dhabi, Project for United Arab Emirates, drawing 1979

A Mountain of Gambling Machines

A Collection of Hotel Implosions

The implosion of the Stardust in Vegas is an occasion for a mini-museum of hotel demolitions.

The Stardust

The Aladdin

Desert Inn/Wynn Parking Garage Implosion

Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields

flight simulator

A fascinating archive of (mostly) abandoned US airfields compiled by Paul Freeman. The above photo is the first helicopter flight simulator, also featured on the site.

Take a tour through nuclear America

The New York Times visits the National Atomic Museum , the Trinity Site, the Nevada Test Site, and the Museum of Atomic Testing.

Another bunch of random links and quotes

* “Shoot all scriptwriters,” he wrote in his popular, long-running Village Voice column, “and we may yet have a rebirth of American cinema.”

* “The original plan for the film was that every shot would be digitally placed over archival footage. So that literally, the film would be “shot” in 1945 Berlin; the actors would be green-screened over archival. There was a scene in a butcher shop, for example, and I had to find every camera angle we needed in a butcher shop in 1945 Berlin. If there was a scene outdoors, a destroyed park or a zoo, I had to find those camera angles. There was interplay between the writing, directing, and archival research: what I could find that was in Paul Attanasio’s script, and whatever else I found in my research that might work or that piqued Paul’s interest, or Steven Soderbergh’s… A colleague of mine in the art department, Joanna Bush, created an amazing database of all the footage I’d collected. It was organized based on the geography of Berlin. So that on Steven’s computer, he could click on a map of Berlin and it would find all the archival footage that I had gotten on a particular plaza or a particular street or a particular location, and pull up all that archival footage and all the stills. Steven could know where he was situated in Berlin, and the art department could recreate a particular strasse. We’d know the ruins and we’d know how much that area was bombed out and all that.” More…

* “My first exposure to the subject came in a book by another medical anthropologist, Margaret Lock, whose Twice Dead (2002) is a brilliant comparative anthropology of Japanese and North American attitudes to brain-death as the criterion of death. Hence the title: a person is ‘once dead’ when technical criteria establish that the brain has stopped, while the body is still ticking over quietly on a ventilator; ‘twice dead’ when the heart is stopped and the organs harvested.”

* “What, he wondered, did we want to do? Did we want to eat, to drink, to fuck? Uh, dinner sounds cool.”

* And last, but not least, the Athanasius Kircher Society 2006

David Byrne and the ruins of Essen

kabakov

My video The Disappearance ends with a passage discussing how factory locations are often used as the setting for the closing scenes of sci-fi films and thrillers. Most of the photographs in this portion of the video are of the coal mine in Essen, a site I learned about for the first time while researching the piece, and since then have seen in several other books and Web sites concerning the history of factory architecture and film.

Over at David Byrne’s blog (yes the David Byrne) there is an in-depth entry on the Essen site. Byrne scouted it for a film he was working on in the late 80s, and returned there recently for a concert. The site is the location for Ilya and Emilia Kabakov’s “Palace of Projects” (pictured).

Also related to my video is Byrne’s discussion of the Essen site as a place where “two world wars were ‘made,’” making it an obvious target for allied bombing. Despite the assault, the factory recovered and operated until in the mid-1980s. And then?

Thomas W. tells us that the Chinese wanted to buy this entire site when it closed — their own coalfields are not entirely depleted — not just yet — so they can actually reanimate this creature. As this Essen colliery/cokery was the last one in the area to close the local government hesitated approving the sale, and decided instead that their glorious industrial past should be remembered, memorialized rather than obliterated and forgotten, so they declined that particular offer. They call them industruialkulture monuments. Cathedrals of Industry. Other nearby sites had been sold in entirety to the Chinese — in Dortmund a similar site was completely dismantled and shipped to China. Hundreds of workers were shipped in, housed in tents on site, meals and facilities provided, as they took the beasts apart. How did they do it? We gaze at the tangle of pipes around us, the huge metal machines that dwarf human scale. How could anyone keep track of the parts? Where would you begin? The scale is like ants taking a car apart and then reassembling it — and hoping it works.

Turnstile

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Open Democracy has a short essay by Jason Orton about his photos taken in the abandoned underground UK bunker, Turnstile. Interestingly called a “cold war city” by the photographer, Turnstile was to server as a gigantic safe room for the UK government in the event of a nuclear war. (Via Subtopia.)

The Wrong Way to Floyd Bennett Field

Something to do this Labor Day weekend. From Art in General:

Help launch the eteam’s departing flight from a historic and fully operational, but dormant airfield in Brooklyn. Play a role in an eteam film- be the passenger, the pilot, the engine, or the fuselage of a plane as it exits from the gates of historic Hanger B. Learn the history of Floyd Bennett Field, New York’s first airport and now a Gateway National Recreation Area by participating in a guided tour by Linc Hallowell, a historian and park ranger of the National Park Service, who will introduce you to the airfield’s peek moments, its decline, and the process of renovation that is underway. The afternoon winds down with a BBQ.

Admission fees:
$10 (includes tour, transportation not provided)
$20 Art in General members (tour and transportation on shuttle bus from AiG to FBF)
$25 (tour and transportation on shuttle bus from AiG to FBF)

Shuttle departs from Art in General, 1:00pm

RSVP to 212.219.0473 x29 or anthony AT artingeneral DOT org

Organized by Art in General in collaboration with Floyd Bennett Field

This program is presented in conjunction with:International Airport Montello

Nuclear Getaway: The Johnston Atoll

johnston_atoll_1.jpg

It took me a while to notice, but this winter the indefatigable CLUI added an entry to their site on the sale of the natural and manmade Johnston Atoll. (Also note their entry on the Dixie Mall.) Discovered in the early 19th century and converted to a nuclear test site in the ’50s and ’60s, it seems that the military has gotten all of the their mileage out of the concrete slabs and are putting up for sale. The islands are unbelievable in a JG Ballard sort of way, sporting a ruined golf course, airstrips and acres of radioactive concrete. How could anyone turn down the offer? Some choice quotes and photos from CLUI:

johnston_atoll_2.jpg

In 1962, Johnston was used for a series of nuclear tests as part of Operation Dominic, which included the only U.S. test of an operational ballistic missile with a live warhead. For this test a Polaris missile was launched from a submarine, and traveled 1200 miles through space and the atmosphere, until detonating 11,000 feet above the ocean near Johnston…

johnston_atoll_3.jpg

…Also that year, the newly constructed rocket launch pad at Johnston was used for a number of extremely high altitude nuclear tests. On June 20, during “Starfish,” the Thor rocket engine cut out a minute after launch, and the missile was intentionally destroyed, at 30,000 feet. Large pieces of the rocket, including some plutonium–contaminated wreckage, rained down on the atoll….

johnston_atoll_4.jpg

… The test was repeated in July, and the rocket successfully flew to the highest elevation ever for a nuclear detonation (248 miles above the earth). Impressive light displays of the “artificial aurora borealis” lasted for several minutes, and were visible from the military outpost at Kwajalein Atoll, 1,600 miles away. The electromagnetic pulse from the blast knocked out street lighting in Oahu.

johnston_atoll_5.jpg

Other projects have taken place on the island in the last 50 years, the details of which are only partially known to us. In the 1960’s and 1970’s, Johnston was the site for the government’s first operational anti-satellite program, which involved nuclear rockets ready to launch from Johnston to knock out enemy satellites. Also, beginning in 1964, a series of open-air biological weapon tests was conducted at Johnston Atoll. The American strategic bio-weapon program tests involved a number of ships positioned around the island, upwind from barges loaded with rhesus monkey test subjects that were exposed to agents dispensed from aircraft.

(Via BLDGBLOG.)

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John Menick is an artist and writer.
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