When the Unavoidable Knocks at the Door…
Lost Highway Expedition was initiated by Azra Akšamija, Katherine Carl, Ana Dzokiæ, Ivan Kucina, Marc Neelen, Kyong Park, Marjetica Potrè and Srdjan Jovanoviæ Weiss, together with partners in participating cities. The expedition started on July 30, 2006 and went from Ljubljana to Zagreb, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Skopje, Pristina, Tirana, and Podgorica. It ended on August 24, 2006 in Sarajevo.
In contrast to the idea and logic that changing places leads from point A to point B, an odyssey within and/or across cultural boundaries started from Ljubljana and ended in Sarajevo with Lost Highway Expedition (LHE).LHE is a project initiated by the School of Missing Studies and Centrala Foundation including: Azra Akšamija, Katherine Carl, Ana Dzokic, Ivan Kucina, Marc Neelen, Kyong Park, Marjetica Potrc and Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss, together with partners in Ljubljana, Zagreb, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Skopje, Priština, Tirana, Podgorica and Sarajevo (30 July – 24 August 2006). For more info: http://www.europelostandfound.net. This seems to emerge in response to problematizing issues of geopolitical fragmentation, the conflictual zones, and the normalization in its curatorial strategy in the successor states of former Yugoslavia.
The pertinence of this project in the context of this argument was revealed in Marc Neelen’s question: “[where] is it then this multitude of individuals is heading?” This is conceived in a shift that has occurred with the condition that the active autonomous agent presupposes to search for “the future.”
Coinciding with remaining and current political situations in different corners of the world that propagate “changing place, losing the way, and the expectations of return” into existence, this inter-disciplinary project aims towards creating a dynamic structure against and beyond representation by introducing an incomplete open system towards static structures. What is to be said is established through the “found knowledge” of a “nomadic voyaging—” the expedition with its multitude.
Certain conditions of impossibility generate several essential issues initiated by looking at the location of emerging spaces on the far side of the tendency to identify politics along with the notion of Balkanization. This idea involves a vision in which a new “space of enunciation” within a networked culture is introduced beyond its metaphorical existence and rhetoric construction.
In addressing these matters of concern, however, a far broader issue emerges. Key to this is the process of “existential territories.” This requires going beyond the boundaries of dichotomies. Negri and Hardt in Empire describe the “multitude” such that it “designates new spaces as its journeys establish new residencies” in different “wor(l)ds.”
The maps in the hand:
Passing through Ljubljana, Zagreb, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Skopje, Priština, Tirana, Podgorica and Sarajevo…
It is a temporal experience of human mutability, historical in the deepest sense of the term in that it implies the necessary experience of any present as a passing experience that makes the past irrevocable and unforgettable, because it is inseparable from any present or future.
–Deleuze
The “nomadic voyaging” towards the Eastern axis engendered by the “flows and the spaces of encounters” through transitional interactions maintains paradoxical settings in its proliferation of the sites in which decentralization overlaps.
In The Balkan’s Imaginary and the Paradox of European Borders, Dusan Bjelic acknowledges that “the experience of the Balkans bears the code of the discursive power-relations constitutive of its authenticity [within] the reciprocal component of its own self-invention and its reaction to its own image.”
However, what appears in this discursive space is as Todorova argues in Imagining the Balkans: the “imputed ambiguity” marks a rupture with its “transitory character,” where the contradictory tensions are at play. This is about the interaction and reciprocal presupposition in an essential paradox of “moments of sociability” and “objects that producing sociability” traverse art and its politics on the basis of the impossibility of meaning.
This is basic to cultural production and towards the complex relational powers to a degree that is beyond the understanding or scope of the “conditions of possibility” to “conditions of actuality.”
Boundaries are crossed when the ability to live in different “wor(l)ds” generates a range of notions of crossings and transitions and of limits and relocation from structure. This designates the engagement in rupture and affirmation of the encounter in its proximity towards mirroring the “world we have lost” and the tracing of a world yet to come. After all, “it is not necessary to create a world, but the possibility of a world.”
Consequently, the basic matrix of the LHE project brings us back to the hidden boundaries of the multitude in “immediate experience” that effectively undermines a plausible reality behind reality, which was perhaps directly posited through reflective determination.
This implies a reification of “showing you the world in my eyes” which renders the multiplicity of “changing places, losing the way, and the expectations of return” insofar as therein resides the unavoidable that knocks at the door, especially when considering the current situation that is unfolding in the Middle East. Yet, what in practice transcends its own context with the politics of production still remains crucial and needs to be explored further.