
Carrizo-Parkfield Diaries: notes from the underground
by Agnese
Benassi
Some time ago I participated in a discussion on the topic
'Aesthetic
of the catastrophes',
where it brought back Thom’s theory of the catastrophes. It assimilates
the catastrophe at the moment of the transformation between two different
states (orders). I put the accent on the transformation, that moment
of unstable equilibrium between two varying equilibriums that could
not be immediately classified, short like a quake or infinitely slow,
nearly imperceptible to our senses. I thought deeply about the role
of the feeling of the catastrophe, its emotional impact, inasmuch as
if analyzed theoretically it seemed to lose the sense of the tragic
inborn in the term.
Other aspects had been discussed, but one had not emerged:
the memory.
And it’s just this that Christina McPhee and Jeremy Hight explore
in Carrizo-Parkfield Diaries, fusing a unique connection between memory,
trauma and geomorfology. They make it through a multimedia installation
that is related to the short catastrophic moment of the seismic event,
more specifically with the continuous telluric movements of the S.
Andreas Fault in California, between Carrizo Plains and Parkfield. |  |
Christina
McPhee is a new media
artist. She studied literature and history of art at Scripps
College, Claremont and painting at the Kansas City Art Institute
and at Boston University. Her work involves memory and time in
complex electronic landscapes, and has been shown all over the
world.
Jeremy Hight is an artist, writer and poet, he has created
various multimedia works, one of the last is 34 North 118
West,
a project
that uses GPS technology in order to create a narrative formed
by the ground, unseen history and people's live movement. His
essay entitled Narrative Archaeology is studied in universities
worldwide. He teaches Visual Communication for Multimedia at
Mission College, Los Angeles, and has Neapolitan origins.
Sinthea (Sindee) Nakatani is a code programmer that, like
she says, has learned much of her coding knowledge from online
communities and open source resources. She programmed the
Carrizo-Parkfield
Diaries following, after several options, the KISS (keep
it simple
stupid) approach, using PHP, mySQL and Actionscript. |
 | The
complete installation is visible at the Transport Gallery in Los Angeles
until April 16th, but there are the on-line
diaries as well as the video images of the place and digital chromographic prints.
The diaries are comprised of sounds and music contained in flash movies
triggered from a number sequence, fed and updated every hour by data coming
from the seismic activity of that place in California. This data 'crashes'
into a database containing data of the last big earthquake, and this 'collision'
triggers the animations, but not in accidental way: "the number values
determine what is pulled, so a higher number value, meaning stronger quake,
triggers different animation... stronger new quake, more intense the trauma
in writing and image...".
The mechanism is not explicit, but looking at the diaries
we can notice some more intense animations: "the human trauma moves like the landscape trauma,
like they are the same...". This unusual narrative hits for the atmosphere
that is able to create, with indistinct images, intermittent and sometimes
grinding music, words giving the idea of lived life, fragments of post-trauma
memories of people with different experiences. |
 |
Like
Thom, Hight sees a process of continuity in the seismic event: "The
quake energy in the ground is chaotic, and yet has structure, movement...
then it ends and the ground and landscape has to adjust, show damage,
continuous resonating for a time (aftershocks) and, in a sense, has
physical memory”. Crossing searches on psychology, identity,
trauma and geomorfology, Hight compares the human memory to the experience
of the traumatic event. As a person's experience of an event in different
ways depends on the previous moments they have lived , also earthquakes
can be different according to the ground: "... this happened in
the last Saint Francisco quake: the ground in north beach was finer
soil and it turned to a temporary liquid state... this is called liquefaction”.
The
topology of the ground, the physical landscape, like the topology
of the human psyche: this is the interesting parallel put into view
by Carrizo-Parkfield Diaries, that’s why we cited Dostoevski
in the title. He has investigated the neurotic landscape of the human
mind, here the narrative is ultimately authored by the earth itself,
with its untiring seismic activity. | 
|
http://www.carrizoparkfielddiaries.net
http://www.christinamcphee.net
http://www.34n118w.net
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