An
Overview
For
my first project, I created a primitive art installation
piece using a refrigerator, various household items,
and a portable DVD player. By placing visibly stained
and inedible foodstuffs in the fridge, along with
video footage of various animals in the stages of
preparation for consumption, followed by more violent
images of injury done to humans, I hoped to make the
following question impossible to ignore—at least
for a time: At what point should we finally take accountability
for the negative consequences of our conveniences?
Must we wait to raise our awareness until everything
we consume is literally marked—in this case,
marked black—by their cost?
Old
Cause vs New Cause
The
relationship between us and the objects of our consumption
is problematic for two reasons: 1) We tend to fail
to recognize anything beyond the immediate cost of
things from an individualistic frame of mind (i.e.
A shirt from Urban Outfitters costs $30. Other costs,
such as labor, the environmental inefficiency of cotton
are forgotten); 2) The causal system in an age of
post-modernity is no longer what it was formerly,
and we tend to think inaccurately in terms of the
old way.
As I'm
presenting, I pour a glass of black water on the rocks.
Photograph by Joe Lopez.
The
second part of the video shows violence against humans
in the most systematic form: war. It may seem a bit
farfetched to suppose our getting a bite to eat causes
large-scale deaths, but perhaps a causal web, rather
than a linnear chain, can account for this:
I
eat meat or consume dairy regularly. » I support
the meat/dairy industry. » They distribute most
of the educational materials about dieting, which
leads to large-scale mis-education. » More people,
because they lack the proper information are less
healthy. » Rate of heart disease escalates.
» More people die from something preventable.
» Pharmaceutical companies capitalize on this
need and invent drugs. » These drugs cause side
effects, and also leave pollutants in the environment
(Anti-depressants found in water supply, for example)
» All goods require transport and vehicles.
» We depend on oil/gas. » Foreign policymakers
and businesses exploit other countries. » This
demand for energy plays a significant role in decisions
to go to war. » We indirectly support violence
through meat consumption, which contributes to a more
general acceptance of violence. » Other forms
of violence, such as the battery of women, become
more tolerable. » War is more easily justified,
and atrocities go unquestioned.
|
Yummy.
|
The
old way:
Actions
have one-to-one effects, almost like physical laws.
(Ex: I punch you in the face. I injure you; or I as
an employer pay you less because you're an African
American. I affect direcly your economic well-being.)
The
new way:
The
predominant pattern of causation is no longer linnear,
but instead takes on a viral, or rhizomial character.
Actions cause multiple events, disperse, and their
effects become almost untraceable. It becomes more
difficult to identify the exact effects of our actions;
this difficulty, however, doesn't give us license
to neglect responsibility.
The
video begins with the first model, as it shows what
goes into the commodification of meat. The causal
chain could be something like this: I eat meat or
consume dairy regularly. » I support the slaughtering
of animals, de-beaking of chickens, crating of veal,
etc. » Conditions for livestock and those working
in the industry continue to worsen.
The
Method
Using
some good old-fashioned food coloring, I was able
to discolor the items I included in the fridge display:
bread, cheese, turkey slices, corn, ice cubes, pickles,
milk, and others.
..
This
project seems to suggest that we can't look at poilitics,
human rights, health, environmental concerns, and
education independent of each other.
(The
refrigerator I used is probably still somewhere in
the ActLab. If you know of its whereabouts, perhaps
you could let me know.) |