The Scaffold is a Wormhole

As we are turning the pages from old to new, I thought of writing one of those old-school blog posts, more for the fun of writing it – and hopefully you reading it – rather than trying to make a point or breakthrough. Although pages, pointed pencils, and breaking through are definitely topics in these reflections about The Scaffold being a wormhole. Hope you enjoy this rabbit hole.

A brain worm in my head is obsessing about wormholes being an excellent metaphor or not for bending cognitive spaces to our own particular navigational needs. 

An ear worm or brain worm is usually defined as a “catchy or memorable piece of music or saying that continuously occupies a person’s mind even after it is no longer being played or spoken about.”. 

Unfortunately, in slang, it means “a persistent delusion or obsession; a deeply-ingrained or unquestioned idea”. 

I leave it to my readers to assess whether my thoughts belong to the former or the latter.

The wormhole metaphor popped up during one of my catch-up calls with partners in crime about The Scaffold, our transdisciplinary learning studio for the never-normal. 

The Scaffold is a wormhole, an unorthodox way of going faster from A to B. 

Here is where Dr Romilly explains about the wormhole to Cooper in the film Interstellar:

I love the paper sheet and pencil metaphor to suggest this alternative route towards your imaginable futures. 

Easier said than done: if The Scaffold is indeed a wormhole, what do we need in place to create the wormhole? What is the nature of the plane being folded? 

The plane could be looked at as the social fabric for thinking together, thinking in synch. It is another tool or system to facilitate coordinated behaviour.  The plane becomes a graph-mind, as explained in Venkat Rao’s Graph-Mind-Notebook series. 

Punching the right line through the plane is difficult, and comes with great responsibility, and only few people can do this. These punchers are usually born like this, and often not welcome or seen as inappropriate in corporate environments. 

It takes a huge effort to instigate experiences that break away from the normal. Humans are hardwired to believe what they hear/already know. Their brains are wired to look for mirror neurons, and this not only at the cognitive cortex, but also at the motor cortex, visual cortex, other cortexes…

How do you break away into the territory of experimental imagination, as described by Ann Pendleton in Pragmatic Imagination? You could use LSD trips to create experiences that are  as strong as giving birth to a baby. Seriously, how to make the hole is a very serious proposition.

You have to first identify the consistency of assumptions of the plane, then have different strategies for drilling the hole, and a list of tools to drill the hole.

I always thought – and still do – that using artists is a natural human way to resonate beyond the cognitive, textual level. Artists – not as entertainment, but as prime contributors to the content and the narrative – can bring us in a state of different reality.

It is about human presence in multiple realities, in form ànd feeling, in space ànd time. It resembles to dance, or rather choreography.

“Dance/choreography is dancing of the second order, meta-dancing, or better, it is an investigation of dancing.” 

Alva Noe in his book The Entanglement

“We will soon live life across multiple realities. Each with its own physical laws, bodies & affordances. The only common denominators? Space, time and human presence.”

Andreea Ion Cojocaru

How to make holes is also a matter of nuance, of deciding how much dissonance you want, you can have, what’s beyond your comfort zone, although we know from Niels Pflaeging that there is no such thing as a comfort zone.  

Imagine a dial/slider of dissonance

Who turns the dial? Who is the orchestrator/composer/juggler of place, space, and time? Who is the mapper/weaver of ideas? Who curates the team of transdisciplinarians in a coherent impactful learning experience?

This is about going through walls. 

It remembers me of Geoff Manaugh’s blog about Nakatomi Space where he described Bruce Willis’ Die Hard experience to literally going through walls

What I find so interesting about Die Hard—in addition to unironically enjoying the film—is that it cinematically depicts what it means to bend space to your own particular navigational needs. 

This mutational exploration of architecture even supplies the building’s narrative premise: the terrorists are there for no other reason than to drill through and rob the Nakatomi Corporation’s electromagnetically sealed vault. 

Die Hard asks naive but powerful questions: If you have to get from A to B—that is, from the 31st floor to the lobby, or from the 26th floor to the roof—why not blast, carve, shoot, lockpick, and climb your way there, hitchhiking rides atop elevator cars and meandering through the labyrinthine, previously unexposed back-corridors of the built environment?

Geoff Manaugh

The Scaffold as a wormhole is about going through previously unexposed back-corridors where all is malleable. 

This will scare the hell out of many. The disclaimer deserves a warning to be prepared to be discomforted, even to expect existential angst. Such disclaimer also imposes a duty of extreme care to the designer of such experience. 

Interestingly, and to stay in the world of film and imagination, the quote “Innovate or die” is sometimes attributed to Robert Iger, the CEO of the Walt Disney Company. 

In that sense, the title of this blog post could as well have been

“Die Hard and Innovate”

With thanks to Andreea, Marti, JMS, Josie, and Venkat for planting these brainworms in my head.

Warmest,

Petervan Studios – Update Dec 2023

As we close the year, here is the latest update on Petervan Studios.

The previous update was in March 2023. In a sense, this update is an update on the whole year. A lot has happened since then. A lot did not happen. An overview.

Quick catch-up

I studied architecture (art school), never practiced (dropped out), and stumbled into a nice corporate career. In 2017 I took a sabbatical and never went back. I left the corporate world. I am now officially “retired”

Family

On 18 Dec 2023, Astrid became 18 years, officially “of age”, driving our car (good driver, final exam in Feb 2024), and started higher studies (a four years bachelor nursery), and horses, of course. And in May, we celebrated our 30th wedding anniversary. Time flies. Happy times.

Cosy Birthday Breakfast for Astrid

The Art Studio

The Art Studio is nicely rippling along. I did not have the feeling that I accomplished much, but with hindsight, it’s not too bad, and there are a lot of good foundations for the year to come.

Some of the new projects include:

Hexagrams

Claim your word

Something has dissipated

New paintings

New digital artworks

New soundscapes

Experimenting with interfaces for IRL and VR installations

You can find most of them via the “Artworks” tab on my website

© Petervan Artworks 2023 – Pears – Acryl on Canvas

The “Something has Dissipated” project got some traction. There are now about 20 spoken language versions by real humans, including Mongolian and Chinese. But also some synthetic non-human avatar versions like this one:

I registered for the Stability.AI residency by the HUG Innovation Laboratory, participating online between 8 Jan and 18 Feb 2024.

In the planning is a personal solo art exhibition in VR coming and maybe IRL. Some installation concepts will try-out first in VR, and maybe later IRL.

A new performance lecture “City of Play” is in the making, about the New New Babylon (and the power of imagination). No specific target date. I have time, and it has to be right.

New New Babylon – City of Play

I am kind of obsessed with the New Babylon project of artist Constant Nieuwenhuys, who co-founded the avant-garde COBRA art movement in the 1950s. 

For 25 years he worked on New Babylon, an imagined city for the playful and creative human being. The oeuvre consists of hundreds of drawings, sketches, and maquettes. His work was inspired by the book Homo Ludens by Johan Huizinga.

The NEW New Babylon is an artistic research project where we use 2023 technologies.

At the time of writing, we are trying to set up a team/consortium to overlay an existing city (district) with a VR environment for A/B Testing of the urbanistic, economic, and governance aspects of the city.

It probably will involve expertise from worlding experts, interactive fiction, procedural games, autonomous worlds, protocol language patterns, etc

More high-level info here: https://petervanstudios.com/new-new-babylon-city-of-play/ .

I have more details, so if you are really interested in putting skin in this game, DM me.

Performance

The script is more or less done now. Starting to make the first soundscapes for this. 

This trailer of Hilma af Klint’s “The Temple” experience keeps haunting me. 

As well as this painting by Léon Spilliaert from 1908 called “De Duizeling” aka “The Dizziness/Vertigo”

At this moment I am exploring a whole slew of tools: videosync, BEAM, BAM, Procreate Dreams, Capture for scene design, and spending lots of time on learning/trying to understand Blender, Unity, Unreal Engine, new Ableton packs, the new version of Apple Logic Pro X, and hopefully soon Apple Vision Pro.

Timing slips. No problem, I have time. And it has to be right. And not sloppy.

Delicacies

Delicacies are back! This time on Substack

Writings

Loads of notes, draft blogs, reflections, etc in the pipeline. When I look at some of the material, it feels like I am in a different reality.

The next one is probably about wormholes.

No idea when and if I will publish what when.

It’s probably going to come in bursts.

Books

Highlights:

Making Meaning with Machines: Somatic Strategies, Choreographic Technologies, and Notational Abstractions through a Laban/Bartenieff Lens

The Entanglement: How Art and Philosophy Make Us What We Are

Other books I am reading: See my GoodReads:

https://www.goodreads.com/goodreadscompetervan

Exhibitions

Since March 2023, I visited many art exhibitions and galleries. If I had to pick one or two highlights, it would be Jan De Vlieger at Mudel and the Inspired By Love expo at Belfius Art Gallery. Picture below is work by Emilie Terlinden.

Detail Jan De Vlieger’s San Marco People – picture by Petervan

Detail of Emilie Verlinden’s The Farm 2023 – Picture by Petervan

Also, the works of David Claerbout and his practice are a continuous inspiration for my own work. Here is a great talk by David at Schaulager Basel as part of the Out of the Box exhibition.

David Claerbout discusses a range of artworks, among them Nightscape Lightboxes (2002-2003), Wildfire (meditation on fire) (2001), and Backwards Growing Tree and Birdcage (both from 2023), the latter two on show at the Gallerie Greta Meert in Brussels till 3 Feb 2024.

What’s next?

I don’t know. Focus areas are:

The New New Babylon project

The upcoming solo exhibition in VR

The Performance

But some promising smoldering sparks deep in the campfire may suddenly light up. Life is full of surprises. Only the fool don’t change their mind.

So, that’s it for this edition. 

Happy New Year to all of you!

If there is something worth reporting, the next update is for April 2024. 

Warmest, 

Inspiration – Peter Cook – Utopian or Real?

From time to time, I discover an interview, an artist, a dreamer, or another non-conformist take on reality that I find worthwhile transcribing. 

I prefer to make such transcripts manually, by listening, pausing, and reflecting. Like drawing by hand. 

And also in the resulting text, it is possible to give some sense to that rhythm of reflection. 

In this post, a transcript of the conversation with artist/architect Peter Cook on the benefits of drawing by hand, on buildable or non-buildable ideas, on utopia or reality. I started transcribing around 11:15 in this video which also contains beautiful artwork. 

Somehow, I would like to grow old like Peter Cook…

In drawing

You can decide upon almost anything

How to make a building that can go from solid to transparent without a window?

From solid 

to slightly permeable 

and then translucent 

More translucent

Completely transparent

And then back again

I don’t think any of the work is utopian

The notion of utopia, the notion of the ideal perfect objective is not in my mind

I think that a lot of these drawings are buildable

they may not be a hundred percent buildable 

but they are more buildable

than they’re unbuildable

so what i’m saying is

to answer the question is it utopic 

No, it’s not utopian 

I even balk at the idea

if it’s huge you see

what happens is

the critical observer will say 

Ah! that stuff is utopian

what we do down the road is real

and it delights me to say that

we did build The Kunsthaus in Graz

which could have been one of these drawings

but it’s there 

you can go inside 

it is still working 20 years down the line

and agreeably 

The Kunsthaus in Graz, by Peter Cook

and so then I say 

hey hold it

if you say that this stuff is utopian

what about Graz  

it’s built

if you can

build Graz 

aha you guys

you can build 80% of this stuff 

it’s just that you obey by the critics and the

regular people saying it’s utopian 

You put it aside 

you put it into a kind of

you put it into a pigeon hole that says

oh those sort of architects are utopian

and we architects are normal

the delight I get out of doing some buildings 

it’s to say

screw you 

it can be built

so then i say

I do not want to be a utopian architect

i’m not interested in utopia 

I’m interested in architecture 

I’m interested in the drawings 

contributing towards 

the discussion and language 

of architecture 

and thank you very much 

I wouldn’t mind building some of it

Below are some images of the hand-drawn city landscapes by Peter Cook. From the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art

Obviously all images are courtesy of the artist. 

A lot of Peter Cooke’s work and insights throw me back to my own architecture studies in the 70ies when we were allowed to design buildings that did not have to be buildable.

In the same way, his utopian/reality paradox is central to the ideas I developed as part of The Scaffold, a transdisciplinary learning studio for the Never Normal. The studio gives permission to play with ideas that are not necessarily buildable but that unlock some other kind of less cognitive insight.

Hope you stay on board

Warmest

Petervan Studios – Update Sep 2022 – Other news

© 2022 Petervan Artworks – Artist and Engineer – created with MidJourney

Here is the latest update on Petervan Studios. The previous update already goes back to February 2022

Professionalization of Petervan Studios Practice

Some days ago, I published a post about this and the launch of my new website and The Scaffold.

As I was very focused on professionalizing my art practice, I did not produce much artwork during that time. On the website, you can discover some of my existing work by selecting a method, dynamic, and outcome. You can of course also sort per container: canvas, video, audio, etc.

As part of the inventory work, I stumbled upon some older works and played around with DALL-E

© 2022 Petervan Artworks – made with DALL-E

© 2022 Petervan Artworks – Prison cell in ProCreate

IN OTHER NEWS…

Exhibitions

Since the last update, I visited the following art exhibitions:

Dhondt Dhaenens, Deurle, April 2022

Berlinde De Bruyckere, Studio visit, Ghent, April 2022

Castle of Laarne, Laarne, May 2022

Storycon, BOZAR Brussels, May 2022

Nick Ervinck, Skins, K.E.R.K., Middelkerke, July 2022

8th Biennial of Painting, Dhondt Dhaenens, Deurle, July 2022

8th Biennial of Painting, Mudel, Deinze, July 2022

8th Biennial of Painting, Raveem Museum, Zulte, July 2022

Jonas Gekhiere, MUSEE, Oostende, July 2022

Christian Dotremont, KMSKB, Brussels, August 2022

Tanya Goelen, KMSKB, Brussels, August 2022

(Un)Common Values, National Bank Belgium, Brussels, August 2022

Nick Ervinck, Studio Visit, Lichtervelde, August 2022

Wim Opbrouck Open Hart, Dr. Ghislain Museum, Ghent, August 2022

Splendid Isolation, S.M.A.K., Ghent, August 2022

Outdoors

We had a fantastic spring and summer. We basically had sunny weather from March till August. At least that is how I recall it. 

Spent quite some time outdoors: some gardening, some walking, some bicycling, some doing nothing. Got a nice tan, and people asked me where I spent my holidays. At home, but many don’t seem to believe me 😉

I have not traveled abroad since October 2019. Cannot say I miss it.

Books

Check out my GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/3085594-peter-auwera

Some highlights:

Ways of Being: Beyond Human Intelligence by James Bridle

Reality+: Virtual Worlds and the Problems of Philosophy by David Chalmers

De Avond is Ongemak by Marieke Lucas Reineveld

And for the artists in this community:

On Being an Artist by Michal Craig-Martin

Art/Work by Heather Darcy Bhandari and Jonathan Melber

Making It in the Art World: Strategies for Exhibitions and Funding

Petervan Rides

Since July 2019, I have published every month a Spotify List with new releases combined with some oldies from the 60ies, 70ies, and beyond. Search for “Petervan Ride” and select “playlists”. Selection is driven only by my personal taste (or lack thereof). 

In July 2022, we entered the fourth year of this experiment. Here is the latest Ride from September 2022

I suggest you play it in shuffle mode, it enhances the surprise experience.

Family

The most important news is that Astrid passed and is now starting her last year in high school! Where has the time gone? 

What else?

Horses

Astrid is still enjoying horse riding very much. And so do I!

I have three roles in the horse riding adventure: being her All Bundy, her taxi driver, and her photographer

Astrid with Cienta

So, in summary, what’s next?

The plan for the next mile is to work/play on:

Support Astrid in her last year at high school

Professionalizing my art practice

Pitch and realize my project “The Scaffold”

So, that’s it for this edition. 

If there is something worth reporting, the next update is for Feb 2023. 

Warmest, 

Petervan Studios – New Website – Launch The Scaffold

© 2022 Petervan Artworks – The Scaffold – created with Stable Diffusion

Since March 2022, I have focused on the professionalization of my art practice. As part of a grant for the innovation of cultural business models, I invited Kurt Vanbelleghem from Amy-Art and Present Future to be my coach in that endeavor.

Kurt is a curator, critic, and publisher specializing in the field of contemporary artistic practices. He received a MA in Psychological Sciences and a MA in Art History from the University of Ghent, Belgium, and a Master in Visual Arts Administration from The Royal College of Art, London, UK. 

Whereas we initially started looking at my artwork only, Kurt was great at pointing out that the output of my artwork was less important than the methods and dynamics applied. And that these methods were also underpinning my other work in the area of interventions, provocations, and interruptions. In other words, all my work was about similar forms of artistic and aesthetic expression and experience. Kurt set me on a path of better articulation of my ambitions and offerings. It also led to a new vocabulary and a new set of aesthetics to describe and share what I do and why I do it.   

I have now consolidated my creative undertakings into Petervan StudioS (plural). 

Petervan Studios is the melting pot of three studios: The Art Studio, The Interventions Studio, and The Scaffold Studio. The Studios have the following methods, dynamics, and outcomes in common:

Methods: Collisions – Layering – Activations – Speculations

Dynamics: Translating – Unsnapping – Reframing

Outcomes: Provocations – Experimentations – Collaborations

The three studios share the motivation and desire for societal, moral, and aesthetic advancement. 

I just launched a brand new website with all details about the three studios: www.petervanstudios.com

The Website is designed by WebIt. Thanks, Ruben, Joke, and team for your patience. Thanks also to Peter, Kurt, Janne, and Tijana from Amy-Art for help with the archiving and API integration.

Below is a quick summary of the three studios

Studio-1 Artworks

This studio is the home of Petervan’s art experiments: a mix of analog and digital artwork and productions, writings, poems, installations, video scapes, soundscapes, recordings, documentaries, and time capsules.

Studio-2 Interventions

These interventions build upon my experience and capability as a translator/interpreter of your specific challenges and designer/architect of intellectual collisions. Most of the interventions involve private or semi-private tailor-made provocations and include: Conversations, keynotes, performances, and curations

Studio-3 The Scaffold

The Scaffold is a brand-new transdisciplinary learning studio for the never normal. This unusual learning studio invites participants into a fresh break from the day-to-day. It allows participants to think, sense, learn, ànd act together with a brilliant, curated non-conformist tribe about a specific collective challenge. Not to solve the challenge, but to identify pivotal insights and a new way to position it.

The Scaffold is made possible through strategic partnerships with nexxworks and Collective Next

We also brought together a coalition of exceptional individuals as advisors for The Scaffold. A unique mix of strategists, futurists, engineers, entrepreneurs, experts in classic and contemporary arts, masters in narrative environments, philosophers, licensed architects, and VR developers.

Please let me know what resonates.

Warmest, 

Traveling without moving – Genres

This post is the last post of a series of essays bundled under “Traveling without moving”.

The intro of that series can be found here. In hindsight, this whole series was a slow reflection, maturation, and catalyst for something that will emerge in September as “The Scaffold”

The idea of a new “genre” has been hanging around since 2018, actually. But the COVID-related lockdowns have only amplified this dissatisfaction with replicating old analog formats into their digital copy-cats, without considering that the craving for something better has a deeper foundation.

In my Nov 2020 update, I already suggested:

“People are exhausted. Tired of online meetings. Tired of being locked up in their houses. Tired of all the negative news. People crave oxygen. People crave for small safe groups where they can share, critique, ideate, play.”

As John Hagel wrote some time ago: “We all are hungry for hope and excitement”

During and post-COVID, we have seen an acceleration in the use of online meetings and other forms of remote participation. We also witnessed the rise and hype of the metaverse, web3, AI-based image and text generators, and more. 

But we have not catered to the craving for oxygen. On the contrary, we seem to flee and lose ourselves in virtual realities, suffocating ourselves in the coolness of the latest technological gadgets and hypes. 

I feel we have hardly touched the surface of what is possible and more importantly what is desirable. What is our/my ambition in this space? I have written before about this in the “Ambition Cube

I believe we need to start working on a new “genre” for collective learning and collaboration. 

Photography in Scaffold by Milo-Profi, Begijnhof, Mechelen, BE

Over the last couple of months, I have watched, suggested, and experimented with a number of concepts that go beyond a pimped-up Zoom meeting. The spectrum included proposals like Pirate TV (gracefully hijacked – and well executed – by Mykel Dixon and Co after I mentioned it during a catalyst meeting with Josie Gibson), Beyond TV, or Beyond Netflix.

I started reflecting: is “pirate” or “rebel” really what I want to be? That may sound like heroic and sympathetic, but is that behavior leading to the desired outcome of imagining and orchestrating new narratives? And why would I even use the word “TV” in what I do? TV as a format that leaves little room for imagination?

Maybe it should be something more Newsroom style like Ian Bremmers’ GZERO channel, Ray Wang’s “DisruptTV”, or Gerd Leonhard’s KeynoteTV. Gerd probably nailed it when it comes to repurposing keynotes for the virtual world (and also very well executed).

Somewhere in 2020, I got the wonderful opportunity to collaborate on nexxworks’ “Missions”, and more specifically on the curation of Mission NXT, with Peter Hinssen as the host.

Mission NXT episode with Peter Hinssen and John Hagel

That worked quite well, and the concept was integrated into nexxworks’s Memberships Program.

In all formats above I have witnessed discussions live or pre-recorded, with or without Q&As, edited or unedited, etc.

 But these are delivery-related questions only.  

In the end, these formats are still about passive consumption of knowledge, not about working-out-loud together, or better “learning-out-loud together”, and at best they reach the level of high-quality “teaching” of simple topics.

What we seem to be craving for are formats that are mentoring and/or inquiry-based, tackling complicated and complex subjects and projects. These use in-person and virtual facilitation and immersion technologies, helping us discover new unintended opportunities and new unintended behaviors and skills.

Courtesy Ann Pendleton-Jullian from FOUR (+1) Studios

What does that genre-ambition look like? What do we really want?

 We do NOT want yet another set of virtual equivalents of “meetings”, or “events”, “workshops”, TED Talks, TV shows, etc.

We want a genre with high participation and high connectedness; with a slow tempo, we take the time to digest existing knowledge and create new knowledge. Failing and learning together through “collisions”, provocations, and collaborative and highly participatory engagements. 

This new genre adheres to a different style: away from the spectacle, and breathing a mood of silence and introspection. Not trying to impress but to take care. Away from the quick bites, quick-wins, and snackable fast-food content, but surfing on the slow waves of the long quality content format. 

Witnessing, questioning, interrogating, inquiring, iterating, all beyond the cognitive knowledge consumption.

With tools like scaffolds, collages, visual and multi-sensory collisions, assemblages, narrative environments, multiple narratives, and plurality in points of view and participants. 

It should feel like a cesarean, assisting birth to something completely new. 

It is about scaffolding narrative immersive spaces for collective learning.

Detail “Mechanisms I” by © Tanya Goel – 2019 – Picture by Petervan

For a couple of months now, I have been working in stealth mode on a new project called “The Scaffold”, which is exactly doing that. 

The Scaffold will come out of stealth next month, together with a brand new website and offering for Petervan Studios

Hope you stay on board

With warm regards,