Fate of
the body – stating a presence in the electronic and cyber era
(Fragmented translation from an essay originally written in Bahasa
Malaysia and published in “Pameran Seni Elektronik Pertama” - 1st.
Electronic Art Show”, National Art Gallery of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, 1997)
Hasnul J Saidon
London in the 18th century. Mass printing
technology, gave birth to several innovations in ‘print making’ art amongst ‘fine
artist’. Oral tradition began to be forgotten as Edison with his phonograph and Berliner with his
gramophone began to invade human civilization. Alaxender Graham Bell and
his telephone, displaced human voice and extended it beyond audible local distance.
Muybridge, Lumiere, Marey, Eastman, Kodak and Edison extended the dream of
displacing humans into an artificial stage. They became modern ‘dalangs’ (puppeteers), who opened up the path of using 'light' and film surface as a new stage for human
civilization. They completed and perfected early experiments by Platteau through his ‘phenatiskiscope’ and
Daguerre through his ‘daguerrotype’ in transferring human drama from reality to
‘virtual reality’. Through such virtual reality, humans began to
encounter an ‘out of the body’ experience, to be ‘presence’ as ‘light’ on a
flat screen. Film and cubism – began to provide multiple views in relation to Einstein's theory of relativity. They signify a shift from centralized view to ‘based on the viewer or camera’ quantum view.
Wright brothers shifted the limit of human perception and perspective from
middle distance landscape to a bird’s eyes view, different from views painted
by Turner, Constable, Ingres, Monet and friends. Satellite images and electron
microscope also shifted human perspective – allowing humans to peek into the double helix structure of
DNA or galaxies or a woman bathing in Kremlin! Scientific and technological
inventions extended the biological body.
We simply can’t leave the fate of the body to chance anymore. We have to
shift and adapt to a new world created by a techno-centric view, or risk being
colonized by a ‘fate’ dictated by such view. Macluhan’s notion of global
village also connotes transmigration, yet we should also ask, what about
virtual or online transmigration? With the hyper-connectivity of online space,
we can’t deny the implication towards cross-cultural encounters. We have to encounter new cultural agents – Ken, Saleem,
Dunhill, Malboro, all the global brands. We have to encounter what Baudrillard
has termed as simulacra. We have to acquire a virtual presence, to become an avatar.
‘Terminator’, ‘Blade Runner’ used to remind us of technological catastrophe. We
need to re-visit the meaning of ‘melayar’ (sailing or to be hip, surfing) –
to be a fluent sailor, or now a hip surfer on the net wave. Are we performing
it with wisdom? We should question scientific rationality and value that are propelled
without human values. We have fuse wisdom from both the East and West, and take notes on the
fates of previous civilizations. What have we learnt?
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