Bring a camera with you: the posthumous collaboration of Ahmed Basiony and Shady El Noshokaty

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2015Author
Putnam, El
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Putnam, El. (2015). Bring a camera with you: the posthumous collaboration of Ahmed Basiony and Shady El Noshokaty. In Fabian Dorsch & Dan-Eugen Ratiu (Eds.), Proceedings of the European Society of Aesthetics Annual Conference (Vol. 7).
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Abstract
In this paper, I investigate the role of digital technology and its
relationship to gesture in the posthumous collaboration of Ahmed Basiony
and Shady El Noshokaty, drawing upon the philosophy of Bernard Stiegler.
Picking up where Basiony left off, El Noshokaty frames the presentation
of two seemingly disconnected videos—documentation of a performance
that Basiony was preparing for the 2011 Venice Biennale and his footage
from the Tahrir Square protests where he was killed—resulting in 30 Days of
Running in the Place. This fulfillment is possible due to what Stiegler refers
to as epiphylogenesis, or the development of new ways of being through
technological innovation. Digital technology has introduced new forms of
tertiary retentions, or the process of externalising memories beyond the
fragility of living beings into the facticity of the non-living, affecting how
these are externalized and shared. Stiegler describes how the repetition
of tertiary retentions can lead to indifference, as images and sounds are
played back over and over again, dulling the senses of human recipients as
they are transformed into passive consumers, resulting in symbolic misery,
or lost of participation in the symbolic. The development of new forms
of participation that attempt to re-develop and re-use these technologies
provide platforms for coming together and becoming together. Drawing
from Stiegler’s relationship between aesthetics and politics, specifically his
understanding that a political community is one that comes together and
feels together, I describe how El Noshokaty fulfills Basiony’s gesture while
presenting a new means of participation that offers an escape from symbolic misery. In this action of common becoming, the artists present dedication to the politics, aesthetics, and ethics of a better society.