No LAB
: Cao FEI + MAP Office
A Post-Katrina Social Experiment Alice Ming Wai Jim
The three-year collaborative
multi-media project NO LAB in
RMB City (2008-2011) by Beijing-based
artist Cao Fei and Hong Kong-based MAP Office
(Laurent
Gutierrez and Valérie Portefaix) was originally
produced for the 2008-2009 inaugural
exhibition of Prospect.1 New Orleans, the largest biennial of
international contemporary art ever organized
in the United States. The project was then
later, repackaged
as NO LAB on
Tour, presented by the Savannah College
of Art and Design (SCAD) at each of its
locations in Lacoste, France (2009), Savannah
(2009) and Atlanta (2010), Georgia, and
finally in Hong Kong (2011).[1]Prospect.1was
conceived by veteran biennial curator Dan
Cameron as a means to mobilize the cultural rebuilding of flood-ravaged New
Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina. The U.S. Biennial opened November 2008
in museums and alternative art spaces,
historic structures and abandoned sites
throughout the city the
weekend before the presidential election which
would see Barack Obama become America’s first
Black president, and four years after Katrina
devastated half of the southern seaboard the
last week in August 2005, flooding eighty
percent of New Orleans, Louisiana, with over
100,000 evacuees taking refuge in the Atlanta
metropolitan area. As if excoriating the
biennial’s intentions, red vinyl texts on the
exterior of the NO LAB
installation boldly read: “Fifty Percent of New
Orleans’s [sic] Artists Lost Their Homes, and
Dozens Lost Their Life’s Work,” “Tourists Buy
Souvenirs. Collectors Buy Art” and “Prospect.1
is Going to Blow the Art World’s Collective
Mind.” The location and organization of
political activism has undeniably been
revolutionized by the Internet yet skepticism
remains over whether networked sociality,
cyber-activism, and online protests staged in
virtual worlds largely populated by those
apathetic to real world concerns and politics,
leads to greater awareness of pressing social
issues, political activism and new forms of
resistance in the “meatspace” of the physical
world. This article explores how Cao Fei
+ MAP Office’s NO LAB project
proposed a model of mapping virtual and physical
realities as contiguous rather than parallel or
overlapping, “distinguished by a fluid barrier
that welcomed “new and imaginative figures to
cross from one side to the other via mechanisms
tied inherently to the cosmopolitics of the
international art audience: the local is reborn
through the failure or even destruction of the
liminal design flaws of the artwork” such that
“contrariwise, it is also possible for images of
the specific and the regionalto be
absorbed back in the unnamed virtual space in
which, for some, ‘art happens’,” leading to not
only an appreciation but also a questioning of
real world values.[2]
Featured downtown in the Contemporary
Arts Center, one of Prospect.1’s
main venues, NO LAB
was an exploration of New Orleans as a virtual
city in Cao Fei’s RMB City
(2008-2011), her online fantasy world whose
planning and construction were just getting
underway on the Creative
Commons’ Kula Island in Second Life.[3]Launched
in 2003 by Linden Lab, Second Life (SL) is the three-dimensional
virtual universe of different
user-created worlds inhabited by over 20 million
self-customized user-avatars called “residents”
who communicate though instant messaging.Membership
in Second Life is free to the public common
spaces but with Linden dollars converted from
real US dollars, residents can purchase land
(their own “personal islands”) and the goods
and services to build up and privatize their
virtual homes and businesses. RMB
City is
arguably the most widely acclaimed SLart (art in
Second Life) project in both SL and RL (Real
Life) art worlds. Commissioned by the Serpentine
Gallery in London and developed with Vitamin
Creative Space in Guangzhou, RMB City
was
envisioned from the onset as a
platform/laboratory-as-concept piece and
two-year residency for the artist and her peers
to collaborate on creative projects. Between 2008 and 2011, it hosted
and spring-boarded over a dozen activities
ranging from in-world interactive exhibitions to
hybrid events, such as NO LAB, that
combine SL and RL performances as well as site-specific
community-based interventions.
RMB City (as in the
Chinese unit of currency, renminbi,
literally “people’s money”) started out as the
Cao Fei’s fictional vision of China’s
feverish rate of urbanization, echoing
early discourses of the Internet as a purely
democratic space where people could enter and
participate regardless of race, class, creed, or
location in the real world. Sound artist and
experimental musician Zafka, described RMB Cityas a “virtopia” (virtual utopia): “the triumph of a
kind of grassroots production mode: everyone is
the creator of the new world.”[4]
By the end of its run however, RMB City
came into its own as a critical parody of
relationships between China’s state capitalism,
free market economiesand the virtual
economies of an artworld island online. Filled
with every conceivable socialist,
communist and capitalist icon, symbol or
architectural landmark of major cities from the
Pearl River Delta to Beijing and Shanghai,
celebratory historical monuments and
signature high-rises alongside super malls and
street markets dominated this new Asian remix
city where China Tracy, Cao’s long black-haired
‘SLebrity’ avatar since 2006, roves (all avatars
in SL have the ability to fly) as denizen participant-observer,
resident/tourist and philosopher guide. But under the
surface not all was well in
RMB City. Marooned,
rusted or
perforated buildings dangerously hovered over a
dysfunctional Tiananmen
Square-cum-infinity pool, huge gushing toilets, and dilapidated houses
Across this virtual islandlaid its
most dystopic site: the bleak digital scape of
the forgotten black neighbourhood of the Lower
Ninth Ward in New Orleans, which was among the
districts hardest hit by Katrina. In a slick
tight costume of a futuristic warrior princess
complete with rocket boots, China Tracy’s
appearance on NO LAB
territory was as an immediate futuristic
anachronism. The bright, colour-saturated qualities
and slick
animation of RMB City’s
chaotic futuristic theme park, typical
of the original aesthetics of Second Life,
starkly contrasted with the somber topographical
features of NO LAB in RMB City. The desolate metaverse designed by
MAP Office is in grayscale. Black-lined digital
drawings extracted from photographs taken during
a research trip depicted the synthetic waters of
the Lower Ninth pre-, during and post-flood as
well as archetypes of its residents and iconic
American individuals, who aided in post-Katrina
recovery efforts. These avatars included then
presidential candidate Barack Obama, Oprah
Winfrey, Mayor Ray
Nagin,actor Brad Pitt,
founder of the Make It Right Lower Ninth housing
project, When
the Levees Broke documentary director
Spike Lee, and the actors of artist Paul Chan’s
restaging of Samuel Beckett’s play Waiting
for Godot for New Orleans. They hoisted or
stood resiliently by signs or billboards
encouraging residents with slogans such as
“Still Proud to Call it Home,”“Change
We Can Believe In,” or “Movin’ on Up!”
For the Prospect.1installation, a five-minute machinima
(animated film made using 3D game engines in a
real-time virtual environment) of NO LAB
directed by Cao Fei with a soundtrack by the
Japanese rock band Prague,
was projected on one end of a temporary, DIY
Carnival cart constructed out of whitewashed
plywood. Nearby, interactive computer stations
enabled visitors to create their own avatars to
participate in the “live” remaking of the
virtual New Orleans. Prominently featured
wandering in colour photographs of the barren
Lower Ninth filled with overgrown grass and
weeds are China Tracy and the MAP Office duo,
the latter present through the signature black
and white drawings of themselves – their avatars
since 2005.
Having come up with the idea of using a Mardi
Gras float upon MAP Office’s happening on an
abandoned lot of discarded Carnival carts, the
island became a deeply operational concept, one
which has long preoccupied the artists in their
work. In the case of NO LAB,
it compelled the simultaneously consideration of
the material implications of recovery through
cultural tourism (the Lower Ninth is still the
highlight of Katrina disaster tours ever since
Brad Pitt’s Global Green made it right) and
urban poverty, racial polarization and the
government neglect of marginalized
African-American communities even before the
massive natural disaster (when the Lower Ninth
had the highest black homeownership rate in the
city).[5] “By
June 2006, investigations by engineers and
journalists ultimately revealed that the
flooding in the city was caused not by the
strength of the hurricane but by the weakness of
the levees. These levees were designed and build
by the United States Army Corps of Engineers.
They were not constructed to the specifications
of the designs.”[6]
The Lower Ninth and neighbouring St. Bernard
Parish are located immediately in front the east
levee breaches of the Industrial Canal where
three major failures occurred. The media
speculated that New Orleans would survive only
as an island surrounded by miles of open water.
“[S]urrounded by waters as it were, New Orleans
is more akin to an island than to a continental
landmass,”
Prospect.1 Associate Curator Claire
Tancons writes,“along with the parallactic shift
implied in seeing New Orleans as a Caribbean
island rather than an American [city]” (always
somewhat under discussion since the Louisiana
Purchase) “is a refocusing upon the specificity
of its cultural traditions. Chief among them is
Carnival, locally known as Mardi Gras, [which
is] very much a Caribbean celebration.”[7]
Following the immediate aftermath of Katrina,
the Mardi Gras, traditionally hosted by the
Lower Ninth and other black neighbourhoods who
stood to gain the most was invoked and in fact
Carnival became an icon of post-Katrina
recovery, at least in the media.
NO LAB on Tour
subsequently extended and built-up a prolonged
engagement and series of activities over time by
incorporating the Carnival’s signature Second
Lines and Mardi Gras Indians. Second Lines are traditional New
Orleans-style street parades where “second”
refers to the people following a brass or
marching band (the “Main Line”). They are more
casual than a confrontational protest march and
can be described as “in effect a civil rights
demonstration, literally demonstrating the civil
right of the community to assemble in the street
for peaceful purposes [-- to assert their right]
to exist.”[8]On
September 18, 2009, NO LAB on
Tour #2 organized the Savannah Second Line,
a real-life procession that aptly ended on
Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, led
by a Mardi Gras Indian and accompanied by
life-size two-dimensional wooden figures of the
avatars created for NO LAB
in New Orleans. The grand procession also
included community members, as well as students,
faculty, and staff from the Savannah College of
Art and Design, marching alongside also costumed
as the cut-out black and white avatars. In
contrast, NO
LAB on Tour #3 in Atlanta in 2010 opened
as a gallery exhibition followed by a Second
Life Second Line in NO LAB’s
virtual New Orleans the day after, virtually
bringing the parade full circle.
In retrospect, it is difficult to avoid linking
NO LAB
and the myriad of issues it raised to Cao Fei
and Map Office’s other socially-engaged
projects: parade and protest in MAP Office’s
repeating islands from Hong Kong to China to New
Orleans in SL and RLand Performing
the Archipelago (2012), their The Final
Battle (2008), a procession for the
Seventh Gwangju Biennale to commemorate the
lives lost during the 1980 Gwangju Democratic
Uprising, or Cao Fei and Ou Ning’s “village-in-a-city”
under siege documentary films on the
traditional village of San Yuan
Li (2003) in Guangzhou whose hardy
residents forced real estate developers to build
around the now prime land and Dazhalan
(2005) on the demolition prior to the Beijing
Olympics ofone of
the poorest and highest density old city-centre
neighbourhoods southwest of Tiananmen Square.
Cao Fei’s last invocation of RMB City was as a
one-person game art installation grimly titled Apocalypse
Tomorrow: Surf in RMB City (2011) that
invited audiences to guide the on-screen avatar,
“an intrepid meditating monk,” through a
post-disaster floodscape of the submerged
once-famous SL city sometime in the future.
While SL as a cultural interface offers abundant
possibilities for identity play, NO LAB
adamantly debunked the myth of the Internet as a
space without difference or material effects at
the same time they push the limits of online
gaming technologies to address and be relevant
to real-life geopolitical economies and social
hardship. Towards a sense of global justice,
Cao Fei and MAP Office’s social practice art
have consistently strategically and creatively
deployed the
potential of hybridized media art practices to
activate community through a process of
continuous remaking that allows for constant
participation of other people, and to generate
multiple sites of collective sharing, creation
and political engagement in real and virtual
worlds – both as it were, of our own making.
[1]
New Orleans has long been considered a
sister city to Savannah. According to the
artists, the two cities “share many
historical and present-day similarities: a
port of entry on the East Coast serving the
slave trade, a landscape of marshes and
plantations, neo-classical architecture, and
tremendous celebratory parades.” Quoted in
Claire Tancons, “A New Orleans Laboratory?
Cao Fei + MAP Office’s NO LAB
on Tour between Second Line and Second
Life, Carnival and Virtual Reality,” Cao Fei
+ MAP Office’s NO LAB on Tour(Savannah,
Georgia:
Savannah
College of Art and Design, 2011). NO LAB and other projects by MAP
Office, the multidisciplinary platform
founded in 1997 by French-born husband-and-wife architect-artists Laurent
Gutierrez and Valérie Portefaix, are
extensively documented in MAP
Office: Where the Map is the Territory,
ed. Robin Peckham (Hong Kong and Beijing:
Office for Discourse Engineering, 2011).
[2]
Robin Peckham (ed.), “Rituals of
Resistance,” MAP
Office, 242.
[3]Over the last decade, Cao Fei (b.
1978, Guangzhou) has emerged at the
forefront of a generation of
artists engaging with social gaming
technologies to create online participatory
media projects. She is one of only a handful of
contemporary Chinese women artists who have
achieved international status and prestige
in the art market and the new media art
field, both dominated by male artists. For a
lengthier account of her new media projects,
see my article “The Different Worlds of Cao
Fei,” Yishu: Journal of Contemporary
Chinese Art 11:3 (May/June 2012)
82-90.
[4]
Zhang Anding (SL: Zafka), “Here Comes
Metaverse: a New Existential Manifesto,” RMB
City: Cao Fei/SL Avatar: China Tracy,
ed. Hu Fang and Cao Fei (Guangzhou: Vitamin
Creative Space, 2008).
[5] Nancy
Boyd-Franklin, “Racism, Trauma, and
Resilience: The Psychological Impact of
Katrina,” Katrina's
Imprint:Race and
Vulnerability in America,
ed. Keith
Wailoo, Karen O'Neill, Jeffrey Dowd, and
Roland Anglin (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers
University Press, 2010) 83-84.
[6]
New Orleans writer and filmmaker Lolis Eric
Elie, “New Orleans: Still Live with Voices,”
Prospect.1
New Orleans, ed. Lucy Flint (New York:
PictureBox, Inc., 2008) 29.