Film | Video
RETROVISION
With its intervention in the film and television
media, Retrovision tests the power of
information and manipulation of mass
consciousness. In a period when the
insurmountable dichotomy between the idea
and its execution, between reality and the
media-presented history, between utopia and
the existing, is becoming part of the overall
media spectacle and thus also the source of
collective neurosis and instability, Retrovision
puts itself in the service of the project of
comprehensive renewal of the understanding
of things and their balanced harmony.
Through a self-induced specter of media
heterogeneity and choice, Retrovision sees a
single transmitter, although multiplied, and
perceives that the technique of setting up and
eternal renewal requires the production of
identification, participation in the service of
progress, breathing of freedom, worship of
egotism and indivual happiness. Retrovision
confirms the requirement of an integral
production of media-cybernetic simulation of
the value system, such as state, society,
family, individual and related rituals. This
collective and in-depth experience of the film
and television media nurtures automatic
resistance to analytical speculation and calls
for generalized emotions. Retrovision is no
stranger to this. However, the world is not
composed merely of mass media information
images: the very pure, non-transparent
identity between form and content is
conditioned with the historical guideline of the
artistic machine: the mechanics of rhythm -
construction of images - production of
meaning. Formally, Retrovision is therefore
an organic uniformity of film and television, of
truth and illusion, of fiction and reality. The
attitude of Retrovision towards opposition is
synthetic deconstruction. Retrovision thus
rejects self-deception of reason and answers
to the precepts of spiritual principle as well as
taking full responsibility for participating in the
system of the production of things and
people. Retrovision unites images and visions
of the past and the future into a positive vision
of the present.
NSK Video, 1987, Length 22 minutes, U-MATIC
Musical video spot SYMPATHY FOR THE
DEVIL, 1988, Produced by Mute Records,
London, Length 5 minutes,40 seconds, 16 mm
NSK in Vienna and New York, 1988, Length
15 minutes, U-MATIC
TV film on LAIBACH, 1989, Length 60
minutes, 1 inch
TV spot ZENIT, 1988, Length 30 seconds, 35
mm
Musical video WIRTSCHAFT IST TOT, 1992,
Produced by Mute Records, London, Length
4 minutes, 16 mm
U-MATIC
Musical video spot SYMPATHY FOR THE
DEVIL, 1988, Produced by Mute Records,
London, Length 5 minutes,40 seconds, 1U-MATIC
» See document: http://www.neuropa.eu.org/embassy/5a/5a.htm
Predictions of Fire

What follows is an entirely accurate account
of all discernible written, spoken, sung or
shouted words within the 95-minute running
time of Predictions of Fire. Although it is
inevitably limiting to "read" a motion picture, it
can be a useful exercise for those interested
in absorbing some of the more complex
associations built into the film's narrative.
Predictions of Fire dialogue list
FIRE FILM VOICE:
To make a fire, we need a flammable
substance, air, that is, oxygen, and a source
of heat. Making a fire goes like this. Heat the
flammable substance until the temperature
reaches the level where a certain chemical
reaction takes place. The mixing of these
gasses with oxygen results in the burning of
that substance.
LAIBACH SINGER:
Death, lust is dead,
death is dead, sorrow, dead,
God is dead...
FIRST INTER-TITLE:
In the dark times, will there also be singing?
Yes, there will be singing. About the dark
times.
--Bertolt Brecht
OFF:
Towards the end of the period of totalitarian
control of East and Central Europe, an art
movement named "NSK" appeared in a
country then still called Yugoslavia. Using the
materials of music, theater, and the visual
arts, the NSK collective took on the role of
catalyst, revisiting the repressed traumas of
European history and exposing hidden
mechanisms of ideological domination.
NSK SPEECH:
Tribes of Europe! Democracy has destroyed
order. The ground is ready. Now we can say:
no history has been decided, no nation has
ever won thanks to justice. It won thanks to
pure physical strength. All civilizations are
based on it, all the powers of law will dance to
the sound of arms.
LAIBACH SONG:
World, without dreams, without lust,
without words, all is money.
Death, lust is dead,
death is dead, sorrow, dead,
God is dead... God is dead;
lust - lust is dead,
and sorrow is dead;
everything is dead....
Where is a space, a sacred space,
where my vows will not be disturbed?
Where is a home, a national place,
where our sighs will not be heard?
TITLE:
Predictions of Fire
OFF:
Historiographers are gradually coming to the
realization that history itself is in fact a series
of consensual myths. It's not necessarily a
nation's past that shapes its mythology, but its
mythology which shapes its past. Taken
apart, analyzed and then re-assembled,
history's fragments reveal a cyclical
structure. Within this recurring pattern, the
history of an entire people is actually no more
than a collective projection -- an illusion
shared by millions.
SONG:
Now the sun will rise as brightly
As though no misfortune had befallen in the
night.
OFF:
Ljubljana, a small city in the heart of Central
Europe. In a global return of the repressed,
the concept of Central Europe undergoes a
revival, after 50 years of cold war division.
Laibach, the provincial Habsburg town,
became Ljubljana, the westernmost city of ex-Yugoslavia, and now plays the role of capital
of Slovenia, a sovereign state. In the early
80's, Czech writer Milan Kundera wrote an
essay about the region. Central Europe as a
family of small nations, he said, has its own
vision of the world -- a vision based on a
deep mistrust of history. The people of
Central Europe represent the wrong side of
European history: its victims and outsiders.
All of this century's great Central European
works of art, Kundera wrote, even up to the
present day, can be understood as long
meditations on the possible end of European
humanity.
SONG (CONTINUED):
Misfortune came to me alone,
but the sun shines on everyone...
SECOND INTER-TITLE:
There is no document of civilization which is
not at the same time a document of
barbarism.
-- Walter Benjamin
OFF:
But where, exactly, is this elusive center,
suspended for all of human history between
the mad ambitions of the East and West?
Like art, dominated on either side by politics
or religion, does it finally deserve autonomy
and equal status? For a millennium, Central
Europe was defined by an entity known as
the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The rise of film
and the decline of the Habsburg dynasty
cross in provincial Laibach in 1909. At the
turn of the century, this tiny Slavic republic
has lived for a thousand years under
Germanic rule. Slovene cultural identity is
formed specifically through resistance to
external assimilation.
World War One. The conflict sparked in
Sarajevo becomes the first great cataclysm of
a century which invented global war. The
Slovenian Alps are the largest battle-field of
the eastern front. Slovenians are drafted into
uniforms of two opposing armies -- the
Austrian and the Italian. After the war, a rally
is held in Congress Square, at the center of a
city now officially called Ljubljana. With the
ancient Habsburg regime crumbling, the
formation of a Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and
Slovenes is announced. But Slovenian
dreams of equality within this union of the
Southern Slavs soon evaporate. A more
Balkan reality arrives in the form of King
Alexander Karadjordjevi~. By 1929 he has
established a Serbian royal dictatorship over
the multi-national state, which is re-named
Yugoslavia.
The arrival of the requisite Cardinal, to lead
the second Eucharistic Congress for
Yugoslavia in the Ljubljana stadium built
specifically to host it, represents only one
more in a series of conflicting claims on the
allegiance of Slovenian souls. In April 1941,
German, Italian and Hungarian troops occupy
Slovenia within 24 hours. The victorious
fascists encounter a deeply divided
population. Threatened by Communism,
irritated by the Serbian dictatorship, a sizable
minority welcomes the German occupation.
Arriving from the West, a failed Austrian artist
declares "Let this land be German again."
The largest part of Slovenia is incorporated
directly into the Third Reich, with the rest
going to Italy and Hungary. The new regime
immediately expels tens of thousands of
people, handing their property over to
German settlers. Opposition intellectuals are
executed or sent to concentration camps.
Slovenia has the distinction of being the only
territory directly annexed by Greater
Germany during the Second World War with
its own partisan resistance army. Apart from
Communists, it includes Christian socialists
and other left-wing groups. But in the
classical alliance of religion with power, the
majority of local clergy support the fascist
regime. An anti-Communist Quisling white
guard is set up, and large numbers of
Slovenians are drafted and sent directly to
the Eastern Front. Ljubljana's stadium, built as
a Catholic Church, maintains this role as
Slovenia's archbishop blesses the
proceedings.
QUISLING PROPAGANDA MINISTER:
We are proud that we warmly love our
wonderful homeland, this strange God's
kindergarten in the heart of Europe. And we
are prepared to defend it until the last drop of
blood against the criminal liberation front and
its conspirators, and so in the community of
European nations contribute our share in the
preservation of Christian Europe. Why?
Because on our side is truth, justice, and
almighty God!
RUPNIK, QUISLING PRESIDENT:
Slovenians can be rescued only by a
victorious Europe, and Europe can be led to
victory only by Germany!
THIRD INTER-TITLE:
We believe in the future, and will look for it in
the past if necessary.
--Laibach
OFF:
Forty years after the anti-Communist rally in
Congress Square, Laibach, the first
component part of the NSK art movement,
appear directly at the center of a media
sensation that they themselves have
designed. Although presenting themselves as
the blank-faced robots of history, Laibach
stage a carefully crafted challenge to state
authority. Their German name alone
functions as a provocation in Socialist
Yugoslavia, a state founded on a
mythologized cornerstone of partisan
resistance to Fascist occupation.
CONCERT ANNOUNCER:
Is it possible? Is it possible that someone
permitted that in Ljubljana, first Hero City of
Yugoslavia, a youth group can have a name
why unearths memories of --- Laibach?
LAIBACH SINGER:
Comrade soldiers, friends! The time of peace
here ends!
OFF:
Many conflicting interpretations of Laibach's
first public appearance exist, but very few
saw it as a confrontation of one myth using
the materials of another. As in many
countries, post-war historical amnesia was
state-enforced in Yugoslavia.
LAIBACH SINGER:
The name itself and the sign are a visual
materialization of an idea on the level of an
enigmatic visual symbol. The name Laibach
first appears in the year 1144, as an original
name for Ljubljana with the etymological
meaning "city by the river." It surfaces again
during the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, this
time as an alternative to the Slovenian variant.
The name Laibach appears again after the
capitulation of Italy, when Nazi and Quisling
forces tortured and murdered the people of
Ljubljana who didn't believe in the victory of
the Third Reich. The name Laibach appears
for the fourth time in 1980, when a youth
cultural group bearing this name is founded,
opening up a concrete possibility for the
development of politicized, systematically
ideological art as a consequence of the
influence of politics and ideology. In this
sense the name unites the horror of the
communion between totalitarianism and the
alienation generated by industrial production
in its slave form.
OFF:
But what was the real motivation behind
Laibach's early performances? Was this a
politicized art, or aestheticised politics? Or
were they simply a warning that if you
repress history, it will eventually boil over?
According to homeopathic theory, you can
only cure through the symptoms of an illness.
The immune system must be provoked. How
better, then, to trigger the defense
mechanisms of the state than to hold a mirror
up to that state?
VESNA KESIC:
When actually Laibach first came out in the
larger public space, the first reaction was so-called shock, even a political shock -- which
is the function of avant-garde art, we know
that.
TV SLOVENIA INTERVIEWER:
You step forward as provocateurs, as, one
could say, the number one enemy of the
state. Do you have many followers?
LAIBACH SINGER:
Art is a noble calling which requires
fanaticism. Laibach is an organism whose
aims, life and means of activity of the group
are higher -- in strength and duration -- than
the aims, life and means of the individuals
which compose it.
TV SLOVENIA INTERVIEWER:
Aren't you afraid that someone might one day
spank you because of all this?
LAIBACH SINGER:
Art is a noble calling which requires
fanaticism.
FOURTH INTER-TITLE:
The new art is a new era. It is a movement
independent of other ideologies.
--Kazimir Malevich.
OFF:
By 1984, Laibach and several other
Slovenian groups took the fanaticism required
of art one step further, linking together into a
larger collective body. NSK, or Neue
Slowenische Kunst, would encompass music,
theater, design, architecture, and the visual
arts. They said they were presenting art "in
the image of the state." But, like Laibach,
they didn't seem to have any specific political
agenda. Manifestos issued by the new art
movement said that their intention was to
"revive the trauma of early 20th century avant-garde movements by identifying with them in
the stage of their assimilation into the
systems of totalitarian states."
In 1927, traveling from East to West, Russian
avant-gardist Kazimir Malevich passed
through central Europe, arriving finally in
Berlin for a series of lectures. Unfolding
diagrams translated into German, the founder
of the school of abstract art known as
Suprematism explained some basic
principles. Art, he said, had always
functioned merely as a "toiletry article" within
society. But the new art would have its own,
independent ideology. Although in the West
Malevich is credited with being a godfather of
abstraction, from an Eastern viewpoint it
seems clear that his main intention was to be
the author of a new mythology. Two
generations after the Soviet Utopian avant-garde was destroyed by the revolution it had
helped create, many of its ideas came to life
again in the Westernmost city of socialist
Yugoslavia. Welded together into a simulation
of a state bureaucracy, the groups
comprising the NSK art movement together
created an abstract Suprematist form.
Although using the materials of history and
politics as the bricks and cement of their
state structure, NSK seemed to float free of
any specific doctrine. If the artists of NSK
could be said to have a political goal, it would
be the destruction of historical naivete.
FIFTH INTER-TITLE:
Trbovlje. This town has built us, and we
continue its revolutionary tradition.
--Laibach
OFF:
Nineteen seventeen. Shock-waves of
revolution spread outwards across Europe.
The best-known images of the upheaval in
Russia are already the product of a myth-making art serving the direct interests of the
new Soviet state. In the beginning, the
Utopian rhetoric of the revolutionaries and the
revolutionary ideas of the utopian artists
marched together.
The success of Marxist ideology in the East
inevitably impacts on the Slovenian mining
town of Trbovlje. Hunger, dismal working
conditions, and blatant exploitation of labor
are the norm in the industrial heartlands of
Royal Yugoslavia. But the revolution brings a
message of hope. Strikes and street battles
between fascist and socialist miners groups
soon erupt. Contemporary Trbovlje's huge
coal-fired power plant has the largest smoke-stack in Europe. Laibach emerged from this
machinery in 1980, producing a specifically
industrial form of rock music. Thirteen years
later Irwin, NSK's collective of five painters,
return to the source of the movement's
original motivating aesthetic.
Like Laibach, members of Irwin came from
the factory and mining towns of socialist
Yugoslavia. Using materials like coal, tar and
blood, the earliest Irwin works consciously
reflect their proletarian origins. Although their
role would later evolve, in the early 80's Irwin
took on a specific mission within the NSK
movement. They would be the chroniclers, or
mythologizers -- artists willfully serving the
interests of the state they themselves had
helped design.
FIRST MINER:
It's the cement factory!
CIRIL MAK, MINER:
Maybe these are old paintings, from the times
when Laibach started and they painted from
here in Trbovlje. They are connected with the
miner's life here.
SECOND MINER:
I don't like their style. They have a lot of... I
don't like their boots.
THIRD MINER:
What do we think of the paintings? Fuck 'em.
We don't know what this is all about.
CIRIL MAK, MINER:
The painting as a painting? It's unusual,
because normally a simple person would
expect a painting to represent something
nice, a landscape or something. But these
are... The painter who painted this wanted to
say something. He is practically the only one
who could explain it. I can't get to the bottom
of it.
Laibach as Laibach? Laibach as a music
group is very popular abroad, in Europe. I
saw on TV that they had a concert in Vienna,
and in Prague they were sold out. But here,
in our town, they are not so well known. Are
they only a music group or are they
something more?
THIRD MINER AGAIN:
We think the paintings are beautiful, but look
what the mine looks like. Let's go! Wait, we're
having an interview! Let's go! Good luck!
CIRIL MAK, MINER:
It's difficult to explain. I think Laibach have a
very special style, a way of expressing
themselves through music, it's a kind of
protest against society. Laibach was a kind
of... reaction against society and the system,
the whole European system.
SIXTH INTER-TITLE:
All art is subject to political manipulation
except that which speaks the language of the
same manipulation.
-- NSK Statement
OFF:
By the middle of the century, the machinery
producing power from coal and steam and
the machinery producing mythology from
images of power are manufacturing each
other. The mass reproduction of images on
strips of moving celluloid prefigures the mass
media which will follow -- the beginning of
new, increasingly global, cycles of
manipulation.
ARCHIVAL FILM TITLE:
Visit of Marshal Tito to Trbovlje.
SEVENTH INTER-TITLE:
Cleanse / klenz/ vt (formal or archaic) make
thoroughly clean; make pure: ~ of/from sin. ~
n [C,U] substance that ~ses (eg a synthetic
detergent).
EIGHTH INTER-TITLE:
Our mission is to make evil lose its nerves.
--Laibach
SLAVOJ ZIZEK:
The big question that everybody is asking
himself or herself a-propos of Laibach of
course is: Are they taking themselves
seriously or is this meant in an ironic way?
Well, I think of course that this is the wrong
alternative. Because the automatic
assumption of this question is that if your
attitude towards a certain social system,
system of social values, etc., is ironic then
you are subversive; you take it seriously, you
are a conformist, etc. I think that the whole
point, the basic underlying premise of
Laibach strategy is that -- and this holds not
only for Slovenia but let's say generally, for
so-called late capitalism in general even --
that the system itself has as its inherent
condition of functioning that its own ideology
must not be taken seriously. In other words,
cynicism as today's prevailing mode of
ideology means that it is the positive condition
of the functioning of the system that its own
ideology must by its own subject not be taken
seriously. An ideal subject today is the one
who has ironic distance towards the system,
etc., etc. And the reverse of this is that the
only way, I would even say, to be really
subversive is not to develop critical potentials,
or ironic distance, but precisely to take the
system more seriously than it takes itself
seriously. And I think that this is, maybe, one
of the keys to Laibach strategy.
RASTKO MOCNIK:
Artistic representation of fascist rituals may
even have good general cultural and even
political effects. I think that it is a general
characteristic of the Eastern Bloc that the
confrontation with fascism was never really
made on the symbolic level. It was clear for
the rest of the Eastern Bloc that it couldn't
happen because it was too close to the ways
totalitarianism functioned there, while in
Yugoslavia I guess it happened for a
perverted reason, namely, that the real
victory over fascism, the military victory,
blocked the symbolical confrontation, people
thought it was OK, we defeated the Nazis we
defeated the Quislings, now we didn't have to
worry about them anymore. And of course,
the everyday fascism is always there, without
the Quislings and the Nazis.
SLAVOJ ZIZEK:
For example for the American public, let's
recall a typical town in the South of the United
States in the 20's. We have the official white
law and order, rule etcetera. On the other
hand we have the nightly dark side or it: Klu-Klux-Klan, beatings of the blacks, etcetera.
Now my point is here double. First -- the
transgression. There is nothing subversive in
the transgression of the system. This nightly
suspension of the rule of law and order --
lynchings, beatings of the blacks -- are
transgressions of the system, but
transgressions which are an inherent part of
the system. If you would ask an ideal subject
of the small southern town: where is your real
identity? You can break the official public
law, you will still be considered as one of us.
If you don't solidarize with the Ku-Klux-Klan,
you are excluded. So in other words, not only
does every system include its own inherent
transgression, but identifying with this
transgression -- which must remain
unspoken, concealed -- is the real form of
conformism. And this transgression must
remain hidden, unspoken. Of course, this
goes for the United States. Here, in so-called
'real socialism', we had other forms of these
hidden transgressions. And my point is that
what Laibach is doing is precisely bringing to
the light of the day this inherent transgression
which, precisely in order for the system to
reproduce itself, must remain hidden.
RASTKO MOCNIK:
I think that NSK really came at a good
moment, and made a symbolical artistic
recapitulation of the deep virus of fascism in
Slovenian tradition, as in every other
European tradition. I mean, of course,
fascism only came to power in certain
countries. But it was present everywhere.
And it still is. And you see, in Yugoslavia,
how it is.
NINTH INTER-TITLE:
Conditions of Burning and Methods of
Extinguishing.
FIRE FILM VOICE:
During an attack, we should stay calm and
peaceful in shelters.
The first task of the fireman is saving lives,
then fighting the fire.
To extinguish the fire, the most important
thing is to discover and control its source and
prevent its spreading further. Everything must
be done systematically.
The fire goes in all directions - it spreads on
steps or through windows. In this way, it can
jeopardize its surroundings; this can happen
through sparks or heat, or burning parts of
the building itself.
The area of danger can be very very big,
especially in the direction the wind blows. The
danger area has a circle shape when the
weather is calm, or, when the wind blows, in
the shape of a segment of a circle.
The neighbors, in their own interest, help with
containing the fire and extinguishing it. If it's
not enough that just the neighbors help, then
we must call the firemen. If even that is not
enough, and there is danger that the fire
would spread further, in a way in which the
firemen could be trapped and surrounded,
then everything should be done to place the
firemen outside that area so they can
continue their work. Of course, that cannot
be done until the inhabitants are evacuated.
A fire like this can destroy entire parts of the
city. If people react at the right time with all
these small actions, then you can save your
town and city from total disaster. Educated
citizens can be a very important rear-guard,
which is of extreme importance in defending
our socialist homeland.
TENTH INTER-TITLE:
God's Kindergarten
OFF:
The brutal civil war that has been raging
across the Yugoslav republics since the Axis
invasion is finally extinguished in 1945, with
the victory of the partisan armies. For the
second time in the century, Slovenia will be
ruled from the East. For the next 50 years,
European stability will be enforced by an
unprecedented dismemberment of Central
Europe and the rest of the continent between
the two great Cold War blocs.
CONGRESS SQUARE SPEECH:
The immense world of violence has fallen!
Ljubljana has proved that it is the live heart,
the live, beating heart of an alive, proud,
heroic Slovenian national organism!
OFF:
Arriving from Belgrade, a one-time Austro-Hungarian soldier speaks in Congress
Square. Although the Yugoslav state has
risen intact from its own ashes, its Western
borders are disputed by the leader of the new
Communist regime.
TITO:
Ladies and Gentlemen! Comrades! We want
the entire world to know that Yugoslavia,
which was fighting, doesn't want anything but
that one nation, of one blood, shall live within
the framework of one state!
OFF:
Although Tito's demands are not backed by
force, the old Habsburg port of Trieste and
part of Austria are claimed by Yugoslavia.
Trieste in particular becomes the site of
clashes between military police and Slovenian
protesters. But it soon becomes clear that the
substantial Slovenian populations here, and in
the Austrian province of Koroska, will remain
west of what has become known as the Iron
Curtain.
TEACHER:
Who gave their lives for the freedom of
Koroska?
STUDENT 1:
The Partisans of Koroska gave their lives for
the freedom of Koroska!
TEACHER:
Where, then, is our northern frontier?
STUDENT 2:
Our northern border is there where our
victims fell!
STUDENT 3:
Let's sing a partisan song!
PARTISAN SONG:
Brothers, to the sun of freedom!
Brothers, come up to the light,
the painful night is behind us,
ahead lies a day of freedom!
The painful night is behind us,
ahead lies a day of freedom!
OFF:
Everyone loves a parade. The concept of
politics as entertainment was one of the great
inventions of mass propaganda. Although the
fascist states had been defeated, the
aestheticization of politics lived on in
communist rituals. As for the parades, they
were an assembly line manufacturing the new
history. Traditions had to be invented and well
documented. In its own way, the ideology that
had been planted in Europe's Eastern half
believed itself to be at the beginning of a
thousand year Reich.
THIRTEENTH INTER-TITLE:
Europa
Leben / Tot
SONG:
There is a life
There is a life
There is a life
Before death!
OFF:
There's a Balkan quality to European history.
Long before the springtime of nations and the
contemporary idea of the nation-state, ethnic
groups and rival religions and ideologies of
Europa fought for domination over
populations and scraps of land. If Slovenia
was God's Kindergarten, as the Quisling
propaganda minister proclaimed, then all of
Europe was his playground, dedicated to
refining strategies of domination and
manipulation destined to rule the world.
SONG (CONTINUED):
We march together
We march together
And that's for sure!
TWELFTH INTER-TITLE:
Every new order pre-supposes the existence
of disorder and is already infected with an
inherent virus of future disorder.
--Laibach
OFF:
Although Tito had broken Yugoslavia free
from Stalin's East Bloc in 1948, creating the
world's first non-aligned Communist state, in
the end his "soft totalitarianism" was no more
resilient than that of the other regimes of
Eastern Europe. The crash of a unifying
ideology, 45 years after its greatest victory,
initially spilled more blood in the Balkans than
anywhere else. Less than a year after the
implosion of the USSR and the disintegration
of Yugoslavia, the Irwin group flew to Moscow
with the idea of facilitating communication
between the post-Communist states. The
evaporation of Soviet power had been
characterized by what Robert Hughes called
a "migration of images into oblivion."
Previously, though, Communism had erased
its own large share of history. So it seemed
appropriate to treat the vast stage of Red
Square for what it is: a symbolic zone, in
which various competing myths are
presented -- and sometimes re-presented.
MOSCOW POLICE MAN:
On the square? It's normal, it's a square on
Red Square. It's a painting, the "black
square", yes? Of course, I don't understand
this painting, but I know it.
INTERVIEWER:
Do you know anything about these people
who put the square here?
MOSCOW POLICE MAN:
I just know they're from Yugoslavia.
INTERVIEWER:
But Yugoslavia doesn't exist.
MOSCOW POLICE MAN:
Yes, yes -- Croatia, Slovenia...
IRWIN INTERVIEW, SPEAKER 1:
NSK as a system was established in Slovenia
in the 80's, and this action is the first in which
this system has begun to move, where this
body has moved to Moscow...
IRWIN INTERVIEW, SPEAKER 2:
I would like to make a link. In the 80's, NSK
contemplated ideology in totalitarian states,
and that was a kind of answer to the position
of Eastern Europe within art. In the 90's,
where totalitarian states are disappearing,
and national states emerging, NSK starts to
think about its own state in time, and not in
space. That's why the embassy was our ideal
space, our ideal form.
VESNA KESIC:
In a way you could say that Russia, or
actually even Moscow, all that we see here is
a natural environment of Laibach. And that's
one of the reasons why they are here of
course, because this is a sort of mythical
source of theirs... NSK people are clever
enough that they know that this Western-Eastern communication is not enough to
restructure the entire Eastern world, that
another contact between East and East is just
as necessary as the first one.
MOSCOW TV SPEAKER 1:
There's a new embassy in Moscow. True, it
was not announced in the newspapers, or
mentioned on TV, or anywhere else.
MOSCOW TV SPEAKER 2:
The NSK Embassy is in a normal domestic
apartment on Leninsky Prospect. Still, it has
attracted large crowds of people, including
artists, intellectuals, and punks. NSK
Ambassador Miran Mohar says that NSK
came to Moscow....
RASTKO MOCNIK (EXTERIOR):
NSK has an embassy in Moscow, and they
are actually simulating a state. It's not just a
parody; I think it's deeper. It means that they
are really functioning as a state, as an artistic
collective, so that they expose the statehood
mechanisms that work in everybody of us,
and we should be aware of them if we want to
enter into a state that would not be an
oppressive hat on everybody, but would be
an enlightened mechanism of human
coexistence. So, of course, that's an ideal we
want to achieve, but I think it's good to see
that we are state builders spontaneously. So
its better to do it in an artistic way than in the
real world, where the state may turn around
and hit you, when the moment comes.
RASTKO MOCNIK (INTERIOR):
So that's domination, 'D.' Capitalism relies
upon economic domination, domination by
economic means. Yeah, that we'll learn in a
few years, both you and me. And non-economic constraint is typical of most of the
other systems, and Communism is, let's say,
a post-modern version of them. Now, non-economic constraint can be either
repression, or ideological interpolation. The
systems that rely on repression are not very
efficient...
ELENA KURLANDZEVA:
After they'd removed all our famous and
majestic monuments, such as this one of
Dzerzinsky, the chief and organizer of the
KGB, and Kalinin, our first and most beloved
president, who ruled in Stalin's time, and
Yakov Sverdlov, whom everybody called
Vyashka, and who played a wholly
unimportant role in Russian history, after
they'd removed all of these monuments, they
spent a long time contemplating what to do
with them. On the one hand, this was, of
course, a vandalistic act, it was quite
obviously vandalism, since history may not be
forgotten, no matter what it may have been
like, and on the other hand, it was almost
necessary to remove them, in this moment, it
meant an enormous emotional unburdening. I
think that if Irwin had been in Moscow at the
time it would have been an interesting and
unusual experience for them, since they
experiment with the same principles: to break
down, to build, to break down, to build again,
and in such a way build their own system.
The experience of NSK in relation to the
darkest and most tragic -- and for this reason
also the most interesting -- moments in
history is very important for us at this
particular time, as the dilemma of what to do
with the past is what intellectuals are currently
dealing with. But NSK was the first to
formulate precisely what we can do with our
experiences, that we need no fear them, that
we can harmonize them into an artistic
system.
DEMONSTRATORS CHANT:
Fascism will not win! Fascism will not win!
DEMONSTRATOR WITH MEGAPHONE:
Americans! Listen to the voice of working
Russia! Take your dirty hands off Serbia!
DEMONSTRATORS SONG:
How will we build our country? Brick by brick
by brick...
THIRTEENTH INTER-TITLE:
Art and totalitarianism do not exclude each
other.
--NSK Statement
OFF:
According to theory, the past itself is no more
than an archive of collective memory. By the
90's, the songs of the Great October
Revolution have become the property of an
aging rear-guard.
But if history is in fact a sum total of re-writings through time, what then to do with
this cargo of conflicting myths? Like the
ideologies which inspired them, the early 20th
century Utopian avant-garde movements were
largely organized as collectives --experimental social structures. The Eastern
Modernists believed that the world could be
completely transformed according to
principles of a new and unified aesthetic. If
the state was to wither away, as Marx
predicted, then the Soviet avant-garde would
take on the job of replacing it with a total art-form -- something the Germans call a
Gesampt-kunstwerk. At the close of the
Modern era, with the wreckage of these
utopian dreams strewn across the landscape
like pieces of a crashed airplane, it made a
certain sense to reassemble the mechanism -- to try to determine what had happened.
FOURTEENTH INTER-TITLE(S):
Retro
Retro-Avant
Retro-Avant-Garde
DRAGAN ZIVADINOV:
If the beginning of the avant garde is
romanticism and the avant garde is the legal
successor of romanticism, then retrogardism
is the legal successor of the avant garde.
Historical avant garde is a style, written at the
beginning of the century as a response to the
mimetic art which dominated the world for
2000 years. Retrogardism, of course, is like
the avant garde a style formation in art. Its
method is the retro-method.
LAIBACH SONG VOICES:
This is the end, the end of the world!
OFF:
German Nazism, Italian Fascism and Soviet
Communism all first repressed, then took
direct control of, the ideas and energies of
the early 20th century modernists. Each in
their own way transformed the Utopian
premise of the state as a work of art into an
art at the direct service of the state. Both
Adolf Hitler, the art school reject, and Josef
Stalin, the self-described engineer of human
souls, transformed their societies into vast
ritualistic dystopias. If the state was an art-work, they were its artist; the people were
their material. If the state was a church, then
their role was clear. They were God.
LAIBACH SONG VOICES:
Actor! Actor! Actor!
OFF:
The works of NSK's Irwin collective revealed
fascism and communism as two sides of the
same totalitarian canvas. But they went
beyond that. By deploying a variety world
mythologies together within the same work,
the Irwin artists exposed a broad spectrum of
domination codes. Placing quotations from
Western modernist art and consumer culture
side by side with symbols of both totalitarian
and religious art, they revealed their essential
similarity within the world ideological
constellation. The works of Irwin, wrote
Russian theorist Boris Groys, "had already
appeared, long before the end of the Cold
War in political life, as an artistic rendition of
its end."
DRAGAN ZIVADINOV:
The people around here are either scientists
or ideologists or religious representatives or
artists or philosophers. They cover the global
experience of the planet Earth. Each has its
own rituals: religion has numerical rituals,
ideology fascinating ones, science magical
ones. Art, of course, has to act through the
ritual of obsessive neurosis. Obsessive
neurosis is the field where the sacred
paradox becomes evident. At this point,
assuming numerical or fascinating rituals
means assuming the fields that either
ideology or religion express...
LAIBACH SONG VOICES:
Actor! Actor! Actor!
FIFTEENTH INTER-TITLE:
The only truly aesthetic vision of the State is
the vision of the impossible State.
-- Scipion Nasice Theater.
OFF:
Within the cosmology of NSK's virtual state,
Laibach plays the role of the politicians or
ideologists, Irwin are the state artists, and the
theater group, now called the Cosmokinetic
Theater Noordung, functions as a kind of
church -- a place where obsessive neurosis
is transformed into ritual ceremony.
DRAGAN ZIVADINOV:
The ballet we are preparing will first be shown
on December 11, 1992. It is dedicated to
Herman Poto~nik Noordung, or rather to the
centenary of his birth.
SIXTEENTH INTER-TITLE:
Prayer Machine Noordung
FIRST VOICE IN BALLET MUSIC:
Capital of pain. Capital of pain.
SECOND VOICE IN BALLET MUSIC:
You are free. No charge. No sense. You are
totally alone. One plus one, plus one....
OFF:
Throughout history, art has served power --
be it political, religious, or economic. Viewed
in the light of Kazimir Malevich's observation,
the entire NSK project can be interpreted as
an attempt to reclaim an aesthetic legacy. If
the ideas and artistic methods of the early
avant gardes were exploited by political
forces, creating a kind of ceremonial theater
in the service of politics, then NSK was
reasserting aesthetic control over this work --
while accomplishing an even more subversive
reversal. Politics and religion would not only
remain within the work. It would now be they
which would serve art. This is the "hidden
transgression" at the core of the Neue
Slowenische Kunst art movement. Call it
politics in the service of theater.
ADDITIONAL VOICES IN BALLET MUSIC:
Quickly! Before its too late!
There's no alternative.
It's an emergency.
Moscow is already destroyed.
It's not war -- its peace!
SEVENTEENTH INTER-TITLE:
And what is art? Art is the goal and the end of
progress.
--Irwin
OFF:
Suspended as they are between East and
West, NSK seemingly made a determination:
no one side would ever be adequate. A
comprehensive world-view required that
neither hemisphere be denied, just as neither
be wholly accepted. No matter how intense
the ideological pressure, the truth of their
specific historical condition could only
include both sides of the story. And suspicion
of history must be matched by a profound
ambivalence about any single mythology,
iconography or state system. Only in this way
could an artistic project defined as a "state in
time" chart an autonomous course.
The famous Slovenian architect Joze Plecnik,
active at the end of the Habsburg era, once
said the following: "Of course we have our
own culture, its just that we have to look for it
in Germany, France and Italy." At the end of
a century in which the border between East
and West crossed Slovenia five times, that list
of influences has expanded considerably.
Maybe this is why post-modernism, with its
endless appropriations, came along as
something the Slovenes had already
understood better, as part of their national
fabric. More importantly, in a culture marked
by successive periods of denial of one or
another side of history, Irwin's work
represents a voluntary endorsement of
"outside" influences. In New York, these
influences are once again visible as building
blocks of the recombinant Slovene identity.
KIM LEVIN:
When I walked in here today, I sort of
glanced at one of the paintings on the wall,
and all of a sudden there was the ghost of
Vassarelli as, as a kind of patterned
background on it. And mixed in with that there
are remnants of Beuys, and Malevich, and
Duchamp, and all the kitsch Slovenian
images that Irwin members probably grew up
with, and all the pictures they probably saw in
church... It's not about, so much, the old idea
of what things should look like. And when I
say old, I mean Modern.
Well, I don't think you can tell who did which
work, I mean they're not separate identities.
And they say that they get rid of the idea of
the author. When you get rid of the author in
a country which at the time I first saw their
work and when they first started doing it
several years before that, was a totalitarian,
communist society, it's very different from
getting rid of the author in a society based on
individuality and the individual.
OFF:
Not surprisingly, NSK's authorless distillations
of an East-West cultural schizophrenia have
not always been well understood -- or liked --
at home. And the prevailing political climate
has inevitably played a role in this. Before
Slovenia's first democratic elections, a
perception existed that NSK was producing a
fascistic, or right-wing art. Later, their use of
Eastern modernist images resulted in their
being directly accused of working for the
discredited Communists.
KIM LEVIN:
Well it's hard to say the collapse of
communism makes it less relevant, because
they look relevant in a different way right
now, since the various ethnic groups in
Yugoslavia are... kind of in the midst of a war
and trying to kill each other, and so suddenly
their work, instead of being relationed to the
old politics, I can start looking at their work in
terms of: it's full of conflicting pasts, I mean
it's full of nationalistic imagery, international
modern art imagery, old religious imagery,
and... I mean, it's almost as if they
internalized this conflict that's happening now,
or anticipated it or something.
PARTISAN SONG (SUNG BY IRWIN
MEMBER):
Rifle on the shoulder
in the hands, a machine gun
the foe will feel how bitter it is
to dance with us!
PARTISAN SONG (ORIGINAL, CONTINUED):
Hey comrades! We don't regret
the blood for a free Slovenia!
Now, rifles in the hands, now
let the machine gun sing,
our foe will feel how bitter it is
to dance with us!
EIGHTEENTH INTER-TITLE (WITH BULLET
HOLES):
Fascism under the guise of democracy is the
rule of financial capital itself.
-- Laibach
PARTISAN SONG (CONTINUED):
There's land waiting for us,
there's a burned home waiting...
LAIBACH STATEMENT:
The East collapsed because it blindly believed
Western utopian ideas of the freedom of the
individual. The West, on the other hand,
survived because through its corporate logic
it discreetly introduces a system of
unconscious, collective non-freedom. The
collapse of communism no longer means a
permanent triumph of classical capitalism. In
its core, capitalism has a tendency towards
self-destruction. The fundamental self-destructive substance of capitalism, and its
driving force, is greed. It is a characteristic
of greed that it only appeases its hunger
when it destroys itself.
NINETEENTH INTER-TITLE:
The End of History.
OFF:
Slovenia entered the age of the electronic
camera at around the same time Josip Broz
Tito died in a Ljubljana hospital in 1980.
OFF:
Adopting a Yugocentric view, the global
decline of Communism began not with the
rise of Mikhail Gorbachev to the East, but with
the fall of the founder of Socialist Yugoslavia
in the Westernmost republic of his domain.
Everything else was just details -- including
Gorby's visit to Ljubljana in 1988.
Another type of communist was on the way.
The decline of the ideology of 1917 paved the
way for a one-time Belgrade banker
preaching nationalist fundamentalism.
MILOSEVIC:
Comrades! There is no price, and there is no
force, which could shake the leadership of
Serbia, and the citizens of Serbia, in the
struggle for just aims!
CROWD:
We want weapons! We want weapons!
MILOSEVIC:
I don't hear you well! I don't hear you well, but
I want to give you the answer that what you
require -- soon all the names will be
published! And I want to tell you that those
who used people in order to manipulate with
them in order to realize political aims against
Yugoslavia, that they will be punished and
they will be arrested! This I guarentee you!
OFF:
Elias Canetti has said that each war starts
with pictures. Ex-Yugoslavia's contemporary
horror was started consciously, on Serbian
state-controlled TV. Years before fighting
erupted, a relentless tape-loop of fifty-year-old war crimes -- including the forced
baptism of Orthodox Serbs by a Catholic
priest in Croatia's notorious Jesenovac death
camp -- flickered in millions of Serbian living
rooms every night. It was in Serbia that
Communism made its first -- but not last --
post-modern transition to a televisual fascism.
It began as a return of the repressed. The
century had vanished into the archives, but
the archives came to life again, releasing
stored demons in prime time.
Slovenia reacted to events in the South with a
kind of pragmatic rebirth of national feeling.
Slovenian secessionists were given a massive
boost by the Yugoslav National Army's
clumsy political trial of four Ljubljana
journalists in 1988. A rally in Congress
Square pounded some final nails into the
coffin of Yugoslav unity. The proceedings
bore an eerie resemblance to those of 70
years before, in which the first Yugoslav state
was announced, in a shower of hope and
goodwill.
SOLDIER:
Mr. President! The troop of the Territorial
Defense is lined up in honor of the Republic
of Slovenia as an independent state, and it is
prepared for your review.
PRESIDENT KUCAN:
Our history is honorable and clean. Until now,
history didn't give us anything for free; we
had to work hard for everything. That is why
we still exist.
OFF:
Slovenia's secession from the bankrupt
Yugoslav federation recycled a time-worn
dramaturgy, bringing a familiar cast of
characters and costumes back into the
limelight of history. But there was a
difference. This time, for the first time, the
rituals of the state endorsed autonomy from,
rather than subservience to, an external
capital power. If art can declare
independence, why not the state itself?
PARTISAN SONG:
Through burned fields, all the way to white
Ljubljana,
our army breaks through like a storm!
As long as the brigades are here, who can
steal our land?
On Slovenian land we are master!
TWENTIETH INTER-TITLE:
Ideology relies on rhetoric because it
constructs subjects who subscribe to their
own freedom.
-- Bill Nichols
OFF:
In March of 1989, the year in which Slovenia
took it's first legislative steps towards full
separation, Laibach made the risky decision
to play a concert in the center of Serbian
nationalism: Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital.
Part of the performance was a speech,
delivered in a politically explosive mixture of
Serbian and German.
SPEECH:
Brother Serbs! You are here, from alpha to
omega! You rule this land, and we will not let
you be raped. This I guarentee you! You
believe in God's penalties and rewards! Your
holy towns will remain holy. Saint Sava says
that this land has to be Serbian! Profaned
graves -- we've thought about it as well. But
He believes in attack and honor!
OFF:
Reality has a way of taking its revenge. The
speech, which started by appropriating two
statement by Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic, would end by directly quoting
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain,
the key architect of European pre-war
appeasement of Adolf Hitler. NSK's
"retrogardism" had reached its closest
encounter with the very phenomenon it had
anticipated. In both form and content,
Laibach's provocation in Belgrade that day
was as precise as a chemical formula. It
seemed to crystallize the exact moment of
transition between Yugoslav socialist speech
and Serbia's emerging ethnic nationalist
rhetoric. The first had always stressed
brotherhood and unity among the Southern
Slavs. The cadences of the second had not
been heard in Europe since the dark days of
the thirties.
SPEECH (CONTINUED):
Listen! The violence, the war, the love, and
eternal holiness... Upon these premises we
guarantee you your borders, and that means
peace in our time.
TWENTY-FIRST INTER-TITLE:
Language is a system of orders, not a
medium of information.
-- Gilles Deleuze
RADIO VOICE 1:
Germany calling! Germany calling! We are
continuing our news in English.
RADIO VOICE 2:
But Europe is not the same...
RADIO VOICE 3 (CHAMBERLAIN):
It has become like a disease which has been
long neglected, and a surgical operation was
necessary to save the life of the patient.
RADIO VOICE 4 (MUSSOLINI):
The solution which is now obviously the most
proper is the most simple, the most logical,
the most radical. It's the one that we fascists
are calling totalitarian.
OFF:
Details of the past, transposed as metaphors
to the present, are sometimes capable of
anticipating the future. For the remainder of
European history, Chamberlain's voice will be
synonymous with the weakness of
democracy when confronted with fascism.
LAIBACH SONG:
They were nailing criminals alive to trees
torturing them terribly, gouging eyes out
crushing their limbs, putting their crossed
arms
through wounds
they slaughtered whole criminal families
some specialist for killing guilty children and
women
they cut some heads off with pocket knives
death for death
death for death
death for death
death.
OFF:
The carnage in the East came via the Kum
and Krvavec TV towers, across the ridges of
mountains that had protected Central Europe
from the Ottoman Empire for 500 years.
These images of horror were relayed across
the new Slovenian state to the great
democracies of the West, where they were
surrounded by late-night pornography and
ultra-violent movies. The autumn of the
century had become the season of the
channel changer. Atrocity was replaced by
entertainment, or simulated atrocity as
entertainment.
TWENTY-SECOND INTER-TITLE:
The Heaven Over Trbovlje
TWENTY-THIRD INTER-TITLE:
The Heaven Over Ljubljana
OFF:
When Slovenia became the first target of the
Yugoslav Army in 1991, its network of TV
towers were a top priority. If history
increasingly consists of images, those who
control the images control history. By the end
of the century, the mass rallies of the 30's
were largely unnecessary. With the precision
of a guillotine, film sliced history into 24
frames per second, transporting it into the
future.
In 1983, the so-called "interview" of Laibach
by TV Slovenia defined an early landmark in
what critics of mass media have termed
"culture jamming." Conducted more by the
group than by unwitting journalist Jure
Pengov, Laibach revealed the way state-controlled media work by externalizing both
its methods and its codes. Although
interpretable now as a kind of failed
inoculation, Laibach's action anticipated both
the visual appearance and the televisual
method that would later be used to trigger
dormant nationalism within the Balkans.
LAIBACH SINGER:
Television. Within the industry of
consciousness the television medium is,
besides the school system, the leading
molder of uniform thinking. Television
programs are basically centralized, with one
transmitter and many receivers. No
communication is possible between them.
CHRIS BOHN:
Yeah, I think it was Goebbels who formulated
the equation 'one transmitter, ten thousand
receivers.' The idea is that the transmitter
would cut out any idea of two-way
communication with the receiver, the receiver
was in a passive position all the time, and that
is the pure principle of rock music. And when
you think about what they're doing, they're
not actually glorifying totalitarianism, they're
revealing the mechanism of totalitarianism.
The paradox of Laibach is, Laibach would not
be tolerated in a totalitarian state, because
they're giving too much away. Totalitarianism
only wants a celebration of itself, it doesn't
want a revelation of itself.
LAIBACH SINGER:
We use mainly tools with a manipulative
possibility and with a propagandistic
character, and repressively use the power of
information. These tools are used for
collective consumption, and are the best for
deterring the masses from critical thinking --
for instance film as the most powerful weapon
with the longest strength and the most
powerful influence on the human spirit.
TV SLOVENIA INTERVIEWER:
If I got it right, you use television to challenge
us. Fine, so do we. Maybe, maybe now
somebody will act and repress these
horrifying ideas and declarations here in the
middle of Ljubljana.
LAIBACH SINGER:
We are the children of the spirit, brothers of
might,
whose promises are still nowhere in sight,
we are the black specters of this world below,
we are singing of this mad picture of woe,
we are the first TV generation.
TWENTY-FOURTH INTER-TITLE:
Yugoslavia / Force
OFF:
There's a European quality to Balkan history.
When Europe falls out of balance, it is visible
here before anywhere else. At the end of the
bloodiest century in history, and with the
finest armies and weapons in the world, a
complacent Europe grows accustomed to
watching its own primitive past play like a
violent film safely on the other side of the old
East-West boundary. But more than a
decade after its founding, the warning of a
group of artist from one of Central Europe's
forgotten cities still resounds. Look at the
past, NSK said, and you will see the future.
Look at the Balkans, Europe. You are looking
into a mirror.
TWENTY-FIFTH AND LAST INTER-TITLE:
Epilogue
FINAL OFF:
In the middle of the nineties, the most
successful pop-cultural export from the old
East performs for the first time in the cradle
of democracy. As usual in Athens, reminders
of history don't have to announce themselves.
They are visible everywhere -- like the signs
reflecting an irrational Greek fury at the tiny
ex-Yugoslav republic of Macedonia, just to
the north.
INTERVIEWER:
So, would you call yourselves Nazis?
FIRST GREEK SKINHEAD:
No, we don't call ourselves Nazis, you in the
media call us Nazis. We call ourselves Greek
National Socialists.
SECOND GREEK SKINHEAD
For example, we believe that here in Greece,
there is land only for Greeks.
INTERVIEWER:
Would you consider them a fascist band, or...
SECOND GREEK SKINHEAD:
No.
FIRST GREEK SKINHEAD:
I don't know, yet.
SLAVOJ ZIZEK:
So again, the big question is: are they
fascists or not, to put it simply, what are
they? What is at stake in their act is precisely
to return this question back to ourselves, to
ask ourselves. We have there a certain
performance; how do we stand towards it?
They are not the answer, they are the
question, they are a big question mark on-stage. We must answer it.
END TEXT:
At the close of the millennium, Slovenia
remains an independent and democratic
nation. It is visible on the map, within a
Central Europe uneasily balanced between
the East and West.
As for NSK, the art movement organized "as
a state without territory, a state in time"
recently started issuing its own passports.
They have been used successfully to cross
international frontiers -- including by a
number of citizens of the besieged Republic
of Bosnia Herzegovina, who otherwise have
great difficulty crossing state borders.
Kinetikon
» See document: http://www.bodyproject.net/kinetikon/
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