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MANIFESTA 10

June 28- October 31
Hermitage Museum and the city of
St.Petersburg (Russia)




 

NOFUTURE?!


A black car is travelling along a motorway with a large neon sign ( like a circus or a casino) on the roof endlessly blinking the question and answer NO?FUTURE! At daybreak, it stops in the city centre. Dressed in a military jacket, the woman driving gets out of the car and heads down the main street beating a drum and incessantly ringing the doorbells on people’s houses. The city is still asleep and despite all this racket only a few concerned neighbours peek out at her from their windows. The woman gets back behind the wheel and sets off for another city.


In the video, our heroine, Jeanne, resolves to wake up the people in the city, in this case Le Havre.(1) Strolling through the city streets, she beats out a rhythm on a drum and rings people’s doorbells without getting any reply. Before we carried out this action, we had no idea how the neighbours would react. They could have been angry or might just as well have decided to join it. The question we asked ourselves afterwards was whether or not we would have had the same reaction in other cities, such as Naples or Saint Petersburg, for example. The other logical question was whether or not we would get the same reaction at different moments in time. Above all, it hinges on how fast asleep the neighbours are. 



Following the protocol for NO?FUTURE!, every night after the video has been screened the car roams the city streets and lights them up with its sign.


During the four months that Manifesta 10 will be in Saint Petersburg, the car will follow  each day  a different route  through the city. There will be 122 different routes in total. These quick, short routes are being planned in collaboration with Dimka Vorobyev  and the group V-Kafe from Saint Petersburg.(2) All the routes will be displayed on a large map.


The car and its neon sign should act as a mobile collage applied to the city—permanently questioning, free of charge—and as a comment on each individual part, each specific situation. The authorship is apparently anonymous and is highly suspicious. Its role is to spark a dialogue that comes from nowhere at a given moment in time. This collage should act as a firebrand.


Now that the car has reached Saint Petersburg, new questions have arisen, such as how it will be perceived in this context and whether or not the English slogan NO?FUTURE!(3) ought to be translated into Russian, without losing the blinking ambiguity that comes from the appearance and disappearance of each of its constituent parts. Advertising slogans in Russia are sometimes left in English (as in other countries), either transcribed into the Cyrillic alphabet or not. I can remember a big sign saying SALE on one of the main streets and BUSINESS CENTRE written in the Cyrillic alphabet. The NO?FUTURE! sign has a touch of a political proclamation, a religious sermon, a fairground pitch or a battle cry about it, but it isn’t actually trying to sell anything—or perhaps it’s trying to settle everything at once.


In the approximate translations, the literal translations and the vague reshapings,  all the raw power of the original seems to get left behind. None of the people approached were very satisfied with any of the translations or equivalents. There were several suggestions: HE(T) 3ABTPA, HET 6YAYWELO, HET? 6YAYWEE!, BbIxoda HET!, HACTAHET…3ABTPA… Another idea was double versions in Russian, with two sides to the sign: нет? будущее! on one side and нет? будущего! on the other. Soviet songs were also suggested:


 

А мы рукой на прошлое: вранье!

 

А мы с надеждой в будущее: свет!

[He waves goodbye to the past: all lies (all bullshit)

 

and we're turning with hope to the future: light!] (4)


To complement NO?FUTURE! one of the final ideas was to use the title of Nikolay Chernyshevsky’s novel Что делать? [What Is to Be Done?] on the other side. Lenin took this title for his 1902 political pamphlet on organising a  political revolution. An exclamation mark could even be added to the end to give Что делать?! [What Is to Be Done?!] However, this title is also the name of a well-known group of artists in Saint Petersburg that has turned down the invitation to take part in Manifesta 10 as they are concerned about the role this event might play in the present political context. In May 1901, though, Lenin wrote another article whose title, (С чего начать?) [Where to Begin?] could definitely be used in a loop to complement NO?FUTURE! in the form of a mirrored question lighting up the outskirts of Saint Petersburg and its more impressive streets, before heading off to another city. Where to Begin? NO?FUTURE! We’ll see.


JORDI COLOMER

Barcelona, March 2014



(1) This city in Normandy was flattened by bombs during the Second World War. Out of the ruins, architect Auguste Perret designed a new, austere, modern town built out of reinforced concrete, dominated by straight lines. Historically, Le Havre is a major port that linked France and America and there are several ferry lines to the nearby English coast. Aki Kaurismäki’s 2012 film Le Havre tells one of the stories that take place in the port: a young illegal immigrant from Africa, Idrissa, manages to make it to England thanks to the help of Marcel Marx, who hides him in a shipping container.


(2) Dmitry Vorobyev (1974), sociologist, artist, activist. Lives and works in St. Petersburg, in the field of urban sociology and artistic reflection on transformation of urban space. Author of more than 20 publications and co-organizer of  a number of  exhibitions “100 Beautiful  Dead” (2012), “Fragments of an Unknown City” (2011), “Underground Skyscraper” (2007).

 V-kafe (Sunday Cafe), an informal group of St. Petersburg activists, sociologists, urbanists, local history buffs, and flaneurs that has been conducting walks (mostly to parts of the city usually ignored by tourists and residents alike) almost every Sunday for the past five years. During the walks, the documentation, studies, reflections and sometimes interventions take place before and after drinking coffee on the street on very unconventional points as a traditional culmination of every v-kafe. 


(3) The title NO?FUTURE! comes from the lyrics to the song God Save the Queen (1977) by the English punk rock band the Sex Pistols:


 

God save the queen, her fascist regime 

 

It made you a moron, a potential H-bomb !

 

God save the queen, she ain’t no human being

 

There is no future in England’s dreaming


 

Don’t be told what you want, don’t be told what you need

 

There’s no future, no future, no future for you…


(4) Thanks to Sasha Galitzine, Elena Yushina, Thomas Engelbert, Tatiana Tarragó, Stanislav Semenyuk
and all the staff at Manifesta for their invaluable support in the form of suggestions and discussions for possible translations.

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Jordi Colomer, NOFUTURE, 2006/2014. 

NOFUTURE, 2014, Car with neon sign roaming the city every day at sunset. 

Production: MANIFESTA 10 / St. Petersburg.

NOFUTURE, 2006. Video-projection. 

HD-CAM. 9’43’’. Production: Spot, Le Havre / arts Le Havre.


Courtesy:
The artist,
Galerie Michel Rein Paris,
Galería Juana de Aizpuru, Madrid, 

Galerie Meessen De Clercq, Brussels. 

Photo: Jordi Colomer, © Jordi Colomer, NOFUTURE c/o Pictoright Amsterdam 2014.


With the support of: AC/E (Acción Cultural Española) and Institut Ramon Llull