Nannette Jackowski, Ricardo de Ostos

Six hours and 30 minutes upriver from Manaus, the capital of the Brazilian state Amazonas, we reach our destination: a once-glamorous town, now abandoned and infested by fire ants. The only inhabitant is a Japanese man. Soap opera blasts from a TV in his hut as he explains how one should unfold a hammock to avoid the ants. At 10pm the power generator shuts off, leaving only darkness and the progressive myth of the Amazon – a populated forest connected by drones and long-distance technology that lives as a dream-resource reservoir for the dream of preservation itself. 

In the morning our expedition into this technological environment continues. Moments of an Indian shaman wearing a sleeveless Panasonic t-shirt intertwine alongside tourist-friendly swimming with dolphins and a gigantic river filled with trash. The notion of natural resources and how gate-cities operate is renewed by Manaus’ dedication to religious processions and its belief in Santa as a valued asset. 

Inspired by a non-linear view of reality in shamanism and an increase in ADHD patients, Shahaf Blumer designs a clinic in Manaus whose space addresses the notion of psychedelic as a form of treatment. As an alchemist and mad scientist Stefan Jovanovic recreates the call of rain and floods in the Amazon basin. Utilising people as participants he generates a sonic environment that reverberates in the slow burn of an instrumental totem. Alvaro Fernandez fever dreams of beaming the Amazon Theatre broadcast to his ‘Digital Operas of the Amazon’ at the Royal Geographical Society in London. In a desolate ant-infested city northeast of Manaus, Gordon Gn Guanlian designs a blood bank outpost that operates as a node-giving lifeline to humans in need of transfusions. 

What is a resource? If the alchemical world operated as proto-science in its confusing clash of obscurantism and truth, would preservation be a proto-environmental phase? A transition stage? A moment of shift? If so, it is necessary to re-search for what the bricks and mortar of this transformational world could become.

 

Unit Staff

Nannette Jackowski

 

Ricardo de Ostos

 

Thanks to our visiting critics 

Manuel Jiménez García 

Apostolos Despotidis

Chryssanthi Perpatidou

Giles Bruce

Javier Castañón

Mollie Claypool

Oliver Domeisen

Laura Barbi

Kasper Ax

Marianne Mueller

Gian Luca Amadei

Abel Maciel

Roberto Bottazzi

Nate Kolbe 

Charles Walker 

Alice Labourel 

Yael Reisner 

CJ Lim 

Tyen Masten

Ellie Stathaki

 

Alex Kaiser

Jiwon Lee

"Life... is an enormous lottery: the prizes are few, the failures innumerable." -Machado de Assis
Perhaps so Amazon is.
However, there will be no more tears or failures, for the new El Dorado of 2080 provides an alternative framework to what we believe was unseen, or untouched.
Thanks to the scanned data-scapes provided by Angel systems, a network consisting of 100,000 gold detecting birds maneuvering over the land of abundant resources, coupled with the native Mythologies of deep Amazonia - our future generations would gamble on these goldscapes of knowledge and literally, gold.
The combinations of previous knowledge from our Amazonian ancestors and the newly provided data from these Angels result in a new reality - no longer basing itself on rootlessness, but lampooning one of today. As such, we face an enriching new phase of tomorrow.