I am Lucky, by Leonid Kaganov
Former factory
Deep Theatre, Lugansk, (Ukraine)
The twin
drivers of human progress during the 1800s – the Science of the Age of
Enlightenment and Productivity of Industrialisation – broke down at about the
same time. The endpoint of Science was the atomic bomb, that pinnacle of
scientific achievement that brought in the option of wiping out entire cities
with the push of a button. Efficiency and productivity were taken into
unintended territory by Nazi Germany, when they were applied to ethnic
cleansing and forced labour camps – transforming the unclear blob of humanity
into an efficient mass, and cutting away the 'excess'.
Both of
these events showed just how far the human being had departed from rationality
and ethics in a quest for progress by which just about anything was justified.
When they both collapsed suddenly, there was now this giant spiritual vacuum, a
lack of direction for the human project.
Happily, we had a neat replacement, neo-capitalism, with its key objective of resource exploitation and growth coupled with an illusory endlessness, perpetuated by a mechanism of manipulative fabrications commonly referred to as consumerism, promising to fill that void with escapism, fantasy and sensation. These two drivers are our new gods, (combated, albeit, in retrospect, a bit hopelessly, and at times itself appropriated by its big brothers, by a broad movement called ‘humanism’, which took shape in arts and culture).
Happily, we had a neat replacement, neo-capitalism, with its key objective of resource exploitation and growth coupled with an illusory endlessness, perpetuated by a mechanism of manipulative fabrications commonly referred to as consumerism, promising to fill that void with escapism, fantasy and sensation. These two drivers are our new gods, (combated, albeit, in retrospect, a bit hopelessly, and at times itself appropriated by its big brothers, by a broad movement called ‘humanism’, which took shape in arts and culture).
But,
naturally, these two prongs have weaknesses. And what happens when the party’s
over?
There are
two ways artists can address this spiritual gap, a quickly looming train wreck.
They appear, on the surface, to be very similar, and they often involve going
back to basics. Who needs consumerism
anyway? We can have Butter-bread! Together! We can share it with each other!
Quick, break it in half and give it to your neighbour! Just like we used to
when we were kids! Isn’t this beautiful?
So what’s
the difference?
Critical thought. I claim.