Rationalizations and Reflections

22 04 2009

The moment has come when the logos, whatever condition they’re in, have to be cut loose from the cozy confines of my desktop and sent out into the wilds of the blogosphere.

MacNab argues that in each disaster there is pattern of energy that is its essence– that is in fact characteristic of each disaster’s human element (all disasters have them–we are such messy solipsists as a species). Numbers, especially, have deep psychological and cultural resonances, even as they simply mark what is present structurally in the disaster or entity.  The figure that I chose to embody the disaster was, oddly, a mathematical probability graph. It is dissying possibility as well as a tacit acknowledgment of its role as a phantasm: nothing can really graph the disaster as it’s happened– no probability curve, no spreadsheet is up for it.  In most of the images, I’ve chosen to figure this abstraction as a monster: Leif Erikson and Odin each get to take shots at it. It also reminded me of a post-industrial incarnation of the beasts that attack in Ragnarok, the end of the world in the Norse Eddas.

It is striking graphically: primary colors for the boxes and a tripartite structure of rigid squarish branches and more triangular branches. MacNab writes that “In the third, the tension is resolved and the lost unity is restored,” and, as in dialectical thinking, it is composed of the prior one and two, and yet more than it. Three often apears in these images: a figure (human), the monster (the probability graph) and some graphic element, be it an additional picture (foreclosed house, etc) or just a shape.

A further pattern I’ve noticed in my designs is a fondness for gradients. Although I am still getting thehang of Adobe Illustrator after a couple years away from it, I found the gradient a useful way to convey visually and affectively what I thought the disaster was about: the opposition between hard and fast rules (the graph monster) and the areas of gradation in our strange late capitalist lives. It was also a rather effective way to evoke both explosion (nuclear, perhaps) and implosion (black holes, even) in the same circular pattern. MacNab doesn’t make use of gradients, but I presume that’s because she’s primarily working as a print artist: there are certain limitations when working in a printed medium. One of the parameters of this assignment was that the logos be easily disseminated and intuited.My images are actually rather easy to replicate (I could assemble the raw bits in less than ten minutes, usually) and intuit and yet, I hope, there is a feeling of both dread, of a choice made to “defend” ones territory, even against the absurd and terrible abstraction of the credit default graph. I didn’t limit myself to the confines of print media but instead thought about what would via an electrate sensibility.

I have two favorites from this batch of logos and one chosen, final product.  The first is the the rainbow gradient protester-cum-copper with the default graph in the background. I feel that this juxtaposition of images captures what Klingmann deemed as essential in branding experience in casino architecture: the visual icons of the disaster. In my case, a term came into usage about half way through my blogging experiment (my disaster is still on going!): the saucepan revolution. The images of protesters and a cop, nailed with chunky fermented dairy product, have, if my blog stalking is any indication, reached  “icon” status. The placement of these images on a square, shifting background from warm, fiery colors to cool colors at first glance oversimplifies the possible subject positions one can take up in the disaster– participant (warm color) and enforcer (cool color): however, I feel that the gradient challenges this simplistic, but intuitively potent construct.

The second favorite is the one I’ve chosen to go with. Its much simpler and cleaner, in terms of design. In it, Odin is tangled up in some plant or snake life–I like the ambiguity as it could be either/both: Odin was impaled in a tree for several days while he learned runes AND he fought snakes during the Norse end of the world: Ragnarok. During Ragnarok, volcanoes explode, things flood, a battle that is all but certain defeat for the gods is waged, anyways, because that’s what norse gods do: yes, the norse gods die, although the survivors on earth (about two of them) restart human civilization.

Even if this allusive baggage isn’t immediately intuited from the image– although Icelandians and probably Scandanavians in general would do so–the image of a man tangled, knifing his way through, speaks to the subjective experience of the economic crisis as well as ironically commenting upon it. This is the great “battle” of our times, only it is fought against mathematical models,  indifferent banks, and lots of red tape. The simple positioning of “us” and “them” becomes less possible, although the urgency to take up “arms” (pots and pans!) does not.  The Credit graph lurks in the back like a further snakey, viney thing to be taken contended with. The “third” figure in this image is the yellow–>black radial gradient. Yellow was chosen because, first, it was the only primary color not present in the graph. The radial itself also evokes images of an implosion or explosion: the limits of human production and experience as well its implied subsequent nadir. It also, as MacNab argues, is a circle: it is both everything and nothing, unity and void. As noted elsewhere in my blog, I think that this sums up the contradictions that the present economic crsis has laid bare.

None of this is to say, however, that I planned any of this like this in as cooly formulaic terms as laid out. For me, what was most important was the confrontation between a single figure and a strange monster, even as the use of a graph and a mythological figure pointed to the impossibility of such a cofrontation in “real life”.





Ragnarok: snakes for all your apocalyptic needs

21 04 2009

ragnarok-redux





Logos, Takes 2, 3, 4

21 04 2009

valhalla-foreclosure-with-signvalhalla-foreclosureswords-and-longboats





Saucepans and Credit Swaps: The Logo, attempt 1

19 04 2009

The Saucepan revolution meets Credit Default Swaps...sauced





Melting down: metaphor versus metonym with a moving target like capitalism

16 04 2009
An Economic indicator from Iceland, c/o the Economist

An Economic indicator from Iceland, c/o the Economist

And, if you really, really crave information and graphs about Iceland’s impending economic doom, savor this link from the Central Bank of Iceland:

http://www.sedlabanki.is/?PageID=548

Inflation: Iceland

Inflation: Iceland

Iceland's international investment position

Iceland's international investment position

All of this reminds me of a recent podcast from Planet Money–NPR’s excellent show about the global economic crisis. Wednesday April 15′s podcast was called “Godzillions on Parade”. Thesis: Big numbers are impossible to really perceive or conceptualize–arguments about the global economy and potential debt loads of countries and companies who accept help are doomed to pointlessness in small part because we just cannot get our minds around these numbers: http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2009/04/hear_godzillions_on_parade.html.

There is much the same problem inherent in trying to represent Iceland’s recent disaster in ways that actually speak via images in an immediate, visceral, intuitive way….





Currency, Graphs and other ways to Concretize Capitalism

16 04 2009

One of the challenges in attempting to blog this disaster is that, unlike death, fires, genocide, disease, or even alien abduction, it doesn’t leave much of a trace of damage itself– at least immediately. When a credit default swap goes badly, there isn’t a smoke signal released into the sign in the shape of a foreclosure sign. Although folks are astonished with which the speed Iceland and the global economy tanked–a matter of weeks, really–as it was tanking there was no material sign of damage: most global currency isn’t even backed by a precious metal anymore. An obvious way to communicate the effects of the global economic crisis is to do it through metaphors–many images were along the lines  of the earth’s surface unraveling like a skin peeled from fruit. Not what literally happened and yet, the world is apparently unraveling– did begin to unravel rather quickly.

To continue the inventory–Captialism, the archive of images:

Credit default swaps are actually incredibly complex transactions and the images that the math mad geniuses use to represent them (to themselves!) are a wee bit tricky. What’s beneath is an image of that expresses the probability that a debt will be defaulted upon per go round of rate adjustment. My knowledge of sequences/series and probability petered out in 2002, so I can’t explain it intellectually. I am, however, on a purely (stupidly) aesthetic level, struck by its tripartite structure, its tidy branching and proliferation of what is presumably pain and distress. It’s almost as if dialectical thought and rhizomatic thought attempted to merge themselves graphically: many have abandoned the idea that history has a teleology like Hegel’s ultimate truth/being/whatever, but the idea that two things could merge and produce something greater than the some of the parts– fundamentally altering what was formerly contradictory, is still seductive. Perhaps part of its sexiness is its ostensible and often bull-headed simplicity as a model.  By contrast, rhizomatic thought cannot orient itself with respect to top, bottom, hierarchy, etc, as as such this ordered, linear model doesn’t begin to capture it literally, although its branching evokes it for me, if only because I realize that this model is overly simplistic and leaves out any number of complex trades and trading contexts that would make this graph more meaningful but less communicative.

The Mathematic Agony and Ecstasy of Credit Default Swaps: modeling magic

The Mathematic Agony and Ecstasy of Credit Default Swaps: modeling magic

Iceland’s currency–the kronur– wasn’t always worthless, though. It was once perfectly respectable multicolored paper that circulated throughout a country with the population of roughly half of Austin, TX, slightly less than my adopted hometown of Lexington, KY and almost exactly the population of my actual hometown of Huntsville, Alabama (395,645 for the metropolitan area).

Below is a smattering of Iceland’s currency, prior to its redesign: Iceland's currency, prior to redesign.

And,  at immediate right, is some of the newly designed 5,000 kronur note. Given the current rate of inflation– 17.1% as of November 2008– 5k krona notes just don’t have the pizzazz they used to:

5000_krona





Inventory of the Disaster: Retread

15 04 2009

Earlier, I attempted to deal with the images that Iceland, itself, as an imaginary location brings up like “ice”, “glaciers”, and “geysers” . However, in the attempt to make this logo more specifically about the disaster itself. So, in an attempt to be more systematic about this– temporarily, of course– i’m going to list images and feelings and energy patterns/flows associated with different aspects of the disaster, both as “narrated event” and “node in a network of flows of capital, cultre, human-ness, whathave you”.

Disaster: Scene/Location in Culture– Iceland

—Norse–viking settled Possible images: of Vikings– Teutonic blondes with horned hats? Images of Norse Gods: Odin, Freija, Thor, Loki, Valhalla, anything from The Ring Cycle.

—Contemporary: see film depictions earlier in blog: strange depressive welfare state with anxieties/angst over future prior to boom, post boom. Images of young folk at bars with older citizens “on the dole” are literally the scene of the disaster

Contemporary/political:

—Citizens took to the streets to protest the government’s complicity in the neoliberal banking policies that landed the tiny nation in this mess. But they did so with kitchen implements: pots, pans, food, spoons, etc. It has become known recently as the “saucepan revolution” or the “kitchen revolution” depending on what media source you consult. Pots and pans have the added benefit of providing the visual/conceptual pun on  “domestic”: the problem is “domestic” (versus global/international) as well as “domestic” in the home sense– a movement of Icelandic women have argued that this crisis was brought on by men and masculinist economic policies and thus women should have a shot at running the country

–Citizens also burned a lot of things.

–Citizens also tended to drape things with pink fabric, especially macho national heroes

Disaster: Scene/Location in Space

What I’ve already discussed in the blog: Iceland is cold, icy, snowy, geyser studded, and often dark.





The Future: it IS murder

15 04 2009

When they said, “REPENT!” I wonder what they meant…Perhaps Cohen ought to repent this fabulously awful music video. But it captures the sort of affect I feel when I think about the future of the economic meltdown, in Iceland and on the Planet. It’s more than just the lyrics though:

a. Cohen’s voice: like Dylan’s, it’s nothing to write home about. It’s remarkable for its lived in, limited quality. It’s the reedy wheezing sound you’d expect a centuries old monk to make answering a question about eschatology.

b. the back-up vocalists: it feels as if there wasn’t a moment during the mid-eighties to the present that Cohen hasn’t performed without lovely, mo-townish backup vocalists. (Exception: U2 was his backup band in “Tower of Song” during the excellent “I’m Your Man” tribute concert.) They make it sound prettier, but over produced– self consciously stylized.

c. the visuals: it’s really, really painful for me to watch Cohen get his groove on.  But there is something about his suaveness that is comforting.

Bonus: First We Take Manhattan. High Eighties Cohen really is the sound my soul makes when it worries about global economic policy.





Wonkette : Get Ready For Sexy Teabag Parties Round The Clock And Coast To Coast!

15 04 2009

Wonkette : Get Ready For Sexy Teabag Parties Round The Clock And Coast To Coast!

Posted using ShareThis





Bark Cat Bark: Iceland

12 04 2009







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