Romano - On Some Common Places
Romano - On Some Common Places
Romano - On Some Common Places
Gianni Romano
In a recent special issue of a popular architecture
magazine that was devoted to Milan, two expensive
shops in the city's center were listedwithout any
embarrassment or perplexityas indicators of the
city's liveability. In reality, to paint Milanese liveability in such a pandering way is a perfect example of
the loss of identity of a place while it seems to be
labouring to hold in due consideration the identities
that compose it. More and more, Milan resembles one
of those condominiums imagined by J.G. Ballard.
By now it has become commonplace to say that the
metropolis causes alienation and fragmentation;
evidently, the places where meaningful aggregation
and communication are still possible are elsewhere.
More than a social space, the city has become a Net of
cells which don't meet, without center and without
margins. According to some, the need for virtual
places emerges from this lack, not because of a demand for simulation, but due to the need for communication. The virtual develops as a reaction to a
world that has no other physical realities to develop.
Extraterritoriality
The space that invites activity is the space that contains the present. It is not the case, therefore, that in a
society still sceptical of contemporaneity (and of art,
its illegitimate daughter), a virtual space has been
created, though it's fundamentally extraterritorial.
Inside this space, ways and places find space inside
those interstitial areas which usually deny them access
because they don't conform. Yet, it is exactly in these
middle areas that meanings barter to ransom content
from conformism and banality. These are the places
that give the signal of a diffused metropolis, a dilated
space, a place that is no longer possible to circumscribe within the limits of urban space: a gigantic, extraterritorial metropolis. Transition, exportation, and
communication are possible here. The boundary
between the observer who interprets, classifies, and
orders, and the spectator who is confined to receiving
in a contemplative manner, is definitely weakened
here.
What I augur, however, is certainly not used diffusely
in technology by artists as a healthy cohabitation, the
awareness of still wanting to investigate contemporaneity as a space of endless inventionI always hope
that technology will help to bring imagination beyond
the pure mimesis of a reality that's more and more
difficult to represent.
Space as Container
Perhaps this is only one of the symptoms of the
landscape's change, which is no longer our material
territory, but the area to where communication has
moved. The passage from landscape to mediascape involves a change our perceptive rather than
communicative modalities, and it is the media
landscapethe decentralized place par excellence
that appears to us all the more as a non-place of communication. From the very beginning, new communicative technologies privileged spontaneous aggregations: BBS, community groups, or concepts like
MUD (Multi-User Domains = areas of multiple frequentations), which tried to establish community
dialogues based on common themes and ideas. In
these cases, the space is constituted by those people
who frequent it. The position of these areas of discourse inside a virtual space has opened new roads for
the complex architecture of communication, represented today by the Net.
It appears quite evident that if single spatial unity
becomes increasingly meaningless for us, we will no
longer be able to place and define it as a living/
meeting place; the tendency is to widen the context
because it develops (or cultivates) an awareness of
place. Place, in general, is the true space for the
transmission of content. It's happening in the new
media landscape, but is it not absurd that this place is
revealed through the windows of those small boxes
called computers? The Net thrives on these incongruities, it is an unbelievable mixture of public and
private. Think of the use of the word home page,
which covers the site of a single person or a big firm.
The home page vindicates the personalization of the
message, the singularity of private space made available to the endless communicative potentiality of the
Net. Whereas in our cities, every culture of difference
is waning, the Net forces us to consider them. In this
new space, the two symbolic places between which
the contents expand are, please note, the home page
and the World Wide Web. Which is to say, your own
house and the whole world, local and global. In this
uneasy, but extremely dense context of meanings, it
has become necessary to open the right perceptive coordinates, to cross what seems like the true contemporary metropolis: a place that pushes the subject to
rediscuss every stabilized or normative boundary. In
this place, where you can no longer distinguish
between inside and outside, fragmentation is the
model best adjusted to face reality, forcing us to see
again the traditional way of observing, living, and