Lynda Benglis installing Adhesive Products, Walker Art Center, 1971
Noah Kahan
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Misplaced Lens Cap
Sweet Seals For You, Always
EXPECTATIONS
we're not kids anymore.

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RMH
Peter Solarz
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Show & Tell
Cosmic Funnies
todays bird
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Origami Around
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Discoholic 🪩
Mike Driver

izzy's playlists!

Kiana Khansmith
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@amma
Lynda Benglis installing Adhesive Products, Walker Art Center, 1971
Damn that pig has some balls
Cassini | BDiF
Alice Aycock, Project for a Circular Building with Narrow Ledges for Walking, 1976
Simulation does not replace reality, it is not an equivalent that stands for reality, but rather it appropriates reality in the operation of despotic overcoding, it produces reality on the new full body that replaces the earth. It expresses the appropriation and production of the real by a quasi cause.
Anti-Oedipus - Gilles Deleuze & Félix Guattari (via communize-anarchy)
can you explain abhumanism? at least what you think it is?
Yes, I’d love to!
There is a teeny Wikipedia snippet article that I think is quite nice and a good starting summary, but there are some more important points to expand on. The term “abhuman” comes from Gothic literature, and was originally used to describe things like werewolves and vampires, in which bodies were “vestigially human and in the process of becoming something monstrous.” It is about stepping outside the limits of ‘normal’ human experience (I hate saying it like that but unfortunately I haven’t come up with a better phrase yet, perhaps someone can help me?) and becoming something other than what is considered beautiful, desirable, expected. My absolute favourite description is the becoming of the “not-quite-human subject.” The prefix ‘ab-’ by its nature suggests loss or moving away from something. To me, abhumanism is breaching pattern.
For this reason, I find it more useful than transhumanism, which I still take issue with because of its blatant connection to eugenics. Transhumanism is primarily concerned with the idea of becoming posthuman, which I can get behind, but through developing beyond-‘standard’ abilities for humans including intelligence. It proposes the improvement of human experience as things like ectogenesis, limiting offspring by “licencing” people to be parents wherein those rejected are likely those who are homeless, in poverty, dealing with addictions, or are convicted criminals. This implies there would be some push for forced sterilisation/abortion practices, all the while evading actually having to come out and admit that by saying that the WHO will deal with it when the time comes. I will not ascribe to a eugenicist ideology and honestly, I think transhumanism is a bit of a mess as it aligns itself with the same capitalist ideologies that insist on normalcy and productivity. You can read more in the Wikipedia article, which I think does an ok job of summarising some of the problems.
I have always been much more interested in this idea of stepping outside of the limits of human experience, but in a way that includes expressing the grotesque, the imperfect, the ugly and the monstrous which transhumanism is flagrantly against. Transhumanism posits being completely able-bodied as the ultimate human experience, and abhumanism does not.
It is widely accepted that Gothic literature is essential, in that it tends to re-emerge in periods of cultural stress to negotiate social/epistemological transformations and crises. It has traditionally lent itself to that which is un- or underrepresented in nature, and that can include technological imaginings of the body, absolutely. This is why I think drawing this line through Gothic genealogy is also important. Gothic subculture is long, long-surviving and has only become more diverse. Health goth takes pieces from biotechnology and prosthetics (and, yes, unfortunately it cites transhumanism), while also incorporating fetish culture and aesthetics as it informed 1970s/80s goth. Abhumanism is simple in that it doesn’t represent a body politic with the massive implications of transhumanism.
A problem I run into a lot is that, by “trade,” I am an “Art Historian.” I always end up trying to fit my work into the discipline in some way, and that means a lot of the people I share it with usually have zero idea what I’m talking about. I delivered a presentation a few months ago where I talked about how computer error messages and dialogues can help us understand this concept of the abhuman (among other things), and there was someone who insisted he didn’t understand why I was talking about Gothic literature. In the end, he really just found it too hard to transport something he thought was left in the past to what I was saying, and that is a hard thing when talking to academics. But anyway, I’m working on that. I hope this was helpful!
um i have never read a single transhumanist text that advocates eugenics or seen anyone who’s into transhumanism advocating it, so calling bullshit on that, but i can totally get behind abhumanism as well
Zoltan Istvan openly discusses “restricting human breeding.” He talks about depleted ecosystems as though population control is the answer to maximise the world’s resources. He says, in not so many words, “Why should we allow drug addicts to have children?”, talks about women being pregnant “without permission,” mentions children born into poverty costing taxpayers billions. He has no problem advocating selective breeding. Unfortunately, this guy is becoming the public mainstream face of transhumanism. If equal access to the technologies that are supposed to be human advancing is an issue, he is doing the opposite of addressing that.
It’s A Rainy World After All
PHOTOGRAPHY: Expired L.A. by Vicky Moon
"I wanted to shoot at night because I feel that L.A. changes drastically from night to day. There’s this quietness that L.A. has when it’s dark that is really nice," photographer Vicky Moon says. “It’s like you can finally have a conversation with the city without having to shout.”
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Under construction
Stuart Calvin - Featured Ruby 15 artist.
graham stevens - desert cloud„ oslo architectural triennale, 1972
Iceberg
Dibuj a tinta sobre papel 58 x 89 cm 2014
Xulián Nava 1983 Cuernavaca, Morelos, México
Trevor Paglen, Non Functional Satellites, (2013).
Heroes Design - Portfolio of Piotr Buczkowski
Yeong Ja Jung - Exposure on the Mirror (1980)
Images sent to me by EFEDRA, one of my top 5 favorite contemporary art & fashion blogs on Tumblr. Sheer class.
Joel Morisson
Balloon / Junya Ishigami. 2008.