Makery

Artists on the water, a history of pirate ships

In 2011, Teemu Takatalo, Tommi Taipale and Juha Mehtäläinen on the Baltic Sea, as part of Curated Expeditions. © Silakka

In anticipation of “Trans//Border”, a tribute to the French activist and navigator Nathalie Magnan in Marseille, Rob La Frenais takes us on a guided tour of aquatic projects by makers, artists and activists.

Two homeless people in London recently made headlines in the UK by designing a floating DIY “Wendy House”, which floated on the Regent’s Canal. Made with “For Sale” boards from a well-known London estate agent, it was destroyed by the canal authorities after two weeks.

The floating house with the roof made of estate agent boards. © Rob La Frenais

Max Bloom and Stephen Watt decided to build the innnovative floating house after they became homeless, and they were trying to get is registered as a boat, a neighboring canal-dweller told the Evening Standard

It’s a shame it was destroyed. No one knows if it’s a brilliant art statement to use Foxtons signs or if it’s just a light, waterproof material for the roof…

“In civilizations without boats, dreams dry up, espionage takes the place of adventure, and the police take the place of pirates.”

Michel Foucault

Emergency situations

Boats and homelesseness are in the news right now. In Paris, a historic barge designed by Le Corbusier to house the homeless, the Louise-Catherinerecently sunk after the Seine river flooded. Makery has already written about geek piracy, UFOs and sail cargo fair trade, especially through the activities of the Time’s Up Boating Association and the FutureFarmers Seed Journey.

As a sort of preamble to Trans//Border, a celebration of the life of the French cyberfeminist Nathalie Magnan, at Mucem in Marseille on March 16-18, we look here at the history of artists’ floating vehicles, discovering new prototypes and initiatives along the way.

Nathalie Magnan at the helm of Sailing for Geeks, hacktivism on a sailboat by the cyberfeminist in 2004. © Jacques Servin

Historically, two examples have inspired artists working today. One is the Belgian artist Panamarenko, born in 1940, whose work is continued by a group of young artists called the Panamarenko collective. His impossible submarine, the Pahama Novaya Zembla, has inspired many contemporary artists and makers.

In 2009 in Dunkirk, Panamarenko’s “Scotch Gambit”:

The other is Buckminster Fuller, whose innovative Rowing Needles (designed so Fulller could row from his island in Maine) inspired the artist Neal White, who used Fuller’s concept to design what he calls a Rowed Lab Contingency Vehicle—a vehicle designed to be propelled by two human rowers on the traditional sliding seats, as an emergency transmission station to be used in the case of floods or other emergencies.

Sea of control

This convergence between dark ecology and activism was reflected in his previous Dark Places, bus tours of hidden nuclear and military sites, where members of the public don high-visibility vests and conduct “overt research”—often to the consternation of the authorities.

Sketch of Neal White’s “Rowed Lab Contingency Vehicle”. © Neal White

It is also possible that the Rowed Lab could be used to make more overt operations concerning migrants’ floating vehicles with the help of amateur rowing clubs, creating an innovative link between art and sport.

Isabel Arvers, who is co-organizing Trans//Border, drew my attention to a number of activist websites about the sea, including Watch The Med and the Anti-Atlas of Borders: “The sea is an information map full of control.” Artists Ashok Sukumaran and Shaina Anand from Mumbai, India, have also made a number of projects about informal shipping lanes. In From Gulf to Gulf to Gulf, they gave the crews of dhows, plying between the Middle East and India with undocumented cargos, smartphones to use on their voyages in exchange for their home movies, which were the sources of their documentary.

“From Gulf to Gulf to Gulf”, Shaina Anand and Ashok Sukumaran (2013, trailer):

Also in India is Desire Machine Collective’s Periferry, a disused ferry on the Bramaputra river, which “acts as a threshold, the place where all places meet and dialogue about collaborative practices and cultural resistance takes place.”

“It’s My Island”, floating island by Finnish artist Antti Laitinen, in 2007. © DR
Antti Laitinen’s “Voyage” on the Thames was stopped by the police in 2008. © DR

From floating island to nutshell

Like the house made of estate agent’s boards, humor is the one thing that unifies many projects. Finnish artist Antti Laitinen uses found materials to construct different realities. In Growler (2009) he built his own iceberg and towed it out to sea. He is most known for It’s My Island (2007) and Voyage (2008), where he rowed an artist-created island, complete with palm tree, out to sea, and later on the River Thames, where he was apprehended by police. In 2010, his Bark Boat project, developed by the Capsula collective, saw him navigate a piece of tree bark in the Baltic Sea, as part of Curated Expeditions.

“Bark Boat”, Antti Laitinen (2010):

Humor is also present in the work of Yoshinari Nishiki, who designed a portable bike-mounted coracle for “hunting invasive crabs in the River Thames in order to make a better economy than Deliveroo or fried chicken shops.” His TOFU (Technology of Future Utopia) association markets imaginative products such as the “Homing Pigeon Unused Train Ticket Delivery System.”

Australian sound artist Nigel Helyer also designed a series of Sound Coracles featured in his Deluge Ark(ive), which was exhibited in Tasmania in December 2017.

Yoshinari Nishiki’s portable coracle. © Florian Braakman

Le Havre-based artists-designers HeHe anarchically cross engineering boundaries in works such as Radeau de sauvetage, a sail-powered train. They are planning to build an orbital river station based on Herman (Potočnic) Noordung’s early orbital station designs, as both an emergency vehicle and artwork for one of France’s many flooded rivers.

The orbital river station project by the duo HeHe. © HeHe

This kind of transgressive technological boundary-crossing was exemplified in Nathalie Magnan’s Sailing for Geeks, which took place first in Finland during ISEA 2004, then during Fadaiat, where the sailboat passed through Tarifa, Tangier and Gibraltar in 2005. Reversing the path followed by so many floating migrants to the shores of Morocco, the boat, equipped with tracking equipment and captained by Magnan, pioneered many projects which now track the “liquid traces” of the Mediterranean and other contested seaways.

Art or crew?

Moving out of established paradigms of leisure use of water and navigation inspired the Facebook group “Wild Rowing”, which presents alternatives to traditionally organized, competition-obsessed rowing clubs. In 2016, the Times Up Boating Association hosted Row Europe, an activist rowing project on the Danube. However, some clubs are very friendly and take time to teach people of all ages to row. Rowers themselves are very close to the water, understand the currents of rivers very well, and are often very ecologically aware, such as artist/rower Valerie Coffin Price, author (with poet Philip Gross) of A Fold In The River, who sees rowing as “immersion in the landscape”.

The Wild Rowing group has attracted some 360 people similarly interested in art and rowing, and hopes to organize an artists rowing crew to form an 8 (the lead rower of the Oxford vs. Cambridge boat race) for the next documenta in Kassel. Maker-Rowers are warmly invited!

Rob La Frenais, an independent curator and wild rower, is in residency from April 24 to May 16 at HIAP (Helsinki International Artist Programme) in Finland, to prepare the exhibition “Contingency Vehicles – Artists On The Water”

“Trans//Border, the teachings of Nathalie Magnan”, tribute to the theorist and media activist, cyberfeminist, filmmaker and navigator Nathalie Magnan.