kagablog

July 29, 2007

Filed under: art, Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 10:09 pm

1333.jpg

April 26, 2007

Propagandizing Propaganda: Interview with Aleksandar Macasev

Filed under: Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 12:23 pm

by Steven HellerJanuary 17, 2006
goebb1-portrait.jpg
The Joseph Goebbels(TM) project, the brainchild of Aleksandar Macasev, is a multimedia attack on the information and disinformation glut that uses the infamous Nazi minister of propaganda and enlightenment as its poster child. Dredging up the Nazi past is always charged, but plastering Belgrade’s streets with posters featuring Goebbels is asking for trouble. Here Macasev (who was graduated from the faculty of architecture, University of Belgrade, in 1998 and now teaches interactive design at the BK Academy of Arts in Belgrade) addresses the issues raised and the responses received. More information on Macasev’s work can be found on Black Pixel.

This project was part of BELEF 05 (Belgrade Summer Festival), visual arts selection (curated by Anica Tucakov).
goebbels-sits.jpg
Why did you launch the Joseph Goebbels(TM) project?

I had been thinking a lot about the nature of mass communication and contemporary media culture because I had been working for a number of advertising agencies. The conclusion I reached (and it may seem obvious to some) was that the truth has become totally irrelevant in the present state of mass-media culture. The first obvious thing that came to my mind was propaganda. And when you say the word “propaganda,” it is highly possible that the image of Joseph Goebbels will pop into your mind. I like to use icons, so I decided to try and use the icon of propaganda—Goebbels—to say something about media. First I made a small web art piece called, “Unstable Portrait of Joseph Goebbels”, which was exhibited at the WebArt festival in Podgorica, Montenegro. That piece drew some attention and it was included in a selection of artwork for Hz magazine, so I figured I could pursue the idea further, this time in the form of an advertising campaign–the very means that I am talking about.
josephgoebbelsrantsbeforega.jpg
Goebbels may not be known to many in the current generation. Why didn’t you base your iconic image on Hitler himself?

I think that Goebbels is becoming more known to the current generation because of the 60th anniversary of the fall of fascism and the movie Downfall. That movie is very important for my concept because all the famous fascist villains were represented as human beings.

Why not Hitler? Hitler’s iconic image will always be remembered as an ultimate 20th century villain. No more, no less. Joseph Goebbels was the media mastermind, not Hitler. On the other hand, I was fascinated by Goebbels: an ultimate opportunist. He was a left-wing (almost Communist) activist at the beginning. Realizing that he didn’t need a weathervane to tell which way the wind was blowing, he switched to a much more plausible option: the fascist one. And he was a totally non-Aryan type: crippled, refused from the army service, black-haired and brown-eyed. But he had a hypnotizing voice of a messiah–spooky, but fascinating. You can easily recognize the type in many of today’s politicians and media personas.
goebbelsqwe.jpg
By elevating Goebbels as an icon of information and disinformation, might you be creating a hero rather than a villain?

I am not trying to achieve either of the above, but part of the point is that I can create a heroic icon out of a villain, by using the power of an iconic advertising image. You place a convincing huge outdoor image in front of the masses, presented in the form of a positive campaign, and people are likely to perceive the image as heroic. But I think the majority of the people who saw the campaign still perceived him as a villain. My attitude in the whole project was to avoid dichotomies: villain-hero, truth-lie, good-bad ? I am just offering imagery and a broad statement. Joseph Goebbels is much more about the Joseph-Goebbels state of media culture and not about the man himself.
goebbels1-speech.jpg
This is where I get concerned about unintended consequences. Advertising plays on ambiguities and the public’s lack of long-term memory. When you say you are able to make a hero out of a villain—even to show it can be done—doesn’t that mean that some people will succumb to the myth? Isn’t this a little like creating Frankenstein’s monster?

Well, all this seems like playing with fire, and I was very aware of all that when I started it. I will say it again: it is not about the particular man; it is about media culture. He is just an iconic carrier of the idea. People are very often fascinated by Nazi iconography, but they are ashamed to admit that. Talking about monsters: Joseph Goebbels was a monster, according to the historical documents. Are we capable to look in the face of the monster and recognize ourselves and the society we live in?
goebbels-fire1.jpg
Do you really believe that the way propaganda was practiced under Goebbels is the same as what is practiced today in politics, government and commerce?

I don’t personally know what kind of propaganda was practiced during Goebbels’ era, I can only read documents and see images (“history” is just a bunch of documents and vague personal memories that I don’t want to accept as the ultimate truth). But based on my reading and my experience with the present media culture, I believe propaganda is more or less the same now, as it was then.

The famous Goebbels’ quote, “A lie repeated a thousand times becomes a truth,” can be applied to any contemporary mass-media activity. Let’s say that you, many times, see a soap advertisement that will make your skin look younger, and it is made of purely natural ingredients. After a while, you may want to buy it and try it. You will not be upset if your skin doesn’t get younger and if you discovered that the soap is made of synthetic chemicals. You bought the idea and that’s enough. The actual truth/lie has nothing to do with it. To paraphrase Goebbels, “A message repeated a thousand times becomes the truth.” Which means that everything and nothing is truth. Ergo–there is no truth.
goebbels-fire1a.jpg
Be honest, can this kind of art/design project truly have an impact on people? Isn’t commercial branding such an integrated part of life that any attempt to critique it in this way is futile?

Contemporary art in general has very little impact on the broader audience. Mass-media and graphic communication, however, have a greater impact, and that’s why I try to use it in art. I think the greatest and broadest impact has the political activity in epic tones broadcasted to the millions. A series of performances by Marina Abramovic will move a lot of art lovers, critics and theoreticians. The latest Diesel campaign, however, will move a horde of fashion victims, trendy teenagers and some common people. The speech of George W. Bush about ultimate evil coming from the east will move half a world (ok, a third of the world). My intention with Joseph Goebbels was activist in nature, but basically it was artistic.
goebbels-fire1ab.jpg
What are you hoping to accomplish? Are you saying that people must be aware that they are being lied to, or is there a deeper message?

The power of the media is such that people often believe what they are told. That’s the power of media. You cannot see with your own eyes or experience personally every single detail about some news that you have heard or seen. In theory, you can choose to believe in it or not by using your common sense. My message is that there is no truth or lie. Everything is just a story or a message and you can choose to believe in it or accept it. Healthy skepticism for a healthier life.

I remember my professor of geometry who once said: “Don’t believe everything I tell you. You have to try it yourself.” I was shocked: “But, geometry is a very exact and unquestionable discipline,” I said. “Exactly. Especially because of that.” So I can say to all of you now: “Don’t believe me: See for yourself.”
To paraphrase Goebbels, “A message repeated a thousand times becomes the truth.” Which means that everything and nothing is truth. Ergo–there is no truth.
Okay, I understand where you’re going, but I still wonder what your moral responsibility is. Is it to make people aware they are being duped and that all hope for truth is lost? Is it to stimulate people to be more proactive in what they accept as truth and to fight for greater truth? Or are you simply being kind of nihilistic in saying here it is, do what you will?

The bottom line of the Joseph Goebbels project is: Joseph Goebbels’ methods of propaganda were very efficient and are the most remembered. There is always a moral responsibility in communicating messages to the broader audience. I have taken a relatively morally indifferent position, if such a thing is possible at all. Indifferent in terms of not accepting black/white view of the world. I have offered imagery and challenged the audience’s moral and common sense. The imagery is a portrait of Joseph Goebbels made of randomly chosen media company logos, logo of the campaign that is four loudspeakers that resembles Nazi iconography and the title which is Joseph Goebbels, a sort of a trademark. I will quote disclaimer from the Joseph Goebbels website: “Joseph Goebbels deals with nature of media and mass communication and it doesn’t intend to propagate principles of Nazism or any similar ideology. If you get a different impression after visiting this web page, that’s your problem.” Responsibility of the consumer.

Before the campaign started, we wrote a letter to the Jewish community in Serbia stating that this is a work of art and it has nothing to do with promoting Nazi values. The answer was: “We are not for it and we are not against it.” Good enough.
goebbels-fire1abc.jpg
Now that the Soviet bloc has turned capitalist, what has changed in terms of the propaganda?

Let us clear something up first: we talk much about propaganda, but it is actually about media culture. Propaganda has always very negative connotations, while media culture has not. Media culture uses almost all the principles of propaganda.

It is interesting that you ask me about Soviet bloc, the ultimate nemesis of the American democratic system. As I see it, capitalism and communism are forms of economic system. But capitalism is more “economical” phenomena (a natural one I may add) while communism is more political and ideological. This is very roughly considered because borders between politics, ideology and economy are more than blurred.

Russian switch from socialism to capitalism changed nothing in terms how media culture functions. Only imagery is not so “totalitarian” any more. But let’s go back to America for a moment. When you have lost your “ultimate nemesis” you had to invent a new one: evil coming from the Middle East. I find Michael Moore’s point very interesting: American government is controlling masses by distribution of fear. If I would be a paranoid conspiracy theorist I would say that Michael Moore is an invention of United States government. The best way to control things is to invent them.

I grew up in former Yugoslavia, the only non-aligned country in Europe respected and accepted both by the east and the west. Maybe that’s why I like to take a cozy position of not accepting any of the poles in good-evil or truth-lie dichotomies. During the ‘90s, we faced some sort of totalitarian parody and its very obvious media manipulation. Unfortunately with very bloody consequences.
1521.jpg
What has been the response to the project? And has it surprised you in any way?

Oh, there are a whole variety of responses to this. Since Joseph Goebbels was a media campaign, I appeared on a lot of television and radio interviews. The Serbian media did not know how much to praise the work or how harsh to be. The funniest thing was the random old lady asked for the opinion for national television. She said in a low voice “Isn’t that a German? Why didn’t they put up some of our people?” She probably thought of some “lost” war criminals that the Hague Tribunal is trying to catch. Art critics had the most boring response. There is a discussion on a Serbian designer’s online forum about this being totally confusing and stupid. “Why did he use Vodafone and Microsoft?” I was always more interested in opinion of the journalists of some non-cultural pages and of common people.

I was walking the streets with a friend taking photos of the posters and billboards around the town. There was one guy, probably my age, commonly dressed, completely average looking. He was peeling the posters off the wall. I was taking photographs of him and he didn’t react to it. My friend asked, “So, how do you like it?” He said in a completely indifferent voice, “For god’s sake this is Joseph Goebbels and my family name is Ishmael.” I was stunned. That was actually my first real experience with the ultimate villain-victim relation as is Nazi-Jewish. Like a Stockholm syndrome. I thought that we (note that I say “we” although I am not Jewish) have a capacity after 60 years to maybe try to look at the historical narratives from other perspective. Maybe I was wrong.

I had an interview in a chief police station because of a pile of complaints from disturbed citizens. The inspector (a woman) was very polite. At the end of interview, they all became my fans. I told my American friend I was called into the police station, and he was shocked because he thought you can never be investigated by the police because of your art in democratic countries. I just wonder what would have happened if I had put the Joseph Goebbels image in Times Square?

Reactions from abroad were much more affirmative. I’ve received a lot of fan mail from the United States. Some people in the Netherlands were intrigued by Joseph Goebbels, but when I met them they were not quite sure if I could create a public campaign in the Netherlands the way I did in Serbia. A Slovenian journalist used the news about my artwork to point out the radical media restrictions of the new Slovenian government. Israeli designer Dan Reisinger, my idol as a teenager, was fascinated and he took some of the posters with him to Israel. That meant a lot to me. Recently the artwork was printed in Print magazine. It was on the cover of the article “Belgrade confidential” about Serbian design.

The valuable part of the whole project is actually the reaction. And to see the difference between my intention and what really happened. The whole media clipping will be published on www.goebbels.info in February or March 2006.

this interview first appeared on aiga journal of design

October 15, 2006

goebbels

Filed under: Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 9:56 pm

October 14, 2006

goebbels

Filed under: Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 5:55 pm

October 12, 2006

goebbels

Filed under: Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 5:59 pm

October 8, 2006

joseph w goebbels

Filed under: Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 11:39 am

Joseph W Goebbels

“Joseph Goebbels TM” is an art project in a form of media campaign that addresses the issues of contemporary media culture and mass communication. The basic premise of the project is that the truth became completely irrelevant in the present media situation. Ergo, there is no truth. Or to paraphrase the infamous Nazi minister of propaganda, Joseph Goebbels:” Thousand times repeated message becomes the truth”. Dr. Goebbels is considered to be the father of the modern media culture.
The project used the mass-media to transmit the message about the mass-media itself. It was a fully fledged campaign on the streets of Belgrade (billboards, postcards, posters, web site, TV/radio ads…). It raised a lot of attention and even earned it’s author an interview with the local authorities. Outside of Serbia it was widely praised though.
The complete documentation (photos of the campaign, campaign items, press clipping…) could be seen on the official web site of the project www.goebbels.info

“Joseph W Goebbels” the latest incarnation of the project addressing the outrageous George W Bush’s propaganda. And particularly the ABC’s documentary “Road to 9/11″ that used the infamous tragedy for the sole purpose of giving the excuse for the war in Iraq. Blood and death as a presidential campaign. Democratic organizations in America will use Joseph W Goebbels image for the campaign against blatant pro-Bush propaganda. The usual media logos are replaced with logos of ABC, Disney, FOX and other pro-Bush media.

More of the “W” news to come.

October 7, 2006

kagablog welcomes aleksandar macasev as a contributor!

Filed under: Aleksandar Macasev — ABRAXAS @ 10:40 am

Aleksandar Macasev

Aleksandar Macasev is a Serbian artist of the younger generation, growing up during last the breaths of the former Yugoslavia and studying and emerging as an artist during the last European dictatorship. He turned out to be a model of an artist who transcends the usual guild limitations, working in the fields of design, web, media, advertising, mass communication and the usual art practice. According to his own words contemporary art became an idle entertainment of the bored. It is enclosed within dull limits of the art system and it has lost any possible edge (if art needs an edge at all?). Stephanie Skirvin said about him in Print magazine :”Aleksandar Macasev’s work ranges from the deceptively simple to the highly political.”
Presently Macasev lives in between Serbia and the US.
www.the-mighty.com - AM’s official web page
www.aleksandarmacasev.blogspot.com - diary of the visual culture worker

contact: mighty@the-mighty.com

Born in Becej, Yugoslavia on 3 August 1971
Graduated from the Faculty of Architecture,
Belgrade, Yugoslavia in 1998
Member of Art Directors Club , Belgrade
Member of Applied Artists Association of Serbia
Works in a variety of visual culture disciplines
(graphic/web design, contemporary art)
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
web
Steven Heller, an interview with Aleksandar Macasev, for AIGA, 2006
magazines
Flash Art magazine, October 2006
STEP magazine, 2007 STEP field guide, Alice Twemlow (in preparation), 2007
PRINT magazine, European Design Annual, LX:III, May/June 2006
PRINT magazine, Stephanie Skirvin, “Belgrade Confidential”, LX:I, Jan/Feb 2006
Wallpaper magazine, Sean Tichar, “Serb You Right”, No. 73, November 2004
books
“360≠100 Contemporary Designers”, Mike Dorrian, Liz Farrelly (in preparation), 2007
“Anatomy of Design” book by Mirko Ilic, Steven Heller (in preparation), 2006
“Innovative Promotions That Work: a quick guide to the essentials of effective design”,
Lisa L. Cyr, ROCKPORT, 2006
WORK EXPERIENCE
2004- 2006 Teacher of interactive design and history of design at the Department for Computer
Art&Design, BK Art Academy, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro.
2004 Art director at BBDO advertising agency, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro, web designer at
MassVision agency
2001-2004 Art director and web designer at Saatchi&Saatchi advertising agency, Belgrade,
Serbia and Montenegro
1999-2001 Web designer at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro
1993-1998 Designer for ITAKA cultural NGO, Becej, Serbia and Montenegro
SELECTED LIST OF INTERNATIONAL CLIENTS
SWATCH, Playboy, Mirko Ilic Corp. NY (US), Karlssonwilker NY (US), Deloitte, French Cultural
Centre, Belgrade (Serbia), Merkator (Slovenia), Cinemania (Slovenia), Janjic GMbH (Austria),
CHARTAMEDE foundation, London (Great Britain)
FULL LIST OF EXHIBITIONS, AWARDS AND PUBLICATIONS in the following pages
Í
1841 Columbia Rd NW, #404, Washington DC, 20009
+1 202 341 9087
mighty≠the-mighty.com
address:
phone:
e-mail:
www.the-mighty.com

EXHIBITIONS
2006
Small Town Horror, Postcard Project, Gallery of Cultural Centre of Belgrade
Zentropa Balkan, print, CONFIDENTIAL exhibition, Kocka, Belgrade
Joseph Goebbels™, print, Belgrade Design Week
GRIFON, biannual graphic design show, Belgrade
In The Name of…, print exhibition, BELEF festival, Belgrade
2005
Joseph Goebbels™, art campaign, BELEF festival, Belgrade
Human After All, ambience set, Lose Yourself exhibition, Cultural Centre of Belgrade
No Name expo of graphic design, Cacak, Serbia
2004
(f)art collection screening, OUT VIDEO festival, Jekaterinburg, Russia
RROSE PIXEL presentation, SERBIAN FAGS IN SLOVENIA exhibition, Ljubljana, Slovenia
COPY & WASTE (web art), the Webart exhibition in Podgorica, Montenegro
Unstable Portrait of Joseph Goebbels (web art), Webart exhibition in Podgorica,
Montenegro
GRIFON, biannual graphic design show, Belgrade
2003
(f)art collection screening at the DAMASQUINE gallery in Brusels, Belgium
BLACK PIXEL V.1.00 and KONTROLA.CO.YU web artwork, October Salon in Belgrade,
Serbia and Montenegro
R(r)OSE PIXEL (queer version of the BLACK PIXEL) presented at the Queer Weekend
(Coming out with nick II), REX, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro
Selja (web art), 4th Fair of the Short Electronic Form, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro
2002
Danse Macabre (Video/web work), festival VIDEOMEDEJA in Novi Sad, Serbia and
Montenegro
Wedding and XXXS (Web art), 3rd Fair of the Short Electronic Form, Belgrade, Serbia and
Montenegro
2001
Sponsor (Web art), ARTISTS FORBID - Novosibirsk exhibition, Russia
Folie a deux (with Andrej Dolinka) and “adZ v.2” (Web art), CALL ME SARAJEVO (video
festival), Sarajevo, Bosnia
FAST FORWARD AND CONSUMING IMAGES - exhibition of paintings in TERRA gallery in
Kikinda, Serbia and Montenegro
INHABITED SPACE - spatial intervention which took part in the Belgrade summer festival
(BELEF), Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro
“:)” (chat performance), CONVERSATION (International exhibition at the Belgrade MOCA),
Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro
The Best of serbian Advertising (Web art), 2nd Fair of the Short Electronic Form, Belgrade,
Serbia and Montenegro
2000
Window (an ambiental work) and “Trace of desire” (the body action), the 4th Yugoslav
Biennial Of Young Artists, Vrsac, Yugoslavia
Products (mixed media), the 5th International Biennial of Miniature Art, Gornji Milanovac,
Yugoslavia
Link (An ambiental work in urban space ), Multimedia project, “Srbija 2000”, Belgrade,
adZ (v.1.00) (Web art) 1st Fair of the Short Electronic Form Belgrade, Yugoslavia
Consuming Images, Exhibition of paintings, Becej, Yugoslavia
1999
Inhabited Space, (An ambiental work in urban space ), Becej, Yugoslavia
1998
Accumulation, (author of the exhibition of the young artists), Becej, Yugoslavia
Mapping (ambient work), the 3RD Yugoslav Biennial Of Young Artists, Vrsac, Yugoslavia
Corrections, (mixed media), the 4th International Biennial of Miniature Art,
Gornji Milanovac, Yugoslavia
1997
Spatial Resemantizication, installation exhibition, Becej, Yugoslavia
1996
War island, exhibition, Belgrade, Yugoslavia
Project X, video exhibition, Belgrade, Yugoslavia
1995
The Body, exhibition of paintings, Becej, Yugoslavia
1994
Metelkova Street, project exhibition, Birmingham, Zurich, Bruxelles, Ljubljana
1993
Exhibition of posters, Becej, Yugoslavia

AWARDS:
2005
Award for the best campaign design (Mirko Ilic’s exhibition in Belgrade), PR society of
Serbia
2004
1st prize for COPY & WASTE at the Webart exhibition in Podgorica, Montenegro
2003
1st prize for the Ideas Campus web site at the ArtTech III festival, Pancevo,
Serbia and Montenegro
Awards for web design and digital photography at the XPOSE festival, Pancevo, Serbia
and Montenegro
Awards for vector graphics and flash animation at the Art tech IV festival, Pancevo, Serbia
and Montenegro
2002
Special award for web design at the FINLANDIA “On ice” competition, Belgrade,
Serbia and Montenegro
2001
Rex award for “adZ” (v.1.00) (Web art) 1st Fair of the Short Electronic Form, Belgrade,
Yugoslavia
1996
The 1st prize at the architectural competition for the river island on Danube in Belgrade,
Yugoslavia
1994
The second prize for total design for Yugoslavian EASA (Europian Association of Students
of Architecture), Belgrade., Yugoslavia
1993
The 3rd prize on the student competition for total design for the YOUNG ARCHITECTS
CLUB, Belgrade., Yugoslavia
4
www.the-mighty.com