BLACK
SITE SPECIFIC
by
Ben Davis
Trevor
Paglen, "Black World," Nov. 16-Dec. 23, 2006, at Bellwether Gallery,
134 Tenth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001
Radical
geographer, muckraking author and outlaw artist, San Francisco-based Trevor Paglen
has, in the past, presented installations such as 2005s "Code Names"
at Diverse Works in Houston, a display performing the formidable task of gathering
in one place the codenames of all known classified government programs. Hes
also participated in agitational stunts such as releasing robotic "drones"
outside of Bechtels Bay Area headquarters, programmed to deploy leaflets
exposing the corporations criminal activities to passersby. Paglens
works touch on the far-out regions where reality becomes indistinguishable from
paranoid delusion, and they have taken him from the fabled Area 51 in the Nevada
desert to the wastelands of occupied Afghanistan.
His
latest project, "Black World," on view at Bellwether gallery, grows
in part out of a years-long collaboration with journalist A.C. Thompson, recently
culminated with the publication of their book Torture Taxi: On the Trail of the
CIAs Rendition Flights (Melville House, Sept. 2006), which documents much
of the factual background behind the works on display. Paglens obsession
with government conspiracy has put him ahead of the mainstream media: His project
of tracking the CIAs secret network of airlines and "black site"
secret prisons was begun well in advance of the Washington Post exposé
earlier this year detailing the practice.
The
installation at the Chelsea gallery is something of a puzzle, requiring a certain
amount of background to make sense of the artifacts on view. At its center are
a variety of large C-prints, capturing mysterious rows of planes parked on tarmacs
or inscrutable buildings in the desert. The images have a distorted quality, resulting
from being shot from extreme distances, but also giving them an unsettling, haunted
air. The same applies to a series of blurry video loops depicting similar subject
matter.
Each
work is tagged with a precise, informational title, as one might expect from an
artist/geographer -- for instance, one reads, Unmarked 737 at Gold Coast
Terminal / Las Vegas, NV / Distance ~1 mile / 10:44 pm (2005). Aside from these
title clues, it falls to further investigation (I had to call the artist) to fish
for the incriminating specifics -- in this case, that this cryptic image of men
entering a shadowy plane at night depicts a flight that ferries government workers
to jobs at secret facilities.
Most
sinister -- and impressive -- in this regard is a lone photo titled Salt Pit,
Shomali Plains Northeast of Kabul, Afghanistan (2006). Using the testimony of
torture survivor Khalid El-Masri, European flight records of known CIA planes,
and Google Earth, Paglen was able to travel to Afghanistan and locate the "Salt
Pit," the most famous of the CIAs secret detention facilities, ten
minutes outside of Kabul (in an Alternet interview, he describes how he knew he
was on the right track when he passed a goatherd wearing a Kellogg, Brown &
Root ball cap).
This
drama is not visible in the photo, which features a strip of sand and a low building
surrounded by barbed wire at the foot of a gravelly hill. In fact, what the image
exudes is impenetrability, both physical and intellectual. Paglen claims to be
the only person known to have photographed the Salt Pit and, rather than sell
the image to a news source, he has chosen to produce the photo in an edition of
one, an enforced scarcity that reduplicates the clandestine nature of the subject.
There
are two other types of work in "Black World." One consists of displays
of signatures photocopied by the artist from records gathered during his research
into the network of dummy civilian corporations set up by the CIA all over the
U.S. to charter aircraft. Each page displays multiple signatures side-by-side,
showing identical names clearly printed in different hand-writings -- indexes
of real operatives masked behind a fake identity used to skirt the law.
The
final piece in the Bellwether show comes from Paglens parallel investigations
into secret Department of Defense activities. In a long case displayed on one
wall, the artist presents some 20 patches once worn by personnel as part of secret
programs, sent to him by various contacts inside the military.
The
symbolism of these artifacts is fascinating and esoteric. They betray an almost
nerdy love of wizards, aliens and ghosts, and are replete with ironic Latin inscriptions
(one reads "Si Ego Certiorem Faciam. . . Mihi Tu Delendus Eris," --
"I could tell you. . . but then Id have to kill you"; another,
"Gustasus Similis Pullus," translates as "Tastes Like Chicken.")
An accompanying booklet has Paglen decoding the insignias oblique references
to their affiliated government programs: According to the artist, a dragon refers
to a codename for infrared satellite capabilities, while the oft-recurring sigma
symbol stands for the number zero, representing stealth capability.
The
murky, difficult-to-decipher nature of the "Black World" installation
as a whole is not accidental. It doubles the works content, forcing the
viewer into a position of investigation that mirrors Paglens own process.
At the same time, this obscure approach reflects the conundrum of all projects
that directly pose activism as art -- in what way does working through the art
gallery, a venue best served for selling esthetic luxury goods (and the works
at Bellwether are priced from $1,000 to $20,000 for the Salt Pit photo) serve
the cause? With his lone-scholar-against-the-system approach, it must be said
that Paglens interventions are better fodder for the esoterica-obsessed
intellectuals of Cabinet magazine (where, in fact, he will shortly publish a piece
on the patches) than for building a mass movement against a government that has
made electrocution, starvation, humiliation, simulated drowning and other terrifying
practices a routine part of the way it does business.
But
there is an answer to this too. In conversation, Paglen expresses some indifference
to the question -- "If they want a political intervention, people can read
one of my articles or attend a lecture. Thats not what this is about."
To laud him for his commitment as a political artist thus misses the mark -- the
concern that underscores the diverse displays at Bellwether, from the unseen torture
behind the fragmentary photographic images, to the unseen schemes behind the signatures
and insignia, is the limits of what can be artistically shown or known.
Read
this way, what Paglen presents is a kind of negative political art. It portrays
the esthetic capture of politics, even when it is very committed, as a kind of
hallucinatory dead end. It makes the argument that theres a level beyond
which representation cant take us, and that only something else -- investigation,
organization or protest, it falls to the viewer to decide -- can take on.
BEN
DAVIS is associate editor of Artnet Magazine.