>> Dec 2007, off sight

PROGRAM was invited by Bao Atelier (Beijing) to participate at 总站 :: DEAD END during the Second Shenzhen and Hong Kong Bi-city Biennale of Urbanism & Architecture 2007.

Guy Debord once said that “everything directly lived has moved into representation.” What we experience first-hand, we’ve already learned about second-hand. What we know as real, what we feel is authentic is but an after-image, a format of reality mediated by the very world we build around us. So thorough has been our mediation globally that different places across the globe begin to seem oddly similar. At a glance, you’re in Paris, look closer and you’re in Shenzhen, close your eyes and its Cairo. With 30 minutes of Shenzhen, we will bring you through, above, and around the world – what does the world look like from Shenzhen and what does Shenzhen look like from a distance? In the next 30 minutes, your surroundings may seem present, distant, dissolved, surreal, and strangely familiar. Welcome to your window to the world.

The experience

The ideas that we aim to fold together in this pedicab experience are related to our perceived ability to define an urban experience in Shenzhen while situated in Berlin. How does one understand and design an experience for a distant physical location without being there? According to the American historian, Anthony Grafton, “ninety-five per cent of all scholarly inquiries start at Google.”

Google, and its subsidiary, Google Earth, has constructed for us a massive architectural feat – a tunnel linking Shenzhen to Berlin, trafficking information in the form of live and archived sound, images, video and text. Distance is no longer perceived, and through this tunnel, we experience a digitized version of Shenzhen – Shenzhen 2.0, perhaps.

The passenger on the pedicab will be given a cell-phone, and throughout the trip, strangers from around the world will call, offering bits of information that was found while Google-searching “Shenzhen.” Tourist information, financial stat-sheets, blog entries and all other manner or information will be conveyed as stories, rumors and hearsay – providing, in effect, a parallel or live experience of the randomized data that one receives on Google’s searches. The stranger may also engage the rider in conversation: “What do you see now?” “Are you cold?” This conflation of distances and information with a live urban experience will culminate at the surreal gates of Window of the World, a theme park close to the Biennale site that similarly fuse these criteria, illustrating the surreal, dislocating effects of our contemporary world.

Collaborators: Mary Chiu, Liu Xiao
Special thanks to: Joshua Kauffman, Gwendolyn Floyd, Kari Rittenbach, Elaine W. Ho
*all Shenzhen photos from BAO Atelier



FILED UNDER archive, NEWS