|
No Loitering
April 15, 2002
During the last weekend of Marchs the first session
of the 'Hot Summer of Psychogeography' (or Guy Debord's dérive in
2002) took place in Amsterdam. Socialfiction, the organisers, sent
participants on their way from Dam Square with an algorithmic description
of the route. The same experiment was repeated later in the day
in the Bijlmer district.

Dérive through Utrecht last year |
 |
Situationist Guy Debord devised the notion of psychogeography in
the 1950s. It deals with the study of the exact laws and specific
effects of our geographic environment. Psychogeography describes
the sudden change in atmosphere a few metres further along a street,
and the different characteristics of city districts. It reveals
the path of least resistance a person subconsciously takes when
wandering aimlessly and points out the attraction or repulsion of
particular places. One of Situationism's practices is the dérive
(literally: wandering or drifting), a technique of rapid passage
through varied environments. Involving playful-constructive behaviour,
dérive examines psychogeographical effects and is thus quite different
from the classic notions of journey and routing. Dérives weren't
random; they challenged the psychogeographer to use his powers of
imagination to experience the urban environment anew - for example,
by following scents or negotiating a route through Paris armed with
a map of London. What propelled these strollers was not so much
curiosity but political and theoretical motivations.

The Naked City, a map by Guy Debord |
From the 1970s on, the notion of dérive continued to inspire people,
but more at an academic level and rarely as genuine action. The
curiosity to discover all aspects of the city developed within Urban
Exploration, a network that reports on urban voyages of discovery
all over the world on the internet. Its success lies mainly in its
illegal and spectacular character. In a response to sensation seeking,
those within the Dutch organisation Socialfiction.org, headed by
Wilfried Hou je bek (literally: Wilfried Keep-your-bloody-mouth-shut),
developed Generative Psychogeography. This focuses on strolling
around the city according to a generative algorithm (i.e. one that
evolves over time) with the aim of (re)discovering the environment.
The first experiment was a trip through Leidsche Rijn using a map
of Rome. Since this didn't live up to expectations, they soon wanted
to roam a city without preconceived notions. So they devised a method
similar to how John Cage directs music: 'directions but no map'.
John Conway's Game of Life provided the answer. No matter how simple
the rules are, you can never predict how an animal colony will develop.
You can only observe what happens. With that in mind, Socialfiction.org
composed a set of rules that marks out an endless city route and
surprises the psychogeographic stroller as to the logic of the drift-algorithm.
Three experiments were conducted in the summer of 2001. The directions
given to participants were variations on the formula: second right,
second right, first left, and repeat.
|
The Socialfiction.org Algorithm |
Last Saturday's generative psychogeographic walk took participants
from Dam Square into the busy centre of Amsterdam. As it turned
out, a number of groups ended up back at Dam Square after about
an hour. That didn't happen later in the day in the Bijlmer district,
where groups used the same formula to follow routes. Since Bijlmer
has no clear street pattern, different routes took people past the
same point repeatedly. The number of words to be seen was one striking
difference. While the city centre is littered with ads slogans and
all sorts of do's and don'ts, Bijlmer is wordless. All they found
was a sign on an out-of-the-way plot that warned: No Loitering.
But wasn't that the point of the whole session? Some participants
filmed and taped proceedings. The questionnaires completed afterwards
are now being processed, and the findings will soon be posted on
the Socialfiction.org website. Similar experiments are planned in
other European cities this summer to unravel the structure of these
cities. Here follows a short report from one participant: My route
was determined by repeatedly taking the second turn right, first
left, and first right. By following this rhythm, first amongst the
Saturday fun shoppers in the centre of Amsterdam and later in the
emptiness of Bijlmer, you experience the finely structured maze
of city-centre streets retroactively. It's not unusual to wander
through the city. Your chosen route is no different or ridiculous
from that taken by anyone else. The Bijlmer lacks all raison d'être
in terms of streets and lanes. The second right takes you back to
the park you've already passed on all sides, first along the cycle
lane and then the gently curving footpath.
 |
Sebas Veldhuisen
Translation: Billy Nolan
more information: links psychogeography
Socialfiction
Psychogeografie
Derive
Nothingness
Game of
life
Urban
Exploration with Google
|