stephanie syjuco

 

PROJECTS 
 

NEW!
Black Markets
Mis-Productions
Artworlds
Working Relations
Technologies
> Multi-User Interfaces
>
Nonspecific Product Units
> Comparative Morphologies

> I Love Technology and Technology Loves Me
> Planned Obsolescence

Unnatural Territories

 

PROJECT INDEX

SMALL PROJECTS

STATEMENT

CV

REVIEWS

CONTACT

 

   


 

 

 

Planned Obsolescence
2000

Temporary vinyl lettering in Esperanto, on the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Theater, corner of Mission and Howard Streets, San Francisco.

Part of the "Word Art Project" curated by Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and sponsored by Novellus Corporation.

 

Commissioned by Novellus Corporation on the event of their annual product exposition, the "Word Art Project" invited six artists to create text-based public pieces along the theme of "communication," and were affixed on the sides of the event building. Novellus is a Bay Area company that specializes in copper-based communication cables, an alternative to fiber-optic cable material.

"Planned Obsolescence" is a sentence in Esperanto, a late-19th Century invented language. Composited from basic Romantic language structures, Esperanto was supposed to break down the language gap between nations, serving as a utopian bridge between cultures and countries. The irony today is that it is, at best, a quaint remnant of a frozen moment of idealism.

Commercial communications technologies today wrap themselves in the lingo of utopian connectivity, touting that it brings the world together, glossing over the myriad and complex differences that exist within the world and keep societies more separated than ever regarding issues of economics, race, and class. Being able to "talk" to someone today across long distances via all the hi-tech implements (some of us) have access to does not necessarily mean communication has occured on any level at all. The English language, rather than being supplanted by a strictly hybrid language like Esperanto, has become the dominant global communication language of today.

"Planned Obsolescence" brings up issues of barriers to communication and meaning. Written in a language that almost nobody speaks (and yet it looks vaguely familiar, almost Spanish-sounding), it was a giant billboard in an obsolete language. Taken from a 1960's basic primer on Esperanto, the phrase translates into English as, "By means of our flying buses you will reach any part of the world"--a rather outmoded and outdated statement today, and, I project, as outmoded and outdated as current catchphrases that swirl around today's communications technology will be seen in the future.

back to top