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Indybay Feature

Another Contribution to the Dicussion of the Artists' Role in Gentrification

by Anonymous
A response to "A Critique of the Critiques" by the original author of "Rock Beats Paper."

First of all, it’s encouraging to see that my article caused at least enough of a stir to warrant its own critique, because that was half of its purpose. I hope this conversation doesn’t end up isolated between myself and a single critic, especially one that doesn’t seem to actually be affiliated with Rock Paper Scissors despite their defensive posture. In order for meaningful action to be taken against the forces that drive gentrification, we must have a clear understanding of how it works in the first place.

To clarify, I did not and have never suggested that the sole responsibility for gentrification or development lies on art, artists, or the art scene. In fact, gentrification is a large-scale, long-term project of capitalism, the starting point of which could be traced back to the large infrastructural projects that devastated neighborhoods (like the freeways and BART station in West Oakland, for example.) The maneuvers of capital and politicians advanced this process step by step, until we get to where we are today—and of course, they aren’t finished by a long shot.

My critique is not that the blame should be placed squarely upon the artists, but that artists do share the responsibility to a certain extent. Anyone that wishes to refute this may just as well take it up with Rock Paper Scissors themselves, who take credit for this in their statement, albeit in a more positive light. And it’s not to be understated, the enthusiasm the city and artists share for revitalizing poor neighborhoods, an enthusiasm that continues to be shared even after the veil has been lifted showing us all what it truly means: an assault of capital. As a response, the editor of my original piece offered the explanation that even “the activities of a radical project can at times be recuperated” but this is to miss the point as well. To build a “creative culture” that is not fundamentally and intrinsically connected to a fierce antagonism with the forces of domination is not a radical project.

This is what it means to pick sides, as I wrote in my original critique. The way that the art scene is used by developers to attract capital is precisely because it is ambiguously political. You can be a co-op, or a horizontal collective, your gallery can host so-called “radical art,” and despite all of this, it is not perceived as a threat. Just look at Banksy—his edgy, oh-so-political stencils are auctioned off for tens of thousands of dollars. In the end, the aesthetic of revolution doesn’t so much bother the capitalists as does an actual inclination towards revolt.

And what would fighting gentrification be, if not revolt? Certainly not just surviving, not limping along, following the flow of displacement away from the metropolis. My intent has never been to discourage solidarity from those facing eviction, in fact I clearly call for that solidarity. To expect such a call to be in jest simply underscores the desperate nature of the situation. But evictions have been attempted before, sometimes successful, and always worth it. Behind barricades and during standoffs, comrades and accomplices can find each other and build bonds that will outlast any single struggle. I don’t need to brag about my personal accomplishments, but we can see across the Bay Area for the past several years many different attempts to prevent evictions of all sorts; whether it’s squatted houses or plazas, wild spaces or urban gardens, or just helping a family stay in their home.

And of course, we cannot limit ourselves to simply defending what already exists, revolt must generalize, and take an offensive position. But for now, we must start from where we are: being absolutely crushed. As I stated before, in order to take action, we must clarify the processes at hand, reveal our own complicities, in order to better sabotage their functioning. The time to act was yesterday, but it’s better late than never.

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by Evicted from the Mission in 2013
"...revolt must generalize, and take an offensive position..."

Sounds nice. Sounds real nice. You are telling short on specifics. What you write here reads like every single issue of the Bay Area anarchist publication FireWorks, where there is a detailed, often cogent analysis of the housing catastrophe -- and never a hint of any clear concrete proposals for action, just a standard issue clarion call for the the downfall of capitalism, which is apparently to be accomplished by rock or two through a window or two during some sporadic fleeting episode of urban rioting.

Frankly bagging on this art space looks like externally projected middle class guilt. Anti-capitalist awareness is what it does -- and when it does nothing, it isn't anti-capitalist, it's just another person with a harmless opinion. Three hundred thirty million plus-people in the US have an opinion about something. If your supposed anti-capitalist opinion has no practical, real world component then it is of no more use here than baseball stats. And by practical and real world I don't mean being a cheerleading squad for work-within-the-system fans of the Democratic Party.

This is impressive, in a wholly negative sense; there are probably more than a hundred people in the Bay Area who like to shoot their mouths off about what uncompromising anti-capitalist revolutionaries they fancy themselves to be, and in the context of a multiple year long market-engender housing crisis in the Bay Area, and all the rich opportunities for subversive collective action this presents, these ostensible insurrectionaries have absolutely failed to assert any kind of ongoing, credible independent action, other than microscopically small efforts that are invisible to friend and foe alike in society at large. The philosophy of these people appears to be that everything is terrible, and somebody else should do something about it.

by Author
I'm sick of this. I've written so much these past years, so much to try and contribute to an understanding of the situation so as to better act upon it. But people don't actually read shit.

Immediately your comment comes to mind, criticizing me for not proposing anything concrete in terms of action despite there being a really plainly stated call to fight the eviction. Something that, in this cesspool of a "radical milieu" is taken as a joke by the person this post is in response to, because no one actually wants to do anything.

Not to mention the Rock Paper Scissors Collective themselves, who expressed some vague radical sentiments before dropping out of the conversation. Being "radical artists" is nothing more than a quirky hobby for them, because if they took it seriously then they would be using the next 30 days to organize a defense, not just throwing their hands up in defeat. RPSC at the very least picked a side, here. Just not the side of revolution.

More and more do I feel that this is a lost cause. People will only get out of this what they want to hear, whether it be some unintelligent insurrecto-rant for the above commentator or a plea for more political lip service which is how RPSC has publicly interpreted it.

by Evicted in 2013
I am not just trying to be Debbie Downer here. I am trying to goad you, or goad someone, into taking the kind of collective high-profile direct action that should have commenced several years ago, and that can still happen today.

Presumably, you are in the Bay Area. I am not. I cannot do jack. I got evicted out of the Bay Area two years ago. Among all the people that you know who shoot their mouths off about the Oakland "Commune", the Invisible Committee, groove on riot porn from Greece and similar matters, is it not possible for you to find five or six people -- five people? six people? -- who are not just posers and gasbags, and who will commit to an aggressive common efforts focused on the market-relations driven housing and gentrification crisis in the Oakland/SF area? Everybody in the entire Bay Area can't be a complete dud, can they?

This means:

1. A collective effort. A shared commitment where each individual contributes as best they can for at least a solid two year period.

2. Something distinct from all the stuff that's already being done; forget about demos at City Hall, demos inside City Hall, demos period for that matter, signing petitions, ad nauseam.

That stuff has been having no material impact on the housing and displacement problem since I first worked with the Berkeley Tenants Union in the late 1970's. Its proponents are clearly more afraid of surprises than they are of little trivialities like the entire wage-earning class being driven out of SF, and now Oakland as well.

3. I'm talking about an effort or efforts that are taken seriously by friend and foe alike, that have a very high public visibility, and which in the spirit of the real IWW, which lived and died a hundred years ago, will suggest methods of struggle and attack that can be taken up autonomously by threatened working people.

It may be good to think big -- always bearing in mind the goal of helping to create a new mass social movement against capitalist America -- by thinking very small. Focus on a specific embattled working class neighborhood, or even a small area of an embattled neighborhood, like SF's Valencia Street from 19th to 15th. The right kind of ongoing aggressive actions can have a larger impact, like rings flowing outward across the previously still surface of a pond.

Instead of dealing with the tail-end results of the problem as Eviction Free San Francisco does, deal with the problem at its source. The prevailing economic climate fuels the problem. Undercut investor hubris, and undercut investor confidence, and you begin to deal with the problem at its source. Bourgeois types want convenience. If you make it clear they will be perpetually inconvenienced, they will seek convenience elsewhere.
For those few who haven't already seen it, this shows clearly the connection between art, artists and gentrification:
"The Occupation of art and gentrification" -
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/anonymous-the-occupation-of-art-and-gentrification
For a more elaborate critique of art and culture, see also this: http://dialectical-delinquents.com/articles/culture/the-closed-window-onto-another-life/
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