
      
        More&More (The Invisible
            Oceans)
          2016
          Software-driven animations in custom steel housing, sculptures, shelving, crates, bathing suits, website,
          books
          Production: Sarah Rothberg
          Bathing suit/web site collaborators: Sarah Rothberg,
          Surya Mattu
          Software: Sam Brenner | Web development: Neil Cline | Studio assistance: Ariana Martinez
          First exhibited at bitforms gallery, New York,
          Feb 2016
          Commissioned in part by Borusan Contemporary
          Project website: moreandmore.world 
          
          
        
         
        
 
        
 
 
  
        
        
         
        DESCRIPTION 
          (from the bitforms press release, by Kerry Doran)
        The ocean makes up 71 percent of our planet’s surface. So, how is it that we know more about
          Mars than the marine environments of Earth? As impenetrable as the deep oceans are to humans, we imperviously
          live in a black box of international shipping, reducing the ocean to a surface rather than an environmental
          force. MORE&MORE is a socioeconomic, post-natural foray into the infrastructure of global trade: a
          systemic means to a never-ending end of economic growth. Here, the Harmonized System Commodity Description and
          Coding System, or Harmonized System (HS), rules the world. With roughly 26,000 items in 99 categories, the HS
          tariff code is an opaque, granular (yet oblique) language unto itself. Everything is reduced to code; the
          ocean all but disappears.
        Zurkow visualizes the Harmonized System as a series of iconographic tchotchkes, unifying disparate
          commodities into a phantasmagoric depot. MORE&MORE: China, India, Japan, Mexico, Turkey, USA, Russia, and
          Brazil (2016) are eight sculptural animations, with custom algorithmic software generating hypnotic patterns
          of export products. Changing weather, the rising and setting sun, and cycles of the moon illustrate that while
          time passes, ports are always open and shipping never stops.
        A physical firewall of HS code is wallpapered throughout the gallery space. In a kiosk at the
          gallery’s entrance, handmade chocolates and soaps shaped as HS code icons, postcards from major port
          nations, and swimsuits visualizing trade relations between countries are displayed as retail goods.*
          Sculptures made of 3D powder, plaster, fungus, and coffee husk are respectively indicative of a given supply
          chain: while 3D powder is sourced from China, fungus could be grown in one’s backyard. According to
          Zurkow, “If the Earth was Joseph Beuys, fungus would be its felt.”
        Plying the oceans for international trade is historically rooted. Dutch jurist and philosopher
          Hugo Grotius declared the oceans international territory in the seventeenth century with his Mare Liberum (The
          Freedom of the Seas) (1609): 
        
        
          The question at issue is… the ocean, that expanse of water which antiquity describes as the
              immense, the infinite, bounded only by the heavens, parent of all things… the ocean which, although
              surrounding this earth, the home of the human race, with the ebb and flow of its tides, can be neither
              seized nor enclosed; nay, which rather possesses the earth than is by it possessed.
        
        Rather than sustaining life, the ocean is ostensibly asphalt connecting a Pangea of capital.
          “In this circuit, captivation in enjoyment fuels the exploitation, expropriation, and extraction driving
          the capitalist system: more, more, more; endless circulation, dispossession, destruction, and accumulation;
          ceaseless, limitless death.” (1) Zurkow,
          along with her collaborators, suggest that in the invisible oceans’ absence, we find presence: as human
          agents, observers, victims—another species, in desperate need of adaptation.
         
        
          
 
        
         
        At the opening reception, poet Kalliopi Mathios emceed the evening, reading from A Guide to the Harmonized
            System. Guests were encouraged to read from the tome, alongside Mathios.
        On February 24, the gallery presented Climate Cocktails: Drinks from the Dead Zone, a night of
          open mic reading by Mathios from A Guide to the Harmonized System and drinking the discourse.
        To coincide with the opening, two books were published by punctum
            books: MORE&MORE (the invisible
            oceans), edited by Chris Piuma, and A Guide to the Harmonized
            System, edited by Marina Zurkow, with contributions by Stacy Alaimo, Heather Davis, Kathleen Forde,
          Dylan Gauthier, Elena Glasberg, Kalliopi Mathios, Steve Mentz, Astrida Neimanis, Chris Piuma, Elspeth Probyn,
          Sarah Rothberg, Phil Steinberg, and Rita Wong. 
        
        *200 unique postcards and unique swimsuits are available for sale. Visitors are welcome to customize suits
          at moreandmore.world. 
          Swimsuits & website were designed in collaboration with Surya Mattu and Sarah Rothberg.
        
        
         
        PRESS: 
        
        
         
        
        
 
        