Het Nieuwe Instituut presents Control Syntax Rio. Monitoring the Col..


Protesten in Rio de Janeiro tegen corruptie. Foto EPA/Oliver Weiken
Brazilians attend a protest against corruption. Photo EPA/Oliver Weiken

12 June 2016 - 8 January 2017

The city of Rio de Janeiro has an advanced command and control centre from which various scenarios - from traffic jams to acts of terrorism and natural disasters - can be predicted and potentially prevented. The installation Control Syntax Rio, on show at Het Nieuwe Instituut from 12 June
2016, shows how this Olympic city is being read as a matrix of potential calamities and the impact this has on the social climate of the city.

An advanced command and control centre was opened in Rio de Janeiro long before the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the upcoming Olympic Games. The Centro de Operac,oes Rio (COR) monitors urban traffic movements, people flows, weather conditions, calamities and health risks at all hours of the day.

Where army and police data systems are aimed at fighting crime and preventing possible terrorist attacks, the COR focuses on the city as a whole and collects data from weather stations, traffic cameras, mobile apps, social media, health organisations, and even local observers. This data is
used to build models that are intended to ensure that traffic circulates smoothly, potentially hazardous situations are neutralised, and that the city provides its inhabitants and visitors with the healthiest environment it can.

The installation Control Syntax Rio shows how the COR approaches the Olympic city as a matrix of possible disasters and solutions. The COR is concerned with vast streams of data and algorithmic analysis, but the effects of its command and control mechanism - described by the curators Mark
Wasiuta and Farzin Lotfi-Jam as a "control syntax" - are much more concrete. They directly affect the social climate of the city: neighbourhoods can be sealed off, traffic can be redirected and citizens can be temporarily denied access to public facilities.

The reality of this "smart city" teems with potential conflicts. For instance, how much space is there for residents of a neighbourhood to hold a demonstration if there is also a risk of a traffic jam? And how much private data is needed to neutralise a threatening health issue? The COR's
walls are covered in screens that not only express the desire to control and optimise the body of the city, but also reveal the irregularities, risks and instabilities of the city. Control and disorder become simultaneously visible in the COR.

Control Syntax Rio leads the visitor through a spatially reimagined Rio de Janeiro, confronting them with different models of exceptional situations: a landslide, a demonstration, a bus on fire blocking a road, a chemical leak, a festival. Here, one experiences Rio as a smart Olympic city with
the COR as its nerve centre.

Curators and spatial designers

Mark Wasiuta teaches at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University (New York City), where he is Director of Exhibitions, Director of Collecting Architecture Territories, and Co-Director of the MS degree programme Critical, Curatorial and Conceptual
Practices in Architecture.

Farzin Lotfi-Jam is an adjunct professor of Architecture at Columbia University (New York City) and holds advanced degrees from Columbia University and RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia. He is a 2015-2017 Fellow of the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart and was a 2013-2014 Sanders
Fellow at the University of Michigan.

Control room Rio de Janeiro. Centro de Operac,oes Rio de Janeiro. Foto George Soares.
Control room Rio de Janeiro. Centro de Operac,oes Rio de Janeiro. Photo George Soares.

Exhibitions and activities programme related to the Olympic Games

For Het Nieuwe Instituut, the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro have provided a springboard for devoting a large part of its programming in 2016 to the human body. Not only the physical achievements of individual athletes but also the crowds of people who will be monitored, analysed and
manipulated as a collective body by advanced technologies: 24 hours a day. Technological innovations have created a situation in which the body of the citizen and that of the state, the city and the public realm can be more efficiently moulded into an ideal image. The body is being designed at
all levels and media play a crucial role in recording and propagating these innovations.

The programme comprises the following exhibitions:

* The Life Fair. New Body Products
* Control Syntax Rio. Monitoring the Collective Body
* Space Embodied. The Russian Art of Movement 1920-1930
* 51 Sprints
* Munich 1972. The Design of a Democratic Body
* Platform. Body/Space

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Note for editors:
For more information and/or images please contact Ester Martens, Het Nieuwe Instituut Department of Marketing, Communications and Commerce by email e.martens@hetnieuweinstituut.nl or telephone +31 (0)10-4401268.

See also the webmagazine Control Syntax Rio

Control room Rio de Janeiro. Centro de Operac,oes Rio de Janeiro. Foto George Soares.
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Protesten in Rio de Janeiro tegen corruptie. Foto EPA/Oliver Weiken
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