
My newspaper rightly pulled out all the stops to celebrate David Hockney — and to mourn his loss. He was a ‘national treasure’ in the same league as David Attenborough and Alan Bennett
Quote of the Day
”You will know you’re old when you cease to be amazed.”
- Noel Coward
Hmmm…. I’m getting there.
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Mumford & Sons + Friends Bonnaroo | Amazing Grace
A venerable hymn given the bluegrass treatment.
Long Read of the Day
What would Muskism be without Musk?
Henry Farrell’s review essay on Quinn Slobodian and Ben Tarnoff’s new book, Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed which, appropriately enough, came out just before Musk became the world’s first trillionaire.
Both they and Henry are trying to get above the IPO fray to figure out what the longer-term consequences of the current madness might be.
It’s hard to even begin to articulate this question on a day where on the one hand Musk is enjoying his stock market apotheosis, and on the other is doing everything he can to stir up race riots. But what would Muskism look like without Musk? I take Slobodian and Tarnoff’s ultimate lesson as being that we need to move beyond Musk’s personality, and start thinking about Muskism or Muskismus (I like the German word, which is why this post has the German translation’s cover) as a mode of organizing production, as a generic ideology, as a set of political bargains, as a form of state-business fusion, or some weird amalgam of all four. If Muskism is going to change the world as its backers hope, it is highly unlikely to be because SpaceX manages to corner the entire global economy. If it fails, as I personally suspect it will, it is going to be because of the underlying contradictions that are getting papered over.
To figure this out, we might begin with the other businesses that seem to exemplify Muskism. Obviously, this would include Palantir, and a bunch of the defense-tech businesses funded by Musk’s adversary Peter Thiel. Thielismus starts from many of the same premises as Muskism, but with a different clatter of tacked-on lunacies (less cosmism; more prophecies of the Antichrist). Are there businesses that adopt some of the aspects of Muskism that Slobodian and Tarnoff acknowledge as useful (SpaceX has transformed the launch business) without all of the negatives? It would be useful to know: the waterfall approach to project management has not been good e.g. for Europe’s defense sector.
We might also want to ask whether Muskism is inextricably intertwined with US hegemonic power. What happens to the Muskist project if US hegemony fails? What happens to US hegemony if Muskism fails?
Do read it. We need more thinking on this level.
Books, etc.

After news of David Hockney’s death broke I went searching through my bookshelves to find this compendium of his work looking for this picture:

It was the most prominent early result of his experiments with photography. He began creating what he called ‘joiners’, images of scenes stitched together from hundreds of polaroid shots of a particular scene. As someone who’s been a keen photographer since my teenage years, I was fascinated by these works and fondly imagined that they would provide me with a way to create artworks that were more than just photographs.
Big mistake. Here’s the evidence — a joiner I did of the O’Connell monument in Glasnevin cemetery in Dublin.

It’s ok but feeble and unimaginative compared with Hockney’s works in the genre. I discovered that making joiners work was exceedingly difficult. The art is in finding creative ways of assembling the individual pieces of the mosaic. Hockney had the art. I didn’t.
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