Film/Video
2018
Jubilee 2033 trailer
Related Bibliography
Katrin Köppert
“Postdigital Camp: Zach Blas’s ‘Too-Muchness.'” In ambivalent work*s queer perspectives and art history, edited by Daniel Berndt, Susanne Huber, and Christian Liclair. Diaphanes.
Web
PDF
“Queere Ästhetiken des Algorithmischen in Zach Blas’ Contra-Internet: Jubilee 2033.” Cultural Inquiry 22: 149–76.
Alice Bucknell
“Zach Blas: Silicon Traces Trilogy.” New Mystics.
Valerie Amend
“The Internet Is Not a Possibility: An Interview with Zach Blas.” OnCurating 40.
Ana Teixeira Pinto
“Zach Blas: Contra-Internet. Zach Blas in conversation with Ana Teixeira Pinto.” Mousse Magazine 63.
Benjamin Busch
“Zach Blas on the Concept of Contra-Internet.” Berlin Art Link.
Claudia D'Alonzo
“Contra-Internet’ e la fine della rete secondo Zach Blas.” Motherboard Italia.
Tausif Noor
“Critics’ Picks: Zach Blas.” Artforum.
“Contra-Internet with Zach Blas and Laurel Ptak.” e-flux Podcasts.
Jasmina Tumbas
“The Ectoplasmic Resistance of Queer: Metric Mysticism, Libidinal Art, and How to Think Beyond The Internet.” ASAP Journal.
Colin Perry
“Zach Blas: Contra-Internet.” Art Monthly 411.
Contra-Internet: Jubilee 2033 is a re-imagining of scenes from filmmaker Derek Jarman’s 1978 queer punk film Jubilee, starring Susanne Sachsse and Cassils. Jubilee 2033 follows author Ayn Rand (Susanne Sachsse) and members of her Collective, including economist Alan Greenspan, on an acid trip in 1955. Guided by an artificial intelligence named Azuma, they are transported to a dystopian future Silicon Valley. As Apple, Facebook, and Google campuses burn, Azuma reveals that Ayn has become a celebrity philosopher to tech executives, as her writings foster their entrepreneurial spirit. Amidst the wreckage, Rand and The Collective are introduced to the internet, observe techies being captured by anti-campus groupies, and bear witness to the death of Silicon Valley elite. Once inside an occupied office of Palantir Technologies, the group encounters Nootropix (Cassils), a contra-sexual, contra-internet prophet, who lectures on the end of the internet as we know it. Seeking respite, Rand and The Collective find themselves at Silicon Beach, where chunks of polycrystalline silicon mix with sand and ocean.
Jubilee 2033 was nominated for a Teddy Award for Best Short Film at the 2018 Berlin International Film Festival. The film is distributed by Arsenal Institut für Film und Videokunst e.V. and Video Data Bank.
Contra-Internet: Jubilee 2033 is the prologue to Blas’s Silicon Traces trilogy, a series of moving image installations that contends with the beliefs, fantasies, and histories influential to Silicon Valley’s visions of the future.
Related Works
Contra-Internet
Contra-Internet (lecture-performance)
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Evil Eye
Unknown Ideals
…of bread, wine, cars, security and peace
Zach Blas: The Unknown Ideal
The End of the Internet (As We Knew It)
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transmediale
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