Johannes Grenzfurthner (German:[joˈhanəsˈgrɛntsfʊɐ̯tnɐ]; born 1975 in Vienna) is an Austrian artist, filmmaker, writer, actor, curator, theatre director, performer and lecturer. Grenzfurthner is the founder, conceiver and artistic director of monochrom, an international art and theory group and film production company. Most of his artworks are labeled monochrom.
Grenzfurthner is an outspoken researcher in subversive and underground culture, for example the field of sexuality and technology,[1][2][3] and one of the founders of "techno-hedonism".[4]
Boing Boing magazine referred to Grenzfurthner as leitnerd,[5] a wordplay with the German term Leitkultur that ironically hints at Grenzfurthner's role in nerd/hacker/art culture.
In the early 1990s, Grenzfurthner was a member of several BBS message boards.[6] Grenzfurther used his online connections to create monochrom, a zine[7] or alternative magazine that dealt with art, technology and subversive cultures.[8] His motivation was to react to the emerging conservativism in cyber-cultures of the early 1990s,[9][10] and to combine his political background in the Austrian punk and antifa movement with discussion of new technologies and the cultures they create.[11] The publication featured interviews and essays, by e.g. Bruce Sterling, HR Giger, Eric Drexler, Terry Pratchett and Bob Black,[12] in its experimental layout style.[13] In 1995 the group decided to cover new artistic practices[14][15] and started experimenting with different media: computer games, robots, puppet theater, musical, short films, pranks,[16][17] conferences, online activism, which Grenzfurthner calls 'Urban Hacking'[18] or more specific: 'Context hacking', a term that Grenzfurthner coined.[19]
Context hacking transfers the hackers' objectives and methods to the network of social relationships in which artistic production occurs, and upon which it is dependent. In a metaphoric sense, these relationships also have a source code. Programs run in them, and our interaction with them is structured by a user interface. When we know how a space, a niche, a scene, a subculture or a media or political practice functions, we can change it and "recode" it, deconstructing its power relationships and emancipating ourselves from its compulsions and packaging guidelines.[20]
The group is known for working with different media, art and entertainment formats.[21] Grenzfurthner calls this "looking for the best weapon of mass distribution of an idea".[22]
Grenzfurthner is head of the Arse Elektronika[23][24] festival in San Francisco (2007 – ), an annual academic and artistic[25] conference and anthology series that focusses on sexuality and technology. The first conference was curated by Grenzfurthner in 2007 to answer questions about the impact of sexuality on technological innovation and adoption.
Grenzfurthner is hosting Roboexotica,[26] the international Festival for Cocktail-Robotics (2002–) which invites researchers and artists to build machines that serve or mix cocktails. V. Vale calls Roboexotica "an ironic attempt to criticize techno-triumphalism and to dissect technological hypes."[27]
Grenzfurthner is head of Hedonistika, a festival for artistic food tech and robotic indulgement. The festival took place in Montréal at the 2014 'Biennale internationale d'art numérique',[28] in Holon, near Tel Aviv at 'Print Screen Festival',[29] and in Linz at Ars Electronica 2022.
Grenzfurther is the CEO of film production company monochrom Propulsion Systems.[35] He is member of the Austrian Director's Guild[36] and the Association of Austrian Documentary Filmmakers.[37]
Grenzfurthner lectures at art institutions,[44][45] symposions[46][47] and political events,[48] teaches at universities[49][50][51] and mentors students.[52][53]
He has published books, essays and articles on politics, contemporary art, communication processes and philosophy including Mind and Matter: Comparative Approaches Towards Complexity, Do androids sleep with electric sheep?, Of Intercourse and Intracourse: Sexuality, Biomodification and the Techno-Social Sphere and Pr0nnovation?: Pornography and Technological Innovation.[54][55][56][57]
Grenzfurthner published the much debated pamphlet "Hacking the Spaces", that dealt with exclusionist tendencies in the hackerspaces movement. Grenzfurther extended his critique through lectures at the 2012 and 2014 Hackers on Planet Earth conferences in New York City.[58][59]
2020 through 2021, he was editor-in-chief of the print and online magazine The Free Lunch.[60]
Since April 2023, he has been contributing as a weekly columnist to the Austrian news magazine Profil.
Grenzfurthner has taken a comedic turn and performed at various venues, e.g. Vienna's Rabenhof Theater.[61] Parts of his comedy show "Schicksalsjahre eines Nerds" form the basis of his documentary film Traceroute (2016). Grenzfurther is a presenter and emcee for various industry events,[62][63] and guest performer at events like Goldenes Brett. Grenzfurthner has had supporting and lead parts in several theater plays.[64][65] He performs in Andi Haller's feature film Zero Crash[66] and Michael J. Epstein's and Sophia Cacciola's feature film Clickbait[67] and Umbilicus desidero.[68] He portrays one of the two lead characters in his own film Je Suis Auto.
Grenzfurthner was one of the core team members in the development process of netznetz, a new kind of community-based funding system for net culture and net art together with the culture department of the city government of Vienna.[70]
Together with Florian Hufsky, Leo Findeisen and Juxi Leitner, Grenzfurthner co-organized the first international conference of the pirate parties.[73][74]
Grenzfurthner conceptualized and co-built a robot installation to promote the products of sex toy company Bad Dragon.[75] He created an artistic online ad campaign for Cheetos.[76]
Grenzfurthner lives and works in Vienna. Grenzfurther grew up in Stockerau in rural Lower Austria[77] and talks about it in his stand-up comedy "Schicksalsjahre eines Nerds" (2014) and his semi-autobiographical documentary film Traceroute (2016).
If I had not grown up in Stockerau, in the boonies of Lower Austria, than I would not be what I am now. The germ cell of burgeoning nerdism is difference. The yearning to be understood, to find opportunities to share experiences, to not be left alone with one's bizarre interest. At the same time one derives an almost perverse pleasure from wallowing in this deficit. Nerds love deficiency: that of the other, but also their own. Nerds are eager explorers, who enjoy measuring themselves against one another and also compete aggressively. And yet the nerd's existence also comprises an element of the occult, of mystery. The way in which this power is expressed or focused is very important.[78]
Grenzfurthner uses his personal history and upbringing[79] as a source for his work. In a conversation with Zebrabutter he names the example that he wanted to deal with his claustrophobia,[80] so he started a series of art performances where volunteers can be buried alive.
Grenzfurthner's name was one of 200 activists, politicians, and artists from Germany, Switzerland and Austria (only one of a total of 10 Austrian names) that were published on an ultra-rightdoxing list distributed on a variety of online platforms in December 2018 and January 2019.[82][83] The list's extremist creators threatened "#wirkriegeneuchallee" (sic!) — "We will get you all". Grenzfurthner openly addressed this on online platforms[84] and in lectures.
An artistic fake image posted by Grenzfurthner in July 2021 on his Twitter account sparked some controversy on social media and in the news.[85][86][87]
Jean Peters reports in his book "Wenn die Hoffnung stirbt, geht's trotzdem weiter" (2021, translation from German) about a special form of anti-fascist prank Grenzfurthner staged:
Austrian artist Johannes Grenzfurthner, who himself has also published on context hacking, mingled in disguise with a Nazi demonstration in Bavaria in the spring of 2005. When cameras passed by, he made the forbidden Hitler salute. When he started doing so, the dam quickly broke; everyone around him joined in. In doing so, he had created media images showing the group as it really was. It turned bizarre when a few of them then approached him and said, "Stop, stop!" which, coming from a Nazi, sounded like a performative peculiarity, "we're not allowed to do that here." Whether over-affirmation or mimicry, the point is to make truly visible what would rather remain hidden behind a facade of self-righteousness.[88]
Editor of "Weg der Engel" (Michael Marrak and Agus Chuadar, 1998)
Editor of "Who shot Immanence?" (together with Thomas Edlinger and Fritz Ostermayer, 2002)
Editor of "Leutezeichnungen" (together with Elffriede, 2003)
Editor of "Quo Vadis, Logo?!" (together with Günther Friesinger, 2006)
Editor of "Spektakel – Kunst – Gesellschaft" (together with Stephan Grigat and Günther Friesinger, 2006)
Editor of "pr0nnotivation? Arse Elektronika Anthology" (together with Günther Friesinger and Daniel Fabry, 2008)
Editor of "Roboexotica" (together with Günther Friesinger, Magnus Wurzer, Franz Ablinger and Chris Veigl, 2008)
Editor of "Do Androids Sleep with Electric Sheep?" (together with Günther Friesinger, Daniel Fabry and Thomas Ballhausen, 2009)
Editor of "Schutzverletzungen/Legitimation of Mediatic Violence" (together with Günther Friesinger and Thomas Ballhausen, 2010)
Editor of "Urban Hacking" (together with Günther Friesinger and Thomas Ballhausen, 2010)
Editor of "Geist in der Maschine. Medien, Prozesse und Räume der Kybernetik" (together with Günther Friesinger, Thomas Ballhausen, Verena Bauer, 2010)
Editor of "The Wonderful World of Absence" (together with Günther Friesinger and Daniel Fabry, 2011)
Editor of "Of Intercourse and Intracourse – Sexuality, Biomodification and the Techno-Social Sphere" (together with Günther Friesinger and Daniel Fabry, 2011)
Editor of "Context Hacking: How to Mess with Art, Media, Law and the Market" (together with Günther Friesinger and Frank Apunkt Schneider, 2013)
Editor of "Screw The System – Explorations of Spaces, Games and Politics through Sexuality and Technology" (together with Günther Friesinger and Daniel Fabry, 2013)
Editor of Subvert Subversion. Politischer Widerstand als kulturelle Praxis (together with Günther Friesinger, 2020)
^Dunbar-Hester, Christina (2020). Hacking Diversity: The Politics of Inclusion in Open Technology Cultures. Princeton Studies in Culture and Technology. p. 59. ISBN978-0-691-19288-8.