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The 24/7 Bed
by Beatriz Colomina

Translation

Karen Witthuhn/Transfiction

When John Lennon and Yoko Ono married secretly in Gibraltar on March 20, 1969, the ceremony lasted only three minutes. But these minutes, so elaborately protected, were in fact the end of privacy. They promptly invited a global audience into their honeymoon bed, a weeklong Bed-In for Peace held from March 25 to 31, 9am to 9pm, in room 902 of the Amsterdam Hilton International Hotel. Two of the most public people in the world put themselves in a literal fishbowl, the glass box of the Hilton. But the workday didn’t end at 9pm. John and Yoko repeatedly declared that they wanted to conceive a baby during that week. The bed is both protest site and factory for baby production: a fucktory.

John and Yoko didn’t simply occupy the room. They redesigned it as a media stage set with a particular image in mind. They were in every sense the architects of that image. It is not by chance that the published images look so similar; practically only one angle was possible. They had emptied the usual Hilton room, removing all the furniture, artwork, and decoration, leaving only the king size bed, which they deliberately placed against the floor-to-ceiling glass wall, with a panoramic view onto the city of Amsterdam. With their back to the window, they faced inside the room in a kind of Loosian move – Adolf Loos always placed the couch against the window with the occupants facing the interior and turned into a silhouette against the light for those entering the room. Their bodies against the light – in an all-white background, of white walls, white sheets, white pajamas, and white flowers – seemed to fly above Amsterdam.

The hotel is in the city, but detached; a transparent oasis. But what is outside? The background is Amsterdam, at the time the center of Europe’s 1960s cultural and sexual revolution, of experimentation with sex, drugs, rock ‘n’ roll, political activism, and protest – against the Vietnam war, the local government, and housing shortages; for equal rights, abortion, and even alternative forms of transportation.

The 24/7 bed of John Lennon and Yoko Ono anticipates the working bed of today. In what is probably now a conservative estimate, the Wall Street Journal reported in 2012 that 80 percent of young New York City professionals work regularly from bed. The fantasy of the home office has given way to the reality of the bed office. The very meaning of the word ‘office’ has been transformed. Millions of dispersed beds are taking over from concentrated office buildings. The boudoir is defeating the tower. Networked electronic technologies have removed any limit to what can be done in bed. But how did we get here?

In his famous short text Louis-Philippe, or the Interior, Walter Benjamin wrote of the splitting of work and home in the nineteenth century:

“Under Louis-Philippe, the private citizen enters the stage of history. . . . For the private person, living space becomes, for the first time, antithetical to the place of work. The former is constituted by the interior; the office is its complement.” (Walter Benjamin, 1978)

Industrialization brought with it the eight-hour shift and the radical separation between the home and the office or factory, between rest and work, night and day. Postindustrialization collapses work back into the home and takes it further into the bedroom and into the bed itself. The whole universe is concentrated on a small screen with the bed floating in an infinite sea of information. To lie down is not to rest but to move. The bed is now a site of action. 

The voluntary invalid has no need of their legs. The bed has become the ultimate prosthetic and a whole new industry is devoted to providing contraptions to facilitate work while lying down –reading, writing, texting, recording, broadcasting, listening, talking, and, of course, eating, drinking, sleeping, or making love, activities that seem to have been turned, of late, into work itself. Endless advice is dispensed about how to ‘work’ on your personal relationships, ‘schedule’ sex with your partner. Sleeping is definitely hard work too, for millions, with the psychopharmaceutical industry providing new drugs every year and an army of sleep experts providing advice on how to achieve this apparently ever more elusive goal – all in the name of higher productivity, of course. Everything done in the bed has become work.

This philosophy was already embodied in the figure of Hugh Hefner, who famously almost never left his bed, let alone his house. He literally moved his office to his bed in 1960 when he moved into the Playboy Mansion at 1340 North State Parkway, Chicago, turning it into the epicenter of a global empire and his silk pajamas and dressing gown into his business attire. “I don’t go out of the house at all!!! . . . I am a contemporary recluse”, he told Tom Wolfe, guessing that the last time he was out had been three and a half months before and that in the last two years he had been out of the house only nine times. Playboy turns the bed into a workplace. From the mid-1950s on, the bed becomes increasingly sophisticated, outfitted with all sorts of entertainment and communication devices as a kind of control room.

Hefner was not alone. The bed may have been the ultimate American office at midcentury. In an interview in the Paris Review in 1957, Truman Capote is asked, “What are some of your writing habits? Do you use a desk? Do you write on a machine?”, to which he answers: “I am a completely horizontal author. I can’t think unless I’m lying down, either in bed or stretched on a couch and with a cigarette and a coffee handy.”

Even architects set up office in bed at midcentury. Richard Neutra started working the moment he woke up with elaborate equipment enabling him to design, write, or even interview in bed. Neutra’s bed in the VDL house in Silver Lake, Los Angeles, included two public phones; three communication stations for talking with other rooms in the house, the office below, and even another office 500 meters away; three different call bells; drafting boards and easels that folded down over the bed; electric lights and a radio-gramophone controlled from a dashboard overhead. A bedside table rolling on casters held the tape recorder, electric clock, and storage compartments for drawing and writing equipment so that he could, as Neutra put it in a letter to his sister, “use every minute from morning to late night.”

Postwar America inaugurated the high-performance bed as an epicenter of productivity, a new form of industrialization that was exported globally and has now become available to an international army of dispersed but interconnected producers. A new kind of factory without walls is constructed by compact electronics and extra pillows for the 24/7 generation.

The kind of equipment that Hefner envisioned (some of which, like the answering machine, didn’t yet exist) is now expanded for the Internet and social media generation, who not only work in bed but socialize in bed, exercise in bed, read the news in bed, and entertain sexual relationships with people miles away from their beds. The Playboy fantasy of the nice girl next door is more likely realized today with someone on another continent than in the same building or neighborhood – a person you may have never seen before and may never see again, and it is anybody’s guess if she is real or an electronic construction. Does it matter? As in the recent film Her, a moving depiction of life in the soft, uterine state that is a corollary to our new mobile technologies, the ‘her’ in question is an operating system that turns out to be a more satisfying partner than a person. The protagonist lies in bed with Her, chatting, arguing, making love and eventually breaking up still in bed.

If, according to Jonathan Crary, late capitalism is the end of sleep, colonizing every minute of our lives for production and consumption, the actions of the voluntary recluse are not so voluntary in the end. The nineteenth-century division of the city between rest and work may soon become obsolete. Not only have our habits and habitat changed with the Internet and social media, but predictions about the end of human labor in the wake of new technologies and robotization that were already being made at the end of the nineteenth century are no longer treated as futuristic. COVID has accelerated this shift in the status of labor and complicated it with the increasing choice of flexible work, working only from home, or not working at all. 

Economists wonder what kind of economic model this reality will lead to: from growing inequalities with vast amount of people unemployed to large-scale redistribution in the form of Universal Basic Income, which was considered a few years ago in a referendum in Switzerland and rejected. The end of paid labor and its replacement with creative leisure was already envisioned in utopian projects of the 1960s and 1970s by Constant, Superstudio, and Archizoom, including hyperequipped beds. Shouldn’t architects return to this question?

Meanwhile the city has started to redesign itself. In today’s ever-accelerating overstimulated society, in which attention becomes fleeting, we have discovered that we work better in short bursts punctuated by rest. Today many companies provide sleeping pods in the office to maximize productivity. Bed and office are never far apart in the 24/7 world. Special self-enclosed beds have been designed for office spaces – turning themselves into compact sealed capsules, minispaceships, that can be used in isolation or gathered together in clusters or lined up in rows for synchronized sleep – understood as a part of work rather than its opposite. As Arianna Huffington predicts in 2018 “’recharging rooms’ will be as common as board rooms” But these relaxation spaces and technologies are not simply appearing inside offices. Whole new types of building dedicated to sleep are popping up in cities. The question of the bed has become an urban question, one of the urban questions calling for our attention today.

The Internet and social media have fundamentally redefining the spaces in which we live, our relationship to objects and to each other. Social media is a new form of urbanization, the architecture of how we live together. Beds have become the key nodes in the vast invisible net of the global communications system that defines the real city of today.

by Beatriz Colomina

Breckerfeld

Begleitet wird die Grand Snail Tour von Künstler*innen aus dem Bereich Literatur, Fotografie und Illustration, die zeitgleich zum Aufenthalt des Tourmobils, Eindrücke und Reflexionen aus jeweils derselben Stadt sammeln und diese sie visuell oder literarisch ins Bild setzen. So entsteht ein Paratext zur 3-jährigen Tour, der in Form einer Reisechronik, ein Kaleidoskop an Geschichten, Verbindungen, Momentaufnahmen in den 53 Städten der Region als Gleichzeitigkeiten und Ungleichzeitigkeiten zur Grand Snail Tour sichtbar werden lässt.

© Daniel Sadrowski

© Daniel Sadrowski

Eine Landpartie von Caren Jeß

Ich fahr da rein mit dem Bus. 
„Schönen Abend noch!“
ruft der Fahrer den Fahrgästen nach, allen,
„have a nice evening!“
Downtown in Breckerfeld. Die Tür des Hotels ist massiv und aus Holz, im Zimmer roll ich mich auf beige-grauer Auslegeware, Schreibtisch und Bett Buche hell, ansonsten viel Silbermetallic, wie in den 00ern, als das die Lieblingsfarbe für Autos war. 
Nachts noch geh ich spazieren und bemerke Breckerfelds beeindruckendes Höhenprofil. Die liebliche Landschaft, die losgeht, wo die gestalteten Vorgärten aufhören, seh ich dann tags drauf bei Sonnenschein. Der Lokaljournalist sagt,
„die Breckerfelder leben gerne in Breckerfeld.“
Ich guck es mir genauer an: Hansering-Park, drum herum viel Universalverbundpflasterstein, historischer Stadtkern, Bronze-Ensemble an der Denkmalstraße, denn Breckerfeld machte einstmals in Stahl, im Norden Aldi, Rewe, Edeka, im Osten ein beträchtlicher Friedhof, außerdem Autos, die hier Kreisel rein, Kreisel raus, über die Frankfurter Straße durch Breckerfeld adern.
„Mit Milch oder mit Sahne?“, 
werd ich gefragt im Eiscafé Venezia, nachdem ich einen Cappuccino bestelle, doch da liebäugle ich längst mit dem Eisbecher „Flipper“, weil der mit einem „Touch Amarenasauce“ kommt, und ich will das schon allein, weil ich das Wort Touch ewig nicht gehört hab. Aber leider keine Zeit für diese Ewigkeit, denn ich will wissen, was die Kinder ins All schicken wollen: 
»Funken in Breckerfeld«
deshalb sind wir hier. Zwischen Schule und Sportplatz ist er aufgestellt: Mona Schulzeks Outer Space Transmitter. Er sendet Botschaften ins All. Direkt aus Breckerfeld. Eine Grundschulklasse kommt, holt die Stifte raus, die Zettel. Die Kinder haben mehr Fragen als Wünsche, schonmal interessant, sie richten sie aber nicht ziellos ins All, in alles, was da sein könnte, sondern gehen direkt rein, in medias res, 
„Aliens“, 
komm, darum geht es doch hier, und über die wollen wir natürlich ALLES wissen, erstmal:
„was könnt ihr?“
Direkt meine Lieblingsfrage. Sie zielt ins Wesen extraterrestrischen Lebens und fragt entwaffnend klug, was Akademiker:innen auch nicht besser wissen wollen könnten.
Dann:
„Seid ihr nett?“
„Wollt ihr Krieg?“
„Könnt ihr Basketball?“
Ich hoffe, die Aliens antworten. Mona Schulzek nimmt die Fragen jedenfalls ernst, übersetzt sie in ihr eigens entwickeltes Zeichensystem, und sendet.
„Wenn ihr nett seid, zeigt euch!“
Die Künstlerin erklärt den Kindern,
„Es gibt mehr Sterne im All als Sandkörner auf der Erde.“ 
Sie staunen nicht schlecht, und ich frag mich, wo eigentlich die Transmitter-Monas meiner Kindheit waren. Ein lizenzierter Hobby-Funker zeigt den Kindern sein Funkgerät, sagt, 
„So ein Gerät habt ihr sicher alle zuhause zum Räuber und Gendarm spielen.“
Die Kinder gucken. 
„Digga“,
murmeln sie, zeichnen noch ein Pferd und noch ein Alien, dann kommt der Bus.
Und es ist wieder ruhig um den Outer Space Transmitter.
Als ich überlege, welche Botschaft ich ins All senden würde, geht mir noch einmal der „Touch“ durch den Kopf, und alle verabschieden sich. Die Künstlerin, das Team und ich.
Bei meinem letzten Spaziergang über wunderschöne Pfade dieser kleinsten Hansestadt der Welt (stimmt nicht, das ist Werben an der Elbe, hab gegoogelt), durch die Dämmerung entlang dem ersten zarten Frühlingsgrün, komm ich an einem Gartenzwerg im Wald vorbei, erschreck mich hart, doch gehe erwachsen weiter.
Bevor meine Zeit hier vorbei ist, treibt mich mein Hunger noch ins „Wirtshaus Anno 1739“, und das möchte ich bitte genauso mit nachhause nehmen. Jedoch es gehört Breckerfeld. Und das hat auch die passenden Menschen dafür, die glasklar lachen oder scheppernd wie Büchsen, Hauptsache heiter, und ihre Brause schlürfen, die Tasse Kaffee und auch das Glas Wein. 
„Wir haben erst vor einer Woche aufgemacht!“
Toi toi toi! Es ist Leben in Breckerfeld.

Stops

Open "Breckerfeld"

© Daniel Sadrowski

12.3.26, 11–17 h

Transmitting in Breckerfeld

Breckerfeld

Artist

Open Artsit

©Jewgeni Roppel

Caren Jeß

Caren Jeß, born in Eckernförde in 1985, studied German philology and modern German literature in Freiburg i.Br. and Berlin. 

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