We know that technology is everywhere, all over and around us. We also know that is starting to expand quicker than us -
-Its like a new universe within us
-Matter within us
-And we cant live without it.
The body is a huge area for advance and can be stripped, played with and improved by technology.
Technologists want to engage the body with the new opportunities arising. By doing this they can advance the human body further than many people think is possible.
Examples of subculture groups engaging with the technologies of the body could be; Stelarc, who uses technology to advance the body Or Orlan who uses plastic surgery as a method of art. Other practises of alternative subculture groups include bloodletting, piercing or branding.
These 'artists' take a post planetary position - like stepping out of the world, to exhibit their work.
All technologies are about enablement, a system of adapting the body efficiently and improving it.
Australian artist Stelarc wanted to explore the inner landscape of the body and surrenders it to technology - he says we are all remote controlled in a way, this he shows using physical actions.
Stelarc makes the interior of the body available to us but also destroys the intimate body by opening it up to us.
Some people say Stelarc degrades the human body to be nothing more then an entity - to him we are purely mechanisms that he can restore to a level where bodies are just bodies.
"Notion of technology invading the body"
Stelarc refers to the body as being brutilised or re-engineering the human body.
A few examples of Stelarcs 'work';
- Stelarc designed a third ear with all sorts of technologies embedded in it eg. radio, internet, MP3 player. It becomes part of a body so technological that there is no need for the body to even be there.
- The 'Ping Body' was an internet activated performance, other people across the world could control Stelarcs body by a touch screen computer. This then sends electrodes to his body. Its one body surrendered to the other.
Stelarc is trying to radically re-think what the body is and what it needs to be to keep up with the ever changing technology in our society.
"The body is profoundly obsolete." - Stelarc.The French feminist artist Orlan wanted to challenge the conventional idea of how the body is percieved. To do this she used plastic surgery as her tool and broadcasts her operations live using local anaesthetic so she is concious throughout.
Orlan wanted to create a new version of beauty so had horns implanted into her forehead. While her operations are being carried out Orlan uses her own blood to draw pictures and express her feelings.
She uses the whole procedure and recovery period as her 'art' to show how beauty and the body can be easily changed.
One of her surgical ideas was to get the biggest nose possible but she couldn't find a surgeon who would step outside the cosmetic surgical boundaries.
Her experiments or surgery's are ways of discovering excellence in a physical form - As Orlan says, no one wants to end up with an average beauty.
These artists show that we are losing touch with the real and with human beings because technology is taking over with new ways to improve upon the 'normal'. Everything we ever do is now being measured, surveyed and tested, we are wiping out the distinctiveness that makes us human and replacing it with technology.
The point Stelarc is making is technology can long outlive the human body and soon enough there won't be any use for it.
paradisewildchild

Very insightful article indeed. Humans are not "things" that need to be fixed if broken. The art and science of plastic surgery should be used to mitigate the sufferings of people like those with burn scars or mastectomies following breast cancer. Plastic surgery should be used as a therapy to restore the self esteem of a patient with a debility or handicap....not to get the jawline of Jennifer Anniston or lips of Angelina Jolie.