Felix Stalder on Mon, 30 Jul 2018 09:25:49 +0200 (CEST)


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<nettime> Malaga: Casa Invisible is here to stay! (Text by Gerald Raunig)


transversal.at
Casa Invisible is here to stay!
http://transversal.at/blog/Invisible-is-here-to-stay

Gerald Raunig, Translation: Kelly Mulvaney

After two-and-a-half hours marching through the city, the protest took a
turn onto Calle Larios, the central avenue of pomp in Málaga’s center,
at 10 pm. A wave goodbye to the vehicle carrying the band that had been
leading the protest for so long, and the march moves on into the
pedestrian zone. Suddenly and with no announcement, the first seven rows
of superheroínas invisibles begin to run, not quite such “invisible”
superheroines, they overtake the six-man line of police and run the
whole way to the Plaza Constitución, where the final rally is supposed
to take place. Incompliant flight, breaking through the consumption and
movement patterns of the expensive shopping mile, stares of disbelief
from passersby and even most of the protest participants are astounded
by what is possible on this day.


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How is this possible in a city that has become more and more beholden to
tourism? That caves in to the assignment and handing-over of the city
center to speculation, gentrification and touristification? Culture
instrumentalized as attraction in the competition amongst cities and as
brand in the service of tourism – from the claim to Picasso’s birthplace
to the countless museum institutions erected of mediocre quality? How is
this possible, above all, in a city that is now also shedding its
liberal cloak and attempting to evict the sole remaining sociocultural
oasis in the thoroughly-touristified desert of its center?

For over eleven years Casa Invisible has been a guarantor of alternative
cultures and ecologies of care, and it has also been a social machine
for everything that is incompliant in spite of, and in the middle of,
the compliant city: feminist cafes and workshops, antiracist and
refugees-welcome groups, concerts, local meetings of the PAH (platform
against evictions), meetings of the movement Málaga no se vende and of
the Sindicato Inquilinas, discursive events held by the Universidad
Libre Experimental (ULEX), dance and theatre workshops, technopolitical
initiatives, and much more. The building, occupied in 2007, was built in
the 19th century; it has a wonderfully shaded patio and is an island in
the middle of the multiply sold-out, instrumentalized and valorized
city. Embedded in a somewhat inhospitable environment, the Casa
Invisible is instituent practice, a new form of sociocultural
institution, multi-generational, transversal and diverse in all directions.


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As part of a federal strategy, the right-wing neoliberal party
Ciudadanos began to attack social centers across Spain at the beginning
of this year, precisely because social centers, thanks to their practice
of occupation, break through the extreme economy of appropriation and
extraction of the compliant city. It is particularly annoying for the
right-wingers that this kind of island against property and speculation
exists in many Spanish cities. In Málaga’s case, the Ciudadanos members
of the city parliament have been pressuring the longstanding mayor of
the Partido Popular to give up his legal “tolerance” of the occupied
Invisible and, after eleven years, to call for the building to be
evicted due to flimsy administrative reasons.

But the Invisible can’t be evicted just like that. On March 10, 2018,
there was an initial colorful protest against the threat of eviction,
and even a steady and steadily heavier rainfall was no reason to stop
the action or give up the joy of occupying public space. Singing and
dancing in the rain, with a fondness for doing so in front of the city hall.


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On July 19 a new and apparently more urgent announcement of eviction
came from the municipality, and an even larger protest march in support
of the Casa Invisible made its way through the city. With slogans such
as “La Invisible se queda” (Invisible is here to stay), “somos
indesalojables” (we are unevictable), “La Invi no se toca” (No one
touches Invi), thousands of people met in front of the social center and
took off on a common march through the city. The mayor, Francisco
(“Paco” or “Paquito”) de la Torre received special attention on this
day, as choruses like these rang out through the streets: “Dónde está
Paquito, Paquito dónde está, Paquito está vendiendo lo que queda de la
ciudad” (Where is Paquito? Paquito where are you? Paquito is selling off
the rest of the city) or “Paco escucha, La Invi está en la lucha”
(Listen Paco, Invi is fighting). This struggle is not just a struggle
for an occupied building and its users, but also a struggle against the
complete appropriation of the city, against a Mall-aga of the muelle
uno, which turned the port into a mall, against the compliant
superficialities of the consumption of culture and sociality that are
extending into all parts of the city center.

But Málaga no se vende – Málaga is not for sale!, as movements against
the sale of the city centers have called themselves in Madrid,
Barcelona, Valencia, Sevilla and beyond Spain. And: without Casa
Invisible, Málaga is no longer anything but a mall, as can be read on a
poster of the freaky Guiri satire crew from the Laguinillas neighborhood.


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The problematic of the compliant city, which complies with and subjects
itself to the demands and orders of the tourism industry, is the
backdrop against which the order of eviction for Casa Invisible by
Málaga’s city administration is taking place. The wild spread of Air Bnb
and tourist apartments, and the gastronomification of the smallest
remaining square meter of the city center make up one side of this
backdrop; the continued construction of a zombie museum landscape
determined by tourism is the other side. Instead of supporting
sociocultural centers like Invisible, the city tries to make its life
difficult or even impossible. It’s no surprise that the protest on July
19 needed to make a stop in front of the city hall…


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At the entrance of the city hall, the invisible heroines of the pink
block proudly hold Invisible’s eviction notice up for the camera, to
then tear it apart. And this can be understood not least as the implicit
announcement that the threat of eviction can also be reversed.


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The mayor will have to assume that the eviction will not remain
invisible and unheard in the classic summertime abyss of August vacation
time, and that instead, the discussion and reporting on the city’s way
of dealing with incompliance, such as that of Invisible, will extend
into the liberal mainstream – whom he has to thank for his tenure in
city hall – and into everyday conversations in neighborhoods across the
city, all the way into the bourgeois spaces between the Plaza Merced and
Calle Larios.


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“No al desalojo!” – No to eviction! After the invisible heroines’ sprint
through the shopping street, darkness falls and the march reunites and
moves towards the main plaza, Plaza de la Constitución. This is the site
of the final rally, and here, the numerousness and diversity of the
participants becomes visible. Once again, the power of invention, the
potency of urbanity, the ecology of care has shown itself, appearing in
the march, in countless performative actions and visual representations
as an affirmation of incompliance: often invisible in everyday life, but
always already there, in the ungovernable pores of the surround, before
and before the compliant city.

And as a final act the Invisible’s Manifesto is read aloud:

“A few days ago we received notification from the Municipality demanding
the eviction of La Casa Invisible. It gives fifteen days to vacate that
which has been built over eleven years of collective strength; fifteen
days’ countdown to continue expanding its homogeneity, but we will not
allow it.

They want to eliminate any glimpse of light, this and nothing else is
what they want, because life is unforeseeable, spontaneous; where it is
least expected, a plant appears, opening itself in the middle of the
cement, opening cracks. Here the Invisible grew during these eleven
years, against all things prognostic, planting its roots in the city,
reclaiming with each step a life that is worthy of being lived. And this
is what tarnishes their cement paradise.

It bothers them and they want to censure all things that cannot be
controlled or predicted, all that which escapes their exclusively
monetary interests, so for them culture is capital, and under the law of
the market that which cannot be sold should not exist. They want a flat
culture, without nuances or edges, of a postal and souvenir type, easily
reproducible, classifiable, sellable. This is hwy they try to invent
folklores, new traditions with which they saturate the streets every day
after another, depreciating the everyday life of the people with
impunity, a people that does not need any kind of extras.

While La Invisible was learning to relate to its surround, to understand
that its struggle was not exclusive, but rather connected by every pore
to the claims being made by neighbors who also see that every ounce of
non-marketable life is being robbed and who are being pushed out to
where they cannot be a nuisance, La Invisible became more and more
discomforting to the municipal government and its caretakers. Thus… they
started to TELL LIES!!!, to divert the conflict so that they wouldn’t
need to confront it, to negate the existence of reached agreements,
attempting to choke a project that they are incapable of understanding.
But they have tricked no one: they are the fools used by an industry
that dehumanizes us and conceives of us as slaves, submissive and
exhausted by interminable days; without projects, suffocating from
terrible wages, without time to devote to anything beyond production and
consumption. Because this is how their image of the city wouldn’t become
clouded, wouldn’t capture the tourists’ cameras. But we, the invisible,
can be obscured, and they don’t want to see us.

They want to make us disappear and with every attempt, we become more!

In recent months, from the downpour that did not prevent us from going
out into the streets to call on the city hall to honor its agreements –
because we have honored each and every one of them – from March 10 until
today, when we return to take the streets to prevent the announced
eviction, the building’s patio has been full of new faces and new
projects. It is impossible to conceive of a Málaga without La Invisible,
we are incapable of imagining it and this is why we continue to defend
its existence in the face of the megalomania of City Hall and its
henchmen, in the face of those who sell the city thinking in exclusive
interests, in the face of those who expel, in the face of those who lie
and censure.

La Invisible is all and each and every one of us. We are those who are
here today and those who continue coming day by day. We are those who
they do not want. We are a common. And we are going to demonstrate that
we are, moreover, UNEVICTABLE!

LA INVISIBLE SE QUEDA – Invisible is here to stay!"



Thanks to all the activists and the ecology of Casa Invisible, and a
special thank you to Kike España for providing material and discussing
and co-interpreting all the signs and movements in the in/visible protest.


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