I live in Melbourne with my wife Helen, our two kids and our dog Jet. My coffee order is a magic if it’s still morning, or a half-full latte in the afternoon. I speak four languages reasonably well, and another handful badly, none of them Japanese.
At work, I help build and maintain the infrastructure of civilisation, mostly by typing words into computers. Some of these words are English paragraphs, and some of them are computer programs.
This is now, in Australia. Before I came over, I lived in Spain, where I also did many things:
2003: Having written about videogames for underground comix magazine El Víbora got me invited to write game reviews for Rolling Stone Spain. This gave me the opportunity to pitch articles about copyleft and Creative Commons, and also interviews/profiles of people like Richard Stallman or my friends Anne Laforet and Olatz Acosta.
2000: Launched with my friend Joan Llorach Interactora which, before its two successive pivots, was an interactive TV startup. Joan spoke at both of my wedding celebrations, and I was “second-best man” at his. We play phone tag a lot. Maybe one day he’ll remember to write “co-founder” instead of “founder” on his LinkedIn profile.
1997: Created and presented two TV programs about digital culture and the Internet for a direct-to-satellite channel called Canal C. At this job I met Luisa Picinelli and Pepe Cervera, both now sadly gone. Our friend Carlos Herrán commented that Pepe and I were so alike that, when he introduced us, he didn’t know whether we’d annihilate each other in a flash of light or mind-meld into a single thinking entity. The second happened. With Luisa it was love at first crossing the door to our office uttering her trademark “Hoooooola”. She was 180cm tall and I was sitting down, which reinforced her amazonian presence. I loved Luisa and I loved Pepe, and now they’re both gone, and I miss them.
I also met Pilar and Luis and Feli and David and Nacho and Mencía, and made enough money to get a mortgage on an apartment. It was only ok as a job, but it was great as a set of chances at life.
1994: Published in La Balsa de la Medusa “Bienvenidos a la galaxia virtual”, a panoramic (and panglossian) view of virtual reality as an impending inevitablity. Re-reading it 32 years later, I feel it might hold up better if I had managed to hold back the naive optimism. Carlos Piera, who commissioned the piece, also commisioned work from Aurora Polanco alongside newcomers Noam Chomsky, Michael Foucault and Pierre Boulez, who were no doubt grateful for the opportunity. The front cover was given to Aurora Polanco’s diatribe against Botero’s voluminous commercial garbage and how exhibiting this work in public thoroughfares fosters the most wretched and reactionary interests of the art market.
1993: Finished a 5-year degree in Modern Philology, which entailed 2 years of classics and philosophy, and then three years of English language and literature, with some French and German thrown in. This could have been a master’s if I had written and delivered a minor dissertation, but I decided to spend my time learning to program instead, and also hanging out with friends Amaia and Kole, and more-than-a-friend Ana. During uni I worked moving furniture and boxes of textbooks, so I got really fit, and never even realised it until it was gone.
1992: Worked as a secretary/dogsbody at Juana de Aizpuru Gallery. How does one get such a job? Because I had worked as an assistant to artist Eugenio Cano, who went to the same high school where I did Year 12 and who needed help to build his massive Compact. I miss Eugenio and his wife Victoria. There are nights where I dream that I’m back installing an exhibition at Juana de Aizpuru’s Sevilla gallery and finishing at 2 fucking AM and being the guy pouring the bucket of black dye into a leaking toilet, cleaning it up with a mop, and then forgetting about the leak and pouring the mop bucket into the toilet again…
1989: Met Jesús Palacios, Met Kole.
1987: Met Tonino.
Before that, I was once a baby. A baby! What a concept!