The Bureau of Operational Landscapes

Entropic Publishing

Field Report #1 Field Season Two, Trenčín September - October 2025

February 27, 2026

Field Season Two: September–October 2026
Field Report Notice
The Bureau of Operational Landscapes circulates field reports as temporary dispatches. Each season is published for a limited duration and then withdrawn. This archive consolidates those materials as part of an ongoing record of infrastructural sites and public encounters.

Field Season Two: September–October 2026

Field Report Notice

The Bureau of Operational Landscapes circulates field reports as temporary dispatches. Each season is published for a limited duration and then withdrawn. This archive consolidates those materials as part of an ongoing record of infrastructural sites and public encounters.

Field Season 2 marks the birth of the Temporary Seeing Section in Trenčín, Slovakia. During this period the Bureau operated publicly across the city, staging provisional acts that redirected attention toward its overlooked infrastructures and residual spaces. These reports register that shift from survey to situated action.

September 21, 2025

Yesterday, as I made my towards my ultimate destination of Trenčín, Slovakia, I drove through the post-industrial town of Ostrava in the Czech Republic, a city in the Silesian region ringed by dis-used steel factories, coal pits, blast furnaces, and coke plants that have been repurposed into sites of leisure and cultural heritage.

Dolní Vítkovice in Ostrava, Czech Republic. A former steel mill turned cultural heritage site with an amazing view from Bolt Tower.

Immediately I thought of the land artist Robert Smithson, who suggested that the future is pre-dated by decay; what he called a “set of ruins in reverse.” He referred to this as entropy, not so much in the scientific sense, but metaphorical. For him, entropy meant that once a system has begun, it is already tending towards its own dissolution.

Robert Smithson, A Tour of the Monuments of Passaic, New Jersey, 1967. In this work, Smithson recast suburban and industrial construction sites and pipes as “monuments,” ruins-in-reverse that revealed entropy in the everyday landscape.

And that’s what this newsletter is all about. It is a “set of ruins in reverse,” born with its own death inscribed. That sounds rather dramatic, but since yesterday, I conceive of this second set of dispatches (the first can be read here) as a form of ‘entropic publishing,’ vanishing not by accident but because disappearance is written into its design, dead even before it begins.

The deletion of you, the subscriber, is intentional as well. Your own disappearance in a month is part of the form, an entropic gesture built into its structure. So I am not describing entropy, but enacting it, carrying erasure as part of its basic operation.

This brings me to the next point: you might notice that I have a name for this Mission in Trenčín: the Temporary Seeing Section. I made a list over the summer, agonizing over various options:

  • Temporary Alignments

  • Public Optics Unit

  • Department of Minor Crossings

  • The Misalignment Authority

  • Manual for Incomplete Views

  • Agency for Partial Sighting

  • Civic Unit for Peripheral Observation

Even this discarded list is part of the method, a minor archive of visions that never came to be, already obsolete before they were enacted. I opted for the Temporary Seeing Section in my car, as the smokestacks of Ostrava faded from view in the mirror (itself a gesture of disappearance). Seeing is provisional. Anything that I record in Trenčín is a view that won’t last; conditions change, contexts shift, and perspectives fade. The moment I ‘named’ the Bureau’s next mission (its first was Park Maasvlakte), is also the start of its decline, a ruin in reverse. The Section is a vantage for a specific moment of time and space, then it closes.

The Temporary Seeing Section — including this newsletter, and anything else I get up to here — is a methodology, really. It is a photographic project that understands seeing as temporary, entropic, and already disappearing.

Yes, very poetic, but: WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

I have been commissioned by the city of Trenčín, which is the European City of Culture for 2026. They’re asked the Bureau to create a series of public art installations this year and in 2026. Specifically, they asked me to focus on an old railway bridge that crosses the river Váh, once a key transit node and today an industrial relic, formerly part of circulation and freight but now circulation reserved for a different form of capital, mostly symbolic. Like those coke plants in Ostrava, this bridge is a shift from work to spectacle, carrying trains to carrying memory.

What I am going to do? Well, read this newsletter to find out!

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The Future (According to Leonard Cohen)
Signing Off