Session 3


Moderator

Julian Stallabrass

Thanks to all of you for your forceful, thoughtful responses; once again we have a lot of contrast between them.

Jennie holds to a division of art and life in which art can allow us to reflect, assimilate, and judge the deeper meaning of the flux of events, including the horrors with which we are faced. Francisco gives a brilliant description of Galindo’s most celebrated work, and of the website 72 Migrants, that perhaps point in a slightly different direction: here the desire is not only to frame, process, and bring the Medusa-stare of the world into reflection and thought but also to break through the indifference with which the flow of events is illuminated, commented on, and then blithely disposed of in the media—to make us truly feel as well as merely watch. Martha’s critique, finally, is directed at quite a different scenario: the remarkable ideological contradiction between an art that is thoroughly compromised by the powers that be but that preens as autonomous—in a “critical” way, naturally. It reminds me of some of the scenarios painted by Isabelle Graw in her book High Price (2010): the artist as the pioneer of what we are all now supposed to be, the Nietzschean forger of our own distinct and publicized personalities, in which professional and personal are merged; the opportunistic and content-free alliances that such agents form, given their lack of any meaningful ideological differences; and the marketability of a powerless “critical” art and even of ”critique” itself.

In this Forum, we have been looking in various ways at the current possibilities for satire and critique in art. Jennie rightly points to a long tradition of activist art, Francisco finds salutary work in performance and online, and Martha points out (rightly of course) that we cannot know the future. I wonder if we should also further consider the life of a broad classicism in the present. If many of the specific references of the classical world have passed away, and it is too much to expect students to know of Aristophanes, Socrates, or Sappho, are we on the other hand witnessing an accommodation between classicism and modernism, a compact that hibernated through the postmodern period to emerge in full health, and that is particularly visible in architecture? In the U.K., we have a number of prominent advocates of a restrained, subtly composed and technophile modernism that dominates much corporate and cultural construction—I am thinking of Richard Rogers, Norman Foster, and James Stirling, for example, though there are plenty of other, younger practitioners. When we think of the persistence of the “white cube” gallery, and the general array of restrained, carefully proportioned spaces in which we see art, all exhibiting such good taste; and when we think of the alliance of that style with the grand open spaces of the museum—well, isn’t there something classical about all of this? And what does it mean, then, that we so often see contemporary art, however variously we conceive it, in an essentially classical frame?


PANELIST

Francisco Goldman

Mexico really can’t be summed up in theoretical fragments, as posited in that last round of posts. For some excellent insight on how, at least regarding the current crisis, Mexico and the U.S. constitute a single entity—especially in the border region—see Alma Guillermoprieto’s recent piece on the narco war in the New York Review of Books.

Of course, the context of this forum is a New York based show of European art. But I happen to find myself in Mexico, in Oaxaca. And Mexico, and especially Oaxaca, do provide interesting parallels to some of the issues we’ve raised.

Like Florence, Oaxaca is a small city that is also a museum in itself, full of sixteenth-century churches and monuments. It’s a tourist city but also a state governmental and mercantile capital and a center of contemporary Mexican art. I’ve just come from visiting the recently restored Santo Domingo Church. Directed by the famous local artist Francisco Toledo, the restoration employed sixteenth-century methods and materials, a hybrid of the European and the indigenous. The tunnel-like corridors of its convent, ending in arched openings that catch the rays of the sun as it rises and sets over the mountains, have walls and ceilings painted with a mixture of egg whites, clay, and baba de nopal, from the green pulp of the nopal cactus. The long corridors glow with the most extraordinary green-blue-golden light, a soul-stirring celestial glow if ever I’ve seen one.

As I walked back from the church to my hotel, black-clad police in riot gear had set up steel gates, letting people into and out of the zocalo one by one. Today’s forecast includes sunny skies and street protests. Though the situation has calmed recently, since 2006 Oaxaca has been the sight of regular clashes, many of them violent, between members of the APPO teachers’ union and the many other activist groups arrayed around them and the often repressive security forces of the governor, an office held for eighty years by the PRI party. The central role played by street artists in the Oaxaca rebellion awoke interest all over the world.

Over the last few days I’ve received an informal seminar in the history of the movement from video artist Isabel Rojas, performance artist Gabriela de Leon, and curator Talia Castillo. Much of it is familiar: kids from the poor barrios finding political expression and activism through street art: graffiti and the production of icons (a punk Zapata and so on.) The venerable walls of the “museum city” themselves came into play. The kids would graffiti; almost immediately, brigades of police would hit the streets with paintbrushes, covering subversive slogans and images with bold colors. (“The police and the graffiti artists were making a political statement together with paint,” my hosts told me. “The city looked like a huge Rothko painting.”) By defacing many of the city’s most beautiful buildings, the activists displayed their immaturity, giving the governor rhetorical cover for some of his government’s excesses, including murder.

Four years later, some of the street artists still languish in prison. Others have hit the world art market, reproducing their iconic activist images in chic galleries. Others anguish over what the next step should be. In recent elections the entrenched PRI finally lost its grip on power in the state. The evolving Oaxaca remains an open-air museum of classical architecture and a vital site of activist art.




PANELIST

Jennie Hirsh

Julian, in citing museum spaces, you describe a sector for encountering contemporary art that’s not necessarily physical but institutional. It’s seen at regularly fixed appointment sites such as Venice, São Paolo, and Kassel, or, more recently, Istanbul, Gwangju, and Sharjah, and at a growing number of itinerant festivals (Manifesta, Mercosur, Meeting Point) and myriad other biennials of various size and scope. And, of course, contemporary art is also seen in the museum: whether collection or Kunsthalle, white cubes and white columns persist as part of many of the structures that institutionally legitimize artworks. But for contemporary art, institutional frames—critical journals, galleries, and venues of display both actual and virtual—become “classical” not necessarily by virtue of their architecture but by their standing as the cultural authorities whose endorsements distinguish art from noise.

At best, they locate and establish good work; at worst, they use art to promote other agendas. If, from the nineteenth century onward, museums served as storehouses for national treasures and the spoils of war, then we should be wary of their walls, too often tombs for societies reduced to symbol as they are displaced, misconstrued, and dissected. As I mentioned earlier, these secular temples have come under productive attacks, e.g. Hans Haacke at MoMA, Fred Wilson at the Maryland Historical Society, and Mona Hatoum at the Querini Stampalia, with artists as agents provacateurs excavating unsavory evidence buried in the histories of institutions.

But museums should be credited as well for changing themselves. The controversies and protests of the 1960s and ’70s pushed them to be self-reflective, to establish education departments with film screenings and other activities open to a broader public. Museums also host critical discussions, charged engagements, and new narratives that attempt to enrich their social function. If museums assumed the form of the classical temple as a strategy both for protecting and proclaiming their wares, they have more recently taken on a different aspect of the classical. Lively spaces of education, conversation, and entertainment, museums aim to be closer to the agora than the temple, privileging the secular over the sacred.

With regard to architecture itself: cultural institutions self-consciously premised on thinking about their own histories offer up more than white cubes for viewing contemporary art: P.S. 1, the school, and the 1970s in New York; the Reina Sofía and the eighteenth-century hospital in Madrid; Hamburger Bahnhof and the railway system in Berlin; and the Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia. These exhibition sites stage the apperception that I mention in my second posting by playing on their own pasts. With different degrees of cynicism and branding, the détourned site inscribes art into the context of architectural history. I would argue that this kind of classicism provides a respite from the reductive and reintroduces a consideration of history into contemporary art.

But in accounting for the different producers of knowledge and power in our discussion, it strikes me that one agent has been omitted. Curators, whether working in institutions or independently, play just as critical role in the production, dissemination, and analysis of art as do its makers and consumers. No longer charged with mere custodial duties, they discover, commission, and critique; they serve as cultural moderators, stirring up discussions and posing difficult questions about what art can do and what it has already done. This kind of discourse, both spontaneous and scholarly, is the inclusive net that draws together disparate authors of both art and its analysis in forums more dynamic than academic scholarship can generate on its own.




PANELIST

Martha Rosler

Julian, I think it is possible that we can point to the artist as archetypal “post-Fordist” worker as a popular trope in some sectors of the art world—the idea being that at present the growth sectors of the educated classes are expected to be flexible, adaptable, self-inventing, and especially in charge of one’s image or persona (or both). You suggest a grand contemporary biopolitical effort to merge the personal and professional, but I think this idea of the cultivated person as an artist has had other incarnations. No matter how quaint or antiquated we may find the figure of the man of taste and sensitivity, I find the primary distinction between the current model and that older one to be that in this new image, the labor of production is acknowledged, even foregrounded, while in the older version it is downplayed or denied.

I would like to swerve a bit to invoke here the tripartite schema of art and its relationship to philosophy (and to the uses of art by political regimes) put forward by Alain Badiou. In his Handbook of Inaesthetics (2004), Badiou presents us with the categories of the didactic, the romantic, and the classical modes, noting that the Aristotelian classical “dehystericizes” art. In Badiou’s account, in the classical schema art is not a form of thought; rather, its function is to allow for catharsis through what he calls (in translation!) “liking.” But the function of liking—appealing to taste, to the senses, but not to truth—makes art a service, and it is as such that states employ it. Badiou reminds us that in the past, absolutist states “vassalized” art and artists but that at present it’s art’s funders who do so. It is possible to see in this catharsis a certain therapeutic function, a soothing of any lingering disconnect or antagonism, intentional or otherwise.

The Latin Americanist George Yúdice, in his Expediency of Culture (2004), makes much of the fact that the imperative to artists to adopt a seemingly vanguardist merging of art with everyday life—which is, under present conditions, effectively a call to art as service—is derived from the state and from powerful foundations. The same applies to the corollary imperative to museums to fill an educative role. These are frightening thoughts for those of us interested in critique, or even simply in art enacted in the wider world outside the white cube. Since vanguardism is distinctly anticlassical, we may easily wind up with opportunism, in the circuit between artists’ desiring to evade the institutions of art and state but not wanting to cede the ground of either those institutions or their funding. If we find in European architecture a neoclassicism built partly out of the language of modernism, perhaps it can remind us that this architecture is at present not vanguardist but corporate. And the persistent framing up of art, of whatever stripe, in the confines of the white box or its symbolic equivalents is all too often similarly opportunistic and driven by the imperatives of capital.




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