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<nettime-ann> pourinfos.org [apostils] : The artist and his “models”. |Jean-Claude Moineau|


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The artist and his “models”
By Jean-Claude Moineau

html version
http://pourinfos.org/encours/item.php?id=3019

Facing the crisis that not only political art or critical art, (two totally different concepts), but contemporary art itself are experiencing, (knowing that “the state” of crisis has always been the “normal” state of art, that art has always been in a permanent state of crisis, a crisis that has recently increased, even accelerated), some people intend to go back to the old polemic (relevant to the various avant-gardes) between documentary-art, or rather, documentary form that inspired Kassel’s last Documenta. What art couldn’t do, documentary, or rather, documentary art, could. As if the so-called “objectivity” or the so-called “transparency” of the document were not suspect, as much as the good old notion of aesthetic experience, here and now, non-mediatized, that most detractors of the document form such as Nicolas Bourriaud in the catalogue of the last Biennale de Lyon [1], cling to.

That context created at the time of Documents, Georges Bataille’s review, the extra artistic reference to science, and especially to anthropology, the search for extra artistic models through art, especially for the anthropological model, or rather the “anthropological paradigm”, even though the notion of paradigm has something too exclusive to be used without care (which, according to S. Kuhn [2]himself, would be abusive). The two following articles also aim in that direction.

The first article, Artist as anthroplogist [3], was written in 1974 by the neo avant-garde conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth,. The piece is really not clear, like most artists writings, especially conceptual artists. It intends to establish a break (in a quasi-Althusser sense) between an “anthropologized art” and the “forms” preceding it what he calls “naive”, relating to artistic activity including the forms of earlier conceptual art. According to Kosuth, earlier art was based on what he called a “scientific paradigm”, and was related to scientism, when, on the contrary, anthropologized art would break from this paradigm.

Kosuth believes that the anthropologist is a man of science, and therefore positioned himself outside of the culture he’s studying; he calls this attitude “un-committed”. But the artist as an anthropologist operates inside his own socio-cultural context and finds himself totally submerged (Kosuth doesn’t see the de-contextualizing character which is that of the museum within which, as an neo avant-garde artist, he continues to mingle), the artist as an anthropologist is an artist that Kosuth would consider “committed” (with the intentional character this implies), but will not use political discourses or bring any aesthetics in the political action as the “protest artist” will.

Kosuth believes that while the anthropologist tries to understand other cultures, the artist, on the contrary, “interiorizes” his own socio-cultural activity. Therefore, the artist as an anthropologist is able to accomplish what the anthropologist has always failed to do. For Kosuth, this paradoxically implies the superiority of the artist as an anthropologist over the anthropologist, his “model”.

The second article is written by the American critic, Hal Foster. The author is both the theoretician of what he calls the neo avant-garde second generation (Daniel Buren, Michael Asher…) who tries to carry on the criticism of artistic institution from the inside, and the road companion of what he calls, at the time, radical Post Modernism - represented by Pictures Artists around Douglas Crimp and Rosalind Krauss - by opposition to the trans-avant-garde and other artists representing what Raymonde Moulin called art for the 80’s Market. The article is called The artist as an ethnographer or does the “end of history” mean the return to anthropology?[4]. One will notice that the title of the article refers to the Post-Modernist crisis of history - ancient continuity history as well as dis-continuity, “structuralism” history, or even still history - to the temptation of what was then a post-history. History is opposed, not like in Michel Foucault’s, whatever his dues to “new-history” are, but to archeology - even though an archeological paradigm appeared in recent art (or rather, a candidate to the title of paradigm), but to anthropology, in reproducing entirely the opposition prevailing in the 60’s between history and structure, as Foster intends in his demonstrations to show an anthropology that would no longer be only Claude Lévi-Strauss’s structural anthropology. In his text, Foster does not praise anthropology or even less so, the artist as an anthropologist or as an ethnographer, but intends to have a truly critical view, both on anthropology (with the internal debates inside the anthropology field, that he calls an auto-criticism practice from anthropology, in a somehow modernist fashion; auto-criticism that, according to him, could have contributed to make it appealing to the artists’ eyes that have adopted the artist as anthropologist paradigm), and on the artist as an anthropologist. I will not only use Foster’s article as my own - as inescapable as could it be - but I will attempt to make a critical reading of it.

The title of the article is, of course, modeled over Walter Benjamin’s L’Artiste comme producteur [5]. In this text, Benjamin sustains that the artist who “shows solidarity with the proletariat” - according to the terms used then - wouldn’t only spread “a politically-right content” – when possible - but must be “artistically right”. “Before asking myself: what is the position of a work of art in relation with the means production at that time, I would like to ask: what is its place within these same means? This question directly aims at the function of the “oeuvre” within the literary production means (or broadly artistic means) of the works of art. In other words, it directly aims at the literary (or artistic) technique of a work of art”.

No Economism in this, since, according to Benjamin, art is not only super-structural unlike orthodox Marxism, but includes what Benjamin calls literary or artistic production links (even though Benjamin avoids technical determinism, whatever dialectical links are being maintained by “the technical production forces” - non specifically artistic - and “the artistic production means”).

What Hal Foster interprets in a totally contestable manner from the Productivist conception as it was defended by USSR right after the revolution launched by the Constructivists, who became later the Productivists, is a conception based on the idea that the avant-garde artist (both in an artistic and in a political sense, that are inseparable anyway) cannot limit himself “to back up the proletariat”, but must become himself a proletarian, must assimilate into a producer in the strong sense of the word and must resolve the artist/producer contradiction. Productivism generally brought back this conception to the engineer/artist conception; the Dadaist Raoul Hausmann and his then companion, Hannah Höch would make a point in reproaching the Productivist conception to carry on praising “expertise” - here again, in all senses of the word – and would oppose to it the conception of the artist as an assembler who only puts pieces recuperated in the industrial production together, without trying to reconcile them in anyway, therefore without being concerned with how they are joined together (that conception was generalized later on by Ernst Bloch [6], without the proletarian reference).

At the same time, Foster allows himself to rediscover – totally out of context, in my opinion – some remains of “Productivism paradigm” in the sculptural action as re-understood – enlarged – in the 60’s by a Richard Serra, and of the notion of “textual production” championed by Tel Quel during the same period.

Foster starts then to relate criticisms held against the productivism paradigm happening at the same time, mainly, he says, from Jean Baudrillard, even if Beaudrillard’s criticism was not aimed at Productivism, but rather at Fonctionalism, which is totally different. According to Foster, these criticisms would have lead the way from a Productivist paradigm to a “Situationist paradigm”, still badly defined even when Baudrillard’s criticisms do not spare the Situationists themselves.

In any case, according to Foster, would we be witnessing the coming of a third paradigm since the second half of the 80’s, the artist as anthropologist, or as ethnographer, since we’re dealing here with a field investigator rather than a office anthropologist (even though Foster seems to hesitate with an other paradigm which would be the artist as a cartographer, or rather as a geographer). An ethnographer paradigm, which oddly enough, would be launched at a time when a crisis would start, not only between ethnography criticized by structural anthropology and structural anthropology itself, just as relates Foster, but anthropology as such, mainly due to - no matter what the anthropologists are saying about it - the fall of the colonial era and the ambiguities of the post-colonial era, if it’s true that there ever was a post-colonial era. At the same time, the anthropology in-crisis could claim itself, unlike the anthropologist as an artist paradigm, as Clifford Geertz [7] and James Clifford [8] did, who are dealing - without falling into obvious aesthetics - with anthropologists writings as literary or artistic texts, of the fictional texture of anthropology, Clifford going as far as talking about “ethnographic Surrealism” (Foster, being ironical about that, also starts to talk about the anthropologist as a collage artist, multi-cultural collage artist, that is). Deconstruction - if not abolition - of the opposition between art (and literature) and anthropology. At the same time, as Foster relates, that anthropology - in this case, cultural anthropology – can present its subject of study, culture, as the result of some collective artists creativity, could assimilate nations to artists. Geertz [9] has been able to handle cultures themselves as texts similar to written texts, to “textualize” non written cultures themselves, with a (questionable) goal to de-contextualize them from their discursive enunciation situation (as well as from the agents’ intentions) to finally consider anthropology as a meta-text, a hermeneutic, when, according to Geertz, the meaning of studied facts is generally not concealed, native people are not cultural idiots, but are spontaneous anthropologists (without any derogatory intention), they are the first interpreters of their own culture, so that anthropology appears - far from the “simple description”, the “return to the real things”, far from Harold Garfinkel’s [10] ethno-methodology - as a second class interpretation, “an interpretation of an interpretation” which aims to remain next to the populations under study. This allows Geertz to build a disparity in the anthropologist and in the “informant” status, a hierarchy between first class and second-class interpretations. The anthropologist’s information is not meant to be read by the concerned populations, but only by “the anthropologists world”. The hermeneutic exchange between the anthropologist and the “anthropologized” resembles the exchange between settlers and colonized peoples, a deeply unequal exchange. This leads Clifford [11] to question the authority of the ethnographer, “his authority and his author-ity” to demand, following Roland Barthes [12] path, the author’s death, at least the individual author if not the collective author, and the reader’s accession to talk, here again, the collective reader, plural, rather than the anthropologist as the author, and ask for the “anthropologist account” as a literary piece. At the same time that appears a new paradigm - not as much for the anthropologist as for anthropology - the paradigm of negotiation (based on the negotiated portrait in photography), of dialogue, of conversation, of inter-subjectivity, of sharing (and not only “exotic sharing”), between anthropologist and “anthropologi-zed”, of even an effective reciprocity, every one ethnography-ing and starting to interpret “the other”.

Nevertheless, one also has to take into consideration that the arrival of the paradigm of the artist as an anthropologist is to be connected with the coming -that we can deplore, alongside with Adorno, without being trapped in a heavy reactive modernism - of art in the broader field of culture - as Krauss is talking about the “broader field” of sculpture when referring to Serra and others - that anthropology is traditionally meant to “control”, although its monopoly is nowadays being threatened by the competition of cultural studies.

Yet, at the same time, what seems to give the art base on anthropology, a more ethical than political character, when political reflux is allowing an ethics come-back, that is not at all the same thing, (let’s not mistake ethics and morality), and even though, as mentioned by Gilles Lipovetsky [13], it would only be “light” soft ethics, without any deep commitment. Deconstruction, as the old sublime category already was, of the aesthetic-ethics distinction.

We do not have here the consensual neo-humanistic, egalitarian, “Family of Man” style of ethics, but rather the ethics of the Other, of the Other with a capital O, ethics of the difference and anthropology defining itself now by opposition to sociology, not as the investigation of man, but as the quest of the Other. Not so much the social Other, but the cultural Other. A passage from a subject defined in terms of economical relationships - perhaps political relationships already - of political exploitation (producer and worker) to a subject defined in terms of cultural identity, representing an “oppressed”, “subjugated” sub-culture. This goes together with the growing interest in the problem of identities in the age of globalization (what Foster rightly links to a definite recent come-back of the subject- and even to a substantial subject-following the Structuralism and post-Structuralism period with the death of the subject and the death of the man, primarily, the death of the author – including also the liberal subject, non substantial, even if the on-going rise of the identities does not reject globalization as much, since it does not belong there. Yet, this would be a pre-defined subject rather than a subject in progress).

And with the idea – as it was the case for the paradigm of the artist as a producer - that the artist generally only has a limited access to this otherness.

Because of the anthropology crisis itself, which for its part, necessitates a re-conversion, otherness non only of the old “primitive” (although this otherness was reduced by its re-conduction to a previous state of “the evolution” of the Same) -otherness that modernist primitivism had already sought in the past -, otherness of the faraway (with a part of exotism), that otherness of the close-by, with, according to Foster, the risk of being self indulgent like Michel Leiris in his search of the Other within himself, in the interiorization of the Other, in the “auto-ethnography” (just like psychoanalysis had rejected the practice of auto-analysis), to project in the other one’s own ideal – or should we say in one’s ideal of the self?-, and to negate the Other as such. Where ethnography used to be in competition with psychoanalysis (the Lacanian Other). Foster sustains that anthropology has now replaced psychoanalysis as the science of the otherness. Anthropology of the close-by can be multi-facetted, from the anthropology practiced by the artist as the anthropologist of his daily routine, of his family, of his friends, to the anthropology practiced by the outlaws, the homeless, and other nomads, migrants or illegal aliens, rejected by the “system”… those who are now taking the status of the proletariat in the past.

This is still true when the ethics of the Other seems to always copy this Other, absolutely Other as close as could it be, on the absolutely Other without any expectation of the divine, the transcendence, the Other being always caught in a “double bind” between subordination to the Same which denies him (consensual ethics) and absolutisation (ethics of the Other).

In particular, a field investigation, on what Marc Augé [14] calls the non-sites, (wastelands, fallow lands… which, more than surrounding our cities (with all the threat intended), distinctions center/suburbs established to reproduce colonialism and post-colonialism, being less and less pertinent appear and pierce the urban space. Art meant to rehabilitate more than to denounce these non-sites, rehabilitation not in the usual urbanism sense, but tending to transform these non-sites into a true anthropologist place according Augé’s definition (that he borrowed from Certeau [15] ).

Nevertheless, this represents a risk to (eco) museum-ize them, to show them off, to turn them into new reservations or new attraction fairs, even into new human zoos, and to make a show, mythical-ize or hero-ize the outcasts themselves, to make a show of the other’s distress just like the so-called humanitarian photography does.

This is the reason why Anthony Hernandez, a Los Angeles photographer, photographed for Landscapes for the Homeless the “homes”[16] of LA “homeless people”, choosing, thus avoiding any voyeurism, by not ever showing homeless people themselves, but only showing the traces they left behind. Camp traces, basic and temporary set-ups, with the goal of not forging a better utopia world (utopia is now taking refuge in the micro-utopia found in the trendy openings at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris ), but with the idea of resisting as much as possible and going as far as to elaborate, in other countries, a sort of infra-architecture, similar to the traces left behind on the land by nomads and similarly to the favelas (they were the inspiration for Japanese artist Tadashi Kawamata’s Field Works - “field works” being the term used in anthropology to designate work in the field - and his own “favelas” that he built himself particularly in Houston at the bottom of high tech modern sky scrapers designed for wealthy individuals as a type of architectonic montage. Transient traces themselves of transient developments that photographic traces are trying to perpetuate in documenting them. Those who left the traces are never seen and have disappeared “for those remaining”. That is the reason why Régis Durand [17] said that, in fact, Hernandez didn’t pretend to be an anthropologist since he never directly dealt with the concerned populations, unlike traditional anthropologist field investigations which looked for subjects, or rather, some of them, “the informers”, like in the Chicago School, see the anthropologist as an active-observer who mingle with the populations he is studying. In fact, Hernandez’s photos always tend to magnify the non-sites that they are reproducing in putting them back, as the title of the series indicates, in the great tradition – genre – of the American West landscape photography, which is filled with spiritualism.

During the winter of 97-98, Jacqueline Salmon in Chambres précaires [18] searched for rooms in the shelters provided by good will organizations for the homeless people during the wintertime. Rooms that, unlike what Virginia Woolf [19] claimed as “a room of her own”, have to be entirely vacated at dawn, by body and personal effects, in order to get people to “work” at looking for jobs, or at least, for food. The spaces shown by Jacqueline Salmon are emptied of their transient occupants, unlike the fallow lands photographed by Hernandez that are free of all marks of appropriation, with the added inconvenience that the outcast finds himself excluded twice; he’s excluded both from the non-sites that precarious rooms are themselves (even if Marc Augé’s notion of non-site can be too open, too vague, since it includes waste grounds, 3 stars hotel rooms and precarious rooms, supermarkets, as well as highways and their surroundings) and he is excluded from the image, he is off-site. He is not so much put at a distance, “distanciation”, than kept in exclusion.
“Rooms without a soul” but paradoxally, the photos bring back the presence of the passing occupants, those who went by and disappeared in the urban material, as a transcendance. There is a sacralization of the homeless, in the excessively religious side of Jacqueline Salmon’s usual architecture photos (that are, in fact, the content of Chambres précaires, as in Hernandez’s pictures are landscape photos). There is no longer an aesthetic representation, but an aesthetic presentation, where the homeless replace divinity. Sublimation of the excluded where a religious character, that too often the characterizes humanitarian photography, Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother, (which appears to be humanitarian photography before the term was coined in the United States by the FSA during the Depression but, since it was de-territory-ized could also, later be used as a symbol for other causes, for instance for the Spanish Civil War), Georges Mérillon’s Piéta de Kosovo, and Hocine’s Algerian Madona (sic), despite some differences.


Aesthetics – or ethics – of the presence-presentation (rather than, as sustains Thierry de Duve [20], presence-absence) can, in some cases, come down to a simple pull back (rather than a total absence) like in Jacqueline Salmon’s other series of photographs called Le Hangar [21] taken in 2001 in the now dismantled Sangatte Center (that can rather be assimilated to Michel Foucault’s [22] heterotopia than a non-site or a counter-utopia). If here again, homeless bodies are mostly absent, photographers show only makeshift beds, like here, folding beds, but also, in order to prove that the place has been occupied, some drying laundry, some strewn items of clothing and shoes. A few sleeping men are appearing furtively in the shot. They are mostly hidden under their covers, they have no faces, they are not identifiable - that was probably necessary for security purposes – and they tend to lose all human characteristics and therefore they become a thing. De-speculation, de-dramatization (like in Edouard Manet’s L’Exécution de l’empereur Maximilien where “the main event”, the historical event, the subject of historical painting, becomes de-dramatized, unlike Goya’s Trois mai 1808), indeed, against “shock aesthetic” – if only there is a “shock aesthetic” – as found in humanitarian photography, risking to bring back the scene from an historical event to a less important event, to bring back the scene in total indifference.

Wouldn’t it be just then, to give back the illegal alien or the outcast his right to the image, rather than keeping him in the absence of image, in the exclusion of image?

Andres Serrano tried to do that in his series entitled Nomades where he photographed homeless people in an improvised studio set in the New York subway; but, in using too much Caravagio’s chiaroscuro (Caravagio also picked street guys as models), he monument-ized (here, opposition monument-document) those he was photographing.

Jens Haaning, the Danish photographer, attempted also to capture first generation immigrants in Copenhagen, in a trendy fashion photo style, as if they were famous top models, with detailed list of their clothing, showing labels and prices, just like in Bret Easton Ellis’ novel, American Psycho. At the same time, he was preparing The refuge Calendar, in 2002 where he used asylum seekers in Finland instead of the usual pin-ups.

This takes us away from the anthropological model, and leads us to many more models coming from high culture or low culture. Gabriela de Gusmao Pereira is precisely the artist who comes closest to the anthropologist model. In Invention Streets [23], she photographed in the streets of Rio de Janeiro, and everywhere else in the world, including in France, not the condition of the destitute, but their resourcefulness, their inventiveness, “the art without art” of the homeless - often effectively visible in her photos – in founding shelters, building themselves rest areas, carrying their burden or selling various small items, non only in order “to survive” - survival being the last resort, a sub-life – but to actually live their lives. Similar gimmicks found in Michel de Certeau [24] show, in their own way, how the homeless resist to being crushed by the so-called consumer society. This is different from “la pratique de la perruque” studied by Michel de Cerneau, where working people are using their work tools for a personal use; we are dealing here with unemployed people who are diverting various consumer society reminders, such as supermarket trolleys. We are far from Krystof Wodiczko’s homeless vehicles or “aliens staff” which, if they were ever available to the outcasts, with the pretense of introducing them to the passers-by, not only would keep them in their otherness, but would also isolate them in their otherness even more. In this case, the fact that homeless people are often visible in the photos is not a problem, since they are neither presented in a victimized way, which would tend crushing them more, nor in a militant mode, but as a source of great creativity. We can regret at the most that Gabriela de Gusmao Pereira is never seen herself on her photos, that whatever room “allocated” to the creativity of those that she photographs, her work still stays in a “one way” direction.

The group Stalker (who took over Andrei Tarkovski’s film title) also got interested in the creativity of the oppressed – the architectural creativity — and is based in Rome. It presents itself as an “urban art lab” with swing-wing geometry, whose composition varies according to the types of projects the group is involved with, and was founded by a group of architects in association with various other architects, artists, photographers, video artists, and anthropologists (except that in this case, the anthropologist is only a model for the artists). They are very fond of walking and therefore, they become walker-architects who are nomads themselves, instead of the usual sedentary characteristics of architecture, and unlike any spectacular-isation, they experiment from the inside the urban phenomenon through their walking, just like the walker-sculptors (Richard Long, Hamish Fulton…), widely using photography, with the difference that Stalker’s walks are on urban territory and not on rural territory. These walks are also to be “situated” in the Situationist drift scene, with the difference that they are not taking place in residential areas, but in what Stalker calls “current territories” – current in a sense of temporary – a more limited notion than the non-site notion referring to waste grounds, fallow lands, and other urban zones, not so much peripheral or marginal, but in-between zones generated by urban metropolis while waiting for redistribution and constitute the dregs of urban civilization. Stalker draws maps of the current territories after the walks, that is a model, this time effectively a cartographic or geographic models, even if those maps are meant to help losing usual geographic and tourist landmarks. Cartography –maps and not carbon copies - to take the term of Deleuze and Guattari [25] – of other sites – heterotopia or Temporary Atonomous Zones (TAZ) [26] types, temporary themselves – and of other forms of life trying to escape predetermined rules enacted by architects, town planners, research departments, politicians and planners of all sorts, to escape control, and invent all types of new possibilities: squats, illegal constructions, “wild vegetables gardens”… An architecture without architects being models for other architects themselves. As it happened in Pessac [27], the inhabitant would be accused of “denaturalizing” architecture –in this case, Le Corbusier’s architecture – by doing some changes in order to take it over – it has been said that modernist architecture was not, in fact, a housing machine since it was not habitable, a piece of furniture brought in a house built, for example by Mies van der Rohe was perceived as an intrusion-, the inhabitant is here responsible if not for the architecture, for the habitat, such as, according to Duchamp, the observer is drawing the portrait, or in the portraits “executed” by some portraitists, the portrait-ized is painting the portrait, not the portraitist. Thus, Stalkers’practices become de facto a modernist functionalism criticism. Even though Stalker since returned to the conception of artist as an ethnographer but rather as a social re-mediator, and that is very questionable, since social re-mediation is almost always an illusion, because it only soothes the pains without being able to resolve pending problems.

As the cartographic paradigm was also adopted by the architect Stefano Boeri and his Agency Multiplicity based in Milan, and associated with various artists (including the photographer Gabriele Basilico), - they have undertaken researches about “eclectic atlas”, in using heterogeneous supports without any pseudo-unity stitching up of contradictions - trying to explore the relationship between land transformations, vertical regulation systems and the proliferating forms of local auto-organization.

The artist, rather than talking on the behalf of the proletariat or the outcasts, could try, if not “to free the speech”, or at least, to give voice to those who cannot speak out, who does only in a “fixed” way, like on television during reality shows. It could be another paradigm, the artist as spokesperson, opposed here again, to Wodiczko’s spokesperson, who is seen more as a gagging instrument than a true spokesperson…

Jean-Claude Moineau
Paris, November 10 th, 2005

Notes:

[1] Nicolas BOURRIAUD, « Time Specific Art contemporain, exploration et développement durable », Expérience de la durée, Biennale de Lyon, Paris musées, 2OO3.
http://www.cfwb.be/lartmeme/no029/pages/page4.htm


[2] Thomas KUHN, Thomas KUHN, « Comment on the Relations of Science and Art », 1969, The Essential Tension, Selected Studies in Scientific Tradition and Change, Chicago, University of Chicago, 1977.
http://www.gallimard.fr/auteurs/Thomas_S._Kuhn.htm
http://www.des.emory.edu/mfp/Kuhnsnap.html


[3] Joseph KOSUTH, «The Artist as Anthropologist», 1975, Art after Philosophy and After, collected Writings,1966-1990, Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press, 1991.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0262111578/002-1919957-9836809?v=glance&n=283155


[4] Hal FOSTER, « L’Artiste comme ethnographe, ou la “fin de l’Histoire“ signifie-t-elle le retour à l’anthropologie ? », tr. fr. Jean-Paul AMELINE, ed. Face à l’histoire, L’artiste moderne devant l’événement historique, Paris, Flammarion- Centre Georges Pompidou, 1996.
http://www.cfwb.be/lartmeme/no026/pages/page7.htm
http://www.lettrevolee.com/halfoster.htm


[5] Walter BENJAMIN, « L’Auteur comme producteur », 1934, tr. fr. Paris, Maspero, 1969.

[6] Ernst BLOCH, Erbschaft dieser Zeit, 1935, Frankfurt, Suhrkamp.
http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=2188

[7] Clifford GEERTZ, Works and Lives : The Anthropologist as Author, Board of trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior university, 1988
http://www.sociotoile.net/article1.html
http://www.melissa.ens-cachan.fr/article.php3?id_article=254
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0804717478/002-1919957-9836809?v=glance&n=283155
[8] James CLIFFORD, Malaise dans la culture, L’ethnographie, la littérature et l’art au XXe siècle, tr. fr. Paris, ENSBA, 1996.
http://livre.archinform.net/author/James_Clifford.htm


[9] Clifford GEERTZ, “Thick Description : Toward an Interpretative Theory of Culture”, in The Interpretations of Culture, New York, Basic Books, 1973. fr. Daniel CÉFAÏ, ed. L’Enquête de terrain, Paris, La découverte, 2003.
http://lhomme.revues.org/document2042.html
GEERTZ Clifford, “Thick Description : Toward an Interpretative Theory of Culture”, in The Interpretations of Culture, New York, Basic Books, 1973,
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/046503425X/002-1919957-9836809?v=glance&n=283155
http://www.amst.umd.edu/Research/cultland/annotations/Geertz1.html


[10] Harold GARFINKEL, « Le programme de l’ethnométhodologie », 1996, tr. fr. L’Etnométhodologie, Une sociologie radicale, Paris, La découverte, 2001.
http://www.unige.ch/fapse/SSE/groups/life/livres/alpha/F/Fornel_2001_A.html


[11] James CLIFFORD, « De l’autorité en ethnographie, Le récit anthropologique comme texte littéraire », 1981, tr. fr. Daniel CÉFAÏ, op. cit.

[12] Roland BARTHES, « La Mort de l’auteur », 1968, Œuvres complètes, tome II, Paris, Seuil, 1994.
http://cernet.unige.ch/biblio/barth68.html


[13] Gilles LIPOVETSKY, Le Crépuscule du devoir, L’éthique indolore des nouveaux temps démocratiques, Paris, Gallimard, 1992.
http://www.gallimard.fr/


[14] Marc AUGÉ, Non-lieux, Introduction à une anthropologie de la surmodernité, Paris, Seuil, 1992.
http://www.urbanisme.fr/numero/337/Ide/invite.html


[15] Michel de CERTEAU, L’Invention du quotidien, tome 1, Arts de faire, Paris, Union générale d’éditions, 1980.
http://www.bibliopoche.com/livre/L-invention-du-quotidien-Tome-I--Arts-de-faire/21374.html


[16] Anthony HERNANDEZ, Landscapes for the Homeless, Hanovre, Sprengel Museum, 1995 et Landscapes for the Homeless II, Sons of Adam, Paris, Centre national de la photographie- Lausanne, Musée de l’Elysée, 1997.
http://www.photographie.com/?evtid=105269&secid=2%20&PHPSESSID=7971868c65ae815830b11badf4b65e4c


[17] Régis DURAND, « Fils d’Adam », Anthony HERNANDEZ, Landscapes for the Homeless II, op. cit.
http://www.fetchbook.info/fwd_description/search_2867541085.html
http://www.etudes.photographie.com/noteslect/ndl0309.html


[18] Jacqueline SALMON et Paul VIRILIO, Chambres précaires, Heidelberg Kehrer, 2000.
http://www.campusi.com/isbn_3933257352.htm


[19] Virginia WOOLF, A room of Her own, tr. fr. Paris, Denoël- Gonthier, 1951.
http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/exhibits/woolf.htm


[20] Thierry de DUVE, « Performance ici et maintenant : l’art minimal, un plaidoyer pour un nouveau théâtre », Essais datés tome 1, 1974-1986, Paris, La différence, 1987.
http://home.netvigator.com/~jasperl/r%60tdd.htm#Brief%20Introduction


[21] Jacqueline SALMON, Le Hangar, Paris, Trans photographic press, 2001.
http://www.transphotographic.com/upload/fichier1141840590.pdf

[22] Michel FOUCAULT, « Des espaces autres », 1967, Dits et écrits 1954-1988, tome IV, 1980-1988, Paris, Gallimard, 1994.
http://foucault.info/documents/heteroTopia/foucault.heteroTopia.fr.html
http://books.google.fr/books
http://foucault.info/documents/foucault.entretienDangereux.fr.html
http://www.word-power.co.uk/platform/Michel-Foucault-Books


[23] Gabriela de Gusmao PEREIRA, Rua dos inventos – Invention Street, Rio de Janeiro, Ouro sobre Azul, 2004.

[24] Michel de CERTEAU, op. cit.
http://www.jesuites.com/histoire/certeau.htm

[25] Gilles DELEUZE et Félix GUATTARI, Capitalisme et schizophrénie, tome 2 Mille plateaux, Paris, Minuit, 1980.
http://www.uta.edu/english/apt/d&g/d&gweb.html
http://www.webdeleuze.com/
http://www.revue-chimeres.org/guattari/guattari.html
http://1libertaire.free.fr/Guattari16.html


[26] Cf. Hakim BEY, T.A.Z. The Temporary Autonomous Zone. Ontological Anarchy, Poetic Terrorism, Brooklyn, Automedia, 1991.
http://www.lyber-eclat.net/lyber/taz.html


[27] Cf. Philippe BOUDON, Pessac de Le Corbusier, étude socio-architecturale, Paris, Dunod, 1969.
http://www.archinform.net/quellen/57906.htm



Jean-Claude Moineau’s biography:

After studying linguistic, philosophy, math and music, Jean-Claude Moineau got involved during the 60’s, in numerous artistic and “meta-artistic” activities, mostly directed toward conceptual art, virtual poetry, events, performing pieces, mail art and “art beyond art”. He participates in various solo and group exhibitions and performances in Paris, in France and all over the world, and he collaborates with many French and international magazines. He is the co-founder of many groups and reviews, and he organizes the first Festival Permanent in Orléans, France.

As did most 68’s artists, he then stoppes all artistic activity. Unlike many who started to get involved again, he refuses to resume his action, as if nothing ever happened before. He continues to be interested in art and in its apories, but in spite of it all, his thought processes remain “meta-artitic”, in the sense of “what relates" to (in a critical way) art.

Since 1969 he teaches art theory at Paris VIII University where he launched and for a long time directed a First Cycle in Art Formation, while being aware of the on-going art world. He also participates in many talks and lectures and is curating many exhibitions.


Main recent publications:

- L’Art dans l’indifférence de l’art, Paris, PPT, 2001.
http://www.e-ppt.net/pages/achats.html
- « La Musique s’écoute-t-elle encore ? »,
Musiques d’aujourd’hui, Actualité en 26 propos, Conseil général de la Creuse, 1993.
http://www.synesthesie.com/heterophonies/theories/moineaulamusiquetxt.html
- « Who’s Afraid of Video ? », Giallu, Revue d’art et de sciences humaines n° 5, Ajaccio, 1995.
- « Trop Much », Deuxième mois « off » de la photographie à Paris, Paris, 1996.
http://www.myope.com/mois-off/off.html
- « After Art After Philosophy », (Easy) Viewing, St. Denis, Musée d’art et d’histoire, 1997.
- « Paragraphs on Contextual Art », Présenten° 1, Paris, 1997.
- « Le Récit de l’art », Le Récit et les arts, Paris, L’Harmattan, 1998.
http://www.harmattan.fr/index.asp?navig=catalogue&obj=livre&no=13666
- « Habiter le cyberspace ? », Episodic n° 4-5, Paris, 1998.
http://www.e-ppt.net/pdf/catal_2006.pdf
- « ça va faire mal », Output n 2, Séoul, 1999.
- « Le Réseau de l’art », Output n°3, Séoul, 1999.
- « Au-delà de la valeur d’exposition », Avis de passage, St. Brieux, ODDC Côtes d’Armor, 2001.
- « ça va ça vient », BERNARDINI, Alain, 1995/2002, Brétigny-sur-Orge, Espace Jules Verne, 2002.
http://www.sdnf.net/panoramic/panoramic.html
- « A compte d’auteur » Allotopie n°B, Copyleft, Rennes, Incertain sens, 2003.
http://www.uhb.fr/alc/grac/incertain-sens/commande.htm
- « Fluxus : une critique artiste de l’art », Luvah hors série n°29, Besançon, Luvah- Dijon, Presses du réel, 2004.
http://www.4t.fluxus.net/colloque01.htm
http://www.4t.fluxus.net/40p-a-lo.htm
- « Une théâtralité post-théâtrale », CORVIN, Michel et ANCEL, Franck, ed. Autour de Jacques Polieri, Scénographie et technologie, Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, 2004.
http://bibliographienationale.bnf.fr/Livres/M6_05.H/cadre792-1.html
- « De la photographie comme opérateur critique à la photographie comme opérateur d’art », Ligeia, Dossiers sur l’art n°49-50-51-52, Paris, 2004.
http://revue-ligeia.com/contenu.php?id=19
- « Qu’est-ce que l’art a à faire des images ? », Art grandeur nature 2004, Saint-Ouen, Synesthésie 2004.
http://www.seine-saint-denis.fr/agn/
- « Le Concert des nations à l’ère de la globalisation », La Toison d’or, Laboratoire artistique flottant, Girold, Apollonia, 2004.
- « Pour une nouvelle économie de l’art »,Guy CHEVALIER, Économies silencieuses et audaces approximatives, Paris, PPT, 2005.
http://www.e-ppt.net/
-« Polyrythmie », Urban Rhythms Human Rythms, Pékin, Beijing Film Academy / Saint-Denis, Université de Paris 8, 2005.
-« Fluxus, un en-jeu géopolitique », 20/21 siècles, Cahiers du Centre Pierre Francastel n°2, Fluxus en France, 2005.
-« Étant donnés », Checkpoint n°1, 2006.


Translation : Kristine Barut Dreuilhe

Original version:
L'artiste et ses "modèles"
http://pourinfos.org/encours/item.php?id=3020


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