DeeDee Halleck on Wed, 27 Oct 1999 20:03:23 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> On the Margins of the Blockbuster |
This is the response I did at the Herb Schiller conference to Bram Dijkstra's very unidimensional non dialectic look at the market and the art world. It is addressing pre - net art pretty much. Dijkstra doesn't even use email and I was trying to meet him on his own turf (19th cent.art). On the Margins of the Blockbuster Discussion of Bram Dijkstra's talk Oct 2, 1999 While no one can deny the corrupt appropriation of art and artists by both private and corporate capital, there are certain contradictions within the structures of art production and consumption that need to be examined. We live in strange times... Blue Chip gallery owner Mary Boone recently spent 30 hours in jail for an exhibit that included live ammunition rounds. Mayor Giuliani is railing against corporate funding of art and the use of museums as a tool of the art market in his scathing attack on the "Sensation" show at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. What is good art? Perhaps it would be that which transcends the fads and day to day investment strategies of collectors and dealers, the hysteria of politicians and the scorn of academia. The trick for the both investors and art curators is to guess which artist will pass that test of time. Contradiction: those artists who stand the test of time are often the more cantankerous, the more difficult to control, the ones who rage against the very venues in which they appear. Did Bougereau simply go out of fashion with wealthy patrons and their art establishment lackeys, or is it that his art remained banal and conformist despite his formidable technical skill? Maybe there's a reason that those British portrait painters lost "value" other than the fading usefulness of their ancestor flounting. What about Turner? He is certainly one artist who transcends fads. His work has grown in importance in a way that leaves portrait painters in the dust, or perhaps the steam of his colossal train station. Nor is "fashion" merely the work of autonomous critics. One thing Bram does not mention is the insidious role of the USIA in regards to the promotion of abstract expressionism Serge Guilbaud has dug up quite interesting facts in this regard. To cite one example: the major national security subsidy of the 1950's blockbuster photo exhibition, Family of Man, which after its popular opening at MOMA, toured 26 countries at the behest of the USIA no doubt to promote the "universality" of the "American Century". The blockbuster art exhibition phenomonen started quite a while ago, witness the Armory Show in the 1920's which introduced Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase to Manhattan. I must confess a certain weakness for blockbuster shows. I recently visited a Millet exhibition in Massachusetts. Aside from a painting here or there (the haunting "Man with a Hoe" at the Getty, for example) there had never been a chance for me to see the work as a whole-- work which is scattered across several continents. The blockbuster dollars paid the various insurance and freight companies to allow this work to come together for a tour of several years. I highly recommend the exhibit. For one thing it is an interesting insight into the sources of impressionism to which Bram alluded. Millet's use of light was keenly noted by Van Gogh, who at one point called him the "father of us all". Actually one of the special aspects of Millet's work for me was his lack of paternalism and especially his lack of misogyny towards women. Is there any other male painter of his era who so resolutely refused to use women's naked bodies? His women are workers with equal strength and dignity to the men. Blockbuster? Yes. There were bus loads of women from Connecticut, hordes of scruffy camp children and their counselors. Am I being sappy when I say that it felt nice to see them there, learning about a humanist painter? Abstraction or humanism-- capital will use whatever it can. The fact that an exhibit can have integrity, can be a source of critical assessment of the human condition testifies to the fact that the art system lives and runs on contradiction. There have to be good curators and good projects out there. Otherwise the system wouldn't work as well as it does. As to abstraction, I think we have to treat abstraction concretely and look at the particular. Capital takes the function of abstraction and generalizes it into exchange. Nothing is sacred, everything is grist for the profit mill. As Marx and Engels said in the Manifesto, "all traditional forms drown in the icy waters of egotistical calculation." Capitalist abstraction is corrosive: it dissolves all of nature and humanity into a calculus of exchange. But is abstraction in art always a tool of capital? What about Malevitch, Rodchenko, Mondrian, African masks, or shields from New Guinea? I recently saw the stone mosaics of Mitla near Oaxaca which show the human capacity to see abstract form in the midst of a concrete sensuous environment. It is a human product that abstracts from the land. The "art" of it is the tension between particular forms and overriding landscapes. The work of Richard Serra can resonate within the industrial urban landscape with a similar tension and clarity. Because Serra is a high priced commodity in the art market does not per se negate his work. The stone columns of Mitla are pure Richard Serra. Within the art market, Serra perfectly illustrates the art establishment's contradictory need for negation. Serra is someone whose rage against the capital machine only increases the market value of the work. Because his powerful critique is taken, rightly so, as a sign of integrity. There is a peculiar dance of power between the museums, the foundations, the collectors and the curators. The power the artists muster is that power to be contrary. Without that contrariness, they would not pass as artists. This is why I propose that Herb Schiller is honored in the art world in a way that far exceeds his recognition, at least domestically in the social science discipline of "Communication". A student of visual arts is more likely to have a Herb Schiller essay in her reading packet than a social science student, even at this august institution ((UCSD). Herb's contrariness is exactly what the art field needs. He has been a hero at the Whitney Museum, the Kitchen, the Wexner Museum and many other bastians of art power because of his integrity. Integrity is necessary to art. The NEA cannot exist without peer panels, and peer panels which have a certain degree of integrity to them. Get a bunch of artists in a room to give out bucks to other artists and, well, they have to get beyond their egos-- integrity is their only currency. Therefore there is consternation over the NEA and the right wing correctly reads the peer decisions as insurrection. With peer panels, you will have controversy and insurrection. But without peer panels, the whole idea of arts funding loses legitimacy. Without insurrection there is no art. To be defined as an artist is to be a rebel. I was an adolescent in the uptight suburbia of Chattanooga, Tennessee, when Life Magazine ran the David Duncan photo series on Picasso's life. What a life: romping with goats and gorgeous children on cliffs above the Mediterranean, drinking huge goblets of wine in a cluttered studio while dressed only in shorts. I immediately knew what I wanted to be when I grew up. It was a total rejection of the southern bourgeois trap toward which my schoolmates were headed. Here in Southern California, those students who declare that they will major in the arts are different from communication students. For an Orange County kid to say she wants to be an artist is per se a rebellious act. Communication students are more practical. I am always astounded with their career goals. The more ambitious ones want to be the weather girl on a local news show. Most of them would gladly settle for a job, as they put it, in "public relations" When asked to further define this, they go on to explain that they might like to work for a real estate or advertising firm. I take it as my goal to, at the very least, make them see that there are other options. Being an artist is perhaps the most courageous thing they could do. The Duncan piece on Picasso was the beginning of a still extant tradition of the artist as celebrity and super-star, the Interview effect. No one played the celebrity role as well as Warhol himself. Unfortunately artists have allowed themselves to be suckered into this convenient publicity and we have Philip Glass selling Dewars Scotch, while Robert Longo sells designer suits. I'm not sure any more if those visual arts students want to paint all day on the edge of the Mediterranian or just sip Dewars in designer suits at a trendy Chelsea bar. But even this trend is changing. The glam artist may be on the way out. Now visual arts departments are getting students who want technical training to work in html. Talented young people are whisked away to design web pages, CD-ROMs, video games, special effects for the blockbuster movies, and digital sound systems. In the canyons of lower Broadway, Silicon Alley and Wiltshire Boulevard, they sit in front of power computers coaxing their software into rotating speeding buses and blasting target bridges with the latest 3-D techniques. As they morph celluloid monsters, their bosses are morphing with each other on the top floor. The creative youth whose brains are the engines of these media machines are deeply cynical about both the world and about the corporations that have hired them. Does it matter if they are working for Cap Cities or Disney or Westinghouse or Murdoch, or a murky combination of any or all of these? They are incapable of talking or thinking abstractly about the system or themselves. On the margins of the art "market", but sometimes hacking into museum or gallery venues, are many artists whose rage has been put in the service of social change. I recently helped out with a huge national art project called 911 Mumia, in which over 200 galleries and museums devoted space to artist's work, in a protest against the death sentence on behalf of radio artist/journalist Mumia Abu Jamal. I would like to toast those artists who both buck and use the system: Seth Tobankan, Peter Kuper, Erik Drooker, Sue Coe, and the other artists of the World War III comics, Barbara Kruger, Leon Golub, Betty Saar, Jimmy Durham, Leon Golub, Allen Sekula, Dread Scott, Keith Haring, Rigo, Craig Baldwin, Shulea Cheang, Martha Rosler, Adrienne Jenik, Igor Vamos, Yvonne Rainer. There are also those subversives who work to create new modes of showing and sustaining art practice in a stand against the very notion of individualism: the collectives such as Guerrilla Girls, Bread and Puppet Theater, the Center for Land Interpretation, Group Material, Paper Tiger and in the San Diego region, the Border Arts Workshop. And then there are those who work directly to counter the very notion of market, such as Max Schumann, whose self defined "Cheap Art" paints the price (anywhere from 50 cents to 15 dollars) directly on the painting itself in a defiant gesture of non compliance. Vinceremos. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net