Sunday, September 13, 2009
Here is a review by means of an essay, generously donated by Andrew Paul Wood.
et al: That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true!
Christchuch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu
Non enim excursus hic ejus, sed opus ipsum est.
- Pliny the Younger
And once you have walked the length of your mind, what
You command is as clear as a loading-list
Anything else must not, for you, be thought
To exist.
And what’s the profit? Only that, in time
We half-identify the blind impress
All our behaving bear, may trace it home.
But to confess,
On that green evening when our death begins,
Just what it was, is hardly satisfying,
Since it applied only to one man once,
And that man dying.
- Philip Larkin
Art, by its very nature is a frivolous occupation – much as the poet WH Auden said that “poetry makes nothing happen” – which is to say it just inexplicably is. Beyond existing, the work of et al also has an ironic sense of humour to it – something that has often been misinterpreted and mocked in the long war between Philistia and Bohemia – and which lends itself well to this approach. And as there is a lot of theory that is overly burdened with style and its own pretentious jargon, I will try to keep such terminology to a minimum – as Dr Johnson said to Boswell, “you must clear your mind of cant – you may talk that way in society, but do not think in it”.
Any discussion of et al is not going to be possible without some sort of explanation of postmodernism. Where modernism was all about clean lines, abstraction, elimination of the human from art, a generally patriarchal and humourless worldview, and a faith in utopian scientific social progress, postmodernism got fed up with this in the 1960s. Postmodernism sought to do away with pedestals and picture frames by spreading the art throughout the gallery through installation (the crap on the floor option), bringing the audience into the artwork’s space and not the traditional vice versa. Artists began to reintroduce a human element in art through performance and reference to decay, entropy, the organic and the scruffy. Postmodernism made room for feminism and indigenous cultures in a real and meaningful engagement rather than merely as window dressing.
There are three artists to acknowledge in this change: the German installation artist Joseph Beuys who exploited ritual, performance, social memory and abject materials to heal the post-war wounds of German society, and declared “everyone is an artist”; Andy Warhol, who believed art, like TVs and automobiles, was for everybody – and probably didn’t deserve its elevated status; and French conceptualist Marcel Duchamp, who considered the idea more important than the object, and showed anything could be art if put in an art gallery, before he gave up art to play chess.
Marcel Duchamp had a go at that Cubism stuff at the end of the Nineteenth Century, but he was only going through the motions. He didn’t get it. He suspected it was a con on the part of the galleries. In 1917 Duchamp put an unplumbed urinal in a New York art gallery as a critique of the power of dealers and galleries to dictate trends in art (coinciding with the rise of the avant-garde, cubism etc). He called the urinal Fountain and signed it R. Mutt.
It became the iconic original of all conceptual art – art in which the ideas generated are more important than the object itself. et al’s portaloo Rapture, exhibited in Telecom Prospect 2004, refers back to Fountain. Portaloos suggest a more democratic and Kiwi alternative to the urinal. This is not the work that went to the 2005 Venice Biennale. It has no relationship to the argument . As it happens, Paul Holmes became the subject of an art work after he referred to the then Secretary General of the United Nations as a “Cheeky Darkie”. The work was called “White Drip” by Ralph Hotere. It happens to now be in Paul Holmes’ personal collection.
The donkey braying emanating from the cubicles may represent French intransigence on the issue, but also one of the constituent personae of et al: p. mule – also responsible for That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true! p. mule is a direct nod to R. Mutt.
As with the enjoyment of a play, a novel, or any fiction, we have a tacit obligation to accept the pretence or pretext – suspend our disbelief and cynicism in order to embrace a metaphorical and metaphysical reality. The same can be said of religion – we must have faith that there is a God in order that we participate in that belief system. It has frequently surprised me how often some very intelligent, worldly people seem to think that art should be any different – that somehow art should be as easily digestible and understood as a soap opera or commercial. There is a reason that high-end food critics do not tend to review family steak houses, and it's because they need to challenge their own sophistication, the public’s sophistication and the restaurant’s sophistication. The critic is not an underfunded extension of any PR and marketing division, regardless of what others may think or desire.
et al installations are obstinately and cussedly difficult things to read, as is et al itself – the trick is not to try so hard. A lot of people have difficulty dealing with the ambiguous nature of et al – is it one person who like Voldemort must not be named (yes), is it a whole bunch of people (yes). The media got their knickers in a twist about this aspect of et al (notably Paul Holmes) because journalists as a species generally default back to black and white worldviews they picked up as court reporters. Their tabloid circuits detected fraud and potential scandal where, of course, there was none. The important thing was that this wasn't actually important – at least, not in a way they understood it.
Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa, who died in 1935, was probably the greatest poet in twentieth century Portugal – though snubbed for the Nobel Prize for many of the same reasons that hack journalists give et al a hard time. Pessoa liberated his creativity from societal constraints by writing under 72 different names – each a distinct character with a name, a personality and a biography. Pessoa – whose own name translates as ‘person’ or ‘persona’ – called these familiars heteronyms, a word previously used to denote different words for the same thing. For the works he wrote under his own name, he used orthonym – the real name.
Among these diverse entities are included the romantic Bernardo Soares, the modernist Alvaro de Campos, and the romantic Maria Jose – a hunchback girl. Each is substantial, distinct and speaks with a consistent and individual voice, allowing the poet to explore all genres and the various fragments of his psyche.
Another comparison is the scandal that erupted over the Ern Malley/Angry Penguins affair in wartime Melbourne. Two young poets sought to highlight what they saw as the absurdity of emerging (specifically Surrealist and Symbolist-influenced poets like Slessor) Australian modernist poetry and together concocted a late, fake poet – Ern Malley – who apotheosised these mannerisms. The irony was that the Malley poems were far more interesting and alive than any of the serious material either had written individually.
Frequently middlebrow commentators accuse et al and its fans to be elitist. I tend to regard that as a compliment. Surely being an elitist only means being a connoisseur of the best – even if it’s the best kitsch. The nature of elitism. Deception is not always malicious. That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true! gives the appearance of being some kind of setting for something official, a rally of the New Zealand Communist Party perhaps. It pretends to be something and invites you to participate, whereupon the lack of function and purpose becomes apparent. Only people of monumental stupidity should feel cheated by this, in as much as only the naive would believe that Shortland Street is a documentary about a hospital. This is not a practical joke so much as a superfiction.
A superfiction is a visual or conceptual artwork which uses fiction and appropriation in order to feign the appearance of the corporate and official institutional world. The term was coined by artist Peter Hill in 1989. This is a way of subverting the non-art world, and bring art out of the straightjacket of the art gallery context. Superfictions explore the interaction between the observer's concepts and the actual "objective" evidence that is presented. This is like drawing lines on a piece of paper to create the illusion of perspective. Would you call perspective a lie?
et al/p. mule’s superfiction in That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true! appears to be a kind of interactive parody of grass roots anarcho-communist socialism that only survives among the earnest and truly naive in New Zealand who failed to learn from the examples of Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot and Fidel Castro. The installation, having learned many of its lessons from Mona Hartoum and Louise Bourgeois, is shabby, utilitarian, and make do – like some sort of community hall in a working class suburb. The viewer – or rather participant – must wind through a labyrinth of meaningless propaganda notice boards, and insubstantial artworld/bureaucratic psychological barriers (tape on the floor) – which I read as a kind of critique of totalitarian mindsets – up to a platform. It’s the sort of scruffy thing Lenin would have spoken from when exhorting the peasants in villages to rise up, not the exquisite constructivist nonsense dreamed up by Tatlin. Also on the platform – which doubles as a bridge connecting the two halves of the labyrinth – are copies of a fictional utopian party agitprop newspaper, completing the content empty illusion.
American philosopher the late Richard Rorty was probably one of the most provocative thinkers of our time. Central to his primary theme was the irrelevance of truth. He argued that the existence of an ultimate ‘Truth’ was almost entirely irrelevant. What is interesting, Rorty suggested, are the almost infinite intellectual and metaphysical strategies people employ in searching for that elusive and probably non-existent Truth. Rorty – as I would suggest et al does – argued that twentieth century philosophy, psychology and politics, Nietzsche, Freud and Wittgenstein have revealed human society as historical contingency rather than a product of underlying human nature or the realisation of a historical/cultural or racial destiny.
The ironic perspective of both Rorty and et al, while enlightening and valuable on the personal level, does not attempt to advance the social and political goals of Rorty’s liberalism, or the philosophies and movements that et al seeks to parody and subvert through shoddy appearances and superficial suggestions.
et al would seem to fit Rorty’s definition of an ironist. An ironist is someone who fulfills three axiomatic conditions, though it might be claimed that the ironist is an elitist, but that presupposes that elitism is a negative quality:
1. Radical continuing doubts about the final vocabulary he/she currently uses because he/she has been impressed by other vocabularies taken as final by people or books he/she has encountered;
2. He/she realizes that argument phrased in her present vocabulary cannot resolve these doubts;
3. Insofar as he/she considers about his/her situation, he/she does not think that vocabulary is closer to reality than others, that it possessed of some kind of authority or power.
Rorty was, in fact, on the side of the artists, believing that art and literature – not philosophy at all – specifically the suitably cynical Orwell and Nabokov (and I would add et al) succeed in the cruelty and humiliation inherent in society and the individual. All express a utopian hope for a liberal culture aware of its own historical contingency, combining ironic and private individual freedom with society’s public goal of human solidarity. That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true! is relentless in sending up the hollowness of the totalitarian regimes that cannot fuse culture with civilisation, preferring to align zeitgeist with authority. Or at least, that’s how I read it.
As Oscar Jaszi wrote in The Dissolution of the Habsburg Monarchy: “I regard the chief utility of all historical and sociological investigations to be to admonish us of the alternative possibilities of history”. That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true! suggests what the French Revolution taught us just over two hundred years ago – that the whole social spectrum of institutions and relationships can be overturned almost overnight – consequently European politics became idealistic and utopian, romantic. This Romanticism is a frequent target for et al – but et al is paradoxically Romantic in its own idealism, mixed with an additional heady cocktail of German idealism from Kant and Hegel. Or is that merely what one or other manifestation of et al would have us believe?
et al’s is an art of ideas, and those ideas’ fear of dying, of extinction and the potential liberation of the self from the individual sense of what is possible and what is important. Inevitably et al does this by offering a role model in playful superfiction and heteronym. et al goes to great lengths to achieve a similar liberation in order to be creatively free from what critic Howard Bloom calls “the strong poet’s anxiety of influence ... the horror of finding himself to be only a copy or replica”.
The installation is essentially a theatrical space – a space that is itself the actor. The installation is a ritual place wherein the audience must participate. The function of the installation, like Baroque church architecture or a theatre set, is to pull us out of our everyday worldly thinking and mindsets by creating a new creating a special environment for existential thoughts. As an art gallery to a certain extent already does this, the meditative so-called temple of the Muses model – et al cunningly fashions a second ‘other place’ within the first. This second other place is so mundane and shabby – it is what the French philosopher Baudrillard calls a simulacrum – a hyperreal near parody of the real world but intensified and concentrated. This and bricolage appear to be among the few ways artists make sense of Benjaminian proliferation and Lyotardian fragmentation of signs that represent contemporary life. One suspects someone has been closely reading Pierre Bourdieu and Hans Haacke’s Free Exchange (Stanford University Press, 1995).
And it is political. et al is an Orwell disguising a critique of totalitarianism as dystopian science fiction (and the typical et al installation is frequently dystopian) in 1984 and as a parody of storybook allegory in Animal Farm. et al is Kafka turning bureaucracy into Dante’s Hell, is Dickens on the poverties and miseries of public life, is Charlie Chaplin parodying Hitler in The Great Dictator, is a celebration of the littleness of life, is all of these things and more.
Most of all, this is art.
This essay is based on the lecture “Exploring et. al.” given by the author at Christchurch Art Gallery, August 12, coinciding with the et al exhibition That’s obvious! That’s right! That’s true! until November 22, 2009.
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18 comments:
The et. al./Pessoa analogy has always been a rather spurious one. Whereas Pessoa's myriad personae allowed for the creation/exploration of an amazing array of poetic styles, forms, worlds, with et. al. for years we've been getting the same old and dreary prison-barracks-classroom-workshop-hospital assemblage, yet from multiple author/artists.
If anything, et. al.'s great merit has been to determine the gallery space itself as part of this Foucauldian nexus.
Both points are interesting Ralph.
Firstly that there is a united self, a visual brand, clearly identifiable from the seventies on, that remains consistent -though with small deviations.
Not as wildly varied as Pessoa.
Secondly the Foucauldian ambience could be about the art community, its social closeness - er..let's call it 'claustrophobia'. Everybody watching everybody else etc. So who is peeking out through the hub of the panoptican?
Let me rattle on a little more. I think Andrew's comparison of et al. with Rorty might be questionable.
Rorty,like Stanley Fish, is an anti-foundationist, and he once debated issues about the limits of interpretation with Umberto Eco in Cambridge.(see 'Interpretation and Overinterpretation', 1992) I think et al. is obviously not as radical as Rorty. There is too much political commitment and not enough cynicism to support that view.
The question seems to be: how best to embrace the notion of being-against... Or, variously: being-anti, resisting, taking leave from, or preferring not to. As you say John, both et al. and Rorty belong to a current within postmodernity named anti-foundational thought. This thinking is engaged with notions such as situational relativity and complimentarity of context, and this involves attempts at investigating and comprehending real situations while simultaneously maintaining that there are no actual points of view outside or above these situations (everybody's looking at everybody else from out of the hub of the panopticon precisely because it is now located everywhere)
But further, anti-foundational thought also maintains that even within given situations neither is there any exact still-point on which to stand and speak from (the hub circulates). All, in other words, is process; and in order to fathom process we require the complex understandings of logical incompleteness, contradiction, philosophical para-doxa, and a taste for radical breaks. This in turn welcomes in a celebration of the free play of difference, of hybridity and fluidity of identity, and investigations into non-essential being.
In the scheme of things known as the history of ideas this postmodern version of anti-foundationalism is said to have called in an end to universal history and its “grand narratives,” and thus to all thinking based strictly within Western, linear ideas of progress, etc... And in their place, a recovery and invention of “other” histories has been proposed: her-stories, nomadic thought, local knowledges, and so forth.
So how in this situation would Rorty, with his philosophy as a mere 'kind' of writing, his irony and non-commitment, his agressive or otherwise exchanges of opinion, be considered more radical than et al.?
A style is precisely a form of commitment, a strategy that is excessive, a deployment towards a new truth-event.
Is, then, et al.'s style excessive in its irony or is it a commitment towards something else?
Erk, I see I've consistently misspelt the word.
However I think that et al. is not an antifoundationalist at all, more like a democratic liberal - something quite different, a distinction thoroughly discussed by Stanley Fish (in Doing What Comes Naturally, 1989). An antifoundationalist according to him believes 'in the inescapability of situatedness', whereas a democratic liberal (like say et al.) seems to have 'a political vision that has at its centre the goal of disinterestedly viewing contending partisan perspectives which are then either reconciled or subsumed in some higher or more general syhthesis, in a larger and larger consensus.' (DWCN,p.350) The two ideologies are quite different.
You (Ralph) and Andrew agree I think that comparing Rorty with et al. is absolutely appropriate, whereas I believe it is a mstake.
I guess I was refering to a 'current' of thought named anti-foundational, a current broad enough, perhaps, to include et al., Rorty, Fish, and a thousand others; along with all their differences and various quibbles over spellings, terms, definitions, subplots, side tracks, etc.
So to use Fish to negate Andrew's et al./Rorty comparison is somewhat beside the point. The comparision is validated in the essay entirely through the use of the concept 'irony'.
So my question was: is et al.'s irony 'excessive' enough so as to be able to bring in a new 'truth-event'?
Given the ability of the neoliberal art nexus to embrace, celebrate, and exploit all forms of institutional critique it seems as though things excessively ironic may be at an impasse.
You don't think any such impasse is more a generational thing? Sincerity is the norm these days.
Even 'inexcessive' irony is rare.
Then the question would become: a sincerety towards what?
Or: what is the new generation being sincere about?
Perhaps a Dane Mitchel/et al. comparison is called for here!
Towards politics, saving the planet, eco crisis etc.
A Mitchell /et al. comparison?
Well Mitchell could be read as a scoffer at the notion of art, making art to undermine it. et al. seem to be very different. Definitely belief is present.
Isn't it rather that the new generation are nostalgic towards a certain politics of the 60s and 70s, and thus towards the neo-avant gardes of that era, including eco-art, performance, certain kinds of conceptualism, etc.?
And wouldn't Dane's practice be a perfect example of this? Afterall, his "Collateral" was composed in-situ and of entirely of recycled and locally sourced materials... An eco-statement if ever there was one.
Dane is a true believer in the potentials of contemporary art, but it's the nostalgic elements of his and so many of his generation's practices which seem to negate any chance of political resonance or effectiveness.
Or....?????
I'm gobsmacked by your brilliant observations Ralph, and certainly you are spot-on with the Barricades show - in terms of 60s nostalgia.
It is all about prioritising layers of meaning - and saying 'Collateral' is an eco- statement, though witty, is a distortion. It is just as silly as saying he made it to express the hopes and aspirations of all the TWNCAA competitors, as some have been saying. The work is driven by mischievousness and knowledge of the institution's vacuous motivations, using their desire for publicity and door numbers as bait to openly participate in their own critque.
He is a very clever artist. The eco thing is just a coincidence.
Why prioritise the always-already coopted institutional critique, the post-Duchampian feel, the sad passions?
By prioritising the eco-statement at least we get in touch with something positive and joyful.
Of all the debate about Collateral, you are the only person I've heard consider it an eco-statement.
There is lots of non-recyclable plastic there you know. In fact that fact would make it 'sad', and I'm sure the artist would find his institutional critique 'positive and joyful.' He's built a successful career out of such strategy.
Yeah, but Dane's recycled the non-recyclable, set it on a new path... I dunno, for me this alone makes it a work worth celebrating in all its lightness and joy.
Surely I'm not alone in seeing it this way????
Goodness,'Lightness and joy'. That sounds a tad like a formalist speaking. The sort of thing I - in a very unguarded moment - might say myself.
Hmmmmm.... I was trying to express the opposite of heavy and sad. Would it have been better to say that Collateral possesses a certain celerity?
Perhaps you're right though, perhaps it's only by bracketing off all the heavy art-system shit that I'm able to wax lyrical and unguardedly.
Is bracketing allowed then? When Smithson bought that rock off the coast of N W America somewhere and then proposed to cover it with a few tons of broken glass everybody got real serious and heavy about that, ended up having the whole thing canned. A little bit of bracketing off of the judgement machine might've come in handy back then.
But hey...
mr wood makes an error in fact almost immediatly in his observation of persoa and the snubing by the nobel commitee, seen as pesoa died in relative obscurity and the nobel prize aint awarded to dead uns andrews comment is historicly inacurate or is it a superfiction?
any way here i agree with ralph re dane it would be correct to say dane upcycled the refuse. as it is no longer the refuse[a nice pun on danes part] it once was . indeed it will no longer enter into the scales and flows of waste that so burden the earth[as it is now art]. i think its a celebration of artistic intentions in all its shades[ is not their trailings a shadow albeit a mould of those wrks] not sleve snigger at their vain asperations as you may suggest john
So is Dane a 'Green' artist with this work? That is far too generous a reading I think.
Look the guy is an unabashed scallywag (that is what is so great about him) who loves stirring things up. He has a history of provocation, making artworks out of Chris Saines screaming at him down the phone, rubbish from Gow Langsford's skip, stolen sandwich boards from ARTSPACE etc.
Of course he sniggers. He happens to be a very charming fellow too. One that is sly and cunning - an expert at being all things to all people. He's no angel.
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