| t byfield on Wed, 27 Dec 95 09:39 MET |
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| Art in America (Art 'R' Us) |
I just stumbled onto this essay (at
<http://english-www.hss.cmu.edu/bs/ 20/Byfield.html>, which I'd completely
forgotten about. I whipped off last spring for a student journal at
Berkeley, _Bad Subjects_, which is associated with an informal cultural
studies mailing list <bad@english.hss.cmu.edu>. The essay was written after
a flamewar about the social virtues of aesthetics (as though we had any
choice); a lot of people on the mailing list seemed to believe that art and
artists are, as someone put it, "elite." (Heh heh.) Anyway: as a result,
the essay is very American in its concerns. (The essay's name, "Art 'R' Us'
is a reference to the U.S.'s first national toy-store chain, "Toys 'R'
Us'.)
So much for the apologia.
>
> ART 'R' US
>
> Ted Byfield
>
> 'Cultivate your legitimate strangeness.'
> - Rene Char
>
> A few years back, at the invitation of an appropriately (which is
> to say, rectangularly) bespectacled and coiffed art-world maven, I
> found myself facing a highbrow panel discussion peopled with some
> serious heavyweights. Of all the speakers present, though, only
> one captured my heart, the suave novelist Anton Shammas. After
> wryly demurring on the subject of 'theory,' he confessed that
> though 'the wily third-worlder' inside him wanted to disrupt the
> decorous proceedings, but went on to speak simply of those
> theoretical moments that had captured him: Gilles Deleuze and
> Felix Guattari's notion of a minor language, Walter Benjamin's
> image of the storyteller, and Mikhail Bakhtin's meditations on
> just how slippery language can be. On hearing this list, I sighed
> with contentment and anticipation like a marquise in a libertine
> novel as she awaits a tete-a-tete with her heartthrob; unlike a
> marquise, though, I wasn't let down -- nor was I on the next day
> when I cheerily bought Shammas's novel, Arabesques. So it was all
> the more dismaying when, a few months ago, I found my way to Pere
> Lachaise, Paris's graveyard to the stars, but, as I passed the
> graves he describes so affectionately, was unable to find that of
> Guattari. Maybe it was best that way; at perfect moments like
> that, my shyness comes out and I feel like a bumbling suitor only
> to be bedeviled by something wilier still.
>
> Language is the field I till and my playground too; 'art,' in a
> word, is a sideline. When asked, I usually say that I work as an
> editor and occasional writer; when Im in an expansive mood, Ill
> sometimes admit that I 'collaborate' with a friend on what he
> calls 'art.' Almost never do I identify myself as an 'artist' --
> I'm not comfy with the term (it seems like frill, a too-proud name
> for what I do, better left for others to bestow as an honorific).
> In that respect, I'm quite American: I don't put much truck in
> art.
>
> Practicing art for several years has taught me a few valuable
> lessons -- about the domain of my responsibility (where my
> considerations and anticipations of possible interpretations
> should leave off); about the difficulty of fishing for forms of
> expression that are committed yet equivocal, enigmatic yet
> comprehensible; about the role and play of commentary and
> elaboration, both my own and others'. Whether I'll continue to
> make artwork, I don't know; whether I'll ever be able to stop --
> even if it's not at all evident that thats what I'm doing -- might
> be a better question. In fact, I know it is a better question,
> since it cannot be answered.
>
> So I claim that 'I don't put much truck in art,' yet go on to
> assert that I may not be able to stop or may continue without even
> realizing it. What's that about? One could give 'subjectivist'
> answers to this question, that is, answers that trace the roots of
> my reluctance or uncertainty to character traits -- and it seems
> reasonable to assume that they might tell some of the story, maybe
> even much of it. But not all of it: after all, it seems safe to
> assume that my earlier metaphors, those of the expectant marquise
> and bumbling suitor in a French novel of two hundred years ago,
> were mostly literary -- I may find some sympathetic chord in it,
> but the social construction of my self surely isn't
> eighteenth-century and French. No, if I'm reluctant to style
> myself an 'artist' or doubtful of the validity of 'art,' I've been
> imbued with these values by the culture in which I was raised.
>
> America, being the land of images -- home to Hollywood and Madison
> avenue, the beacon of freedom that illuminated the world, the
> source of homogenizing culture -- doesn't seem a likely candidate
> for iconoclasm, but looks are deceiving. This country has become
> terrified of images, frightened to death by their ambiguity,
> mortified by what they might or might not mean or say. 'Left' and
> 'right,' or what pass for these, might disagree on *which* images
> they dislike, but they largely agree on a structural point: images
> are powerful and the most dangerous ones exert the most appeal.
> Images entice and lead people astray, it is said; they encourage
> or maybe even force people to become things, to believe things, to
> do things. One will say, for example, that 'racist'
> representations affirm, condone, perpetuate oppression; the other
> will say that 'immoral' representations -- of sexual matters, of
> violence -- will corrupt our youth. Social scientists, as often as
> not the handmaidens of ideology, step in to study the question --
> and, in doing so, regardless of their findings, lend it
> institutional credence ('While the findings are inconclusive,
> experts have studied...'). Small wonder that they do: the very
> thesis, however complex its machinations, that an image can
> somehow *make* someone believe or do something is patently
> idiotic. *Except* when this belief predominates -- in which case
> it is not this or that image that makes anyone do anything but,
> rather, the unspoken injunction *you will do this or that*. And
> artists, if they've realized this simple truth, aren't about to
> clue anyone else in on it: doing so would dispel what little
> 'power' they have the power that's attributed to their work and,
> through still more magical thinking, has devolved upon them.
>
> Still, this loathing of images is entirely misplaced, which is, I
> think, why it is a *loathing*. Worse still, when it mixes with
> Americans naive belief in social transparency (a faith that the
> truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth will reveal our
> 'selves,' our 'truth') and deep-seated antimodernism and
> anti-intellectualism, the result is a kind of aesthetic
> know-nothingism:
>
> *Art is elite. Picasso is a genius. I don't know about art, but I
> know what I like. Yeah -- a black canvas. Artists are elitists.
> Norman Rockwell. Art is irrelevant. The Thinker. All those
> striped-pants artists ever do is sip wine at trendy openings and
> kiss curators' asses. Advertising is getting really arty. Andy
> Warhol was an artist alright -- a con artist, haw haw. Arts and
> crafts fairs. Arts become degenerate -- that Mapplethorpe stuff,
> the NEH should get the axe. You gotta have art. Two trendoids
> contemplate a nail in a wall, until a worker comes up and hangs a
> painting on it. 'I went to the MoMA and the Modern and the
> Guggenheim; tomorrow I'll spend the day at SoHo galleries.' Dunk a
> crucifix in piss and sell it. Victim art. The hand pointing at the
> other hand. Performance art. I could've done that. A starving
> artist. Marcel Duchamp and his bicycle wheel on a stool. Abstract
> public sculpture in parks and plazas. But the children will get
> ideas. 'Interesting...' Art expands your horizons. That's not art,
> that's politics. Art doesn't reflect societys interests. Starving
> artist sale! sofa-sized paintings at low, low prices. But this is
> just ugly who the hell understands this crap? It'll be a mortal
> blow to American culture if art is privatized. Looks like a
> Jackson Pollock, if you ask me. My life is my art. There should be
> a law. Children are born artists.*
>
> The flipside of this public twaddle is the elegant privacy of the
> vacant and careerist 'art world,' which has fled to the high
> ground of arcane, directionless, and self-referential
> pseudo-academic theory -- a group thats very much party to the
> belief that art is somehow 'more.' Fringed with up-and-coming
> designers, wayward architects in search of big-buck renovation,
> hordes of self-styled 'intellectuals' (who'd never dare to call
> themselves that), and baroque teenyboppers, this crowd gads about
> in silly costumes from openings in New York to conventions
> ('fairs') in Germany, touting this years model as *the*
> problematic height of the perennially deconstructed avant-garde
> myth.
>
> Or so, at least, we're told.
>
> Aside from this model's reductivism (and *I* am surely not the
> source of that), it has a big problem: founded as it is on public
> commentary, appearance, and all manner of productivist and
> professionalist assumptions, it fast-talks its way around the
> source of it all -- artists, or art workers, if you will. That is,
> suckers (like me, I suppose) whose efforts, beyond being
> 'expensive' and 'time-consuming,' are born of love and hate, of
> the ambivalent spaces between things and words and pictures, of a
> communicatively self-indulgent desire -- need, maybe -- to express
> something quite unclear, for reasons we don't really understand,
> to people we don't know.
>
> In itself, this is a difficult quest to undertake, let alone to
> maintain year after year -- particularly when failure looms large,
> is everywhere, and takes many forms. One can be talentless,
> uninspired, uninspiring; be at the wrong place, at the wrong time;
> be talented but unsellable; be too impatient and give up; lack
> connections; be overly modest or overly immodest; a woman and/or
> non-white; get a few too many horrendous reviews; be impossible to
> deal with (e.g., overly neurotic); become mired in one's job; be
> overly principled and refuse to talk the necessary trash; be too
> theoretical or cryptic, or be too simple and earnest; be unwilling
> to ingratiate oneself; be on the tail end of a waning trend; be
> seen as somehow unpresentable (e.g., physically unappealing or
> 'lowbrow'); burn out too quickly; or give up for myriad reasons.
> Or, failing all of the above, ones efforts might never quite
> click.
>
> This isn't a sob story about how difficult it is to 'be' an artist
> -- on the contrary. In the grand scheme of human activity, it's
> fairly easy to involve oneself in art, and it's pretty pleasant
> too: one gets to express things and, with some perseverance, might
> even make a *little* money doing so. To do it for a living is
> another story -- that almost certainly involves years of thankless
> effort, moving to one of a handful of cities where the cost of
> living is a constant menace, forsaking a career for odd and
> uncertain jobs (mostly menial), and plunging into the art world in
> a big way, to dwell among people who're either rich or would have
> you believe they are. Much of this can be adventurous and fun;
> much of it can be hellishly boring and demeaning.
>
> Still, the people in the funny clothes are the ones who are most
> *legible* at such gatherings: they simply *exude* creativity,
> *emanate* nonconformity, *project* something that seems somehow
> vaguely related to things avant-garde. The ones who somehow seem
> less visible, though -- when they aren't temping, waiting tables,
> hauling sheetrock, or slaving over a hot graphics setup -- are
> more likely to be' artists.' People laugh at the waiter's line
> 'Well, I'm really an artist,' but, aside from simple spitefulness,
> what exactly is so funny? Their seeming *delusion*? What's deluded
> about working at a menial job to support an effort that seems more
> important? Their *pretension*? That seems unlikely, for lots of
> reasons -- not least among them that we're all, more or less, in
> that situation. Their *failure*? What, does the fact that someone
> isn't Sappho or Michaelangelo or William Gaddis or Tricia Brown
> make their efforts thereby worthless? Worthless to whom, and
> according to what criterion? Or, instead, is the commonplace
> nature of this bind the source of humor? Hardly grounds for
> laughter, that.
>
> There's not much point in going on, because the source of the
> humor is all too clear: there are many, many people who would like
> to express something, somehow, and our society (and our culture)
> makes it impossible for them -- many, many of them -- to do so.
> These people are legion, far more numerous than the liminal fringe
> of actor-waitrons and artist-carpenters. You knew the joke I was
> referring to, you'd heard it before; had the rest of what I've
> said, about why the joke isn't all that funny, occurred to you?
> Probably not. If this seems piddling, think again: questions like
> this tell a great deal about who or what we identify with -- for
> example, abstract, impersonal forces over the individuals (who,
> collectively, form 'people') they demean, distort, and destroy.
> These forces have no power outside of the people who blithely
> identify with them. This is a pretty simple idea.
>
> There are a thousand valid grounds for criticizing art,
> contemporary art, artists, the art world, the classicization of
> art, formalisms of all types, the practice of art as we understand
> it, the shallowness of much art, the role that art plays and the
> interests it serves, and so on. So what? For every object,
> practice, institution, belief, construction, or contingent
> arrangement of affairs, there are valid grounds for objecting to
> it. That there is room and cause to object to something, anything,
> is a testament to the peculiar breadth of the world, but doesn't
> mean that one should do so. On the contrary, it means, if
> anything, that one should be very circumspect -- and, above all,
> *creative* -- with one's criticisms. One should choose one's
> targets well.
>
> So -- not forgetting, please, the fact that unthinkingly drifting
> along the currents of abstract, impersonal forces is both a
> hallmark and a mode of inhumanity -- how does one choose one's
> targets? Well, in large part, ones targets are as predetermined as
> the means of choosing and criticizing them -- and, don't forget,
> as predetermined as the notion that 'one' 'can' or 'should'
> 'choose' 'targets' at all. The fact is, we have very little choice
> on the matter of choosing our targets of criticism: hence the
> paragraph of pabulum above, about how 'Art is elite. Picasso is a
> genius. I don't know about art, but I know what I like. Yeah -- a
> black canvas,' and so on. This is most of what we hear uttered
> publicly, officially, widely, privately, its most of what you hear
> *in your head*; the rest of what we hear is 'anecdotal,' or, say,
> 'deeply imbricated in the superstructural practices that,
> historically, have brought about the notions of the 'individual'
> and 'expression,' and further have served to conflate and reify
> these notions in the form of the commodified, fetishized
> 'artwork.'' That's not a quote -- that's just a Marxist-type
> summary criticism I jumbled together off the top of my head. I got
> it from the same place Cain got his wife, the same place we get
> everything in our lives: elsewherever. The same place that 'art'
> comes from.
>
> And if that seems obvious, well, it is. It isn't thereby boring or
> without importance.
>
> From the standpoint of various rather arch schools of thought, my
> remarks might seem lazy, loopy, trivial, self- serving, amoral,
> deluded, uncritical, reactionary, and/or counterproductive.
> Perhaps they are: after all, I might *seem* to have argued that
> the fundament of ethical criticism is 'creativity,' which is
> surely the most mystified of mystified realms (for those who think
> spatially; I prefer to think -- or to think that I think -- in
> time). Still, I see no other fount of ethics, of criticism, of
> production, of expression; still less do I see a way of codifying
> the -- literally -- *absurd* impulse to continually reorganize the
> boundaries of the organism or groupuscule (i.e., to act) in a way
> that will guarantee an ethics, morality, propriety, or even a
> purposiveness.
>
> 'Art' is hardly the answer; if anything, it is an empty field (or
> open field, as you will) that permits one to say and do things
> that no other field permit and that, in itself, is a fine deal.
> 'Art,' really, is a fancy, transhistorical name for
> *miscellaneous* -- a category the anthropologist Marcel Mauss
> rightly denounced (from the standpoint of a taxonomist, which is
> not mine) as 'the signpost of ignorance.' Were it a question of
> will, of vision, of beauty, this rant would be Romantic, right up
> there with the ceaseless, malingering drivel of Picasso -- but
> it's not; rather, it's a question of bastard wiliness, of
> confusion, of an accidental magnificence that needs no observer to
> complete itself. What is art? 'Art,' I wrote in a paper in eighth
> grade, 'is in the eye of the beholder, unless he's wrong.' I stand
> by this definition.
>
> So here I have sought to lure you, the reader, away from the
> sorrows of rigor -- away from public discourse, away from
> *perceptions*, away from spitefulness, away from formalism and
> relentless evaluation -- and toward the silliness from which what
> we call *art* issues. Whether I've succeeded, whether you're
> convinced (or even remember) my lament about America's iconoclasm,
> I don't know. Whether whatever impression this 'essay' makes
> lasts, I can't know.
>
> Whether it tells the whole story...well, it doesn't, of that I'm
> certain -- but, as Jacques Lacan once said: 'I always speak the
> truth. Not the whole truth, because theres no way to say it all.
> Saying it all is literally impossible: words fail. Yet it's
> through this very impossibility that the truth holds on to the
> real.'
>
> And whether the things I've said are true...well, as Cervantes put
> it: 'and even if they were not, and some pedants and graduates
> turned up to snap and growl at you behind your back in the name of
> truth, you need not bother about them a bit; for even in they
> convict you of a falsehood, they cannot cut off the hand with
> which you wrote it.'
>
> Or did they?
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
> Ted Byfield lives in New York and works as a freelance editor and
> occasional writer. His collaborative work (with Lincoln Tobier)
> has been shown in New York, San Francisco, Hartford (Conn.),
> Chicago, Hamburg, Gratz (Austria). His last author bio in _Movement
> Research_ said it all: 'He's up and down about the art thing.'