9

Who’s Afraid of Four White Walls? Or Have You Ever Been Experienced?

Written By Casey Lynch on February 2, 2012 in Opinion

FLUX 2011. Photo by John Ramspott.

Early Modernism saw two visions of the relationship between art and life emerge. One held that art was autonomous, whereas the other sought to integrate art and life. The former, traceable to such artists as Velazquez and Manet, and subsequently brought to the fore by the Abstract Expressionists and Clement Greenberg, is supposedly self-referential and self-reliant. The latter can be shown to move in two directions; one, via Russian Constructivism as influenced by Marxist historical materialism and the Bolshevik Revolution, sought to dissolve art into life; the other, sometimes associated with rationalist utopianisms of the Bauhaus, De Stijl, and other movements in western Europe, sought to make all of life an aesthetic experience. Two lines, faint and meandering as they may be, can be drawn from the two aforementioned primary modes to the two major ways of making art today. Autonomous, self-referential art could be associated more with objects of the gallery or museum (and permanent outdoor sculpture), while work descendant of “art-merging-with-life” relates more to performance and outside-the-gallery happenings. Throughout the Modern period, myriad art movements have leaned one way or the other in attempts at creating an art that would most accurately reflect and critique the Modern experience. Often, this critique was focused on the project of capitalism; paradoxically, artists of both camps remain reliant on capitalists in order to subsist.

Elevate: Art Above Underground, 2011. Photo by John Ramspott.

Some critical thinkers move beyond the paradoxical relationship with capitalism into the precipitous problem of experience. Walter Benjamin, in an essay titled “Experience” (1913), concludes that an adult (probably an analogy for modernity) loses the ability to have real life experiences in favor of knowledge and cynicism. Giorgio Agamben furthers Benjamin’s thesis in Infancy and History (1978), wherein he applies a linguistic-semiological interpretation to the problem, suggesting that the only thing we experience is language, and our most valued experiences relate to words with no clear referent. For neither writer is experience merely raw stimulus reception, but that which changes us on a deeper level. As Agamben notes, “For modern man’s average day contains virtually nothing that can still be translated into experience. Neither reading the newspaper, with its abundance of news that is irretrievably remote from his life, nor sitting for minutes on end at the wheel of his car in a traffic jam…Modern man makes his way home in the evening, wearied by a jumble of events, but however entertaining or tedious, unusual or commonplace, harrowing or pleasurable they are, none of them will have become experience.”

The Object Group performs Eyewitness at Off the Edge, 2012. Photo by Sara Keith.

I would think that for many people, this analysis rings particularly true in today’s smart-phone-web-2.0-html5-world. Everywhere you look, people are face down, attentive to a glowing screen, “doing” something other than experiencing the physical world immediately around them. Even when a spectacle worthy of drawing one’s attention away from the screen presents itself, many are still obliged to mediate that experience through the screen via obsessive picture taking or video making. As one can tell by the date of Benjamin’s essay, although our technologies are new, the phenomena that follow are not.

Similar ideas can be found in the writings on Situationism from the 1950s and 1960s, and on Relational Aesthetics from the turn of the 21st century. The argument for a more real and imminent relationship to the world is often used to build a case against museums, galleries, and static art in general, in favor of public and interactive art. I believe that the argument has become so common that it is often accepted on its face value, and its flaws never emerge. I also believe that an examination of the questions I present below can help Atlanta’s art scene, inside and outside the gallery, to strengthen and continue to grow.

KAWS opening at the High Museum of Art, February 18, 2012. Photo by Dylan York.

The first problem is that certain experiences are given preference; the “real” kind are seen as deep and valuable, and the “virtual” kind as passive and meaningless. This bias boils down to a kind of Kantian relativism, in which subjective taste is mistaken for universal law. Although I think most people do find real life more meaningful than a virtual one, the distinction becomes blurred when choosing between mediated experiences. Why do so many of us find information from a book, even if it’s fiction, more important than televised drama? Why can some people sit before a computer all day, then brag about how they “don’t even own a TV”? A mediated experience is a mediated experience—just because a person is dressed up, dancing on the corner of the street, does not make the event more real than someone doing the same thing on a proscenium stage. Personal and social boundaries define the line between “real” space and make-believe, thus the definition of mediated is dependent on each viewer’s psychology.

gloATL performs at FLUX 2011. Photo by John Ramspott.

The second problem is more directly related to the idea of experience, specifically with regard to the popular argument that public interactive works create a sense of physical community, as opposed to virtual, online interaction. In today’s hyper-mediated world, a carnival-style art event is equally likely, if not more likely, to be experienced through the lens of a camera phone than is a gallery show. Also, for many, to “experience” such events as Flux Projectsone-night art extravaganza, Elevate: Art Above Underground, or similar happenings is to follow a map and a schedule analogous to some bourgie version of TV Guide.

Ben "Bean" Worley's SYNTHESIZ at Get This! Gallery. Photo by John Ramspott.

Finally, the pace required to “see” all of the art at any of these events often mimics the pace required to get a plasma television on Black Friday, leaving little time to socialize with the company in one’s midst. By comparison, the conversation-filled, wine-sipping, partylike atmosphere of any gallery opening may have more to offer in terms of creating community than the best open-air festival. At the same time, the ratio of numbers of works to amount of time a given festival occurs can be unkind to a viewer trying to interact with all the work to be seen. While this evanescence is representative of the drive-by nature of contemporary real-life interaction, it is also counter to being able to engage with the work on a deeper level. By contrast, in the days or weeks following the opening of a gallery show (the opening being a time when work probably gets the least amount of attention), one can stand in front of a work at one’s own pace, take time to communicate, and make a real, deep connection with the work, in a way described by James Elkins in his series of essays How Long Does It Take to Look at a Painting.

Obviously, I am not calling for an end to public art events. They are great fun and offer opportunities for artists to make, and viewers to experience, works that are disproportionate to the gallery. I have participated in them, and will continue to do so, both as an artist and a viewer. I do wonder though: Why is there such a push to move art outside the gallery? If all of our experience is mediated by technology, what difference does it make where art exists? What does art outside the gallery promote that art inside a gallery does not? Does the apparent need to evangelize the visual arts mark a failure in its ability to compete with the kitsch found on television, in movie theatres, and the on the Internet; are we, as “fine” artists jealous of the popularity of these “lower” art forms? Most importantly, I question why we go to such lengths to produce and receive art: to be able to say that we have experienced its existence, or to actually improve our own existence and experience?

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Google Bookmarks

Category: Opinion |
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

  • http://www.facebook.com/nathan.sharratt Nathan Sharratt

    What are your answers, Casey, to some of the questions you pose?

    I like this article and I like the questions it asks. I think it’s interesting that from the perspective of an emerging artist, getting in to the gallery space is such an ingrained goal, while trends seem to be heading toward getting out of the gallery. On the one hand, you want the legitimacy the gallery brings, on the other, you want to show your work, wherever opportunity permits.

    I think it also raises questions about art as entertainment, another current trend. We see this reflected here in Atlanta, with the carnival atmosphere of Elevate, or the proposals calling for “broad appeal” for FLUX night. I don’t think art as entertainment is a bad thing at all, but it does create a different mindset for the art viewer (or experiencer). 

    Gallery art is seen as more “fine,” while public art events are more “lowest-common denominator,” and viewed less as art than spectacle. Another TV show, except it requires a much longer trip to the remote to change channels. And you have to find parking. 

    I think the danger lies in trying to anticipate and please the public through art. Art that is forced is not absorbed. Likewise, art that is subject to perhaps an unwanted frenetic pace, as you race from one map point to the next, is also at risk of not being absorbed. Can it then be called successful? And, must the art and the event’s success then be measured separately? Are lanterns tied to bicycles driven through the streets successful as art? Are they successful as spectacle? I think definitely yes to the latter, the former I can’t answer. Perhaps the spectacle is necessary to balance the fine art, to give the mind a break from over-contemplation. Or perhaps spectacle steamrolls over the art, hampering its effectiveness? Again, I don’t have the answer.

    The main question, being “are these art events actually creating experiences,” is valid and not easily answered. 

    I think groups like Dashboard Co-Op are helping to bridge the gaps by presenting gallery-quality art with public accessibility. Keeping the edge while not excluding the public at large. Atlanta could use more of this. Spectacle is great, but don’t water down the art.

  • Ktauches

    many good points here. . .especially like the idea that the social function of a (small) gallery opening may provide a higher quality bonding experience for the community than an open-air festival art event. . .After rejecting the gallery for many years, I have really come to re-value the white box’s unique ability to provide solace and focus. here is a space for great subtlety and intellectuality in art that simply cannot be found among the masses in grand mainstream spaces. the “art gallery” is a fine tradition, which should not be thrown away. conversely, the box sort of dominated the 20th century. . .and the pendulum reacted to that in a myriad of wonderful ways.  now we come to a balance point of plurality. . . this is not a coup where the box completely disappears in lieu of the next regime. . .lynch is correct to note that the two opposites are not mutually exclusive. similarly, Niklas Maak writes in the latest issue of Frieze mag about new architectural hybrids. . . “it’s becoming near-impossible to tell what is public and what is private. it seems as if a new type of building is emerging that no longer reflects the duality of inside and outside, private and public, but that cuts across it.”  (his example is the Moriyama House in tokyo (http://www.wohnmodelle.at/index.php?id=83,74,0,0,1,0). we seem to mature as a culture with multiple mediations between realities. . .and so our spaces are also changing.it seems that the duality of white box vs. acts of public art is melting into a big mash up with neither being pejorative anymore. and that’s exciting.  thanks for the article! kt

  • Casey

    Nathan and Karen, thanks for the thoughtful posts. I can’t say that i have answers right now; mostly questions. That is why I wanted to put this article out there. I feel like flux, dashboard, elevate, edge, etc. are still in the forming stages, and I wanted this article to be a kind of in-progress critique for our entire community (including myself as an artist, critic, and viewer.)
    I constantly struggle with the ideas of “fine art” vs “kitsch” and if they can even be distinguished anymore. As “postmodern” as I like to think I am sometimes, I still have a deeply embedded need for experiences that have a depth of meaning (which of course is modernist romantic trash.)
    So here is what I really think (for now.) I really think that art can have a lasting, dynamic, deep effect on people. I also feel that taking art to the public is often about things that i don’t necessarily see as positive – evangelicalism, colonialism, manifest destiny, universalism, etc. Every empire, religion, etc. that tries to reach beyond its domain falls (or weakens as a whole.) The catholic church. The Roman Empire, England, America, the list goes on…
    In religious terms, the protestant reformation was about a return to a depth of piety in the face of an overarching, thinned out, corrupt church. Catholicism (catholic means universal) got too big and essentially imploded. The same thing with the financial crisis – everyone got too greedy and capitalism failed. If we try to stretch art to far, to make everyone an artist, and have everyone involved in art – make art universal – it will become meaningless. Perhaps it already has…
    Now of course, there are Catholics who truly believe, and capitalists who are still rich, and there is still some good public art, but in general, (with a few exceptions of course) I think it has always been weaker than gallery art, and has in turn weakened gallery work, and art in general.

    Maybe I put it best when talking to Jeremy Abernathy a while back when I said, “the gallery is like a sports bar for art nerds.” 

  • Andrew Alexander

    Interesting article and comments. I was especially intrigued by the comparison with the expansion and collapse of the Roman Empire! 

    There was a really interesting experiment that the Washington Post did a few years ago along these lines with violinist Joshua Bell. Bell plays a violin worth millions of dollars to sold-out venues around the world where people pay hundreds to hear him play. They dressed him in a baseball cap and jeans and had him busk at a busy DC metro station to see what would happen, how passers-by would react.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/04/AR2007040401721.html

    I was lucky enough to get to interview Bell about that experience this fall, and he had some interesting remarks:

    Q: Does it ever pop into your head how weird it is that people will pay so much to see you, but then they passed you by when you were playing at a metro station for free?
    A: It made me think about that special atmosphere that happens when people are there with expectations and ears ready to absorb what you’re doing and brains ready to digest what you’re giving them. It made me realize that music can’t be thrown at someone while they’re rushing to work. It is a two-way street. That’s about where i am now. I love public art, and I love the drive to present art to the public in usual unexpected places. But there is something special that happens in galleries and theaters and concert halls where people show up with hearts and minds open to the work. (Bell’s comment even interestingly hints at something sort of unfair about presenting art to people when they’re not prepared for it, when they’re hurrying to other places).

    In the end, the world is big. There’s room for more art in galleries and more outside of it. I think both have their problems but both are net positives.

  • Andrew Alexander

    Interesting article and comments. I was especially intrigued by the comparison with the expansion and collapse of the Roman Empire! 

    There was a really interesting experiment that the Washington Post did a few years ago along these lines with violinist Joshua Bell. Bell plays a violin worth millions of dollars to sold-out venues around the world where people pay hundreds to hear him play. They dressed him in a baseball cap and jeans and had him busk at a busy DC metro station to see what would happen, how passers-by would react.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/04/AR2007040401721.html

    I was lucky enough to get to interview Bell about that experience this fall, and he had some interesting remarks:

    Q: Does it ever pop into your head how weird it is that people will pay so much to see you, but then they passed you by when you were playing at a metro station for free?
    A: It made me think about that special atmosphere that happens when people are there with expectations and ears ready to absorb what you’re doing and brains ready to digest what you’re giving them. It made me realize that music can’t be thrown at someone while they’re rushing to work. It is a two-way street. That’s about where i am now. I love public art, and I love the drive to present art to the public in usual unexpected places. But there is something special that happens in galleries and theaters and concert halls where people show up with hearts and minds open to the work. (Bell’s comment even interestingly hints at something sort of unfair about presenting art to people when they’re not prepared for it, when they’re hurrying to other places).

    In the end, the world is big. There’s room for more art in galleries and more outside of it. I think both have their problems but both are net positives.

  • Andrew Alexander

    Oops! A return should appear in that comment, setting off the quotation. Don’t know why it didn’t register in the comment:

    [Bell's remark:]
    A: It made me think about that special atmosphere that happens when people are there with expectations and ears ready to absorb what you’re doing and brains ready to digest what you’re giving them. It made me realize that music can’t be thrown at someone while they’re rushing to work. It is a two-way street.

    [returning to my blather:]
     That’s about where i am now. I love public art, and I love the drive to present art to the public in usual unexpected places. But there is something special that happens in galleries and theaters and concert halls where people show up with hearts and minds open to the work. (Bell’s comment even interestingly hints at something sort of unfair about presenting art to people when they’re not prepared for it, when they’re hurrying to other places).

  • Andrew Alexander

    Oops! A return should appear in that comment, setting off the quotation. Don’t know why it didn’t register in the comment:

    [Bell's remark:]
    A: It made me think about that special atmosphere that happens when people are there with expectations and ears ready to absorb what you’re doing and brains ready to digest what you’re giving them. It made me realize that music can’t be thrown at someone while they’re rushing to work. It is a two-way street.

    [returning to my blather:]
     That’s about where i am now. I love public art, and I love the drive to present art to the public in usual unexpected places. But there is something special that happens in galleries and theaters and concert halls where people show up with hearts and minds open to the work. (Bell’s comment even interestingly hints at something sort of unfair about presenting art to people when they’re not prepared for it, when they’re hurrying to other places).

  • Ktauches

    I hate when people turn art into missionary work. let’s not assume that art is for everyone at all times (the joshua bell example is excellent, thanks!). art’s small and subculture tendencies are kind of what’s terrific about it. . .of course this goes against the grain of today’s popular sentiment. (social media promotes the fantasy that being in very large crowds is utopic and the only mark of success. . .but then we are already starting to understand the repercussions and shortfalls of such gatherings) not doubt, we are rediscovering the public and the spaces where we publically gather. . . some aspect of art (and not always the finest) will be a part of that.
    I think dashboard, flux, elevate. . .are positive beginnings. I am certainly interested to see the artwork (and artists) at these events mature and fracture with practice. But let’s hope these organizations do not entirely dominate the local alternative-to-gallery scene. let’s hope artists do not become too obedient and dependent. 

    Before flux, dashboard, elevate, we had only underground avant-gardes to create events outside the galllery. many of their events were small and/or poetic and were created with little or no red tape. I worry that these larger, more administrative-minded organizers have entirely eclipsed this other naturally occurring phenomenon among outsider artists seeking alternative places to show.  I certainly hope we will see new crops of smaller artist-initiated events and installations re-emerge as well (there’s certainly a lot of space for such things in this city). . .or else in 5-10 years we’ll have a whole generation running back for (aestheic and intellectual) cover in the galleries.   -kt

  • Casey

    I would like to further clarify, I think public art is definitely a good thing for atlanta right now. We are on the cusp of having our art world grow with scad being here, as well as all of the efforts of flux, elevate, edge, etc. If nothing else, these public events are like advertisement for galleries, museums, etc. At the same time, we are all aware of the pitfalls of over-commercialization, so I hope this conversation not only helps point out the short-comings of public art, but is a catalyst for its improvement. I think a lot of public art comes from artists thinking, “What can i do to make public art?”, instead of “OMG! I have a great idea, but the only way to carry it out is on a public scale.” – There is a monumental difference in the two.