Miško Šuvaković
Neo-Aesthetic
Theory
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Miško Šuvaković
Neo-Aesthetic theory
coMplexity ANd coMplicity Must Be defeNded
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this book is dedicated with love to my mother, ljuba Šuvaković
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editor: tatjana Marković
translation: Žarko cvejić, irena Šentevska,
Branka Nikolić, Goran Kapetanović,
dragana starčević, sonja Bašić
english copy-editing: chris prickett
layout and cover: Nikola stevanović
printed and bound in the eu
Miško Šuvaković: Neo-Aesthetic Theory. Complexity and Complicity Must Be Defended.
Vienna: hollitZer Verlag, 2017
cover image: provisional salta ensemble, corridor - hotel regina, Vienna, April 5, 2013
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
© hollitZer Verlag, Wien 2017
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isBN 978-3-99012-371-3 pdf
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coNteNts
11 IntroductIon
15 PoLItIcS oF tHEorY
1
17 theories of ModerNisM
politics of time and space
2
39 the returN of the politicAl
in contemporary Aesthetics, philosophy and Art
3
49 trouBles With the ecoNoMy, GeoGrAphy ANd history
the social turn
4
61 GrAy ZoNes – politicAl ecoNoMy THROUGH forMs of life
eleven theses on feuerbach, friedman, hayek and speculative realism
77 SocIALISM / coLd WAr / PoStSocIALISM
5
79 the Aesthetics of disruptioN
platforms of Avant-Garde production in socialist yugoslavia and serbia
6
93 coNceptuAl Art
the yugoslav case
7
115 BeyoNd Borders
John cage, cold War politics and Artistic experimentation in the socialist federal
republic of yugoslavia
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127 MuSIc tHrouGH AEStHEtIcS
8
129 the pheNoMeNoloGy of the SCREEN (ANd / or / As) EVENT
Musical de-ontologisation
9
139 Aesthetics, politics ANd Music
the context of contemporary critical theory
10
151 Music ANd politics
the reconstruction of Aesthetics and the contemporary World
157 crItIcAL ArcHItEcturE
11
159 GeNerAl theory of ideoloGy
Architecture
12
167 Architecture As culturAl prActice
the Market’s Appropriation of the social or the ideology of the Multitude
175 PErForMAncE Art
13
177 techNoloGies of perforMANce iN perforMANce Art
concepts and phenomenological research
14
195 the AVANt-GArde: perforMANce ANd dANce
ideologies, events, discourses
15
209 discourses ANd dANce
An introduction to the Analysis of the Resistance of philosophy
and theory towards dance
16
229 theoreticAl perforMANce
performative Knowledge
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241 PoSt-MEdIA Art
17
243 AppropriAtioNs of Music
postmedia: Music
18
251 BeyoNd pAper
postmedia and flexible Art
19
263 Bio Art
the prehuman / the human / the posthuman
20
285 siMultANeously AlWAys, NoW ANd eVeryWhere
A real fiction
21
293 Multiple politicAl/sexuAl Bodies
Between the public and the intimate
22
299 Auto-criticisM of suBJectiVisAtioN
painting as postmedia politics
309 EXPErIMEntAL tHEorY
23
311 A clAustrophoBic eVeNt
Bare life
24
317 A NArrAtiVe
An utterly ordinary evening – PETIT a
324 ABout the essAys
327 literAture
342 ABout the Author
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01 provisional salta ensemble: State of Exception 1, photo-essay, photomontage, 2011
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
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10
Introduction
iNtroductioN
Neo-Aesthetic Theory is oriented toward research and interpretation of THE
unmissed encounters between Philosophical Theories and Contemporary Arts.
this book can be read from different positions of understanding, experiences,
living, events and interpretations of “contemporarity”, but there is one
characteristic and visible platform from which it is written: this is the platform
of a permanent state of emergency. the writer of these lines could say, similarly to
those who have “strongly” experienced the differences and conf licts of the 20th
and early 21st century: my life unwound and is unwinding between the public
and private – the depicted and the undepicted – in a permanent state of emergency:
communist revolutions, self-governed freedoms from bureaucratic communism,
crises of real-socialism, transitional primary accumulations of capital, nationalistic
hysterically-paranoid proscription and the establishment of global neo-liberalism
and a global crisis. this is something which cannot be overcome even with good
intentions or a cheery disposition. it is something which is always played out with
consequences. this is why there is a recurrence, in the lines of the letter which
follows, with the only weapons which modern man has been able to build-up in
his resistance to a permanent state of emergency, and this is a minimum of rationality,
a critical approach and radical analysis. the tradition of the oppressed teaches us
that the “state of emergency” in which we live in is the norm. We have to reach a
concept of history which suits this (Walter Benjamin).
it is the construct that emerges from the encounter between object and subject,
between an effect and an affect, or affect and concept or meaning: “But what’s
the real or more precise linkage among these texts or topics? – the constitution of
a territory (is it literature, the legible, an unordered catalogue of images of life?)”
( Jeanlouis schefer).
i would like to get out of the bottle just like that f ly which was taught this by
ludwig Wittgenstein in his Philosophical Research, but i am afraid that by coming out
of ‘my’ bottle i will find myself in some other bigger or smaller bottle which will
once again be mine and for me, for us and for the “lives” of others. if i am always
caught in a space and time of supervision, control and regulation – the burnt ships
behind me from adolescent pirate stories remain just a spectre of childish fictions
and commercial prose – then, carrying out a minimum of rationality, a critical
11
Introduction
approach and radical analysis remain the means which “keeps” a precarious hope in
place of the broken class-based and ethnic “utopias” about God’s graciousness, the
heavenly Kingdom, the island of humanity, brotherhood, equality and freedom,
about socialism, about communism, about individual freedoms and liberalism.
But, towards what are a minimum of rationality, a critical approach and radical
analysis oriented? definitely towards that which is caught – meta-physically and
existentially – between the undepicted, mute life and the depicted, enunciated
life. What is “that” which is in a trap? that which will maybe be recognised,
i.e. named as “life”. in other words, there will be word of a state of emergency in
which “life” is played out in all the evasions and approaches within the events of
contemporarity.
this is a desire for an unfulfilled, real and direct democracy.
12
Introduction
it is self-evident that nothing concerning art is
self-evident anymore, not its inner
life, not its relation to the world, not even its right to exist.1
it is self-evident that nothing concerning art is
self-evident anytime, not its inner
life, not its relation to the world, not even its right to exist.
it is self-evident that nothing concerning art is
self-evident anywhere, not its inner
life, not its relation to the world, not even its right to exist.
note:
“Generally, i hardly ever quote a text as such, but i lightly modify it in such a
way as to make it ‘meld’ into my own text. this is much closer to the effect of
memory in a text”.2
1 theodor W. Adorno: Aesthetic Theory, trans. robert hullot-Kentor. london: continuum, 2002, 1.
2 Jean louis schefer: in: paul smith “introduction”, in The Enigmatic Body. Essays on the Arts by Jean
Louis Schefer, ed. and trans. paul smith,. cambridge GB.: cambridge university press, 1995, xv.
13
Introduction
... thought immanent to the multiple ...1
... life immanent to the multiple ...
... art immanent to the multiple ...
... body immanent to the multiple ...
... production immanent to the multiple...
... postproduction immanent to the multiple ...
... economy immanent to the multiple ...
... time immanent to the multiple ...
... politics immanent to the multiple ...
... space immanent to the multiple ...
multiple
complexity complicity
1 Alain Badiou: ”so Near! so far!”, trans. louise Burehill, in: Deleuze. The Clamor of Being.
Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 1999, 4.
14
Politics of Theory
politics of theory
1
theories of ModerNisM
politics of time and space
2
the returN of the politicAl
in contemporary Aestehteics, philosophy and Art
3
trouBles With the ecoNoMy, GeoGrAphy ANd history
the social turn
4
GrAy ZoNes – politicAl ecoNoMy THROUGH
forMs of life
eleven theses on feuerbach, friedman, hayek
and speculative realism
15
Politics of Theory
02 provisional salta ensemble:
shadows - Walking through Paul
Chan Shadows, photo-essay,
photomontage, 2011
courtesy provisional salta
ensemble
16
Politics of Theory
1
theories of ModerNisM
politics of time and space
the ModerN, ModerNisM, ANd repetitioN:
NeW/ the NeWest
the modern and modernism are artistic, cultural, and social formations that refer
to changes in art, culture, and society in historical and geographical terms. the
modern and modernism are viewed as formations that should uncover a new “state
of affairs” within contemporaneity. on the other hand, viewed ontologically,
the modern and modernism are also about redefining the potentially new into
a sustainable new or the “tradition of the new” as a permanent search for and
realisation of a “different world” as “the horizon of possibility” for the newer
than new. this search for and realisation of a “different world” or “new state
of affairs” as the horizon of feasible possibilities for the newer than new may be
identified with the concept of permanent modernisation.
the modern and modernity are interpreted as situations of a new sensibility of
time within contemporaneity. the paradigms of the modern or modernity were
established as contexts of Western society, culture, and art between the 18th and
the mid-20th centuries.1 the feeling of modernity signifies the possibility of
identifying the current moment: the here and now as opposed to the overcoming
of the past and an expected future. the modern begins in the history of the West
at the moment of an artistic and aesthetic, as well as a cultural and political break
with the past as a safe tradition. the modern is characterised by opposing the
present or contemporary time of the past – it rejects all narratives of memory,
tradition, and history. for instance, peter osborne views the modern and
modernity as expressions of a specific politics of time:
“Modernity”, we have seen, plays a peculiar dual role as a category of
historical periodisation: it designates the contemporaneity of an epoch
to the time of its classification; yet it registers this contemporaneity in
terms of a qualitatively new, self-transcending temporality which has the
1 Jürgen habermas: “Modernity: An incomplete project”, trans. seyla Ben-habib, in: Postmodern
Culture, ed. hal foster. london: pluto press, 1985, 9.
17
Politics of Theory
simultaneous effect of distancing the present from even that most recent
past with which it is thus identified. 2
in the european context, the politics of time signifies procedures whereby social,
cultural, and artistic phenomena are selected with regard to contemporaneity,
which means regarding differences between the past, the contemporary as the
new or newer, and the future.
Modernism is a developed and “accelerated” modern. Modernism emerges when
the contemporary interval of being here and now is posited as a practice that is
superior to all aspects of social life and when the desire for the new is posited as a
source of permanent social “breaks” leading either to emancipation or to cultural
fashion. Whereas the relatively static modern was characterised by the bourgeois
national industrial capitalism of the 18th and the 19th centuries, modernism is
characterised by moving from capitalism as an “industrial system of production”
toward an internationalised global market system. in other words, the modern is
defined by a recognised modernisation of production within national cultures,
whereas modernism is determined by a global modernisation of mass consumption.
permanent modernist emancipation refers to processes of social, cultural, and
artistic progress that direct human life toward ever-increasing freedom. permanent
fashion refers to the consumerist craving for the new and newer-than-new that
over time starts repeating itself, directing itself toward the production, exchange,
and consumption of the newest. Modernism is thus a selective political practice
that enables a choice that inevitably leads toward the new and newer-than-new.
At this point, the stable model of the bourgeois proprietary modern, based on
aesthetic identification by way of a culturally protected privacy and established
autonomous art, is replaced by a permanent emergence of ever-newer artistic
products with aesthetic or anti-aesthetic properties. Artistic products suggest
novelty and consumerist enjoyment in the new, as opposed to the traditional
model of identifying within one’s own class and its patriarchal structures. terry
eagleton has emphasised the class model of the modern aesthetic:
My argument, broadly speaking, is that the category of the aesthetic
assumes the importance it does in modern europe because in speaking
of art it speaks of these other matters too, which are at the heart of the
middle class’s struggle for political hegemony. 3
2 peter osborne: The Politics of Time: Modernity and Avant-garde. london: Verso, 1995, 13–14.
3 terry eagleton: The Ideology of the Aesthetic. oxford: Blackwell publishers, 1990, 3.
18
Politics of Theory
eagleton’s discussion of “the ideology of the aesthetic” and then t. J. clark’s
critical identification of, say, the role of impressionist painting in the construction
of modern bourgeois life point to a transition from a static to a dynamised
modernity, i.e. liberal modernism:
As the context of bourgeois sociability shifted from community, family
and church to commercialised or privately improvised forms—the
streets, the cafés and resorts—the resulting consciousness of individual
freedom involved more and more an estrangement from older ties; and
those imaginative members of the middle class who accepted the norms of
freedom, but lacked the economic means to attain them, were spiritually
torn by a sense of helpless isolation in an anonymous indifferent mass. By
1880 the enjoying individual becomes rare in impressionist art; only the
private spectacle of nature is left.4
the modern is viewed as the determining context of a realised, urbanised, liberal,
and bourgeois contemporaneity. in The Arcades Project, for instance, Benjamin
wrote about the analogy between capitalism and nature: “capitalism was a
natural phenomenon with which a new dream-filled sleep came over europe, and,
through it, a reactivation of mythic forces”. 5
in his Philosophy of New Music, Adorno critically characterises the realised modern
as the “dialectics of loneliness”.6 he thereby identified bourgeois contemporaneity
as an effect of alienation in the industrial and emerging market world. fredric
Jameson likewise emphasizes the capitalist character of the liberal modern,
regarding modernist abstract art, positing a correspondence between the abstraction
of money and that of painting and sculpture: “Modernist abstraction, i believe, is less a
function of capital accumulation as such than rather of money itself in a situation
of capital accumulation”.7
4 t. J. clark: The Painting of Modern Life: Paris in the Art of Manet and his Followers. london: thames
and hudson, 1985, 3–4.
5 Walter Benjamin: “K (dream city and dream house, dreams of the future, Anthropological
Nihilism, Jung)”, in: The Arcades Project, trans. howard eiland, Kevin Mclaughlin. cambridge,
MA: the Belknap press of harvard university press, 2002, 163.
6 theodor W. Adorno: “dialectic of loneliness”, in: Philosophy of New Music, trans. robert hullot-
Kentor. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 2006, 37–40.
7 fredric Jameson: “culture and finance capital”, in: The Cultural Turn: Selected Writings on the
Postmodern, 1983–1998. london and New york: Verso, 2009, 136–161.
19
Politics of Theory
the oNtoloGicAl core
of ModerNisM
there is more than one periodisation of modernism. for instance, according to
raymond Williams, modernism is periodised as art after 1950.
“Modernism” as a title for a whole cultural movement and moment has
then been retrospective as a general term since the 1950s, thereby stranding
the dominant version of “modern” or even “absolute modern” between,
say, 1890 and 1940 [...] determining the process which fixed the moment
of Modernism is a matter, as so often, of identifying the machinery of
selective tradition. 8
regarding Williams’s notion of modernism, i will use the term “high modernism”,
dating it in the Western world in the post-World War ii period. unlike Williams,
i will use modernism to label various phenomena in society, culture, and art
that began around 1900, when there was an accelerated shift of cultural and
artistic fashions: post-impressionism, various expressionisms, fauvism, cubism,
futurism, cubo-futurism, suprematism, Neo-plasticism, constructivism,
surrealism, Art deco, Retour à l’ordre, New objectivity, etc. We may understand
Williams’s modernism, that is, in my modification, “high modernism”, as the
highest or final stage of international modernisation as a social, cultural, and
artistic project.
historically, modernism, as the phenomenon of acceleration in the sequence
of various paradigms of emancipation and types of fashions, signified
technological, social, cultural, and artistic changes during the 20th century. in
such a periodisation, modernism signified three characteristic phenomenological
moments: (1) the break with the past, (2) the establishment of the contemporary,
and (3) the anticipation of the future. every fresh seizure of contemporaneity was
signified with the demand that the feeling of confronting the new be repeated
regarding the new that had become the old and regarding the future that would
become potentially possible only with the next turn from the new that would
grow obsolete into the new that has yet to come and be the newest. this obsessive
repeatability of attaining the newer-than-new would become the ontological core
of modernism.
thus emerges the formula of permanent repetition: “times have changed”
and again, “times have changed”, and again […] the consequence is that
8 raymond Williams: “When Was Modernism?”, in: Politics of Modernism. london: Verso, 2007,
32.
20
Politics of Theory
things no longer stand in the stable traditional or usual way. it seems as though
something from the past has become superf luous or impossible,9 and something
new from the present has emerged in a way that was erstwhile unthinkable. to
its contemporaries, the new therefore always seemed unjustified, opaque, and
incomprehensible, although, at the same time, fatally attractive as well. that is
probably why theodor W. Adorno at the beginning of his Aesthetic Theory felt
compelled to call for a redefining of the self-evidence of contemporary art: “it
is self-evident that nothing concerning art is self-evident anymore, not its inner
life, not its relation to the world, not even its right to exist”.10
With the accelerated shifts of modernist paradigms, art increasingly differed
from the real or the ideologically projected ideal tradition of great Western
art (Antiquity, renaissance, Baroque). it became necessary to perform a new
interpretation of art and culture simultaneously and in parallel with the emergence
of new art within a changed culture. that was probably why Arthur c. danto
made his claim that interpretation was constitutive of modernist art: “My view,
philosophically, is that interpretations constitute works of art, so that you do not,
as it were, have the artwork on one side and the interpretation on the other”.11
this claim enables the understanding of the modernist notion of “artworld”, which
danto opposed to the tradition of understanding the pure and universal work of art
within the modern and an imaginary Western tradition that linked the modern
with the timelessness of the classical, i.e. that of Antiquity: “to see something as
art requires something the eye cannot decry – an atmosphere of artistic theory, a
knowledge of the history of art: an artworld”.12 therefore, the art of modernism
must be viewed in its variability as a complex web, intertwining the sensory and
the discoursive, and relating to cultural and social contexts.
the modern and modernism traversed the path from an anticipated potentiality,
which would be the regime of alternative and avant-garde practice, to a realised
potentiality as an attained new with all the consequences that accompany the
establishment of artistic, cultural, and social hegemony in relation to other
historical and geographical formations. Between anticipating a potentiality and
9 cf. the logic of thinking about a changed state of things in: Jacques rancière: “in What time do
We live?”, in: The State of Things. london: office for contemporary Art, Norway and Koening
Books, 2012, 12.
10 Adorno: Aesthetic Theory, 1.
11 Arthur c. danto: “the Appreciation and interpretation of Works of Art”, in: The Philosophical
Disenfranchisement of Art. New york: columbia university press, 1986, 23.
12 Arthur c. danto: “the Artworld”, in: Philosophy Looks at the Arts: Contemporary Readings in
Aesthetics, ed. Joseph Margolis. philadelphia: temple university press, 1986, 162.
21
Politics of Theory
realising it as something new, there comes the demand for something newer
than what was already achieved, which leads toward transcending the realised
modernity in order to reach an even more characteristic modernity. Modernism
was more modern than the modern, and post-World War ii modernism was more
modern than interwar modernism.
liBerAl DIFFéRANCE: ModerNist pAiNtiNG
the historical debates about modernism were developed on the basis of a
canonical definition of the international – and this signifies hegemonic – Western
modernism as a grand and totalising post-World War ii style. this is the “Western
story” of universal modernism and its realised autonomy, i.e., its emancipatory
potentiality. here we will mention clement Greenberg’s concept of modernist
painting and charles harrison’s critique of that concept.
clement Greenberg interpreted the concept of “modernist painting”, as it was
established after World War ii, ranging from abstract expressionism to post-
painterly abstraction, as an expression of a historically directed evolution of the
immanent means and effects of painting. Greenberg’s aesthetics of painting is a
neo-Kantian aesthetics of liberal artistic creativity with a precise experiential
distinction between aesthetic judgement and aesthetic enjoyment in relation
to intuitive insight.13 this evolution led from illusionistic realist painting via
impressionism, expressionism, and cubism, to “pure abstraction”, free of direct
references to literary narratives or sculptural three-dimensionality. Greenberg’s
evolutionism posited modernism not as a break with the past, but as a gradual
self-ref lexive perfection and development of the autonomy of the artistic medium
in discovering the immanent nature of painting. the medium of painting thus
became the essential topic of a creative treatment of surface:
Modernist painting asks that a literary theme be translated into strictly
optical, two-dimensional terms before becoming the subject of pictorial
art – which means its being translated in such a way that it entirely loses its
literary character [...] it should also be understood that the self-criticism
of modernist art has never been carried on in any but a spontaneous and
subliminal way. it has been altogether a question of practice, immanent to
practice and never a topic of theory.14
13 clement Greenberg: “intuition and the esthetic experience”, in: Homemade Esthetics: Observations
of Art and Taste. oxford: oxford university press, 1999, 4–9.
14 clement Greenberg: “Modernist painting” (1965), in: Modern Art and Modernism: A Critical
Anthology, eds. francis frascina and charles harrison. london: harper & row, 1986, 8–9.
22
Politics of Theory
Greenberg advocated aesthetic formalism based on the transformation of the
“modern tradition”:
thus, constructivism – in the works of Gabo and pevsner, and most
certainly in the words of Greenberg in 1958 – finally had reached the stage
of the “mirage”. What had once been tactile and contingent had become
“optical”, what had been rigorously anti-illusionistic in emphasizing
weight, physical mass, and process, in foregrounding surface and texture,
and in “baring the structural device” had turned into an “illusion of
modalities”.15
03 provisional salta ensemble: Claude Monet – Jackson Pollock, photo-essay, photomontage, 2011.
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
Modernist painting might therefore be interpreted as an evolution within the
“tradition of modernity”. he understood this notion of evolution, predicated on a
modernisation of painting, not in the Marxist sense of “social practice”, but in terms
of liberal, i.e., individual mastering of creative skills in art as a free and specialised
pursuit of human “self-expression” and “self-positing”. Greenberg’s interpretative
discourse recognised the painterly production of claude Monet, pablo picasso,
15 Benjamin h. d. Buchloh: “cold War constructivism”, in: Formalism and Historicity. Models and
Methods in Twentieth-Cenrtury Art. cambridge MA: the Mit press, 2015, 402.
23
Politics of Theory
Jackson pollock, and the like as exceptional achievements of the modernist evolution
whereby the pictorial plane witnessed pictorial inscriptions of the hand or the body
of the artist. those inscriptions could not be related verbally; they are exclusively
a painterly trace and as such geared toward an optical effect that one may only
indirectly and insecurely verbally present as metaphor in judging a work as such.
in charles harrison’s view, clement Greenberg was the critic who set up terms
for periodizing and defining modernism in the sense of identifying the essential
properties of a painterly work of art.16 harrison viewed Greenberg’s method of
defining modernism as an essentialist objectivism opposed to the theoretical
relativism of the avant-gardes and popular culture. for Greenberg, painting was
always a matter of objective taste, rather than a demonstration of a theoretical position
in a work of art. or in harrison’s words: “for example, asked for evidence that
esthetic judgments are indeed involuntary and objective, rather than being governed
by specific theories or individual preferences, Greenberg pointed to a ‘consensus (of
taste) over time’ which has settled on the defining high point of an artistic tradition”.17
Greenberg’s theory is characterised by his claims that the creative transcends
the critical, that artistic practice is governed by intuitions as direct expressions
of emotions, and by a direct, all-encompassing experience of the work of art.
therefore, artistic creativity invariably precedes theory, i.e. art theory is merely
a secondary addition to the organic wholeness and fullness of artistic expression.
Greenberg wrote: “Art is a matter strictly of experience, not of principles”.18
harrison opposed Greenberg’s neo-Kantianism, which excluded any kind
of intellectual engagement with artistic creativity and advanced an intuitive
establishment of a unitary and universal model of modernism. in harrison’s
view, in contrast to Greenberg’s “one-dimensional definition of modernism”, the
history of modernism after World War ii has been determined by two mutually
opposed concepts of understanding the character of artistic labour.
the first is Greenberg’s concept of high modernism, based on the link between
intuition and taste, which brings the values of the autonomy of abstract painting
into a position of aesthetic dogma in Abstract expressionism and in post-painterly
abstraction:
16 charles harrison: “introduction: the Judgment of Art”, in: Greenberg, Homemade Esthetics, xiii.
17 ibid., xvii.
18 clement Greenberg: “Abstract, representational and so forth” (1954), in: Art and Culture: Critical
Essays. Boston: Beacon press, 1961, 133.
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Politics of Theory
the production of the modern artist, it is assumed, are determined by
some special insight into the nature of reality – be it the reality of the
natural or of the social or of the psychological world. the work of art is
an assertion of the human in the context of the real. Although the values
of humanity are seen as “relatively constant”, art of “quality” is a form of
stimulus to spiritual change.19
the other voice, and this is harrison’s innovation, is critical of high modernism,
where intuitions, spontaneity, expression, and aesthetics are independent of the
semantic and political conditions of contemporary society, culture, and art:
in the second version of the story, the first is taken as given. it is quoted
in a spirit of scepticism, not as a true story, but as one typical of a certain
culture and rooted in certain interests. the second voice seeks to explain
what the first has said, and how it has come to be saying it. 20
04 provisional salta ensemble: Robert Morris/Social Context, photo-essay, photomontage, 2013.
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
19 charles harrison: “A Kind of context: Modernism in two Voices”, in: Essays on Art & Language.
oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1991, 5.
20 idem.
25
Politics of Theory
harrison’s thesis is that the first voice intended to show that artistic production
always and by necessity intuitively preceded theory (the painting of Jackson
pollock and Kenneth Noland). By contrast, the other voice disregards this
separation of the creative from the critical and shows that that distinction in
artistic positions is not an effect of the nature of art or creative individualism, but
a consequence of the organisation of artistic culture in society. this other voice
( Jasper Johns, robert rauschenberg, donald Judd, robert Morris) is determined
by a critical approach that insists on a link between the conceptual and the sensual
in the context of social differences and antagonisms.
ModerNisM ANd the Neo-AVANt-GArde:
diAlecticAl DIFFéRANCE
if one transferred harrison’s “second voice” from its Anglo-American context
to a european, Asian, or south-American context, the critical potential of the
artistic acting against the autonomous aestheticism of high modernism could be
identified with the term “neo-avant-garde”. the concept of neo-avant-garde
signifies a “second avant-garde” about which rather divergent interpretations
exist.
for instance, the early avant-garde of the early 20th century is viewed as original
pioneering artistic acting with a pronounced transgressive and innovatory
potential. the post-war avant-gardes are identified as institutionalised avant-
gardes, i.e. second-hand avant-gardes, remakes of the first (the “historical”)
avant-garde in the context of high modernism. for instance, in his retrospective
defence of his thesis of the neo-avant-garde as an institutionalised avant-garde,
peter Bürger made the following suggestion:
the argument of Theory of the Avant-garde runs as follows: the neo-avant-
gardes adopted the means by which the avant-gardists hoped to bring about
the sublation of art. As these means had, in the interim, been accepted by the
institution, that is to say, were deployed as internal aesthetic procedures,
they could no longer legitimately be linked to a claim to transcend the
sphere of art. “the neo-avant-garde institutionalizes the avant-garde as
art and thus negates genuinely avant-gardiste intentions”. 21
21 peter Bürger: “Avant-garde and Neo-avant-garde: An Attempt to Answer certain critics of
theory of the Avant-garde”, trans. Bettina Brandt and daniel purdy, in: New Literary History 41
(2010), 695–715, here 707. the interpolated quotation is from peter Bürger, “the Avant-gardiste
Work of Art”, in: Theory of the Avant-garde, trans. Michael shaw. Minneapolis: university of
Minnesota press, 1984, 58.
26
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Against Bürger’s conception, one could argue that after World War ii the avant-
garde realised and concretised those technological utopias and projects of the
early avant-gardes that could not be realised before. for instance, solutions in
art, design, and architecture that the soviet avant-garde, Bauhaus, and de stijl
offered on a utopian level became part of the international style and mass market
only in American high modernism.
likewise, one might also argue that the neo-avant-garde was a specific set of
movements and individual effects between 1950 and 1968 that critically provoked
the unitary essentialism and universalism of high modernism. therefore, the
neo-avant-garde regime denotes a critique, subversion, or deconstruction of the
realised possibilities of high modernism, or, more accurately, the artistic, social,
and cultural hegemonies of the realised modern and modernisms.
the neo-avant-garde may be understood in two ways: (1) as a transgression that
disrupts the newly established order of the latest hegemonic high modernism and
(2) as a strategy and tactic of established modernism itself that, out of fear that
otherwise it might turn into a frozen or petrified “new tradition”, produces its
own self-critique to destabilise, destroy, or overcome the attained state of affairs.
We might compare this dynamic as it is established between the avant-garde,
modernism, and the neo-avant-garde with thomas s. Kuhn’s theory of scientific
revolutions. the theory of paradigm shifts in science was applied to art by charles
harrison in his interpretations of the activities of the Art & language group. 22
in other words, my position is that the avant-garde was an artistic or aesthetic
vanguard or anticipation of modernism, whereas the neo-avant-garde was a
critical and excessive practice within the dominant high modernist culture. one
might say that in the context of liberal Western high modernism, predicated as it
was by an aesthetic and poetic fetishisation of the autonomy of the disciplines and
the media of art, the neo-avant-gardes performed a trans-disciplinary critique
or transgression by pointing to the potentialities of “the open work of art and
acting in art”, that is, to a political critique of the modernist professionalisation
and institutionalisation of the production, exchange, and consumption of art
(lettrism, experimental art, happening, Neo-dada, fluxus, New tendencies). one
might also say that the historical avant-gardes (futurism, dada, revolutionary
constructivisms) generated alternative micro-social formations (groups,
movements) that opposed the system of modern art at the time, which was still
insufficiently institutionalised. on the other hand, the neo-avant-gardes became
22 charles harrison: “introduction”, in: Art & Language: Text zum Phänomen Kunst und Sprache, eds.
paul Maenz, Gerd de Vries. cologne: Verlag M. duMont schauberg, 1972, 14.
27
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05 szalma lászló: Homage to Dada, photo, 1972.
courtesy Marinko sudac collection
28
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active against high modernism’s formally and pragmatically established system of
institutions. Whereas the historical avant-gardes, with their various techniques
(collage, montage, assemblage, readymade, avant-garde periodicals as collage-
montage visual texts), anticipated the aesthetic nature of emerging consumer,
popular, and mass culture, the neo-avant-gardes acted in historical conditions
where the paradigms of elite high art modernism were explicitly opposed to those
of consumer, mass, and popular culture. the aesthetic dialectic23 of high taste
(the autonomous values of art) and popular taste (the functions and effects of mass
consumption) were thus confronted with a third party – the critical-subversive
and emancipatory potential of the neo-avant-garde, which was nomadically
traversing both systems—the high and the popular – of modernist art, relativising
their boundaries, deemed to be unconditional and impregnable at the time.
ModerNisM ANd the Neo-AVANt-GArde:
ArGAN’s proJect theory
the relationship of modernism and the neo-avant-garde may also be noted in
italian art historian Giulio carlo Argan’s theory of “the modern project”. As a
leftist intellectual writing in the european context, he recognised the emancipatory
social potential of an innovative artistic practice that had traded its imaginary
creative autonomy for the context of real social antagonisms. unlike American
conceptions of high modernism (Greenberg, harold rosenberg, Michael fried),
in Western europe high modernism had no dominant canonical current; instead,
the differences between various artistic modernisms were established in terms
of political differences and their implementations in the then contemporary
artworlds.
for Argan, it was important to critically re-examine the conditions of the
relationship between art and society. in his view, the basic dispositif of modernism
was established around the concept of the project of a critical and exploratory
art within a neo-capitalist system that enslaved and alienated the individual. the
dialectic of the individual (liberal) and the collective (social) is essential in his
thinking. the modern project denotes plans, visions, projections, and anticipations
of an emancipatory transformation of society and art. the “modern project” is
associated with critical approaches to the notions of social, technical, and artistic
progress in the name of social liberation. the project of art is characterised by
23 cf. the exhibition concept in: High and Low: Modern Art and Popular Culture, eds. Kirk Varnedoe
and Adam Gopnik. New york: Museum of Modern Art, 1990; thomas crow: Modern Art in the
Common Culture. New haven, ct: yale university press, 1996.
29
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participation in the social event. therefore the artistic project is opposed to social
passivity:
Just as it once discovered in the object the immobile structure of the
objective world, today art is discovering in the project the mobile structure
of existence. the project, which art must furnish with a methodological
model, finally constitutes a manoeuvring defence of social, historical life
in its perennial conf lict with eventuality and chance. 24
By positing art as a project, Argan takes art itself into a complex and multifaceted
fight for actualising human life in the modern world. therefore, artistic
projecting is the opposite from as well as an alternative to technological projecting
qua programming, i.e. controlling alienated living in liberal neo-capitalism.
in Arganian thinking, a liberal aesthetic and artistic liberation from the non-
optical in the work is insufficient; art should instead be viewed as a domain of
sociality and, therefore, of the social struggle for human liberation and genuine
emancipation. the target of his discourse is the technocratic and market alienation
of neo-capitalist neoliberalism.
Argan developed his theoretical position by linking critical Western Marxism
with an existentialist sartrean examination of forms of life and the modernist
trust in the potentiality of art as a dispositif of emancipation. in Argan’s view,
the survival of art in tomorrow’s world hinges on the project, making the art of
today conditioned by the art, culture, and society of tomorrow. in this respect,
he is quite close to the neo-avant-garde way of thinking. opposed to “market
fashions”, Argan offers the conception of a political change in art as an important
factor in social emancipation. rather than privileging the immanence of artistic
form, Argan advocates anti-form (informalism: lucio fontana, Alberto Burri)
and art beyond the borders of artistic disciplines (post-informalist art: piero
Manzoni, enrico castellani), to point to the place of the work or act of art in
a web of antagonistic social relations. According to Argan, art that acquires an
exploratory character 25 initiates the passage from the work into performing practices
and production that provoke or even change forms of modern life amid alienated
consumption.
24 c. G. Argan: “progetto e destino”, in: Progetto e destino. Milan: il saggiatore, 1965, 9–74.
25 G. c. Argan: “Arte come ricerca”, in: Arte in Europa: scritti di storia dell’arte in onore di Edoardo Arslan.
Milano, 1966, 3–8.
30
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ModerNisM ANd the Neo-AVANt-GArde:
Multiple ModerNities
Beyond the Western context, the term “neo-avant-garde” signifies complex
processes of artistic subversion and a critique of locally dominant modernisms,
i.e. alter-modernisms. these are manifestations of modernisation “beyond the
cultural-geographic sphere” of Western europe and the united states. Alter-
modernisms may denote various geographical modernities and modernisms that
occurred in the specific contexts of colonial or real-socialist societies, away from
direct or profound impacts of Western liberal modernism’s hegemonies. Alter-
modernisms differ from Western international modernism. in local environments,
certain Alter-modernisms become hegemonic centres of artistic inf luences, while
others become their peripheral followers. in relation to the notions of “global
modernity” as a multiplicity of Alter-modernisms, Western modernity and
modernism are viewed only as one possible instance of modernisation. that is why
one speaks of “Multiple modernisations” or “Multiple modernisms”: “this is seen
to be indicated by the move away from an idea of the singularity of modernity,
based on more traditional, non-linear, historical understandings, to discussions
about the multiplicity of modernities”. 26
destabilising “unitary” or “holistic” modernism led from asking “how to
periodise unitary and universal modernism?” to asking how and why modernism
took place and under what social, cultural, and artistic conditions. furthermore,
the concept of theoretical ref lection on multiple modernities and multiple
modernisms stems from three theoretical models that question unitary and
universal Western modernism:
(1) postcolonial studies, which project notions of modernity and modernisms
in the third World whilst “avoiding euro-centrism”27 – the colonial
societies of Asia, Africa, south America, and the pacific islands;
(2) socialist and post-socialist studies, that address modernity and modernisms
in the real-socialist societies of europe and beyond, highlighting
asymmetries with Western modernism – the so-called second World
societies;
26 Gurminder K. Bhambra: “introduction: postcolonialism, sociology, and the politics of
Knowledge production”, in: Rethinking Modernity: Postcolonialism and the Sociological Imagination.
New york: palgrave, 2009, 5.
27 Bhambra: “from Modernisation to Multiple Modernities: eurocentrism redux”, in: Rethinking
Modernity, 56.
31
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(3) the humanities and social studies, above all art-history studies, 28 led by
concepts from the spatial turn.
the concept of horizontal or geographical distinctions in modernism is notable in
authors working outside of the european context (china, the Arab world, south-
American cultures), as well as in some european theorists of art. for instance,
British art theorist paul Wood’s discussion of conceptual art may be read in terms
of a horizontal distinction between Western and other modernisms:
“conceptualism” takes on a double identity. “Analytical” conceptual art
gets downgraded as the art of white male rationalists, mired in the very
modernism they sought to critique. the expanded history, on the other
hand, begins to excavate a huge array of artists, men and women alike,
deemed to have been working in a “conceptualist” manner from the 1950s
onwards, on a range of emancipatory themes ranging from imperialism to
personal identity in far-f lung places from latin America to Japan, from
Aboriginal Australia to russia. 29
this shows that in alter-modernisms, different neo-avant-gardes are established,
too. for instance, neo-avant-gardes working in alter-modernist contexts are
characterised by critiques of racial, gender, and class identities, as well as Western
economic or cultural imperialism (lygia clark, hélio oiticica, Antonio dias, M.
f. husain, Wang Jin).
sociAlist ModerNisM ANd Neo-AVANt-GArdes:
perMANeNt trANsitioNs
the notions of the Western capitalist, i.e. the liberal concept of modernisation,
developed from modernity to modernism, were confronted by those of
revolutionary communist modernisation in the countries of real socialism (i.e.,
the second World). the primary communist modernisation was based on a
revolutionary and anti-liberal ideology of modernisation. Above all, it concerned
the urbanisation and industrialisation of the underdeveloped russian empire in
the form of the soviet union.
one leninist slogan ran as follows: “industrialisation + electrification =
communism”. the slogan may be explained by reference to lenin’s programmatic
speech about the overcoming of russia’s industrial backwardness:
28 piotr piotrowski: “on the spatial turn, or horizontal Art history”, Umèni/Art: Journal of the
Institute for Art History 56 (2008), 378–383.
29 paul Wood: “Approaching conceptual Art”, in: Conceptual Art. london: tate publishing, 2002, 9.
32
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communism is soviet power plus the electrification of the whole country.
otherwise the country will remain a small-peasant country, and we must
clearly realize that […] only when the country has been electrified, and
industry, agriculture and transport have been placed on the technical basis
of modern large-scale industry, only then shall we be fully victorious. 30
in the soviet context, modernisation determined industrial and economic
development, associated with realising the ideal of the “class struggle”. But
in terms of aesthetics and art, modernisation ranged from radical avant-garde
projects (cubo-futurism, suprematism, constructivism) in the early days of the
revolution to the canonisation of socialist realism as a stable expression of modern
revolutionary and didactic creativity. the ideal of modern art in terms of modern
realism was established as the canonised ideal. for instance, leon trotsky defined
revolutionary realist art in the following way:
When one speaks of revolutionary art, two kinds of artistic phenomena
are meant: the works whose themes ref lect the revolution, and the works
which are not connected with the revolution in theme, but are thoroughly
imbued with it, and are coloured by the new consciousness arising out of
the revolution. 31
trotsky’s understanding of the revolution was in terms of “the permanent
revolution”. 32 one might understand it as a radical and permanent modernisation,
passing through constant transitions toward the universal and geographically
global communist society of the future. Moving from an avant-garde to a
revolutionary and then to a socialist-realist modernisation of art meant creating a
specific modern expression serving the party and the state.
then, in the 1950s and 1960s, the movement from socialist realism to socialist
modernism marked the constitution of a hegemonic artistic pattern in eastern
europe. socialist modernism pointed to the potentiality of a liberal-oriented
creation of abstract – qua Western – artistic forms and, at the same time, to a
symbolic or topical interpretation of such forms, articulated by the party. the
liberalisation of socialist realism in favour of socialist modernism enabled the
30 Vladimir lenin: “report on the Work of the council of the people’s commissars. december 22,
1920”, http://soviethistory.macalester.edu/index.php?page=subject&subjectid=1921electric&y
ear=1921, 3.4. 2014.
31 leon trotsky: “revolutionary and socialist Art” (1924), in: Literature and Revolution, trans. rose
strunsky. london: haymarket Books 2000, 123.
32 leon trotsky: “What did the theory of the permanent revolution look like in practice?”,
in: The Permanent Revolution, and Results and Prospects, trans. John G. Wright. seattle: red letter
press, 2010, 231–252.
33
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establishment of eastern european socialist modernism as a bureaucratised and
institutionalised art in state socialism.
the emergence of the neo-avant-garde in eastern europe was a critique of the
link between socialist realism as a revolutionary art and the phenomenon of
socialist modernism 33 as the art of a bureaucratised post-revolutionary state.
eastern european neo-avant-garde practices 34 were motivated by seeking to
establish an “alternative artistic space” or alternative artworlds. Alternative
spaces were outside of the bureaucratically led institutions of socialist realism
and modernism. Alternative spaces were “dark zones” within tightly controlled
societies with one-dimensional state programmes of supporting and surveying
culture and art.
Alternative artistic space might also be termed “the second public sphere”. 35
in eastern europe, in the domain of culture, neo-avant-garde and conceptual
artistic practices took place outside the official state public sphere, in spaces where
privacy was territorialised as public space (from the studio to the commune).
eastern european neo-avant-garde artists created alternative institutions, such as
exhibitions and theatre plays, in private apartments or studios, founded communes
on the principles of self-organising and direct democracy, published so-called
samizdat periodicals and books in small print runs. Also, eastern european neo-
avant-gardes occupied socially indeterminate spaces that were meant for youth
culture, student cultural institutions, as well as amateur cultural institutions (for
instance, photo and film clubs), which in socialist societies had state support as a
matter of policy.
eastern european neo-avant-garde artists built their production by moving
nomadically through various art disciplines (literature, theatre, music, film,
fine arts). they produced open and multimedia works of art (happenings,
performances, installations, artists’ books) that represented generational, gender,
and cosmopolitan identities geared toward stepping out of closed societies. in the
collectivist cultural order of real and self-managed socialism in eastern europe
33 Ješa denegri: “inside or outside Socialist Modernism? radical Views on the yugoslav Art scene,
1950–1970”, trans. Branka Nikolić, in: Impossible Histories: Historical Avant-gardes, Neo-avant-
gardes, and Post-avant-gardes in Yugoslavia, 1918–1991, eds. dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković.
cambridge, MA: Mit press, 2003, 170–208.
34 piotr piotrowski: In the Shadow of Yalta: Art and the Avant-garde in Eastern Europe, 1945–1989, trans.
Anna Brzyski. london: reaktion Books, 2009.
35 the term was introduced by performing arts theorists Adam czirak and Katalin cseh–Varga
at the conference “performing Arts in the second public sphere” held at the freie universität
Berlin, on 9–11 May 2014.
34
Politics of Theory
06 Vojin Bakić: Model for the Monument to Marx and Engels, 1953.
Magazine Jugoslavia, Belgrade
and in contrast to the pronounced individualism of their Western colleagues,
eastern-european neo-avant-garde artists worked with dialectical differences halfway
between liberal individualism and self-organised collectivism. Noteworthy
examples of eastern-european neo-avant-garde practices certainly include the
theatre experiments of polish director tadeusz Kantor and multimedia artist
Józef rabakowski, those of czech visual poets and performers (Milan Knižák, Jiři
35
Politics of Theory
Valoch, Jiři Kovanda), the slovenian oho group, the croatian group Gorgona,
hungarian experimental artists Miklós erdélyi and támas szentjóby, serbian
composer Vladan radovanović, yugoslav novelist Bora Ćosić, serbian painter
radomir damnjan, hungarian visual poet and conceptual artist sazalma laszlo
and szombathy Balint (group Bosc+Bosch).
07 radomir damnjan: In Honour of the Soviet Avant-garde, b/w print, 1973.
courtesy radomir damnjan
coNclusioN: differeNce / diAlectics
My intent in this chapter was to point to the hybrid complexity of modern and
modernist phenomena in relation to the criteria of the politics of time (dialectic
historicisation) and politics of space (geographic difference). in relation to every
contemporaneity that has occurred or is occurring at different times and in
different places, the modern and modernism required different conceptualisations
of “modernisation” and different conceptualisations of a critical response to the
transition of modernisation practices from the margins of society to its hegemonic
centre, both internationally and locally.
36
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08 Bálint szombathy: Bauhaus, photo, 1972.
courtesy Bálint szombathy
37
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38
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2
the returN of the politicAl
in contemoporary Aesthetics, philosophy and Art
the crisis of philosophy and aesthetics certainly began during the philosophical
century. it started when Marx highlighted the “misery of philosophy” in a world
of real human misery, in the industrial society of exploitation. 36 it also began
with friedrich Nietzsche’s “grandiose” and immanently philosophical failure
to derive yet another great totalising philosophical system of thinking about
everything and for all. it was then, for the first time, that the idea of a failed
philosophical project became a basis for reorganising philosophy. finally, it also
began when dr. sigmund freud set up the universal discourse of the subject and
subjectivity in human life, a humanistic discourse that passed over the empirical
and pseudo-empirical fields of biomedical and socio-cultural hypotheses beyond
the professional security of philosophical paradigms/styles. then, in the first
half of the 20th century, the philosophy of Martin heidegger was an attempt
to find the essential potentiality of only yet another important step for philosophy,
there and then, in what was for him an unacceptable modernity. 37 that one step for
philosophy was assumed in the conservative direction of invoking and responding
to “originary” philosophical voices amidst the nightmare of the great Western
tradition of thinking in metaphors, i.e. metaphysical figures of being, truth,
and the subject. But “that one step for philosophy” was also marked with the
concretely political failure of the traditionally and conservative-oriented modern
philosopher with almost nihilistic misgivings regarding progress. facing the
powers and events of an all-human catastrophe, the devastating totalising state
of emergency that Nazism produced with its anti-liberal programmes in the third
reich, 38 this philosopher reconstituted his anti-modern “right to universal truth”.
Quite asymmetrically, in relation to Martin heidegger, stood the anti-
philosophical endeavour of ludwig Wittgenstein, anti-philosophical in terms
of preserving and cherishing the tradition of autonomous Western philosophy,
with Wittgenstein trying to pose, in his individually manifested everyday human
36 Karl Marx: “the Metaphysics of political economy, vols. 1–5”, in: The Poverty of Philosophy.
Boston: Adamant Media corporation, 2005, 112–192. this elibron classics replica edition is an
unabridged fascimile of the edition published in 1920 by charles h. Kerr & company, chicago.
37 Martin heidegger: Being and Time, trans. Joan stambaugh. New york: state university of New
york press, 2010, 63–66.
38 emmanuel faye: Heidegger: The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy in Light of the Unpublished
Seminars of 1933–1935, trans. Michael B. smith. New haven: yale university press, 2009.
39
Politics of Theory
drama, some basic commonsensical questions – almost “dilettantish” – in the face
of the security of philosophical jargon and its abstracting of the individual’s lived
activity. Wittgenstein’s critical and analytical philosophy of philosophy is “dilettantish”
inasmuch as he is commonsensical and, from platforms of everyday speech, asks
questions about philosophy’s internal affairs, which learned philosophers, who
mature in philosophical discourses and jargons, as theodor W. Adorno, for instance, put
it, do not ask. 39 here, a “dilettante” in philosophy implies not a “self-taught” or
“committed amateur philosopher”, but one who deliberately and self-ref lexively,
demonstratively violates the professional ethics of philosophising by straying from
the normative/canonical jargon of Western philosophy. such a philosopher asks
“impolite questions” concerning the basic meanings of words and their impact on
the lived activity of philosophers and philosophy as a social practice. he diverts
from the doxa of philosophers who do not pose those basic questions as important
questions of philosophy, but construct narratives or models for presenting
thought within already established philosophical networks and methods. those
philosophies are quite close to the discourse of the philosophical hierarchy of
power. this concerns the canonical acceptability of jargon and the conceptual
atmosphere of stable thinking in defined social frameworks. these frameworks
disable writing or thinking about something or anything related to philosophy
outside of jargon topics or objects of debate. Wittgenstein’s reductionist transgressive
solution was to translate philosophical terms from the discourse of philosophy to
the language of the everyday use of words in speech, a task he saw as showing the
f ly out of the f ly-bottle.40 finding a way out of conceptual and linguistic traps
was the main task of Wittgenstein’s philosophising. in that sense, another great
“anti-philosopher” was the french doctor, founder of theoretical psychoanalysis,
Jacques lacan, who, unlike Wittgenstein’s analytical reductionism, resorted to a
“baroque” passage through all the spaces and times of philosophy, metaphorically
speaking, like “a bull in a china shop”. this metaphor bespeaks an author who
sees discomfort in the order of meaning precisely as his key intervention in the
materiality of speech, which is under the impact of the signification order, that
is, the unconscious. lacan’s luxurious “dilettantism” differs from Wittgenstein’s
puritan analytical work on the “absurdities” of philosophy, but the point is the
same: to achieve something with philosophy in a way disallowed by its traditional
discourses, that is, jargon frameworks. for lacan, this meant moving the reality
of the unconscious in any discourse, including philosophical. in lacan’s mind,
39 teodor Adorno: Filozofska terminologija: uvod u filozofiju, trans. slobodan Novakov. sarajevo:
svjetlost, 1986, 51 [theodor W. Adorno: Philosophische Terminologie: zur Einleitung. frankfurt:
suhrkamp, 1992].
40 ludwig Wittgenstein: Philosophical Investigations, trans. G.e.M. Anscombe. oxford: Blackwell,
1986, 103.
40
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philosophical discourse must face its supporting web of signification that modifies
webs of signified, i.e. conceptual ideas. that means having to face the structural
principle of determination that eludes the philosopher’s conscious intent and will
to express “this and that, there and then”; that is, a psychoanalytic theorist faces
the material order of speech, including philosophical speech, which shows, in its
complexity, what it omits, represses, covers, or negates.
finally, french philosopher Jacques derrida’s intervention showed that the
“central world of philosophy” as much as “the margins of philosophy” constitute
the problem of philosophy. he was entirely committed to philosophy, although
his early concept of deconstructing european philosophical logo-centrism – the
centrism of thinking as opposed to speaking and writing – offered some potential
directions for thinking and presenting inter-textually the limits of the philosophy
of transcendence. those who have invoked derrida and radicalised his offers and
promises have either moved out of philosophy and into the domain of the material
practice of writing, of which philosophy is only an instance, or, like others, who were
never in philosophy in the first place, have embraced the possibility of performing
the event of theorising and thereby pointed to the resistance of the materiality of
theory to the illusory esoteric quality of philosophy. After derrida, there occurred
quite diverse inter-textual and multidirectional rearrangements of the relationship
between philosophy and theory, from literary critic paul de Man, artist and theorist
of culture Victor Burgin,41 to novelist and essayist Kathy Acker.42 the extent of the
crisis of philosophy was also enhanced by the feminist, feminine, gender, and queer
theorisation of philosophy, more precisely, by asking that really singular question
extending from simone de Beauvoir via hélène cixous to Judith Butler and Joan
copjec: does philosophy have a gender? then another, even more complex and
philosophical question may be posed: “how was gender in philosophy, i.e. history
of philosophy, and thereby the singularity of the identity of philosophy itself as a
social practice reduced to a universal philosopher?” But that question, as well as similar
questions, despite their attractive and seductive philosophicality, were closer to
the singularity of the practice of theorisation within social, humanistic, or hybrid
platforms of interpretation and textual production about and against philosophy.
in the late 1960s, the notions of theory and theorisation gain a special meaning and thus
certainly an exclusive role with regard to knowledge (discourse, thinking, writing,
41 Victor Burgin: “the end of Art theory”, in: The End of Art Theory: Criticism and Postmodernity.
Atlantic highlands NJ: humanities press international, 1987, 140–204.
42 Kathy Acker: “realism for the cause of future revolution”, in: Kathy Acker: Bodies of Work:
Essays. New york: serpent’s tail, 1997, 14–26.
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behaviour), culture, and society.43 Theory and theorisation denote the hybrid genres
or poly-genres that developed in parallel in artistic, activist, and academic circles
(france, Great Britain, usA, eastern europe) by means of critiquing autonomous
canonical models and institutions of scientific and philosophical labour in society,
culture, and art. the theoretical was posited as the textual and theoretical labour as
a more literal or less literal textual production of a critical discourse. Writings by french
structuralists from the 1960s and international post-structuralists from the early
1970s advanced the critical position that philosophy should be essentially redefined.
that meant transforming philosophy as general thinking about sciences into a
critical theory based on reflecting the material practice of signification whereby
philosophic texts are produced. the practice of philosophy was thus interpreted as
material production of specific social texts. in his Consequences of Pragmatism, richard
rorty pointed out that modernity witnessed an unprecedented “blending” of the
borders of certain autonomous scientific and theoretical disciplines.44 the result
was a new kind of writing, which was neither about evaluating aspects of literary,
artistic, scientific, or cultural products, nor intellectual history, nor a philosophy of
good and practical acting in culture and art, nor the interpretation of society, but
all of that combined in the open and variable poly-genre of writing. theoretical
writing exceeds the boundaries between individual social and humanist sciences,
pointing to forms of production, presentation, and expression in contemporary
plural and global mass and media culture. As a poly-generic practice, theory
asks questions regarding the self-reflexive character of writing about the nature,
conditions, paths, and concepts of generating theoretical texts and their effects.45
then, questions were also posed regarding the epistemological character of
mediating knowledge and therefore also of institutions that establish and govern
meanings, sense, and values within a culture or interrelations between different
cultures. likewise important are questions regarding the critical character of the
conditions and circumstances whereby a theory emerges, is exchanged, governs a
certain or uncertain scene of writing or scene of presenting, and then experiences a crisis,
disappears, or transforms. Also important are questions regarding deconstructing,
dislocating, or decentring the inscription of theory or its effects into a certain mass,
elite, or professional public opinion, as well as traces of theory in its modifications,
their erasure or accumulation on the jetties46 of meaning, sense, values, and
43 patrick ffrench: “the ferment”, in: The Time of Theory: A History of tel Quel (1960–1983).
oxford: clarendon press, 1995, 5–44.
44 richard rorty: “the World Well lost”, in: Consequences of Pragmatism: Essays, 1972–1980.
Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 1982, 3–18.
45 Brian Wallis: “telling stories: A fictional Approach to Artist’s Writings”, in: Blasted Allegories:
An Anthology of Writings by Contemporary Artists, ed. Brian Wallis. New york: New Museum of
contemporary Art and cambridge, MA: Mit press, 1987, xi–xvii.
46 Jacques derrida: “some statements and truisms about Neo-logisms, Newisms, postisms,
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identities of culture. But there also emerge psychoanalytical questions about how
the desire for knowledge emerges, how pleasure occurs in a theoretical text or in a
process with texts (inter-textuality) in media culture. for something – a thought,
speech, writing, or media representation – to be theory, it must contain aspects that
enable or realise an identification, description, explication, and interpretation, that
is, debate. this is the open and indeterminate conception of theory. it is open enough
to encompass quite varied procedures: identifications, descriptions, explications
(readings), interpretations, and debates. What distinguishes theory from all other
cultural activities, disciplines, and institutions is the demand that any kind of
speaking or writing aspiring to be theoretical must meet, and that is to ask what
theory is, how it functions and identifies, describes, explains, and interprets itself as
theory or theorisation within quite specific cultural and social practices. therefore,
theory is not the opposite of practices, but the performance of an invariably specific
material social practice that is posited in such a way that it problematises – reflects,
explains, interprets, produces – concepts, discourses, and representations of theory
as a practice, from specific conditions and circumstances.
the crisis of postmodern liberal pluralism after the fall of the Berlin Wall in
1989, that is, following the end of the cold War and the establishment of “global
politics” and domination of a single superpower and, more importantly, of a
single economic and biotechnological political order, re-provoked possibilities for
examining “politics” and “the political” as a significant response to the apparent
weakness or absence of any kind of the political in the apparently apolitical or
extra-political neoliberal technological practices of organising public and private
everyday life in post-modernity.47 in postmodern and then globalised neoliberal
society, politics has acquired the character of a techno-managerial cultural
practice, moving from fundamental social, global questions to individual cultural
as well as artistic activities in the domain of identity and representation in the
everyday. A cynic might conclude that in globalised times, everything – meaning
culture and art – is politicised, except politics itself, which is depoliticised.48
therefore, in the 1990s and 2000s, it became important to invoke and reconstruct
“politics” and “the political” in relation to politics as a form of sociality, as well
as a form of organisation, governance, control, and implementation. At that
moment, “politics as a practice within or across general sociality” manifested
parasitisms, and other small seismisms”, trans. Anne tomiche, in: The States of “Theory”:
History, Art, and Critical Discourse, ed. david carroll. New york: columbia university press,
1990, 63–94.
47 chantal Mouffe: The Return of the Political. london: Verso, 2005, 1.
48 Jela Krečič: “pogovor s filozofinjo Alenko Zupančič: Vse se politizira, ker se politika depolitizira”
[interview with philosopher Alenka Zupančič: everything is politicised, Because politics is
depoliticised], in: Delo 21 ( June 2008), 24–25.
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a need or, even, desire for meta-theory as the organisation of the singular as
opposed to the particular in relation to universal political knowledge and action,
and traditionally, the meta-theory of “politics” is philosophy.49 As the meta-
theory of big politics, philosophical universalism was “used” as an intervening
sign for a critique of the anti-essentialism and social constructivism of “small
politics” and “micro-ecologies” in culture and, certainly, art. philosophical
universalism thereby enabled asking questions about acting responsibly for every
social intervention and risk of intervention. this kind of demand for another
large-scale politicisation on the level of philosophy and intervention in global
social processes after the cold War occurred in very different ways, above all in
philosophers, sometimes mutually incomparable and often confronted: Jacques
derrida and his new reading of Marx, 50 chantal Mouffe and her discussion of
the return of the political, ernesto laclau and his theory of emancipation in the
epoch of post-modernity and then globalism, Alain Badiou and his platonist-
oriented metapolitics, terry eagleton and his leftist critique of hybrid theories,
Jacques rancière and the preservation of the traditional european Aristotelian
philosophical “political”, 51 Antonio Negri and Michael hardt and their critique
of the current global empire, Giorgio Agamben and his reconstruction of great
philosophy by means of bio-politics, 52 paolo Virno and his theorisation of labour
in global or post-fordist capitalism, and Brian Massumi and his analysis of the
new media on the horizon of critical sociality.
philosophy’s invoking of “the political”, its “return to the political” emerged not
out of a structuring of reality undertaken by a party or state, but of performing
a philosophical desire for post-theoretical speculative philosophical constructions of
the “crisis” character, functions, and plural, which also means arbitrary, effects
of current socialities in capitalism, dominant but crisis-ridden. for example,
the separation of politics and power, which characterises the neoliberal rise and,
certainly, the global crisis of neo-liberalism, has had the effect of depoliticising
“politics” and transferring the complex of the political and politics into the field
of culture and art. Almost all of early-21st-century vital art is politicised, from a
“political fictionalisation of the real” (the irwin group with their NsK global state
project) to various political or cultural activisms (the critical Art ensemble, slavs
and tatars, Alfredo Jaar, tadej pogačar, Zoran todorović, Artur Żmijewski).
49 Alain Badiou: Metapolitics, trans. Jason Barker. london: Verso, 2006, 1.
50 Jacques derrida: “injuctions of Marx”, in: Specters of Marx: The State of Debt, the Work of Mourning,
and the New International, trans. peggy Kamuf. New york: routledge, 2006, 1–60.
51 Jacques rancière:“the distribution of the sensible: politics and Aesthetics”, in: The Politics of
Aesthetics: The Distribution of the Sensible, trans. Gabriel rockhill. london: continuum, 2004, 12.
52 Giorgio Agamben: “poiesis and praxis”, in: The Man Without Content, trans. Georgia Albert.
stanford: stanford university press, 1999, 68–93.
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09 irwin: Time for a new state, print, 2012.
courtesy irwin
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Politics of Theory
10 irwin: Time for a new state, billboard, leipzig, 2012.
courtesy provisonal salta ensemble
for instance, the conf lict, a sort of revival of the cold War in 2007 in 2008,
between the us and russia is not a conf lict between the liberal and the
communist, that is, between capitalist and social property, but between two
capitalist imperial models. it is a conf lict between the American neoliberal
model of capitalism and russian autocratic nationalist capitalism. therefore,
the philosophical derivation of meta- and macro-politicisation marked a critical
and that means analytical reactivation of the contradictory relations of local –
minority – bodies of knowledge as opposed to global – dominant, majority –
bodies of knowledge in establishing and performing “universal” historical and
geographical power. Moreover, this is not about opting between the local and
the global, i.e. the particular and the universal; opting like that has cost dearly,
with the defeats of modern projects in totalitarian regimes (the ussr, the third
reich, fascist italy, the Khmer rouge democratic Kampuchea, the cultural
revolution in china), as well as the defeats of postmodern conceptions, i.e. in
the preservation of “weak” or “soft” power and its concomitant comprehensive
plurality in ethnic wars and genocides, from the former yugoslavia to Africa in
the 1990s. this concerns deriving a philosophical understanding of how global
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as universal power is realised in relating – naturalising the universal with the
particular and, to be sure, conversely, the particular with the universal. if one
pays attention to questions regarding the character of today’s society, then one
must ask about relations between global and local modes of material production
and their fundamental refractions in individual and, certainly, global projections.
then one may ask, in philosophic-metaphysical terms, “who” or “what”, “when”
or “where” constitutes the production of universal knowledge and thereby global
as universal power. the relationship between the global and universal is posited as
a problematic and intriguing trap. in other words, the important philosophical
question is how singularity produces universality and what it is that enables
surveying and regulating that production not only behaviourally, but also
epistemologically and existentially? the critical question is this: can singularity
produce universality?
interpreting the complex process of integrating hybrid and anti-essentialist
theorisations into the neoliberal global system of power, some philosophers have
suggested, as an alternative, the potentiality of resisting global market capitalism
by means of a universalistically posited philosophy. this would be a philosophical
intervention stemming from:
(1) the collapse or disorientation of the traditional left and its theory and
(2) the global domination of “rightwing”, “neoliberal”, and “populist”
discourses, as well as the integration of “soft” or “weak”, that is, “post-
philosophic” hybrid theories into the neoliberal system of a f lexible
technocratic regulation of power.
in theoretical terms, such an intervention would mean a philosophic/theoretical
turn from the 20th-century linguistic turn to the early 21st-century philosophy of the
event.
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48
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3
trouBles With the ecoNoMy,
GeoGrAphy ANd history
the social turn
WhAt MAKes these sculptures so differeNt?
GrAdes of ABstrActioN
Zygmunt Bauman made the following almost tongue-in-cheek remark:
contemporary “workers” protests held in front of a MNc (multinational
corporation) premises seem to be doomed to fail: protesters are confronted by a
slightly dismayed official (a manager, administrator, coordinator, pr executive)
who doesn’t know exactly who should be given information regarding the protest.
in other words, he/she knows that the message will be conveyed through an
endless, intricate maze managing a global corporation topped by no individual
or coherent team, but by abstract networks of hybrid governing and executive
boards or “decision-making platforms” connected to other bodies of management
and funding. indeed, this scheme of governance is incompatible with that of a
personified owner and his way of running things in 19th century companies. in
those times, workers protests tended to personally address the factory owner or
his direct representative, who resided in his villa inside the factory grounds or
somewhere nearby.
let’s try to observe the matter from another angle. let’s take a look at two
sculptures from two different periods and two different political systems: the
monument (ArcelorMittal orbit) raised for the 2012 olympic Games in london
and lenin’s statue at Kaluzhskaya ploshchad in Moscow erected in 1985.
the former piece was designed by the postmodern sculptor Anish Kapoor with
cecil Balmond from the engineering group Arup and Ushida Findlay Architects.
the latter was executed by the sculptors lev Kerbel and Vasiliy dmitriyevich
Fëdorov. Both pieces came about at the peak of a crisis: the global financial crisis
and the global real-socialist crisis, respectively. the former was funded by the
British corporate system. the latter was funded by the soviet state. one stands
for the f luid, abstract order of neoliberal global power. the other stood for the
stability and matter-of-fact soviet tradition of representing the revolutionary
49
Politics of Theory
power of initiation. Both pieces are “political abstractions”, stressing their
assertiveness with monumentality and affirming “the power of corporate market
capitalism” and “the power of the workers’ revolution” (respectively). the
economic abstraction tends to be presented as an abstraction, namely, an abstract
power. on the contrary, the political abstraction tends to be presented as a non-
abstraction, i.e. as concrete power expressed by single or multiple personifications
(a leader, leadership, people).
the crisis of politics
ANd the returN of the politicAl
What began with the postmodern and evolved in the times of global transition was
a progression from the modern bureaucratic capitalist or socialist state which sets
politics in relation to social conf licts (and even economic models of competition,
domination, monopolies and global expansion of the market), towards a society
wherein politics as technology of government departs from the real power.
politics becomes a mechanism of minimal corrections of the social conf licts
conditioned by the real powers – which became increasingly abstract within the
global systems of finance, production, exchange and consumption. for instance,
the sociologist richard sennett asserts there has been a “divorce between power
and authority”53 in relation to politics. furthermore, he concludes that “the crux
of politics becomes marketing” (which seems bad for political life). 54
the point of describing this rather complex scheme is to point to the moment
following the divorce between power and politics in relation to contemporary
art. in the neoliberal society of the postmodern and, subsequently, globalisation
era, politics assumed the character of a techno-managerial cultural practice
(policy): it is now displaced from the domain of fundamental social issues
towards individualised cultural (even artistic) actions in the realms of identity
and representation of the “ordinary”. A cynical conclusion might be that in times
of globalisation, everything – meaning culture and art – is politicised, except
politics itself which is being de-politicised. 55
53 richard sennett: The Culture of the New Capitalism. New haven: yale university press, 2006, 62.
54 ibid., 135.
55 Krečič: “pogovor s filozofinjo Alenko Zupančič”, 24–25.
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stAte of AffAirs
after the end of modern politics
split between power and politics
economy at the place of politics
Management techniques
Grey ZoNe
efforts towards constructing the social
performing the forms of life
Appropriation of politics in arts and culture
i argue that we encounter two synchronous and antagonistic claims:
(1) the claim that there has been a transfer of the political of politics and politics of
the political outside the realm of politics – meaning, into the contexts of culture
and arts. in other words, politics and the political are put into practice in the
regimes of aesthetisation of the art world and culture. politics itself becomes a
formalised technique of government (policies) in the name of the power which
is no longer politics (meaning, a transparent social practice of responding to
the “human condition”); and
(2) the claim (quite opposite to the first) that social space, which no longer
appears as political space (but as the space of the market), is again posited as a
space of the construction of the social by means of art. this implies that the
politicisation of art again brings into play the “human condition” as a specific
condition of a desired sociality.
in both claims art is politicised or, more to the point, in both claims regimes
of art and regimes of politics gain visibility by way of aesthetics. however, the
former claim remains heavily determined by the de-politisation of politics; the
latter conceives art and culture as “ladders” to escape from depoliticised preserves
or spaces of apparent politicality to the realms of real sociality as politicality. this
contradictory contemporary situation may be pictured by the following diagram:
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Politics of Theory
split between power and politics
economy at the place of politics
Management techniques
history
emancipation
freedom
New sensuality
solidarity
self-organization
social security
Grey ZoNe
GeoGrAphy
identity
postcolonial studies
theories of cultural memory
this model demonstrates that the split between power and politics leads to the
effects of split narratives of synchronic “geography” and diachronic “history” i.e.
to replacing the canonical Western historical thought on culture and arts with a
new canon of geographical ref lection. this train of thought was anticipated by the
notions of contextualism, evolving from structuralism (partly post-structuralism)
to cultural studies and their impact on “postcolonial studies” i.e. “geo-aesthetics”
and “theories of cultural memory”.
Modern history seemed complete with modern phenomenologies of emancipation,
freedom, new sensuality, solidarity, self-organisation and social security.
What both diagrams show is the supposition of a grey zone in the split between
power and politics (and, analogously, between geography and history, i.e. between
space and time), which is to be restructured.
the outlined theoretical issues have their instances in artistic practices.
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Politics of Theory
11 peter eisenman: Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin, 2005.
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
12 igor Grubić: Scarves and Monuments, 2008.
courtesy igor Grubić
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Politics of Theory
cultural memory appears as a poetical model with a “distanced politicisation” in
relation to contemporaneity. With his Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe (2005)
architect peter eisenman simultaneously points to the “strategies of memory”
(paying tribute to the victims) and cultural truce in the contemporaneity of new
europe. With the projects of the Atlas Group, Walid raad reconstructs the
memories of the traumatic lebanon civil War, expressing the “unspeakable of
the war” through the visibility of the archives indexing the ethical and political
“stains” of its witnesses and accomplices. With his project Scarves and monuments
(2006) igor Grubić disclosed testimonies of socialist yugoslavia from the national
contemporaneity.
13 Nika radić: At Home (eating), instalation, 2015.
courtesy Nika radić
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Politics of Theory
14 Nika radić: At Home (brushing teeth), instalation, 2015.
courtesy Nika radić
Between the cultural memory of revolutions of modernism and the modern,
homages to 1968 or expressions of yearning for a radical new “sensibility”,
contemporary artistic practices referring to “revolution as an event” are played out
(in, for example, Marina Naprushkina’s ironic installations, actions and workshops
of the platform Chto delat?, the iranian islamic revolution as featured by the
group Slavs & Tatars, Jun yang’s or Ai Weiwei’s parody of the relations between
revolution and counter-revolution in the chinese transition…)
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15 tadej pogačar: Red Umbrellas March,
performance, 2001.
courtesy tadej pogačar
furthermore, activism and social participation (complicity, action) feature as
movements from art into the realm of culture and, finally, via culture to situations
of social antagonisms and conf licts, i.e. to the real political. As artistic practice,
activism appears in quite specific situations when institutions of cultural, social or
governmental work underachieve. the artist somehow becomes a social or cultural
worker who operates in “micro-cultures” (of sexual workers in the case of tadej
pogačar or cultural symptoms of transition in the case of Nikola džafo or every
day politics Nika radić). escape from the micro-cultures into the “restricted macro
systems” is associated with the investigative work of the critical Art ensemble in
the sphere of economic, production, market and political practices, like the global
internet or genetic engineering. the Belgrade movement Žene u crnom stepped
out from the commonly feminist “politics of difference” into an “anti-war politics”
common for critical political practice on a totalizing level.
A radical turn from micro-politics to “politicised sociality” may be entertained
with political movements like occupy Wall street or the egyptian revolution of
2011 and 2013 protests in turkey. these phenomena did not come about with
artistic intentions; however, aestheticisation was part of their renewal of the
common, i.e. social political resistance. the failure of these movements testifies to
the vulnerability of “self-organised resistance”, when exposed to the technologies
of government which conceal the real centers of power.
one of the phenomena of the “politicisation of art”, approaching the models of
modernist politicisation (for example, realist art of the 19th and 20th centuries)
is artists” reaction to terrorism and the war against terrorism in the first decade
of the 21st century. 56 this refers to the realist propaganda or anti-propaganda art
56 W. J. t. Mitchell: “War is over (if you Want it)”, in: Cloning Terror/The War of Images, 9/11 to the
Present. chicago: the university of chicago press, 2011, 6.
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dealing with september 11 (thomas ruff ’s photos) or the war against terrorism
as a form of global repression from a military superpower like the usA (richard
serra’s Stop Bush billboard, Abdel-Karim Khalil’s sculptures or Guy Gladwell’s
critical painting).
ecoNoMy ANd Biopolitics
on a street book stand in Belgrade i accidentally found a book titled Theories of
Collapse, 57 a selection of classical texts on the dialectics of social crises and collapses
(Karl Marx, Vladimir ilič lenin, heinrich cunow, eduard Bernstein, Karl
Kautsky, rudolf hilferding, rosa luxemburg, Nikolaj ivanovič Buharin, fritz
sternberg, henryk Grossman, friedrich pollock, Maurice dobb, paul sweezy,
eugen Varga, paul A. Baran, paul Mattick, samir Amin, ernest Mandel and
Joel Jacoby). the book contains elaborated typologies, analytical and polemical
insights behind the causes of modern crises and fairly detailed chronologies of
local and global crises from 1815 to the early 1980s when the book was published.
using additional sources, i have composed an approximate chronological sequence
of major crises: 1815, 1825, 1836, 1847, 1857, 1866, 1873–1874, 1879, 1886, 1891–
1895, 1899–1904, 1906–1908, 1919–1922, 1929–1932, 1973, 1981–1989, 1987,
1997, 2008–2013.
At the time, i was not interested in the reasons behind the crises, but in the
frequency of their emergence. in the 19th century, crises broke out almost every
ten years. the frequency of the crises did not change dramatically after World
War ii. their permanence and abundance raised the question “what were all those
crises about!?” there may be plenty of answers to that question (the economy,
resources, production, the market, society, politics) i was interested in those that
could be identified as political – and not all political crises, but specifically those
that establish some relation between the derived forms of life affected by the
crisis. in other words, merely superficial insight into statistical data shows that
each crisis resulted in changes in the forms of life, from demography (settlement,
migrations) to standards of living, social security or buying power, i.e. to free
or limited choices in the ways one lives ones everyday life. this insight stirred
some vague intuitions which led me to conclude that, at all times, a crisis was
an instrument or effect of the biopolitical disciplining of society. crises i had
personal experiences with – from the economic crises of self-management
socialism (1960s, 1970s, 1980s) to the crises of transition in the 1990s and the
first decade of the 21st century – showed that “economic crises and collapses”
57 Karl Kautsky: “teorije kriza” (crisis theory), trans. Mirjana pavlović, in: Teorije sloma (theories
of collapse), eds. Branko caratan, rade Kalanj, Vjekoslav Mikecin. Zagreb: Globus, 1981, 93.
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were used either by governments or government-detached bodies (secret services,
banking and business corporations, tycoon alliances) in order to transform the
effects of the crises (most often intentionally or randomly caused by them) into
biopolitical instruments of surveillance and, furthermore, reshape the public and
private daily lives of citizens. i propose the following scheme:
effected crisis:
economy-
resources-
Market-
Biopolitical transformation
of the society
production-
society-
societal collapse
politics-
infrastructure-
Non-revolutionary and non-reformist
transformation of the capitalist society
A crisis taking place for a possibly “objective” reason, brought about by the inner
contradictions of capitalism, appears as a convenient “resource” for performing
discipline. Without a crisis i.e. “state of emergency”, this disciplining could not
be imposed legitimately. this exceptional crisis situation permits the government
to reclaim a share of its impact on society, permits the market to restructure the
habits of the citizen-consumers and, finally, permits production to modify itself.
it allows for passing from one stage to another without perceiving the crisis
as a revolution or reform followed by all the consequences of revolutions and
fundamental reforms. A crisis, therefore, may be identified as a situation which
claims necessary economic renewal as an excuse for a biopolitical “drill” of the
population for the new conditions of consumption, exchange and production.
examples of artistic representation (or, in recent times, the indexing) of the crisis
as an instrument of biopolitics abound. the painter George Grosz witnessed
the crisis of the Weimar republic (Grauer Tag [Grey day], 1921; Die Stützen
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Politics of Theory
der Gesselschaft [the pillars of society], 1926). Joseph Beuys and, subsequently,
Alfredio Jaar spotlighted the transfer of the “symbols of political economy” into
the realm of art – for instance, Beuys: “Kunst = Kapital” (1979) and Jaar: “Kultur
= Kapital” (2012), followed by Jota castro (Mortgage, 2009) or Melanie Gilligan
(Crisis in the Credit System, 2008).
coNclusioN
politics and art are current issues at the beginning of the new century.
the relation between politics and art is traditionally assumed as didactic: it implies
that art transposes politics to a level of general knowledge or abstract stances
on human relations in the particularities of “real life”. the didactic function of
art indeed means that the purpose of art is propaganda. in art, politics claims
presence – sensually/bodily displayed as active knowledge or a cognitively packaged
experience of desired or desirable sociality. it becomes a trace or evidence of
choice for an optimal form of life surpassing the critical distance towards life
itself. 58
in the modern sense, the relation between politics and art is assumed as a critical
practice – wherein art questions the didactic claims of hegemonic politics and its
“normative” performance of forms of life which comply with the apparatuses and
discourses of real and fictional power. Adorno insisted that art should be analyzed
as an element of wider social processes: “it is self-evident that nothing concerning
art is self-evident anymore, not its inner life, not its relation to the world, not
even its right to exist”. 59
politics posits art as an instrument of enframing and performing a social
problem as a challenge to the normative order of power. Art posits politics as an
instrument of spectacularisation (becoming visible, audible) of a social problem
which is concealed behind the normative order of power, administration, and
government.
in the postmodern sense, the relation between politics and art is assumed as
performance or, in other words, as the representation of art and politics in the
realm of cultural discourses and figures.60 A lyotardian critique of the metanarrative
58 Georg lukács: Essays on Realism, ed. rodney livingstone. cambridge MA: the Mit press, 1980,
37–42.
59 Adorno, Aesthetic Theory, 1.
60 Aleš erjavec: “introduction”, in: Postmodernism and the Postsocialist Condition. Politicised Art under
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indicates that politics is being depoliticised, and art is being de-articised to the level
of plural cultural production, exchange and consumption of arbitrary f loating
“artifacts”. politics and art are realms of articulation and re-articulation of the
new form of depoliticised politics: that is, “cultural policies”.
Late Socialism, ed. Aleš erjavec. Berkeley cA: university of california press, 2003, 18–20.
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4
GrAy ZoNes – politicAl ecoNoMy
THROUGH forMs of life
eleven theses on feuerbach, friedman,
hayek and speculative realism
in what follows, i will point to theorisations of modern and contemporary
human, cultural, and artistic practices that relate to antagonistic and certainly
turbulent processings of production and reproduction, 61 political economy,
real life, and forms of life in the field of contemporary non-transparent or
gray sociality. in broadest terms, the field of performing sociality and its
performativity is the field of politics, which one may trace, with its rises and
falls, from Aristotle’s local (zoon politikon) to the utterly contemporary multiple
confrontation of antagonisms and the potentiality of globality. that field is not
only that of a voluntary or coercive ordering of the social, but also an affect or
expression of human concern as well as wish that appears in all those activities
that constitute real life as real, true life.
My discussion rests on an analysis and application of a fragmentary statement that
engels made in a letter written long ago:
According to the materialist conception of history, the ultimately
determining element in history is the production and reproduction of
real life […] hence if somebody twists this into saying that the economic
element is the only determining one, he transforms that proposition into a
meaningless, abstract, senseless phrase.62
therefore, the focus is on the following syntactic model:63
61 hannah Arendt: “the term Vita Activa”, in: The Human Condition. chicago: university of
chicago press, 1958, 15.
62 friedrich engels, in: Karl Marx and friedrich engels: Selected Correspondence. Moscow: progress
publishers, 1975, 396.
63 ronald schleifer: “introduction”, in: A.-J. Greimas: Structural Semantics: An Attempt at a Method,
trans. daniel Mcdowell, ronald schleifer, Alan Velie. lincoln: university of Nebraska press,
1983, xxxv.
61
Politics of Theory
16 provisional salta ensemble: Beuys – KAPITAL – Jaar, photo-essay, photomontage, 2014.
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
production real life
and
reproduction
political forms of life
economy
62
Politics of Theory
the diagram above indicates that the production and reproduction of real life
form the fundamental grounding of sociality, which may be implemented by
regulating and deregulating political economy, whereby ideal and non-ideal forms
of life appear as a disciplinary idealisation or disciplinary regulation of real life.
this concerns the disciplining, i.e. ordering, structural control, or phantasmatic
projection of giving shape to the shapelessness of real life according to the demands
of the ruling class; bureaucratic state apparatuses; techno-bureaucratic actants of
the political economy of the state, union, or corporate network; as well as the
will of the ruler and his “circle”; and the structural potentialities of the “world
system” at present, defined by international agreements and alliances.
the diagram above shows two modular routes leading (1) from production and
reproduction to political economy and from political economy to production and
reproduction and (2) from real life to forms of life and from forms of life to real
life. in other words, in diagrammatic terms, one may note the following relations
between real and ideal events:
production and reproduction
political economy
and
real life
forms of life.
63
Politics of Theory
therefore, the important question concerns the relationship between real life and
forms of life with regards to practices of production and reproduction according
to the idealisations and biopolitical functions of political economy in modern and
contemporary societies. if real life “cannot be separated from its form”,64 then the
impact of political economy is fundamental and indisputable in giving shape to
the shapelessness of real life. if real life may be isolated from its forms and those
forms may be viewed as expressions of speculative realism or, more traditionally,
idealism, then production/reproduction is aimed directly at real life, while real
life, as the relationship between political economy and forms of life, persists as an
alienated abstraction or idealisation, which is supposed to perform the function of
disciplining the “world of consciousness” on the abstract level of a superior model
of governing life. in other words, therefore, we have the following two schemas
as two opposing solutions of “concrete reality”:
production
and real life
reproduction
or
political economy forms of life.
64 following Giorgio Agamben: “A life that cannot be separated from its form is a life for which
what is at stake in its way of living is living itself. What does this formulation mean? it defines a
life – human life – in which the single ways, acts, and processes of living are never simply facts but
always and above all possibilities of life, always and above all power. each behavior and each form
of human living is never prescribed by a specific biological vocation, nor is it assigned by whatever
necessity; instead, no matter how customary, repeated, and socially compulsory, it always retains
the character of a possibility; that is, it always puts at stake living itself. that is why human beings
– as beings of power who can do or not do, succeed or fail, lose themselves or find themselves –
are the only beings for whom happiness is always at stake in their living, the only beings whose
lives are irremediably and painfully assigned to happiness. But this immediately constitutes the
form-of-life as political life. ‘civitatem […] communitatem esse institutam propter vivere et bene
vivere hominum in ea’”. cf. Marsilius of padua: Defensor pacis, V, ii; “form-of-life”, in: Radical
Thought in Italy: A Potential Politics, eds. paolo Virno and Michael hardt. Minneapolis: university
of Minnesota press, 1996, 151–152.
64
Politics of Theory
eleVeN theses
1
the main shortcoming of materialism thus far (including feuerbach’s, as well
as friedman’s and hayek’s pragmatic materialism and the new ontologists’
speculative realism and materialism) is that its subject, reality, sensibility is
understood only in terms of dynamised objects or functional perceptions, and not
as a complex human perceptual activity, a genuine material practice that is a non-
subjective positing and performance, i.e. production and reproduction of real life,
irreducible to a single aspect, such as the economy or, in freud, sexuality or, in
postcolonial theory, race, etc.
that is why Marx argues the following:
hence it happened that the active side, in opposition to materialism, was
developed by idealism – but only abstractly, since, of course, idealism
does not know real, sensuous activity as such. feuerbach wants sensuous
objects [objekte], differentiated from thought-objects, but he does not
conceive human activity itself as objective [gegenständliche] activity. in
the essence of christianity [das Wesen des christenthums], he therefore
regards the theoretical attitude as the only genuinely human attitude,
while practice is conceived and defined only in its dirty-Jewish form of
appearance [erscheinungsform]. hence he does not grasp the significance
of “revolutionary”, of “practical-critical”, activity.65
in pragmatic realism, hayek and friedman necessarily reduce practical-critical
activity to a ref lected economic activity that ref lects and renders sustainable
contemporary late-industrial or post-industrial forms of life without addressing the
activity of the production and reproduction of life that transcends human labour,
which means its real and ubiquitous problematic nature of actant being in life and
becoming real life. the problem concerns economic sustainability – what enables
sustainability? does this concern the instrumental potentiality of the economy,
which reduces the “political” in favour of the effective or the other way around,
enables sustainability as the ideal of politicisation even when sustainability itself
no longer functions on the level of sustainability, as in contemporary economic
crises since 2000?
65 Karl Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, in: Marx/engels internet Archive (marxist.org). source:
Karl Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, in: Marx/Engels Selected Works, vol. 1. Moscow: progress
publishers, 1969, 13–15.
65
Politics of Theory
Moreover, contrary to all idealisms: abstraction or speculative re-ontologisation
is an effect of real human activity, i.e. practice. there is no abstraction outside
practice. that is why in traditional terms, abstraction is not an expression of
idealism, that is, contemporary speculative realism, but a point of resistance to
them – or is it!?
2
the question whether objective truth pertains to human thought is not one of
theory as an alienated practice, but “only a practical” question. in practice, one
must prove the veracity and power of one’s thinking, in other words, that one’s
thought is both-sided as an individual and collective bodily activity. the debate
concerning the reality or non-reality of thinking is a purely ‘scholastic’ debate.
But the problem today begins with the operative/instrumental projection of
speculative realism as the thesis of the object-oriented mind. is that the same
schema that holds true for political economy after friedman and hayek as well –
focused on responding to the mass and global distribution of objects for permanent
consumption?
however, that is not the only possible relation, because for us, who live within
social forms of life that hide real life, objects are mind-oriented. Mind-oriented
objects are “designed objects” of contemporary hyper-production of objecthood in
a world of universal mass and global consumption. they are oriented to the mind
in the same way that affects are oriented to the body! therefore, this concerns
not the mind, but the body. in real life, the notion of the body is not just a form
of life – performed to the level of a sensually distributed figure. let us remember
Barthes’s words from his essay on schumann’s romanticist music: “soul is merely
a romantic name for ‘body’”.66
therefore, speculative realism or new materialism point to an object-oriented
mind, forgetting that in the practice of human being and becoming, the mind
is nothing but a doing and labouring individual or collective body – that is, a
potentially active labour of an emerging real life in the transformation of the
existing state of affairs into the actual, which becomes the possibility of a future
world (compare with dragomir ugren’s “fictional models”). Moreover, it is not
just the mind, i.e. “real life” that is oriented toward objects, but equally so are
objects oriented toward real life – especially if we are talking about art and culture
66 roland Barthes: “rasch”, in: The Responsibility of Forms, ed. and trans. richard howard. Berkeley:
university of california press, 1991, 308.
66
Politics of Theory
as a world of objects designed by people for people, for the sake of genuine human
life realised through exchange, which today inevitably becomes consumption.
the matter is further complicated by the fact that neither objects nor people are
homogeneous, but reside in a domain of produced differences that perform the
functions of natural differences, i.e. operate in a way that creates the illusion that
natural differences are at work.
17 dragomir ugren: The Ugren Room - Project for Tate Modern, london, 3d drawing, 2011.
courtesy dragomir ugren
3
Marx’s demand was an optimistic one:
the materialist doctrine that men are products of circumstances and
upbringing, and that, therefore, changed men are products of changed
circumstances and changed upbringing, forgets that it is men who change
circumstances and that the educator must himself be educated. hence
this doctrine is bound to divide society into two parts, one of which is
superior to society. the coincidence of the changing of circumstances and
of human activity or self-change [selbstveränderung] can be conceived
and rationally understood only as revolutionary practice.67
But what will happen when the axis
67 Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, 13–15.
67
Politics of Theory
political economy forms of life
“has no alternative” but only the demand for a rational realisation of the chosen
operative model of a pragmatic and self-interested political economy? What is the
meaning here of the phrase “no alternative” (Margaret thatcher)? 68 does it mean
that there is really no topos or interval or topos-interval to which “revolutionary
practice” might lead, or exactly the opposite, for which hayek69 and friedman
provide a potential basis in the theorisation of proto-neoliberal economy: that the
phrase “no alternative” means that any alternative practice may be appropriated
by the practice of economy, i.e. political economy founded on understanding the
axis
production
and real life
reproduction
and always and concretely implementing it as that of
political economy forms of life
that means then that production and reproduction have been appropriated by
political economy, whereas real life appears in terms of forms of life as a function
of political economy and its idealisations, which have turned into the pragmatic
operativity of a designed world of objects, geared toward the body of the consumer.
then it means that “revolutionary practice” is no longer revolutionary practice
as promised by leftist revolutionary nostalgics (Žižek,70 Badiou), but appropriated
esoteric capital that enhances indirect material talk of turning from one mode of
production and reproduction to another according to the functional demands
68 Margaret thatcher was prime Minister of the united Kingdom from 1979 to 1990 and the leader
of the conservative party from 1975 to 1990.
69 friedrich A. hayek: “the political Aspects of economic power”, in: Law, Legislation and Liberty,
vol. 3: The Political Order of a Free People. chicago: university of chicago press, 1981, 80–83.
70 slavoj Žižek: “how to Begin from the Beginning”, in: The Idea of Communism, eds. costas
douzinas, slavoj Žižek. london: Verso, 2010, 219.
68
Politics of Theory
of the dominant political economy. the thing with real revolutionary practice
within real life is the opposite: revolutionary practice does not initiate turning from
one mode of production – and reproduction – to another; rather, revolutionary
practice is itself initiated by turning from one mode of production to another. the
switch must be the causal event of a collapse or crisis, with affective, economic,
and political consequences enabling, by means of a risky didactic, a revolutionary
practice. At present, there is really no revolutionary practice, since every turn
from a given mode of production – and reproduction – is controlled by the
dominant political economy of capitalism, whereby all real life appears as a form
of life, which means an object or figure in the double game of the body directed
at an object and an object directed at an individual or collective body.
4
feuerbach starts off from the fact of religious self-estrangement
[selbstentfremdung], of the duplication of the world into a religious,
imaginary world, and a secular [weltliche] one. his work consists in
resolving the religious world into its secular basis. he overlooks the fact
that after completing this work, the chief thing still remains to be done.
for the fact that the secular basis lifts off from itself and establishes itself
in the clouds as an independent realm can only be explained by the inner
strife and intrinsic contradictoriness of this secular basis. the latter must
itself be understood in its contradiction and then, by the removal of the
contradiction, revolutionised. thus, for instance, once the earthly family
is discovered to be the secret of the holy family, the former must itself be
annihilated [vernichtet] theoretically and practically.71
speculative realism begins from the fact of the software-productive-performative
self-alienation and doubling of the world into a cognitive-speculative-software
and secular world. these two worlds are connected in a non-transparent way.
in between them, there are gray zones of contemporaneity. Both worlds are
connected by means of non-vectorised performativity. their aim is to reduce the
cognitive-software-productive-performative world to a secular basis: primary
objective materialism. Just as friedman’s and hayek’s economic theory reduces
political economy to an algorithmic economy of operative sustainability and
potential expansion, with all the negligences that the ‘political’ – whether singular
or plural – have in the West’s history of the practice of the interrelation between
real life and forms of life.
71 Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, 13–15.
69
Politics of Theory
real life
forms of life
5
Marx makes the claim that feuerbach, unhappy with “abstract thinking”, prefers
perception; but that he fails to see sensuality as a practical human-sensory activity.
speculative realism seeks to resolve the subject-object relation by pointing to
the “tool-being of a given object” as the reality of that object,72 forgetting that
the “tool-being of an object” is a practical human-sensory activity, i.e. practice
that keeps connecting and disconnecting hypothetical relAtioNs of reAl
life ANd forMs of life (the object and figure in relation to the subject of
subjection).
Moreover, a form of life as an abstraction does not shape real life as concreteness,
but real life as concreteness and, at the same time, the potentiality of possible
abstractions designs “forms of life” as expressions of the alienation of man who
is not a subject of labour but, on the contrary, a function of that labour,73 for
instance: of design. design should be understood as the purposeful and planned
shaping of objects within forms of life meant to attract life itself to objects that
will work as “agents” of exchange, i.e. consumption, communication, or any type
of serious human relation. therefore, alienation does not equal deviation from
real life or retreat from original real life, but the possibility of subjecting real
life individually and/or collectively to the level of real human life sensuously
perceived through interaction with forms of life. that is a place or interval with
the necessity, but not also totality, of political economy.
72 Graham harman: “elements of an object-oriented philosophy”, in: Tool-being: Heidegger and the
Metaphysics of Objects. peru, ill: open court, 2002, 217–235.
73 cf. Vanja sutlić: “urgentnost radikalno revolucionarnog mišljenja uz prevladavanje metafizičke
sheme ‘stvaralaštvo – postvarenje’” [the urgency of radically revolutionary thought with
transcending the “creativity – reification], in: Praksa rada kao znanost povijesti: ogledi uz filozofijsko
ustrojstvo Marxove misli [labour practice as the study of history: essays on the philosophical
structure of Marx’s thought], Edicija časopisa Kulturni radnik, special edition, 1974, 60–81, here
80–81.
70
Politics of Theory
6
feuerbach resolves the essence of religion into the essence of man
[menschliche Wesen = “human nature”]. But the essence of man is no
abstraction inherent in each single individual. in reality, it is the ensemble
of the social relations. feuerbach, who does not enter upon a criticism of
this real essence is hence obliged:
(1) to abstract from the historical process and to define the religious
sentiment regarded by itself, and to presuppose an abstract – isolated –
human individual.
(2) the essence therefore can by him only be regarded as “species”, as an
inner “dumb” generality which unites many individuals only in a natural
way.74
friedman and hayek reduce the economic essence to the individual human essence
of operative and sustainable decision-making within liberal politics, exclusively
as an affect and effect of political economy.
Economic essence is not at all a speculative – neo-heideggerian – abstraction found
in each individual relative to the invariance of objects, as speculative realists
see it. in its reality, it is the aggregate of variant social relations. speculative
realists, as well as friedman and hayek, however seemingly remote, do not
undertake a critique of this real essence. therefore, they are forced: (1) to
make an abstraction from the historical f low and fix the economic or natural
sentiment to themselves and assume an abstract – “isolated” – human individual,
that is, an isolated speculative mind; (2) since essence can be understood only
in terms of “genus”, as an internal, silent generality that structurally connects
a large number of individuals and thereby realises the domain of real life with
reproduced multiplied relations with potential and actual forms of life. the
remainder of individuality as the matrix of community is, paradoxically, the
populist multitude.
the nature of religion resides not in human essence but in its historically
contingent function, from mysticism qua politics to identity qua politics of the
homogenising multitude of a populist mass and global humanity. that is why
religion has regained its importance for national post-socialist states in the global
economic transitions of the last two decades. the national state is a religiously
identificatory state, with its economic sovereignty suspended for the sake of
74 Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, 13–15.
71
Politics of Theory
global consumption and making profit on a non-transparent level. this is an anti-
neoliberal definition of the current state of affairs in the wake of friedman and
hayek.
7
feuerbach consequently does not see that the “religious sentiment” is itself a social
product, and that the abstract individual that he analyses belongs in reality to a
particular social form.
therefore, hayek and friedman fail to see that “the economic policy of governing”
is a social product and that the abstract individual they analyse belongs to a certain
form of society – community – with all the consequences of the antagonistic
reality of life. When politics turns into policy, we have a serious problem – and
that is the crisis of sociality.
therefore, speculative realists fail to see that the “speculative sentiment” itself is
a social – and that means external – product and that the re-ontologised abstract
individual they analyse belongs to a certain social antagonism, for which they
may assume an abstract and idealised form of life modelled after the “tool-being”
of or from an object.
8
According to Marx, all social life is essentially practical. All mysteries which
lead theory to mysticism find their rational solution in human practice and in the
comprehension of this practice.
A sub-thesis on Nietzsche and Badiou! Whether g/God is dead or alive really
bears no relation – apart from speculative mystification – to the articulation of
thinking about practice qua immanent multiplicity.75
As significantly practical, social life is not necessarily always pragmatic as well,
or reduced, in its alienation, to the re-ontologisation of speculative objects in lieu
of the production and reproduction – misplaced, neglected, or reduced, that is,
alienated – of real life. the paradox is that real life, in order to be identified as real
75 peter hallward: “Badiou’s ontology”, in: Badiou: A Subject to Truth. Minneapolis: university of
Minnesota press, 2003, 81. cf. Alain Badiou: “A renewed concept of the one”, in: Deleuze: The
Clamor of Being, trans. louise Burchill. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 2000, 10–11.
72
Politics of Theory
life, must be produced and reproduced as a form of life or a multitude of forms of
life, and that is nothing other than the function of alienation.76
driving theory toward mysticism, whether in new-monotheistic ( Judaism –
christianity – islam) or eclectic, trans-cultural, New Age, or speculative neo-
heideggerian or populist, integrative-consumer terms, finds its rational resolution
in real human practice and its daily and continuous contradictory and antagonistic
struggle. While that struggle in the context of friedman’s77 and hayek’s thinking
is reduced, nonetheless, to the brutality of economic Darwinism – whether they
care to admit it or not – the answer should be sought in human practice and in
conceiving that practice with all of its differences, from philosophically idealised
understanding itself ( pure thinking), the capability of judgement ( power of judgement),
and the capability of the instrumentalism of acting itself of an individual or/and
collective body ( practical action).
practice is always more complex than our interests and their demands. practice
happens to non-idealised forms of life. in order to be a practice, acting entails
multiple complexity in real life, which is open to a potentiality that suggests not
only “pluggings-in” or “networkings”, but also a real break between qualitatively
different world systems, in history and geography alike.
in order to be a practice, activity shows no nostalgia for things past or lost.
Nostalgia is grotesque. It is not affectively causal, but affectively cathartic.
9
contrary to Marx’s claim that “the highest point reached by contemplative
[anschauende] materialism, that is, materialism which does not comprehend
sensuousness as practical activity, is the contemplation of single individuals and
of civil society [bürgerlichen Gesellschaft], i” 78 am confronted with the fact that
in between liberal individualism and Marxist collectivism, there is also non-
transparent tension expressed in every practical activity and furthermore, that
we are not able – in whatever time or space – to resolve the conf lict between the
individual and the collective, either on the level of the subject or that of identity.
76 speaking not as a Marxist, but as a subject coming from without: the interior is only a surface
illusion. this is transparent mystification.
77 Milton friedman: “the relation between economic freedom and political freedom”, in:
Capitalism and Freedom. chicago: university of chicago press, 1982, 7–21.
78 Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, 13–15.
73
Politics of Theory
therefore, mistaken are all those leftist thinkers who, in their antagonism to the
liberal, turn to an anti-liberal heideggerianism79 – hiding trees behind the forest of
the national state as the guarantee of sovereignty. heidegger’s Rektoratsrede clearly
shows that there is nothing to be found in the exceptionality of the rescuing
potential of the racial/national state – however much one opposed the internaitonal
Monetary fund and similar organisations of coercive political economy.
if there is no solution, there is at least the process or activity of solving. solving may
be replaced with constructing. All key concepts of Marx’s theory are constructed
and quasi-ontological, as opposed to the traditional right-wing fascination with
ontological connectedness – organic coherence.
the mechanism of constructing a new identity – for example, that of a
“proletarian” as opposed to those of a wageworker and owner of wage means – is
important for understanding a new identity in the difference between a managing
bureaucrat and a performer of services or […] today it is no longer the proletariat
that matters, but modalities 80 of constructing the proletariat81 […] modalities of
an identity that does not occur by means of identifying with an order that already
exists in real life, but by constructing a potential subjectivity – in that regard,
one should not forget the axis linking Aristotle and Marx, although, sceptically
speaking, that axis is always present as a construction corresponding to the needs
of turning from one mode of production – and reproduction – to another.
10
to reconstruct Marx’s tenth thesis, which states that the “standpoint of the old
materialism is civil society; the standpoint of the new is human society or social
humanity”82 means to engage in a radical and revolutionary reconsideration
of “human society” and “social humanity”, but that would inevitably entail a
revolutionary or at least critical understanding of contemporary globalism as an
internationalised social humanity, not a speculative-software global economic-
communicational system of exchanging and situating a controlled surplus value
(from the wealthy to the wealthier).
79 slavoj Žižek: “the trouble with heidegger”, in: In Defense of Lost Causes. london: Verso, 2008,
117–124.
80 sutlić: “Za razumevanje Marxovog pojma revolucije”, 83.
81 Jean hyppolite: “otuđenje društvenog i ekonomskog čovjeka u državi” [the Alienation of social
and economic Man in the state], in: Studije o Marxu i Hegelu [studies on amrx and hegel], trans.
Vjekoslav Mikecin, rade Kalanj. Zagreb: Školska knjiga, 1977, 95.
82 Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, 13–15.
74
Politics of Theory
the global movement of real life is the movement of social humanity, as opposed
to local national plugging in to global economy and communication networks,
which are a software-hardware and control-regulative metaphor for real human
mobility or that of life. that is why the question of the mobility of asylum-
seekers is a fundamental question of ref lecting globalism as an internationalist
practice as opposed to conservative racism based on stopping the “foreigners” at
the always constructed borders of local national claustrophobic “treasure rooms”.
the question of humanity is the serious question of constructing relations upon
geographic and temporal differences of identity, which should be confronted with
social humanity qua subjection.
11
philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the world in various ways;
the point is to change it. 83
changing the world does not mean resolving its contradictions and antagonisms
once and for all! that innocent naivety always produces religious, political, even
family totalitarianism in contemporary populist politics! to change the world
means to conquer, actively and in practice, which may also be a theoretical practice,
moments (intervals) or topoi (places) of relations of resolving contradictions and
antagonisms, with all the consequences that may have for concrete individual and
collective bodies.
solutions are a mystification – solving is practice:
(A)
uNder NorMAl circuMstANces, LIFE tAKes directioN the
WAy A riVer does.
life is NetWorKed, ofteN uNiNteNtioNAlly, By iNtersectiNG
ANd floWiNG BeyoNd expected relAtioNs or coMMoN
loGic.
the Body is Modified, MutAted, AdJusted, disAppeArs or
surViVes iN BrutAl “dArWiNisM”: A WouNded Body feels
pAiN, A dislocAted Body feels disorieNted, A Body thAt
leArNs ANd corrects its MistAKes…
83 Marx: “theses on feuerbach”, 13–15.
75
Politics of Theory
(B)
the oNtoloGisiNG chAiN of coNteMporAry life is
perforMed/ perforMAtiVe iN NetWorKs of differeNt
chArActers thAt Are NoNetheless GloBAlised, Not oNly
iN ecoNoMic ANd politicAl terMs, But Also iN terMs of
cArNAl surViVAl.
the NAturAl NoN-NAture of the NetWorKed suBJect, or,
More precisely, of NetWorKed suBJectioN, is No loNGer
coNNected to the oNtoloGy of QuAlities, But to the
coGNitiVe flexiBility of NeGotiAtiNG the coMplexities,
Multiplicities, ANd iNstANces thAt push the Body froM
coMplexity ANd Multiplicity iNto the doMAiN of VAriABle
differeNces.
(c)
crAViNG deMocrAcy!
deMocrAcy is the expectAtioN of the uNexpected. the
uNexpected is A coNseQueNce of coNfroNtiNG the
coMplexity ANd uNexpectedNess of decisioN-MAKiNG iN
huMAN forMs of life.
the ussr collApsed WheN reAl – post-reVolutioNAry –
sociAlisM BeGAN suppressiNG the forMs of deVelopiNG
direct deMocrAcy.
(Neo)liBerAlisM eNtered iNto A perMANeNt stAte of crisis
WheN it stopped deVelopiNG ANd eNhANciNG the forMs of
pArliAMeNtAry deMocrAcy.
Although?!
... 1845 – 1918 – 2008 – 2015 – 2016 ...
76
Socialism / Cold War / Postsocialism
sociAlisM
cold WAr
postsociAlisM
5
the Aesthetics of disruptioN
platforms of Avant-Garde production in socialist yugoslavia and serbia
6
coNceptuAl Art
the yugoslav case
7
BeyoNd Borders
John cage, cold War politics and Artistic experimentation
in the socialist federal republic of yugoslavia
77
Socialism / Cold War / Postsocialism
18 Zenit nr. 10, Zagreb, 1921
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
78
Socialism / Cold War / Postsocialism
5
the Aesthetics of disruptioN
platforms of Avant-Garde production in
socialist yugoslavia and serbia
ABout the Neo-AVANt-GArde:
coNcepts ANd plAtforMs
Neo-avant-garde 84 are transgressive, experimental, and emancipatory artistic
practices that have typically emerged as:
reconstructions, recyclings, or revitalisations of specific historical avant-
garde practices, especially dada, surrealism, and constructivism;
concretely conceived, but marginally positioned projections of great
modernist and avant-garde technological, emancipatory, political, and
artistic utopias, and
establishing authentic breaks, as well as critical, transgressive,
experimental, and emancipatory artistic practices in the cold War climate
of the domination of high modernism in the political West and socialist
modernism in the political east.
the historical avant-gardes emerged from the end of the 19th century to the late
1920s and 1930s. 85 they were characterised by transgressive, experimental, and
innovating artistic activism in bourgeois industrial society. on the one hand, the
historical avant-gardes were a precursor or driving paradigm of the establishment
of modernist culture and, on the other hand, a critique of the traditionalisation
of modernism in bourgeois moderate and stable art, as well as its canonised
autonomy. By contrast, the neo-avant-gardes no longer enjoy the status of a
vanguard or driving paradigm in relation to modernity or modernisms, but are
characterised as corrective, alternative, critical, or subversive practices within
the ruling high modernism or socialist modernism of advanced post-industrial
84 Miško Šuvaković: “the yugoslav Neo-avant-garde”, trans. Jelena Babšek, stephen Agnew.
Impossible Histories: Historical Avant-gardes, Neo-avant-gardes, and Post-avant-gardes in Yugoslavia,
1918–1991, eds. dubravka djurić and Miško Šuvaković.cambridge, MA: Mit press, 2003, 26–
30; and, certainly, hal foster: “Who’s Afraid of the Neo-avant-garde?”, in: The Return of the Real:
The Avant-garde at the End of the Century, cambridge, MA: Mit press, 1996, 1–33.
85 lev Kreft: “Avantgarda” [Avant-garde], in Spopad na umetniški levici (med vojnama) [clash on the
artistic left (between the wars)]. ljubljana: državna založba slovenije, 1989, 97–169.
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societies. therefore, one cannot simply identify the paradigms of the neo-avant-
garde as a “second-hand avant-garde”,86 but must interpretatively re-examine
them as performances of various critical, emancipatory, creative, productive, and
behavioural possibilities in the art and culture of high hegemonic modernism.
“Neo-avant-garde” thus denotes those experimental, exploratory, transgressive,
and critical art practices, i.e. artistic groups, movements, and individual practices
that developed an immanent critique of the ruling modernism after the second
World War. in the most general sense, “neo-avant-garde” denotes post-informel
phenomena, various neo-constructivisms, neo-dada, fluxus, happening, literary
explorations (letterism, concrete poetry, visual poetry, pattern textuality, phonic
poetry, performance poetry, the new novel, various forms of textual production
and performative actions), experimental and electronic music, experimental
and anti-drama, that is, physical and site-specific theatre, experimental film
(underground film, structural film, political film, extended film), structural
high-tech architecture and design.
in part, the emergence and development of international neo-avant-gardes were
affected by avant-garde artists or their – immediate – followers and students who
continued the avant-garde movement shortly before, during, and after World
War ii. they included constructivists such as lászló Moholy-Nagy, Josef Albers,
Max Bill, Nicolas schöffer, Victor Vasarely, the dadaist Marcel duchamp, dancer
and designer xanti schawinsky, and composer John cage. the emergence and
development of neo-constructivism was significantly affected by us art schools’
revivals of the Bauhaus tradition: the New Bauhaus in chicago, 1937–1938; the
school of design in chicago, 1939–1944; the institute of design, founded in
1944; and in Germany – the hochschule für Gestaltung in ulm. the emergence of
neo-dada, fluxus, and happening was significantly affected by Black Mountain
college (North carolina, 1933–1958), which hosted German Bauhaus artists
Josef and Anni Albers as well as schawinsky, and enjoyed the collaboration of,
among others, John cage, the choreographer and dancer Merce cunningham,
architect and visionary Buckminster fuller, and painter and performer robert
rauschenberg. the emergence was also affected by the New school for social
research in New york, where John cage, starting in 1956, gave lectures to a
group of painters, poets, musicians, and filmmakers: Allan Kaprow, Jackson
Mac low, George Brecht, Alfredo hansen, and dick higgins, who, in the early
86 peter Bürger: Theory of the Avant-garde, trans. Michael shaw. Minneapolis: university of
Minnesota press, 1984, 61.
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1960s, formed the core of American neo-dadaism, fluxus,87 and happening. 88
Marcel duchamp’s case is indicative inasmuch as his ready-mades from 1913–1920
strongly inf luenced neo-dada, fluxus, happening, and early pop artists. on the
other hand, in the 1950s and 1960s, under the inf luence of younger American
neo-avant-garde artists and in line with the neo-avant-garde climate, duchamp
revised and actualised his transgressive dadaist positions regarding postwar anti-
aesthetics and anti-art.
At a certain point, the work of art ceased to be a separate, finished, and closed
piece, i.e. a created, formed piece. the work of art becomes a complexly performed
production, exchange, and consumption of relations between phenomena and
concepts as complex multimedia texts in specific historical and cultural contexts
– the worlds of art and culture. the work of art is a sort of semiologically
determinable textual event that stabilises or destabilises the contextual situation,
that is, the function and micro-ecology of the artwork. therefore, the neo-avant-
garde as a proto-conceptualism denotes quite heterogeneous, often indeterminate
and open fields of practical and conceptual transformations of the phenomenality,
status, and functions of artistic acting and ontologising the work in the
paradigms of modernism during the 1950s. Various différend89 neo-avant-garde
proto-conceptualisms, from the avant-garde duchamp, via neo-avant-garde
yves Klein, piero Manzoni, the Zero group, John cage, Jasper Johns, robert
rauschenberg, henry flint, the oho movement, the Gorgona group, dimitrije
Bašičević Mangelos, Vladan radovanović, Allan Kaprow, Andy Warhol and
Ad reinhardt, to the post-minimalism of Mel Bochner and sol leWitt present
different performing practices of treating the concept of the status and functions
of artistic and cultural action. the neo-avant-garde proto-conceptualisms were
the beginning of a complex and hybrid exploration of the artist-work-context-
society relationship.
the emergence of the neo-avant-garde cannot be explained only as a latter-
day historical revision or revival of historical avant-garde tendencies, because
the social, material, and theoretical premises of its development included a
series of specific moments as well. for instance, neo-constructivism introduced
technologies that would have been inconceivable before World War ii (cathode
87 Achille Bonito oliva: “ubi fluxus ibi Motus”, in Ubi Fluxus Ibi Motus, 1990–1962, ed. Achille
Bonito oliva, trans. Gillian lee hamilton, carol lee rathman, henry Martin. Milan: Mazzotta,
1990, 26-38.
88 Allan Kaprow: “A statement”, in Happenings. An Illustrated Anthology, ed. Michael Kirby. New
york: A dutton paperback, 1966, 44–52.
89 Jean-françois lyotard: “Glossary of french terms”, in: Le Différend: Phrases in Dispute, trans.
Georges Van den Abbeele. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 1989, 193.
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ray tubes, analogue and digital technologies, computers, the laser). on the other
hand, the norms of bourgeois class society were liberalised, whereby it became a
consumer and mass society of a totalising media culture. But that was also a time of
alternative and marginal movements, which made room for liberating sexuality,
corporeality, and various forms of underground behaviour that bourgeois
culture and art had previously excluded. Neo-dada, New realism, fluxus, and
happening expanded the domains of artistic, political, and sexual freedoms,
working to spectacularise the marginal. in part, the european neo-avant-garde90
(New tendencies, fluxus) rests on critiquing the subjectivism and existential
drama of informel painting and is defined as a post-informel, post-existentialist,
new-left-disalienated art. in the us, neo-dada and happening emerged from the
critique of abstract expressionism, even though they accepted its conception of
action and behavioural acting in art, unencumbered by any notion of productive
function, turning it toward action and performance. certain sources of the neo-
avant-garde were also located in extra-artistic situations: the critique of the
ideological and aesthetic utilitarianism of the cold War, the critique of socialist
realism in eastern europe, the situationist critical theory of the spectacle,91 the
development of critical theory and the New left, as well as in technocratic-
oriented cybernetics, structuralism, and information theory. While artists and
critics of high modernism, especially American Greenbergian modernism, strove
to enclose art in the narrow professional and media-disciplinary frameworks of
a highly aestheticised and artistically authentic practice proper, neo-avant-garde
artists and theorists strove to open and expand art into existential/behavioural
domains (city planning, design, advertising, political struggle, individual
emancipation, psychotherapy), and those of spiritual activities (links to Asian
mystical and religious teachings),92 from Marxism via structuralism to alternative
psychiatry. the neo-avant-gardes climaxed during the 1968 youth upheaval. the
defeat of those alternative youth revolutionary movements was also the end of the
neo-avant-garde. paradoxically, the 1968 alternative youth culture confronted
the completion of the neo-avant-garde (metaphorically, the final avant-garde)
with the onset of the post-avant-garde (an anticipation of post-modernity), i.e.
the discourse of first-order meta-ref lection and meta-ref lexive art. that is, it
facilitated a direct overlapping of high, popular, and experimental art.
90 Ješa denegri: “Nove tendencije i pojam posljednje avangarde”, in: Umjetnost konstruktivnog pristupa:
Exat-51 i Nove tendencije [constructivist Art: exat-51 and New tendencies]. Zagreb: horetzky,
2000, 334–339.
91 Guy debord: The Society of the Spectacle, trans. donald Nicholson-smith. New york: Zone Books,
1995.
92 Zoran Belić, dubravka Đurić, Miško Šuvaković (eds.): Mentalni prostor, no. 3: “Kulture istoka
– vizuelna umetnost Zapada xx veka” (eastern cultures – Western 20th-century Visual Art).
Belgrade: etnografski muzej, 1986.
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the end of the neo-avant-garde has manifested itself in the impossibility of effecting
a significant revolutionary change in the individual and society by means of art, i.e.
in the collapse and disorientation of utopian and emancipatory radical modernist
projects by way of establishing bureaucratic and market-institutionalised models of
society, culture, and art. the bureaucratisation of society – in the political West and
east alike – became a barrier for permanent artistic revolutions and developments.
in the political east, the neo-avant-garde was pushed to the margins of artistic and
cultural life, whereas the political West underwent a process of integrating the
experimental and techno-formal achievements of neo-avant-garde artists into the
ruling modernist high art and market culture.
Models of historicising the dialectical relationship between modernism and
the neo-avant-garde extend from Greenbergian teleological, historicist, and
essentialist modernism, via the Kuhn’s and Art & language catastrophic and
revolutionary model of paradigm shifts in art,93 to entirely dispersive and
anarchic post-modernist conceptions of post-history, metastasising eclecticism,94
multi-register archiving, media alienation through tactics of un-expression,95
a-historical theories of art in cultural studies, determined through indexations of
intersections between elite and popular art and culture, etc.
on the other hand, one may construct interpretative models/maps of indexed
confrontations within the large and dispersed post-World War ii mega-modernist
paradigm. for instance:
the cold War confrontations of the ruling Bloc cultures, i.e. engaged
and party-oriented artistic creativity in the east and the autonomous,
individually, i.e. liberally and market-oriented modernist creativity,
exchange, and reception of art in the West;
distinguishing between: a) models of elite, autonomous, and artistic
production in high modernism, as opposed to: b) neo-avant-garde critical,
alternative, and subversive production in art and culture, and c) media
production of entertainment in popular art and spectacle culture;
the establishment of a mass totalising industry of popular entertainment
in late capitalism,96 which has deconstructed the tension between high
93 charles harrison: “introduction”, in: Art & Language: Texte zum Phänomen Kunst und Sprache, eds.
paul Maenz, Gerd de Vries. cologne: duMont, 1972, 14.
94 Achille Bonito oliva (ed.): Avanguardia, Transavanguardia 68–77. Milan: electa, 1982.
95 Germano celant: “unexpressionism”, in: Un-expressionism: Art beyond the Contemporary. New
york: rizzoli, 1988, 12–18.
96 fredric Jameson: “the cultural logic of late capitalism”, in: Postmodernism or The Cultural Logic
of Late Capitalism. london: Verso, 1991, 1–54.
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and elite culture by means of arbitrary transformations of art into popular
culture and thematisations of mass culture by means of high art.
the relationship of history and actuality, more formally, of diachrony and
synchrony, is posited by competing narratives addressing the relevance of this or
that face-identity of art, that is, this or that face-identity of cultural identification.
therefore, the following starting point is important: there is no single coherent
and integrative history of 20th-century art, but only a multitude of competing
narratives of interpretation that we call histories or accept as history in relation
to struggles between competing artistic, cultural, social, i.e. political platforms.
the Neo-AVANt-GArde iN yuGoslAViA ANd serBiA:
ActiNG uNder the coNditioNs of reAl ANd
self-MANAGeMeNt sociAlisM
the neo-avant-garde in the second or socialist yugoslavia occurred, in relative
terms, between 1951 and 1973. those dates refer to the emergence of the Zagreb-
based pro- or neo-constructivist-oriented group EXAT 5197 in 1951; the staging
of Tendencije 5 (tendencies 5), an international exhibition of visual explorations,
computer and conceptual art;98 and Rasponi 73 (spans 73), an exhibition of serbian
neo-avant-garde and conceptual art held in Zagreb in 1973.99 in the more narrow
context of art in serbia, the emergence and activity of the neo-avant-garde may
be surveyed from the early experimental and multimedia artistic works of Vladan
radovanović, made after 1955,100 to the exhibition-project Drangularijum (Knick-
knackarium; students’ cultural centre, Belgrade, 1971), which featured Belgrade-
based modernist, neo-avant-garde, and future conceptual artists exhibiting their
works together for the last time.101
the serbian, croatian, slovenian, and hungarian neo-avant-gardes in yugoslavia
emerged as local critiques of, or alternatives to, yugoslavia’s bureaucratised and
academically softened socialist realism and then also to socialist modernism, which
97 Ješa denegri and Željko Koščević (eds.): Exat 51: 1951–1956. Zagreb: centar za kulturnu djelatnost
saveza socijalističke omladine, 1979.
98 Božo Bek, Boris Kelemen, Marijan susovski (eds.): Tendencije 5 [tendencies 5]. Zagreb: Galerija
suvremene umjetnosti, 1973.
99 Biljana tomić and Ješa denegri (eds.): Rasponi 73 [spans 73]. Zagreb: Galerija suvremene
umjetnosti, 1973.
100 Mirjana Veselinović: Umetnost i izvan nje. Poetika i stvaralaštvo Vladana Radovanović [Art and Beyond
– poetics and creation of Vladan radovanović]. Novi sad: Matica srpska, odeljenje za scenske
umetnosti i muziku, 1991.
101 Biljana tomić, Bojana pejić, Ješa denegri (eds.): Drangularijum [Knick-knackarium]. Belgrade:
Galerija studentskog kulturnog centra, 1971.
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enjoyed full support in the cultural policy of the state.102 Quite disparate and often
mutually confronted neo-avant-garde phenomena, tendencies, and individual
practices were directed, to a significant degree, both within yugoslavia and
internationally, toward post-surrealism, post-informel art, neo-constructivism
and New tendencies, letterism, concrete and visual poetry, neo-dada, fluxus,
happening, experimental music, dodecaphony, aleatoric music, stepping out of
music, electronic music and physical theatre, as well as performance. for instance,
the 1959 exhibition of the Belgian urvater family collection, held in Belgrade and
Zagreb, featured works by surrealist and abstract artists.103 Among others, the
exhibition comprised works by salvador dalí, Giorgio de chirico, paul delvaux,
Max ernst, paul Klee, rené Magritte, Joan Miró, Kurt schwitters, yves tangui,
and Maria helena Vieira da silva.
Neo-avant-garde phenomena in yugoslav art occupied a paradoxical status: they
were both neglected and marginalised in yugoslavia’s public culture during the
1950s and officially represented in the system of socialist culture, in exhibitions
(Tendencies, Zagreb, 1961–1973; The Yugoslav Art Triennial, Belgrade, 1961–1977)
and international festivals, such as Music Biennale Zagreb (from 1961),104 BITEF
(Belgrade international theatre festival, Belgrade, from 1967),105 the alternative
film festival GEFF (Zagreb, 1962)106 and Belgrade film festival FEST (1971). the
neo-avant-garde’s double status was a special and carefully nurtured consequence
of yugoslavia’s cultural policies at the time. these policies were contradictory,
probably on purpose. on the one hand, they were aimed at the artistic, cultural,
and political public in the West, as a sign that yugoslavia was accomplishing
a liberal socialist social policy. yugoslavia’s official policy presented itself as
a platform that respected the liberal mity of the West, its realised autonomies
of art from politics and openness to international cultural co-operation. on
the other hand, yugoslavia’s cultural policy was also meant for domestic
political structures and the working people as a liberalised, but still party- and
institutionally controlled and didactically led policy of “democratic centralism”
for the sake of accomplishing a yugoslav self-managed socialist modernisation
102 Ješa denegri: “inside or outside Socialist Modernism? radical Views on the yugoslav Art scene,
1950–1970”, in: Impossible Histories, eds. djurić and Šuvaković, 170–208.
103 Anon.: Zbirka Urvater: nadrealisti i apstraktni [the urvater collection: surrealist and Abstract
painters]. Belgrade: Beogradski grafički zavod, 1959.
104 erika Krpan (ed.): Muzički biennale Zagreb: 1961–1991 [the Music Biennale Zagreb: 1961-1991].
Zagreb: Muzički informativni centar Koncertne direkcije, 1991.
105 Vladimir stamenković: Kraljevstvo eksperimenta: dvadeset godina Bitefa [the Kingdom of experiment:
twenty years of Bitef]. Belgrade: Nova knjiga, 1987.
106 Mihovil pansini (ed.): Knjiga GEFFA 63 [the Book of Geff 63]. Zagreb: organizacioni komitet
Geff-a, 1967.
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and emancipation. thirdly, yugoslav cultural policy also directed its messages
to eastern european centres of power in the ussr and Warsaw pact. those
messages were ambivalent, suggesting that yugoslavia’s political course was still
oriented toward developing revolutionary socialism and, at the same time, that
its cultural space, by virtue of its plurality, was something completely different
from eastern europe and the rigid soviet course of institutional surveillance,
control, and punishment. yugoslav neo-avant-gardes were therefore not dissident
social, cultural, and artistic practices in the eastern european sense, but practices
relegated to the margins and interstices between yugoslavia’s cultural institutions
and their agendas/interests. for example, Tendencies, a series of exhibitions held in
Zagreb, were entirely devoted to neo-avant-garde practices, ranging from “post-
informel art”, via neo-constructivism, computer art, and visual explorations, to
conceptual art. By contrast, the Belgrade triennial, as a periodical exhibition
of yugoslav art, and the ljubljana Biennial of Graphic Arts, as an international
periodical exhibition, were geared toward the dominant artistic practices of
yugoslav and international late modernism, with some openings toward neo-
avant-garde experiments.
A social history of socialist modernist and neo-avant-garde art would feature a
multitude of contradictory situations, including liberalisation and opening toward
“new international artistic practices” as well as numerous cases of proscriptions and
administrative interventions. the latter were quite divergent in character, scope,
and intensity, ranging from inf luencing the funding of institutional or artistic
projects in culture, to appointing and removing the management of cultural
institutions, censoring certain works of art, mostly those that were presented in
the media (film, theatre, the press), and general political interventions and political
campaigns. public political campaigns were linked to various manifestations of
socialist political life, from commemorative speeches by politicians to speeches
and political platforms established and adopted at party congresses and meetings of
cultural workers’ associations. there were occasional campaigns against abstract
painting and “exaggerated artistic freedoms” or “artists’ social irresponsibility”.
thus one might cite campaigns against abstract art (1952–1963),107 negative reviews
of the Fourth Yugoslav Triennial exhibition (1971), which featured neo-avant-garde
and conceptual-art phenomena, administrative pressures exerted against the
political commitments of the Susret (1969), Student,108 and Vidici magazines (1971),
as well as administrative measures against the programme activities of the Novi
107 Josip Broz tito: Govori i članci: 4. XII 1962 – 27. XII 1963 [speeches and Articles, 4 december
1962 – 27 december 1963], vol. 18. Zagreb: Naprijed, 1966, 68, 83, and 155.
108 ilija Moljković (ed.): Slučaj Student: dokumenti [the case of the student: documents]. Belgrade:
službeni glasnik, 2008.
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sad student centre Tribina mladih (youth forum, 1971) and the widely conceived
and repressively executed party-administrative campaign against “the black wave
in culture” (1973).109 dušan Makavejev’s film W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism was
not publicly distributed, although it was presented at international film festivals
abroad. legal action was taken against the film director Želimir Žilnik,110
conceptual artists and poets Miroslav Mandić111 and slavko Bogdanović,112 and
film director lazar stojanović.
the sociologist Zagorka Golubović has pointed to the political aspects of yugoslav
society’s identity crisis, stressing that an important source of conf lict and political
pressure in yugoslav socialism was the gap between proclaimed citizens’ rights –
to work and self-manage, as well as basic citizens’ rights and freedoms – and their
actual ability to use them.113 the sociologist Nebojša popov has interpreted the
condition of political repressio as an institutional expression of the crisis of the
ideological monopoly of the communist party of serbia and yugoslavia, which
led to a restoration of party and state-bureaucratic monolithism.114 highlighting
the political crises and conf licts in the world of fine art, from socialist realism
to the collapse of real socialism, lidija Merenik, an art historian, has pointed to
the overall thesis of conf licts stemming from the contradictions of the end of
modernism. in other words, one might speak of crises stemming from those of
modernism as the dominant hegemonic and monolith cultural and social paradigm
facing postmodern pluralities and decentrings of the field of power and inf luence.115
in that context, various neo-avant-garde practices emerged as multifaceted
109 Bogdan tirnanić: Crni talas [the Black Wave]. Belgrade: filmski centar srbije, 2011.
110 Bora Ćosić (ed.): Rok, no. 3: “rani radovi” [early Works]. Beograd: Bora Ćosić, 1969.
111 Miško Šuvaković: “slučaj slavka Bogdanovića: novosadski akcionizam ili novi koncept političke
umetnosti” [the case of slavko Bogdanović: Novi sad Actionism or the New concept of political
Art], in Evropski konteksti umetnosti XX veka u Vojvodini [european contexts of 20th-century Art
in Vojvodina], eds. Miško Šuvaković, dragomir ugren. Novi sad: Muzej savremene umetnosti
Vojvodine, 2008, 268–273.
112 Miško Šuvaković: “slučaj Miroslava Mandića: umetnost između provokacije i hodanja” [the
case of Miroslav Mandić: Art between provocation and Walking], in Evropski konteksti, eds.
Šuvaković and ugren, 273–278.
113 Zagorka Golubović: “izvori i karakter društvenih sukoba u savremenom jugoslovenskom
društvu” [the sources and character of social conflicts in contemporary yugoslav society],
in Savremeno jugoslovensko društvo [contemporary yugoslav society]. Belgrade: službeni glasnik,
2007, 384–385.
114 Nebojša popov: Sukobi: društveni sukobi – izazov sociologiji [conflicts: social conflicts – A challenge
to sociology], Belgrade: ceNtArfdt, 1990; and Društveni sukobi – izazov sociologiji: Beogradski
jun 1968. [social conflicts – A challenge to sociology: the Belgrade June of 1968]. Belgrade:
službeni glasnik, 2008.
115 lidija Merenik: “Kritički model” [the critical Model], in Ideološki modeli: srpsko slikarstvo 1945–
1968. [ideological Models: serbian painting, 1945–1968]. Belgrade: Beopolis remont, 2001,
96–124.
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evolutions or even breaks in modernist expression. socialist modernism was
largely determined by a surveyed and supported, that is, controlled autonomy
of art and its developments that led toward the high modernism of universal
aestheticism or toward different variants of institutionalised modernisms, from
heroic and sublime modernism (petar lubarda), via folklore modernism (lazar
Vozarević, lazar Vujaklija) and modern formalism (Miodrag B. protić, stojan
Ćelić), vitalism (olga Jančić, Ana Bešlić, Mira Jureša), to informel (Mića popović,
Branislav protić), radical abstraction (olga Jevrić, radomir damnjan, Mira
Brtka), and anti-modernism (the Mediala group), etc. these different modernisms
were built on notions of individual manual creativity – painting and sculpture as
an expression of a complex artistic re-examination of the immanent potentiality
of the artistic medium, i.e. pictoriality and sculpturality. A modernist affinity was
manifested in pursuing abstraction and deriving immanent pictorial and sculptural
phenomenality, which was institutionally – via museums and higher education in
the arts – and canonically posited as the horizon of creativity in the fine arts. As
opposed to socialist modernism, the neo-avant-garde under socialist conditions
signified a multitude of completely unconnected phenomena, tendencies, or quite
differentiated artistic practices that offered an alternative to canonical modernism
and its public institutional presence. the yugoslav neo-avant-gardes emerged in
literature (visual poetry, textualism, experimental prose), the fine arts (post-
surrealist, experimental, multimedia, synthetic, neo-dada, fluxus, and neo-
constructivist explorations), music (late dodecaphony, aleatoric music, electronic
music, music performance), and film (experimental film, underground film,
political film). Many of these neo-avant-garde explorations emerged in genuine
alternative spaces, from the privacy of studios/apartments to amateur movie
clubs and extra-artistic spaces (the streets, dumping grounds, suburbs). A special
neo-avant-garde case was Bitef (Belgrade international theatre festival),
which emerged by presenting, with institutional, state funding, international
late-modernist and neo-avant-garde theatre practice ( Jerzy Grotowski, living
theater, etc.), along with side programmes, experiments in fine art, literature,
and mixed-media production.
the leading figures of socialist modernism strove for “great art”, championing
the modernist notion of the immanence of a single expressive, authentic, and all-
human timeless masterpiece, modelled after canonical artworks by the masters of
the international “tradition of the new”, from pablo picasso and henri Matisse,
via Jackson pollock, to henry Moore. By contrast, the leading figures of the neo-
avant-gardes abandoned the modernist specialisations of manual media in favour
of mechanical reproduction and the open work emerging in non-psychological and
thus un-expressive motivation. they searched for new media or new approaches
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to the artistic and extra-artistic mediation of an idea that was not present in
the world in a simple or all-human manner. dimitrije Bašičević Mangelos was
among the first who perceived this complex change and civilisation break in art,
highlighting the move from the manual civilisation into the industrial civilisation:
Machines
and especially photographic ones
initiate
the contours
of a new civilisation that has replaced
the civilisation
of manual labour
and its matching consciousness.116
in an early text, he wrote:
An object has no attributes. But. function.
there are no eternal values. Not even in the arts. the claim that a work
of art has eternal value is a prejudice. from the past. Another prejudice is
the notion of the existence of a single work of art. there is no such thing
as a lonesome and isolated work of art. there never was. it was never even
made. thus there is no need to assume that it was able. to be. or that it
could be. Made. Art may be grasped only in its closest social relations.
only as an activity. An engaged activity. By no means as a single act.
A single “picasso” does not exist. Alone. A single “picasso” exists only
in relation with others. With other “picassos”. that which represents
artistic value is not an isolated work but the activity itself. With its own
relations.117
this points to the indeterminate, open, and variable field of urban neo-avant-
gardes, which have migrated from the domain of the incontestability of creation
into that of critical re-examining and exploring the possibilities of contemporary
or media and social re-examining of art. Art was no longer treated as an effect
of creation but as an exploration range. But such an exploration range was possible
only in extreme privacy (Vladan radovanović in Belgrade, dimitrije Bašičević
Mangelos in Zagreb and Šid) or alternative channels of communication, from
amateur film (Kino klub Beograd) to auteur magazines (Rok). Moreover, most of
116 dimitrije Bašičević Mangelos: “uvod u funkcionalnu kritiku” [An introduction to functional
critic] in: Fotografija i umetnost [photography and Art], eds. Ješa denegri, Vojin Bašičević. Novi
sad: V. Bašičević and Belgrade: Biblioteka grada, 1996, 31.
117 Mića Bašičević: “Aktuelnost funkcionalne umjetnosti” [the currency of functional Art], in:
Anon., Nova tendencija 3. Zagreb: Galerija suvremene umjetnosti, 1965, 63–64.
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19 Mangelos: Tabula Rasa, painting, 1951-1956
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
these neo-avant-garde explorations were situated in extra-political space, i.e.
outside of the politicised life of yugoslav self-managed society. Apolitical neo-
avant-garde practices managed to emerge as a symptom of freedom within the
utilitarity of socialist cultural and artistic bureaucracy (Vladan radovanović, the
signalism of Miroljub todorović, the neo-constructivism of Koloman Novak and
Zoran radović). on the other hand, certain textual production (the Vojvodina118
textualists, above all Vujica rešin tucić, slavko Bogdanović, Miroslav Mandić,
Bálint szombathy) and filmmakers (dušan Makavejev, Želimir Žilnik, lazar
stojanović) entered the field of critical political provocations that put them in
conf lict with the bureaucratic institutions of self-management socialism. the
paradox of their conf lict was that they championed radical and revolutionary
leftist positions, against the bureaucratic conservatism of real-socialist cultural
and social Bureaucrats.
118 A semi-autonomous province of serbia, situated in the north of the country and comprising
approximately one third of its total area – translator’s note.
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20 Koloman Novak: Lumino Environment - Net, installation, 1967/2011
courtesy Koloman Novak
the neo-avant-gardes in yugoslavia and serbia were mostly characterised by
non-institutional, cultural, and social actionism that helped open the work of
art to artistic action, exploring new media communications, and conceptual
practice. the work of yugoslav neo-avant-garde artists was led by notions of
exploration, by searching for new sensory and inter-media relations of sensory
mediations. the neo-avant-garde emerged in the atmosphere of an urban
perception of contemporaneity and an attempt to provide the contemporary with
a new language of artistic media and new forms of artistic behaviour. Works
themselves often emerged in synchrony with similar efforts in the West (Neo-
dada, fluxus, underground film, happening) and the east (underground and
dissident behaviour). the yugoslav neo-avant-gardes were therefore extremely
internationally oriented in their efforts to transcend timeless modernist
universalism and modernist striving for creative uniqueness.
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21 slobodan tišma: Crna i žuta vrpca, 1970
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
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6
coNceptuAl Art
the yugoslav case
defiNitioNs ANd history of coNceptuAl Art
conceptual art is an auto-ref lexive, analytical and pro-theoretical artistic practice
based on the observation of nature and the concept, worlds and institutions of
art.119 the works created in conceptual art are concepts and theoretical objects and
their point is (a) to introduce disturbances into the traditional and usual modernist
conventions of the creation, presentation, reception and consumption of art as a
field of presenting autonomous and universal works of art, and (b) to undertake
theoretical research in the domains of works of art and interest from which theory
was once excluded (the modernistic muteness of the art of painting).
theoretical conceptual120 art is the name given to verbal debates and essays
which investigate, consider and speak of nature, the concept and the point of art
(works of art, reception of art, the art world, history of art, art institutions, art
paradigms, the creation of art, the artist as subject, the role of the reader or viewer
and the culture). theoretical conceptual art is a critical and analytical art which
developed in the Anglo-saxon world (the group Art & Language, the Society for
Theoretical Art and Analysis, Joseph Kosuth).121
Analytical art is an artistic practice based on research into the epistemological,
conceptual and linguistic nature of art in the twentieth century. there are four
different definitions of analytical art: (1) the definitions of analytical art given by
means of analytical propositions, tautology and logical frivolity in conceptual art,
(2) definitions of analytical art which explain the conditions and the reasons for
applying the method of analytical philosophy and structuralism in conceptual art,
(3) formalist, linguistic-semiotic definitions of analytical art in post-minimalist
and post-conceptual art and, (4) a project of the analytical trend in twentieth
119 ursula Meyer (ed.): Conceptual Art. New york: A dutton paperback, 1972; or Alexander Alberto
and Blake stimson (eds.): Conceptual Art: A Critical Anthology. cambridge MA: the Mit press,
1999.
120 Joseph Kosuth: “1975”, The FOX no. 2. New york, 1975, 67–96.
121 charles harrison: “conceptual Art and Art&language”, in: Essays on Art & Language. oxford:
Basil Blackwell, 1991, 47–61.
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century art (from post-impressionism through analytical cubism to conceptual art
and hyperrealism), which was developed by the italian theoretician and historian
of modern art, filiberto Menna.122 Art is analytical when it is defined by the
concepts of logical frivolity, tautology and analytical proposition.
Mystical conceptual art (renato Barilli) or transcendental conceptualism123
(tomaž Brejc) are the names of metaphysical concepts of conceptual art which see
the reduction and dematerialisation of the work of art (a piece, an object, a form)
as the focus of the artist and the people on the research and direct experiencing
of spiritual powers (esoterica, magic, alchemy, ritual, telepathy). the artist does
not deal with the world of objects, but only with the world of inter-subjective,
psychological and spiritual relationships. together with John chandler, the
American critic lucy r. lippard introduced the term dematerialisation of the art
object124 (1968) as a variant for the term conceptual art. the term dematerialisation
of the art object implies different examples of works of art in which the character
of the work of art at issue is reduced to the process with the body, or with the
materials, forms of behaviour and diagrammatic or textual formulations ranging
from the late neo-dada and fluxus through poor art, the anti-form of art and
post-minimalism to theoretical conceptual art.
coNceptuAl Art ANd specific cultures
Although conceptual art was characterised as an international125 style or concept,
that is to say a language of art, from 1968 to 1978, we may observe various
contextual, cultural differences among individual conceptual practices. it is
possible to talk about American or, even more narrowly, New york conceptual
art (leWitt, Kosuth, Weiner, Barry, Wilson, Bochner) as a post-duchamp reaction
to aesthetics and the dogmas of the Greenbergian formalist high modernism of
post-art abstraction. on the other hand, english conceptual art (Art & language,
Victor Burgin) is born from art education in modernist art schools. european
conceptual art (daniel Buren, Braco dimitrijević, Marcel Broodthaers, the italian
movement Arte povera) emerged as a post-situationalist and new-leftist critique
122 filiberto Menna: La Linea Analitica Dell’Arte Moderna - Le Figure e Le Icone. Milano: Giulio einaudi,
1997.
123 tomaž Brejc: “oho as an Artistic phenomenon 1966–1971”, in: The New Art Practice in Yugoslavia
1966–1978, ed. Marijan susovski. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1978, 13–18.
124 lucy r. lippard: Six Years: The dematerialisation of the art object from 1966 to 1972. london: studio
Vista, 1973.
125 claude Gintz (ed.): L’art conceptuel, une perspective. paris: Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de paris,
1989–1990.
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of the art system and art institutions. German conceptual art, however, came into
being in the form of research into the mystical borders of the relationship between
the individuum and the society ( Joseph Beuys, hana darboven, franz erhard
Walther). east european conceptual art was born in dramatic political conditions
in which very different activities, from formal linguistic analysis of the language
of art and public or private behaviour (body art, performance art), to mystical,
intersubjective experiments, always have the same political consequences. eastern
european conceptual art is politicised by its own concept of inception, that is to
say in its critical and decentralised positioning in the field of political control
conducted by the bureaucratic structure of one-party political systems. yugoslav
conceptual art came into existence with the characteristics of eastern european
conceptual art. there was, however, one distinction. during the 1960s and 1970s,
yugoslavia was open to the West and to the inf luence of the artistic trends of
the time.126 in this sense, artists such as the members of the oho Group, Braco
dimitrijević, Marina Abramović, radomir damnjan and Gergelj urkom, took
an active role in all events on the international art scene. Braco dimitrijević and
Marina Abramović built their international art during the 1970s.
yugoslav conceptual art was created by the work and activities of groups and
individuals from the particular, different cultures of slovenia (Kranj, ljubljana),
croatia (split, Zagreb), serbia (Novi sad, subotica, Belgrade, ruma) and Bosnia-
herzegovina (sarajevo). it emerged from the processes which were first called
“conceptual art” or “post-object” appearances until 1971, and referred to as “new
art”, “expanded media” and “new art practices” in the 1970s and early 1980s.
the term “new art practices” was established to refer to various art appearances,
things (in the visual arts, literature, film, theatre, music) which were art analysis,
criticism and subversion of the moderate socialist modernism of the day.127
coNceptuAl Art iN sloVeNiA:
the oho Group, the oho cAtAloGue MoVeMeNt ANd
the fAMily At ŠeMpAs
the oho Group had its roots in Kranj, a slovenian town very close to ljubljana.
As high school students, iztok Geister and Marko pogačnik began making some
radical cross-media experiments in poetry and the visual arts (1962 to 1966). this
was to do with a neo-avant-garde atmosphere and the establishment of relations
126 Ješa denegri: “Art in the past decade”, in The New Art Practice in Yugoslavia 1966-1978, ed. Marijan
susovski. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1978, 5–12.
127 Ješa denegri and Biljana tomić (eds.): Examples of Conceptual Art in Yugoslavia. Belgrade: Museum
of contemporary Art salon, 1971.
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with the historic avant-garde (dada, the slovenian avant-garde magazine Tank
and surrealism), as well as being a criticism of the dominant topical existential
modernism in painting, sculpture, poetry, prose and theatre. in the mid-1960s,
the oho set out the theory and practice of reism. reism is a philosophical
and art movement in slovenian culture which refers to the return to the things
themselves. this is when the works of art called artikli (objects) were created
(the issue here is pop-artistic production in real socialism) as was “topographic
poetry” (experiments in visual and concrete poetry). the oho catalogue
movement emerged in ljubljana (1967–1971), bringing together various figures
from alternative culture, from the concrete poets and ludists (i.G. plamen, franci
Zagoričnik, Matjaž hanžek), through experimental prose writers (rudi Šeligo,
dimitrij rupel), theoreticians of structuralism and post-structuralism (taras
Kermauner, slavoj Žižek, rastko Močnik, Braco rotar) to the artists making up
the oho Group (tomaž Šalamun, Andraž Šalamun, Marko pogačnik, Milenko
Matanović and david Nez).
in the second half of the 1960s, the oho Group entered a phase of process art
(arte povera, anti-form art, land art). the oho Group became a group of five
authors (Marko pogačnik, david Nez, Milenko Matanović, Andraž Šalamun
and tomaž Šalamun). they created works which could no longer be defined as
an object (“an object in the centre of the world”) but as a relationship between
objects, installations or families, that is, as a visible or invisible process of objects
and their mutual relationships, in other words with objects in the field of natural
energies (gravitation, warmth, the f low of water). the world is presented as a
dynamic order of things between the eye and the ear. the work of art comes into
existence as an event or a situation in nature and then as a conceptual document
and as a presentation in media of an event executed in space and time.
At the very end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s came the phase of
transcendental conceptualism. the aspects of the world which are accessible to
the senses are not presented or documented. they present the natural and the
human world as an order of conceptually (in terms) or mentally (imaginationally)
presentable relationships in the world or in the mind. the idea of dematerialising
the art object appears as a framework for presenting the unpresentable. tomaž
Brejc introduced the term “transcendental conceptualism” in order to describe
the activities of the oho Group and its aim of presenting what exists beyond
what can be presented through the senses. their works are the documentation
of inter-subjective relationships between four artists or four minds (pogačnik,
Matanović, Nez and Andraž Šalamun). in other words, they worked with a
designed, intersubjective “subject” which they called the “oho man”. the oho
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22 Marko pogačnik (Group
oho): Concept, Scheme,
Photograph, Film, Tape
Recording, diagram, 1970.
courtesy Marko pogačnik
man existed through the roles of the relative relationships of the systematic,
sensitive, rational and intuitive. this was the point at which the production of
the oho Group became part of international art practice.128 they exhibited their
works at important exhibitions of conceptual art and established cooperation with
international artists such as Walter de Maria. in 1971, public performances were
suddenly dropped. the members of the oho group opted for the aesthetics of
silence. in 1971, the oho Group disbanded itself. its members began living in a
commune. the commune or the family at Šempas (družina u Šempasu) was born
from a decision by urban artists to live in the countryside. At the very outset,
128 they showed in the exhibitions: Information Show, ed. Kynaston Mcshine. New york: MoMA,
1970; Anon.: Aktionsraum 1. Munchen: Kunstverein, 1970; and Concept, eds. Nathalie Aubergé,
catherine Millet, Alfred pacquement.paris: septieme Biennale de paris, 1971.
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the commune was an “urban gesture” framed in the movements of the counter-
culture or the hippy alternative of the late 1960s. At first, going to the commune
at the Šempas129 was a gesture of refusal, or one of choosing the aesthetics of
silence over the corruptness of the ruling post-modernist world of art and social
realistic dreariness. in the next step it was also a ludistic game: a return to the ritual
and to the ritual nature of the game in everyday life. life became the substance
of art and art lost its autonomy (a conceptual specific quality) from the lack of
distinction in everyday life. the ideal of the avant-garde (dada, constructivism,
early surrealism) was achieved, the exclusiveness of art was lost in day-to-day
human relations.
coNceptuAl Art iN croAtiA
conceptual art in croatia130 emerged in the late 1960s through criticism and
subversion of high modernism (informelle, lyrical, abstract) as well as through the
neo-avant-garde experiments of the neo-constructivist movement of the new
tendency131 (1961–1973). croatian conceptual art was foreshadowed by the work
and activities of the avant-garde, pro-fluxus and pro-neo-dadaist group Gorgona
(Zagreb, 1959–1966) and the activist practices of split artists of the crveni peristil
Group (split, 1966), before beginning with the work of Goran trbuljak and Braco
dimitrijević in Zagreb in 1968.
Gorgona132 was an informal art group created in the art context which followed
informel, the Kleinian metaphysical new realism, fluxus and neo-dada in
Zagreb from 1959 to 1966. in a lucid and critical manner, the Gorgona artists
and theoreticians viewed and dealt with the relationship between the individual
and manifestations of the collective, in other words the differences between the
public and the private. people who socialised and collaborated within Gorgona
included the painters Marijan Jevšovar, Julije Knifer, Đuro seder and Josip
Vaništa, the sculptor ivan Kožarić, the architect Miljenko horvat, art historians
129 tomaž Brejc: “the family at shempas”, in: The New Art Practice in Yugoslavia 1966–1978, ed.
Marijan susovski. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1978, 18–19.
130 davor Matičević: “the Zagreb circle”, Nena Baljković: “Braco dimitrijević – Goran trbuljak”,
Nena Baljković: “Group of six Artists”, ida Biard: “the Galerie des locataires”, in: The New Art
Practice in Yugoslavia 1966–1978, ed. Marijan susovski. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art,
1978, 20–37; and Marijan susovski (ed.): Innovations in Croatian art of the Eighties. Zagreb: Gallery
of contemporary Art, 1982; and tihomir Milovac (ed.): The Misfits. Conceptualist Strategies in
Croatian Contemporary Art. Zagreb, Museum of contemporary Art, 2002.
131 Ješa denegri: Umjetnost konstruktivnog pristupa: Exat-51 i Nove tendencije [constructivist Art: exat-
51 and New tendencies]. Zagreb: horetzky, 2000.
132 Nena dimitrijević (ed.): Gorgona. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1977.
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dimitrije Bašićević and radoslav putar, sociologist and cultural theoretician
Marko Meštrović and later ivo steiner and slobodan Vuličević. Gorgona was
characterised by a sense of radical modernism, understanding of the crisis of
the informel and existentialism, criticism of the object as a completed product-
work of art, a sense of the absurd, black humour and metaphysical irony,
nihilism, individual ethics as opposed to politicisation and the quest for other
art forms. Gorgona and its various activities (a magazine, association, paintings
and sculptures, exhibitions, concepts, actions) were very close to the work and
activities of yves Klein and pierro Manzoni of the Zero Group. Judging by the
modalities of the artists’ behaviour, it is also very close to fluxus, differing only
by not being politically active and popularist but, rather, hermetical, elitist and
dandified. What characterises the paintings of some of the Gorgona members is
the intention of creating anti-paintings by using monotony (Knifer), monochrome
( Jevšovar) and primary gestural traces and forms (seder, horvat, Vaništa). one
particular activity of Gorgona was projects and concepts. the idea of the Gorgona
projects and concepts corresponds to the textual works of fluxus and anticipates
certain textual and behaviouristic works of conceptual art. dimitrije Bašićević
Mangelos133 also worked within the Gorgona group and attended Gorgona social
events but did not show or exhibit his works (no stories, plates, globes). Mangelos
established the proto-conceptualistic practice of producing unique works of hand-
made books, objects and pictures which link together verbal and visual signs and
texts.
the group Crveni peristil [red peristyle] was a moderate activist group of artists
formed in split in 1966 which was oriented towards post-object art. the group
was named after a project planned by its members which was to paint the peristyle
of the split cathedral red. the people who collaborated within this group were
pavao pavličić, toma Čaleta, slaven sumić, Nenad Đapić, radovan Kogej, srđan
Blažević and Vladimir dodig trokut. the group was known for its subversive
and destructive approach typical of urban post-duchamp art of the sixties. in the
course of their work they organised many activities aimed at provoking the people
of split, causing incidents, individual emancipation and anarchistic individualism.
in an eclectic way they mixed into their work the tactics of underground behaviour,
hippy behaviour, free sexuality, magic, beatnik behaviour, drug-taking and the
fluxus strategy of drawing attention away from the works of art and to the action
and the act.
Penzioner Tihomir Simčić was the name of a conceptual group founded by Goran
trbuljak and Braco dimitrijević in 1969 in Zagreb. the group was named after
133 Branka stipančić (ed.), Mangelos. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1990.
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23 Goran trbuljak: I do not wish to show anything new and original, print, 1971
courtesy Goran trbuljak
an unknown person whom the artists had met by chance. At the end of the
1960s, trbuljak and dimitrijević had taken similar positions on their criticism
and subversion of the art system, meaning the status of the artist, the status
and function of a work of art, as well as the role, competence and power of
exhibiting institutions. they worked on the concepts of the “anonymous artist”,
the “accidental participant (accomplice, viewer)” and the “work of art created on
the basis of an accident”. they problematised the status of the artist in a post-
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duchamp and post-situationist manner and exposed to destruction the modernist
concept of a great artist who creates an original and unique work of art. once
Penzioner Tihomir Simčić ceased work as a group, Goran trbuljak134 worked with
and on the model of an anonymous artist, surveys on the status of the artist and the
issue of the relationship between the artist and the art system. Braco dimitrijević
worked with the phenomenon of an accidental passer-by, everyday places of
historic importance or private places without historic significance, as well as with
the identity and place of the exhibition of a work of art. in the early 1970s, Braco
dimitrijević moved to the West where he managed to build an important career
as an international conceptual artist working with the paradoxes of the art system
and mechanisms for assigning a status in history to the artist.
A group of six artists135 worked in Zagreb from 1975 to 1980.136 in the late
conceptual (or post-conceptual) art espoused by the Group of six, there is no
single privileged method of the creation, production or metalingual presentation
of art. their diverse products (objects, collages, texts, drawings, actions-
exhibitions, magazines, pictures, books of artists and installations) are models for
provocation of the ruling national and state art and ideology, meaning the causes,
symptoms or points de capiton which disrupt the field of normality and “regularity”
of production, distribution, exchange, reception and consumption of art in the
modern society of late socialism. in their work the distance between the artist
and society is lost; what shows is the political sub-determination of each act of
art. Mladen stilinović defines the point of their work: “there is no art without
consequences”. the aim of their art is not to present the transcendent depth of
the spirit, aesthetics, art, day-to-day life and ideology. the most important part
of the group’s work focused on the deconstruction of the ideology of late social
realism as a horizon of social definition, ranging from great politics to the politics
of everyday life. And this is how their many slogans came into existence (slogan
as work of art). “sing!” or “An attack on my art is an attack on socialism and
progress”, wrote Mladen stilinović (1977). Vlado Martek stated “every taking of
a pen into one’s hand is an act of honesty” (1976), while Željko Jerman shouted his
great slogan on the street: “this is not my world” (1978).
134 Branka stipančić (ed.): G. Trbuljak. Zagreb: Museum of contemporary Art, 1996.
135 Members of the group were: Vlado Martek, Mladen stilinović, Željko Jerman, Boris demur, sven
stilinović and fedor Vučemilović.
136 Janka Vukmir (ed.): Group of six authors. Zagreb: sccA, 1998.
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24 Mladen stilinović: Sing!, photo collague, 1980.
courtesy Mladen stilinović
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25 Željko Jerman: Thi is not my World, 1976
courtesy fedor Vučemilović
26 Vlado Martek: Theoretical graphics, print, 1995
courtesy Vlado Martek
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coNceptuAl Art iN serBiA
conceptual art in serbia137 began by facing the effects, anomalies and metaphysical
boundaries of moderate modernism within the real socialist society. it came into
existence as intellectual resistance to moderate modernist anti-intellectualism and
aesthetic formalism, giving birth to several different approaches to overtaking,
criticising and subverting modernism.
the evolution of neo-avant-garde experiments in the 1960s led to the activities
of fluxus, the neo-dada, textualism, vocovisual and concretism. Artists began
working with concepts (ideas, language) and media (the book as medium, the
magazine as medium and new, unusual media). of interest here is the work of Vladan
radovanović, who developed specific proto-conceptualist and conceptualist
works from 1955 to the mid-1970s which were based on the action of the artist,
on the relationship between the concept of a work of art and the carrying out and
execution of the work and so on. for example, the action Pričinjavanja (1955–1956)
translates as “art work” rather than “a work of art” because it is based on the
relationship between the mental, linguistic and behaviouralist event rather than
on a completed (manufactured, produced) piece of art.
the Belgrade painter radomir damnjan created an immanent criticism of the
abstract high-modernist painting. damnjan was one of the few abstract painters of
high modernism in serbian culture in the second half of the 1960s. following his
scholarship in the united states, he began to paint in a way very similar to post-
art painting abstraction, to hard-edge in minimalist art. After resolving the basic
painter’s issues of reductionism, literality and autonomy of pictorial composition
(post-painting abstraction) he made a sudden turn to the conceptualisation of
the artist’s status (the artist as a hypothesis of art) and of the work of art (the
relativistic, administrative and institutional aspects of the identity, status and
value of a work of art).
the Bosch+Bosch Group worked in the hungarian border city of subotica
from 1969 to 1976. the Bosch+Bosch Group established a post-avant-garde
“thematisation” of historic avant-gardes before the second World War and of the
137 Ješa denegri, Jasna tijardović, Jadranka Vinterhalter (eds.): Nova umentost u Srbiji 1970–1980 [New
Art in serbia 1970–1980]. Belgrade: Museum of contemporary Art, 1983; Miško Šuvaković:
Asimetrični drugi, Eseji o umenticima i konceptima [Asymmetrical others. essays on Artists and
concepts]. Novi sad: prometej, 1996; Ješa denegri: Sedamdesete: teme srpske umetnosti – Nove
umetničke prakse (1970–1980) [the seventies: the topics of serbian Art – New practices (1970–
1980)]. svetovi: Novi sad, 1996.
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27 Mirko radojičić (Group Kôd): Text 2 (6 No: concept as art; 7 Art as concept), print, 1971
courtesy Mirko radojičić
neo-avant-garde of the 1950s and 1960s. the work of the Bosch+Bosch Group
(slavko Matković, szombathy Balint, szalma laszlo, Kerekes lászló, ladik
Katalin, czernik Attila and Ante Vukov) was nomadic in the sense that they used
various means of artistic expression in both an eclectic and an auto-ref lexive way,
from visual poetry, body art, performance art and land art to textual and analytical
conceptual art. Balint szombathy introduced two important artistic strategies: (1)
work with the phenomena of politics in social-realist societies, for example the
performance “Action: lenin in Budapest” (1972) and (2) complex investigation of
the semiology of urban and natural space. the work of the Bosch+Bosch Group
was also important and inf luential in the exchange of information with modern
Western art in the closed social-realist societies of eastern europe.
the Kôd Group,138 Group (∃139 and Group (∃-Kôd140 worked in the domain of
process and conceptual art between the 1960s and 1970s in Novi sad, the capital
of the province of Vojvodina. At the turn of the decade, Marxism (real socialism
and self-governing socialism) was the outer framework of culture in Novi sad
at the time but it was also a party power mechanism and not a behavioural and
creative framework for young artists. the work of the Kôd Group and Group (∃
was defined as: (1) inter-textualism (behavioural, visual and linguistic languages
138 Members of the group were: slobodan tišma, slavko Bogdanović, Mirko radojičić, Miroslav
Mandić, Janez Kocijančić, peđa Vranešević and others.
139 Members of the group were: Vladimir Kopicl, Čeda drča, Ana raković, Miša Živanović.
140 Miško Šuvaković (ed.): Grupa KôD, Grupa ( ∃, Grupa ( ∃ Kôd [Group Kôd, Group (∃, Group (∃
Kôd – retrospective]. Novi sad: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1995.
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confronting one another), and (2) meta-linguisticality (by creating a work of art
whose function was to stimulate not an aesthetic experience but a debate on art).
Group Kôd and Group (∃ explicitly called into question (a) moderate modernist
values of an art product, both in theory and in production, (b) bureaucratically
defined boundaries between different arts as well as between art, culture
and politics, and (c) the behaviour of the artist-bureaucrat, the projected new
concept of the artist ranging from artist-theoretician through artist-shaman to
the anarchist who seeks to destroy society’s values. Group Kôd, Group (∃ and
Group (∃-Kôd worked in the domain of performance, textual and diagrammatic
analysis of the language of art and media presentations of the behaviour of the
artist. Members of these groups wrote textual analyses of the term art, of the
artist as an institution and of the status of conceptual ref lection within art. slavko
Bogdanović worked with books and undertook linguistic analyses of arbitrarily
selected words. Miroslav Mandić made a para-theoretical critique of the gallery
system. slobodan tišma investigated procedures for constructing a verbal text.
Mirko radojičić analysed the term conceptual art. through philosophical analyses
of ludwig Wittgenstein, Vladimir Kopicl wrote self-ref lexive debates about the
processes of opinion in conceptual art.
the criticism of the art system of moderate modernism in social-realist society was
an important issue in the establishment of an information group of six artists141
from 1971 to 1974 within the Belgrade art scene. this group established a radical
critique of the taste, values and ideology of the prevailing moderate modernist
art in Belgrade. these artists used outer-painting and anti-painting methods and
gestures to provoke, criticise and deny the autonomy of the work of visual art and
demonstrated that a work of art is a product of social and cultural determinants.
from 1971 to 1973, Marina Abramović142 worked on sound ambiances and body
art actions. After 1973 she left yugoslavia and began her international career
with body art actions, anthropological and mystical performances. slobodan era
Milivojević began his research of artists’ behaviour using mixed media works
and public happenings. Neša paripović143 focused on the photographic, on film,
video and the textual documentation and analysis of the paradoxical behaviour
of the artist who denounces painting in the name of everyday life as an artist.
Zoran popović created a number of works very close to analytical art and then,
beginning in 1974, created in the domain of political art. for him, political art
was simultaneously a criticism of social-realist institutions and an apologia for the
141 Members of the group were: Marina Abramović, slobodan era Milivojević, Neša paripović,
Zoran popović, dragoljub raša todosijević and Gergelj urkom.
142 Marina Abramović: Artist Body. Milan: edizioni charta, 1998.
143 Miško Šuvaković: Neša Paripović: Self-portraits. Novi sad: prometej, 1996.
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ideals of the self-governing socialist society. dragoljub raša todosijević worked
within the neo-dada primary art of painting, textual practice and performance
art. his work took the form of an explicit criticism of modernist painting and
the institutions of modernist painting. in the second half of the 1970s he created
a series of dramatic performances in Vienna entitled “Was ist Kunst” in which
he simulated the atmosphere of a police interrogation or, in other words, the
atmosphere of institutional violence within totalitarian societies. Gergelj urkom
worked in the field of the analytic art of painting and conceptual analyses of the
process of painting and the process of picture reception. since 1973 he has lived in
london, investigating the conceptual-perceptive horizons of a painting.
political conceptual art was initiated through the underground strategies of the
Bosch+Bosch Group (for example, szombathy Balint’s Lenin in Budapest in 1972),
or by means of textual para-revolutionary criticism of the politics of bureaucratic
real socialism through the excesses of members of the Novi sad groups January
and february as well as the Kôd Group. slavko Bogdanović and Miroslav Mandić
were both sentenced to several months in prison in the early 1970s because of
their political-art texts. political-critical conceptualism reached its peak with
the establishment of an informal group-movement, october 75 (dunja Blažević,
Jasna tijarović, raša todosijević, Zoran popović, Goran Đorđević, Ješa denegri,
Bojana pejić and Vladimir Gudac). the october 75 group, or movement, emerged
from the relationship between Belgrade artists and the New york part of the
Art & language group and through the acceptance of the social realist society’s
demands for an apologetic politicisation of art and culture (the insistence of art
historian dunja Blažević on self-governing art). in the course of 1974 and 1975,
artist Zoran popović and critic Jasna tijardović spent a period of time in New
york where they established cooperation with authors working on the magazine
Fox and with the New york part of the Art & language group. during his stay
in New york, popović filmed a documentary, “struggle in New york” (1975)
which shows political-art conf licts on the New york art scene between the Art &
language uK group, Art & language provisional, the authors of Fox magazine,
the authors of the magazine Red Hearing and others.
Analytical art144 developed in several directions through the work of members of
the Kôd Group and Group (3, Gergelj urkom and Zoran popović. its complex
and elaborated form was established through the post-scientific work of Goran
Đorđević (1972–1978) and the analytical research of the art of Group 143.145 Goran
144 Miško Šuvaković (ed.): Examples of Analytical Works. Belgrade: sKc Gallery; Zagreb: Galerija
Nova, 1978.
145 Miško Šuvaković: “Analytical Art:Group 143”, in: Asymetrical Others, 183–199.
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28 Neša paripović: Poruke - Messages, print, 1979
courtesy Neša paripović
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29 Group 143 ( Jovan Čekić, paja stanković, Miško Šuvaković): Theoretical Installation (10e Paris
Biennale), 1977
courtesy Group 143
Đorđević used formal mathematical methods to analyse the problem of the visual
presentation of, for example, the book in Visual Presentation of the Process in the
Square System (1974). Group 143 introduced into art work a systematic research of
the theory of art and culture, elaborating the historic term “theory of the artist”
(from Bauhaus to conceptual art).
the conceptual analysis of the sensual-bodily appearance of the object was worked
out through the visual and discoursive speculative work of the art partnership
Verbumprogram146 (ruma, 1975–1991). their work began in the post-duchamp
tradition of the inter-visual confrontation of the art object, the outer-art object
and the production design system. Verbumprogram undertook a critical analysis
of the design of pop art and meta-lingual linguistic forecasting of the visual in
conceptual art.147
146 Ješa denegri (ed.): Verbumprogram. Novi sad: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1995.
147 Members of the group were ratomir Kulić and Vladimir Mattioni.
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30 Zoran Belić Weiss: 5 Steps out of Nothing / 5 steps to Nothing or Void, installation, 1984.
courtesy Zoran Belić
“Art as the semiology of culture” is the title of a series of art-theoretical
strategies developed in the late 1970s through the ambient works and theoretical
interpretations of Zoran Belić W. and Nenad petrović. they began with the
creation of ambient works of a primary reductive character (the phenomenon
of an empty room, the phenomenon of cosmic emptiness, the phenomenon of
f loating, the phenomenon of the open and closed), to then face diverse historic
or geographical cultures and the “theoretisation” of ambiences as symptoms of
culture. investigating the phenomenon of space (ambience), these artists focused
on the issues of the specificity of the ambiences in the particular field of culture,
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comparing, for example, the european and Asian spaces, that is to say the
perceptive, rational and metaphysical spaces. the Zzip Group (the Association
for space research, 1983–1989) was established during the 1980s. Various
conceptual artists collaborated within Zzip (Marko pogačnik of the oho Group,
Mirko radojičić from Group Kôd, Miško Šuvaković from Group 143, dubravka
Đurić, Zoran Belić Weiss, Nenad petrović). Marko pogačnik lived in slovenia,
Mirko radojičić in romania and france, Nenad petrović in the Netherlands
and dubravka Đurić, Zoran Belić and Miško Šuvaković in Belgrade. these
artists were interested in theoretical research into art and culture. A number
of Zzip associates and members focused on esoteric teachings (Zen Buddhism,
anthroposophy, metaphysics phenomenology), while others turned to analytical
philosophy and post-structuralism, that is, towards the linguistic-semiological
analysis of the language of art and sign systems of modern and historic cultures.
the group published a magazine, Mentalni prostor [Mental space], from 1983 to
1987.
the eNd of coNceptuAl Art –
eclectic postModerN Art of the 1980s
conceptual art faced a crisis at the beginning of the 1980s. the balance of
power changed on the international scene, especially in italy and Germany,
and conceptual art was seen as an art form whose time had passed. painting and
sculptural projects and production became fashionable: italian trans-avant-garde
and German neo-expressionism. the 1980s were also a time when yugoslavia faced
a great economic crisis and political conf licts erupted between the leaderships of
national parties. this is the point in time at which the disintegration of the second
or, rather, tito’s yugoslavia began. in this atmosphere, conceptual art disappeared
from the public scene and moved into the world of private or academic research of
theory and art history. only in the late 1980s and early 1990s was conceptual art
revitalised by the establishment of an artistic critique of totalitarian systems and
with the birth of international neo-conceptual art.
the important centres of this new post-modernist painting in slovenia were the
coastal town of Kopar and the slovenian capital, ljubljana. the poetics of the
new art of painting were developed by the critics Andrej Medved,148 tomaž Brejc,
Jure Mikuž and igor Zabel. other painters were also actively working in slovenia
– tugomir Šušnik, Andraž Šalamun, dušan Kirbiš, Živko Marušić and emerik
Bernard. Šušnik and Bernard arrived at eclectic painting from the fundamental
148 Andrej Medved: Poetics of the Eighties Flight to Painting and Sculpture. Koper: edition Artes, 1991.
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art of painting and analytical painting procedures. in his paintings, Šušnik
reinterprets the history of modern art from Matisse to Newman and rothke.
of interest is the example of Andraž Šalamun who, as a conceptual artist, was
a member of the oho Group during the 1960s before turning to action and
dionysian painting of monumental dimensions with abstract or iconic motifs.
the post-modernist eclectic art of painting of the 1980s is an art of painting based
on the enjoyment of the act of painting itself and on the rejection of the concept in
the name of a post-historical evocation of sensual impressions from the history of
painting and sexual fantasies. the inf luential practices of the irwin Group came
into existence parallel with and in opposition to the eclectic postmodernism of
the art of painting which was operating and creating within the Neue Slowenische
Kunst149 movement and which developed a political retro-avant-garde art of
painting based on the citatory, collage, montage and simulational presentation of
the dead signs of the great postmodern political systems (real socialism, fascism,
Nazism).
in croatia, neo-expressionist eclectic painting was created by Nina ivančić150
and edita schubert.151 the painter Željko Kipke152 developed a kind of scholarly,
mystical, post-historic painting in which the movements of pattern painting,
motifs from the life of historic avant-gardes and mystic anagrams and formulas
confront one another. Kipke also wrote poly-genre theoretical texts on painting,
art and culture, reconstructing fragmentary allegoric narrations. in the 1980s,
certain conceptual examples such as Mladen stilinović,153 sven stilinović, Vlado
Martek and Željko Jerman turned to the art of painting, working with the
appearances of political signs and using the picture as one element of complex
narrative-political installations and performances.
several competing postmodern styles emerged in serbia during the 1980s.154 in
the early part of the decade, the conceptual artist laszlo Kerekes developed a kind
of post-naïve, eclectic and brutal-expressionist figurative painting style. the
Aleterimago155 group was linked to italian trans-avant-garde painting practices.
Another group of artists called “Žestoki” [the tough ones] (de stijl Marković,
Vlasta Mikić) followed the inf luence of German neo-expressionism of eclectic
149 Anon.: Neue Slowenische Kunst. Zagreb: GZh, 1991.
150 Anon.: Nina Ivančić. Belgrade: salon of the Museum of contemporary Art, 1983.
151 leonida Kovač: Edita Schubert. Zagreb: horetzky, 2001.
152 Ješa denegri: Željko Kipke. Zagreb: GZh, 1991.
153 spomenka Nikitović: Mladen Stilinović. Zagreb: sccA, 1998.
154 Ješa denegri: Osamdesete: teme srpske umetnosti 1980–1990 [the eighties: topics of serbian Art
1980–1990)]. Novi sad: svetovi, 1997.
155 Members of the group were: tahir lušić, Nada Alavanja, Vladimir Nikolić and Mileta prodanović.
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and brutal forms. Art theoretician and painter sonja Briski developed a particular
kind of scholarly post-historic painting which reinterprets motifs of architecture
and the conditions of reception of a painter’s interpretation, based on architectural
interiors and exteriors. conceptual artist Goran Đorđević abandoned the forms
of conceptual art and began developing a procedure of copying art works and
critiques of reality. he copied his childhood paintings and works from the
history of modernism and especially focused on copying the mythic-modernist
works of Kazimir Malevich and piet Mondrian. eventually he stopped making
public appearances and began supporting the work of simulated (anonymous or
mysteriously concealed) artists who were imitating the painting of Malevich and
Mondrian. conceptual artist raša todosijević redirected his political and critical
conceptual practice into parodic and cynical paintings and sculptures with which
he provoked the serbian public and the dominant culture of ecstatic nationalism.
his most typical works are objects and monumental sculptures bearing the
caption, in German, “God loves the serbs”. the modernist painter and conceptual
artist radomir damnjan established eclectic painting based on systems of copying
masterpieces of modernism (for example, reproducing paintings by de chirico).
during the 1908s, staying very close to its conceptual analyses, the Vojvodina
group Verbumprogram began investigating the phenomena of geometrical
abstractionism in painting and sculpture, developing the practice of neo-geo art.
An unusual, eclectic and provocative atmosphere for making artistic experiments
was created in sarajevo156 during the 1980s. Very different artistic positions here
came face to face, from the world of film (emir Kusturica), rock music (the bands
Bijelo dugme, Zabranjeno pušenje), theatre (sanjin Jukić) and post-conceptual
experiments. young sarajevo artists such as Jusuf hadžifejzović, radolosav
tadić, Jadran Adamović and Gera Grozdanić, and artists linked with the Zvono
(Bell) group (hadžić, Čizmić, hadžihasanović, Kantradžić, Gavranović, Bukvić)
went through the experience of analytical tautological painting and made an
about turn towards a new fictional art of painting pop-art focused allegories.
Because the beginning of the 1980s also marked the birth of painting neo-styles
of early eclectic postmodern art, the artists in sarajevo did not hesitate to link
the incompatible, creating in a nomadic way works of art which gave a nod to
conceptual art, to neo-dada, pop art, arte povera, neo-expressionist German
painting, italian trans-avant-garde and the neo-conceptual diminishing of borders
between high and popular art. conceptual art in sarajevo was a late phenomenon
156 Nermina Zildžo: “the syndrome of sarajevo’s cultural circle”, in: Art and Criticism in Mid
Eighties. sarajevo: collegium artisticum, 1986; radoslav tadić and Jusuf hadžifejzović (eds.):
Yugoslav Documents ’87. sarajevo: olympic centre skenderija, 1987; radoslav tadić and Jusuf
hadžifejzović (eds.): Yugoslav Documents ’89. sarajevo: olympic centre skenderija, 1989.
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within which analytical and political conceptual art was transformed into the
eclectic and nomadic art of postmodernism and urban behaviour was being
generated as a medium of artistic expression.
At the end of the 1980s, eclectic post-historic works were created in the Macedonian
capital of skopje157 which brought together the subversion of modernist, clean
and primary forms by introducing rural or ethnic elements from the mythical
worlds of the Balkans. the artists working within this framework were petre
Nikoloski, Gligor stefanov, Blagoja Manevski, Venko cvetkov, Aneta svetieva,
slavčo sokolovski and tome Acievski.
***
conceptual art in yugoslavia was a complex series of processes which provoked,
criticised and theoretically interpreted the anomalies of modernism in social
realism. paradoxically, conceptual art was both the last stage of modernism and
the first wave of postmodernism.
157 Nebojša Vilić: States of Changes? The postmodernism & The Art of the Eighties. skopje: phoenix, 1994.
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7
BeyoNd Borders
John cage, cold War politics
and Artistic experimentation in
the socialist federal republic of yugoslavia
the coNtext
in the wake of World War ii, socialist yugoslavia (sfr yugoslavia) was
characterised first by close political, military, economic, and cultural association
with the soviet Bloc (1945–1948) and then by its independent construction of
self-management socialism in a complex multiethnic federal state (1950–1991).
following its break from the ussr, socialist yugoslavia found itself between the
eastern and Western political and military bloc and, at the same time, established
relations with the postcolonial third World, founding and participating in the
Non-aligned Movement.
the late 1950s and 1960s saw the forging of a network of timely and interactive
international connections between yugoslavia’s cultural space, as well as those of
some of yugoslavia’s constituent republics, with international art practices. the
result was a series of neo-constructivist exhibitions called Nove tendencije (New
tendencies, Zagreb, Gallery of contemporary Art, 1961–1973). in ljubljana,
the international Biennial of Graphic Arts was established in 1955. the Biennial
became one of the major international exhibitions of graphic art. the Zagreb
Music Biennale was established in 1961 and became a hub of new, i.e. avant-
garde explorations in music. Bitef (Belgrade international theatre festival) was
founded in 1967 and, alongside the festival d’Avignon, soon became a centre of
neo-avant-garde and postmodern theatre in europe. the alternative film festival
Geff [Genre experimental film festival] was established in Zagreb in 1962.
Geff was a festival of new, experimental, and amateur film. fest, the Belgrade
film festival, was established in 1971 and soon became an international festival of
global stature.
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the receptioN of JohN cAGe / Music ANd refereNces
to JohN cAGe
A number of works by John cage were performed at the Zagreb Music Biennale:
concerto for orchestra (1961), Atlas Eclipticalis, Winter Music, and Variations
ii for piano (1963).158 cage visited the Biennale twice: in 1963 and 1985. he
conducted its instrumental ensemble, with david tudor as the soloist. on that
occasion (saturday, 11 May 1963), works by christian Wolff, toshi ichiyanagi,
and cage himself were performed. A Collection of Rocks was commissioned by the
Biennale.159 it was performed by a children’s symphony orchestra at the lisinski
concert hall on 19 May 1985. in his lecture “how to Get started” cage made a
reference to his visit to the Music Biennale:
i was invited to yugoslavia and asked to make a piece for a foyer of an
orchestral hall – i called the piece A Collection of Rocks – in which i used
something between 150 and 200 high school children to copy one another
with the same instrument, for instance, and take on a particular place
in the foyer. there were two levels. And it was a marvelous experience,
hearing these sounds come from different places and last. ten playing on
trumpets so that five would play at once and the other five would copy
them. And the sound could last an electronic length of time.160
With the New york-based troupe Dance Co., choreographer Merce cunningham
performed in Belgrade at the 1972 Bitef, from 17 to 19 september. three works
were performed: Museum Event, at the Museum of contemporary Art, and Event
and Rain Forest – Signals – TV Rerun, at Atelje 212, a Belgrade theatre. John cage
and the pianist david tudor also visited Belgrade at that time.
dubravko detoni, a composer from Zagreb, attended György ligeti and Karlheinz
stockhausen’s darmstadt summer courses in 1970. that year he also assisted John
cage at the festival d’automne à paris.
detoni and another croatian composer, Milko Kelemen, slovenian composer
and performer Vinko Globokar, serbian composer Vladan radovanović, english
158 Krpan (ed.): Muzički biennale Zagreb, 1961–1991, 208.
159 Nikša Gligo: “Kakvo glazbeno djelo predstavlja Zbirka kamenova Johna cagea? doprinos
determinaciji djela u eksperimentalnoj glazbi” [What Kind of Musical Work does John cage’s A
Collection of Rocks represent? A contribution toward defining the Work in experimental Music],
in: Zvuk – znak – glazba: rasprava oko glazbene semiografije [sound – sign – Music: discussion on
Music semiography]. Zagreb: Muzički informativni centar, 1999, 81–103.
160 John cage: How to Get Started. A Previously Unreleased of John Cage’s 1989 Performance at Skywalker
Ranch in Nicasio, California. philadelphia: slought Books, 2011, 14.
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composer and performer paul pignon, who lived in Belgrade at that time, and a
hungarian composer from Vojvojdina, ernő Király, explored the boundaries of
musical creativity and music as an art, in the field of “new music”. in most of their
immanently musical works, they aspired toward european avant-garde music (the
summer courses in darmstadt, ircAM in paris). transcending the boundaries of
music and moving toward performance art and experimental sound, their point
of reference was the American experimental tradition and, first and foremost, the
work of cage.
in November 1974, Nikša Gligo, a musicologist from Zagreb, curated an exhibition
entitled Glazbena grafika iz kolekcije Erharda Karkoschke (Works of Musical Graphic
Art from the collection of erhard Karkoschka) at the students’ centre Gallery in
Zagreb.161 the exhibition featured musical graphic art by earle Brown, sylvano
Bussotti, John cage, dubravko detoni, Milan Grygar, roman haubenstock-
ramati, Mauricio Kagel, erhard Karkoschka, Milko Kelemen, ladislav Kupkovič,
György ligeti, Anestis logothetis, Josef Anton riedl, Bogusław schäffer, dieter
schnebel i Karlheinz stockhausen. the works by cage included his solo for Voice
1 (1958) and 59½” for a string player (1953).
the Belgrade composer and multimedia artist Vladan radovanović offered an
early discussion of cage’s music in his essay “tendencije napuštanja oblasti zvuka”
[the tendency to leave the domain of sound].162 With some ambivalence, he
discussed a number of instances of introducing the visual and the kinetic into
music, linking them to cage’s concept of “theater”; more specifically, he discussed
the status of 4’33”. on the one hand, radovanović was close to cage’s open
experimentation in art but on the other, he felt remote from cage’s artistic and
theoretical anti-essentialism.
during the 1980s, radovanović developed and extended the cagean
problematisation of the autonomy and immanence of music in his text on an
anthology of pro- and post-cagean musical and artistic practices in serbia.163
he tried to situate the current status of late avant-garde music. he developed
his thesis by elaborating the concept of “leaving music”, i.e. by advancing the
hypothesis that certain artists and musicians were “moving away from music” and
into the fields of performance, ambient art, fluxus and conceptual propositions
or concrete poetry, the voco-visual, and musical graphic art. in his anthology, he
161 Nikša Gligo (ed.): Glazbena grafika iz kolekcije Erharda Karkoschke [Works of Musical Graphic Art
from the collection of erhard Karkoschka]. Zagreb: Galerija studentskog centra, 1974.
162 Vladan radovanović: “tendencije napuštanja oblasti zvuka”, in: Zvuk 72 (1967), 8–15.
163 Vladan radovanović (ed.): “posleratna srpska avangardna muzika” [post-war serbian Avant-
garde Music], in: Gradina 10 (1984), 5–116.
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presented works by visual artist Zoran Belić, composer and conductor Milimir
draškić, painters Vladimir Jovanović and Margita drakulović, writer Zoran
Mirković, violinist Jelena Mišević, and composers ernő Király, Miodrag lazarov
pashu, Miloš petrović, paul pignon, dušan radić, Miroslav Miša savić, Vladimir
tošić, srđan hofman, Miroslav Štatkić, and himself. in her book Umetnost i
izvan nje [Art and Beyond], musicologist Mirjana Veselinović hofman explored
correspondences between radovanović’s experimentation in music and thought
in criticism and theory on the one hand, and cage’s work on the other.164
in serbian music, interest in cage’s work was concentrated in the work of the
Belgrade-based composers and artists Milimir draškić, Miodrag lazarov pashu,
Vladimir tošić, and Miša savić. they began their explorations of minimal music,
ambient music, musical performance art, and meta-music during the 1970s, in
collaboration with the late conceptualism practised at the students’ cultural
centre in Belgrade. the composer Miša savić and translator filip filipović
published a selection of works and texts by cage.165 the selected texts were taken
from Silence, A Year from Monday, M, Empty Words, and other books by cage. for
these composers, cage’s work was a sign of music’s emancipation and opening up,
as a canonical discipline, into the domain of extended media, open work of art,
and the introduction of conceptual art procedures into the domain of explorations
in music.166
Nada Kolundžija explored cage’s work from the perspective of pianism. in
1981 she recorded John Cage: Sonatas and Interludes, Music for Marcel Duchamp.167
Kolundžija redirected her pianist practice toward experimental work in pianism
and the exploration of the performance of new music and new sound. during the
2000s, Branka parlić, a pianist from Novi sad, performed pieces by satie, Glass,
as well as cage’s In a Landscape and Dream.
on Monday, 17 May 1982, a four-day event entitled Sedamdeset godina Johna Cagea
[seventy years of John cage] was held at the Music salon of the students’ centre
164 Mirjana Veselinović hofman: Umetnost i izvan nje: poetika i stvaralaštvo Vladana Radovanovića [Art
and Beyond: the poetics and creative Work of Vladan radovanović]. Novi sad: Matica srpska,
1991, 25, 29, 31.
165 Miša savić and filip filipović (eds.): John Cage: radovi-tekstovi 1939–1979 [John cage: Works-
texts 1939–1979]. Belgrade: radionica sic, 1981.
166 cf. documents pertaining to the festival Druga nova muzika [second New Music] at the studentski
kulturni centar (students’ cultural centre) in Belgrade, 16–17 May 1984 and Anon.: Muzički
program Studentskog kulturnog centra [the Music programme of the students’ cultural centre].
Belgrade: sava centar, 1979.
167 Nada Kolundžija: John Cage: Sonatas and Interludes, Music for Marcel Duchamp – Prepared Piano.
Belgrade: diskos and sKc, 1981.
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in Zagreb. German pianist herbert henck gave an integral performance of cage’s
Music of Changes (1952). the following day saw the public preparation of the
piano for Sonatas & Interludes (1946–1948). the Belgrade pianist Nada Kolundžija
performed the work. Željko Jerman, a visual artist from Zagreb, performed
his action Prenošenje zvuka iz prostora u prostor [transferring sound from space
into space]; 19 May 1982). the final day of the event saw the screenings of a
documentary film on cage (Greg Burton, 1977) and Nam June paik’s video work
A Tribute to John Cage (1973).
this multitude of works of art and music did not result from any direct inf luence
from cage, or from applying cage’s, that is, fluxus poetics in contemporary art.
rather, these works constituted an opening up and hybridisation of the closed and
canonically determined domain of modernist music toward free experimentation,
transgression, and the interdisciplinary search for new modalities of musical and
extra-musical explorations.
JohN cAGe ANd the literAry
Neo/post-AVANt-GArde
cage’s work in art was embraced and presented as a call for “new” and “open”
action in the pro-fluxus magazine Rok and Mixed Media, a book by Belgrade writer
Bora Ćosić. Ćosić was one of a few Belgrade neo-avant-garde prose authors who
opened up the domain of literature during the 1960s to a critical, subversive, and
transgressive work in art close to neo-dada, fluxus, and experimental literature
(concretism, visual poetry, collage poetry). Ćosić published four issues of the Rok:
nos. 1, 2, and 3 in 1969, no. 4 as part of the Student magazine, edited by students
of Belgrade university, and no. 4a along with the Student materials from 1970.
Mixed Media was a collage-montage collection of notes, quotations, and textual-
visual appropriations from various publications, which suggested the concept of
“mixed media”, i.e. the creation of a mixed and hybrid textual field for presenting
the artist’s ideas.168 Ćosić made one of the first insights into the phenomenon
of fluxus. By positioning cage against fluxus and by pointing to duchamp’s
contribution,169 Ćosić anticipated the idea of “the duchampian tradition” in
the cultural space of serbia and yugoslavia and thereby suggested the hitherto
unthinkable opening up of modern art toward extra-artistic situations, which
have remained important for contemporary art since the 1960s.
168 Bora Ćosić: “‘fluksus’ and Josip Andreis, ‘iz historije muzike’”, in: Mixed Media. Belgrade: B.
Ćosić, 1970, 84–96.
169 Bora Ćosić: “spisak dišanovih zasluga” [A list of duchamp’s contribution], in: Rok 1 (1969),
115.
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Vladimir Kopicl, a conceptual artist and poet from Novi sad, translated, with cana
Božičić, cage’s Predavanje o ničemu [lecture on Nothing, 1959], for the journal
Polja.170 Kopicl worked in the context of experimental art practices. for neo-
avant-garde and conceptual artists based in Novi sad who worked in the domain
of textual experimentation and the so-called “phenomenology of the text”, cage’s
written and orally delivered lectures offered a paradigmatic sample of textual
innovation. cage’s texts stage confrontations between the discourses of anarchism,
ludwig Wittgenstein’s philosophy of language, Western (Meister eckhart) and
eastern (Zen Buddhism) esotery, and prose experimentation ( James Joyce, stephan
Mallarmé). those and similar references were important for the Kod and (∃ groups
and their textual experimentation around 1970. they treated the text as a material
venue for artistic action and as the confronting of an artistic position with concepts
pertaining to politics, religion, philosophy, and direct human experience.
As part of Rolywholyover, an exhibition and set of actions organized at the
Guggenheim Museum soho in New york to commemorate John cage, American
poet and explorer of cage’s legacy Joan retallack performed her Varications
of Errata 5uite: Memento vivere John Cage, in collaboration with Belgrade poet
dubravka Đurić.171 it was a reading of a text dedicated to cage in two voices.
cAGe iN the VisuAl Arts World:
eVerythiNG is Art / eVerythiNG is Music
John cage was certainly important for the “new artistic practices”, which marked
the first serious critique of modernism in yugoslavia’s cultural space, around 1970.
these new practices were marked by post-media artistic production (installations,
performances, interventions, activism, textual analysis), no longer concerned
with the autonomy of media or disciplines of art. What follows is a brief summary
of artistic explorations of “sound” and “chance”.
the oho group (Kranj and ljubljana, 1966–1971) acted in a wide domain of
post-media and post-object art, from reism via processual art to conceptual art.
Milenko Matanović realised his reistic piece Vizuelna gramofonska ploča (A Visual
Gramophone record, 1968) in the spirit of experimental art books. Artistic actions
such as Hepening u parku Zvezda (A happening at the Zvezda park; ljubljana,
1968), Pasija (passion; Bitef, Belgrade, 1968), and Triglav (ljubljana, 1968) were the
realisations of interactive and participatory works performed with the audience
170 džon Kejdž [John cage]: “predavanje o ničemu” [lecture on Nothing], in: Polja 172 (1973),
13–20.
171 Guggenheim Museum soho, New york, 24 April 1994, 1 pM.
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or in specifically structured public spaces. for instance, Matanović’s series of
conceptual diagrams, Interkontinentalni projekt Amerika–Evropa (America–europe
intercontinental project, 1970), was based on chance. four members of the oho
group, two in New york and two in ljubljana, gazing at the sun, each dropped a
pin on a piece of paper with a circle drawn on it. the respective positions of the
pins inside the circles were then compared and interpreted as indicative of the
inter-subjective relations between the four members of the group. this was a self-
ref lexive presentation of the role of chance in the performing of inter-subjective
relations among members of the oho group.
in 1969, Braco dimitrijević, a conceptual artist based in Zagreb and sarajevo,
realised his Suma 680, an interactive installation, at the student centre Gallery in
Zagreb. the installation featured 680 cans scattered on the f loor, which the public
were allowed to move, kick around, etc. the installation was therefore essentially
shaped and reshaped by the visitors’ reactions to the configuration of the cans in
the gallery. Also, the gallery was filled with the noise of people and cans moving
about. dimitrijević also realised a cardboard model of a gramophone record,
including the cover. the cover read “Njegove olovke glas” (his pencil’s Voice).172
the spiral groove on the “record”, that is, on the cardboard, was inscribed by
a pencil, making this a non-functional record that only ref lexively suggested a
possible sound, which, in fact, was not there. What was actually recorded was
the silence or “muteness” of writing with a wooden lead pencil. Both of these
examples point to dimitrijević’s significantly anti-formalist and anti-essentialist
position. for dimitrijević, anti-formalism and anti-essentialism mean renouncing
the significance and authenticity of the concept, phenomenality, and status of the
work for the sake of the concept, status, and functions of art. he stated that quite
clearly in his text Kao što glasovir nije muzika, ni slika nije umjetnost [ Just as a piano
is not Music, so a painting is not Art].173 dimitrijević argues that concentrating
on the formal aspects of the work of art hinders the development of art and the
possibility of permanent innovation in the world of art and culture.
in 1970, slavko Bogdanović and slobodan tišma, two members of the Kod
group, produced a series of drawings entitled In No Strange Land (subjektivni notni
tekst na muziku Donalda Erba).174 the drawings belong in the tradition of automatic
172 Braco dimitrijević: Njegove olovke glas / His Pencil’s Voice. Zagreb: Galerija studentskog centra and
Muzički salon itd, 1974.
173 Braco dimitrijević: “Kao što glasovir nije muzika, ni slika nije umjetnost”, in: Anon.: Braco
Dimitrijević. Zagreb: Gallery of contemporary Art, 1973.
174 slavko Bogdanović: In No Strange Land (subjektivni notni tekst na muziku Donalda Erba) [A subjective
Musical text on Music by donald erb], nos. 1, 2, 3, 1970; slobodan tišma, nos. 1, 2, in:
Retrospektiva grupe KoD, ed. Miško Šuvaković, 44.
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writing. they ostensibly begin as handwritten inscriptions (cursive script, bad
handwriting), only to transform into a form of writing with no recognisable
signs (a scribble, trace). What remains visible in the work is only a record of the
dissipation process of a graphic sign – the trace as a document of writing and
writing as an expression of consciousness or perhaps of its retreat into a psychedelic
state.
Goran trbuljak, a conceptual artist from Zagreb, exhibited a photograph of a
street stairway with a metal pipe serving in lieu of a handrail. the photograph was
captioned as follows: “striking this pipe produces a sound different from the sounds
of surrounding pipes”.175 trbuljak thereby confronted a chance sound, initiated,
perhaps, by a random passerby. he selected and indexed an everyday moment
independent of his intentions and artworld expectations. the border between art
and non-art was thereby opened and placed beyond creative intentionality.
Katalin ladik,176 a neo-avant-garde actress, poet, conceptual artist, and performer
based in Novi sad until 1992 and then in Budapest, performed as a vocalist
at the yugoslav Music forum in opatija in 1969, 1970, and 1980. in 1971 she
also performed at the Zagreb Music Biennale. in 1972, she performed with the
Acezantez ensemble and composer Milko Kelemen at the Munich olympic Games.
With the same ensemble she also sang at the 1970 chamber opera and Ballet
festival in osijek and the 1972 April Meetings in Belgrade. she participated in the
performance of dušan radić’s Oratorio profano at the 1979 Belgrade Music festival
(BeMus), in the Great hall of the labour union house in Belgrade. A large part
of ladik’s artistic work has been associated with vocal and instrumental music,
although she is neither a formally trained musician nor a “musical amateur”, but
a kind of a musical break and “vocal wonder” unfolding between music, theatre,
and poetry. she has shown how a musical performance may be derived from a
literary and visual performance, and then transposed into an onstage or offstage
event.
Marina Abramović, originally from Belgrade but now a global artist, began her
artistic explorations by working on sound objects and environments. her objects
were boxes emitting roars and sounds of gunshots and sheep bleating. her sound
environments comprised amplified urban and indoor spaces, for instance, the
chirping of birds in the tree outside the students’ cultural centre in Belgrade and
playing airport sounds in the foyer of the centre (1971). Abramović explored the
175 Branka stipančić (ed.): G. Trbuljak. Zagreb: Galerija grada Zagreba, 1996, 12.
176 Miško Šuvaković: The Power of a Woman: Katalin Ladik / Retrospective, 1962–2010. Novi sad: Muzej
savremene umetnosti Vojvodine, 2010.
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boundaries of the work of art and conditions of the phenomenality of the sensuous,
i.e. visual, ambient, and sonic in 1970s contemporary art. she performed her first
series of body art works entitled Ritam 10–0 (rhythm 10–0) in 1973–1974. the
appearance of “rhythm” in the title of the series pointed to the transferring of
the “musical concept of rhythm” into existential and behavioural ritual actions.
for example, Ritam 10 (edinburgh, 1973), the first in the series, was based on the
relationship between the sound of a knife hitting a hard surface and the bodily
act of stabbing a knife back and forth between her fingers. in that work, the sonic
rhythm produced by the stabbing, recorded and reproduced, becomes the sonic
basis of the artist’s further reactions and stabs.
Group 143 were active in the domain of analytical conceptualism, exploring
concepts and phenomena of artistic practice. for instance, in Osnovne strukture –
složene strukture (Basic structures – complex structures, 1975), i, who was a member
of the Group, produced a series of typewriter drawings, exploring syntactic and
formulaic relations among binary visual structures (solid and perforated lines).177
With its sensory phenomenality, the work is reminiscent of the I Ching, that is,
of the diagrams that cage used to compose, and of Walter de Maria’s structural
minimalist installations. however, the intention was not to address the symbolic
procedures of the chinese divination technique, but the visualisations and
tautological character of binary systems. Another characteristic example may be
paja stanković’s project Teorija broja u domenu vidljivo-čujnih manifestacija [Number
theory in the domain of Audio-visual Manifestations].178 stanković constructed a
formal numeric-visual diagram and then translated it into an audio-visual schema
for performing sounds, i.e. pitches. the resulting algorithm was then performed
as a double piano recital on 11 december 1978. stanković’s purpose was to link
three structural systems: the mathematical construction of a numeric series, its
visualisation, and translation into a musical performance protocol. With dragana
Jovanović, stanković also realised a vocal-phonetic performance, which featured
a 48-minute-long vocal performance of the word Da (yes).179
Between 1979 and 1982, the Belgrade-based artist Zoran Belić Weiss realised
performances and installations using spatial and live sound.180 his work was linked
177 Nika radić, dietmar unterkofler: Miško Šuvaković: Umetnost kao istraživanje. Art as Research.
trans. irena Štentevska, emilija Mančić, dubravka Đurić. Belgrade: orion Art; ljubljana: the
p.A.r.A.s.i.t.e. institute, 2011, 77.
178 paja stanković: “teorija broja u domenu vidljivo-čujnih manifestacija”, in: Seminar, ed. Miško
Šuvaković. Belgrade: Galerija sKc, 1978, 27.
179 Biljana tomić (ed.): Galerija Studentskog kulturnog centra, 1979–1980. Belgrade: sKc, 1980.
180 Jelena Mišević: “Zvuk – ambijent” [sound – environment] and “Zvuk”, in: radovanović (ed.):
“posleratna srpska avangardna muzika”, 55–59.
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to the simulacra of Zen Buddhist rituals and ideas of emptiness in Western Art
(from yves Klein to John cage). he called his works vežbe (exercises), emphasising
the existential character of doing and acting in art and de-emphasising the notion
of a finished work. he was interested in individual and collective subjectivations
in performances and installations using sound or the absence of sound. some of
his most characteristic performances include Vežba: meditacija glasom [exercise:
Meditation using Voice], Vežba: gong [exercise: the Gong], Vežba: ritualni zvuci
[exercise: ritual sounds], Vežba: zvučni pod [exercise: A sounding floor], Vežba:
vibracija [exercise: Vibration], etc. his most complex project was Vežba: sedam
dana [exercise: seven days]. for seven days, between 6 and 13 January 1980,
Belić inhabited the students’ cultural centre Gallery. Belić ritualised the time
he spent at the Gallery with exercises comprising sleeping (day one), generating
the sound of water in the space (day two), closing his eyes and keeping quiet (day
three), performing sounds on a gong (day four), waiting to greet people (day five),
refusing to explain that day (day six), and not moving or making any sounds (day
seven).
in 1980, the Belgrade-based violinist Jelena Mišević performed her project Zvuk
– Ambijent (sound – environment, 1980), based on the following proposition:
“i choose that an audio and visual structure constitute an eNViroNMeNt
and that this environment exists as my own experience”. in her project Zvuk
(1981), she realised the concept of the “mental construction” and “diagrammatic
construction” of sound structures, using the sound of the violin.181
Belgrade artist dragoljub raša todosijević produced several post-fluxus works,
in which he explored sound and different modalities of sound installations.182 his
work Nevidljiva skulptura [invisible sculpture, 1981] was realised by building a
radio into one of the walls of the students’ cultural centre Gallery in Belgrade.
todosijević started from the fact that the state security service had used the
building in the 1950s and 1960s and that, when the students’ cultural centre
moved in, listening devices were found in some of the walls. in addition to its
political connotations, the work was also based on the fluxus tactic of concealing
the source of sound and the role of duchampian packaging. todosijević’s works
with the piano were a postmodern homage to fluxus and its iconic figures.
todosijević performed the destruction or, rather, a sculptural extension of a piano
using walking sticks, in My Second Fluxus Piano (2002). his performance You Will
Never Play Again (Verona, 2002) also used a piano object.
181 Zoran Belić: “Vežbe 1979–1982”, in: ibid., 38–41.
182 dejan sretenović: Thank You, Raša Todosijević. Belgrade: Muzej savremene umetnosti, 2002, 68–
69, 106–107, 122.
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Neša paripović, a Belgrade painter and conceptual artist, produced two video
works associated with the idea of performing a rhythmic sound.183 the first of
these, Video 1, was realised at the Brdo art colony, organised and led by Austrian
art dealer ursula Krinzinger, from 1 to 9 october 1976.184 the video was
recorded inside the room where the colony’s artists had their meals. paripović
used tableware to generate a rhythmic sound. in his second video work, Ritam
(1980), paripović applied paint onto a white surface, generating rhythmic sounds
with his hands. Between 1995 and 2006, paripović realised a series of sound
installations: Zvučna strana kvadrata [the sounding side of a square],185 Leva
strana rama [left-hand side of a frame], Između crvenog i plavog [Between red and
Blue], and Tangenta [tangent]. in these temporary installations, paripović used
architecturally situated sound, i.e. a cord spanned across the surface of a wall, in
relation to the environment and its geometric structure.
experimentation in the interdisciplinary domain between images, space, public
behaviour, and sound is also associated with the Hidrogizma Sound Theatre (1978–
1981), a ljubljana-based group.186 the group comprised Jani osojnik, dušan
pirih hup, iztok Šmajs, Jani Batista, Gregor razpotnik, Andrej plahuta, iztok
osojnik, and Vesna Črnivec. hidrogizma was posited as a water machine or
sculpture, that is, a social space for generating sound. its project was an almost
utopian intervention in the realisation of quite diverse, important and marginal,
tendencies in 20th-century music. it was a late music-sculptural Gesamkunstwerk
project that was meant to promise, out of a synthesis of modern and avant-garde
music, the total music of a new age, after modernity.
183 Šuvaković: Neša Paripović: Self-portraits, 103–106.
184 ursula Krinzinger (ed.): Brdo 1976. innsbruck: ursula Krinzinger, 1976.
185 Miško Šuvaković (ed.): Neša Paripović: Zvučna strana kvadrata [Neša paripović: the sounding side
of a square]. Belgrade: N. paripović, 1997.
186 tamara soban: “hidrogizma”, in: 7 Sins: Ljubljana – Moscow, eds. Zdenka Badovinec, Viktor
Misiano, igor Zabel, tamara soban. ljubljana: Museum of Modern Art, 2008, 89, 202.
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126
Music Through Aesthetics
Music throuGh
Aesthetics
8
the pheNoMeNoloGy of
the SCREEN (ANd / or / As) EVENT
Musical de-ontologisation
9
Aesthetics, politics ANd Music
the context of contemporary critical theory
10
Music ANd politics
the reconstruction of Aesthetics and the contemporary World
127
Music Through Aesthetics
128
Music Through Aesthetics
8
the pheNoMeNoloGy of
the SCREEN (ANd / or / As) EVENT
Musical de-ontologisation
the ApproAch
the following brief discussion will outline and problematise a set of theories
that give us access to the relationship between paper, screen, and music. i will not
speak of music itself, paper itself, or screen itself; instead, i will speak of those
theories that generate the potential to interpret, i.e. speak about music, paper,
and screen.
i begin with the following brief observation by Jean-françois lyotard: “for
the eye ‘to recognize sound’, as paul claudel put it, the visible must be legible,
audible, intelligible”.187
lyotard’s assertion points to the need to bring phenomenological analysis face
to face with discoursive analysis in understanding the relationship between
the visual and the musical. if paper (the visible, the legible), the screen (the
audible, the visible, the legible), and the intelligible interrelate on the grounds
of a certain or an uncertain set of meanings, then their interrelationship belongs
in the domain of semiology. if paper (the visible, the legible), the sensory
(the audible, the visible, the legible), and the intelligible (consciousness itself )
interrelate on the grounds of a certain or an uncertain expectation of cognising
the underlying truth (ishodišna istina), then their interrelationship belongs in
the domain of hermeneutics. if paper (the legible, the visible), the screen (the
audible, the visible, the legible), and the intelligible (institutional knowledge)
interrelate on the grounds of a certain or an uncertain set of cultural references
or mediating cultural texts, then their interrelationship belongs in the domain
of discoursive analysis, as well as cultural and social studies. if paper (the
legible, the visible), the screen (the audible, the visible, the legible), and the
intelligible interrelate on the grounds of a certain or an uncertain set of sensory
187 Jean-françois lyotard: “the Bias of the figural”, in: Discourse, Figure, trans. Antont hudek,
Mary lydon. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 2011, 3.
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Music Through Aesthetics
conclusions and judgements, then their interrelationship belongs in the domain
of aesthetics. if paper (the legible, the visible), the screen (the audible, the
visible, the legible), and the intelligible interrelate on the grounds of a certain
or uncertain set of beliefs regarding the autonomy of an artistic/musical sample,
then their interrelationship belongs in the domain of art theory, that is, special
study or theory of the arts. that is, if paper, the screen, and the intelligible
interrelate on the grounds of a certain or uncertain, i.e. real or assumed event,
then their interrelationship belongs in the domain of phenomenology.
Mapping the potentialities broached by the relationship between “paper, screen,
and music” toward “paper, screen, and the intelligible” for the event of the
body, i will now begin asking questions regarding the discoursive analysis of
phenomenology in the historical and synchronic sense.
proBleMs With differeNt coNceptuAlisAtioNs
of PHENOMENOLOGY
At the very beginning there will emerge a difference among a number of
potential “phenomenologies”. it points to the difference between individual
understandings of a “phenomenon”. the founding of phenomenology strove for
immanent understanding, i.e. for understanding the phenomenon in itself and for
itself, which meant that understanding phenomena qua events and qua concepts
was derived outside of psychological and empirocentric interpretations. it is
as though an entirely new way of thinking and speaking were being sought
for interpreting phenomena – a way that would break with psychologised and
experiential justifications (hegel), as well as with the psychology of knowledge
paradigm (husserl), and the speculative philosophy of hegel’s and husserl’s
phenomenology for the sake of commonsensical thinking about phenomena
(Wittgenstein and, in music aesthetics, roger scruton).188 one may therefore
set out the following starting scheme of primary phenomenologies:
188 cf. ludwig Wittgenstein: “#341”, in: Philosophical Investigations, trans. G. e. M. Anscombe.
oxford: Blackwell, 1986, 107; roger scruton: “tone”, in: The Aesthetics of Music. oxford:
clarendon press, 1997, 19.
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Music Through Aesthetics
understanding the understanding the deriving representations of
phenomenon of the spirit in phenomenon of the sensory phenomena with reference to
metaphysical terms in consciousness in scientific the conceptual apparatus in
terms terms of the common sense
hegel husserl Wittgenstein/scruton
system of thought science of consciousness critical conceptualisation of
itself the relationship between
phenomena, concepts, and
language
pheNoMeNoloGy As A philosophicAl pArAdiGM
referring to Maurice Merleau-ponty in the opening of his early study in the
philosophy of phenomenology, Jean-françois lyotard wrote that we should
look for the unity of phenomenology and its true meaning in ourselves; that is,
referring to francis Jeanson, lyotard insisted on “the absurdity of demanding
an objective definition of phenomenology”.189 he thereby suggested that one
could access phenomenology only from the inside, by directing at oneself those
questions that are typically posed in that style of philosophising:
this signifies, in short, that philosophy must not only be grasped as event,
and “from the outside”, but worked through as thought – that is, as problem,
genesis, give-and-take movement of thought. this constitutes the genuine
objectivity that husserl wanted; for the testimony of phenomenology
does not lean in favor [of ] a simplistic subjectivism.190
But in order to get to the “internal questions”, let us begin with certain
external indices and their positioning in the conceptual map that represents
“phenomenology”.
189 Jean-françois lyotard: Phenomenology, trans. Brian Beakley. Albany: state university of New
york, 1991, 31.
190 idem.
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Music Through Aesthetics
phenomenology (Ger. Phänomenologie) is a discipline of philosophy that explores the
meanings and sense of the phenomenality of the world. the word “phenomenon”
stems from the Greek word phainómenon, which means “that which appears”. the
word phainómenon combined with the word lógos constitutes the name for the
philosophic study of phenomena, i.e. “phenomenology”. therefore, a phenomenon
is that which appears in the mind, something that emerges and presents itself to
the mind by way of the senses, something that is discovered and conceived in
that discovering. in philosophical terms, a “phenomenon” is that which shows
and uncovers itself in itself. in the everyday speech and jargons of the art world,
“phenomenon” denotes that which is perceived by the senses, which has a visual
and figural appearance, that is, acoustic and musical sensory phenomenality and
presentability – in fact, that which appears as an event in the world, that which is
perceived, grasped by thought, and spoken, that is, written about.
German 18th-century philosophy anticipated the concept of phenomenology in
Johann-heinrich lambert’s Neues Organon. G. W. f. hegel signified phenomenology
as the philosophical approach that begins by exploring phenomena – i.e. that which
is present in conscious experience and thereby grounds our understanding of the
absolute, logical, ontological, and metaphysical spirit (Geist), that which transcends
phenomena. phenomenology is the activity whereby one may posit phenomenal
knowledge.191 At the outset of the 20th century, edmund husserl defined the
concept of phenomenology.192 for husserl, phenomenology was a reflexive study
of the essence of consciousness from the position of one’s personal experience and
the perspective that stems from it. husserl viewed phenomenology as the study of
the essential (eidetic phenomenology), because its object was pure essences, not real
existences, i.e. things or facts. however, husserl soon transcended phenomenology
as the study of the essence of things and developed it as the study of perceiving
the essence or consciousness that perceives the essence from the viewpoint of
transcendental phenomenology. husserl’s phenomenology points to the ways
of knowing the world, not just to that knowledge itself. consciousness is always
directed at something and therefore intentional. phenomenology’s task is to explore
the contents of consciousness in order to discover its essence (eidos). one comes to
know the essence by way of reduction, whereby whatever is not relevant to the
object is excluded from the structure of consciousness. reduction rids the object of
consciousness of all natural (practical) stances, historical and social characterisations,
and theoretical foreknowledge. this process is intuitive and intuition is a reflexion
191 G. W. f. hegel: Phenomenology of Spirit, trans. A.V. Miller. oxford: oxford university press,
1977, 49–53.
192 edmund husserl: Author’s preface to the english edition, in: Ideas: General Introduction to
Phenomenology, trans. W.r. Boyce Gibson. london: routledge, 2012, xxxvi.
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of the intellect, which emerges on the basis of the records of consciousness.
phenomenology is therefore the study of pure phenomena, i.e. phenomena that are
presented directly to the knowing subject’s perception as true, that is, absolutely
true. their value is not restricted to human cognition, because, according to husserl,
that would give rise to relativism. that cognising subject is the transcendental I.
that is why husserl referred to his philosophy as transcendental idealism. husserl’s
phenomenology was continued by eugen fink and ludwig landgrebe. critiques of
husserl’s transcendental phenomenology were developed by hedwig conrad-Martius
and roman ingarden,193 as well as by the Göttingen circle of phenomenologists,
including Nicolai hartmann and Moritz Geiger. they advocated eidetic ontological
phenomenology and complemented the phenomenology of acts with that of objects.
Martin heidegger developed hermeneutical phenomenology and a radical revision
of husserl’s “science”. Major contributors to the development of phenomenology
also include Waldemar conrad, paul ricœur, Mikel dufrenne, Jean-paul sartre,
Maurice Merleau-ponty, emmanuel levinas, fritz Kaufmann, danko Grlić, ivan
focht, Milan damnjanović, ivan urbančič, and tine hribar, among others.
the NeW pheNoMeNoloGy
Event phenomenology or new phenomenology covers a range of self-critiques of
semiology, linguistic centrism, and the domination of the interpretation of
signifiers in late structuralism. it concerns the transition from the late-structuralist
critique of the subject to the materialist analysis of the relationship between the
subject and the object as a phenomenal event.
The new phenomenology also concerns the post-heideggerian interest in the event
(Ereignis). for example, Gilles deleuze and félix Guattari define the concept of event
by means of analysing and discussing permanent but discontinuous duration, i.e. by
means of analysing and discussing endless variations, continuous metamorphoses,
becoming an animal, becoming a woman, constant mutation, the production of
flux, and immanent movement.194 in the philosophy of Jacques derrida, the event
is the différance: the event of a temporal deferral and displacement of the present
by means of script/writing (écriture) on paper.195 lacan’s interest in the event was
193 roman ingarden: “the Musical Work”, in: Ontology of the Work of Art: The Musical Work, the
Picture, the Architectural Work, the Film, trans. raymond Meyer, John t. Goldthwait. Athens, oh:
ohio university press, 1989, 1–135.
194 Gilles deleuze, félix Guattari: “of the refrain”, in: A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and
Schizophrenia, trans. Brian Massumi. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press , 2002, 344.
195 Jacques derrida: “freud and the scene of Writing”, in: Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass.
london: routledge, 2002, 247.
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determined by switching from the tactic of interpreting signifier topology that is
characteristic of language to the examination of the object (for instance, the objet petit
a) and its functionally impossible or missing place, that is, to the exploration of the
subtle and complex relations between the subject and the other and to the discussion
of the real as that which evades symbolisation, but penetrates it in the form of
traumatic over-determination. for slavoj Žižek the event is that which remains
outside of the text, that which emerges as an event in terms of an intervention of
the material order (the quilting point [point de capiton],196 the real, castration, the
object, the unconscious) in the systems of textual, that is, symbolic representation.
With his thought of approaching the event as it emerges in each generic procedure,
Alain Badiou has emerged as the philosopher who has renewed philosophy. Badiou
emphasises that concepts and rules should be produced as events.197 in Michel
foucault’s late works, the event is a “biopolitical articulation” of the mind-body,
i.e. individual in the concrete social, cultural, historical, and geographic space
of Western capitalism. Groups of living beings are constituted as populations via
articulations of health, hygiene, habitation, the everyday, labour, the division of
social roles, and the relationship with political power.198 Giorgio Agamben points
to the complex idea of the event of forms of life, as life that can never be separated
from its form, i.e. life in which no such thing as mere or bare life can be isolated.199
Biopolitically oriented philosophers point to the critical (in terms of both critique
and its critical importance) phenomenality of the event or series of events of the
production of forms of life.
from this new phenomenological perspective, we may speak of positing an event
that will involve not-the-body-itself (ne-samo-telo) or an event that is a performance
of not-the-body-itself. the phrase not-the-body-itself means that the body does
not appear as the body itself underneath layers of sedimented shadows (plato),
illusions of the everyday (heidegger), discoursive practices (foucault), traces of
culture (deleuze), and texts from history (Kristeva). The body is something that
conceives, begins, functions and acts, produces or behaves among many different
potentialities. potentialities are not only meanings or complex identities, but
196 slavoj Žižek: “od ‘prošivnog boda’ do nad-ja” [from the “Quilting point” to the super-i), in:
Birokratija i uživanje [Bureaucracy and enjoyment], trans. Bojan Bem. Belgrade: radionica sic,
1984, 29–51.
197 Alain Badiou: “events”, in: Manifesto for Philosophy, Followed by Two Essays: “The (Re)Turn of
Philosophy Itself ” and “Definition of Philosophy”, trans. Norman Madarasz. Albany: state university
of New york press, 1999, 79–88.
198 Michel foucault: “the Birth of Biopolitics”, in: Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth, ed. paul rabinow,
trans. robert hurley. New york: New press, 1997, 73–79.
199 Giorgio Agamben: “form-of-life”, in: Radical Thought in Italy: A Potential Politics, eds. paolo
Virno and Michael hardt, trans. cesare casarino. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press,
1996, 151–156.
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also sensory/bodily phenomenalities out of control in an open and indeterminate
world of natural, human, and machine/media relations. the body is not a signifier,
which means preparation for a letter on paper, a sign, a code, a word, or text –
the body is not a signifier for a determinable meaning that might facilitate the
reading of the body’s identity. the body is a behavioural machine in which f luxes
of contents and expressions of the body’s appearing and mediating here-and-there-
and-then and here-in between do not depend on the signifier. for us, bodies are
typically bodies in between the screen and the world.
We must therefore look into the history of philosophy that generated these two
different kinds of phenomenology: the traditional and new phenomenology. from
our present perspective, the history of “phenomenology” has no single source and
may be outlined with the following diagram:
spinoza
Kant hegel Marx
Bergson
Nietzsche
husserl
heidegger
saussure Benjamin
derrida foucault
deleuze
Agamben
(the phenomenology of forms of life)
Massumi
(the phenomenology of media)
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for example!
in this tree, one branch takes us from Nietzsche via heidegger to derrida, but
derrida is also the endpoint of the trajectories going from hegel and husserl,
via heidegger, to saussure. the entangled branches of this tree point to the
crisscrossing paths of deconstruction, which terminates at writing itself,
as inscription and trace. the inscription and trace remain on paper, which is
a function of the fragile membrane of writing, problematised by derrida by
building discontinuities regarding the phenomenology of thought, that is, the
phenomenology of the senses (of speech).
Another branch takes us from spinoza via Bergson to deleuze and then on to
Brian Massumi, 200 establishing a line of identifying the screen as the mechanic
place of production or source of sensory/bodily affect in the field of antagonisms
among different social apparatuses. following the “logic of deleuze’s analysis”,
Massumi has succeeded in establishing a discussion of ‘the phenomenology of new
media’ within social antagonisms and contradictions.
in terms of “traditional phenomenology”, the essential aesthetic triangle adheres
to the following scheme:
work of art
its record
work of music
on screen
presentation of the
performed
specialised sense
aesthetic judgement and conclusion regarding sensory experience
200 Brian Massumi: “the Bleed. Where Body Meets image”, in: Parables for the Virtual: Movement,
Affect, Sensation. durham, Nc: duke university press, 2002, 46–67.
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in other words, when we enter the field of the “new phenomenology”, which
depends on the potential promises of an altered constitution not only of the artwork,
now becoming a screen event, but also of the character of the “phenomenon of the
event that initiates the performance of the work” in relation to the body in the
field of sociality produced by the immaterial labour of the new media, we arrive at
the following diagram:
the screen (replacing the work of art/music)
the body
(replacing the senses)
the transformation of sensory experience into an
inter-sensory (audiovisual) experience, the basis of bodily affect
finally, if we posit the diagram above as the basis for deriving a biopolitical
interpretation of the shaping of the body in the field of sociality and, accordingly,
posit the screen as the source of the event of “forms of life”, the body as the
“apparatus”201 (i.e. relation between discourse and the material order), and the
“bodily affect of the body in front of the screen” and the “affectof human labour,
production, and acting in society”, 202 then we may translate that diagram into the
following graphically presentable model:
forms of life
affect
as the basis of social
forms of life
human labour, apparatuse
production, and
acti
201 Giorgio Agamben: “What is an Apparatus?”, in: What Is an Apparatus? And Other Essays, trans.
david Kishik, stefan pedatella. stanford, cA: stanford university press, 2009, 2–3.
202 Michael hardt: “foreword: What Affects Are Good for”, in: The Affective Turn: Theorizing the
Social, ed. patricia ticineto clough. durham, Nc: duke university press, 2007, xii.
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9
Aesthetics, politics ANd Music
the context of contemporary critical theory
politics, the politicAl, politisAtioN
the history of the usage of the term “politics” has developed heterogeneously
and widely from the Greek term πολιτικός , to the medieval term vita activa as a
translation of Aristotle’s term βίος πολιτικός , 203 to modern notions of politics in
polysemic, often contradictory potential definitions. for example, what can be
called politics is conducting the affairs of the city/state; the fulfilment of public
life or public dialogue; the management, supervision and regulation of state and/
or social relations; the implementation of the social/communal; the wielding of
concrete or abstract power; the organizing of the bureaucracy in everyday life;
the establishing of relations between individual and collective identities leading
to individual and collective subjectivation; an emancipatory event; and the
aspiration to preserve tradition.
in the foregoing and many other possible identifications of “politics”, two
distinctive aspects stand out: community and relationship. the french philosopher
Alain Badiou interpreted an event as political, emphasizing this: “An event is
political if its material is collective, or if the event can only be attributed to a
collective multiplicity. ‘collective’ is not a numerical concept here. We say that
the event is ontologically collective to the extent that it provides the vehicle for a
virtual summoning of all”. 204
from the vaguely outlined multitude of notions, one can single out two general
structural moments that are expressed in the difference between the notions of
“politics” and “the political”, according to the constructions of chantal Mouffe:205
(1) the political – dimension of antagonism which is constitutive of human
societies;
203 hannah Arendt: “the term vita activa”, in: The Human Condition. chicago: the university of
chicago press, 1998, 12–17.
204 Alain Badiou: “politics as truth procedure”, in: Metapolitics, trans. Jason Barker. london: Verso,
2006, 141.
205 chantal Mouffe: “politics and political”, in: On the Political. london: routledge, 2005, 9.
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(2) politics – the set of practices and institutions through which an order is cre-
ated, organizing human coexistence in the context of the conf lictuality
by the political.
this means that the term/notion politics” denotes the ways in which a community
and a relationship are materialised. contrary to that, the term/notion political
suggests the nature or character of a human community and relationship, which is
antagonism. Antagonism, in that case, is the ontological prerequisite of a human
relationship and the community emanating from that relationship.
the role of antagonism in the constitution of relationships, i.e. a human
community, lies in the way in which personalised or abstract power turns out
to be the prerequisite for overcoming an antagonism or decomposition due to an
antagonism. the notion of power is f lexible, as well as variable both historically
and geographically. one can speak of the power of people, citizens or participants
in the community, of the power of the leader, of legal and illegal power, of
the power of institution(s), of the power of the bureaucracy, of the power of
a political party, of the power of a parliament, of the power of faith, of the
power of the economy, but also of liberation from a superior power, of a change
of the power wielder, or of a change in the nature of power. the relationship
between power, the community and antagonism is complex and f luctuating.
for example, power in medieval societies was the personal power of the ruler
legitimised by religion, or more precisely, by the structures and institutions of
the religious system. power in bourgeois societies is depersonalised in the name
of representative institutions and documents (rulebooks) of political life. power
in totalitarian societies was personalised in the leader or in the party. the ideal of
modern democracy is the power of the people expressed through parliamentary –
representative – administration and the execution of this power in a bureaucratic
way. Global neoliberalism causes a rift between politics and power, when politics
as an institutional structure loses the power of decision-making, surrendering it
consequently to economic interest groups.
politisation singles out a certain activity that uncovers, utilizes and/or demonstrates
the political character of every human relation. seeing every form of human life
– a relation or a set of relations – as political suggests that antagonism has active
role in every situation which appears to be independent from politics.
thus, in the first step, politisation reveals that culture, religion or art are vague
fields of politics, i.e. of the social with characteristic antagonisms. in the second
step, it is shown that politics can be a means of inf luence on antagonisms appearing
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politics 1 the political 1 politics 2 the political 2 politisation 1 politisation 2
theoretical activist
politics is a set the political is politics is a set the political is politisation the politisation
of practices a multiplicity of techniques a set of traits of art, in the of any human
and institutions of antagonisms for creating that something theoretical activity, in
that effectuate which are a relation (anything) sense, leads the activist
a certain social constitutional between power acquires by to the sense, leads to a
system or for a human and society being put in a epistemological phenomenological
relationship society social relation discovery or to confrontation
or in a relation the use of the with an event of
between power political in any human activity
and society human activity as a social
antagonism
in ostensibly autonomous fields of culture, religion or art. in the third step, the
inverse potential appears. this means that, for example, at the moment when
social antagonisms are shown to exist in art too, art can be offered as a sensibly
affective sample of the fictitious or actual settling or aggravation of antagonisms.
Aesthetics ANd politics
to develop the thesis on aesthetics as the intermediary between politics and
music, i must remind that there is no unique notion of “aesthetics” which would
be irrevocably delimited by the concepts of “the science of the beautiful”, of
“the philosophy of specialised sensibility”, of “the philosophy of art”, of “the
politics of human sensibility”, of “the revolutionary or emancipatory potential of
sensibility” or of “the metacritique of the aesthetics and philosophy of art”. All
of these outlined identifications of aesthetics have their specific synchrony and
diachrony, which means the logic of narrative which was developed in a particular
way and set against other narratives about what aesthetics was, what it is and
what it will be. due to certain revisions of aesthetics, forgotten or completed
aesthetical stories were reactualised and revised in the new conditions of human
life and the political, i.e. in the antagonisms of “new” time. the aesthetic now
becomes a sort of contradictory cause and effect of the phenomena of politics
and the political. in other words, i shall demonstrate that the elements of politics
and the political are sensible phenomena connected in a complex way with the
discourses of society. But at the same time, the manifestations of the articulation
of the total individual and collective sensibility of humankind are always in a
political environment – within a form of life (state, institution, social or cultural
group, modalities of subjectivation). in the process, individual and collective
sensibilities remain within a multitude of affects created by antagonisms which
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are overcome, provoked, evaded, surpassed or created by “that life”, while dealing
with its collective and individual human sociability.
the french philosopher Jacques rancière, 206 for example, foresaw the turning
point in aesthetics which proceeded from the aesthetic as a specialised sensory
experience judged impartially, or with a philosophical bias in the domain of the
autonomy of art, to the politics of sensibility. in other words, this is “the politics
of the distribution of sensibility” within political life. this is perceived as the
transformation of politics and the political from a “non-sensible domain”207 into
building sensible life forms and pursuing the desire for new visible and/or audible
life forms. the politisation of sensibility and the sensibilisation of politics are the
outlined subjects of this aesthetical narrative.
aesthetics 1 aesthetics 2 aesthetics 3 aesthetics 4 aesthetics 5
autonomous aesthetics of art politisation of aesthetisation metaaesthetics
aesthetics autonomy aesthetics
judging/knowledge philosophy and/ knowledge about knowledge critique of
about a specialized or theory of art, political regimes of and ability to the discourses
sensory experience including music. the potential or real perform a sensible of specialised
of an external ernst Bloch, totality of human transformation sensibility, of
(visible, audible) Princip nada 3 [the sensibility with or, more often, political regimes of
stimulus principle of hope, respect to nature, to identify the human sensibility,
vol. 3] trans. h. culture, and even human world and of art,
Šarinić. Zagreb: art (aesthetisation) including music
Naprijed, 1981
over the history of aesthetics, such related strategies of aesthetisation and
politisation can be most certainly identified in the works of friedrich schiller, in
his ideas about the aesthetic education of man;208 ernst Bloch, in his quest for “the
intensity-richest human world in music” [intensitätsreichste Menschwelt in der
206 Jacques rancière: “the distribution of the sensible: politics and Aesthetics”, in: The Politics of
Aesthetics – The Distribution of the Sensible, trans. Gabriel rockhill. london: continuum, 2004,
12–19.
207 Jacques rancière: “Aesthetics as politics”, in: Aesthetics and Its Discontents, trans. steven corcoran.
cambridge: polity, 2009, 38.
208 fridrih Šiler [friedrich schiller]: “pisma o estetskom vaspitanju čoveka” [Über die ästhetische
erziehung des Menschen], in: O lepom [Über die schönheit], trans. strahinja Kostić. Belgrade:
Book & Marso, 2007, 111–202.
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Musik];209 herbert Marcuse, in his projection of the idea of “new sensibility”210
yearning for unlimited freedom; Wolfgang Welsch, in a revisionist theory of
contemporary aesthetisation which develops from the traditional notion of the
aesthetic in arts towards the aesthetic in the sensuously altered world of the
new media;211 thomas docherty, who created the liberal notion of “aesthetic
democracy”, 212 etc. these and many other examples show the importance of
understanding the aesthetic as a “political agent” which plays an important
role not only in the judgment or interpretation of art, but also in the complex
multiplicities of the social life of humankind, which are often external with
respect to art:
“Aesthetic” here will be used not as a synonym for “artistic”, but rather
as its complement, extending from specifically artistic experiences to
the broad, holistic domain of lived and imagined experiences, including
social, political, bodily, and technological dimensions. the meaning of
the “aesthetic” is related to that found in friedrich schiller, for whom it is
linked to politics, not only to pure beauty and autonomous art, as is today
often the case. 213
this indicates that aesthetisation places a work of art, i.e. a work of music, into
an external relationship to politics (a set of social relations, practices, institutions)
and the political (constitutional social antagonisms). the aesthetic, in that case,
is not seen as an essential feature of the artistic/musical, or as a distinctive
intersubjective effect of a musical work. it is seen as a set of sensory events which
make, for example, a single individual work of music or a work’s microstructure
establish a relationship with politics and the political in a specific way. this way
of establishing the relationship depends on the contextual, meaning historical and
geographical circumstances of the work’s phenomenon in its artistic, cultural or
social aspects. 214
209 ernst Bloch: “prekoračivanje i čovjekov najintenzivniji svijet u muzici” [Venturing Beyond and
Most intense World of Man in Music], in: Princip nada 3 [The Principle of Hope, vol. 3], trans. h.
Šarinić. Zagreb: Naprijed, 1981, 1248–1303.
210 herbert Marcuse: “the New sensibility”, in: An Essay on Liberation, Boston: Beacon press, 2000,
23–48.
211 Wolfgang Welsch: “Aesthetics beyond Aesthetics; for a New form to the discipline”, in: Undoing
Aesthetics, trans. Andrew inkpin. london: sAGe publications, 1997, 79.
212 thomas docherty: “Aesthetic democracy”, in: Aesthetic Democracy. stanford cA: stanford
university press, 2006, 149–160.
213 Aleš erjavec: “introduction”, in: Aesthetic Revolution, ed. Aleš erjavec. durham: duke university
press, 2015, 2.
214 for instance, courtney Brown politicizes the practice of performing Beethoven’s works depending
on the historical context related to the fluent geopolitical space of Germany. he points to utterly
different statuses of “Beethoven practice” in Beethoven’s own time; after the re-invention of his
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Music, Aesthetics ANd politics
the relationship between music and politics as mediated by aesthetics can be
deliberated in various ways. here, i choose the binary structural model with
the categories of (1) politisation of the aesthetic, i.e. the formal formations of a
musical work, and (2) the aesthetisation of political relationships between music
and its cultural-social environment. this binary structure (1–2) is based on the
distinction between the internal (micro) and external (macro) approach to music.
the internal (micro) approach is effectuated through the recognisability of the
sensible in politics in the phenomenal or functional modalities of music in culture
and society. i identify the former approach as the immanent (i.e. inherent, intrinsic,
internal) politics of music. i identify the latter approach as the transcendent (i.e.
non-inherent, non-intrinsic, external) politics of music.
the former approach is governed by the requirements of close/careful reading
and listening to music, in order to reach and penetrate it. the latter approach is
governed by the conditions of distant reading and listening to music, in order to
show that it exists by everything else that is not music, which in this case means
by politics. however, it transpires that this “highly dramatic division” is not, in
fact, a split, but a manifestation of one and the same under the different conditions
of interpretative movement between a concrete and abstract knowledge about
music and its political manifestations with respect to human sensuality.
sociological formalisms – such as those that can be found, directly or indirectly,
in the works of theodor W. Adorno, 215 fredric Jameson, 216 tony Bennett, 217
franco Moretti and others – are based on a general hypothesis that an indisputable
correspondence exists between the social processes and constitutional potentialities
of a work of art, literature or music. in Philosophy of New Music, Adorno218 quite
indisputably grounded his debate about schönberg’s modernity on the thesis of
“social formalism”: “the forms of art register the history of humanity with more
work in the second reich; during the Weimar republic; in the third reich; and in the divided
cold-War Germany after 1945. courtney Brown: “Beethoven”, in: Politics in Music. Music and
Political Transformation from Beethoven to Hip-Hop. Atlanta: farsight press, 2008, 11–27.
215 theodor W. Adorno: Philosophy of New Music, trans. robert hullot-Kentor. Minneapolis:
Minnesota university press, 2006.
216 fredric Jameson: Marxism and Form: Twentieth-Century Dialectical Theories of Literature. princeton:
princeton university press, 1971.
217 tony Bennett: Formalism and Marxism. london: routledge, 2003.
218 compare with tyrus Miller: “the New Wave: Modernism and Modernity in the later frankfurt
school”, in: Modernism and The Frankfurt School. edinburgh university press, edinburgh, 2014,
162–163.
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in a musical work outside of a musical work
internal external
microplatform macroplatform
immanent formalised aesthetics of music transcendent politicised aesthetics of music
close or careful reading/listening distant reading/listening
sociological formalism political interpretations
interpretations of a musical work, musical practice
politisation of a musical form
or music by cultural or social potentialities
immanent politics of music transcendent politics of music
immanent politics of music
music and subjectivisation: presentation of self
music and ideology: construction of everyday life
politisation of musical form
politisation of musical technique
signifier musical practices
musical creation as productive work
institutional critique of music
political economy of music
ecstasy or participation: from style to strategy in music
transcendent politics of music
music and the public sphere
music and the emancipation of humankind
music and nation as an imaginary community
music and representation of power
music and revolution
music and totalitarianism
music and anarchism
music and terrorism
music and war
music and transition
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justice than do historical documents. there is no hardening of form that is not
to be read as the negation of the hardness of life […] schoenberg hit upon the
social character of loneliness by cleaving to it unconditionally”219 or “though
artworks have scarcely ever imitated society, and their authors need know nothing
whatever about it, the gestures of artworks are objective answers to objective
social constellations”. 220 for instance, Moretti uses the following words to present
a similar hypothesis on the social potential of the form: “forms are the abstract
of social relationships: so, formal analysis is in its own modest way an analysis of
power […] [s]tudying how forms vary, you discover how symbolic power varies
from place to place”. 221
the immanent politics of music can be another, more general and vaguer name for
“sociological formalism”. it appears as a risky attempt at reading, or sometimes
ascribing – i.e. inscribing – political meanings, values or references from/into
the musical work itself, or more precisely, from/into formal effects and affects
of the musical material. if one accepts this, then the unity and integrity of the
opacity of musical creativity and/or musical reception is broken up into potential
segments. these segments, potentially open to politisation, which can be found
in any work of music, are many – i will give some of them: music is the means of
subjectivation; music is the referential space of the performers’ and the listeners’
bodies; music is the agent of ideology in the processes of constructing everyday life;
i.e. musical form is an abstract sample of the social, but so is the musical technique
of performance; musical creativity (composing, performing, media design) is
productive work in the domain which can be denoted by the political economy of
the production of value and, more importantly, of surplus value; but music is also
a signifier practice which, upon re-orientation from a delusion of ecstasy to the
domain of productive, communicational and consumer participation, becomes
the transformation of a musical style into a political strategy.
for example, subjectivation by music takes place as a material social practice both
from the composer’s/performer’s and the listener’s point of view. Adorno fully
centralised the subjectivation of the composer in schoenberg’s music in these
words: “the subject of new music, what its deposition transcribes, is the real,
emancipated, isolated subject of the late bourgeois period. this real subjectivity,
and the radical material that it has integrally structured, provides schoenberg
with a canon of aesthetic objectivation”. 222
219 Adorno: Philosophy of New Music, 37–38.
220 ibid., 101.
221 franco Moretti: Distant Reading. london: Verso, 2013, 59.
222 Adorno: Philosophy of New Music, 48.
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on the other hand, roland Barthes, in the case of a listener to robert schumann’s
music, promotes subjectivation to a bodily event which is the basis for the
potentiality of music as social subjectivation: “But, in music, a field of signifying
and not a system of signs, the referent is unforgettable, for here the referent is
the body. the Body passes into music without any relay but the signifier”. 223 By
relating music to the body it enters, Barthes necessarily promises musical space
as the social space of bodily action. But this is not a literary space representing/
denoting or describing a social motive, subject or narrative. this is a space
directly linked to the performer’s and listener’s bodies, bodies that through music
become subjects confronted with what can anticipate any meaning, although it is
not conveying a particular or specified meaning at that moment. this is certainly
a “signifier” which is a part of the signifier practice in music.
Adorno understood art/music as the subject’s last refuge:
the work of art “reflects” society and is historical to the degree that it
refuses the social, and represents the last refuge of individual subjectivity
from the historical forces that threaten to crush it […] thus the socio-
economic is inscribed in the work, but as concave to convex, as negative
to positive. Ohne Angst leben: such is for Adorno the deepest and most
fundamental promise of music itself, which it holds even at the heart of its
most regressive manifestations. 224
if we dramatically overemphasize this Adornian idea of refusing the social, we
obtain the Althusserian-lacanian image of relationship between the immanence
of music and transcendence of politics, i.e. the censorship of the political in the
artistic. from the Althusserian-lacanian standpoint, it transpires that that which
eliminates the social from the artistic/musical, and the social is constituted by that
elimination, is not some pre-human chaos, an unfathomable abyss of nature, the
place of the source of truth; instead, a predetermined practice, a signifier practice, is the
real foundation or the truth of what sigmund freud called the “unconscious” in
the relationship with sexuality, and Karl Marx “class conf lict” in the relationship
with society. 225
the transcendent politics of music can be attempts at going beyond “the artistic or
musical text” and to perceive the text in quite different referential situations with
respect to the social. discussing Western music, the philosopher philippe lacoue-
223 Barthes: “rasch”, 308.
224 Jameson: Marxism and Form, 34–35.
225 “Art, society/text. A few remarks on the current relations of the class struggle in the fields
of literary production and literary ideologies”, in: Art Margins 5/3 (2016), 102–114.
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labarthe underlined: “first, there is uestion of music, which, strangely, is never a
question of music alone”. 226
to put it crudely: the sense and meaning of music do not emanate from the musical
work itself but from the work’s place in the field of social relationships. one could
say that musical work or music as an event is something that is structured into
specific sense and meanings by an external relationship with social institutions
(politics) and social antagonisms (the political). however, a musical work also causes
potential affects in a listener, which are subjectivised by music in a specific context.
if what has been previously said stands, one could say that music effectuates the
potentiality of the political with respect to numerous forms of human life. these
potentialities are manifold and possibly infinite, as are the situations of politics
and the political in the reality of individual and collective forms of human life.
there are many examples of the external or distant politisation of music, which
means bringing music into a specific relationship with the social. for example: the
relationship between music and the public sphere, 227 the function of music in the
emancipation of humankind, 228 music in the creation of the imaginary community that
we call nation, 229 music and the representation of power, 230 music and revolution, 231
music and totalitarianism, 232 music and anarchism, 233 music and terrorism, 234 music
and war, 235 music and violence, 236 and music and transition. 237
226 philippe lacoue-labarthe: “preface”, in: Musica Ficta/Figures of Wagner. stanford cA: stanford
university press 1994, xvi.
227 christian Wolff: Bread and Roses – Piano Works 1976–1983, sally pinkas (piano). cd, Mode 43,
1995.
228 philip Glass: Satyagraha, dVd, Arthaus Musik 100 136, 2001.
229 Krzystof penderecki: A Polish Requiem, Klosinska, rappe, Minkiewicz, Nowacki, Warsaw
National philharmonic choir and orchestra, Antoni Wit, cd, Naxos 8.557386-87, 2004.
230 Arnold schoenberg: Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte op. 41 (1942), Glenn Gould (piano), the Glenn
Gould collection, cd, sony classical G010001016574y, 2012.
231 luigi Nono: Al gran sole carico d’amore, staatsoper stuttgart, lothar Zagrosek, cd, sWr 8573-
81059-2, 1999.
232 larry Weinstein: Shostakovich against Stalin – The War Symphonies, Nederland radio philharmonic,
Kirov orchestra, Valery Gergiev, dVd, decca 074 3117, 2005.
233 John cage: Anarchy – New York City – January 1988. Middletown, con: Wesleyan university
press, 1988. cf. John cage: Roaratorio. An Irish Circus on Finnegan’s Wake (1982), cd, Wergo Wer
6303-2, 1994.
234 John Adams: The Death of Klinghoffer, london symphony orchestra, conducted by John Adams,
directed by penny Woolcock, dVd, decca 074 1898-9, 2003.
235 stefan Wolpe: Lieder; Battle Piece (1943–1947), cd, Neos 10719, 2007.
236 susan fast and Kip pegley (eds.): Music, Politics, and Violence, Middletown, ct: Wesleyan
university press, 2012.
237 laibach: Rekapitulacija 1980–1984, NsK records & Nika d.o.o., efA 13670-2, 2002.
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All these examples, and many more, show that the “external politics of music” is
carried out by the aesthetic which is vague and variable, i.e. by sensory techniques
of placing music in discoursive and affective political contexts as a possible
acoustic embodiment of politics and the political. this does not mean that music
“transcends” from the immanently musical (music as music itself ) to the musical
as politics and the political, but that music is understood as a political situation.
for example, while theorizing about music and politics, John street puts forward
the following position:
i would like to persuade readers that music embodies political values and
experiences, and organizes our response to society as political thought and
action. Music does not just provide a vehicle of political expression, it
is that expression. And, furthermore, states organize us through their
management of music and sound more generally. the boundaries between
the two realms of music and politics, i will try to suggest, are largely
illusionary. 238
the placement of the relationship between music and politics is carried out
by the contextuality of music (culture, state, nation, race, gender, class); by
programme actions (verbal denoting of a musical work as a political notional
meaning); by functional institutional employments of music (assigning political,
social and cultural functions to the musical work); by compositional politisations,
identifications, but also obsessing over political ideas, myths and ideals; by
performance actions (adding various social roles while presenting the musical
work); or by motivational guidance of the performers’ and listeners’ attention
(generating complex networks within discoursive and affective apparatuses
related to usual or exceptional forms of everyday life).
the relationship between discourse and affect enables music to become the means
of the articulation and subjectivation of the human intelligible and sensible
presence in the social world of antagonisms and institutions which provide
or disturb various functions of society. in other words, music is not only the
representative of politics and the political, but also an aesthetic – meaning sensible
at the individual and collective level – potential of generating society and the
social. therefore, the external politics of music are aimed at showing that no
music exists which is not politics within the political, i.e. antagonistic situations
in society.
238 John street: “introduction: making connections”, in: Music and Politics. cambridge, uK: polity,
2012, 1.
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10
Music ANd politics
the reconstruction of Aesthetics and
the contemporary World
three theses ABout Music ANd politics
thesis 1:
Western art music is a model of the multiplicity of social experiments that have
real consequences for forms of human life; therefore, it is argued that all music is
political.
thesis 2:
such a model of the multiplicity of social experiments is always a singular event
that may be called a musical affect that is politically geared toward individual
and collective forms of human life, that is, toward the listener’s body itself or the
collective body of multiple listeners (the audience).
thesis 3:
Art music is posited into the world so that always and everywhere one may speak
about two different ontologies of music: the immanent ontology of a musical
event in the world of art and the transcendent or political ontology of music in
the world beyond the worlds of art. there is an important relation between the
concepts of transcendent, beyond, and political. this text concerns the second
ontology, that is, the political, which is identified as transcendental and external
vis-à-vis the immanent phenomenality of an individual work of music.
Music and politics: dispositives and politics
to recognise and thereby translate a given experience of music into customs and
bodies of knowledge that identify music as a social relation or cultural identity, one
must generate or modify a sensory-conceptual set of available apparatuses based
on our bodily-aural intuitions and instincts, individual and collective values, as
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well as the musical and above all non-musical potentialities of the world in which
we grow up, which we inhabit, and with which we identify in the everyday. 239
the starting thesis stated above rests on two theoretical constructions:
(1) the construction of a sensory-conceptual regime of music that manifests
itself in relation to the individuality and collectivity of performers and/or
listeners, as well as on
(2) the construction of bodily-aural intuitions and instinct in specific
differential contexts of the world of music, above all, technical skill,
technical perfectionism, and technical virtuosity.
the relationship between a sensory-conceptual regime and bodily-aural intuitions
and instincts is always in a relation or web of relations that i would call the
apparatus of music. such a relational apparatus of music is essentially political,
because it relates to quite disparate potentialities of establishing, performing, or
maintaining a specific sociality – for instance, communality, belonging or non-
belonging – in and through music. the relation between a sensory-conceptual
regime and bodily-aural intuitions and instincts is political in the terms in which
Jacques rancière discusses the “distribution of the sensible”: “this means that an
aesthetic politics always defines itself by a certain recasting of the distribution of
the sensible, a reconfiguration of the given perceptual forms”. 240
But remember, the distribution of the sensible of music concerns not only the
technically accomplished acoustic quality of an event, but also a complex social,
productive, and receptive relation between individuals and collectives, in which
there is a part to play not only for the bodily-sensorial preparations, but also
for the settings of the coming together of sensory and conceptual potentialities
in relation to the uncertain vectors of the intuitions and instincts that fit into
musical, artistic, cultural, or social apparatuses, that is, in the most primary
sense, into the aesthetic canons and everyday clichés of performing and listening
to music. therefore, the politics of music or the aesthetic politics of music is not
only a composed and performed musical event that results in a sensory-corporeal
affect of music in listening. the affect of intensity is the sensory impact of music
directed at listening, which is posited in the discoursive maps of interpreting the
reasons for that particular music within such and such social antagonisms and
239 david harvey: “freedom’s Just Another Word”, in: A Brief History of Neoliberalism. oxford:
oxford university press, 2005, 5.
240 Jacques rancière: “politicized Art”, in: The Politics of Aesthetics: The Distribution of the Sensible,
trans. Gabriel rockhill. london: continuum, 2004, 63.
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differences. through the process of subjectifying the performers and listeners, the
regime of political concepts and meanings, that is, more specifically, discoursive
formations, appropriates sensory affects, reconstructing them in the field of
politics, i.e. confronting social antagonisms. Music as an apparatus is an aspect of
the political as the active in human life.
the conceptual construction of music as an apparatus refers to music as a subjectified
technology that generates specific types of bodily perception and appropriation
of artificial sound, as well as institutionalised forms of the production, exchange,
reception, and consumption of music as a cultural property (cultural surplus
value), with which specific forms of its direct and indirect audiences’ bodily and
cultural behavior are organised. the starting definition of apparatus may be
found in a Michel foucault interview:
What i’m trying to pick out with this term is, firstly, a thoroughly
heterogeneous ensemble consisting of discourses, institutions, architectural
forms, regulatory decisions, laws, administrative measures, scientific
statements, philosophical, moral and philanthropic propositions – in short,
the said as much as the unsaid. such are the elements of the apparatus. the
apparatus itself is the system of relations that can be established between
these elements. secondly, what i am trying to identify in this apparatus
is precisely the nature of the connection that can exist between these
heterogeneous elements. thus, a particular discourse can figure at one time
as the programme of an institution, and at another, it can function as a
means of justifying or masking a practice which itself remains silent, or as a
secondary re-interpretation of this practice, opening out for it a new field of
rationality. in short, between these elements, whether discoursive or non-
discoursive, there is a sort of interplay of shifts of positions or modifications
of function which can also vary widely. thirdly, i understand by the term
“apparatus” a sort of – shall we say – formation which has as major function
at a given historical moment that of responding to an urgent need. the
apparatus thus has a dominant strategic function. 241
if one applies foucault’s concept of apparatus to music, the following construction
may be derived. the apparatus of music is a heterogeneous set, which comprises
acoustic events; musical instruments; musical literature; musical knowledge in
composition and performance; the audio-technology of amplifying, recording,
and reproducing music; various discourses of the world of music, art, culture,
241 Michel foucault: “the confession of the flesh”, in: Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews & Other
Writings 1972–1977, ed. colin Gordon, trans. colin Gordon. New york: pantheon Books, 1980,
194–195.
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and society; modalities of contextualising music; architectural forms and urban-
planning positions of spaces designated for performing and listening to music;
the behavioral bodies of performers and listeners, that is, technical staff; decisions
regarding performance times and venues; the administrative characteristics and
modes of acting of musical institutions; relations between musical and non-
musical institutions; formal and informal institutions; statements about music,
from philosophical to everyday slang; moral and aesthetic propositions; business
and economic propositions, etc. – in short, whatever is said or left unsaid regarding
individual works of music, a body of work, or a musical practice. All of these
are elements of the apparatus and one could list many other elements, linked to
concrete historical and geographical practices of music.
Nevertheless, the apparatus is above all a system of relations that may be established
between the many elements listed above, as well as other, potential or unspecified
elements.
What is identified is every apparatus of music is a set of direct and indirect relations
that may exist among these heterogeneous elements in the establishment of a
particular music, in historical and geographical terms. An individual apparatus
may thus figure, in a given context, as the program of an institution, while in a
different context, it may function as a means of justifying or masking a practice
that, by itself, remains inaudible or invisible, or as a secondary reinterpretation
of this practice, opening to it a new field of rationality. in short, between these
elements, whether discoursive or non-discoursive, there is a multitude of dynamic
interrelations of moving positions and modifying functions that may vary
depending on the context (the geographical and historical loci).
the term “apparatus” denotes different kinds of formations that perform the
function of answering to an unexpected or expected challenge in the musical and extra-
musical public and private sphere, at a given historical juncture and geographic
location. the apparatus has its dominant strategic as well as numerous tactical
functions in the social construction of reality.
Music as an apparatus signifies a threefold relation between technology, the
institutions, and the audience, which emerges in a product that may called a work
of music in an artistic sense or a piece of music in the cultural sense.
in the diagram above, technology denotes a heterogeneous or closed set of
techniques, technical means, and modes of behavior linked with using or
performing a technique and the rules or customs of using a technique in relation
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the Apparatus triangle
institution
piece of music
technolog
audience
to specific individual or collective forms of behavior linked to the production,
exchange, reception, and consumption of music. in that sense, the technology of
music signifies not only the performance of music on a musical instrument or on
multiple musical instruments, but also the sum of relations linked with creating,
performing, reproducing, and presenting music in artistic, cultural, and social
institutions. in this instance, the institution signifies any formalised social relation
that has a professional or administrative platform, assumed or specified protocols
or work and operation, and expected procedures of realising its platform, posited
by its protocols in relation to itself and society at large. An institution is the social
“framework” that enables the realisation of an open or closed social relation that
is constructed or mediated by music.
finally, one may draw the following three conclusions:
(1) that music is an exceptional field wherein the transparency of the functions
of art in a concrete society and culture is ideologically subverted and
(2) that music is in metaphysical terms an artistic and cultural practice
whereby concrete references of a musical work and society are reduced
in an interpretive way, i.e., its function emerges as that which has been
removed to the level of having no function at alll;
(3) Adorno’s middle-way solution suggests that there is a historical society242
– the bourgeois society of the modern West – that established the function
of reducing music’s social functionality; by not having, in absolute terms,
242 Mladen dolar: “strel sredi koncerta”, in: Uvod v sociologijo glasbe by Theodor Adorno. ljubljana:
dZs, 1985, 302–303.
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a social function, music thereby realizes its social function in a given
society.
Adorno’s solution may be a juncture taking us toward claiming that music is in
any case determined by the character of its apparatus, which shifts in different
cultural and social conditions, with time and space – history and geography. in
other words, i posit the following two theses:
(1) music has the character of an apparatus,
(2) music as an apparatus is not invariant but a social practice in the transition
of context.
Music as an Apparatus
piece of music as an apparatus
affect as
an
effect
of a performing
practice
meaning as
an effect
of signifying
practice
context body collective.
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criticAl
Architecture
11
GeNerAl theory of ideoloGy
Architecture
12
Architecture As culturAl prActice
the Market’s Appropriation of the social or the ideology of the Multitude
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31 provisional salta ensemble: State of Exception 11, photo-essay, photomontage, 2014
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
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11
GeNerAl theory of ideoloGy
Architecture
ApproAchiNG the coNcept of ideoloGy
i will begin with the completely simple distinction between politics and ideology.
in the most general sense, politics may be defined as the sum of all pragmatic
social practices and institutions whereby a social relationship or order is realised.
some theorists distinguish between politics and the political. 243 the political is
then defined as the multiplicity of all the antagonisms that constitute human
society. politics denotes social confrontation and attempting to resolve those social
antagonisms, i.e. attempting to resolve the political, which constitutes society.
in political and cultural terms, an ideology is a relatively coherent and determined
set of ideas, symbolic conceptions, values, beliefs and forms of thought, behaviours,
expressions, presentations, and actions, shared by the members of a particular
social group, political party, state institution, ethnic or gender group, or class of
society. therefore, ideology has the character of identificatory representation and
perception. the ideology of an individual is the way s/he perceives her/himself
as a singular subject in the context of her/his society, a subject in a community,
the community as a subject, and therefore life itself, nature, and the world as
phenomena for the subject.
in social studies and the humanities, the concept of ideology is defined in
different, sometimes equivalent and variant, but sometimes also contradictory
ways: (1) ideology is the sum of all positive and pragmatic beliefs, values, modes of
behaviour and acting shared by a group of theorists or agents, that is, members of
culture or a specific distinguished formation within the framework of culture; (2)
ideology is the sum of all the misconceptions, false beliefs, and effects of illusions
shared by the members of a social stratum, class, nation, political party, a specific
culture or world of art, which projects a possible, actual, and current world of
existence; (3) ideology is the sum of all the symbolic and imaginary, arbitrary and
artificial effects produced by the media system in places of expected reality and
posits us as objects among objects of consumption, seduction, and ecstasy, that
243 chantal Mouffe: “politics and the political”, in: On the Political. london: routledge, 2005, 9.
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is, ideology becomes, by means of its media realisation, a techno-multiplied new
reality (hyperreality); (4) in its essence, ideology is a phantasmatic construction
serving to prop up our reality, in other words, it is an illusion that structures effective
social relations and hides traumatic social divisions or confrontations that cannot be
symbolised, and therefore its function is to provide us with a bearable social reality;
(5) ideology is the surrounding field of phenomena that emerges before our bodies
and the conceptuality that accompanies that emergence, thereby constituting the
subject, society, culture, and art; (6) ideology is the multiplicity of meanings,
representations, and forms of the production of knowledge and representations
that determine a culture, either necessarily or out of historical motivation,
turning it from a non-regulated (or under-regulated) system into a regulated (or over-
regulated) system of the production, exchange, consumption and enjoyment of
sense, commodities, production, exchange, consumption, information, power,
and the representing of representations; (7) ideology is the hidden (tacit, invisible,
underlying) order that determines a given society or social formation, whether or
not that society or social formation acknowledges it as its ideology; (8) ideology is
a rational verification (legitimisation) of the status quo; (9) ideology is not reality
itself, but a regulative relation or system of representations realised or offered by
the state apparatus and institutions of everyday life; (10) ideology is the present
experience of the human and the world; (11) ideology denotes the meanings,
sense, and values of the power structure practised or aspired to by a specific social
formation or society as a whole and (12) ideology is a system of signs and signifiers
whereby a society posits itself vis-à-vis any other system of signs and signifiers,
thus positing itself vis-à-vis any other society, even itself as a society, culture, or
the world.
following Marx, louis Althusser redefined “ideology” as a representation of
the imaginary relationship of individuals to their real conditions of existence.
A specific ideology has its material existence because it is a socially active
representation. from this materialistic ground, Althusser derived the following
conclusions: (1) every practice is enabled by ideology and unfolds via ideology and
(2) ideology exists only from the subject and for the subject. in that sense, ideology
is a system of representations that carries out the interpellation of individuals as
subjects vis-à-vis their real social conditions:
ideology is a “representation” of the imaginary relationship of individuals to
their real conditions of existence. 244
244 louis Althusser: “ideology and ideological state Apparatuses (Notes towards an investigation)”,
in: Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays, trans. Ben Brewster. New york: Monthly review press,
1971, 162.
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lacanian theoretical psychoanalysis, a step further from Althusser, has pointed
out that the role of ideology is not to offer the subject an escape point from her/his
reality, but to offer her/him social reality itself as an escape from a real traumatic
kernel in the midst of human life. for, according to lacan, a phantasm is not
something that opposes reality, but the last support for that which is called reality.
for instance, according to slavoj Žižek:
ideology is not a dreamlike illusion that we build to escape insupportable
reality; in its basic dimension it is a fantasy-construction which serves
as a support for our “reality” itself: an “illusion” which structures our
effective, real social relations and thereby masks some insupportable, real,
impossible kernel (conceptualised by ernesto laclau and chantal Mouffe as
“antagonism”: a traumatic social division which cannot be symbolized). 245
the ideological web of signifiers supports the subject by hiding the pre-
ideological kernel that is enjoyment. in other words, there is something that
precedes ideology and that is enjoyment. ideology exists by hiding that which
precedes, i.e. enjoyment. in ideology, not everything is ideology, i.e. ideological
meaning; rather, that surplus is the last support of ideology. According to Žižek,
there are two complementary procedures of ideology critique: (1) discoursive
ideology critique rests on demonstrating that the ideological field results from
a montage of heterogeneous f loating signifiers, their totalisation by means of
entangling specific nodal points; (2) the other procedure of ideology critique
targets the kernel of enjoyment, the ways in which ideology articulates, implies,
manipulates, and produces pre-ideological enjoyment structured in a phantasm.
late modernist and postmodernist social and cultural theories define ideology
not as a natural, self-evidently human system, but as a form of social, symbolic,
and imaginary production of ideas, values, and beliefs. An ideological system
comprises: (1) symbolic and imaginary representations of ideas, values, beliefs,
and samples of identification; (2) a subject who is socially produced for those
symbolic and imaginary representations; (3) a social activity in which the subject
of ideology expresses, presents, and conducts ideas, values, and beliefs in order
to identify with her/himself, her/his community, etc. for instance, cultural
studies define the concept of ideology, borrowed from Althusserian and lacanian
polemics, with the following schema:
the attempt to fix meanings and world views in support of the powerful.
Maps of meaning that, while they purport to be universal truths, are
245 slavoj Žižek: “how did Marx invent the symptom?”, in: Mapping Ideology, ed. slavoj Žižek.
london: Verso, 1994, 323.
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historically specific understandings which obscure and maintain the
power of social groups (e.g. class, gender, race). 246
this casual sketch of ideology theorisations suggests that ideology is an important
situation of human existence247 as a social and cultural phenomenon. ideology
constitutes the recognisability of the human situation in relation to its social and
cultural reality, whereby the individual, culture, and society are transformed
into subjects. But reality itself, reality for the subject, i.e. society, is not beyond
ideology, but is essentially mediated by ideology as a constitutive human fiction.
this “embarrassing knot” constitutes the fateful dependence of the individual and
the collective on the experience, identification, and understanding of human life.
32 provisonal salta ensemble: Ankara, 2007
courtesy provisonal salta ensemble
246 chris Baker: “Glossary”, in: Cultural Studies: Theory and Practice. london: sage, 2000, 386.
247 rastko Močnik: “Althusserjeva teza” [Althusser’s thesis], in 3 teorije. Ideologija, nacija, institucija [3
theories. ideology, Nation, institution]. ljubljana: *cf., 1999, 7–17.
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33 provisonal salta ensemble: london, 2013
courtesy provisonal salta ensemble
34 provisonal salta ensemble: Vienna, 2013
courtesy provisonal salta ensemble
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ideoloGy ANd Architecture
My argument is that architecture is essentially a political and ideological practice
that uses its techno-aesthetic and techno-artistic strategies to participate in the
organisation of individual and collective human life, as well as in representing
the symbolic and imaginary field of visibility of a society for itself and other.
except in rare instances of totalitarian political practices, 248 the techno-aesthetic
and techno-artistic modalities of architecture typically hide its political and
ideological character. the fact that techno-aesthetic and techno-artistic aspects of
architecture hide its political and ideological character shows that the practice of
“hiding” is essentially an ideological practice that posits architecture, especially
modern and postmodern architecture, as a non-ideological or post-ideological
state apparatus. 249 that is why techno-aesthetic and techno-artistic modalities of
architecture are ideological constructs that realise the symbolic and imaginary
presentation of architecture as an autonomous field of human creativity or pre-,
that is, post-political organisation of human life as a place of dwelling. With much
precision, Martin heidegger depoliticised and de-ideologised architecture by
pointing to a fundamental dimension of human existence, i.e. to the character of
habitation as a metaphysical event of human existence. 250 in a similar way, techno-
aesthetic and techno-artistic fetishism, posited as the concrete pragmatism of
modern and postmodern architecture, likewise hides its ideological and political
functions. 251
therefore, analysing the political and ideological in architecture cannot be
restricted to questions about architecture’s pragmatic functions, which are then
embodied in a free creative act that transcends architecture’s techno-aesthetic and
techno-artistic modalities to produce a “work of architecture”, analogous to the
“work of art”. the political (executive) and the ideological (representative) must
be studied by pointing out that architecture’s techno-aesthetic and techno-artistic
modalities are instruments of censoring the political and the ideological in the
architectural product. in other words, the political and the ideological are not
“functions” or “meta-functions” imposed on architecture, but ideological and
political “contradictions and antagonisms of the very function and phenomenality”
248 Albert speer: Neue deutsche Baukunst, ed. rudolf Wolters. Berlin: Volk und reich Verlag, 1941;
Alexei tarkhanov and sergei Kavtaradze: Architecture of the Stalin Era. New york: rizzoli, 1992.
249 Manfredo tafuri: “toward a critique of Architectural ideology”, in: Architecture Theory Since
1968, ed. K. Michael hays. cambridge, MA and london: Mit, 2000, 2–5.
250 Martin heidegger: “Building dwelling thinking”, in: Basic Writings, ed. and trans. david farrell
Krell, london: Kegan paul, 1977, 319–339.
251 udo Kultermann: New Architecture in the World, trans. ernst flesch. New york: universe Books,
1966.
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of specific historical architecture. therefore, the practice of architecture is in its
character a signifier practice and that means a material practice, in which the social
and the human are produced in the struggle to structure the visible, i.e. presentable
order of power, rule, governance, and existence there and then.
if we accept all of the foregoing, the history of architecture is no longer a history
of remembering the architectural works of the past, or a history of the traces of
positing architectural works as traces of techno-aesthetic and techno-artistic ideas.
the history of architecture then becomes a critical history of the social relations
of production, exchange, and consumption of “architectural products” in their
singular situatedness via politics and presentedness via ideology. in other words,
paradoxically, architecture is something other than that which appears as direct
affective experience before the body and the eye. that other must be explored.
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35 stojan Maksimović: cultural centre „sava centar“, Novi Beograd, postcard, 1979
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
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12
Architecture As culturAl prActice
the Market’s Appropriation of the social or
the ideology of Multitude
in this text, architecture is discussed as a “symptom” of shifts in the visibility
of social relations in the transitional society of serbia from the fall of slobodan
Milošević’s regime, via globalised transitional expansive practices in the economy,
to the onset of the global financial crisis of neo-liberalism during the late 2000s.
here, architecture is interpreted not as a collection of “characteristic or great
works” in a given state, national culture, or a set of national cultures, but as a
“symptom” – a sliding signifier – showing the way and modes whereby a society
visualises and spatially presents itself, seeking to organise its public and private
life. Architecture then becomes a sort of “spectacle”, where social relations
become visible. in contrast to, for instance, charles Jencks’s conception of ‘the
new paradigm in architecture’, 252 in transitional societies one may not speak so
much of great architectural masterpieces or expensive spectacular expositions of
‘cultural policy’ by means of museums, opera houses, theatres, cultural centres,
shopping malls, business centres, etc., but of an architectural-visual-spatial
theatricalisation of political, ideological, and economic structural changes in the
identity of a contemporary citizen.
in serbian and yugoslav architecture, during the era of socialist self-management,
architecture rendered visible the social relation of the “self-managed” and “techno-
bureaucratic” sociality of real socialism, for instance, through the construction of
residential blocks and neighbourhoods and public spaces as part of raising the
living standards of the working class, to present the accomplishments and power of
socialist cultural and social policy. 253 during the 1990s, despite some individually
important works, architecture and city planning were an expression of social
entropy and the collapse of “real socialism” and its social apparatuses. 254 this was
252 charles Jencks: The New Paradigm in Architecture: The Language of Post-modernism. New haven: yale
university press, 2002.
253 ljiljana Blagojević: “Materijalizacija: modernizam upotrebne vrednosti, 1948–1965”
[Materialisation: use-value Modernism, 1948–1965] and “ideologija: moguća tumačenja”
[ideology: possible interpretations], in: Novi Beograd: osporeni modernizam [New Belgrade:
Negated Modernism]. Belgrade: Zavod za udžbenike, Arhitektonski fakultet and Zavod za
zaštitu spomenika kulture grada Begrada, 2007, 120–193, 242–251.
254 ljiljana Miletić Abramović: “Arhitektura kontradiktornosti konfliktnog, haotičnog društva u
tranziciji” [the Architecture of the contradictions of a conflict, chaotic society in transition],
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the entropy of the “policy of rational city planning and architecture” as well as the
inability to identify the character of sociality without invoking the populist and
chaotic socialist-nationalist discourse. the planning and architectural chaos of the
1990s was certainly a symbol of the contradictions of a society unable to resolve
its conf licts and inherent contradictions in a rational or pragmatic way. in post-
2000 serbia, architecture has been performed as a discoursive, ideological, political,
and historically and geographically determined practice in its transitional society.
it rests on the development, syntheses, and contradictory confrontations of the
socialist, global neoliberal, and nationalist-bourgeois free-market production
and reproduction of individual and collective living situations. the architecture
of globalising transition is spectacular precisely the way Guy debord defines
spectacle as capital accumulated to the point where it becomes image. 255 capital
as architectural image has been significantly determined and guided by its most
characteristic architectural achievements since 2000, which include shopping
malls, business centres, business-residential centres, and small-scale industrial
architecture.
Architecture as a discoursive practice is “visual-spatial speech” or a manifestation
of the special social institutions of articulating, producing, controlling, and
consuming living space, that is, life in an articulated, delimited, and derived
space. Architectural work or its effects are performed under the auspices of
social institutions that establish, present, and control characteristic historical and
geographical social formations of life forms, bodies of knowledge, identities,
meanings, and values in the realisation and consumption of living space and time.
Architecture as an institution, discipline, practice, or object is a discourse because
it constructs visual-spatial and existential individual and collective interpellations
and identifications of society in historical and geographic terms, that is, of social
subjects. that is why today’s architecture may be discussed in terms of architecture
in global and transitional post-fordism alike.
According to contemporary italian political theorist paolo Virno, the important
characteristics of contemporary society are the multitude, labour, post-fordism,
and power. 256 Virno has supplied a critical analysis of the fundamental changes
in the character of capitalism during the 1980s and 1990s. he identified in those
changes a significant role of the multitude and the “socialist” character of post-
in Paralele i kontrasti: srpska arhitektura 1980–2005 [parallels and contrasts: serbian Architecture
1980–2005], Belgrade: Muzej primenjene umetnosti, 2007, 66–85.
255 Guy debord: “separation perfected”, in: The Society of the Spectacle. New york: Zone Books,
1995, 24.
256 paolo Virno: A Grammar of the Multitude. cambridge, MA and london: semiotext(e), 2003, 55.
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fordism: “post-fordism is the communism of capital”. unlike a people or nation,
the multitude is a plurality that rejects political unity and does not turn rights into
sovereignty, opposing obedience and representative democracy. in Virno’s view,
“the multitude” differs from the “mass” of popular mass culture, although that
distinction does not seem so clear today. the change in the character of labour
has generated new forms and relations of production, exchange, and consumption
– turning away from the industrial production of “objects” to providing services,
as well as new forms of decision-making concerning a relation determined by
blurring the boundaries between politics and labour. that is why the industry
of communication, i.e. spectacle (cultural industry) is an industry like any other.
What is new is that the industry of communication is also becoming an industry
of the production of the means of production. the traditional Marxist division
between the basis and superstructure thereby acquires a new character, that
of “innovating” the modes of communication, perception, and event in social
reality. in such a context, “city planning” and “architecture” are not national
superstructures on the bases of everyday life, but forms of cultural services and
thereby the realisation of cultural policy, which is no longer a representative
of “the higher values” but an agent of expansive capital itself and its economic
demands in mastering the multitude, i.e. turning it into a mass.
Architecture is an ideological practice, because architectural production and
consumption are material instrumental and functional factors in the social and
cultural, that is, political and state-legal, i.e. economic “reality” of the everyday
life of any historical and geographical society, including the contemporary
transitional society of serbia. therefore, architecture is not a mimesis of social
reality but an important instrument of constituting and performing social “reality”
in its concreteness and universality here and now. for instance, the socialist-
realist architecture of the late 1940s and 1950s was not the mimesis of a realised
socialist society, an existing and present space in a revolutionary real-socialist
society, but a way for real-socialist societies to assume, perform, and publicly and
privately inhabit, through their institutions, a potential or ideal architecturally
articulated space whereby the real-socialist identity of the ruling working class
and its vanguard, the communist party, that is, its techno-bureaucracy, could be
identified with all of its optimal projections and projects.
the paradox of socialist realism and its performance of “socialist aestheticism”
was its removal of “social public space”, the central place of sociality and
social decision-making, from everyday life into the “closed protocol spaces” of
bureaucratic institutions – for instance, the labour union house in Belgrade, the
building of the federal executive council, and the social-political organisations
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Building (the central committee building). these buildings constructed the
closed indoor spaces of a bureaucratic representation of the working class that was
somehow deferred from the actual performance of politics, although regularly
referred to, mentioned, and invoked. the humanisation of socialist realism –
implementing the policy of “Marxism with a human face” – a political turn from
real socialism to self-management socialism, enabled a “controlled opening of the
institutions to the people” (for instance, the Belgrade fair complex, the passenger
terminal at Belgrade Airport, the department stores in all major cities and
especially their pinnacle, Beograđanka department store in Belgrade, sava centre,
etc.) and a “humanised” and “modern” everyday life in urbanised residential areas
and blocks (e.g. New Belgrade and satellite towns around Belgrade).
By contrast, the ideologies of transitional globalism are geared toward open but
economically controlled, surveyed, and guided spaces, above all: business centres
and shopping malls257 (e.g. ušće shopping and business centre – formerly the central
committee building, etc.). ušće commercial centre emerged through a symbolic
transformation of the social-political organisations building (cK), ruined in
the NAto bombing of 1999. the building was reconstructed by the European
Construction team in 2005. this almost symbolically shows how capitalism during
the transition period “absorbed” and transformed the architectural symbols of the
era of real- and self-management socialism.
each one of these potential possibilities of performing an architectural context
of living in serbia concerned an explicit ideology of performing the positing of
an individual as a social subject, in real socialism, self-managed socialism, and
transitional global society. An individual becoming a subject 258 of socialism or
transitional globalism, i.e. neoliberal capitalism is guided by her subjection to
the Master-subject. in socialism, the Master-subject was the party and its leader/
leadership, whereas in contemporary capitalism, the Master-subject is the
depersonalised topology of power-capital. therefore, the Master-subject is not a
direct “real-life character”, but a Subject mediated by bureaucratic and technocratic
apparatuses, practices, and representatives-agents of performing life itself in given
conditions and circumstances.
Architecture, for example that of shopping malls (e.g. Mercator, tempo, ušće,
delta city, rodić), effects a confrontation and mutual recognition between an
individual becoming a subject and the Master-subject, who supplies the emerging
257 Anon.: “conQuest: Arhitektura kupovine”, in: DaNS 60 (2007), 4–19.
258 louis Althusser: “ideology and ideological state Apparatuses”, in: Lenin and Philosophy and Other
Essays, trans. Ben Brewster. london: New left Books, 1971, 168.
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36 social-political organisations building (cK): Belgrade, postcard, 1960s
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
37 provisonal salta ensemble: ušće business centre, Belgrade, 2014
courtesy provisonal salta ensemble
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subject with protocols of conduct. for instance, a labour union deputy would
come to the labour union building as a representative of her work and labour-
union unit, whereas a consumer or “spectator” comes to the mall as a potential
and realised consumer in the circulation of commodities, information, and money,
i.e. “digitised values”. in such a framework, ideology is a set of representations,
images, meanings, and symbolic values. those images guarantee that the
individual will, in such a space, behave appropriately and perform his becoming
a subject of socialism or capitalism in an expected and “regular way” and thus
affirm the function and meaning of the “architectural space” he comes to visit.
ideology is not explicitly pronounced, but designed by the institution’s external
visual appearance, which means its architecture, which motivates the realisation
of the individual as a subject in relation to the Master-subject. Architecture is an
instrumental part of this motivating process and its objectifications into the reality of
human life. A good example is a comparison between the Avala tV tower (1965)
and the building of pink tV (2000) – which shows the difference between real-
socialist construction undertaken by the state and private, neoliberal construction
and the marking of “social identity”.
the architecture of neo-liberalism is an open and often contradictory architectural-
political platform that spectacularises the conception and horizon of the activity
and affectivity of economic liberalism. economic liberalism rests on instruments
of fostering permanent and expansive economic development, as well as securing
political and individual human freedoms in a market system as a basically social
system. the architecture of neo-liberalism is doubly market-oriented: it is an
expression of a free-market general intellect and its spaces are those of free-market
protocols. the language game of differentiating a “social-housing” building of
the socialist era from an “apartment” building in the era of transitional global
capitalism suggests two entirely different modes of ownership: in socialism, an
apartment was social property and one could only gain the right to use it for a
limited time, whereas in neoliberal capitalism, an apartment is private property
that is owned or rented. if we sharpen this idea to its pragmatic extreme, one
might say that “an apartment in socialism was occupied by a family”, including
a certificate of a generational occupation of an abode, whereas in neo-liberal
capitalism, an apartment is rented by an individual for a limited time period in
her professional life. Neoliberal architecture therefore posits a “doctrine” quite
different from the modernist utopianism of working-class housing, for instance,
that of Walter Gropius or le corbusier, that architecture’s market activity and
characterisation are an “ethical value per se and in se”, which makes “business
ethics” the dominant paradigmatic determinant of other human activities and
forms of life in society.
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in terms of Realpolitik, neo-liberalism is the political protocol of reconstituting and
limiting the competencies and powers of the state in line with the economic
demands of permanent and expansive free-market development, which is
implemented through the privatisation of finance and the globalisation of the
market. this concept, which began to be introduced in serbia during the 1990s at
first “modestly” and then, after 2000, expansively, experienced a “global crisis”
during the late 2000s. in serbia, the context of the rise of neo-liberalism and its
global crisis is more complex than in Western societies. regarding architecture,
one should note the following:
(1) traces of architectural socialism and its emancipations by way of modernism
and postmodernism;
(2) the production of Volkisch populism and striving toward traditional
national architecture;
(3) arbitrary non-architectural and non-planned developments of new
peripheral neighbourhoods with individual construction;
(4) production and postproduction of neoliberal globalist expansive
architectural and planning developments of public and private spaces with
references to the global market.
one may therefore argue that the overall picture of transitional architecture in
serbia, primarily in cities such as Belgrade, Niš, Novi sad, Kragujevac, etc., rests
on a hybrid confrontation of stylistically/iconographically divergent systems of
the “visibility of construction” and the “spectacularisation” of human life, from
ghettoes (roma neighbourhoods) via individual development (neighbourhoods
populated by refugees from the warzones of the 1990s) to the distribution of
private capital into individual edifices (postmodern residences with regionalist
or traditionalist symbolic characteristics) to public business and commercial
spaces self-referentially identified as “neoliberal” or “capitalist” or “market”
(business and shopping centres). the visibility of an architectural edifice
becomes a hybridised and individualised “code” of the user’s identification and
“social micro-ecology”, whereby the user identifies as a subject of contemporary
society. As a style, “postmodenism” came to an end precisely with the demand to
globalise and abandon all eclectic and eccentric expression. the final examples
of postmodern architectural works are the petrol station called Dejton (designed
by Mario Jobst and built 1992–1995) and the building of the yugoslav drama
theatre (designed by Zoran radojičić and dejan Miljković, built 1997–2003).
As a “style characteristic”, transitional globalism began and developed with
numerous buildings, such as that of pink tV in Belgrade (designed by Aleksandar
spajić, completed in 2000), the Belgrade Arena (designed by Vlada slavica, built
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1992–2001), the business and manufacturing centre NiMAx (designed by Vladan
Nikolić and Mladen Nikolić, built 2003–2005), delta city shopping centre in
New Belgrade (designed by disraeli Moore yaski sivan Architects, completed
in 2006), the idea supermarket in subotica (designed by Jasna M. Živković, built
in 2007), the Mercator centre in Novi sad (designed by Vladimir Koželj, built
2006–2007), the business and service centre porsche Beograd sever (designed
by Goran Vojvodić, built 2006–2007), Belgrade, the business facility of putevi
požega (designed by Vladan drndarević, built 2007–2008), the holiday inn
hotel and expo xxi hall in New Belgrade (designed by Vladimir lojanica, built
2005–2007), Albon Agena company’s business and the manufacturing complex
in Šimanovci (designed by Zoran Bulajić and Katarina Bosnić, built 2006–2008).
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Performance Art
perforMANce Art
13
techNoloGies of perforMANce
iN perforMANce Art
concepts and phenomenological research
14
the AVANt-GArde:
perforMANce ANd dANce
ideologies, events, discourses
15
discourses ANd dANce
An introduction to the Analysis of the Resistance of philosophy
and theory towards dance
16
theoreticAl perforMANce
performative Knowledge
175
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38 Miško Šuvaković: Organisation of Sculpture, photo performance, 1974
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
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13
techNoloGies of
perforMANce iN perforMANce Art
conceptual and phenomenological research
ApproAch to the AppreheNsioN
ANd the coNcept of PERFOMANCE ART
the apprehension and conceptualisations of performance art are multi-signifying
and ill-defined in their numerous current or retrospective uses, applications
and performance in different theories and histories of art in the 20th century.
the apprehension and the term performance art was conceptualised in the late
1960s and early 1970s in neo-avant-garde tactics, less frequently in strategies,
transformations and the overcoming of closed boundaries of defining the visual 259
– most importantly, high modernist – works of art, and visual arts in general
as arts based on creating, making or producing authentic, self-inferential, self-
contained, and all-accomplished pictures and sculptures as pieces. Afterwards,
in the late neo-avant-garde, the idea of performance art was, in theoretical
interpretative and historicist terms, retrospectively applied to different open,
experimental, processual and action art works, conceived and performed as
events. however, the late neo-avant-garde concept of performance art was in
interpretative, anticipatory and programmatic, i.e. hegemonic terms, applied to
quite different postmodernist art works which have been performed and based on
the concept of the realisation of events. the idea of performance art was applied
in music, 260 literature, radiophony, 261 film, theatre, dance, 262 opera, 263 art practices
aimed at cultural work, in electronic mass media. At this point, it is necessary to
stress that the conceptualisation of performance art was not created in synthesis
259 here we foremostly refer to the “creation” of painting or sculpture transformed from piece to
work. cf. Arthur c. danto: “Artworks and real things”, in: Art and Philosophy – Readings in
Aesthetics, ed. W.e. Kennick. New york: st. Martin press, 1979, 98–110.
260 Michael Nyman: Experimental Music – Cage and Beyond. cambridge: cambridge university press,
1999.
261 Wireless Imagination: Sound, Radio, and the Avant-Garde, eds. douglas Kahn and Gregory
Whitehead. cambridge MA: the Mit press, 1992.
262 “Nove teorije plesa” [New theories in dance], thematic issue, TkH 4 (2002), 9–135.
263 herbert lindenberger: Opera in History: From Monteverdi to Cage. stanford cA: stanford university
press, 1998; rose lee Goldberg: “theater, music, opera”, in: Performance. Live Art Since the 60s.
london: thames and hudson, 1998, 62–93.
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of different proceduralities, from individual arts into a new multi-disciplinary
integrative “super-discipline” of new art. the apprehension and concept of
performance art are applied to often incomparable art practices fromdifferent
diachronic and synchronic contexts, which identify the act of realisation of the
work or the event of the actualisation of the work as an event-as-art work. the
attention is shifted from the finished/static object- or piece- as a finished product,
to performance as a process within the realm of art and culture. the history of
performance art is constructed as a narrative of comparative maps of strategies
and tactics of identification and interpretation of different constructed or random
procedures of authors’ nomadic performance of the art work as an event. the art
work of performance art is, most frequently, a heterogeneous event situated in quite
subjective, social and historical moments of late capitalism and its hegemonies
imposed on the second-postsocialist and the third-postcolonial world.
in observing different examples of use or just recalling various models of
performance art in contemporary theatre, we could put forward a thesis that
the examples of performance art in historical avant-gardes264 were external,
“beyond-theatrical” nomadic attacks on the institutions of theatre. in the avant-
gardes, performance is based as the anticipatory, innovative and excessive action
out of the context, meaning the specified world and localised theatre institutions
and environments. the art experiment was enacted in the intermediary space of
different autonomously situated arts. in the neo-avant-gardes265 of the late 1950s
and 1960s the most radical examples of theatre were transformed towards the
happening, i.e. they “asymptotically gravitated” towards performance art. examples
can be found in the examination of the instrumentality of the actor’s “body”
out of the context of dramatic motivation in Grotowski’s theatre laboratories,
in the practice of political activism as theatre or paratheatre or beyond-theatre
actionism in the production of Living Theatre, 266 and in the founding of the
complex multi-variant ethno-, ritual- or therapy-oriented practices and theories
through the existentialised and anthropologised practice of performance, as
described by schechner. 267 A certain affinity was perceived for transgression as a
trespass, that is, a formal egress outside of the canonised modernist autonomously
situated limits of theatre. As opposed to that, with the postmodern theatre, for
example, since Wilson’s work Einstein on the Beach, a third possibility also emerged
264 for example, the dadaist performance in Zurich’s Cabaret Voltaire (1916), the cubist-dadaist
production of the Parade (1917) in paris or picabia’s complex multimedia stage piece Relâche (1924).
265 on the atmosphere and tactics of neo-avant-garde theatre, cf. the catalogue Anon.: Bitef 5.
Belgrade: Bitef, 1971.
266 carlo silvestro, ed. The Living Book of the Living Theatre. New york, Greenwich ct: New york
Graphic society, 1971; the living theatre, Paradise Now. New york: random house, 1971.
267 richard schechner: Performance Theory. london and New york: Methuen drama, 1988.
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– and that was the introduction of “beyond-theatre” experiments, models and
tactics into elaborated and hegemonic systems of work in theatre. thus the
concepts and phenomena of performance art appear as procedures of concurring
deconstruction of stable characteristics of theatre within its canonic institutions
and also as the recycling and implanting of performing into the theatrical, within
the realm of the hegemonies of theatre as a dominant practice in performing arts.
certain theatre, dance, opera and music-performance works were created under
indeterminate inf luences or applications of concepts and phenomena of performance
from performance art. the problematic, marginal, auto-ref lexive, deconstructionist
or transgressive procedurality of performance from performance art is applied to
performing the work as a whole or the performing of fragments within more complex
modernist or postmodernist realisations in theatre, dance, opera and music. on
the one hand, the context of theatre as a performing arts discipline was thus
opened and expanded, but on the other, the anti-aesthetical, pro-conceptual and
para-technical procedurality of performance art was re-aestheticised and technically
canonised. the early theatre works of robert Wilson, A Letter for Queen Victoria
(1974) or Einstein on the Beach (1976), were created through the transfer of performer’
arbitrarity, alienation and the director’s constructivism into the deconstruction
of drama theatre and its evolutions. for example, Einstein on the Beach features the
deconstructing of drama theatre into a theatre of architectural or visual images,
where the relatively autonomous authors‘ writing (ecriture) of the composer
(philip Glass), choreographer (lucinda childs) and director (robert Wilson) are
programatically opposed. the opera cycle268 of John cage Europeras 1&2 and 3&4
(1987, 1990) would almost seem to be an ordinary opera cycle had there not been
the performing of intervention and the destruction of the formal-easthetic-as-
technical character of the opera by introducing the role of chance into the writing
of the libretto, the composing of the music and the treatment of set and costume.
John cage tried to break all the typical institutional-poetic canons in opera art
by anarchistic annulment of the authorial first-degree-authentic creative act. he
set the opera‘s multigender text as a simultaneous performing of eclectic, randomly
chosen samples from various historical opera works. the theatre piece De macht
der theaterlijke dwaasheden [the power of theatrical Madness, 1984] by Jan fabre
was performed in an accelerated and metastatic recycling of the concepts of trans-
avantgarde practice in painting. the trans-avantgarde practice in painting is the
post-historical, arbitrary, eclectic and collage/montage production of the literal
and the fictional in the realm of the concrete image. When the concept of trans-
avantgarde is transferred and set into the theatre work, a performed theatre event
268 lindenberger, “regulated Anarchy: John cage’s Europeras 1&2 and the Aesthetics of Opera”, in:
Opera in History: From Monteverdi to Cage, 240–264.
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becomes a system of confronted and discontinual post-dramatic visual-stage-
scenes. fabre worked with two characteristic levels of performance: (1) with first-
degree performance on stage, which deconstructs the important phenomenal
aspects of the director‘s interpretation of the dramatic, in the name of the visual
theatre and (2) with second-degree performance of the institutional transfer of
concepts, procedures or paradigms of one art like painting into another art, like
theatre. in so doing, he renders these two levels as performance in the realm
of marked erotisations of representational phenomena. in a psychoanalitic269
sense he underlines that performance is, actually, passage à l’acte, inciting of the
reality of the unconscious for the purposes of theatre‘s post-aesthetic ecstatic
bliss ( jouissance). Anne teresa de Keersmaeker, 270 in a series of neatly conceived
and highly aestheticised pieces, like Just Before (1997), Drumming (1999), I said I
(1999) or In Real Time (2000), introduces elements which do not belong to the
integrating and time-set aestheticism of high-elitism in late post-modern
dance. those unexpected rough elements belong to the margins of dance life. in
addition, these performances are set on the loose and largely arbitrary formal
open structures of connecting dance parts. loose, arbitrary and open structure is
what recalls or suggests the atmosphere of performance art. thus, Keersmaeker‘s
accomplishment is that highly-aestheticised dance becomes de-ontologised or
relativised by displaying unstable and arbitrary relations between the dominant-
exceptional and marginal-trivial aspects of dance technique as a “machine” of
microsocial behaviour. on the other hand, she aestheticizes the elements which
potentially belong to performance art, by bringing them to the level of centered
dance technique or the stylised production of dynamic relations of dance figures.
As a choreographer, she simultaneously positions the performer’s body as a literal
body from performance art and as a non-literal body or a figure from dance. in
contrast, Jérôme Bel, 271 in a series of conceptual choreographic performances like
The Show Must Go On! (2000) or Jérôme Bel (2001), appropriates the conceptual
and phenomenal character of performance art to problematize the status of dance
as an art which is centered and canonised around the self-understood functions of
dance technique. Bel’s dance performance is not a performance of canonised stage
dance behaviour determined by the tradition of the evolution of dance techniques
in modernism and post-modernism. his realisation of dance is characteristically
a performer’s work, because he as an author, with his co-performers, performs a
“piece”, but also because the stage behaviour of his performers is not determined
269 Jacques-Alain Miller: “Jacques lacan: remarques sur son concept de passage à l’acte”, in: Mental
17 (Avril 2006), 17–28.
270 Anne de Keersmaeker et al.: Rosas – Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker. tournai: la renaissance du
livre, 2002.
271 “dosije Jérôme Bel, xavier le roy”, in: “Novi ples/Nove teorije” [New dance/New theories],
thematic issue TkH 4 (2002), 94–101.
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by intentionally anticipated aesthetic results, but by the concept of the
autoref lexive examining of the different multi-registered identities of the author,
the performers and the audience. he performs and suggests the uncodified
behaviour of the choreographer, dancers and spectators in the context of dance
and in so doing, through quite practical body acts, he raises the questions of the
status of dance as a historical and current art practice, respectively. When the
apprehension and the concept of performance art were established in art histories
and theories, it was possible to apply the concept of performance in interpretative,
theoretical and poetical terms, to those works which are not events. the idea
of performance art was applied to those works which come out of a creative
or productive act, which, in a way, advocates or interventionally anticipates
and, of course, deferres the process of performance. the object, text, image in
a painting, photography, screen image, poster, advertisment, environment/
installation, media construction etc. are all interpreted as traces which advocate
and demonstrate already finished processes of performing. in that sense, the abstract
paintings of Jackson pollock, Jasper Johns or Marc devade; the feminist films of
yvonne rainer or the gay movies of derek Jarman; the video installations of Bill
Viola; the deconstructivist and pornographic fiction of Kathy Acker; the pop-
rock spectacles of laurie Anderson; the para-theoretical texts of John cage; and
the photographs of Joel-peter Witkin, cindy sherman or William Wegman are
all interpreted as works of performance art or as works with certain/uncertain
aspects of performance art. however, these works are not ‚events‘ in front of
an audience, but rather their phenomenal appearance and semantic function are
interpreted as traces of the painter‘s, director‘s, writer‘s, composer‘s, sculptor‘s or
photographer‘s behavioural act of accomplisment of the work as an intervention
on the work itself or an intervention through this work within the context of
the presentation. the act of the interventionist accomplishment of the work is
what the work apparently displays and advocates, and that is, in this perspective,
more important than the story told, the image presented or the written symbolic
order itself. for example, the work of cindy sherman Untitled Film Still # 21–23
(1978) is a series of photographs which presents stills from acts of a masked actress,
but they are not documents of public or private performance. these are directed
sequences or shots prepared and performed for the photographic shoot. 272 the
photos are intentionally shot so that, most often, they look like stills from well-
known movies from the 1950s. she scenically designs images for photography and
filming and thus produces visual photographic and film representations of fictional
spaces, situations and events for the gaze, that is, the act of watching, recognition
and identification. her photographic images produce a socially situated visual
272 rosalind Krauss: “cindy sherman: untitled”, in: Bachelors. cambridge MA: the Mit press,
1999, 101–159.
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surplus of meaning, value and sensuality. that visual surplus of meaning is
beyond one‘s grasp, it is non-centered, slipping and shifting, often metastatic and
therefore destructive. the work of cindy sherman is American in its performance
of confrontation with the system of urban and media production, exchange and
uncontrolled consumption of goods, values, meanings and visuality. her works
reconstruct the material system of the performance of production, exchange
and consumption of fictionality through anticipations of entropy in the visual
image, because her photographic images render uncertain representation, which
escapes clear recognition and identification. her work in its phenomenal and
semiologically representable structure does not only exhibit what in direct, that
is, first-degree terms it speaks about. it is as if her work speaks that the artist
exploits those “subjects” or any of the media she uses as an interventionist performing
practice in the complex existential world of the social conf licts of late capitalism.
coNceptuAl poteNtiAlity AGAiNst
the poteNtiAlity of pheNoMeNA iN the
heteroGeNeous reAlM of discursiVity
the interpretation of any work of performance art, for example, leads through the
development of complex relations of exchange and effects of the individual-actual
events and the universal potential of the concepts. in that sense, philosophically-
phenomenologically speaking, stelarc’s or Nauman’s idea is something that stems
from themselves through an event that has to be mediated and translated into a
thought, understanding and experience of the other. the idea is then a kind
of a vehicle for the conceptual translation of the state of mind, the conscious-
subconscious-unconscious, the life activity or experience into a project. stelarc’s
pierced skin and hanging body emerge from his power to conceptualize, for
example, his life activity as an intentional provocation and endurance of pain. he
conceptually envisages and phenomenally performs his life activity, through formal
potentialities of a behavioural text. that behavioural text potentially connects his
life activity as an instrumental text, with various other texts of culture, which
are also traces or traces of traces of other life activities and their conceptualisations
from which certain works of art and theory were conceived. for example, at this
point we are speaking about the potentiality of the concept of pain which can/
potere/ also be the deferred pain of the betrayed christ in carravagio’s painting
The Betrayal of Christ (1602) or the “pain” of the dead christ in the painting The
Entombment of Christ (1602-04) 273 or the pain of the agony/as/erotic-pleasure of
273 leo Bersani, ulysse dutoit: Caravaggio’s Secrets. cambridge, MA: Mit press, 1998, 54–59, 36–
38.
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the hero who speaks in first person in the sacher-Masoch‘s novel Venus in Furs
(1870) or the autoref lexive pain rendered as the voice of the man dying of Aids in
derek Jarman‘s film Blue (1993). 274 roughly speaking, if we accept this dynamic
scheme, then the life activity of the performer, supported by the concept, is driven
to a potential form, to be performed by the body in the behavioural process as a
phenomenon. phenomenon is what sensually/corporeally appears to other bodies,
i.e., to the bodies of the observers/audience which translate it into the concept of
the life activity which perceives or comprehends the externalised life activity of
the performer‘s body. on the other hand, Nauman‘s neutral instrumentalisation
of his own body comes from his power to conceptualize, for instance, his life
activity as a deliberate de-aesthetising and annulment of anticipated expressivity
in the context of modernist identifications of the artist as the origin of authentic
and true emotions. he situates his act and behaviour, demonstrating that the
presence of the body is not centering of live and vital presence. the presence is an
effect of the indexing of the phenomenon as the trace, as the trace of the erasure
of the trace. that is, Nauman points to the shift from the position of the strong
subject as the hot spring, the origin of the phenomenon-work in a painting, as in
the examples of pollock or rothko, to the position of the neutral subject as the
cold cavity of the spring, the origin of the act in the work. through stelarc‘s or
Nauman‘s performance art works I perceive and comprehend their life activities
or at least their conceptual notions of those life activities. i perceive them through
the dynamics of the event which confronts our bodies as punctuations in the actual
perceptive, which means interactive, time and space of actuality. the complex
intersubjective and interactive relation between “him” as performer and “me”
as observer stands on the conviction that the event really happened. And then,
through conceptual understanding, the plan of the presentation of the notion
of “pain” or the plan of the presentation of the notion of “infantility” become
comparable and usable to establish some universal philosophical knowledge about
the human subject as the subject of pain or the subject of infantility. stelarc’s
pain and Nauman’s infantility are introduced in the game of potential notions,
which are the instruments of universality. Because, i alone can not experience
stelarc‘s pain alone – for me, his pain becomes pain only through the potentiality
of conceptual relations, relations with numerous concepts of the pain of christ,
sacher-Masoch, Jarman and others. only through potentiality of conceptual
relations does the coldness and neutrality of Nauman’s work become coldness and
neutrality for me.
274 Marina Gržinić: “hysteria: physical presence and Juridical Absence & Aids: physical Absence
and Juridical presence”, in: “the seen – le Vu”, thematic issue, Filozofski vestnik, ed. Aleš erjavec,
2 (1996), 45–63, here 51.
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Against thus postulated, logocentric model, from the “origin” to the “hiatus”
of thought, it is also possible to postulate a pro-deconstructivist position, which
leads from the philosophical to the theoretical mapping of interpretations of
performance art. According to the pro-deconstructivist position, the concept is
not understood as the origin of thought from the life activity that constitutively
precedes the text as a material, sensually accessible order of signs. the concept is,
on the contrary, interpreted from the pro-deconstructivist and later elaborated
theoretical perspective, as a material text of the project by which the plan is
postulated. the plan brings the art work into relations with other art works or
their textual projects, which are entangled in complex and ambiguous relations
with other texts of culture at the anticipated place of thought. it is possible to make
quite a “hard” statement: I will never know what stelarc or Nauman authentically
or truly feels and thinks through the presentation of a body exposed to painful
actions or a body lead by infantile drives. i can not know any of these artists’
intentions, desires, feelings or constructions, i.e. lives. their behaviour is not a
faithful image or an apparent expression of their feelings and thoughts. on the
contrary, it can be assumed that their thoughts and feelings are potential images of
overwhelming, shifting or humming texts of culture. We can ascribe to stelarc’s
gestures of pain or Nauman’s acts of infantility any arbitrary meaning through the
conceptual apprehensive potentialities of indexing: sadomasochism, alienation,
autoagressiveness, para-christian or dervishesque ectasies, the ironical or cynical
behaviour of the artist, the dematerialisation of the art work, transgressiveness
in relation to the canons of art and culture, violation. the behaviour of the artist
is a kind of a behavioural text, which builds up at the material limit (membrane,
skin) of stelarc‘s body the potentialities of the concepts. At this point, the artist‘s
behaviour is also a kind of text of deferrence of what sensually cannot be perceived
and verbally cannot be expressed. the behaviour of the artist as a behavioural text
addressess our intelligibility, which exists as a machine for the comparison of texts
and which connects a “text” with a text into a sequence which creates the potential
for the understanding of established meanings of pain. the pain does not exist
for me, as a spectator, without the textual comparisons with behavioural texts of
other artists. those texts imply that his body is in a state of pain only when they
are in comparison with other behavioural texts about the body under pain and with
verbal texts which locate or describe or interpret “the depth of pain”; or, with my
learned and acquired identifications of pain. for me, as i watch the body in pain,
the pain is not the effect of some authentic induction or aura (sic!) which passes from
him to me. We identify ourselves with the text of pain or the text of the absence
of pain in a designed moment of a body made up and stage set, so that the body
can be seen as a a body displaying pain, a body displaying the endurance of pain,
a body displaying the control of pain or a body displaying the absence of pain.
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this is not about setting a stage for the relationship between texts which relate
to the performing of phenomena. Nauman‘s performance, i.e. his performances
in the 1960s275 are identified as a performance of the infantile behaviour of the
artist (walking along a given geometric pattern, monotonously playing one tone
on the violin, repeating one body action, making faces, touching or playing
with testicles, smearing the body with shining oil or glaring paint) in textual
surroundings which are aroused and brought under suspicion. his behaviour is
a text-symptom: a text on which the slipping of the meaning of the totality of
potentiality is enacted. Nauman’s performance is not identified as an authentic or true
human acting from the self, through the self and for the self. it is a provocative and
behaviourally post-duchampian positioning. Nauman’s performance is a tactical
intervention within the defined meanings, values and individual existential and
social horizons of modern art and its sublime, aesthetic and ethical criteria which
f loat in the atmosphere of the Western dominant culture. his walking appears as
an individual, quite localised and fragmented act which can not be universalised.
the artist replaces his universally aimed creative act with the “cold” and “neutral”
phenomenality of his behaviour, which, in absence of any dramatic expressivity,
points to his behavioral “politics”. his work is about the politics of behaviour,
and not about the expressive power of behaviour. therefore, in the terms of
post-deconstructivist theory, one can talk about performance art as a textual
production in which the “textual” samples of behaviour, speech or documentation
are performed – samples which the artist enacts and inscribes in place of the
anticipated “idea”. the role of the text is paradoxical: it opens the body to the
concept and separates the concept from the body, deferring it textually into the
fictional space of narration and knowledge about performance art. performance
art appears as a mapping of heterogeneous behavioural practices, pointing to the
marginality and secundariness of pain or infantility as traces among traces, and
not as a live or life-giving ingredient among ingredients, in relation to established
dominant canons of mimesis and expression within Western art and culture.
pheNoMeNoloGic poteNtiAlity ANd oNtoloGy
of Multiplicity iN relAtioN to perforMANce Art
WithiN the discoursiVe field of
the poteNtiAlity of iNdexiNG
phenomenological potentialities are based on the conceptual demonstration of
how the individual body performances in performance art are performed and enacted,
275 Bruce Nauman: Pinch Neck (1968), in: Anon.: Bruce Nauman – Werke 1965 bis 1972. düsseldorf:
städtische Kunsthalle, 1973, 83.
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Performance Art
i.e., how they happen for the body or before the body in real or fictional or Vr
space and time. The body situation is a static relation, or arrangement of bodies
or objects in space and time. the situation can be interpreted as a frozen event,
a selected and extracted still from the f lux of events, a suggested absence of
the process, a motionless event or, perhaps, a terminated event, etc. the event
(ereignis) is conception, growth, endurance, work, action, termination, endless
repeating, monotonous repeating, continual metamorphosis, discontinual shifting,
accelerated action, deferrence in time and space, focusing on the object of desire,
loss of an object of identification etc. 276 the potentialities of the phenomena of
performance art establish a relation between the sheer experience of the event and
the conceptual rendering of events and experiences of the events. the human
body is, for the most part, a carrier or a medium of the action in performance art.
in addition, the human body is also involved in the process of the reception of an
event. however, the body is never just a body, even when the artist tends to display
just a body in the play of the transformation of metaphoric figural mediations in
the matter-of-factness of presence. When dennis oppenheim (Reading Position for
a Second Degree Burn, 1970) exhibits his everyday body as a “place” or when franko
B. (I Miss You, 2002) puts forward only his white, bloody non-referential body on
the catwalk, reducing the multitude of potentialities of meaning in the body, they
do not reach the body itself. oppenheim and franko B. use the body as an instrument
or a machine of sensual display, a machine for production of potential relations
between the body and the object, the body and space, the body and time, the body
and body. the body is just an anticipated figure which helps us focus on the body
itself, which is never simply present here and now as just a body.
from the semiologic perspective, the presence of the body is a potential relationship,
a signifying relationship, an anticipation of the meaning of the body and a
deferrence of the body as the carrier of the sign in the exchange for the meaning
of the text. every body is in the field of transformation of the discoursive realm
and, therefore, is a figure. for instance, when in performance one shoots a gun
and chris Burden gets wounded (Shoot, 1971), he becomes a kind of a textual knit
for all potential meanings: autodestructivity, masochism, fatalism, the immediate
facing of the pain in the here-and-now, senseless urban volence, the mediation
of universal pain through individual pain, the challenge of the permitted or
forbidden, the facing of danger, the American obsession with guns etc. his
behavioural text is introduced into the performing machine of the multiplication of
potential textual identifications within culture. every performance is a textual
potentiality of intertextual confrontation, exchange, in fact, the promiscuity of
276 francoise proust: “Kaj je dogodek?”, trans. Jelica Šumič-riha, in: “filozofija i njeni pogoji – ob
filozofiji Alaina Badiouja” (thematic issue), Filozofski vestnik, 1 (1998), 9–19.
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meaning that circulates or f lows around the corporal-behavioural, which escapes
each or any statement. the semiologic perspective subsumes sensual impressions
under the interpretative multiplications of meanings within the directed event and
the uncontrolled webbings of information in culture. the semiologic perspective
helps or inhibits communication and understanding in the radical censorship of
the phenomena or, more precisely, in the translation of phenomena to a message
or a multiplicity of refering messages.
from the traditional phenomenological perspective, the presence of the body is an
initiation for a special kind of encounter in which something displays itself by its
own self. the behavioural human body, which is, in semiologic terms, always something
else, prepares itself to be displayed as only a body by itself. the body, however it
might be obscured by the webs of potential accidents, should enable the sheer
body here-and-now to appear before us and for us. it is anticipated that the sheer
body appears as a house of the being as in the naked sexual body of carolee schneemann
(Meat Joy, 1964), the artificial cynical bureaucratic masked/demasked bodies set as
sculptures of Gilbert and George (The Singing Sculpture, 1970), the travesting
multireferential body of multiplying visualisations of yasumaso Morimura
(Doublenage /Marcel/, 1988), the castrated body of Bob flanagan (Auto-Erotic SM,
1989), the surgery-operated and corrected body/face of orlan (Omnipresence,
1993), ron Athey‘s body possessed by the virus (4 Scenes in a Harsh Life, 1994), the
para-mythic and para-ritual body of Marina Abramović (Balkan Baroque, 1997),
and Valentina Čabro‘s body of an ordinary pregnant woman as a house of the
other (Ultra-Intro, 2002) and others. the traditional phenomenology searches for
just a body as a phenomenon out of the relativity and illusions of everyday
appearances: as something which is a display-of-self-by-one’s-self, and relates to a
special kind of encounter with something. that encounter, as a real exceptional
encounter, is anticipated and expected as the ultimate meaning of the artistic and
aesthetic act within performance art. from the relatively new phenomenological
perspective, the presence of the body is determined by a shift from the semiotic
representation of the body as a signifying anticipation of figures to a representation
of the effects of individual bodies. At this point, we talk about the representation
of an event which contains not-only-body or an event which is a performance of not-
only-body. the syntagm not-only-body means that the “body” does not appear as
just a body behind the layers of apparitions, in the platonic sense or as apparitions
of daily occurrences in heideggerian terms, discoursive practices (foucault),
traces of culture (derrida) or the textual experience of history (Kristeva). the
body is “something” conceiving, commencing, it works and acts, producing or
behaving between many potentialities. the potentialities are not only meanings,
nor just complex identities, but also sensual/corporal appearances, out of control
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in an open and ambiguous world. the body is not a signifier, 277 which means an
initiation for one letter, one sign, one code, one word or one text – the body is not
a signifier for a determinable meaning which will be used to read the identity of
that body. the body is a behavioural machine in which f luxes of content and expression
of appearance and mediation of the body here-and-there-and-then, here-and-
now or here-in-between, do not depend on the signifier. the bodies are for us,
most often, bodies-in-between. they are caught in the event of experience,
communication and physical/sensual/corporal confrontation of f luxes intersected
by potentialities that exist and lead to different incomparable registers of
recognition and identification of the body. each individual body is in multiple278
intersection of different f luxes: f lows of emerging and unfolding. there is no
body of one and exactly that centered identity. the individual body belongs at the
same time to different identities: racial, ethnic, class, age, professional, etc.
Applied in traditional phenomenological terminology, the f lux would be a
“produced phenomenon in progress” which is transformed or, actually, deterred,
potentially ceaselessly. in that sense, laurie Anderson’s performance Stories from
the Nerve Bible (1992–1993) represents a complex multimedial machine of the
production of corporal-audio-visual images on the concert-screen f loor. 279 here
we do not meet, for example, one body: laurie Anderson’s body. here we meet a
multitude of simultaneous multiplications. We meet the light, neon, f leshy,
gendered, political, private, public, economic, enthropic, expansionist, illusionist
or literal as well as the rock-and-roll performer’s, arty-designed or lost-in-the-
world, decentered in human presence and media-deferred; in other words, the
alienated body. the stage machine produces the body f luxes. laurie Anderson is
not a painter/sculptor who comes out on stage and awards her audience with her
artistic painting-sculptural act as a public stage event. she seemingly or, perhaps,
really abandons the profession of a visual artist as a producer of objects and enters
the context of the stage and media performance of popular music. she becomes a
performance artist, composer, performer, singer, and director. 280 laurie Anderson
takes over and embraces the competencies of a rock super star, realising herself in
that domain through concerts, spectacles, video clips, single and lp records, cds,
277 Guattari in an interview to catherine Backes-clément: “Gilles deleuze and félix Guattari on Anti-
oedipus”, trans. Martin Joughin, in: Gilles deleuze: Negotations 1972–1990. New york: columbia
university press, 1990, 13–24, here 21–22.
278 peter hallward: “creatural confinement”, in: Out of This World. Deleuze and the Philosophy of
Creation. london: Verso, 2006, 61.
279 Johannes Biringer: “returning to the Body with Memories and screen lives”, in: Media &
Performance: Along The Border. Baltimore: the Johns hopkins university press, 1998, 63–72.
280 cf. the statement in William duckworth‘s interview with laurie Anderson: “i see myself more as
a director, and occasionally a performer and composer, than as a performance artist”, in: Talking
Music. New york: da capo press, 1999, 384.
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Performance Art
and interviews. she designs the androgynous artificial figure of a singer-performer
on stage and in media representations. she is a rock star, ref lecting certain
intellectual and artistic references from visual arts and befitting institutions of
the art world, as she exhibits documents from concerts, produces works, publishes
private diaries, writes pro- or para- or auto-referential theoretical writings, and
conceives complex interdisciplinary performances. 281 in fact, she appears in the
similar realm of the construction of identity of multimedia artists like yoko ono,
david Bowie, Brian eno, even Joseph Beuys. on the other hand, she became a
rock star emerging from the environment of elite and experimental visual art.
Anderson has abandoned the context of visual arts at a certain historical moment.
this was a moment when the relationship between the world of high art and the
world of popular art and culture became relative, when the borders of high art
and popular art became very permeable for the mutual exchange of constructed
identities, forms of representation and the production-exchange-consumption of
aestheticised cultural environments. Working with relative relationships of elite
and popular art, Anderson found herself taking a post-situationist position of
being-in-between. And being-in-between means being in between the world of
autonomous art and the entertainment industry, American art as popular and
european art as elitist, American art as a production aesthetics and european art
as a creative aesthetics, the artist and the entertainer, the male and the female
figure in the representation of gender identity, the natural and the artificial being/
organism, the stage and screen figure/body and so forth. As a rock singer, Anderson
carefully develops the identity of an intellectual and arty-rock star who expects
from her audience a certain intellectual and critical attitude. she stimulates their
intellectual attitude with multimedia images and multimedia conveyed narratives
which are amplified and aimed at verbal performance, the artificial stage design
as the setting for the behaviour of the performer, the modification of the sound of
the human voice and musical instruments, the construction of scenes by lighting
and the setting up of spatial audio-visual images. she speaks about herself, or
more precisely, about her body as a vehicle,282 showing herself as a stage-media
setting of micro-multitudes in motion, micro-machines, desiring machines,
molecular formations in f lux, intersections of f luxes and so on. her work would
be just one in many cases in the history of performance art if observed merely as a
crossover or transition from the elite realm of performance into another realm, the
realm of popular performing art. however, there is also a potential for a multi-
register interpretation of her work. it is possible to approach any of her concert-
281 laurie Anderson: “for instants”, in: Individuals: Post-Movement Art in America, ed. Alan sondheim.
New york: dutton paperback, 1977, 69–83.
282 laurie Anderson: Empty Places: A Performance. New york: harper perennial, 1991.
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spectacles283 from a consumer, pop-rock-identification or arty-fancy or
intellectually pro- or para- critical-theoretical perspective. these options stand
on comparative simultaneous levels of performed multimedia-event, as an art
work in between high and popular culture. But, if her artistic work is observed in
accordance with the criteria of the duschampesque tradition of work with
readymade phenomena, then it might be claimed that every concert-spectacle
performed by laurie Anderson with a big-name co-performer and technical crew
before a huge audience has two incomparable levels by which to structure the
phenomena: (1) the first level is the level of a concert-spectacle, typical of any
super-rock concert with its particular audience, its ecstatic behaviour and
behavioural participation; and (2) the second level is the level of the relationship of
the visual performance artist, which sets her existential, behavioural and
professional life as a simulacrum of a rock-star within the actual system of pop-
rock music as part of the entertainment industry. if this second level is accepted,
then it is possible to see that her work “exists” through the performing of complex
interventions on the institutional system of the entertainment industry. the
institutional system of entertainment cannot be directly perceived by watching/
listening to the concert-spectacle, but through the intelligible-critical
interpretative mapping of relationships between different events of concerts-
spectacles within the broader cultural framework, i.e. the effects of the
entertainment industry. one level is the level of the phenomena of body
performance in a concrete space and time, in the framework of the social
institutions of popular culture, and the second level is the discoursive performance
of a macro-project or macro-politics within the institutions, statuses and functions
of popular culture. in a single work, laurie Anderson works synchronically and
interventionally with two different phenomenalities of performance. she works
with the multimedia phenomenalities of a stage performance and with potential
phenomenalities of the political-institutional performance. her work is an
onthology of multitude, because it simultaneously exists in different, almost
incomparable registers of reception: the actual indulging in music, light or images
at the concert and the intelligible critical and ref lexive understanding of the
entertainment industry as a production of political objects. for example, the
status of the audience in her work is multi-signifying. the audience is the target
group which she addresses seductively, offering enjoyment. laurie Anderson
addresses them through a multimedia concert-spectacle. At the same time she
serves as an entertainer to that audience and she uses the audience as an object or
a symptom in testing the system of institutions of popular culture. But, she also
rewards the audience with a conceptual and meta-critical potentiality of
283 e.g. performances: United States (1979–1983), Wired for Light and Sound (1983) or Stories from the
Nerve Bible (1992–1993).
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understanding the simulacrum which she performs through the institutions of
popular culture. thus the postulated phenomenology of multiplicity in the
analysis of performance art is the interpretative quest for the way in which
something that acts and resists the immediate coding or fixed meaning is
established in performance art. the resistance to coding or performing of the
message acts like a complex multi-register atmosphere which, quite carelessly, i
could call existence.
the pheNoMeNoloGicAl ANd/or discoursiVe Aspects
of perforMANce Art: oNtoloGicAl QuestioNs
the idea of performing can be observed neither as a direct, certain, homogenous
unit, tool, drive, nor as a vehicle for establishing a work of performance art. the idea
of performance cannot be described exclusively through its performative functions.
the performance is a way of giving reference related to the statement, but also
something beyond speech, image, body or appearance. Additionally, performance
is a system/practice of interpretations, established between the concretisation
of each individual act in progress and its surrounding meaning, opening to the
potentialities of cultural identifications as a discourse or through the discourse.
however, the interpretation is not a clear or unambiguous verbal statement about
the orientation of the phenomena in the field of discoursive potentialities. Quite
the contrary, it is the opening of heterogeneous potentialities which sometimes act
through feasible meanings (text-sign-meaning) and, most often, act as performed
atmosphere of potential meanings around the body in the event. discoursive
potentialities are based on the effects of the utterability, i.e. the advocating of the
work of performance art as a textual/intertextual material within the surrounding
order of cultural contexts. therefore, performance exists as a fissure and hiatus, but
also a nexus and linkage between phenomena which unfold through the body
and a discourse which moves the body in the whirlpool of potentiality from one
cultural register of identifications to another.
My concluding remark is that performance is not a sum total of morphological,
by their own nature differentiated acts, processes, gestures, behaviours, i.e., actions,
procedures or even methods of the performing of behaviour in art and culture.
the definition of performance as morphologically different procedures of
representation, expression, construction, simulation or performativity describes
and explains performing as a field of heterogeneous and incomparable onthologies
or concrete morphologies. for example, in the history of modernism, representation
and expression are interpreted as completely opposed strategies and tactics in
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producing an art work. the modernist revolution in redefining the status of the art
work is with certain artists (Kandinsky, Artaud, Barba) and theoreticians (croce,
Greenberg, Barba, danto) interpreted as a consequence of the shift from the strategy
and tactics of representation to the strategies and tactics of expression. in contrast,
postmodern theory demonstrates (oliva, owens, Biringer) that expression is a
specified tactics of representation within complex historical, posthistorical or
transhistorical tactics of representation or mimesis of mimesis, as a whole or non-
whole metaphysical horizon. the causes of this are numerous argumentations which
aim at demonstrating that between the “inner determination” (e.g. according
to Kandinsky) and external-material order of the work, a causal directing and
connecting relationship of the expressive leaving of traces does not exist. the
behaviour of the artist in performance art is not an externalizing of the internal
into the external world of traces from the depths. the behaviour of the artist in
a performance is a behavioural representation, which always points at and refers
to the anticipated potentialities of the traumatic, demonic or mental, through
always-external interpretative textual focusing. And, therefore, my concluding
remarks read as follows: performance is a name for the tactics of the regulation and
deregulation of the orientation of primarily behavioural acting as representative,
as expressive, as constructive, as simulationist or as performative. What matters
are not the different morphologies of the performance, but the ways of focusing
the function of any procedure of performing in the realm of phenomena and in the
realm of discourse. in other words, a specific performance, which is recognised
as representative, as expressive, constructive, simulationist or performative is
not determined by the attributes of representation, expression, construction,
simulation or performativity, but by the functions of representation, expression,
construction, simulation or performativity. And orientation is a procedure of the
regulation and deregulation of the potentiality of behavioural phenomena and
textual potentialities as f luxes in a chosen, inferior or superior discoursive realm.
for example, Gina pane in her work Death Control (1974) displays to the gaze
her body/f lesh crawling with worms. 284 her performance thereby expresses the
anxiety, morbidity, fear of death or invocation of death, but she also works with
the complex systems/practices of advocating the body in painful, lethal, arousing
or critical situations of human existence. the discoursive orientation of behaviour
grasps her work and situates it or moves, regardless of the fact that i feel her/my
own repulsion/anxiety/fear. My own repulsion/anxiety/fear is suggested in my
observation of her face covered with worms and in my identifications with her
284 Gina pane: “i was living in posthumous time. covered with maggots, my flesh detached by
maggots: flesh of my flesh, two fleshes living together, one nourishing itself from the other: the
process of life in a continuum of time” – quote in: tracey Warr and Amelia Jones (eds.): The Artist’s
Body . london: phaidon, 2000, 101.
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face as a face of potential death. the effect of her work is not an effect of the
opening of her depth through a corporal interactive act, but a phenomenal and
discoursive focusing of the functions of performance on the situating of a corporal
phenomenon in relation to the certain and uncertain potentialities of discourse.
her behaviourality is, therefore, a screen of projecting hypothetical “depths”,
which is nothing less than a carefully regulated/deregulated effect of the focused
functions of performance in redirecting the intersected f luxes in motion.
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39 lončarević: Maga Magazinović, photo, 1932
courtesy dubravka Đurić and Miško Šuvaković Archive
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14
the AVANt-GArde:
perforMANce ANd dANce
ideologies, events, discourses
iNtroductory proBleMs:
ModerNisM ANd the AVANt-GArde
discussion of the status, functions, and effects of any avant-garde art, dance
included, does not concern itself merely with phenomenal or conceptual features
characteristic for avantgarde artworks, behavior on the part of avant-garde artists,
or their private and public life. to the contrary, what is of growing importance are
the questions of instrumental potentialities or realisations of an avant-garde as an
intervening material practice of art, confronting or opposing both the dominant
and marginal paradigms pertaining to the historical or contemporary cultures. in
other words, from a historical perspective, avant-garde art practices are viewed as
specific transformations of artistic, cultural, and social resistances, constraints, and
discontinuities within the dominant, homogeneous or hegemonic artistic, cultural,
and social environments. the theory of the avant-gardes therefore must shift from
ontological or phenomenological questions of existence or the phenomenality of
an artwork to instrumental questions of the functions, performance, and effects of
artistic practices in a given, historical and geographic social set-up.
the late 18th and 19th centuries, modern art was largely determined by the
constitutive chain of events establishing Western bourgeois society as a society of
class-structured hierarchies and hybrid realms pertaining to socially productive
work. According to Jürgen habermas,
the project of modernity formulated in the 18th century by the
philosophers of the enlightenment consisted in their efforts to develop
objective science, universal morality and law, and autonomous art
according to their inner logic. At the same time, this project intended
to release the cognitive potentials of each of these domains from their
esoteric forms. the enlightenment philosophers wanted to utilize this
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accumulation of specialized culture for the enrichment of everyday life –
this is to say, for the rational organization of everyday social life. 285
class structuring of Western societies led to a “vertical” distinction between
the practices pertaining to high and low art/culture, according to the criteria of
conceiving art as an identificational practice for the high classes, featuring in the
field of cultural and social functions of the everyday as a practice of consumption
or entertainment for the lower classes. High art was conceived as an autonomous
aesthetical practice presenting trans-historical and trans-geographical artistic
work – superseding and outdoing the everyday. on the other hand, low art was
conceived as instrumental and, therefore, utilitarian production of the trivial
atmosphere of entertainment and consumption as forms of the regulation of
everyday life. construction of the hybrid realm of socially productive work had
led to new distinctions between the useful and beautiful effects of work and,
consequently, to distinctions between work as the articulation of time dedicated
to production and time of leisure and consumption. certain professions were therefore
constituted as working practices of realisation and articulation of leisure time
for consumption, additionally comprising art as an “instrument of articulation”
of exceptional free time for the high classes and trivial free time for the lower
ones. the notion of a masterpiece was not conceived merely in terms of techne or
poiesis pertaining to an executed painting, sculpture, theatre, dance, opera, or
musical piece, but in terms of the function of the piece for a particular purpose
of engaging in exceptional aesthetic enjoyment and experience, as opposed to
(or beyond) trivial everyday pleasures and consumption. in that sense, modernist
art was instrumental in the production of that “beyond-the-real” in creating the
very reality as an exceptionality of a new identity: the identity of the citizen.
the fictionality of modern art was an instrument of conceiving the identity of
reality as the actuality of class, implying the hierarchies of the bourgeois society.
this functionality of modernism as an exceptional and autonomous realm of free
or authentic creation concealed that slippage leading to the concept and practices
of the avant-gardes. Namely, high and low art were structured as oppositions,
sometimes distant, sometimes close, but they nevertheless supported each other in
the construction of the rigid hierarchies of differences within the class society and its
material social practices. the avant-garde was created within the confines of high
modernism, mostly in the following terms:
(1) as induction of crisis within high modernism,
(2) as experimental development within high modernism,
285 Jürgen habermas: “the project of enlightenment”, trans. seyla Ben-habib in: “Modernity – An
incomplete project”, in: Postmodern Culture, ed. hal foster. london: pluto press, 1983, 9.
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(3) as critique, provocation, subversion, destruction, and transgression of
the modernist canons, i.e. as reaction against the canonic version of
modernism as the dominant culture of hegemony.
the 20th-century’s modernisms and their material practices may be rendered
through various interpretative modes of historisation. the modes of historisation
range from Greenberg’s medium-specific, historicist, and essentialist modernism 286
via the Kuhnian Art & language’s revolutionary model 287 pertaining to the
shift of artistic paradigms, to loose and anarchic postmodernist concepts of the
domination of the synchronic over the diachronic, post-history, metastases of
eclecticism, multi-register archiving, unexpressionist tactics of alienation, and
ahistorical art theory conceived within culture studies, determined as the indexing
of intersections between elite and popular art and culture. interpretative model-
maps of confrontation within the dispersed mega-modernist paradigm before and
after World War ii may be additionally conceived:
(1) bohemianism and the avant-garde as realms of purposeless work/life
within the instrumental and productive bourgeois society of the european
cultures prior to World War i;
(2) historical avant-gardes as antecedents of new stages of development of
modernist bourgeois societies of the late 19th / early 20th century;
(3) historical avant-gardes as forms of provocation and resistance to the
dominant bourgeois society and its hegemonist universalism in the first
decades of the twentieth century;
(4) historical avant-gardes as an “engine”, processing high bourgeois
modernism into the emerging mass media culture in france and Weimar
Germany of the 1920s;
(5) historical avant-gardes as idealistic projects, carried out in rigid social
circumstances288 of the 1920s’ and 1930s’ totalitarian regimes, and (at
the same time) avant-gardes as transgressive projects of the modern
bourgeois society in crisis, themselves becoming symbolical victims of
the totalitarian regimes;
286 clement Greenberg: “Modernist painting”, in: Modern Art and Modernism: A Critical Anthology,
eds. charles harrison, francis frascina. london: harper & row, 1986, 5–10.
287 charles harrison: “introduction”, in: Art & Language: Texte zum Phänomen Kunst und Sprache,
Köln: duMont international, 1972, 14.
288 Boris Groys: “the russian Avant-Garde: the leap over progress”, in: The Total Art of Stalinism.
Avant-Garde, Aesthetic Dictatorship, and Beyond, trans. charles rougle. princeton NJ: princeton
university press, 1992, 20.
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(6) cold-War confrontations of the politically aligned cultures, between
engaged and party-dictated artistic production in the east and autonomous
individualistic modernist creation of art in the West;
(7) distinction between the modes of elite and autonomous artistic production
pertaining to high modernism, as opposed to the neo-avant-garde critical,
alternative and subversive production of art/culture and the media output
of mass entertainment pertaining to popular art/culture;
(8) new theory of crisis of the hegemonic functions of modernist art, conceived
to claim the space reserved for anticipated production of autonomous
artworks;
(9) critical simulations of a retro-avantgarde289 conceived as interventions
into the public realm of the post-totalitarian, post-socialist society;
(10) deconstruction of the tensions of high and elite culture by arbitrary
transformation of art into pop culture and engagement with mass culture
within high art as part of the totalizing industry of post-capitalist mass
entertainment;
(11) integration of techniques of the historical avant-gardes (collage, montage),
neo-avant-gardes (performance), and post-avantgardes (simulation) into
production systems of popular or critically subversive digital art practices,
(12) integration of the avant-garde utopian projects into the political setup
of mass consumer society, from branding to entertainment, from political-
economic regulation and deregulation of the everyday, to identity strategies
and tactics for the late-capitalist globalized and mass-mediated world.
the relation between history and actuality, diachrony and synchrony, 290 applies
to opposing narratives of importance of this or that facet-identity of art, or this
or that facet-identity of theory. What matters is, therefore, the initial claim: that
there is no such thing as a unique coherent and integrative history of the 20th
century, but rather a multiplicity of competing interpretative narratives we call
history and recognize as such. the essential problem of historical analysis and
interpretation today is not construction of a consistent integrative representation of
historical sequences of events, but conception, deconstruction, identification, and
interpretation of the multiplicity of competitive historical narratives and ways of
conceiving references, from narratives to events of art/dance, and from events to
narratives of cultural theory.
289 Marina Gržinić: “retro-Avant-Garde, or Mapping post-socialism”, in: Fiction Reconstructed:
Eastern Europe, Post-socialism & The Retro-avant-garde. Vienna: springerin, 2000, 43.
290 Alexandra carte: “destabilising the discipline. critical debates about history and their impact
on the study of dance”, in: Rethinking Dance History. A Reader, ed. Alexandra carter. london:
routledge, 2004, 11–13.
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crisis of MiMesis ANd rhetoricAl loGic:
toWArds AVANt-GArde dANce
emerging “avant-garde dance” was primarily aligned with subverting the canon
of the white ballet. the 20th century’s long development of “avant-garde dance”
was in turn aligned with interdisciplinarity – the critique and subversion of the
autonomy291 of ballet and dance as artistic disciplines based on a “technical canon”,
but also with notable excursions from dance into other arts: necessary turns
of “dance conceived as dance technique” into “dance as performance art”, and
“performance art” into “media post-production practice”. such transfiguration of
dance as autonomous art would not pass without the necessary conceptualisation
of choreographers’ and performers’ work (labour), namely, without critical
assessment of the institutions of ballet, dance, and theatre.
the white ballet was established and developed as a complex technical-and-
rhetorical system of representation of real and fictional bodies and human
behavior throughout the seventeenth, 18th and 19th centuries in europe. it was
structured as a complex semiotic and figurative system pertaining to the body
and its behavior, on the respective canonic assumptions of representation – the
representation-enactment of stories through constructed, artificial, and stylised
bodily behavior (the demonstrative visual narration of events of the real and/or
fictional worlds). it may be claimed that all the relevant concepts and practices
of rhetoric and techniques of the white ballet were eventually developed and
established (in academic terms) by the end of the 19th century. they were
academised to the point when ballet, in analogy with the concepts of absolute
music, no longer possessed a single necessary or anticipated reference to mimesis
which (as it were) had been an archi-trace 292 of purpose in dance, erased through the
rationalised coding of aesthetic figures of disinterested pleasure, reclaiming the
anticipation of an ideal body (ballet figure compositions). the ballet became an
“art without a function”: ballet for ballet’s sake – aesthetic enjoyment in technical
skill of performing a rhetorical game of abstract figures. however, ballet’s
function was precisely to be relieved of function in constitution of an ideal and
abstract realm of pleasure in alienated bodies of the subjects of a puritan bourgeois
society.
291 Miško Šuvaković: “Around Althusserian-lacanian critique of Autonomy of Art: class and the
unconscious”, trans. Nada harbaš, ed. polona tratnik, in: Monitor ZSA 31–32 (2009), 35.
292 Jacques derrida: “the outside is the inside”, in: Of Grammatology, trans. Gayatri chakravorty
spivak. Baltimore: the Johns hopkins university press, 1998, 44–64.
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GeNres or “pArAdiGMs” of AVANt-GArde dANce
responses to the technically and rhetorically elitist academism of the white ballet
were conceived in the early decades of the 20th century through several entirely
different approaches to subverting the white ballet. those, tentatively speaking,
genres and definite “paradigms” of dance were: popular dance, exotic dance,
utilitarian (gymnastic) dance, and expressionist dance.
the world of entertainment (populist spectacle: popular peasant and urban
dances – in music halls and cabarets) were a populist alternative to the class-
transcending white ballet performed in the theatre. cabaret was a venue of the
transformation of dance into popular public charade, but also of the conception
40 lončarević: Maga
Magazinović, photo, 1932
courtesy dubravka Đurić and
Miško Šuvaković Archive
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of an open live (in terms of daily existence) artistic character of dance as opposed
to the academic aesthetic-technical features of the white ballet perceived as
high art. inf luences of the cabaret in the early 20th century may be detected
in french cubism and dadaism (production of Parade and Relâche) through the
inf luence of the composer eric satie, in italian futurism, German expressionism,
and the emerging popular dance art in the united states e.g. in the para-cabaret
experiments of loïe fuller.
White ballet was additionally confronted with the concepts and practices of exotic
dance (dance of the other – other cultures). two essential points of innovation
were of consequence: (1) renouncing the technique of the white ballet in the name
of skill in performing dances of the others, non-canonical dances for the european
41lončarević: Maga
Magazinović, photo, 1932
courtesy dubravka Đurić and
Miško Šuvaković Archive
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culture, which in practical terms also implied (2) a confrontation of the traditional-
art notions of “disinterestedness of the ideally beautiful” in white ballet with the
modern art notions of the extraordinary, new, other, shocking, or exotic. on the
other hand, the european bourgeois society of the early 20th century began to
stratify, through the establishment of a middle class of managers and consumers,
as opposed to the binary division into high and low classes, prevailing from the
eighteenth to the late 19th century. the early 20th century saw the european
middle classes experiencing the colonised cultures of Asia, Africa, and south
America obliquely, their experience being mediated by the colonizing discourse
(orientalisation of the east), and not through the notions of property.
Acknowledging the fact that white ballet implied annulling (abstraction,
approximation, discharging) of the everyday behavioral body in the name of
the artificial rhetorical body-as-figure, a group of choreographers, dancers, and
“cultural workers” emphasised the need for developing a “body culture” as a
form of aesthetisation of life and revitalisation of the everyday human body. this
effected the characteristic modernist focus on the emancipation of the everyday by
undermining high art’s elitist borders. Gymnastics, nudism/naturism, recreational
dance, return to nature, struggle for the right to free sexuality, feminism,
liberation, and aesthetisation of ordinary bodily motion etc. were different tactics
of the shift from ballet as a high art to dance as the “everyday life activity of
emancipation”. the choreographer Émile Jaques-dalcroze developed a system of
gymnastic dance education called “eurythmics”. the anthroposophical teacher
and thinker rudolf steiner conceived a form of meditative dance also termed
“eurythmics”. rudolf laban developed his techniques of free dance associated
with gymnastic emancipation of the human body. 293 hedi Kalmeier conceived
gymnastics as one of the fundaments of sustaining feminine beauty and health.
Maga Magazinović elaborated in practical and theoretical terms the role of “body
culture” (gymnastics, plastics, rhythmics) in education and the arts.
expressionist dance emerged almost on the fringes of the main currents of
expressionist art (poetry, painting, music, drama theatre, and film) in the first
decades of the 20th century. on the one hand, expressionist dance synthesised
the experience of romanticism’s white ballet and its crises with cabaret music, in
its turn to non-Western dances, body culture, and its shift from the poetics and
concepts of mimesis and evolution pertaining to white ballet to the fetishised
techniques of body representation in rhetorical figures. from the early pre-
expressionist or late-romanticist emancipatory ballet of isadora duncan, the
293 rudolf von laban: Laban’s Principles of Dance and Movement Notation, with 114 Basic Movement
Graphs and Their Explanation. Boston: plays inc., 1975.
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eclectic choreographies of ruth st. denis and ted shawn or the over-stylised
symbolist dance of Vaslav Nijinsky, expressionist dance was established as the new
dance featuring expression in the choreographies and production of rudolf
laban, Mary Wigman, harold Kreuzberg, Valeska Gert, dorothea Alba, Gret
palucca, and Kurt Jooss. expressionism is characterised by the drive to liberate
the body from the mimetic and rhetorical technical constraints associated with
the white ballet. instead of the mediatory role of technique, what is at stake is a
straightforward gesture and bodily motion liberated from hindrance (costume,
ballet slippers, including technical conventions). expressionism allowed for a
form of dilettante work in dance, previously unconceivable.
Neo-AVANt-GArde dANce:
froM trANsGressioN to experiMeNt
Modernist dance associated the disciplinary autonomy and media essentialism
in conceiving and performing dance with the determining deep-seated human
experience of each individual gesture or form of behavior in relation to the
universal truth and essence of human, cosmic, or planetary existence. such
demands for the association of the individual and universal during the late 1940s
and 1950s brought about a radical breach within dance, opened by the American
choreographer Merce cunningham and composer John cage. probably intending
to render the modernist notions of objectivity of dance in more radical terms – dance
as dance and dance for dance’s sake – they broke from the modernist focus on the
autonomy of dance technique and indexed the metaphysical expression employed
by dance to represent the individual in the universal and vice versa. indeed, they
terminated the need on the part of high modernist choreographers and dancers to
verify their formal-aesthetic or formal-artistic research by metaphysical (mythical,
symbolical, archetypal) notions, confronting ideals of human exceptionality and
expressive power communicated by dance with their poetics of indifference. 294
cunningham accomplished a shift from symbolic bodily behavior to an intentional
focus on details or localised sequences of bodily movements. in conceptual terms
the shift implied a turn from dance as a symbolic295 practice (Martha Graham)
to dance as a syntactic296 and pragmatic297 practice (Merce cunningham). in his
294 Moira roth: “the Aesthetic of indifference”, in: Moira roth, Jonthan d. Katz: Difference/
Indifference: Musings on Postmodernism, Marcel Duchamp and John Cage. Amsterdam: G+B Arts
international, 1998, 39.
295 dance as practice of production of meaning.
296 dance as practice of production of formal relations.
297 compare with “social coewography”, in: Bojana cvejić and Ana Vujanović: Public Sphere by
Performance. Berlin: b_books, 2012, 55–75.
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dance pieces cunningham paradoxically associated the notion of the ready made
(reclaiming the non-artistic as artistic) with relieving his dance technique from
metaphorical anticipations.
MiNiMAl dANce: the liMits of dANce –
choreoGrApher As perforMer
ANd perforMer As coNceptuAl Artist
Minimal dance emerged from various disciplinary experiments within the
neo-avant-garde movements of the late 1950s and early 1960s, out of the sharp
radicalisation of cunningham’s research of ‘literal dance techniques’ and his turn to
anti-technique or anti-dance: “No to spectacle no to virtuosity no to transformations
and magic and make-believe no to glamour and transcendency of the star image
no to the heroic no to the anti-heroic no to trash imagery no to involvement of
performer or spectator no to style no to camp no to seduction of spectator by the
wiles of the performer no to eccentricity no to moving or being moved”. 298
of additional importance is the duchampian inf luence on the American modernist
art of Jasper Johns, robert rauschenberg, and robert Morris. it should be noted
that both rauschenberg and Morris took part in dance performances or conceived
dance events. Art happenings also had a certain impact on minimal dance conceived
through association of artistic experiments with non-artistic, e.g. therapeutic
exercise – as featured in the works by Anna halprin. 299 certainly, in the 1960s the
socio-cultural tendencies of sexual emancipation and politisation of everyday life
claimed great importance. Minimal dance aligned with a broader contemporary
critique of modernism in literature (beat poetry, objectivism), sculpture and
painting (minimal art), and (minimal) music. Minimal art, in more general
terms, features the paradoxical attitude towards high aesthetical modernism,
indeed a critique of modernism, modernist essentialism and the metaphysics of
art autonomy, as well as the over-emphasis of modernist procedures of reduction,
in its shift from reduction resulting in an ideal sensuous token into reduction
leading beyond the sensuous – into conceptual, mental, cerebral, intelligible,
political. Minimal art was also informed by the aspiration to reach the literal 300
non-metaphorical and non-symbolical, pertaining to the artist’s body and bodily
enjoyment. Minimal dance claimed reference to minimal post-sculptural and
298 yvonne rainer: “No Manifesto”, in: yvonne rainer: Work 1961–1973. halifax: the press of the
Nova scotia college of Art and design and New york: New york university press, 1974, 51.
299 Anna halprin: “initiations and transformations”, in: The Painted Bride Quarterly 4 (1975), 68–75.
300 cf. Michael fried: “Art and objecthood”, in: Minimal Art, ed. Gregory Battcock. New york: e.p.
dutton & co., inc., 1968, 116–147.
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post-painterly practices, as well as minimal music. on the other hand, minimal
dance featured the relation between choreographers’ and dancers’, namely, dancer-
choreographers’ (as performers’) notions of the body, its motion, and interaction
of bodies and objects in a non-fictional time and space. Minimal dance liberated
the art of dance from the “traditional mimetic and expressive technique” in
emphasizing and elaborating body motion and modes of typical and untypical
behavior pertaining to dance phenomena, the concept of dance and the modernist
dance tradition. dance embraced new movements and motions, processes and
conditions of the body coming from various forms of individual or collective
behavior. Accordingly, the dance artist was no longer disciplinarily designated as a
dancer, but as a performer. in those terms, minimal dance comprised a shift from
dance art to the artistic practice of performing conceptualised bodily processes
and conditions – indeed a form of performance art. it emerged in the context of
the New york experimental venue Judson dance theater301 and soon became an
internationally acknowledged phenomenon of experimental or conceptual dance.
the historical framework identified with minimal dance included, in various
phases, the following choreographers and dancers: yvonne rainer, robert Morris,
simone forti, trisha Brown, steve paxton, Alex hay, deborah hay, Judith dunn,
laura dean, Joan Jonas, lucinda childs and Meredith Monk.
MediA + techNoloGy ANd dANce:
A NArrAtiVe of deVelopMeNt
during the modernist times experiments with the “alternative body”, “artificial
body”, or “body-medium” referred to the futurist 302 designs for mechanical the-
atre, dance and music. for instance, fortunato depero designed costumes made
from plastic in 1916–1917, and those resembling machine bodies for the mechanical
ballet Macchina del 3000 featuring music by franco casavola in 1924. futurism as-
sociated the utopian concept of a machine-constructed body with the entertainer’s
body in the cabaret. cubism and dadaism searched for an “object” as the cen-
terpiece of a stage event. A series of production conceived in-between theatre,
dance, parody musical and performance art – raymond roussel’s Impressions of
Africa (1911); eric satie, pablo picasso, Jean cocteau and Léonide Massine’s Parade
(1917); and satie and francis picabia’s piece Relâche (1924), 303 including fernand
301 sally Banes: Democracy’s Body: Judson Dance Theater, 1962–1964. durham: duke university press,
1993.
302 Giovanni lista: Théâtre Futuriste Italien, vols. 1, 2. lausanne: la cité-l’Age d’homme, 1976.
303 rose lee Goldberg: “surrealist performance: the construction of ruins”, in: Performance – Live
Art 1909 to the Present. london: thames and hudson, 1979, 49–62.
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léger’s film Ballet mécanique (1924), 304 indicated new possibilities of conceiving bal-
let/dance and employing such concepts in different media (e.g. film). the russian
and later soviet constructivist avant-garde 305 displayed a considerable interest in
implementing constructivist principles in building the stage, fashioning the stage
figure and performing the stage event. the utopian notion of a constructed world
appeared in Mikhail Matyushin, Alexei Kruchonykh, and Kazimir Malevich’s opera
Pobeda nad Solncem (Victory over the Sun, 1913). Nikolai foregger staged his Mechan-
ical Dance (1923) featuring a number based on an imitation of “machine transmis-
sion”. the system of Meyerhold’s exercises termed “biomechanics” also conceived
artificial and regulated theatre bodies. in Germany, the new constructivist ballet
developed at the Bauhaus 306 as part of the choreography, stage design, and dance
curricula of oskar schlemmer and his ideas on the synthesis of dance, architecture
and machine through mathematical design and the revitalisation of popular dance
festivities. ludwig hirschfeld-Mack experimented with “coloured lightplays” or
choreographed events in the Bauhaus laboratory for theatre of light. 307
the relation between dance and technology308 presently develops in the context
of postindustrial societies of mass production and communication (exchange and
consumption) of art in the following terms:
(1) technology (computers, cybernetics) is employed in terms of subsidiary
instrumentaria for the realization of concrete dance production – from
technical production and stage design, to articulation of the performance
(dance) and its content (stage action),
(2) dance is conceived and directed i.e. programmed as a media product,
namely, the “original” dance performance does not take place on stage –
it is recorded (film, video) or simulated (computer, internet), screened or
interactively performed as a computer product (cd, Net), and
(3) dance is realised in terms of the interaction between the performer and
his/her audience via computer multimedia technology and Vr (virtual
reality) – entering the realm of the phenomenology of “screens” and “ter-
minals” i.e. cyber technology. 309
304 Malcolm turvey: “the Avant-Garde and the ‘New spirit’: the case of Ballet mécanique”, in:
October 102 (2002), 35–86.
305 Béatrice picon-Vallin: Théâtre juif soviétique. lausanne: La Cité-L’Age d’Homme, 1973.
306 roselee Goldberg: “Bauhaus performance: Art and technology: a New unity”, in: Performance
– Live Art 1909 to the Present, 63–78.
307 Andreas hapkemeyer, peter stasney (eds.): Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack. Bauhäusler und Visionär.
ostfildern: hatje cantz Verlag, 2000.
308 Johannes Birringer: “dancing with technologies”, in: Media & Performance: Along the Border.
Baltimore: the Johns hopkins university press, 1998, 25–101.
309 emil hrvatin: “terminal spectactor”, in: It takes place when it doesn’t. On dance and performance
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coNceptuAl dANce:
AVANt-GArde striViNGs
ANd their reAlisAtioNs
conceptual dance or conceptual dance choreography terms the critical insights
into the deconstructionist practice and simulationist production of institutions,
discourses, phenomena, concepts, and procedures of choreography and dance/
ballet pertaining to the Western art of the 1990s and 2000s. the concept of think-
dance refers to the works of european choreographers, dancers, and performers
Jérôme Bel, Boris charmatz, xavier le roy, thomas lehmen, thomas plischke,
tino sehgal, Magali desbazeille, Meg stuart, Gilles touyard, among others
choreographers and performers Jérôme Bel, Boris charmatz, or xavier le roy
ref lect on the age after poststructuralism and cultural studies. the focus of their
work shifts from immanent questions concerning dance as art, to superficial po-
litical, i.e. discoursive questions concerning dance as an institution of art.
Jérôme Bel performed the decisive attack on the institution of art, changing the
status of dance technique deduced from the binary opposition: technique (mod-
ernism) – anti-technique (avant-garde, neo-avant-garde). the conceptual choreo-
graphic and dance positions of Bel’s works (Nom donné par l’auteur, Jérôme Bel, Le
Dernier Spectacle, Shirtology, The Show Must Go On, all conceived in the 1990s)
are primarily discoursive. the material event of dance draws from the represen-
tation of concepts (of the author – choreographer, dancer, artist), dance objects
as works of art, the signification of performers’ behavior, contextualisations of
popular culture and the dramaturgy of mass exchange and consumption of stage
spectacles. in Jérôme Bel’s choreographies the institution of dance is rendered as
an elusive and dynamic contextual frame of exploration – from creation to obser-
vation. 310 le roy’s choreographic preoccupations are research and analysis-based
in phenomenological terms. they depart from the theoretical and conceptual
completeness of Bel’s spectacles, devoid of the cynical self-referentiality of body
gesturing proclaimed in institutional frameworks as dance. le roy’s positions
imply an open field of representation and designation of the body. his bodies
disclosed to audiences’ gaze are intent on escaping the rational logocentric and ho-
listic structure of the body as an organism in the cartesian mind-body opposition.
they lend themselves to the gaze of the other bodies, as objects, as machines, as
since 1989, eds. Martina hochmuth, Krassimira Kruschkova, Georg schöllhammer. frankfurt am
Main: revolver, 2006, 16–26.
310 Jérôme Bel and Jan ritsema, “their Job is Not to dance, But to Watch other people dancing - if
they dance”, in: ibid., 29-38.
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bodies without organs and as subjects, self-conceptualised and deferred in the course
of the performance.
conceptual works by dance choreographers and performers in the 1990s featured
functions different from those assumed by visual conceptual artists during the
1960s and 1970s. choreographers and dancers dissolved the strata of existentialist
prejudice on what should be a good object of dance in order to disclose new pos-
sibilities of open concepts in dance, indicating a split between the dancing body
conceived as an image (framed gaze), and as live motion (behavior-performing
body). the focus is located on the surface or, figuratively, the skin, as the divide
between the movement and its body. Movement is conceived and emphasised as a
sequence of actualised possibilities inscribed into a dance archaeology of the body.
the audience is incited to watch its own observation. the new conceptually ori-
ented dance art came out in a transition from dance as art into the realm of rep-
resentation and research in visual media. New dance choreographies may rather
be expected in a gallery space then in the venue of a designated box-like theatre
stage. for instance, tino sehgal’s Untitled (2001) features not merely as a dance
performance, but as an imaginary museum of dance. Sand table by Magali desba-
zeille and Meg stuart/damaged Goods (2000) reduces the movement to touching
an image of a body. in Programme court avec essorage by Gilles touyard and Boris
charmatz (2001) the body is literally manipulated by the work cycles of a wash-
ing machine. such choreographic tactics aim at proclaiming the departure from
essentialism, technicism, and aestheticism in dance, towards the conceptual criti-
cal and deconstructionist textual maneuvering with historical and contemporary
discourses of dance as art in the age of culture.
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15
discourses ANd dANce
An introduction to the Analysis of
the Resistance of philosophy and theory towards dance
There is no greater enemy to the human body than being.
Antonin Artaud (1947)
iNtroductioN
the aim of this study is to show that the practices, histories, and currencies of dance
in relation to culture, society, and politics must be open 311 to critical and analytical
debate. And that debate must be free from the “traps of anecdotal narratives” and
thereby theorised as a critical and analytical discourse with enough abstraction to
be applied to the “epistemological critique” of the knowledge of contemporary
dance. that means that, under the specific conditions of a transitional culture and
sociality, under which i speak and write, i am trying to derive a theorisation of
dance, art, culture, society, and politics as Althusserian material theoretical practices:
so a practice of theory does exist; theory is a specific practice which acts
upon its own object and ends in its own product: a knowledge. considered
in itself, any theoretical work presupposes a given raw material and some
“means of production” (the concepts of the ‘theory’ and the way they are
used: the method). 312
the derivation of a “hardcore theorisation” described above is contingent on
realising that in the transitional society of contemporary serbia, discourse is open
to discussion in the hybrid interpretative fields of conceptualising the production,
exchange, and consumption of dance.
When i speak and write of dance, a number of parallel but rival points of departure
are there for me:
(1) dance is a performing art;
(2) as a performing art, dance is not necessarily posited today only as
autonomous live performing, but also as media and post-media performing;
311 Michael Baldwin, charles harrison and Mel ramsden: “Art history, Art criticism and
explanation”, in: Art History 4/4 (december 1981), 432–456.
312 louis Althusser: “on the Materialist dialectic”, in: For Marx, trans. Ben Brewster. london:
Verso, 1996, 173.
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42 provisional salta ensemble: Coreography 1, photo dance, 2015
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
43 provisional salta ensemble: Coreography 2, photo dance, 2015
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
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(3) as a performance art, dance is often no longer a function of ‘dance as art’,
but of dance as a culturally intervening, that is, activist practice.
furthermore, saying that dance is a performing art means that what is at stake is an
art practice based on the structural and phenomenal articulation, de-articulation,
or the appropriation of the event in the ideal “space” of theatre, that is, in the un-
ideal spaces of cultural and social relations, i.e. in contradictory and conf licting
contexts.
As a performing art, dance may be identified as live art whenever it is set, presented,
or performed by living, behavioural, mobile bodies in the contexts of art, culture,
and society. As a media performance, dance signifies a live art mediated through
mechanical, electronic, or digital media, as well as a “live” intervening on the
articulation, that is, on the choreography of movement within the media practice
and system of communication and mediation (film, television, digital systems,
communication networks). As a post-media practice, dance signifies an important
change that leads from choreography and dance as the creating of “sensuous
aesthetic value” to the conceptual field of reconsidering and researching the
status of dance as an art or a material cultural practice. 313 it is about transforming
art from creating in the traditional or new media into a field of exploring new
production and postproduction relations with media or phenomena within social
contradictions, conf licts, and paradoxes. the post-media and post-production
character of contemporary dance makes it “ontologically” free from the modernist
conceptions of the radicalisation of the aesthetic evolution of live performance
(yvonne rainer, trisha Brown), as well as from the postmodernist conceptions
of plural media work with dance and representation, that is, the recreation of the
performance of dance by performing media models (pina Bausch, Anne terese de
Keersmaeker). dance thereby becomes a practice, similar to any other practice of
art in the age of culture 314 – which is not bound to the phenomenalisation of its own
313 conceptual or choreographic dance is an open term for the critical examinations, deconstructive
practices, and simulational production of institutions, discourses, phenomena, concepts, and
procedures of choreography and dance in the Western art of the 1990s and 2000s. the idea of
conceptual dance (think-dance) concerns the work of european choreographers, dancers, and
performers, such as Jérôme Bel, Boris charmatz, xavier le roy, thomas lehmen, tom plischke,
tino sehgal, Magali deshazeille, Meg stuart, and Gilles touyard.
314 Art in the age of culture is an indeterminate indexical identification for art after the fall of the
Berlin Wall and the reversal from the specific symptom retro-practices in the art of the 1980s and the
early 1990s towards the establishment of the art of the new global epoch. the new art in the age
of culture resides in its emerging from the centred autonomies of the macro-political order into
an art with conspicuous cultural functions in the new reconfiguration of media and actuality. Art
in the age of culture emerges with the production of global empires, from the usA to the eu, in
a post-cold War age.
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medium or disciplinary identity, but to the function of performance in relation to
the history of dance, the cultural paradigm of dance, that is, social contradiction
in the altered world of the transitional globalisms of the 21st century’s first decade.
on the one hand, this is about work that assumes the demand that the dancer
intervene “apologetically” or “critically” in a given cultural or multicultural
milieu, whereby dance is posited as a field of the appropriation of culture (for
instance, Akram Khan’s multicultural dance and lisa Bufano’s dance of the
handicapped). By contrast, activist dance tends towards a mutation of dance as
an art into a field of everyday cultural and social contradictions. dance itself
then cancels itself as an art practice and becomes an instrumental practice, which
makes only limited references to the history or cultures of dance.
dANce ANd theory: discourses ANd AppArAtuses
like any other art, dance is entirely within the domain of theory, even when
choreographers and dancers “believe” that they are outside of theory, outside of
discourse, in the pure domain of technique, affect, or communication. this is not
just about a body set in motion opposite to and outside of writing, but a body that
is always covered or implicated, that is, mediated by the traces of writing about
dance, body, space, movement, time, performance, theatre, indirect gestural
narration, mediation of sense, meaning, sign, value, the object of enjoyment, a
body that is a surplus of value, meaning, and sense in relation to the everyday body.
the stimulating tension between body and writing: body-text and écriture-as-
text are, again, always already écriture within the writing that grants something
(a certain bodily movement) the status of dance as art within the culture.
in addition, by écriture or writing i do not mean the act of writing itself – leaving
a graphic trace that refers to language or worlds beyond language – but a genesis
or only relocating the performance of that which is on the other side of language,
which at once consists of bodies that construct figures on the stage or screen.
But bodies also make all the possible geographically situated histories and our
choices in them. that still means that the effects of language or the effects of
the body relate to the language of linguistics, which is merged with the affects
in the infrastructures of society, that is, with its apparatuses. dance is therefore
not any movement of and by the body, although any movement of and by the
body may become dance in relation to an apparatus and our positions in it (or
in them), regardless of the “morphology (and its techniques) of that movement”.
An apparatus then is a heterogeneous set that includes virtually anything, non-
linguistic, bodily, kinetic, linguistic, behavioural phenomena and their “solid”
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contexts: discourses, buildings, institutions, contracts, customs, habits, and
even theoretical and philosophical propositions. the apparatuses, in which the
identification of movement as dance and of dance as a social practice occurs, have
concrete strategic and tactical functions, which are situated in relation to powers
and the knowledge of powers.
one may derive two characteristics, directing but confronting claims about the
relationship between dance and theory:
(1) dance precedes theory, and
(2) theory precedes dance.
the first claim. this means that beyond the verbal, dance is determined by a
significantly, characteristically, and predominantly bodily movement. the body is
in an artificial and specifically constructed motion in relation to the music (as basis /
ground/, accompaniment /guard/, or adornment /ornament/) on a defined and restricted,
that is, framing stage in a defined duration—for instance: Nijinsky, L’Après-midi
d’un faune (1912) or Martha Graham, Primitive Mysteries (1931). Moreover, bodily
movement emerges from the choreographer or dancer’s intuitions – her feel for the
music, space, and time in relation to the movements of her own body. the concept
of “emergence” is linked to the polyvalent terms of intuition and the truth of
being (Mary Wigman, Martha Graham). in dance, the bodily act (motion, gesture,
movement, behaviour) emerges from its performance out of the dancer’s intuitions
regarding the given space, time, and music, or other bodies (Merce cunningham,
The Septet, 1953). Any of those factors may be sidelined, or stressed to the degree
of a rhetorical figure. in such an understanding of dance, theory comes after the
fact, as a conceptualisation of technique and then it is a matter of a poetics of dance.
the poetics of dance may be a stricter or a softer, descriptive or normative, pro-
theoretical articulation of the techniques of the performance of dance and the mode
of being of dance as an artwork (the writings of isadora duncan, rudolf von laban,
Mary Wigman). the critical theory of dance arises – still later – as description,
explication, interpretation, or discussion of the dance work and its historic and
geographic, or stylistic identifications, or the possibilities of interpreting the dance
work in the framework of the disciplines and theories of the humanities – it is
an “epistemological break” that plays out in the application of poststructuralist,
feminist, and cultural-studies theories to contemporary dance. the writings of
sally Banes, Johannes Biringer, cynthia J. Novack and others are a case in point.
the second claim. this means that dance is always-already within a discoursive
grasp of bodily movement, that it is a part of the most complex possibilities of
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its apparatuses. dance is born in the midst of a “language” or an “atmosphere
of language”, as well as of a language that pledges the unverbalisability and
unsayability of the dancing body regarding verbal language. the body is in an
artificial and constructed movement in relation to the music (as the basis /ground/,
accompaniment /guard/, adornment /ornament/ or as proposition /suggest/) 315 on
a defined and circumscribed – framing – stage (space) for a defined duration,
which is established, performed, and received in the specific institution of dance.
there is no dance or music without the “framing” institution and its constituent
discourses, through which every individual dance begins to relate to other
individual texts of culture or meta-texts of culture. dance and music are separate
today—for instance, the practices developed by yvonne rainer, trisha Brown,
robert Morris, or Bruce Nauman in the 1960s, or Meg stuart, Jérôme Bel, Boris
charmatz or xavier le roy, iztok Kovač from the late 1990s. they do not
necessarily relate to each other. still, the non-relationship of music and dance
represents an important identity of the contemporary choreographic creating of
“dance as an art of bodily movement”. Moreover, bodily movement does not spring
from the choreographer or dancer’s intuitions – her unverbalised “immediate”
feel for the music, space, and time, or movement without music, but from the
conceptual, poetic, and ideological horizon in which she is found, formed, through
which she developed, or which she critiques, destroys, deconstructs, or restores
and appropriates anew – Mårten spångberg has developed an example of such a
strategy. the discoursive practices of the institutions, through which the world of
the dancer, choreographer, composer, but also spectator/listener is constructed, is
a certain conceptual, poetic, and ideological horizon. that “world” is not an image
of the real world, but an instance of an apparatus: a case of a complex situational
relationship for the event. furthermore, “discoursive practices” connotes the
extraction of a field of objects by defining a perspective for the object of cognition,
through determining the form for the development of concepts and theories.
discoursive practices are not simply ways of producing discourses for or through
the apparatuses. they are shaped in technical meetings, in institutions, in patterns
of behaviour, in various types of transmission and diffusion, in various pedagogic
forms that at once impose and maintain them. in such a context of thinking,
intuition labels the “tacit knowledge” that practitioners, theorists, and spectators
of dance adopt, share, and accept as self-evident. in such an understanding of
dance, theory proceeds, or is at least synchronous with, the conceptualisation of
technique and in that case it is a matter of a discoursive and then also a theoretical
framework for a poetics and practice of dance. the critical theory of dance as
315 for the representational aspects of music cf. Jenifer robinson: “Music as representation Art”, in:
What is Music? An Introduction to the Philosophy of Music, ed. philip Alperson. university park, pA:
the pennsylvania state university press, 1987, 165–192.
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description, explication, interpretation, analysis, deconstruction, or discussion of
a dance work and its historic and geographic identifications is a nexus of discourses
that surround the dance work and its affective interactions with other theories
of the world of art and culture. the theory and practice of dance are a jagged
knot that is hard to untangle because apparatuses are not just the “esoterics of
discourses” or “intensity of discourses”, but also an array, mixture, multitude that
fundamentally alter the real relationship of the one to the other regarding dance.
two cases of dance practice are discussed below:
(1) from the standpoint of the “work/life”—the theoretic-anthropological
position, and
(2) from the standpoint of the “representation in culture” / “representation of
culture” – the theoretic-textological position.
politics ANd BAllet/dANce:
the differeNce BetWeeN the BIOS POLITIKOS ANd
VITA ACTIVA (AN ANAlysis of ModerN ANd
postModerN dANce forMAts)
According to hannah Arendt, 316 the difference between the Greek term bios
politikos and its medieval rendition into vita activa is that bios politikos explicitly
signified the domain of human relations, emphasising the action, praxis, needed
for its realisation, whereas vita activa signifies all three basic human activities:
work, production, and action. if one applies this “formula” to the understanding
of the relations of politics, society, and the arts, in this case dance, one may then
arrive at the following scheme:
Basic anthropological scheme one
Bios politikos Vita activa
the order of the social relation labor work/production practice
this scheme is “anthropological” because it begins with the term life as the basic –
ontologically assumed – condition of the “human”. the human and life are linked
in that which may be called the form of life. furthermore, according to Giorgio
Agamben, the form of life denotes a life that cannot be separated from its forms, in
316 hannah Arendt: “the term Vita Activa”, in: The Human Condition. chicago: university of
chicago press, 1958, 12–17.
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other words, a life that cannot be bare life. 317 following Arendt, “labor” in scheme
one above denotes the activities that pertain to the biological potential and
process of the human body, which spontaneously grows, which is in metabolic
processes, and which, ultimately, disappears. the basic condition of life is labor.
“Work” or “production” denotes the activities that belong in the domain of the
unnaturalness of human existence, which is not built into life itself in the biological
sense. production enables and secures the “artificial world” of objects, different
from the natural environment and life processes in the biological sense. hannah
Arendt stresses that every individual life is circumscribed by its own biological
limitations. the world in which life, as well as production, unfolds outlives and
transcends every individual human life. the basic condition of production is the
existence of the world and, it may be added, the attainment of the alienation in
the worldly. “practice” is the activity/performance that directly plays out among
people, without the mediation of the life of objects. practice is possible as practice
by virtue of the fact that a certain life form on this planet emerges as the life of the
human being among other people. in other words, practice is the activity whereby
human interrelations are established, which means “society”. that is why practice
is an essential feature of the political, but also of art.
in the next step of understanding the “political”, one may introduce a rather
specific relation between “dance as art” and “politics”. dance is then viewed as
an event in relation to the events of the order of human-social relations, the work
of the body (the creative animatedness of the body), production of the object
(work of art, dance), and action as an intervention in a singular social relation (the
primary functions and meaning of dance work).
derived structural social scheme two
the order of the social Work production Action in the social
relation relation
function of dance in the mode of bodily the relation between the potential of
society creation and perception the dominant the intervention or
of the dance work production of material engagement of dance in
value in society and the society
mode of creating and
performing the dance
work in society
317 Giorgio Agamben: “form-of-life”, in: Radical Thought in Italy: A Potential Politics, eds. paolo Virno
and Michael hardt, trans. cesare casarino. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 1996, 151.
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in relation to the order of the social relation, that is, politics, arises the question as to
whether dance as an art has any functions and how those functions may be demanded,
received, and executed. if human life is understood as a significant separation of bios
from zoé, it follows that dance always has a specific function in separating “human
life” from “life in general”. on the other hand, the long process of the development
of positing and therefore also interpreting ballet/dance318 as a unified, social, and
aesthetically situated practice – for instance, the tradition of white ballet: George
Balanchine, Mikhail Baryshnikov – has been establishing itself since modernity
towards the “modern age”. those practices are devoid of any obvious function, in the
field of a sensuous perception that must be without any specific practical interest if it
is indeed to be an aesthetic appreciation of art, that is, ballet. As an aesthetic practice,
dance is not supposed to have a practical function. But is this really so? in the history of
Western dance, one may recognise four instances of the ‘functions’ of dance:
derived structural scheme three: society – dance
the function of the function of presenting the function of the autonomy of
representing, that is, the individual/singular performing micro- or dance or its lack
presenting the societal versus societal totality macro-identification of function as the
function of dance
Mimesis catharsis and/or expression performance the immanence of
(performativity) singularity
philosophic and philosophic and aesthetic cultural studies philosophic and
aesthetic platonism Aristotelianism aesthetic Kantianism
the political plane the plane of the individual the micro-political the aesthetic plane
plane
in the first instance, ballet/dance has the obvious function of representing/
presenting society. in that case, presenting society is given as a “generality” (a political
idea, concept, or stance) that may be presented and represented with a singular dance
sample, that is, a dance work. in the discourse of traditional Western aesthetics,
one might say that singularity renders generality sensuously presentable.
sensuous presentability therefore emerges as mimesis (mimicking, imitation) of
the perceivable or real world. in this case, ballet/dance is viewed as a function of
the political, which means that the truth of ballet/dance, in the platonic sense, is
the truth of a general or abstract political idea: the royalist (the dancing of louis
xiV’s france, court dances and ballet as an effect of court performance practices),
318 in this section i am addressing ballet and dance. i am using the concept of dance as a synchronic
term that comprises ballet as type, species, or genre. At the same time, i view ballet diachronically,
as the art of the canonically formalised staged dancing in the modern tradition, and dance as a
development or revolution in regards to ballet of the long 20th century.
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the bourgeois (the late 19th-century paris opera dance school), the proletarian
(the 1920s working-class and theatre associations of Weimar Germany), and the
consumerist idea (the appropriation and reconstruction of avant-garde and neo-
avant-garde dancing that Mikhail Baryshnikov has performed since the 1990s).
in the second instance, ballet/dance is a function of presenting the individual as
the singular event of the human body’s movement against societal totality, that
is, the generality or universality of society. in that case, universality appears as
the effect of an “empty signifier” that may represent entirely different singular
events with their distinguishing signifieds, towards an always absent generality.
A singular event that is established against sociality is a sort of break or rupture in
sociality, which transpires identify in the choreographer/dancer’s creative act or
the spectator/listener’s receptive absorption into the singularity and immanence
of the dance work. that break or rupture, which pertains to a singular individual
or, less often, to a micro-collective group of individuals, is traditionally labelled
in the Aristotelian fashion as “catharsis” and/or, in more modern parlance,
expression. 319 it is an interactive event with a ballet/dance work that results in
a singular individual event of perception that is not subject to the social order
(custom, law, symbolical order, cliché). the breach of the custom/law in the self-
realisation of perception is the fulfilment of the truth of catharsis/expression of
the dance or ballet work (rudolf von laban, Mary Wigman, Martha Graham).
in the third instance, ballet/dance has the wholly determinate function of
performing the micro- or macro-identification of the choreographer/dancer or
spectator/listener with social and cultural clichés, that is, the accepted models
of community and self-recognition. in the first instance, pertaining to the
representation of society, it is a case of political idealities (ideas, abstractions,
general stances, values). in the third instance, these are pragmatic representations
of community or self-recognition in specific cultures and cultural practices,
within historical society. roughly speaking, one may point out that self-
recognition in sensuously presentable representations of community (race,
gender, class, generation) is a specific practice of performing identity in dance.
the performance of identity occurs—for instance, according to cultural studies
– in relation to culturally assumed or posited, sensuously presentable clichés.
in certain historical periods or specific geographic and cultural localities, what
we call “the art of dance” has performed the function of the identification of
the subject, recognition, self-declaration, and demonstrative show of belonging
to a real or fictional community. there are many examples, ranging from the
319 Nelson Goodman: “expression”, in: Languages of Art. london: oxford university press, 1969,
85–95.
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early 20th-century russian ballet to Martha Graham’s Wild West dances and the
multicultural practices of today (pina Bausch, Akram Khan and others).
in the fourth instance, dance is based in the concept of its autonomy as an art. the
modern concept of art, formed in the 18th century era of the enlightenment, was
based in a profound reconfiguration of social life, in other words, in the radical
specialisations of human labour, production, and activity, under the pragmatic and
utilitarian conditions of the advance of capitalism. A new field, “ostensibly free from
society”, was posited in the domain of professional distinctions and labelled with
the newly coined term – “the fine arts” – in contrast to the Greek concept “techné”
(skill, craft). dance, that is, ballet, was understood as a “fine art”. it emerged that
an important quality of ballet/dance was the aesthetic, that is, “in a post-Kantian
wording”: an autonomy that is disinterested with regards to utilitarian, productive,
or social work. the problems inherent to the conceptions of autonomy were already
observed by Adorno, for instance, in his discussions of absolute music, when he
pointed out that the function of music is to be without function. 320 if an important modern
feature of art is to be autonomous, that means that in a specific society – the bourgeois
capitalist society – it does have the social function of not having a function in the
pragmatic social sense. But if art has at least a single function, and if that function
is not to have a social function in the everyday, then it is not autonomous. how to
solve this paradox? A response that might be advanced regarding the paradox of
the autonomy of art is that the function of the autonomy of ballet/dance regarding
society and politics is feasible only as a political decision to grant autonomy within
the social practices of interest. for anything to be autonomous art or, to put it more
specifically, for ballet/dance to be autonomous regarding society and politics, “it”
must be politically derived as an autonomous field of action in society. Besides, the
autonomy of ballet/dance in relation to culture is not the same kind of autonomy
that culture has in relation to society. the autonomy of dance/ballet in relation to
culture, therefore also to society, is idealised to the incontrovertible. the autonomy
of culture in relation to society is relative and contingent, that is, controvertible and
problematic in every respect.
scheme four presents a conception by which the relation between the autonomous
and political “dance” is presented and interpreted as a binary opposition of
obvious opposites. 321 the dance work is either a subset of the domain of autonomous
320 theodor W. Adorno: “function”, in: Introduction to the Sociology of Music, trans. e.B. Ashron. New
york: continuum, 1989, 41.
321 charles harrison, fred orton: “introduction: Modernism, explanation and Knowledge”, in:
Modernism, Criticism, Realism: Alternative Contexts for Art, eds. charles harrison and fred orton.
london: harper and row, 1984, xi–xxviii.
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art, or a subset of the domain of dance as political art (e.g. ballets from the chinese
cultural revolution). the opposition of the dance-political and the politico-
dance is posited as fundamental for the modernist development of the distinction
between the status of the high, autonomous and that of the “low”, political art
of dancing.
the derived distinction between autonomous and political art:
scheme four
the hypothetical refocus from the dancer and spectator’s body to
the dance-choreographic artwork “itself”
dance as autonomous art dance as political art
By contrast, scheme four points to the “hegemonic” modernist view that all art
is autonomous with regards to society and politics. such “absolutely autonomous
dance art” develops by its respective genres, that is, by different thematisations
or presentations of references. the genres differ. Besides, one of the substantive
demands that are imposed on dance is to perform a dance, whose extra-artistic
reference or theme is: politics and sociality. in other words, a formalist assumption is
posited, whereby certain dance works created within the context of the autonomy
of art may present the “theme of politics” or the “theme of sociality”. in terms of
their “behavioural content”, which represents their “verbal content”, they fulfil
their political function, whereas in terms of their formal compositional features
they realise their autonomous artistic and aesthetic values.
the analysis and discussion above reveal that the conceptions of the “autonomy
of the aesthetic” and the “autonomy of dance as art” show and confirm some
important features of the art of dance. for anything to qualify as dance art, it must
be an autonomous, singular presence and phenomenality of an artwork aimed
at the aesthetic distribution of sensuous perception. But this arrangement has a
rather limited history, which spans across from the late 18th century to the mid
1960s. during that short history, the conception of the autonomy of, for instance,
the art of dance, was universalised in the appropriation of different cultural
“dance artefacts” from the history of Western civilisation, ranging from antiquity
to the renaissance, and from different geographic localities (Africa, Asia, south
America). the renaming of ancient Greek or African dance artefacts into ‘the
art of dance’ was a consequence of the hegemony of the european culture of the
enlightenment, which transpired not only in the extraordinary development of
philosophic and theoretic thought, but also in the colonialist, economic-political
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domination of european culture. it may be pointed out, then, that immanuel
Kant’s conception of “the disinterestedness of the aesthetic judgement” became
the anticipatory foundation of the modern thinking of art not only with its
philosophic “forcefulness”, but also with the military, political, and economic
domination of the West and its culture. it is as if it were an impact that might
be metaphorically named with the expression “the mutual action of Kant and
cannon” on the modern world.
culturAl studies ANd dANce
dANce ANd culturAl texts: issues of ideNtity
cultural studies are being posited today in a number of interpretative and
perspective directions regarding the strategies and tactics of contemporary dance:
(1) towards opening the Western paradigm of dance to the effects and
practices of non-european dance traditions – extending to the exotic and
then intercultural, multicultural, transcultural, and nomadic dance,
(2) towards a theory of complex (heterogeneous, poly- or multi-centred/
decentred) systems of bodily expression and presentation; in other words,
the world today is viewed as a global system (an integrating, but not yet
integrated system) that is plurally determined by mutually incomparable
and un-coexistent geographic and historic cultures,
(3) towards a constructivist and critical theory of identities (racial, ethnic,
gender, generational, political, professional, cultural, etc.) – identity is
viewed not as a given necessity, but as a constructed or produced order of
ideas (representations),
(4) towards a dominant discourse of the world after the collapse of the cold
War division of the world, which means, in common parlance, towards
the ruling globalist ideology of the world after the fall of the Berlin Wall,
and-or
(5) towards developing specific studies or theories of specific systems and
practices of the contemporary world (women’s, queer, postcolonial studies),
which would offer interpretations or discussions of gender identities in
dance.
in the following lines i will be relying on the assumptions of the constructivist
and critical cultural studies that have been developed through the deconstruction
of the sociological studies of ballet and dance.
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“the soul”, “feeling”, “the heart” are romanticism’s names for the body. 322 But
the body is not simply present here and now; it is always-already a manifold,
multiplied figure (heterogeneous, polymorphic, plural, metastasised) that hides
(or only promises to reveal) its corporeality in different, culturally determined
identities. I would like to see, touch, hear, smell, taste, feel THIS body itself – but
every time [...] every time, instead of the “body itself ” of my expectations, there is a body
constructed through the workings of the mechanisms and powers of culture – in fact, I am
always confronted by figures that conceal the body. the working of culture is revealed
precisely in the deferral of the body by means of the mechanisms of symbolic
and imaginary mediation (concealment, censorship, suppression). i can therefore
think contemporary dance as a material, productive, figurative model and a model
of figures-texts that are offered within complex multimedia discourses of culture
(of the dynamism and tension of the global-local, marginal-central-dominant,
public-private). only in some radical cases does the body burst through the
figure’s membrane (for instance, in yvonne rainer and Jérôme Bel, or in iztok
Kovač and Janez Janša project Falcon!).
the dancing body is introduced into the rhetorical (mediating and reinforcing)
namings or symbolically redirecting situatings of the body in and from culture.
contemporary dance shows that there is no body outside of culture, that is, outside
of the constitutive procedures of the construction of identity, although there are
ideological (political, poetic) mechanisms that select, name, and identify certain
bodies as the precisely and uniquely ideal-bodies-themselves or as universal-
abstract-bodies. those are constructions of specific Western hegemonic cultures
(of antiquity, the renaissance, bourgeois realism and modernism). the dancing
body is not an image of a body identity in culture, but one of the mechanisms of
the constitution and performance of identity in culture, therefore also of culture
itself. in other words, it is not as though the body were in culture (as a potato might
be in a pot), but rather that the body and culture construct and constitute each
other through their mutual relations. i can therefore think dance as an effect of
strategy and tactics, that is, as a way to represent the body between “entertainment”
(the consumption of free time: Jérôme Bel), “enjoyment” ( jouissance) (the economy
of desire/longing: Keersmaeker), and “the construction of different identities”
(ranging from rainer, Keersmaeker, and forsythe, to Bel, charmatz, and le roy),
in the one and-or any, but always determinate social order of communication,
expression, presentation, constitution, exchange, and change of corporeal-
behavioural sense and meaning. the body’s representative is the figure: a symbolic or
imaginary, but always material gap between the idealised, metaphysically centred
un-literality of the relationship between the meaning and expression of the body
322 Barthes: “rasch”, 308.
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44 Janez Janša & iztok Kovač: Falcon!, dance, 2013
photo: Nada Zgank
courtesy Janez Janša, iztok Kovač, Nada Zgank
45 Janez Janša & iztok Kovač: Falcon!, dance, 2013
photo: Nada Zgank
courtesy Janez Janša, iztok Kovač, Nada Zgank
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46 Janez Janša & iztok Kovač: Falcon!, dance, 2013
photo: Miha fras
courtesy Janez Janša, iztok Kovač, Miha fras
47 Janez Janša & iztok Kovač: Falcon!, dance, 2013
photo: Miha fras
courtesy Janez Janša, iztok Kovač, Miha fras
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in a specific context. the dancing figure materialises the gap between the ideal
and phenomenal behaviour of the dancer. dance in contemporary culture arises
as a plural order of figures-in-motion that disclose the heterogeneous and plural
evidence of their passing through different cultural identities. every figure of
contemporary dance (for instance, in pina Bausch’s Two Cigarettes in the Dark from
1994, or William forsythe’s The Loss of Small Detail from 1991, or Jérôme Bel’s
The Show Must Go On! from 2000) is, to use Jameson’s terminology, a “cognitive
mapping”323 of the crossing and confronting of “images” from the surrounding
emergent social reality. outside of behavioural performance, social reality does
not exist. cognitive mapping is a mapping that must be unpacked through a series of
concepts that link the physical and the social in articulating the complex relations
between the global and the local (the universal and the particular or marginal,
which penetrates the universal, thus turning it into the specific). pina Bausch’s
world is a “model” of european late capitalism and an eclectic, quotation-collage-
composite post-historical or parahistorical postmodernism. it is an eclectic post-
historicism, in which dance and theatre are linked in a multilayer narrative text
of incomplete behavioural stories. forsythe’s world is a “model” of unstable and
nomadic “cynical pictures” of identity within the synchrony of ballet/dance, in
the penetration of mass culture demands into the elite high-culture institutions of
white ballet or the autonomous dance of modernism. forsythe’s cynicism is a slip
out of the ballet fetishisation of the ballet/dance technique, in the name of a body
politics and a politics of a behaviourality caught in the jaws of exceptionality and
the everyday. Bel’s world is a “model” of a culture that pertains to the nomadic
trans-tactics of subverting global liberalism and the high-art aesthetics of
modernism and postmodernism. Bel works on conceptualising the performance
of technique and thereby refocuses away from the poetic logic of the disinterested
techniques of performing ballet/dance to the politics and the interestedness of
every technique of performative behaviour. All these worlds are part of the map
of late capitalism after the fall of the Berlin Wall, although they are, with their
specific differences, an index of a different/dissolved position within the actuality
of a great (Western) macro-paradigm of production, exchange, reception, and
consumption of cultural identity. dance conceptualism (that of Bel, le roy,
charmatz) stems not from conceptualisations of the aesthetic reductions of dance
behaviourality (as in early rainer, or Brown, or early Keersmaeker), but from the
deconstruction of ballet/dance technique 324 through a reversal from “technique”,
323 colin Maccabe: “preface” and fredric Jameson: “introduction”, in: The Geopolitical Aesthetic:
Cinema and Space in the World System. Bloomington: indiana university press, 1995, xiv–xvi, 3.
324 What i mean is that in any discipline, including dance, behind technique there stands a certain
conceptual (poetical, ideological, theoretical) apparatus. i am adopting this conclusion from
theoretical psychoanalysis (lacan: “As far as i am concerned, i would assert that the technique
cannot be understood, nor therefore correctly applied, if the concepts on which it is based are
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as a disinterested creative activity, to a para- or quasi-technique-politics or
technique-as-economimesis, that is, as a sign of a conceptualised behaviourality
in an open-media and culturally circumscribed world, in which the tactics of
the design and organisation of behaviour as a symptom of social representations
supplant the techniques of creativity. in other words, the realisations of Bel,
xavier, and charmatz emerge as poetically centred within ideology and its
discourses of “art in the age of culture”. By contrast, the works of Anne terese de
Keersmaeker are conceived in the doubleness of an eclectic postmodernism’s elitist
hyper-aestheticism (it is all in perfect technical-technological performing order)
and the locating of sub-textual references towards issues of cultural identity
(gender, macro-culture, production, exchange, consumption of values). in Rosas
danst Rosas, behind a perfectly centred “discourse” of hyper-aestheticism, there
are certain stakes of identity construction: (1) body speech (the construction of
the dance figure/s), which are figures after the “death of the subject” – we are
watching and listening to alienated figures outside of the domain of psychological
motivations; in fact, these are figures of late capitalism’s mass-culture media
images and (2) body speech (the construction of the dance figure/s), which are
figures of the construction of an inter-figurative relation (seduction, attraction,
proposal, rejection, elusion, approach, expectation) among female identities (the
relation of two women, the relation within a world of women, the possibility
of centring female behaviour as the “core” of desire/longing). in other words,
the dancers of Rosas danst Rosas do not represent the Juliets, ophelias, swans,
Kareninas and the like, nor any ideal ballet or dance bodies; rather, they are
bodies found in the figurable contextualising of specific behaviourality, and that
is dance. it is no longer about expressing identity, but constructing identity and
its differentiations, nuances. Both identities (the late-capitalist and the female) are
material constructions based on the procedures of performing the figure in the
position of the subject (late capitalism) and of performing female behaviourality
in the position of existential or psychological motivation (the female identity at
the moment when the critical mass of women’s labour achieves domination on the
artistic and other public stages of Western cultures). Rosas danst Rosas is a dance
construct of female identity in late capitalism, close to the construct of female
identity in the novel and the sitcom Sex and the City. Both cases are about pointing
to the establishment of the relation between the public and the private in female
behaviourality of late-capitalist (mass-media, consumerist, alienated) society.
ignored”) and take it into dance theory. cf. Jacques lacan: “the function and field of speech and
language in psychoanalysis”, in: Jacques lacan: écrits: A Selection, trans. Alan sheridan. london
and New york: routledge, 1977, 43.
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coNclusioN: episteMoloGicAl BreAK or
the spectAculArisAtioN of the iNVisiBle
the earlier discussion has pointed to the status and functions of dance from the
standpoint of “labour/life” (the theoretic-anthropological position) and that of
“representation in culture” / “representation of culture” (the theoretic-textological
position). however different and indeed competing on the battle or market fields of
contemporary theory, aesthetics, and philosophy of art and culture, these two
positions point to a significant symptom, which is that the meaning and value
of ballet, i.e. dance, has essentially changed. the epistemological break of the
potentiality of the meaning and value of dance is no longer found in “technical
skill itself ”, or in “virtuosity”, that is, in the immediate, spontaneous – “sincere”
– expressivity of the body set in motion on- or offstage, nor is it found in the
desire for the “exclusively novel” in the dance or performance experiment. the
epistemological potential of the “break” is revealed, choreographically set, and
performatively executed in the political confrontations of the liberally individualised,
democratically assumed, or totalitarianly collectivised body, as well as in apologetic,
critical, or subversive contemporary myths that are indeterminately functional in
terms of political correctness or cultural fascinations and obsessions: uncontrolled
powers, economic crises, environmental disasters, institutional conspiracies, real
or fictional human rights, open/closed markets, globalised life, cloned life, dis-
alienated humanity, market-situated lives, as well as critical self-consciousness.
the art of dance-performance, aimed at subverting power, thus can be issued as a
singular event within a social relation, as a critical, engaged, activist, action practice.
the art of performing is aimed at destroying or derealising the event inside sociality,
whether that event concerns elite practices in high art or alternative practices in
popular culture. Action practice is founded on performing a personal and direct,
most often ethically, politically, existentially, or behaviourally provocative act,
gesture, or form of behaviour in any micro- or macro-social relation whatsoever.
engaged practice entails the significant decision on the artist’s part to take, with
her art work or existence, an uncertain and critical role in social conflicts and
confrontations with repressive power, i.e. with politics imposed from above.
Activist 325 practice in and/or with art signifies a practice-oriented conceptualised
operative project, that is, an artistic intervention in culture and society that bears
political, which also means social or cultural, consequences. engaged, activist, or
action practice as subversion of social power starts bottom-up (from the people, from
the margin, from self-organised sociality, etc.), as a singular event. those practices
325 Aldo Milohnić: “Artivism”, trans. olga Vuković, in: Maska 1–2/90–91 (2005), 15–25.
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are aimed at hierarchical structures of power in society, at provoking, destroying,
or derealising them. provoking means a relatively “safe” violating or challenging
(taunting, problematising) of symbolic norms and discourses of political power, for
instance, in a dance act and choreographic-performative stance. destruction means
a singular event – rupture – that demolishes a symbolic or concrete order of relations
in society. destruction is an activity that is established and developed in the tradition
of historical avant-gardes and neo-avant-gardes – whereas in contemporaneity it
has to be looked for. derealisation signifies more complex sets of dance or cultural
activities that are aimed at taking away sense/reason, legitimacy, or significance
of effect in certain social practices, first and foremost in the practices of didactics
and repression, that is, practices of performing everyday life in the manifestations
of social power. Artistic subversions of power emerge as an exit – one might say:
transcendence – of the artistic itself into the domain of the political. therefore,
these artistic practices strive for immanence in a political sense, and that means to
working with sociality.
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16
theoreticAl perforMANce
performative Knowledge
one of the great and dramatic confrontations in the art of the 20th century was
the struggle between the anti-theoretical and the pro-theoretical principles in the
approach to modern art and culture.
Anti-theoretical modernism in painting, theatre, dance, poetry, prose, or film
was the foundation of the modernist mainstream. Anti-theoretical modernism or
high modernism was based on the canonical ideas of the autonomy of art within
society, the intuitive creation and reaching super- or pre- verbal existential
experiences and aesthetic values. in high modernism, the knowledge of art was
as a rule treated like synthetic (or experiential) knowledge of the appearance of a
work of art. As far as high modernism is concerned, the theory always followed
the creation as the critical and poetical interpretation of a work of art that
came into being from non-transparent creative intuitions, which meant that the
criticism and theory of art possessed subsequent representational functions in the
processes of understanding, archiving and valuing the unattainable creative act
and its effect, or in other words, its product. Anti-theoretical modernism saw
theory as more or less useful, but certainly not as an unavoidable surplus of social
value.
the pro-theoretical approach within modernism was connected with the
interdisciplinary tactics of the avant-garde (Artaud 326 , Brecht) and neo-avant-
garde (richard schnechner) phenomena, which were the result of the critical
or subversive resistance to the high modernist mainstream. the pro-theoretical
approach was based on anti-canonical notions that the autonomy of art is relative
and functionally determined by the political organisation of the public and the
private domain, that is to say, of free time and working hours, or of the controlled
and uncontrolled institutionalised creative context. therefore, the creation is seen
as something coming from conceptually envisaged or theoretically determined
starting points, while the notion of the non-transparency of intuitions in high
modernism is critically seen as important and determining, but a tacit conceptual
or theoretical construction. in this sense, the theory of art is not the superstructure
of receptive and aesthetical experience but a constitutive and constructive practice
326 christopher innes: “Anton Artaud and theatre of cruelty”, in: Avant Garde Theatre 1892–1992.
london: routledge, 1993, 59–69.
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of every artistic creation, even when it presents itself as anti-theoretical. from this
point of view, the anti-theoretical nature of high modernism is shown as a developed
theoretical system of the horizon of the identification of the impossibility of
artistic expression and articulation. the pro-theoretical approach is in principle
developed as:
(1) a self-ref lexive approach, when the artistic work becomes the research of a
specific process of artistic creation and the function of art in the world of
art, culture, and society;
(2) a conceptual approach, when the artist plans, executes and offers the
work for reception on the basis of exhibiting concepts (ideas, notions,
mental representations) leading to the problematic provocation of the
artistic practice, although the concept itself does not necessarily acquires
theoretical interpretation or verbal utterance, and
(3) a theoretical approach, when the work of art or the artistic practice
are executed within theoretical intentions, theoretical networks of
interpretation, theoretical objects as examples of art or theoretical
practices.
the pro-theoretical approach in art most often becomes performance practice
because it is based on the tactics (concepts and procedures) of performing the self-
ref lexive, the conceptual or the theoretical within the artistic practice itself.
the history of pro-theoretical approaches leading to performance art, 327 results
from two areas of action of artistic avant-gardes and neo-avant-gardes: (1) from
experimental work in the theatre, and (2) from performing procedures within art
(painting, sculpture, poetry, film).
Performance art in the theatre designates such theatrical practice that moves from
the concept of the theatre as a representational art to the theatre as a researching
performance practice. for example, the idea of the theatre as a laboratory, as
artistically institutionalised space where theatrical art is experimentally and
theoretically researched (acting, dance, direction, choreography, scenography,
ritualisation of everyday life, theory of theatre or theory of culture and society)
is typical of modernism and the avant-garde: the research of psychological aspects
of acting introduced by constantin stanislavsky, the biomechanical experiments
327 robert c. Morgan: “conceptual performance and language Notations”, in: Conceptual Art.
An American Perspective. Jefferson Nc: Mcferland & company, inc., 1994, 79–100; thomas
Mcevilley: “Anti-Art as ethics. themes and strategies”, in: The Triumph of Anti-Art. Conceptual
and Performance Art in the Formation of Post-Modernism. New york: Mcpherson & company, 2005,
231.
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by Vsevold Meyerhold, mechanical/mathematical ballet by oscar schlemmer
in the Bauhaus, and the dance school by rudolph von laban. modernist and
avant-garde theatrical laboratories are characterised by (a) a utopian project
of the transformation of the theatre into an all-encompassing work of art
(Gesamtkunstwerk), and (b) the poetical and pedagogical function of the laboratory
as a domain of theoretical and practical preparation for public appearance. in
the neo-avant-garde and post-avant-garde sense, the notion of the theatrical
laboratory was introduced and developed by polish artist Jerzy Grotowski from
the early 1950s until the early 1970s (teatar laboratorijum – Vroclav, and his
later work in the usA). Grotowski’s work went through the formative period
of critical examination of the avant-garde tradition, of the formulation of poor
theatre (pure theatre), in the late 1960s, giving up the normal theatrical practice
for the total experiment and the research of borderline areas of ritual and spiritual
micro-relations (spiritual and existentialist education) of a group of associates at
the beginning of the 1970s. theatrical/performance work is understood as an
incentive for researching and verifying both the spiritual and physical existence of
the individuals involved in the process of the theatre as art. the idea, the spiritual
condition, or the interpersonal relations among the individuals transposed into
the scenic, the scenic-like, or as proper to laboratory or extra-theatrical space
become a model for the factual, fictional, and spiritual learning of the accomplices.
in other words, the institutions of the writer, dramatist, director, scenographer,
costume designer, merge in an open and critical institution of the accomplices/
performers.
the movement away from the neo-avant-garde 328 (the examination of the avant-
garde tradition and the immanent criticism of modern theatre) and subsequently
away from Grotowski’s post-avant-garde laboratory (post historical evocation of
the theatrical, artistic and cultural traces) to postmodern theatrical laboratory-
school-workshop was led by peter Brook, Julian Beck from Living theatre, richard
schechner and richard foreman from Performance group, eugenio Barba’s Odin
Theatre, robert Wilson, the school of the group The Thing: Theatre of Mistakes
(london). the development of post-laboratory work, that is, the performance
work, leads to the conception of post-theatrical practice as the meta-research of
theatrical concepts such as art and social practice (metatheatre) in the following
ways: (1) to formal physical, spatial, and temporal research of discoursive and
non-discoursive theatre as well as to the examination of avant-garde tradition; (2)
to the theoretical and political formulation of the nature of theatrical experiment
328 paul schimmel: “leap into the Void: performance and the object”, in: Out of Actions. Between
Performance and the Object, 1949–1979. ed. paul schimmel. london: thames and hudson,1998,
1–119.
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(the post-avant-garde phase of the late 1960s and early 1970s) with its typical
politisation of Living Theatre and the equalising of the domain of theatrical action
with the domain of political action in the physical and environmental event; (3)
to the criticism and deconstruction of an exclusive and autonomous modernism –
returning to the ritual shamanist break of the fundamental theatrical relationship
between the actor and the audience (Grotowski), to the research of cultural post-
theatrical relationships (schechner) and extra-european rituals, dancing and
theatrical rituals and magical systems (Barba), so that it was possible to establish
a multi-genre, pluralist and eclectic theatre of ritual typical of postmodernist
nomadic or trans-movement from metatheatre to pararitual archetypal act.
schechner developed a complex field of performance studies that steps out of the
domain of the theatre as art and enters a field of performance as the instrument of
exhibiting cultural and societal practices in articulating the public and the private,
or, micro and macro space. richard foreman, richard schechner or herbert
Blau worked from the late 1960s on the research of a theoretically oriented
theatre and performance. robert Wilson, while a director in the field of theatre-
spectacle, developed systems of pedagogical or exhibiting workshops where he
used performance art to show through self-ref lexion or pedagogy the poetic aspects
of his creation.
Another significant area of execution of theoretical performance is one that comes out
of the theatre in the field of other arts. 329 the artistic work of Marcel duchamps
led from the sensual to the conceptual. in his ready-made works he avoided
the didacticism of theory, remaining in the sphere of subtle and sophisticated
conceptual provocations of the canon or the functions of the modernist world of
art. A younger generation of artists, who might still be termed neoDadaists because
of their debt to duchamp, turn away from duchamp’s critical conceptualism and
towards theoretical didacticism. 330 that is how John cage’s theoretical performances
were born. in John cage’s work, from the 1940s to the 1990s, we can see theory
in action. 331 the development of cage’s work led out of music, in other words to
the establishment of music as a widened activity that can be in the intertextual or
interbehavioural relationship with the music of the other, other arts or forms of
discoursive expression and representation. What with cage appears as theoretical
discourse simultaneously with his artistic work or through it can be identified as:
329 richard Kostelanetz: The Theatre of Mixed-Means. An Introduction to Happenings, Kinetic
Environments, and Other Mixed-Means Performances. New york: dial press, 1968.
330 cf. tyrus Miller: “example 10. didactic drifts. one or More conclusions”, in: Singular Examples.
Artistic Politrics and the Neo-Avant-Garde. Northwestern university press, evanston ill, 2009, 215–
225.
331 John cage: “lecture on Nothing”, in: Silence. hanover: Wesleyan university press, 1961, 108–
127.
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(a) the principles of metamusic – dealing with the relocation of the ontology of
music entry (intentional expression using sounds) into the theoretically-textual
discourse on music which is brought into being in places and in conditions where
the execution of a musical work (intentional creation or execution of structured
sounds) is expected; (b) lecture poetry – dealing with the relocation of one artistic
discipline (music) into other artistic disciplines (poetry, rhetoric, political
canvassing, performance art), and (c) textual production – dealing with a text that is not
poetry or music but textual productivity in art. cage in fact developed, with his
verbal or lecture performances, the first obvious model of theoretical performance. 332
characteristic verbal performances are 45’ for a Speaker (1954), Composition as Process
(1958), Lecture on Nothing (1959), Mureau (1962), John Cage Talking to Hans G. Helms
on Music & Politics (1972), Composition in Retrospect (1981), Diary: How to Improve the
World (1965- until death) or i-Vi (1988-89). Within experimental poetry, post
fluxus artists like david Antin and Jerome rothenberg gave pro-theoretical
performances during the 1960s and 1970s. After cage, henry flynt based his
pro-theoretical work in fluxus and developed concept art. he called concept art the
artistic practice based on the artistic intervention of ideas. flynt gave lectures-
as-performance on art, politics, mathematics, and economics (lecture, 1963). pro-
theoretical or conceptual, but also ironical and satirical performances were given by
Georg Brecht (Drip music, 1963), George Maciunas (In Memoriam Adriano Olivetti,
1964) or dick higgins and Alison Knowles (Solo for Voice no. 2, 1962). German
artist Joseph Beuys, who was close to fluxus 333 and conceptual art, developed
a practice of lecture performances in order to prepare and perform his social
sculpture. Social sculpture is a utopian project, which defines society (the social
system) as an area of artistic acts and the shaping of a new stage of civilisation.
Joseph Beuys has given a certain number of political and initiation lectures (in
New york, chicago, london, oxford, Belgrade) since 1973. on the occasion of
the exhibition called Document 6, he also organised one hundred days of work of
Free International University in Kassel in 1977. these public lectures enabled him
to lay the foundation for a form of work with individual and social creativity
as well as the evolution of society. Beuys expressed his theoretical positions in
The Theory of Sculpture and The Energy Plan for the Western Man 334 (1973–1974).
his artistic anthropology is based on: (1) the emancipating activity of fluxus;
(2) the theoretical analysis of society as established in europe’s critically oriented
332 Marjorie perloff: “No More Margins: John cage, david Antin, and the poetry of performance”,
in: The Poetic of Indeterminancy. Rimbaud to Cage. evanston: Nortwestern university press, 1983,
288–339.
333 henry flynt: “essay. concept Art (provisional version, 1963)”, in: Ubi Fluxus ibi motus 1990–
1962, ed. Achille Bonito oliva. Milan: Mazzotta, 1990, 109–111.
334 caroline tisdall: “energy plan for Western Man”, in: Joseph Beuys. london: thames and hudson,
1979, 207–213.
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conceptual art; (3) the social, economical, and spiritual theory of the spiritual
evolution of mankind by rudolph steiner, the founder of anthroposophy; (4) the
critical new-leftist practice of the German neoanarchism from the 1960s and 1970s;
(5) the ideas of alternative ecological movements (the Greens, feminists). Beuys’s
purpose was to create a total work of art (Gesamtkunstwerk) by the evolutionist and
revolutionist transformations of materialistic bureaucratic societies of Western
private capitalism and eastern state capitalism. Because only the human power of
thought can create a new cause in the world and in this way determine the future
course of history.
Within the situational movement, critical and materialistic theory and the
practice of subverting the mass and popular culture of the late capitalist society
was developed. the situational international 335 was established in 1957 as an
international european group (movement), consisting of artists and theoreticians.
present at the founding conventions were members of lettrist international,
the international union of Bauhaus picturalists, architects Guy debord and
constant Nieuwenhuis, as well as danish painter Asgern Jom, a member of the
COBRA group. the headquarters of the situational movement were in france,
and situational groups were active in sweden, Germany, and italy. the activity of
the situational international was theoretical and propagandist, guided by analyses
and discussions concerning the change of modern society, culture, and art. the
situationalists dealt with writing manifestos, statements, and resolutions; they
gave lectures and exerted inf luence at the university of strasbourg where in 1966
the students under their inf luence organised a revolt that started with a physical
attack on Abraham Moles, the professor of cybernetics. they experienced the
students’ demonstrations in May 1968, as the realisation of their theories of
spontaneous revolution so that they took part in practical political action. for
situationalists, political action was a form of performance art. situationalists
developed open pro-marxist analysis and the exhibiting of performance practice
criticism of everyday consumer society. their credo was: “We want ideas
to become dangerous”, 336 expressing the strategic ambition of intellectually
and theoretically based terrorism. Avoiding the interpretative speculative
truths, they tended to discover individual and fragmentary truths in everyday
behaviour itself, which they called anarcho-marxist truths. they oriented the
initial discussions towards criticism of the historical left, claiming that the real-
communism in the soviet union had created a new form of exploitation that
they called state bureaucrat capitalism. the main subject of their discussions was
335 tom Mcdonough: “introduction: ideology and the situationist utopia”, in: Guy Debord and the
Situationist international: Texts and Documents. cambridge MA: the Mit press, 2002, ix–xx.
336 ibid., 272.
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capitalist consumer society. the purpose of their criticism was to expose the logic
of commercial or commodity production, which in modernist capitalist society
prevents individual freedom and emancipation. in order to attack the totalitarian
consumer society of spectacle, it is not enough to revolt against its structures and
institutions but also against its values. first of all, it is necessary to produce the
criticism of work. the abolishment of work, according to them, is not a utopian
concept but the first pre-condition for overpowering the society of commodity.
the abolishment of work is the condition for overpowering the imposed division
between free time and working hours. in order to be free, human activity should
be artistic and based on play. Art and play are the only activities that can bring
back the rational and the concrete to everyday life. they were preoccupied with
the intention to reshape the lives of people into art by spontaneous revolt of the
masses. they were against the idea that life should be transformed into art. the
ideal situationist was an amateur expert and an anti-specialist.
in conceptual art 337 the idea of artistic execution is connected with theoretical
work in the area of non-theoretical expectations in the world of art. theoretical
performance does not exist as a separate genre or stream in conceptual art, but
certain activities of destruction and theoretisation of artistic practice are
established in the way of performance art. Belgian proto-conceptual artist Marcel
Broodthaers organised his life and work as a deconstruction of cultural industry,
for example, the performance of museum situations with an audience (Musée d’Art
Moderne, Departement des Aigles, Section des Figures, 1972). A conversation between
two persons, the announcement of theoretical conversation, or the documentation
originating from theoretical or everyday life, ian Wilson proclaimed for a work of
art: “ian Wilson came to paris in 1970 and discussed the idea of oral communication
as artistic form”. Bernard Venet organised public lectures given by scientists
(mathematicians, physicists, chemists, and anthropologists) during the early 1970s
as works of art. however, these public performances were not a synthesis of science
and art or the aesthetisation of science but genuine scientific lectures relocated
and performed within the institutionalised system of arts. Venet wanted to show
that it was possible to execute a scientific lecture as such in the system of arts, by a
meta-language action on the conventions and regulations of the institutions in the
world of art. douglas houbler, lawrence Weiner, and robert Barry worked with
meta-performances, creating verbal expressions that can be executed materially or
behaviourally but which are not executed and remain ideal analytical propositions
of art. the Art & language group based its work as a conversation and learning
337 claude Gintz (ed.): L’art conceptuel, une perspective. paris: Arc Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de
paris, 1989.
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among the members of the group338 (“if x is a member of the A & l group, then
there is a certain y from whom x can learn, while x and y are different from
each other”). in this sense Art & language did not realise theoretical performances
as events before an audience but as a complex behavioural situation of research
(conversation and learning) in the world of art. their complex, but cognitively
feasible work is an installation for the theoretical performance of the audience (Index
01, 1972) at the exhibition of Document5.
in the age of eclectical postmodernism, during the late 1970s and early 1980s,
there was a strong anti-theoretical impulse, led by the change from comprehending
the text towards enjoying the text. But, the essential thing for postmodernism was
the shift from the interest in theoretical explication to relying and acting through
the theoretical or discoursive atmosphere of history, culture, and society. certain
authors (Beuys, Victor Burgin, Barbara Kruger, cindy sherman, and even robert
Wilson or Jan fabre) do not base their performances as rational or pragmatic
theoretical criticism of the world of art but as the manipulation or simulation of
the artistic act in a theoretical, political, cultural, or everyday atmosphere which
stands in referential relationship towards uncertain theories, above all, those of
post structuralism. 339
in the epoch that certain theoreticians call art in the age of culture at the most recent
turn of the century, there appears to be an interest in some areas for theoretical
performance. Theoretical performance becomes an instrument in the critical practice of
those artists who work with cultural identities – referring to theories of race, nation,
gender, or generation. female or male artists give private or public performances,
most often behavioural events, in order to provoke, simulate, deconstruct or
satirise a specific identity and its supportive discourses or normative ideologies.
for example, Adrian piper works with behavioural, theoretical, and socially
normative discourses of the interaction between gender (bisexual), race (of mixed
blood), and class (working and middle class), while holly hughes works with
lesbian, Marina Abramović with heterosexual, and tim Miller with queer identity.
for these authors, the theoretical is one of the instruments for the explication of
critical, traumatic or repressive policies of identity in contemporary geographical
and historical societies. Within the techno-performance practices that have
established themselves as net theatre, cyber art, the art of systems or relational art
338 terry Atkinson, Michael Baldwin: “the index”, in: The New Art, ed. Anne seymour. london:
hayward Gallery, 1972, 16–19.
339 Mary Jane Jacob: “Art in the Age of regan: 1980–1988”, in: A Forest of Signs: Art in the Crisis of
Representation, eds. Ann Goldstein, Mary Jane Jacob, catherine Gudis. cambridge MA: the Mit
press, 1989, 15–64.
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(orlan, stelarc, Marko Košnik, igor Štromajer, Marko peljhan) the theory has the
necessary function of the instrumental discourse used to form a new artistic field
of media practices. it is possible to differentiate between theories belonging to the
corpus of media or techno-theories and the theories of culture, and specific art or
self-poetic theories. for example, orlan works with the indexing of biomedical
cultural theories in relation to gender theories. Marko peljhan intervenes within
the determined scope of applied arts (cybernetics, ecology, meteorology), using
scientific infrastructure for the execution of his works. Marko Kosnik puts into
effect the aesthetisation of the scientific, that is, of cybernetic systems, while
stelarc, on the contrary, uses theoretical references, technological knowledge,
and cultural ends to exert a de-aesthetisation of the behavioural body of everyday
life. certain former east european artists (oleg Kulik, irwin, dragan Živadinov,
petar Mlakar, Mike hentz) put their work in the field of political problems or
ideological cracks in macro- and micro-policies of the late socialist societies or
those in transition. for example, the irwin group’s performances called NSK
guard from the 1990s are not explicitly theoretical performances but they cannot
be understood without a conceptual and theoretical problematisation of the
ideological and political role of the army in socialist and societies in transition.
the case of theoretical and theoretical/practical problematisation of the status
of the theory of art on the universal level and on the level of claustrophobic
and theory-phobic societies in transition is the subject of research by a series of
authors linked to the tkh-centre (Walking Theory) in Belgrade. laurie Anderson
with her rock performances executes the spectacle as theoretical symptom of
borders or confrontations between mass and popular culture. the examples of
pro-theoretical deconstructions of the theatre towards the exhibiting theatre can
be found in completely different works such as those by emil hrvatin or coco
fusco. the experiments with dance were, in their long 20th century history,
anti-theoretical and if the role of theory appeared it had pedagogical or poetical
functions (rudolf von laban, Mary Wigman, Merce cunningham, trisha
Brown); one of the rare examples was yvonna rainer who in the early 1960s
executed exhibiting performances (Trio A) in order to test the theoretical premises
of the new or minimal dance. the generation of choreographers and dancers,
which appeared during the late 1990s, conducted an unusual change towards the
theoretisation of choreographical and dance work. this new dance coming after
postmodernism, and called choreographical or conceptual dance appeared as a
practice resulting from critical/theoretical research and deconstruction of dance
paradigms (the institution of dance, dance techniques, the status of constitutive
relations within the dance as art). these choreographers and performers ( Jérôme
Bel, xavier le roy, Matrten spangberg, tina sehgala) are interested in the
introduction of the conceptually or theoretically constructed positioning into the
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rhetorical systems of modernist and postmodernist dance, but also in the execution
of theoretical performances (verbally determined dances, performances, workshops,
lectures). the role of theoretical performance in dance is dramatically obvious since
the theory represents the means of attack on technical fetishism of dance as well
as on choreographical rhetorical aestheticism.
there is a metaphorical, almost allegorical use of the notion of theoretical performance
in the sense of the theatralisation of philosophy or of philosophical performance.
theatralisation of philosophy, according to peter sloterdijk, occurs with
friedrich Nietzsche and denotes the end of philosophical metaphysics, becoming
rhetoric (from Martin heidegger through Jacques lacan and Jacques derrida to
Jean Baudrillard and peter sloterdijk) or language game (ludwig Wittgenstein).
ludwig Wittgenstein turned his lectures on philosophy of everyday language
into demonstrations of thinking experiments which he conducted using his speech
or behaviour. there are stories about how old heidegger walked along the Alpine
paths singing philosophical sentences on being, in order to achieve the longing
of the ancient Greeks towards the truth itself. At the end of modernism, lacan
organised his lectures on theoretical psychoanalysis as psychoanalytic sessions or
shamanist rituals of initiation, establishing his learning as a process of initialising
the transfer and counter-transfer between the subject, object, and the other.
the philosophers and theoreticians belonging to the epoch of postmodernism or
the epoch of culture like lyotard, Baudrillard, derrida, or sloterdijk take their
discourses out to the scenes/screens of mass culture, creating mass spectacles.
philosophical or theoretical constructions become the instruments of mass media
performances. philosophy ceases to be only a discourse of analysis, discussion,
and hermeneutical speculation but also becomes its own demonstration or
intervention on the scene/screen. philosophy is increasingly a demonstration
of the media breakthrough of the signifier into the ideal, smooth, and sexless
body of traditional philosophy, in other words, into metalanguage which in this
way starts to present its illegitimacy. sloterdijk developed in his work the idea
of theatralisation, 340 effacing the borders between the philosopher as a thinking
figure and the philosopher as the scenic figure. speaking about the denial of power,
sloterdijk at one point exclaims: “Better a cynical dog than an integrated swine!”341
he would like Marx to speak the language of Kierkegaard, and Kierkegaard to
speak of Marx’s topics. the denial of power can be seen in the rejection and
in evaporation of the hypotheses of subjectivity. the evaporation of the subject
340 peter sloterdijk: Thinker on Stage: Nietzsche’s Materialism, trans. Jamie owen daniel. Minneapolis:
university of Minnesota press, 1989, 17–18.
341 peter sloterdijk: Critique of Cynical Reason, trans. Andreas huyssen. Minneapolis: university of
Minnesota press, 1987, 261.
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of instrumental repression, the subject resulting from repressive limitations of
consecrated social autonomies and institutions, represents for sloterdijk the basic
philosophical problem. in such context, philosophy becomes softer, rhythmical,
devoid of its polemical combativeness. however, it is paradoxically critical
(cynical) and post critical (soft in the postmodernist manner). it is fickle, seductive,
theatrical, paradoxical, and dilutingly all encompassing. sloterdijk initiates the
theatralisation of philosophy, bringing the thinker onto the stage. his discourse is
soft, literary-didactic and subversive, speculative, aestheticised, and devoid of
feeling for sentimentality and respect: he talked in the clothes of a Buddhist monk
and preached his philosophy from the pulpit of a christian church. his discourse
is simultaneously placed: (1) behind the end of modern philosophy, and (2) in
order to thematise modernity, and (3) to theatricalise the philosophical points
of departure (to be a dog on the philosophical scene means to be a philosopher
after Nietzsche). slavoj Žizek, on the contrary, and in contrast to sloterdijk, is
not a philosopher of postmodernist spectacle but a critically minded philosopher
of the epoch of globalisation, which means that Zizek’s performance is not an
aesthetisation of philosophy as in the postmodern period but a dramatic face-to-
face between the area of transfer/counter-transfer of philosophers or theoreticians
with the media-multifold other. 342 Žizek inscribes himself as a critical materialist
philosopher into a structural position of mass media other (for example, in
numerous polemics about 11 september 2002). he presents himself as the one who
with the help of discourse interprets media horizons of the dominant ideologies
and policies, but who also, simultaneously, is subjected to transfiguration by the
powers or potentials of the discourse performed by mass media. the appearance
of the philosopher in the media transfigures his interpretation into the massive
and global spectacle of consumption/enjoyment of meaning. the theatralisation
of philosophy nowadays is not, as in the postmodern period a hybrid and dispersed
aesthetisation of philosophy, but the media performance of global representatives
of particular framing, editing, and the presentation of the contextualised or
decontextualised discourse of the philosopher. even though we had at the end of
19th century a philosopher who showed the dirty hands of philosophy (Nietzsche)
at the heart of universality, we have at the beginning of the 20th century a
philosopher who in the global production of the media becomes a hybrid field
to the media of distributed philosophical organs without a body in a struggle for
the regulation or deregulation of the dominant and marginal knowledge of the
contemporary world (Žizek). later, Martin Jay in the text entitled “the Academic
Woman as performance Artist”343 offers a provoking theoretical thesis that some
342 slavoj Žižek: The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology, dVd, cinedigm, 2013.
343 Martin Jay: “the Academic Woman as performance Artist”, in: Cultural Semantics: Keywords of
Our Time. Amherst: university of Massachusetts press, 1998, 138–143.
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of the leading women theoreticians of cultural, and especially gender studies
( Judith Butler, Jane Gallop, Avital ronell, eve Kosowsky sedgwick or Gayatri
chakravorty spivak) have become certain kinds of women performers. having said
that, it does not mean that they have really become women performers in the
world of art but that their behaviour in the academic world is manifested in
a particular, atypical way in relation to academic norms in that through their
behaviour they demonstrate, execute and re-construct their theories. the theory
becomes possible by moving the body in its relational and interactive micro- or
macro-cultural space. in this way, the traditionally modern distinction between
the body and soul is deconstructed to the opinion, which is the manifestation of
the body in its interaction with environmental potentials and current events. if
thought is body, then it is part of the theoretical, part of the cultural, the political,
and part of the existential performance. in this way, the theory ceases to be an area
of ref lection (the mimesis of the world by the process of thinking) and becomes
the time and space of the performing body through which the world manifests
itself.
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post-MediA Art
17
AppropriAtioNs of Music
postmedia: Music
18
BeyoNd pAper
postmedia and flexible Art
19
Bio Art
the prehuman / the human / the posthuman
20
siMultANeously AlWAys, NoW, ANd eVeryWhere
A real fiction
21
Multiple politicAl/sexuAl Bodies
Between the public and the intimate
22
Auto-criticisM of suBJectiVisAtioN
painting as postmedia politics
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17
AppropriAtioNs of Music
postmedia: music
As a vocal performer Katalin ladik 344 took part in the production of Jugoslovenska
muzička tribina (opatija) in 1969, 1970, and 1980, and in Muzički biennale in Zagreb
in 1971. With Acezantez Ensemble and the composer Milko Kelemen she performed
during the Munich olympic Games in 1972. With this ensemble she performed as
a vocalist at the festivals Annale komorne opere i baleta in osijek in 1970 and 1972,
and Aprilski susreti in Belgrade in 1972. she was a performer in dušan radić’s
music piece Oratorio Profano at the festival Beogradske muzičke svečanosti (dom
sindikata, Belgrade, 1979).
A major part of ladik’s work was associated with vocal and instrumental music,
although she had no particular musical qualifications. Neither was she an “amateur
musician”, but a phenomenon of musical excesses and vocal miracles, combining
music, theatre, and poetry. her music essentially addressed the relations between
sound and a woman’s body. it was the music of a female body and its motion,
transformation, action and expression whether she produced sounds with her
body as a musical instrument – playing with a bow on the strands of her hair,
playing folk or art instruments nude, voiced poetry or transformed her voice into
linguistically inarticulate sounds of phonic poetry or when her voice turned into
a scream transforming poetry into an acoustic event of music, or when she loaned
her transgressive voice to experimental musicians.
ladik’s relationship with music may be observed from quite a peculiar perspective.
An extreme, chaotic and controversial, “synthetic” approach to the question of
meaning in music may start from a discussion of similarities or, simply, relations
between “music” and “women”. those are, certainly, metaphoric constructions.
344 Katalin ladik (Novi sad, 1942) is a hungarian and yugoslav performer and visual artist, poet and
actress. she entered the realm of performance art in 1968 with her first action/happening ufo
in Budapest with the hungarian neo-avant-garde artists tamás szentjóby and Miklós erdély.
unlike the majority of “new artistic practice” protagonists who entered the realm of experimental
art either from literature or from visual arts, Katalin ladik’s background was radio and theatre
acting. she was an actress-turned-poet, and subsequently performer of music, happenings, body
and performance art. however, she also transformed from a performer into a conceptual artist,
and from a conceptual artist into a producer of postmodern performance as spectacle. her work
and opening of artistic practices indicate a dense human action confronting multiplicity i.e. poly-,
inter-, mixed- artistic strategies.
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the suggested complexity of relations between “the woman” and “the music” is
central to ladik’s approach. she is not a musician, she is not the music, but she is
a woman, Woman or Woman, 345 the source of the music, extending, expanding,
spreading, diffusing her body in the human space. her voice is a revolution in
language, possible only as a transgressive event of music which is not merely
music, but becoming a woman.
Katalin ladik struggles for body and music to speak. the body and music have
a voice, but they are deprived of speech (fr. parole). the codes of knowledge,
knowledge related to the body, can be transposed to music “easily”. the voice
comes from the body. there is indeed a third approach – to articulate the music,
relying on the body born in language with the productivity of the text. connections
between music, text and body clearly relate to knowledge. the place of knowledge
is in the love triangle music-text-body: is this not the structure of performance and
the place of fiction, as well? the work precedes the fact, the tone precedes the
scream, the language precedes the music and the body. there is no music in itself –
there is no body in itself. the text in itself is not in itself, but in references to other
cultural texts. the music and the body – in order to be music and body – have to
relate to a text which is already in relation to other texts. Katalin ladik’s body
defies the Law, it opposes the order established by the super-ego. What is at stake
is the transgression of music and the body in relation to a text striving to be the
text of the law or an expression of the super-ego.
the signified of painting or literature obscures the signifiers and their rough
bonding in order to represent (images, figures, narratives, atmospheres). in music,
as it were, that concealing or repressing effect of the signified, the revoking
(abstrusing), and the matter of music is absent. signifiers appear in an elusive
openness towards the possible, or all the possible, anticipations of meaning and
animated unstable sense. What is at stake is the sense of the performer’s body.
What mediates the body in music are not significations (their fictional rendering
shaped by verbal or pictorial images and narration), but signifiers addressing
the body and promising a relationship between the body and the music. roland
Barthes quite specifically wrote that body penetrated music without any devices
of mediation – merely with the signifier. Music, unlike a novel or a painting, does
not represent the body – it invokes the body penetrating the music – the body in
the ambiance of sounds. the body is surrounded by the music, concretizing space
and time; the body informs the music with a voice departing from the body and
345 suzanne Barnard: “tongues of Angels: feminine structure and other Jouissance”, in: Reading
Seminar XX. Lacan’s Major Work on Love, Knowledge, and Feminine Sexuality, eds. suzanne Bernard,
Bruce fink. New york: state university of New york press, 2002, 171–185, here 177.
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48 Katalin ladik: Incantation, performance, 1970
courtesy Katalin ladik
entering the space. the body can be the one and only essential meaning of music.
this is the realm of Katalin ladik’s music/vocal transgressions. this entrance –
this transgression – makes the music truly mad:346 the animated body defies the
law invoking the text and destroying the voice in the body.
346 Barthes: “rasch”, 308.
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Katalin ladik pursued her interest in music with her collaboration and relationship
with the composer, musicologist and ethnomusicologist ernö Király, while
working for the radio Novi sad. Király developed his unconventional style in a
synthesis of hungarian folklore and free modes of music performance based on
the composer-performer relationship. interest in the oldest layers of hungarian
musical heritage stimulated ladik’s fascination with the latent power of voice to
overcome the cultural patterns of ethnic or tribal identification. on the other
hand, ladik adopted from Király a tendency to subjectify vocal expression and
search for the expressive uniqueness of a vocal event. An important issue for ladik
was how a woman attained subjectivity – a unique feeling of the world – with a
voice distinguishing her body as feminine. she also collaborated with Király on
his record ernö Király (udruženje kompozitora Vojvodine, Novi sad, 1978).
the other important context of ladik’s involvement in music was the contact
with the ensemble Acezantez or Ansambl centra za nove tendencije Zagreb
and the composers dubravko detoni, Branimir sakač and Milko Kelemen.
the ensemble was founded in 1971 and led by dubravko detoni. it comprised
exceptional performers of new music: pianist fred došek, clarinetist Giovanni
cavallini, violist daniel thune, and actress Veronika durbešič Kovačić. the
ensemble focused on combinations of tone and noise, movement, light, acting
and pantomime. Katalin ladik performed with them in 1972 and 1973.
According to dubravko detoni’s notes, the Multimedia stage fantasy la Voix du
silence had been, for instance, conceived in the following terms:
(1) darkness. Katalin lies numb in the middle of the room, hidden from
view. No one must notice her presence. With a barely visible glow, the
ensemble mysteriously and slowly walks in, approaching the piano from
all sides. the game with the instrument and around it starts. it becomes
faster, increasingly nervous, but absolutely silent. At its climax, with a hand
cue, everything declines. finally, everything calms down. everybody
goes to their instruments and resumes the echo of the decelerated game.
easier and easier… in the end, a long silence. listening to one’s thoughts.
listening to one’s nervous system, by electronic means.
(2) Monos iii. extremely slow tempo. huge pauses. Quite peculiar sounds,
electronically filtered, as it were. Barely any music is involved. instead of
music phrases one may use gestures, voices… like in underwater music.
(3) A hammer signals Katalin to wake up. she gets up slowly, suggestively.
her appearance and motion must produce a small shock. A pantomime
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commences, considerably more diverse in contrasts, slightly more dyna-
mic, faster, but longer. it straightforwardly blends into a gestural mo-
nologue (story). the intensity is growing. Katalin becomes agitated, her
hysterical gesturing becomes mechanical – very fast, brief, but rapid. she
ascends higher and higher on an invisible crane (?) Noise from the sound-
track appears at her climax (psychological and physical), stunning Katalin
for a while. At the same time the ensemble is initiated, and they respond
to each noise. Grafika IV has already begun.
(4) Grafika IV. occasionally, the soundtrack interferes. insist on
motionlessness in the pauses. invisible cues for beginnings. the given
patterns may be realised in following modes:
a) baroque,
b) serial,
c) cluster,
d) noise – electronic,
e) speech – singing,
f ) gestural.
(5) All the time, Katalin, invisibly present, descends from the top. When
on ground, she cues a:
a) grand, silent music scene. perhaps romantic, perhaps expressionist,
perhaps serial music... What remains is the movements, suggestive gestures,
signals, use of devices, rapid changes of instruments, the zest of music;.
b) such playing gradually diffuses into a series of absurd, superf luous
gestures, with no meaning or purpose – abandoning the instruments,
restlessness, psychological anarchy. Without a single sound or noise;
c) gestures of an individual who wants to give some kind of a cue for
a new start gradually emerge from that chaos. everyone begins to notice
him, follow him and wait for his cue. the actions calm down, the waiting
is anxious, the hand is up, but there is no cue. the ensemble is again
consumed by anarchy of superf luous actions. this is repeated (always
with a different soloist) several times. in the end, there is a longer pause –
nothing happens any more, but the concentration is gone as well (after the
pauses in Grafika IV);
d) suddenly, without a cue, there is an enormous, hysterical (perhaps
even detached) acceleration of all previous actions, swiftly following one
another, but lasting only for a moment. pause;
e) a three times slower reprise of the act d). Aphasia of movement, in-
tentions, gestures. everything is touched, and everything moves somewhere,
without an aim or purpose. the motion gradually becomes slower. for the
ensemble, there are two possibilities of exit from that space:
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e.1) the musicians finally fall to the ground and, crawling on their
knees and elbows, remove themselves from the scene under a great strain;
e.2) the musicians slowly get up and apparently stay still. however,
this is an illusion, after all: they are moving invisibly, very slowly, depart
for a long time, and finally disappear. the lights are off.
throughout the act 5 Katalin responds to certain changes in action, at
the same time, very slowly, approaching the place where she was at the
beginning; calmly and indifferently she digs in and, immediately before
the dark, disappears – forever.
Zagreb, 1972 347
this was an intricate conceptual set of propositions for a multimedia stage music
piece. Katalin ladik featured as a performer in this “open work”, conceived in a
rough mode where every performer assumed a role, along with responsibility for
the performance – down to the singular details.
the second characteristic piece is Milko Kelemen’s 1972 composition Yebell. the
piece was dedicated to dubravko detoni and ensemble Acezantez, and premiered
at the festival slatina-radenci. it comprised an improvised process of turning
words – mostly curses and vulgarities in various languages – into sounds. the
most obscene expressions gradually turned into expressions of tenderness and
those, in turn, again into vulgarities. 348 Yebell action for soloists – singers, dancers,
mimes, the chamber ensemble peters and Acezantez, was performed on the
occasion of the 20th olympic Games in Munich on september 1, 1972. the
libretto was conceived by Katalin ladik and Attila csernik with ladik joining
the other vocal performers.
ladik also performed at the premiere of dušan radić’s Oratorio Profano – homage
to Fluxus at the festival Beogradske muzičke svečanosti (dom sindikata, Belgrade,
1979). the oratorio was a play for three speakers, featuring texts by the neo-
avant-garde author Bora Ćosić (from his work Mixed Media), 349 followed by Kurt
schwitters’ Ursonate, with three chamber sets of instruments, four orchestras,
four tympanums, organs and a tape conceived in collaboration with the composer
Vladan radovanović. the performance was conducted by oskar danon. Katalin
ladik was one of the speakers. this extraordinary, hybrid piece of late music
avant-garde was based on samples of ethnic and popular music, notions of
347 dubravko detoni: “Multimedijalna scenska fantazija La voix du silence”, in: ACEZANTEZ,
eds. raul Knežević and dalibor davidović. Zagreb: Muzički informativni centar Koncertne
direkcije, 1999, 144–145.
348 http://mbz_hr/upload/umjetnici/287.pdf.
349 Bora Ćosić: Mixed Media. Belgrade: B. Ćosić, 1970.
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aleatoricism, sound poetry, action performance, and electronic music with neo-
classical references to scriabin and stravinsky. 350
Katalin ladik responds to music ambiguously. on the one hand, in a traditional
relationship: the performer (musician or actress) – the musical piece and
its reproduction. however, ladik conceives and conducts a very personal
interpretation of the piece and the “role” assigned to her in the dramaturgy of the
performance. on the other hand, her position of “not-musician-but-a-performer-
of-phonic-poetry” approximates music performance in revocation of articulated
speech and sexuation of her voice. this token of the body-woman identifies the
realm of elusive hybridity, metaphorically associating (one may claim – ref lecting)
the woman and the music. she additionally worked with the possibilities of
departure from “music” – with a hermeneutically motivated interpretation of the
score as the trace of the composer/author’s ideas. in her shift towards performance
art, she opened music performance to entirely different strategies for conceiving
the artist’s behavior. in a trans-disciplinary and trans-genre manner ladik
explored, questioned, transgressed, or merely tested the borders of her existential
phenomenality in music. in this sense, with her performance in a music ensemble,
Katalin ladik stood for disruption of “music as a stable discipline”. her role as a
“performative disruptor” in the music ensemble was an essential contribution to the
neo-avant-garde’s challenging of the stable and stratified order of modern music
conceived as art. finally, the effects of her voice were a form of norm-free archaic
affectation – penetration of the “signifiers” into the systems of communication in
music. this affectation was a necessary condition for the anticipated effects, not
only acoustically and conceptually determined – but notably corporeal.
350 Vesna Mikić: “Neoklasične tendencije”, in: Istorija srpske muzike. Srpska muzika i evropsko muzičko
nasleđe [the history of serbian Music. serbian Music and european Musical heritage], ed.
Mirjana Veselinović-hofman. Belgrade: Zavod za udžbenike i nastavna sredstva, 2007, 208.
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49 i. G. plamen, Marko pogačnik: Pegam in Lambergar, oho books, 1968
courtesy Marko pogačnik
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18
BeyoNd pAper
postmedia and flexible Art
the experiMeNt ANd the NEW: coNtexts
the concept of research emerged in modern art when it seemed as if the poetic
platforms of creativity as a technical craft had been exhausted. in art, research is
viewed as an open activity that characterises working in art:
the important difference between research and non-research art therefore
seems predicated on the fact that non-research art sets out from established
values, whereas research art seeks to establish those values and its own self
as a value. indeed, the first aesthetics that dealt with the very problem of
art and its place among the activities of the spirit were born when art was
first posited as research and when it first undertook to explore itself. 351
Artists act, the bounds of their activities consciously marked, although not every
step in their activities, i.e. research, can be envisioned and they face discovering
and choosing new domains of action. research in art is often posited as a heuristic
procedure. heuristic research is a self-motivated type of research that, in the
absence of a precise programme or algorithm of research, proceeds from one
instance to another, using the method of trial and error. therefore it denotes the
principle of researching/exploring, in the sense of a creative programme. heuristic
research/exploration treats the totality of reflecting and the procedures of seeking
and finding new, i.e. authentic realisations or possibilities of producing a work of
art. heuristic research accepts in advance the possibilities of failure, error, fallacy,
illusion, and mistake. its procedure does not rest on a system of rules, but on
discovering, confirming, and rejecting what has been accomplished. Art is thereby
reoriented, away from “creating works of art” (heidegger’s Ge-Stell) into the
world and toward an uncertain quest or research leading toward the unknown and
unexpected – authentic and new – in both traditional and new media, as well as
in human relations, which are established in art. 352 research highlights the retreat
from creating works of art (techne + poïesis) toward the concepts of artistic projects.
351 G. c. Argan: “Arte come ricerca”, in: Arte in Europa: scritti di storia dell’arte in onore di Edoardo Arslan.
Milano, 1966, 3–8.
352 Martin heidegger: Basic Writings, ed. and trans. david farrell Krell. london: Kegan paul, 1978,
302.
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the concept of research emerged as the basis for the establishment of the concept
of experimental art, i.e. art that supplants creating artworks with the “process
of research”, leading toward new perceptions, experiences, knowledge, and
statuses of art in the field of the aesthetic, cultural, and social. experimental art
thus emerges as a planned and organised research situation leading toward “the
artistically new”.
in principle, the concept of experimental art is historicised in two ways.
experimental art is an aspect of the avant-gardes. in that sense, one might say that
avant-garde (or vanguard, in english) denotes any super-style, radical, excessive,
critical, experimental, projective, programmatic, and inter-disciplinary practice
in art. these terms determine the character of the avant-garde and complement
one another. for instance, the radicalism of avant-garde artists appears in their
rejection of traditional art, bourgeois culture and society. excessive practices are
those whose phenomenality, appearance, sense, and meanings provoke and shock
bourgeois society. those excesses may be aesthetic, moral, or political. excess
has often been an artist’s ideologically inarticulate gesture that determined her/
him as an exotic social individual to whom anything was allowed (the artist as
a bohemian). By assuming a critical and political status, excess has become a
thoroughly planned procedure meant to provoke and destroy the autonomy of
modernist art and bourgeois culture. the experimental status of avant-garde art
suggests that the object of artistic work is not the creativity of an artisan or the
production of an artwork, but to explore and change the nature of art. Avant-
garde art strives for a complete transformation of art, culture, and society, and
therefore has a projective character. the notion of the project determines the sense
of avant-garde activism, in terms of ideology, values, and meanings. the concept
of optimal projection was developed by literature historian Aleksandar flaker. 353
optimal projection denotes moving and choosing the optimal variant of one’s
artistic work in overcoming social reality. the avant-garde is inter-disciplinary,
because avant-garde artworks are not made within the confines of determined
and autonomous media and disciplines. rather, they are made by transgressing,
critiquing, and destroying the boundaries of media, disciplines, and genres of
art. Avant-garde work in art either pinpoints the boundaries of media (from
impressionism to abstract art), or transgresses them, producing citational, collage,
assemblage, and readymade objects, situations, events, and textual structures
(dada, constructivism).
353 Aleksandar flaker: “optimalna projekcija” [optimal projection], in: Pojmovnik ruske avangarde
[conceptual dictionary of the russian Avant-Garde]. Zagreb: Grafički zavod hrvatske, 1984,
107–113.
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otherwise, the concept of experimental art is also posited as a more general concept
than the avant-garde, in which case it signifies various artistic practices from the
twentieth and early 21st century that pursue research and critical work in the
virtually infinite domain of the hybrid and f lexible possibilities of contemporary
art, culture, and society. the diagram below may serve to demonstrate this
complex construct:
EXPErIMEntAL Art
Avant-gardes neo-avant-gardes Post-avant-gardes contemporary art
ProJEct rEALISAtIon conSuMPtIon SuBVErSIon
utopia concrete utopia Mass culture Global society
in other words, the concept of “experimental art”, as a more general concept of
the practice of artistic research, refers to various research, critical, and inter-
disciplinary practices, which i classify in four potential formations.
Avant-gardes or, more precisely, historical or early avant-gardes (c. 1900–1933)
are characterised by explorations leading toward a project (utopian draft) of a
future or ideally imagined modern art, culture, or society. the avant-garde is
thus almost literally the vanguard or reconnaissance patrol of modernism, that is,
avant-gardes are an expression of a radical modernisation. they perceive the new
(the novel, novelty) as genuinely new, anticipated and craved.
the neo-avant-gardes (c. 1949–1968) which may be conceptualised as a critique
and overcoming of the cold War, established high modernism, by means of
multimedia, pro-science, and political explorations of its antagonisms and
limitations. the neo-avant-gardes already belong to “the tradition of the new”.
they were an expression of the intent to realise the new there and then – for
instance, the concrete utopianism of neo-constructivism. that is, the neo-avant-
gardes subvert the “canonisation of the new”. the new, losing its novel character
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due to its modernist canonisation, becomes subject to subversive and critical work
on the part of artists (Neo-dada, fluxus).
the concept of “post-avant-garde” (after 1980) points to postmodern, that
is, postmodernist artistic practices, which recycle or simulate strategies of
experimentation, transgression, and critical provocation under the conditions of
the post-modern mass market and popular culture. in addition to “post-avant-
garde”, one also encounters the terms “retro-avant-garde” and “post-pop”.
retro-avant-garde signifies a variety of retro approaches that signify, under
“post-modern plural conditions”, the recycling of clichés or stylistic patterns of
the avant-gardes and neo-avant-gardes, as well as, certainly, various modernist
samples, ranging from Fin-de-siècle clichés to those of the roaring 1920s and the
gloomy 1930s to the cliché of the cold War 1950s. post-pop signifies tactics of
appropriating and simulating popular and/or mass culture in experimental art
and its orientation toward the contemporary everyday. the new emerges against
the backdrop of the “tradition of the new”, which has become one of the old or
completed traditions of modernity and modernism.
the term “contemporary art” signifies post-media, critical, subversive, and
politicised artistic practices in the age of global transitions, so to speak, after
post-modernity. these practices unfolded in the antagonisms of the 1990s global
transition societies and continue to unfold under the conditions of the economic
crisis characteristic of post-2000 neoliberal capitalism. these practices are closer
to the f lexible, production technologies of mass media culture than they are to
traditional artistic or literary mediums. the term “contemporary” signifies that
which is taking place in the present and ref lecting and problematising the actuality
of geographic areas. experimentality no longer denotes the diachronic moving
of borders from the mastered toward the new, but a synchronic re-examination
of the conditions and circumstances of geographical and global contemporaneity
itself, in relation to the media, political, cultural, aesthetic, and, although quite
rarely, the traditionally artistic. furthermore, today’s totalising economy and
its corresponding global culture have posited the “new” as a temporary market
quality. Quite quickly, the plurality of the new is replaced by the plurality of
the newer still. this generates a staggering hyper-production of the new and its
totalising, almost instantaneous global supply. contemporary art, dealing with
contemporaneity, is at the same time the new mainstream (the undisputed style or
cliché of the actualisation of time and space) that affirms the neoliberal conditions
and circumstances of social reproduction and subversions of the dominant
representations of the market’s power. But paradoxically, if successful, every
rebellion transforms into a market value of mainstream culture.
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MediuM, MediA ANd postMediuM
the contexts described above (the avant-garde, neo-avant-garde, post-avant-
garde, contemporary art) enable locating the widest possible array of conditions
for extremely varied experimental artistic practices that all stem from the visual
arts, performing arts, new-media arts, and, certainly, literature. this concerns
the hybridisation of the traditional and homogeneous disciplines of art and
their expansion into the open field of experimentation, inter-disciplinary, and
inter-media crossing between various domains of art and culture. for instance,
letterist, concrete, and visual poetry stepped out of literature and into the field
of the visual, performing, and media arts. this was a move out of the verbal,
literary text, toward the visual poetic text (for instance, Jiři Valoch, Optical Poem,
1966). conceptual art abandoned the stable boundaries of painting and sculpture
as mediums. Visual artists moved into the field of the theoretical competence
of the humanities, the philosophy of language and society, and, often, literature
(poetry, prose, essay writing). A famous example is an essay by the Art&language
group, 354 which discusses the situation of mounting an essay on essay writing
on a museum or gallery wall. An entirely indeterminate and expansive field of
textual-visual production may be surveyed from dada (schwitters, picabia) and
surrealism (rené Magritte, Ceci n’est pas une pipe, 1929), via Neo-dada and fluxus,
to conceptual art and post-modern and contemporary practices ( Joseph Kosuth,
robert Barry, Barbara Kruger, Jenny holzer). Most of these works inhabit the
extra-disciplinary domain of visual-textual experimental or critical exchanges
and constructions. 355
turning now to the work of art in poetry, we may introduce certain conceptual
delineations. i will outline those delineations by progressing from the written
record of the poetic text (in phenomenological terms, from the paper bearing the
inscription of the poetic text) and from collecting poetic texts (written records
or imprints on paper). such a move takes one toward the body of the book (in
phenomenological terms, from the zero body of paper to the full body of the book)
and then on to the transformation of the poetic text into an object, situation, or
event. let us look at the table below:
354 Art & language (Baldwin, Atkinson): “print (2 section A and B) (1966)”, in: Art as Thought Process:
Works Bought for the Arts Council, ed. Michael compton. london: Arts council, 1974, 31.
355 Aimee selby (ed.): Art and Text. london: Black dog publishing, 2009.
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from technical support via medium to media paper
from technical support via medium to media Book
Media Book qua object, installation, event
Media object
postmedia installation
Medium sound
postmedia event
postmedia text and image
Media screen
postmedia Web/Network
the left column introduces the general conceptual identifications of different
technical mediators: technical support, medium, media and postmedia. each
of those terms has a multitude of meanings and conditions of use; therefore, i
will redefine them with specific uses in the context of the present discussion and
connect them to the terms in the right column. the right column represents very
specific and concrete tools in artistic communication, for example: paper, book,
object, instalation, sound, event, text, image, screen, web-network.
technical support denotes various means of creation, production, communication,
and presentation, which are used to make, present, communicate, and exchange
works of art/literature. those means do not constitute the character of an artwork,
but make it accessible in the conventional sense of reception. in other words,
a “technical means” is not an integral part of the work, but only its necessary
agent, whose phenomenal characteristics do not constitute the work’s aesthetic,
poetic, or artistic character. in yet other words, we may read a poem by petrarch
or haroldo de campos from a small or large book, a luxurious volume using 120-
gsm paper, or a cheap volume using 60-gsm paper. the only thing that matters is
that the imprint has to be technically adequate, legible, but legibility is not part
of the intent of petrarch’s or de campos’s poetry. legibility goes without saying,
as a necessary technical prerequisite for communicating a poetic text that is not
equivalent to the imprint itself.
“Medium” is a problematic term. entirely joking, i might say that it denotes
people endowed with extraordinary supersensory abilities that enable them to
communicate with beings beyond our world of experience. in the present context,
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however, that is not the meaning of “medium” i have in mind. in the context
of this discussion, the term signifies the totality of all material conditions and
aspects, i.e. things that are required in the production, emergence, exchange, and
communication of a work of art as such in the artworld, culture, and society. A
medium is much more than technical support, because it includes a complex poetic
and aesthetic relationship with technical support. for example, the medium of
petrarch’s poetry comprises his internal life, the latin language, the spoken and
written language of renaissance florence, as well as the multiplicity of possible
modes of reciting his poetry out loud and to oneself, and writing his poetry by
hand on a suitable surface or printing it mechanically, or, nowadays, presenting
it using any means of presentation whatsoever (ranging from printed to onscreen
and audiovisual images). All of this is further complicated by adding possible
techniques of translation from one language into another that are built into the
medium characteristic of his poetry. By contrast, a concrete poem by de campos
(for instance, fala / prate / cala / ouro), in addition to all the aspects of medium
that petrarch’s poetry has, also bears certain characteristics of the visual. its
visuality is a constitutive aspect of its medium, as poetically relevant as is the role
of linguistic language. in petrarch’s poetry, the visual has no such import, that is,
it is only a necessary condition for the legibility of an inscription whose messages
and aesthetic characteristics are not an effect of that legibility. By contrast, de
campos’s poetry “works” with the relationship of legibility and visibility as
constitutive aspects of a work of poetry. it may be noted that the concept of
medium also includes the conditions wherein a work comes into being, those of
communicating, i.e. exchanging the work, as well as those of its reception. in
literature, the medium of poetry often also includes aspects that are not in the
work itself, but relate to the receiver (reader, listener), who memorises the work,
with her/his potential abilities to reproduce it in her/his memories, writing, or
oral communication.
“Media” are technical means built in and presented as a constitutive poetic and
aesthetic aspect of a work of art. A “technical means” is not auxiliary support, as in
the literal usage of the term, but an important demonstrative aesthetic and poetic
aspect of a work of poetry, which means that it is constituent of the work, which
also shows and problematizes it. Marshall Mcluhan’s well-known phrase, “the
medium is the message”, 356 states that the medium is embodied in the message. in
other words, the totality of all material conditions and circumstances is embodied,
i.e. demonstratively materialised in the message (a work of poetry). if the totality
of all material conditions is reduced to “technical means” and “technical support”,
then one may say that the media of art is an applied technical means problematised
356 Marshall Mcluhan: Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. New york: Mentor, 1964, 7.
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and thematised by means of a poetic work of art. for instance, the russian avant-
garde (e.g. Alexei Kruchyonykh, olga rozanova, Vselenskaja vojna (universal
War, 1916), slovenian reism (e.g. i. G. plamen, Embrionalna knjiga [the embryonic
Book], 1968), and German conceptual art (franz erhard Walther, Large Cloth
Book, 1963–1969) treated artistic poetry books as a medium to be explored in
artistic research and used to present that research. russian avant-garde books
explored the relationship between verbal and visual technical means (means of
support), which constitute the expressive (sensory/aesthetic) properties of a book.
A book is not an “agent”, but the content of communication. in slovenian reism
and especially in Embrionalna knjiga, the poetry book itself was the object of a
phenomenologically motivated exploration of the “character of the book as a
medium” and the “boundaries of the book as a medium”. As for franz erhard
Walther, his Large Cloth Book is a sizable object, produced in the form of a book
comprising 68 pages. it is used as an unexpected space for putting performing
bodies into specific relations. the book as a medium of research is thereby brought
to the performing “condition of a postmedium”.
the postmedia artistic or poetry practice may be interpreted as a hybrid linking
of various artistic, poetic, and extra-artistic phenomena in the presentation of
political, aesthetic, ethical, and poetic/artistic ideas. postmedia works are poetic/
50 Biljana tomić: Typoetry, letraset, 1968
courtesy Biljana tomić
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artistic or aesthetic events realised as objects, installations, or performances that
are appropriations of extra-artistic objects, situations, events, institutions, and
modes of behaviour, that is, data aesthetics or documentary practices. My preferred
term, “postmedia artistic practice”, is indebted to the term “the post-medium
condition”, developed by American theorist and art historian rosalind Krauss. 357
the difference between her usage of the term “the post-medium condition”,
itself indebted to lyotard’s “postmodern condition” (la condition postmoderne),
and my own construct is that my construct does not engage in a comparative
polemic concerning the importance and value that the medium and media may
have as opposed to the postmedium and postmedia in the phenomenological-
aesthetic sense, but merely describes the condition of the contemporary hybrid
artistic and poetic practice, no longer predicated on the traditional modern
mediums and media of poetry, the fine and the visual arts. these are hybrid
artistic practices that traverse various formats of performing poetic, artistic,
and aesthetic concepts, stances, discourses, and apparatuses. the traditional and
modern poet or artist was determined by a “specialised poetic ontology”, which
was essentially determined by the nature of her/his preferred medium or media
(painting, poetry, prose, photography, theatre, film, etc.). the contemporary
artist and/or poet addresses the format whereby her/his ideas (concepts, stances,
discourses, and apparatuses) are realised. in other words, before, one was an artist
or poet by virtue of using a certain medium or media in a canonical or individual
way. today, by contrast, artists or poets are identified as such regardless of the
medium or media they employ. they select the best suited format for realising
their ideas and introducing them into the field of social or cultural contexts. the
concept of format refers not to a “poetic ontology” that determines an artist, but
to her/his strategy of acting in art, culture, and society. in contemporary art and
poetry, strategy takes us from “style” toward a “political platform”. therefore,
the format is not a necessary way of creating or expressing, but a disciplinary or
inter-disciplinary set of modalities for realising artistic and poetic ideas, selected
from one instance to the next. such a set of modalities may rest on the medium or
media of a particular discipline of art, or on inter-disciplinary moving between
various disciplines of art, as well as on media from other cultural and social
practices (bureaucracy, politics, social work, creative industries, mass media,
everyday forms of life, etc.). A format is not an artist’s or poet’s choice of a
specific poetics of art/poetry, but a real or ostensible choice of performing a
politics of art/poetry.
357 rosalind e. Krauss: ‘A Voyage on the North Sea’: Art in the Age of the Post-medium Condition. london:
thames and hudson, 1999, 32, 45; rosalind e. Krauss: Perpetual Inventory. cambridge, MA: Mit
press, 2010, xii, 89.
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51 csernik Attila: Telopis, performance, 1971
courtesy csernik Atila
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there are many examples of postmedia artistic and poetic practices – here are
some of them! Bálint szombathy has realised “found poetry” (Found Visual Poems:
Rock Letters, 1976). these are works of poetry realised in the format of land art.
szombathy looked for rocks in the ground and used them to produce letters in it.
the resulting work is located outdoors (pico del teide, tenerife). in the world of
art, szombathy’s work of poetry is present by means of photo-documents.
in 1970, the Bosch + Bosch group performed Art, an interventional poetry action.
they used cardboard to make the letters A, r, and t, and installed them outdoors,
on the ground or in water.
Visual artist Josip stošić worked with the format of the poetic installation of objects
(Verbalno preparirani predmeti [Verbally prepared objects], 1970) and behavioural
interactive action (Premetaljka [Anagram], 1971) in gallery spaces and other types
of interior. his installation HA-HA (1964–84) was realised as a simulacrum of
a theatre melodrama. for instance, when the curtain rises, the improvised stage
features the letters hA...hA, cut out of paper. the letters constitute the actors of
the play, its décor, and poetic text, all at once.
the performance format was developed in various situations, for instance, in
the context of the poetic voice as the medium and/or media of poetry (Kurt
schwitters, Ursonate, 1922–1932) and in the experimental hybrid poetic practice
of “oral, audio, or verbal poetry” (henry chopin, Katalin ladik, John cage).
in this context, one might also mention complex theatricalised poetic
performances, such as More (the sea), a 1969 action by the oho group and tomaž
Šalamun; Katalin ladik’s Vabljenje (1968); carolee schneemann’s feminist poetry
performance Interior Scroll (1975); Attila csernik’s body poetry from the 1970s;
and charles Bernstein’s language poetry performances (Futurist Manifestos, 2009).
An example of postmedia poetry practice based on digital interactive visual-textual
models was presented at the Vienna Airport in 2012 (ZeitRaum, a project realised by
Ars electronica futurelab, in collaboration with Jussi Ängeslevä, yugo Nakamura,
and robert huber). digital poetry, for instance, has developed from media
(computer poetry, hyper-textual poetry) to postmedia poetry (internet or net poetry,
interactive poetry, digital performance) – characteristic artists include eduardo Kac
and catherine davinio. today, new media, i.e. digital technologies have globalised
the field of postmedia artistic practices and brought it to the dominant “flexible
possibility” of practising as well as applying experimental poetry/art.
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in the contemporary world, the ideas of postmedia working with hybridised and
f lexible artistic, poetic, and literary formats have emerged in two antagonistic
roles:
(1) that of art suited to the de-territorialised and f lexible corporate and
market demands of mass consumption (the advertising industry, political
propaganda, cultural creative activism, the construction of the public
social sphere, mass consumption), and
(2) that of art suited to the demands for permanent emancipation and critique
of contemporary structures of political and economic power (activist
politicised art).
these two roles are not unconnected; on the contrary, they are connected in the
antagonism that we recognise as the constitutive conf lict of contemporaneity.
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19
Bio Art
the prehuman / the human / the posthuman
Bio Art denotes those art practices that are based on a spectacularising working
with biological and biopolitical systems and practices. Biotechnopolitical
conceptions may be identified in the performances of hanna Wilke (Intra-
Venus, her medically spectacularised work from 1993), stelarc (his Third Hand,
1976–1980, a cybernetic hand), orlan (Omnipresence, plastic-surgery procedures
conducted on the artist’s body in 1993), in the performances and video works
by Matthew Barney (regulating the body and an electronic system in Blind
Perineum, a 1991 work of his), in the performances of Zoran todorović (the use
of the human body for food, 1998), the organic, living tapestry and sculpture of
oron catts, ionat Zurr, and Guy Ben-Ary (performing sculptures with fibrillar
microorganisms that reproduce, develop, and spread, 1990), the installations of
eduardo Kac (Genza, his work with a f luorescent rabbit from 2000), as well as in
works by heli rekula, lucy orta, egle rakauskaite, ron Athey, polona tratnik,
Andreja Kulunčić, and others.
live art is primarily the practice of performing an artwork, i.e. a live event, in
the presence of an audience. the concept of “live art” is synonymous with the
concepts of performance art and body art. the idea of synthesising life and art
was first given in the project of the total work of art (Gesamtkunstwerk). the notion
of performing an interactive relation between “life” and art signifies procedures,
processes, situations, and events of presenting an artistic concept live before an
audience, or in collaboration with the audience. this primarily concerns all forms
of “the performing arts” and, more narrowly, “performance art” and its 20th-
century modifications. those modifications led from avant-garde artists” private
and public actions to German and Austrian actionism, social sculpture, masculine
and feminist body art, conceptual performance, photo- and video performance,
as well as cultural activism, techno-performance, cyber-performance, bio-
performance, radical body art, and “device art”. performing live is determined by
distinguishing the event of presenting an artistic concept from a produced piece
of art. At a time of transition and globalism, live performance poses some obvious
questions about the relation between “life” and the “functioning of machines” in
complex interactions between organic and machinic, inorganic acting.
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however, live art is also an expression of the spectacularisation of relations
between forms of life and contemporary art practices. it concerns relations at
a time of transition and globalisation, whereby the conception of “live art” is
entirely modified. According to yves Michaud: “here it is a new field of acts and
works that employ the materials and processes of life”. 358
relations between life and art are founded on the position that forms of life
may be spectacularised as qualitatively new phenomena in art and culture.
Analysing relations between art and life leads toward modes of representing, i.e.
spectacularising life through art. in addition, forms of life thereby become a kind
of post-media in artistic acting. forms of life become tactical media for exploring
the fields of visibility of those forms of life themselves.
human culture is a specific form of life. forms of life are spectacularised in cultural
formations. for instance, the commune in Šempas, slovenia, 359 emerged through a
critique of modernist and urban alienation. it posited itself as a symptom, or even
as an experimental ground for exploring “natural”, i.e. non-urban forms of life.
Non-urban forms of life are spectacularised there through models of rites, rituals,
and ceremonies in everyday living in nature.
Another important position in live-art practices lies in distinguishing between
the human body as a biological organism and the behavioural body. for instance,
American body artist dennis oppenheim worked with his double-action body. in
Parallel Stress (1970), he used his body as an instrument to measure physical urban
and natural space. in that project, the human body was used as a behavioural
measuring instrument. By means of his own behaviour, the artist determines the
situation of his body and the environment in which it acts. in Stills from Gingerbread
Man (1970–1971) and The Residue (Waste Products) Becomes the Finished Work Micro-
Projection-Feces (1970), oppenheim worked with two different types of his body’s
phenomenality: with a behavioural body in the process of consuming gingerbread
in which a photo shows the artist eating and with a body in the process of
digesting the consumed gingerbread. the work also comprises a graphic medical
representation of the cake being processed inside the artist’s digestive system.
these two levels of presenting the artist’s relating to the cake point to two
divergent understandings of “live art” – as behavioural and as biological.
358 yves Michaud: “Art and Biotechnology”, in: Signs of Life. Bio Art and Beyond, ed. eduardo Kac.
cambridge MA: the Mit press, 2007, 387.
359 the Šempas commune grew out of the oho group in 1971. cf. taras Kermauner and Marko
pogačnik: “oho – Šempas 1963–1985”, in: Zmajeve črte, ekologija in umetnost, ed. Marko pogačnik.
Maribor: Založba obzorja, 1986, 109–123.
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Models of representing human or animal bodies as biological organisms are likewise
characteristic of live art. that is, performances are characteristic of biological
metaphors for the human body. representations of the body qua biological have
a long tradition in the West, from dürer and leonardo’s scientific/artistic work
in the renaissance, to rembrandt’s The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp (1632),
through the natural-history museums of the late Baroque and enlightenment –
for instance, florence’s La Specola museum. La Specola features anatomical wax
figures, which display the human body and its biological structures. in one of
his studies, french art historian Georges didi-huberman offered a foucaultian
historicisation of medical photography. he has developed an elaborate discussion
of photographic representations of the diseased body in french 19th-century
medical journals. the role of medical photography was to visualise illness:
this text makes a surreptitious leap: the experience of the clinic comes to
be identified with something like a “fine sensibility”. it was a “concrete”
sensibility, or, if you prefer, “sensory” knowledge — but an aesthetic, in
any case, a scholarly aesthetic (the beautiful soul mentioned above). 360
American performance artist carolee schneemann has spectacularised her body in
menstrual cycle (Interior Scroll, 1975), whereas British artist franko B has mounted
performances in which he spilled blood from his own veins (Oh Lover Boy, 2001).
on the more dramatic end of the scale, artists of different epochs have attempted
to represent “death” as the limit of life or as that condition after life. death itself
could never be represented. instead, artists developed different iconographies
to represent dying (e.g. Jacques-louis david, The Death of Joseph Bara, 1794),
the dead body (e.g. Marlene dumas, Waiting (for Meaning), 1988 and Gerhard
richter, Dead, 1988), and metaphorical or allegorical representations of death as
a humanoid figure (e.g. dürer, The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, 1498; damien
hirst, For the Love of God, 2007). death was always able to elude entirely different
aspects of its spectacularisation and attempts to achieve it. similarly to love, death
does not yield to literal visual representations – even in such cases as photographs
of friedrich Nietzsche’s dying body (25 August 1900) or that of painter olga
rozanova on her deathbed (7 November 1918). death is the limit of all forms of
life and may be spectacularised only through the signifying practices of the un-
literal and fictional mediation of signs, texts, or images of death. in 1993, derek
Jarman made Blue, a film that shows a blue screen for the entire 75 minutes of its
duration. this is accompanied by a voice that speaks of living with Aids, dying,
and death: “My retina is a distant planet. i played this scenario for the last six
360 Georges didi-huberman: Invention of Hysteria: Charcot and the Photographic Iconography of the
Salpêtrière. cambridge, MA: the Mit press, 2003, 26.
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years […] My vision will never come back […] the virus rages, i have no friends
now. i lost my sight […] i shall not win the battle with the virus”. 361
in contemporary art, live art has become conceivable by politicising forms of
life, which means all those forms that show “life” in its social contingency and
spectacularisation. life is viewed here not as a prehuman event, but as an event
that is determined by the limits of performing human relations, i.e. sociality.
initially, politicising forms of life was associated with environmentalist and
feminist art activism and later, in the 1990s and 2000s, it spread to other fields of
art activism. for instance, bio-activists have focused on critiquing and subverting
the political power of corporate genetic engineering. in Free Range Grain (2000–
2004), the critical Art ensemble sought to spectacularise, i.e. face the public with
the production of genetically modified food:
What cAe / da costa / shyu see in this particular example of GM good
distribution is a means to visualize the material reality of theories of global
trade. on the one hand, there is the global economy of smooth space, where
the commodity moves relatively freely. on the other hand, there is a belief
that markets can be locked down by using traditional forms of blockage
typically used to preserve or strengthen nation-state economies. the eu
is often perceived both as open (a major architect in the development of
open markets and free trade as well as producers of global consensus) and
yet locked down (fortress europe). our belief, however impressionistic, is
that the eu tends toward the global (smooth space). since processed corn
and soy products are being imported into europe in large quantities, we
are quite skeptical that the eu will be able to maintain its borders against
such contaminated commodities. 362
the cAe thereby opened the field of biological production and politics to social
critique, by means of spectacularisation through artistic tactical media. for them,
the problem is not “biological technology” itself, but the profit that comes out of
it and the grounds for the political strategies of dominating and controlling forms
of life. 363
to call certain art practices “medical” or “pharmaceutical” means to point out
that concepts that developed out of artistic representations toward bio-activism
361 derek Jarman (dir.): Blue, dVd, 1993.
362 critical Art ensemble, Beatriz da costa, shyh-shiun shyu: Free Range Grain (2000–2004), http://
www.critical-art.net/frG.html, 18.07.2011.
363 critical Art ensemble: “introduction / contestational Biology”, in: The Molecular Invasion. New
york: Autonomedia, 2002, 3–4.
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developed in the direction of medical and pharmaceutical science, institutions,
and their political discourses that participate in the construction of individual
and social reality. such art practices become a “symptom” of the conditions and
circumstances in which medical and pharmaceutical industries establish their bio-
power, control the difference between health and disease, survey and regulate
forms of life, and set out to do business and presuppose economic interests to
human health. controlling the difference between disease and good health has
given rise to the genre potentialities of spectacularising reactions to medicines, of
using medicines to modify forms of life, and of treating and surveying the living
body, maintaining and ending its life, as well as problematising pharmaceutical
production.
A symptom is a construct of signification that, unlike a phantasm, can be analysed.
the artist qua symptom addresses an uncrossed and consistently large other (the
medical and pharmaceutical bio-power) that will retroactively assign the artist
a certain meaning and role in the individual and social organisation of everyday
reality. for instance, hannah Wilke performed her private rituals for photographer
donald Goddard in her hospital bed. she had cancer and posited her “medically
treated body” as a symptom of the relations between disease, medicine, and art.
lacanian psychoanalysis treats the symptom as a defect of symbolisation, i.e. as
the centre of opacity and the unverbalised in the subject. 364 the symptom is an
element where the concealed appears, the repressed truth of a field, of a totality.
the symptom is a point where totality necessarily slides. symptoms are resolved
in interpretation by assigning them meanings, by situating them in a symbolic
network and thereby depriving them of their absurd and traumatic contents.
in lacanian psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic treatment ends when the subject
identifies with his symptom. the subject identifies with the place where the
symptom used to be and recognises the element that lends it consistency. Medical
and pharmaceutical discourse must be brought to symbolisation in all its opacity
– which is not only a matter of “semantics” but also of “visibility”. confronting
the visibility of medical and pharmaceutical mechanisms occurs on a spectrum
between “subjective feeling” and social institutionalisations of bio-power, which
directly or indirectly decides about the status of the healthy and the status of the
diseased, that is, about life and death.
the notion of the visibility of illness, for instance, of mental illness, was an
obsession among romantic and later expressionist painters. Géricault’s portraits of
364 Jacques-Alain Miller: “two critical dimensions: symptom and fantasm”, 2009, http://
pablobenavides2.blogspot.com/2010/09/two-clinical-dimensions-symptom-and.html, 18. 07.
2011.
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mental patients (1818–1824) spectacularised human mental life by showing visible
behaviourality (facial expressions and contortions, positions of the body, etc.).
individual behaviouralities were posited as different types of human pathology.
spectacularising inner life was a constructive act of locating and positing
identification matrices in french modern culture.
A different example of an artist’s engagement with medical and pharmaceutical
subjectification is Marina Abramović’s performance Ritam 2 (rhythm 2) from
1974. the artist used her body exclusively as a means to manifest psychophysical
reactions to acute schizophrenia medication. the working of these medicines
brought her body into unpredictable conditions. the work recorded the changes
on her body caused by the medication. her body was spectacularising the effects
of the medication.
the General idea group – two of whose members died as a result of Aids –
produced a series of projects to follow the syndrome’s emergence. the emergence
of Aids constituted not only the emergence of a new disease, but also of a
pathology complex that carried social and political effects, first and foremost
in the us. 365 the associations of homophobic campaigns in the late 1980s and
1990s turned an issue of an epidemic and medical intervention to contain it into a
political issue, one of labelling specific gender identities as suitable or unsuitable.
the cultural climate around Aids showed how medical policies turn into social
policies. in that context the General idea group started a series of “symptom”
projects (The Imagevirus Series, 1989–1991; Blue (Cobalt) Placebo, 1991; Pharmacopia,
1992; Infections, 1994). With these projects, they confronted the experience with
the understanding of individual and collective attitudes on Aids.
Genetics was then anticipated as a scientific – empirical and theoretical –
discipline founded on observing and generalising rules regarding living
organisms’ hereditary features. As a scientific discipline, genetics traversed a
number of stages over the course of the 20th century, which shaped its political
history. 366 in philosophical terms, during modernism genetics was characterised
by an essentialist and universalist stance on the hereditary predetermination of
all living organisms. it was posited in opposition to the darwinist qua theory
of living organisms’ adaptation to their environment and struggle to survive. it
had empirical and pragmatic characteristics in selecting and modifying different
365 tyrus Miller: “Aids and Artistic politics”, in: Congress Book. Panels, Plenaries, Artists’ Presentations.
17th International Congress of Aesthetics, ed. Jale Nejdet erzen. Ankara: sANArt, 2008, 83–90.
366 raphael falk: Genetic Analysis: A History of Genetic Thinking. cambridge: cambridge university
press, 2009.
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species of plant and animal life used in human diet. in political terms, genetic
metaphorisation formed the ground of many racial theories, racist politics, and,
especially, eugenics as the study of “pure” racial species.
later, genetics became a discipline of molecular biology. it was defined as the
study of communicating inside “living material”. Genes were theoretically
posited as carriers of information or informational constructs that participate
in the construction of every organism’s living cells. the communicational
character of genes guided the subsequent development of genetics as a theoretical,
experimental, and technological discipline. its extraordinary development began
during the final third of the 20th century. 367 What essentially changed the status
of genetics in the field of sociality was its entry into the field of commercial
engineering. on the neoliberal market, genetic engineering opens up to those
areas that are not only pragmatic activities, e.g. developing new types of healthy
and cheap foods or treating hereditary diseases, but also those of predicting and
constructing new or modifying existing forms of life, as well as integrating
genetic engineering and genetic narratives into contemporary cultural and artistic
practices.
Genetic art begins as a laboratory research art of new forms of life. the ideal
of shaping life has forged a tight bond between genetic engineering and artistic
explorations of genetic technologies. it concerns obsessing and fancying that art
may open up to new post-media, i.e. genetic technologies, which modify forms of
life, such as formation principles that ground the derivation of new forms of life.
on the other hand, it concerns extending human perception, which is brought
into a relation with the visibility of forms of life and their modifications. for
instance, Joe davis has pointed to the following change in art and its potentiality
regarding forms of life:
in a relatively short period of time, artists have moved from the traditions
of naturalism as mimetic representation to the direct manipulation of life
itself. to date, the extent of these artistic manipulations has been work
with single genes (or sets of genes) and their expression or disposition
within the cells of host organisms. 368
there are many works that make use of strategies and tactics of genetic
transformations in metaphorical ways, such as “dolly”, Act iii of steve reich and
Beryl Korot’s video opera Three Tales (1997) and eduardo Kac’s post-production
project GFP Bunny from 2000. the following works also use strategies and tactics
367 Joe davis: “cases for Genetic Art”, in: Signs of Life, 249.
368 ibid., 262.
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of genetic engineering with living materials in an interventional way: Hybrid:
Streptocarpus Hybrid (2002) by George Gessert, Marta de Menezes’s Heliconius
Butterf ly (1999), eduardo Kac’s The Eighth Day (2001), and Al Wunderlich’s Living
Paintings, among others. oron catts and ionat Zurr have likewise realised projects
involving “semi-living sculptures”, which are inanimate objects colonised by
living cells. 369
over time, genetic art expanded to cover not only the firm and idealised, often
also a fascinating “science-technology-art” collusion, including the cultural
fields, as well as the political analysis of the discourse, institutions, and certainly
the effects and affects of “genetic products” in contemporary society. the
critical Art ensemble’s activist production, such as The Flesh Machine (1997–98)
are characteristic of this strand in genetic art. politicising genetics by means of
genetic art and cultural activism has been established as a practice of cultural
analysis and also often of subverting genetics as a science and technological
engineering in the service of bio-power and the neoliberal totalising market.
this no longer concerned being fascinated about intervening in the field of
primary forms of life, but also about politicising different contexts of genetics
as a science, technology, and art. the issues that genetic art raises today address
not only new or modified forms of life, but also re-examine those statuses and
functions of genetics that relate to the field of sociality: artistic work with the
platforms, protocols, and procedures, i.e. institutional potentialities and limits
of medical genetics, as well as with the market in genetics, which is determined
by the commercialisation of genetic engineering on the global market. Genetic
engineering or genetic technology are therefore treated as artistic or tactical post-
media and used to realise concepts and projects in literal working with forms
of life. spectacularising the politicisation of “genetic engineering” exposes its
constructs and systems of control as instruments in the ongoing performance of
today’s hyper-technologised reality, i.e. the ideology of life control.
the respective jargons of cybernetics, cultural studies, and art theory distinguish
between three different structural concepts of an “artificial organism”. A robot
is an autonomous artificial body directed by algorhithms, which enable it to
simulate the bodily behaviour – working and acting – of a human being. A cyborg
is an artificial “organism”, made by articulating the hardware of a machine linked
with a biological organism. in a general sense, an android is an artificially derived
organism that reminds one of a human being by its corporeality. copies of men
369 oron catts, ionat Zurr: “An emergence of the semi-living”, in: The Aesthetics of Care?, ed. oron
catts. perth, Australia: symbiotica, 2002, 63–68.
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are called androids, whereas copies of women are called genoids. More narrowly, a
genoid/android is an artificial technobiologically generated being, the appearance
and behaviour of which remind one of a female or male human.
Metaphorically, a cyborg is any artificial, i.e. machinic body that features a
regulative hardware connection with a biological organism: this would include
such concoctions as video-bio-computer installations, bio-mechanical dolls,
prosthetically extended biological bodies, cybernetic products (biologised
robotics), and various science-fiction projections of para-mythological creatures.
cyborgs are metaphorical creatures endowed with unlimited possibilities of
transvesting, i.e. of a regulating kind of cross-dressing and disguising in the world of
bio-electronic simulated realities.
philosophically, a cyborg is a creature made by synthesising a creature with a
non-creature (the metaphysics of machines, the metaphysics of bodies other than
biological bodies and of life other than biological life). this anticipates the basic
metaphysical question of natural and unnatural forms of life – i.e. of forms and
anti-forms of life. A cyborg may also be defined as an analytical creature that is
the result, i.e. the consequence of a biological-hardware realisation of analytical
technological propositions. phenomenologically, a cyborg is that which shows
the interactive links between the presence (ontology), appearance (morphology),
and phenomenality (of labour, production, acting, reception, exchange, and
consumption) of every spatio-temporal event in the world.
in cyber-technologies, relations between cause and consequence, that is, destinies
and fatalities in the regulative relation between biological and mechanic organisms
are subject to change. establishing (Her-stellen) and representing (Dar-stellen)
overlap on a screen that shows how the prosthetic conjunction of the biological and
the electronic simultaneously occurs in real and machine time. Not only is the
paradigm of positing, i.e. performing presence thereby cancelled, but so also is
that of presenting, i.e. deferring, which constitutes the situation of absence. the
issue of the border between the organism and the machine is thereby reduced to
that where the biological organism ends and the machine begins. All borders are
thus relativised and the human being no longer feels like a finished (complete, i.e.
organically accomplished and unified) body, but as an extended body, as well as
one that grows out of a machine. it is an event between a body and a machine.
that something “in between” is the founding epistemological difference that
grounds not only the ontology, but also the sociology of cyborgs.
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the history of cyber-art is linked with 1960s neo-constructivism. 370 enrique
castro-cid, of chile, organised the first exhibition of robots in 1965. the
pioneers of robotic, cybernetic, regulative ecological, and cyber-art include Nam
June paik (Robot-K56 with 20-Channel Radio Control and 10-Channel Data Recorder,
1965), charles Mattox (Act of Love, 1965), thomas shannon (Squat, 1966), david
von schlegell (Radio-Controlled Sculpture, 1966), and hans haacke (Grass Cube,
1967). A number of artists also worked in association with the californian Art and
Technology movement, which during the late sixties and seventies brought together
pro-scientific tendencies toward analysing and synthesising science, technology,
and art: visual explorations, kinetic, computer, and cybernetic art, robotic art,
ecologic art, etc. edward ihnatowicz was the first “robotic artist” in the full sense
of the term. he worked with interactive situations between robots, the audience,
and the environment. one of his works is The Senster (1969–70) – a hydraulic
robot that responded to the voices and movements of people walking around
it. The Senster was the first robotic sculpture controlled by a computer. Notable
robotic artists today include stelarc, Julie Wilson, eduardo Kac, Kevin Warwick,
Guillermo Gómez-peña, Juan ybarra, and the electronic defence theater group,
among others.
in feminist theory, cyber-technologies have become an important critical
metaphor, because they facilitate the deconstruction of gender qua sexual, i.e.
biological essentialism. feminist theory/philosophy views the cyborg as an
ontological sample that enables the hybridisation of the biological human body,
that is, of human forms of life. Biologically standardised and identified, the human
body is thereby modified in a functional, sensorial, and spatio-temporal sense.
this means that the completeness and tightness of the human body that is present
there and then is thereby relativised and brought to a degree of bio-machinic
processed-ness that turns the fiction of a different body into an event and the
event into a new human experience. to experience oneself as a bio-machine is
a novel subversive identification that destabilises universal humanoidity and the
humanistically situated division of gender roles:
the cyborg is resolutely committed to partiality, irony, intimacy, and
perversity. it is oppositional, utopian, and completely without innocence.
No longer structured by the polarity of public and private, the cyborg
defines a technological polis based partly on a revolution of social relations
in the oikos, the household. Nature and culture are reworked; the one
can no longer be the resource for appropriation or incorporation by the
370 Jack Burnham: “robot and cyborg Art”, in: Beyond Modern Sculpture: The Effects of Science and
Technology on the Sculpture of This Century. New york: George Braziller, 1975, 312–376.
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other. the relationships for forming wholes from parts, including those of
polarity and hierarchical domination, are at issue in the cyborg work. 371
feminist-oriented cyborg theory has introduced gender transgressivity in
utopian idealisations of different, relativised, and transitional bio-technologically
produced bodies. this transgressivity has led to a relativisation of gender identity,
as well as to a restructuring of the affectivity of drive and desire. drive and
desire thereby turn into affect (enjoyment, abjection, or horror) in relation to the
machine and the biological organism.
A separate problem in understanding and performing biotechnopolitical art or,
more succinctly, Bio-Art, concerns the metaphysical, technological, scientific,
and political relations between the prehuman, human, and posthuman. this
is not about a simple line of transformation from the prehuman via human to
posthuman, but an uncertain “tangle” of lines of performing the prehuman,
human, and posthuman.
the “pre” in “prehuman” signifies primarily that there are forms of life that
precede the human form of life. it suggests, in the spirit of evolutionism, that
human forms of life stem, perhaps, from prehuman forms of life. darwin’s theory
of evolution points to such a chronology of development, from lower forms of life
to the human form of life. however, using “prehuman” might also signify all those
simpler forms of life that are independent and unaffiliated with human forms of
life. the entire living world that surrounds humans, even those segments of it
that are subject to technological interventions by humans, comprises a plurality
of forms of life that may be called pre- or extra-human. hence the definition
that prehuman and/or extra-human forms of life are those that are outside human
forms of life. some of those external forms of life comprise a constituent part of
human forms of life, for instance, bacteria, which inhabit the human organism
and participate in its operation, or viruses, which inhabit and “colonise” it in order
to attack it. finally, all those teachings that precede the philosophy, politics, and
ideology of humanism may also be considered “prehuman” in a philosophical
sense. As one of the fundamental pre- or para-human philosophies, politics, and
ideologies in the West, christianity is in its essence – with one God the creator –
driven by prehuman motives. the christian concept of man who is a work of God
is s/he whose appearance resembles God’s, but God’s essence does not resemble
man’s. Man is determined by a prehuman – i.e. God’s work. Also, an irresolvable
aporia in christian philosophy is its narrative of the son of God who is both God
371 dona J. haraway: “A cyborg Manifesto”, in: Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of
Nature. New york: routledge, 1991, 151.
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and man. 372 that means that the identity of the son – Jesus christ – is determined
by prehuman and human attributes both at once. the philosophical concept of
the son of God, Jesus christ, thereby emerges as a transitional concept that moves
us away from God as principle to man as principle and that means away from
christian theology as the basis of christian ideology to humanist philosophy as
the basis of modern ideology.
the human is literally the property of being human, that is, the phenomenality
and presence of being human in the world. in a derived sense, the human
is an expression or construct of the ideology of humanism. the human is a
construct of an epistemology that posits the human and humanity as the basis
of any understanding of man, culture, society, and even the world itself. Man
is imagined as the source of all thinking and intentional acting in the world.
humanism is therefore posited as the universal code, language, and linguistic
system that enables us to communicate at all. 373 As an ideology, political theory,
and philosophic dogma, humanism constitutes itself between the renaissance, of
course, the late Baroque, and finally the enlightenment, in which this explicit-
differential “i’ of the liberal, modern human is constructed and performed.
humanism is an ideology because it offers material conditions and circumstances
to identification, whereby a creature by means of an event manages to recognise
and determine itself as “human” (a child, woman, man, gay, lesbian, transsexual,
queer, etc.). human is viewed as the agent of the world – the world is identified
as such, i.e. as the real inasmuch as human appears in it as the agent who ref lects
and brings it from concrete to abstract knowledge. humanism is also a political
theory because it theorises the ontological basis of every existing world as a
“human world” based on performing entirely different social relations. it is also
a philosophical dogma that centres human knowledge – the power of producing
and deriving concepts – at the core of every knowledge. the source as well as
the abyss of knowledge is human. human is he who thinks, i.e. knows, and
knowledge is estranged from him by being written down or mediated through
various means, ranging from speech and writing to mechanical, electronic, and
digital systems of acting. the notion of estrangement occupies an important
position in humanism. it occurs when the “human” is relayed or transformed
by extra-human means, i.e. technologies, which are still human – since they are
manmade. And yet, they are less human than human acting itself, because they
372 Jean-luc Nancy: “Atheism and Monotheism”, in: Dis-Enclosure: The Deconstruction of Christianity,
trans. Bettina Bergo, Gabriel Malenfant and Michael B. smith. New york: fordham university
press, 2008, 23–24.
373 dušan pirjevec: “svijet u svjetlosti kraja humanizma” [the World in light of the end of
humanism], in Smrt i niština: odabrani spisi [death and Nothingness: selected Writings], ed. Mario
Kopić. Zagreb: demetra, 2009, 7.
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detach themselves from human. in his critique of humanism, slovenian scholar
and thinker dušan pirjevec noticed a link between humanism and technocratism
in their common desire to rule to world:
What does it mean that human rules nature by means of technique? to rule
nature is the goal of the subject that was long ago determined by europe’s
first thinker on the subject, rené descartes, saying “se rendre comme
maitres et possesseurs de la nature” (to make oneself ruler and proprietor
of nature). to be lord, to rule, is kratein in Greek, so one must say that a
man who uses technique to rule nature is a technocrat. the technocrat
is the complete man-subject. the man-subject forms the foundation of
humanism, therefore humanism, victorious and realised as subjectivism,
is in fact technocratism. 374
re-examining the subject, which is an essential effect of humanist ideology,
politics, and philosophy, brings about a reversal: by re-examining itself, the
subject becomes an object. the border between subject and object, which resides
at the centre of humanist discourse, is re-examined, and that brings humanism
into question. heidegger questioned humanism by means of the traditional doubt
regarding the “originality” or “primacy” of the subject: Man is never first and
foremost man on the hither side of the world, as a “subject”, whether this is taken
as “i” or “We”. 375
By contrast, structuralist theory advanced its own critique of humanism from
the standpoint of an ideological critique and conceptualisation of the subject
inside the structure. the ideological critique of humanism strives to show that
humanism is not a “commonsensical” or “self-evident” view of the world or of
itself as the source of the world/worldliness. if humanism is not self-evident, if it
is structured as a discourse, then it is a complex and complicit way of deriving an
image, i.e. a fictional representative that suggests that it is a self-evident reality.
if humanism is a fictional mediating representative between the individuum and
collectivity in the world, then it is an ideology. from claude lévi-strauss to
Michel foucault and Jacques derrida, the structuralist claim emphasised that the
subject was not the source of or in itself, but instead, that the individuum qua
subject became possible only by positioning itself in the order of a structure that
is given in the same way as language is. the claim is that the subject results from
a structural relation within culture or society, not that structural relations result
from the subject.
374 ibid., 28.
375 heidegger: “letter on humanism”, in: Martin heidegger: Basic Writings, ed. and trans. david
farrell Krell. london: Kegan paul, 1977, 229.
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re-examining the borders of humanism, that is, treating the subject as an object
of epistemological work, leads to conceptions of transhumanism. transhumanism
is established around issues concerning the limits of human forms of life, that is, it
explores those limits as concrete and abstract knowledges. transhumanism seeks
to explore and develop concrete knowledge of human forms of life, which usually
means technical knowledge and skill, in order to enhance the mental and physical
capabilities of humans. A range of different techniques, such as bioscience (genetics,
neurology), medicine (electronic orthopaedics, nanotechnologies), pharmacology,
and cybernetics (artificial reality, artificial intelligence), are used to enhance
human forms of life. in a utopian sense, transhumanism may also be understood
as using technology to transfer one form of life into another, hoping not only to
extend human life, but to preserve it and eventually bring it to “immortality”.
As an epistemology of abstract knowledge, transhumanism offers two roughly
varying approaches: utopian fiction, and a philosophically motivated discussion
of potential ways out of the “catastrophe of natural evolution”, therefore also of
life the forms of which can be technologically “preserved”. 376
the posthuman comes out of theorisations and predictions that may be labelled
as effects of posthumanism. 377 the concept of “posthumanism” may not be
strictly determined. posthumanism may be discussed as a collection of theoretical
platforms of advance structuralism and post-structuralism that question the
“concept of the subject” and the “discourse of the subject”, that is, the ideology
of modern humanism. those theorisations that aim at materialist naturalism and
biologism, that is, at discussions of non-intentional forms of life, may also be
considered posthumanist. posthumanism labels predictions, that is, speculations
about life after death or the forms of life that may be identified after death.
finally, posthumanism labels those technologies whereby the “posthuman world”
of robots, cyborgs, artificial intelligence, genetically constructed forms of life as
well as their roles in extending, enhancing, and immortalising human forms of
life are realised. it concerns transferring or simulating or generating human forms
or life in artificially constructed and derived digital, biological, and digital-
biological systems. Artificial forms of life independent of human existence at the
same time pose fictional, philosophic, predictive, and technological questions,
which are raised in the context of posthumanist thought.
When the concepts of the prehuman, human, and posthuman are identified in
contemporary art, especially with regards to biotechnopolitically oriented art,
three characteristic concepts may be distinguished:
376 ibid., 518.
377 ibid., 512–516.
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(1) the prehuman signifies those art practices that are based on working with
“non-human”, i.e. organic or living materials, organisms, creatures, or
phenomena as with post-media or tactical media of art,
(2) the human signifies those art practices that are based on working with
“human” creatures in the biological, psychobiological, cultural-
biological, or socio-biological sense as with post-media or tactical media,
and
(3) the posthuman signifies those art practices that are based on working with
what comes after the human (death, life after death, eternal life, machine
analogies or metaphors of life, robotics, digital simulacra, cybernetics,
virtual art, cyber systems, artificial intelligence, biological computers,
genetic engineering, cloning, etc.) as with post-media or tactical media.
certain artworks have been realised through the mediation of literal or
metaphoric exemplifications of the prehuman, human, and posthuman, that is,
through different combinations of them. these three models were then posited
as realisations of concepts derived by artists in relation to forms of life. these
works’ respective forms of life at the same time formed the “contents of the
work” and the “post-media”, that is the tactical-media set of apparatuses, by
which the work was realised.
52 Nataša teofilović: S.H.E., digital print, 2006
courtesy Nataša teofilović
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53 Zoran todorović: Correction/Portrait, 2004
courtesy Zoran todorović
on one occasion, 378 i applied the scheme outlined above to the works of three
artists: the posthuman in relation to the human and the prehuman in the work of
Nataša teofilović, 379 the human in relation to the prehuman and the posthuman
in the works of Zoran todorović, 380 and the prehuman in relation to the human
and posthuman in the projects of polona tratnik. 381 their respective art projects
are linked by their shared fascination with life as a singular event that should be
explored in its finitude, individuality, relativist stance on truth or construction,
that is, on the relative formations of life, and with life that is finite and mortal
at every moment, in fact, with life that may not be determined as true or false
but only as constantly changing in the world. this points to the contemporary
transitional relation to the conceptualising of life, conceived in an entirely different
fashion from the ideal forms of life grounded in the tradition of Western philosophy
from hegel through derrida: “But the absolute idea in its infinite truth is still
determined as life, true life, absolute life, life without death, imperishable life,
the life of truth”. 382 life as an individual event in changing, i.e. “life as transition”
has become a kind of post-media and tactical art practice. Artists perform practices
378 the exhibition EuropaN – Scenario 1, Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst (Museum of contemporary
Art in leipzig), 9 september 2011.
379 Nataša teofilović: Umetnost pokreta u prostoru praznine (tehnologija i praksa virtuelnih karaktera) [the
Art of Moving in empty space (the technology and practice of Virtual characters)], manuscript.
380 Miško Šuvaković: Intensity of Affect: Performances, Actions, Instalations; A Retrospective of Zoran
Todorović. Novi sad: the Museum of contemporary Art of Vojvodina, 2009.
381 polona tratnik: In vitro. Živo onostran telesa in umetnosti [in Vitro. live Beyond Body and Art].
ljubljana: horizonti (transars, 1), 2010.
382 Jacques derrida: Glas, trans. John p. leavey Jr. and richard rand. lincoln: university of
Nebraska press, 1986, 82; John schad: “epilogue”, in: Life after Theory, eds. Michael payne and
John schad. london: continuum, 2003, 172.
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constructed around incommensurable singularities, which are realised around a
“core” that is projected as a random form of life.
Nataša teofilović has been acting in the context of digital art and screen
installations. she has realised two characteristic works: s.h.e. (2007) and 1:1 (2010).
her works are software-generated representations of artificial humanoid bodies.
they are 3d digital animations, followed by screen presentations of humanoid
figures in motion. Whereas s.h.e. is projected onto five monitors, 1:1 consists of
a single projection of a 3d animation from the ceiling onto the gallery f loor. in
her works, Nataša teofilović spectacularises the relation between the physical
and the space onscreen, enabling a “physical” confrontation between human
beings (spectators present at the gallery) and the digital figure generated onscreen
(a posthumanly conceived body). this spectacularised confrontation establishes
the respective situations of the observer and the observed. 1:1 performs the event
of the crossing of one body over, that is, through another. the principle of the
“post-human” is posited in such a way that it generates a figure that looks like
a living body (it moves and emulates human behaviour), but its abstractness at
the same time thwarts any illusion of the “human”. A metaphysical suggestion is
thereby made that the generated figure reminds one of a human body, but is not
a human body. this is about constructing a fiction in motion and action. What is
seen is a figure and a figure is an object. the object assumes the role of the visual
phenomenality, that is, behaviourality of the human form of life. the generated
and animated figure’s assumption of human functions opens its potentiality to
suggest the post-human metaphorically.
Zoran todorović is an artist who uses new media or performance platforms as
apparatuses for exploring critical and border human situations – forms of life and
their limits in the biological, social, cultural, technological, and political sense.
he is not fascinated with the capabilities of new technologies and their effects in
art. rather, todorović is an introverted user or consumer of new-media or socio-
technological practices in performing critical and singular behavioural events, the
intensity and affect of which are presented live or documented and mediated in the
systems of communicating and presenting in the worlds of art. for him, tactical
media appear as products of mass social technologies, that is, as performances of
hypnosis, serum injections, taking medicines, processing plastic-surgery waste,
performing plastic surgery on human bodies, dieting, as well as behavioural
relations on the street or in private and confrontations with racial contradictions,
indexing sexual user work, and so forth. for instance, Zurenje (staring, 1998)
confronts the inverting of gazing – gazing at the genitals and gazing out from the
genitals. A project of many years, Asimilacija 1–3 (Assimilation 1–3, 1998–2009)
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is a series of events based on offering dishes made of human tissues discarded
as waste in plastic surgery. Agama 1–3 (2003–2005) is based on washing with
soap made of human fat. the video installation Cigani i psi (Gypsies and dogs,
2007) presents footage made by cameras strapped around the necks of dogs in a
Belgrade park and the roma boys cleaning car windshields at a busy junction in
Belgrade. Toplina (Warmth, 2009) was realised as a complex collaborative practice
of producing and marketing blankets made of discarded human hair. todorović
posits his work in art as “performing live”, which introduces biotechnologies into
specific performance situations that correspond to real affective life situations.
he posits performance situations either as interventions on other people’s bodies
(authorial experimentation with interventional otherness) or on his own body (the
model of the artist’s body as an object and subject of art). the performance event
appears in “private”. then, it receives its public presentation in the media. the
performance event then appears in “public”, where it involves interacting with
the biotechnological limits of standardising the human body, i.e. the bodies of
collaborators involved in the same art project or of the audience present, who are
brought to ref lect on their own intimacy in public. the relation between private
and public – intimate and shared – is explicitly elaborated as the constitutive
atmosphere of performing forms of life as events in an art project. the aspects and
models of todorović’s work in art described above are significantly biopolitical
in terms of biopolitics as the social technology of shaping human life for real,
social life. human life is not something that a living creature carries “by itself ”
or “for itself ”; rather, it is the inscription of – more precisely, a singular event of
inscribing – that creature into a situation or form of life, i.e. into its lifespan as well
as living space qua something unrepeatable: ever different and malleable amidst
the world, i.e. the conf lict of nature as living matter and society as organising the
behaviour of developed and culturally elaborate forms of life.
polona tratnik explores the “models of forms of life” that are sub-human, that
precede or are traces of human forms of life, that is, that are independent of
them. in co-operation with biotechnicians and other medical staff, she brings
“biological samples” to visibility. spectacularising prehuman or post-human
samples is possible by exemplifying microscopic biological organisms in the
system of cultural presentation. in a number of projects, tratnik has explored
presentations of the microscopic organic world in the field of visibility, which is
provided by the potentiality of artworks. in 37° C (Kapelica gallery, 2001–2002),
tratnik produced an installation realised as a breeding ground of human skin cells.
in Intimacy under Threat (2005), she exhibited bacteria that inhabit objects used in
everyday life: washbasins, eyeglasses, etc. for instance, in being spectacularised,
bacteria that inhabit washbasins become a sample of affectation – feelings of
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unease, confronting everyday life, which is seldom noticed or taken into account.
regarding Hair, a project she realised in 2005, tratnik wrote:
the present installation encourages the visitor to establish intimate contact
with the life that he or she can sense behind the walls of an incubator. in
a petri dish, the artist’s hair sprouts in agar nutrient based on serum from
the artist’s blood. the visitor can catch only glimpses of the fragile life
in a carefully isolated container that simulates the conditions inside the
body. 383
this is a tactical act whereby the microscopic world of human cells, i.e. forms of
life are transferred into a simulated situation, or. a micro-ecological situation, in
which the sampled form of life is developed and spectacularised to perform the
affective relation between the observer and the living world. A similar procedure
was performed in Unique (2006), which visualised the microscopic plant and
animal life of the human body:
the observer’s intimacy is examined with an intrusively piercing eye. the
observer is also positioned into an artificial environment for cultivating
life. it contains numerous living species. A human being becomes merely
one of them. 384
54 polona tratnik: Hair in Vitro, 2010
courtesy polona tratnik
Hair in Vitro (2006–2010) is a complex interdisciplinary research project, realised
in co-operation with artists, scientists/technicians, and spectators. the term in
383 Anon.: Polona Tratnik: Lasje / Hair, ljubljana: Moderna galerija ljubljana, Galerija Kapelica and
ribnica: Galerija Miklova hiša, 2005, 9.
384 polona tratnik: “unique”, In Vivo – In Vitro exhibition held in february, 2006, in Athens, Greece,
supported by Kapelica Gallery, ljubljana, 2006, manuscript.
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vitro 385 (latin: within glass) refers to studies in experimental biology based on
isolating living matter from a single organism. the isolated component is excised
from its usual biological context to be subjected to analysis and examination. in
Hair in Vitro, living human matter (skin, tissues, hair) is isolated by means of plastic
surgery and keeping the sample alive in laboratory conditions. tratnik examines
and spectacularises living materials in real time, for instance, the growth of hair
in laboratory conditions. here is how tratnik interprets her project:
the project is rhizomatically structured at several levels and connects
technoscience with heterogeneous artistic strategies and with humanistic
research in tissue engineering and immunology as socially especially
actual fields of biotechnology that promise revolutionary consequences,
especially in medicine and aesthetics surgery. the project as well ref lects
the hybridization of art, humanities and technoscience, which is today at
slope. the team of authors-executors is focused on the research process
and on consistently connecting fields, harmonizing the heterogeneous
interests. the work is not oriented to producing finished products, artifacts
for observer’s contemplation, but to opening of the research process and
the whole discourse to the public at diverse occasions. the aims of the
project are the communication of biotechnological potentials with the
wider public, the realization of specific goals, which are interesting from
the biotechnological, artistic and other aspects, and discussing the related
issues, which are extremely important for the contemporary individual
and society. 386
these micro-processes were spectacularised by means of different tactical media.
A surgical procedure was performed. An installation was realised under simulated
laboratory conditions. hairs were kept “alive” in vitro. tratnik then documented,
that is, in this case, photographed the samples’ behaviour in laboratory conditions.
she made three video works that present the operation of taking a human sample
(The Operation), the laboratory work on the sample (The Laboratory), and the
sampled hairs’ growth (The Hairs’ Growth). this is an example of using practices
of post-production to multiply and spread the effects of spectacularisation in the
field of visual culture.
the procedures of post-production spectacularisation described above are
essentially changing the world of human sensory experience. these changes
385 the term in vivo signifies studying living organisms in their “normal” environments, whereas ex
vivo signifies studying still functioning organs excised from their original organisms.
386 polona tratnik: “las in vitro” (2010), http://www.horizonti.net/index_e.html, 20. 07. 2011. cf.
tratnik: In vitro. Živo onostran telesa in umetnosti, 168.
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are determined by relocating, i.e. transferring scientific biological and medical
microbiological laboratory experiments into the exhibiting contexts of art and
culture. A double effect is thereby achieved:
(1) the sealed and culturally/socially invisible world of practices and appara-
tuses developed in scientific institutions is thereby opened up to individu-
al and collective public “experience” (the aesthetic plane) and “cognition”
(the epistemological plane), and to to cultural exchange in society (the
political plane),
(2) the opening up of science to culture through the “tactical media” of art
was realised as a political act of rearticulating the spectators’ experiential
contexts and thereby also of changing their stance on the visible and invisible
forms of everyday life, which constitute the world that surrounds us.
in modern society, it was customary to keep the world of science separate from the
world of everyday human experience. scientific knowledge, packages of forms of
life and everyday human experience of everyday forms of life were never brought
to bear on one another, except in such critical situations as epidemics and actions
to contain them, wars and the use of biological weapons, and similar situations.
By contrast, globalism led to an important turn. the turning of the scientific
into everyday knowledge has transformed the character of human experience.
Art practices are the cultural instruments of the spectacularisation of scientific
work. As tactical media of spectacularisation, certain art practices bring packages
of specialised scientific knowledge up to the level of a sensory and bodily event.
the field of cultural human experience is thereby extended and reshaped. the
respective fields of science and everyday life lose their institutional and sensory-
experiential autonomies. they become a complex and complicit hybrid field of
culture. therefore, we are talking about art and science in a time of culture.
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55 Jun yang: Jun Yang and Soldier Woods, 2002
courtesy Jun yang
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20
siMultANeously AlWAys, NoW
ANd eVeryWhere
A real fiction
the proletAriAt ANd coGNitAriAt:
(e)MiGrAtiNG ANd the GloBAlisAtioN of life
Jun yang was born in china in 1975. his family emigrated from china to Austria
in 1979. he was raised and first educated in Austria. he studied art at the Gerrit
rietveld Akademie in Amsterdam, in 1994–1995, and at the Akademie der bildende
Künste in Vienna, between 1996 and 2000. today, he lives between Vienna, taipei
(taiwan), and yokohama ( Japan). his work is represented by galleries in Vienna,
Beijing and tokyo. he teaches at the Art and design department of yuanzhe
university in taiwan and at universität für Künstlerische und industrielle
Gestaltung in linz, Austria.
Jun yang acts as a “contemporary mobile subject” vis-à-vis private and public
global intercontinental life. the relationship between the private and the public
is an essential parameter in his artistic production and presentations. Jun yang
performs his “i” (his voice) and “identity” (image of belonging) not only by
moving between two countries or two continents, but also by moving between
two transitional civilisational orders of producing life. in his projects, he shows
how producing life produces experience. his reference societies – chinese and
european – are not invariant models of established and fixed, realised civilisations;
rather, they are societies and socialities that keep changing independently from
one another. these are uncertain, variable, i.e. transitional horizons, with and
toward which sociality is performed. his affiliation with chinese and european
social and cultural horizons is extremely complex. it is growing more complex, as
the Chinese horizon is distancing itself and multiplying by virtue of the acceleration
of china’s socialist market as a globally expansive market. that is, it is growing
more complex as the diverse European horizons are coming together and grouping
around the stable idea of the union and, simultaneously, dispersing around the
archaeological sediments of schismatic european identities – those of singularised
cities, regions, large and small religious sects, remote provinces, obscure valleys,
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fragmented cultivated fields, synchronously present ethnic groups, as well as
market monopolies and border mountain ranges.
presenting experience emerges in the form of uncertain indexing and mapping of
temporal and spatial changes of forms of life that are provisionally and ephemerally
situated between the global points of Jun yang’s movements. he moves between his
family formats, provisional abodes and family enclaves, professional strongholds,
and potential places for performing and presenting his artistic work, which carries
an autobiographic potential. his sociality is more complex than anyone outside of
migrant and emigrant narratives might imagine. the mechanism of migration is
built into his everyday life – a mobile life, a life on the move.
Jun’s sociality is ambivalent. it may be presented as an open field of variable and
provisional human relations, characterised by a subjectionally relative relationship
between the inner and the outer or the immanent and the transcendental. his social
and cultural inside, that is, outside, i.e. immanence and transcendence of cultural
and social experience is paradoxically open in its dynamism toward its referential
communities, which it treats in terms of identity and interpellation. his “artistic
identity” is posited, gestellt, between appropriation and expropriation, in such a
way that he rearticulates it, from real opacity into a potential autobiographical
and self-ref lexive presentation of himself as a “probe” in a world that keeps
changing as a result of his movements and the immanent movements of others
within those worlds.
Jun yang’s initial artistic practice is appropriative in an utterly contemporary
sense. he appropriates names, signs, images, events, and narratives from global, i.e.
european and chinese cultural contemporaneity, positing them interpretatively,
as documents of assumed cultural models – transitional china and transitional
europe. Jun yang derives model-samples of transitional europe in cultural clichés
of everyday contemporary china and, vice versa, of course, he derives sample-
models of transitional china in cultural clichés and political epistemologies of
contemporary europe. he is thereby likewise appropriated and integrated in that
sino-european game. his expropriation qua Jun yang takes place by virtue of
his becoming chinese, under certain conditions, or european, that is, chinese-
european and european-who-is-chinese. in other words, in an uncertain and risky
way, Jun simultaneously becomes the subject and object of his own appropriations
of the reference cultures that are absorbing him. those reference cultures take him
into a process of expropriation – cultural and social appropriation of him as an
object of identification, i.e. situating the subject “Jun yang” into the experiential
context of the culture and civilisation in which he acts, which he inhabits, and
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from which he emigrates, which he leaves or occupies and appropriates as a
“conquered living space”. Appropriation here means individually appropriating
something or anything from collective property, that is, the identity of a given
culture. expropriation means appropriating an individual form of life or an
individual experience or identity from “society” as a collective. in his projects,
micro- and macro-cultures play an important role: the family, marital union,
business partnership, lateral kinship, ethnic, and civil bonds and their branching
out.
Jun yang is a participant in the global “artistic proletariat”, which has transformed,
over the past decade, from a proletariat into a cognitariat. 387 that means that he no
longer belongs to the traditional modernist artistic working class, who sell and
surrender, that is, let their bodily labour that is built into their objects, i.e. works of
art. he has become a subject in the global transitional “working class”, who perform
and sell their “intellectual” or “projective” labour, built into performative and
media effects/affects and abstract documents, which distribute the potentialities
of the global “artworlds”. he has become a representative subject of the cognitariat,
who work on actualising (appropriating, expropriating) a hybrid and complex
reality within “modalities” of contemporary art as hybrid, projective, simulative,
and performative worlds.
the production of “aesthetic regimes”, i.e. “artworlds”, has become the basic
mode of productive artistic contemporaneity. When Arthur danto introduced
the concept of artworld, he conceptualised it as the epistemologically motivated
context hosting the emergence and survival of an “artwork” created for a spectator/
spectatorship. 388 When political philosopher Maurizio lazzarato pointed out that
a major difference between industrial capitalism and entrepreneurial capitalism
lies in its endless global expansion in time, he was referring to an essential,
ontologically motivated change of character of the contemporary social product.
in modern industrial capitalism, the produced thing/object results from a
process and sense of producing for the market, whereas in contemporary global-
transitional capitalism “generating a possible world” is the end-product, given
both as effect and affect. 389 for Jun yang, what matters is stepping away from the
artwork to a produced and market-mediated sample or probe of the artworld. for
387 suely rolnik: “politics of flexible subjectivity: the event Work of lygia clark”, in: Antinomies
of Art and Culture: Modernity, Postmodernity, Contemporaneity, eds. terry smith, okwui enwezor
and Nancy condee. durham Nc: duke university press, 2008, 103.
388 Arthur danto: “the Artworld”, in: Philosophy Looks at the Arts: Contemporary Readings in Aesthetics,
ed. Joseph Margolis. philadelphia: temple university press, 1987, 162.
389 rolnik: “politics of flexible subjectivity”, 103.
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him, the artworld is not just danto’s “epistemologically determining context of a
completed work of art”, but an affective, semantic, and epistemological “probe”
of confronting culture and society with art-generated critical, subversive, inverted,
and f lexible alternatives to existing clichés of forms of life in the everyday of
transitional new china (for instance, see his video work Paris Syndrome, 2007–
2008) and transitional and alienated europe (e.g. 16mm film Norwegian Woods,
2008).
56 Jun yang: Paris Syndrome, video, 2007–2008
courtesy Jun yang
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“paris syndrome” is a psychological disorder typically diagnosed in Japanese
workers and tourists visiting or working in paris. it emerges when a Japanese
worker or tourist is confronted, for the first time, with the reality of paris and
cannot reconcile his fantasies about “the city of light, love, and fun” with the
metropolis’s brutal concrete reality. it is a negative cultural shock. in his video
work Paris Syndrome, Jun yang explores and presents simulations of cultural clichés
and mediators of the visual presentation of dreams, the simulation of a desired
reality, the realisation of one’s life ambitions, and so on. the video work was shot
in the new residential districts of Guangzhou, which imitate the iconography,
form, and atmosphere of european upper-middleclass neighbourhoods. the film
shows couples, “lost” and “absent” amidst an aff luent fantasy come true.
the film Norwegian Woods speaks of memories and modalities of keeping and
archiving memories. the film is about lena, who returns to a Norwegian island
to take care of her mother’s house, after her passing. the film’s narrative focuses
on lena’s inner dialogue with herself about deciding what to keep and what to
discard of her mother’s possessions. the film talks about a personal experience of
the transience of life, lena’s emotional relationship with her highly intimate past,
and ways of coding and archiving one’s memories and belongings in constructing
one’s private memory. the film might also be a metaphor of european museum
and archival practices.
in both of these works, Jun yang problematises different aspects of the “visibility”
of personal experience, dilemmas, and reactions to the cliché of the new in
china and that of the past in europe. he uses china and europe as background
“cultural texts” of sorts, which enables him to show, visualise, and perform the
characteristic traumatic subjectivity of the modern human in the field of growing
alienated from one’s space, objects, and human presence in the actuality of life.
strAteGies ANd tActics
of TRANSLATING
in his video work Jun Yang and Soldier Woods (2002), Jun yang performs a para-
theoretical and humorously motivated discussion of the use, performance, and
meaning of his name in different functional and experiential contexts. he
suggestively exhibits misreadings of his first and last name in different socio-
cultural contexts, that is, the semantic confusions that typically arose around his
name during his childhood in Vienna. As the video’s screenplay points out:
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my name is
Jun Yang /’d | u:n i^n/
Jun is the first name
Yang the family name
in Chinese – to be precise in Mandarin Chinese – it is pronounced
Jan Chuen /i^n ’t | u:n/
family name first
my parents on the other hand
are from a region with a different dialect
so when they named me they had a different pronunciation in mind
they would say
Ji Chuan /ji: ’t | u-an/
again family name first
...
we left the country when I was 4
and therefore – in some ways we also left this language.390
the film shows how socio-cultural constructs shape one’s real cultural subjectivity.
on the other hand, in his artistic work, Jun yang performs constructive procedures
whereby he reconstructs relations with the outer world. An artist’s practice thereby
becomes a demonstration, with which s/he wittily and superficially examines the
conditions of shaping one’s social self and moves it from the role of the “subject as
object” of cultural formation into the role of a narrator who reveals and exposes
him/herself as a produced effect of cultural practice. the film also presents a
characteristic difference between its own subjectivised Jun yang and Jun yang in
real life. Jun yang posits his real as well as fictional life as a paragraph from a “travel
guide”, 391 which points to the complexity of cultural discourses as obvious for
pursuing the “human condition” as a problem of translating.
for Jun yang, the problem of translating is applicable and important for any
dissimination 392 of human experience caused by differences between close and
390 hu fang: “for the forgetting of Memory, and the separation of Arrival”, http://www.art-it.
asia/u/admin_ed_contri6/mfAZhbou1xQleahiKVup/?lang=en#note1, 26. 11. 2012.
391 the opposition between the concept of “the travel guide” and the discourse on method in Bruno
latour’s discussion “Menjati društvo, obnoviti sociologiju” [change society, reconstruct
sociology], in: Treći program Radio Beograda: “Nova francuska sociologija”, 146 (2010), 85.
392 in a derived sense, “dissimination” denotes the event of meaning dissipating in language, which
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comparable, as well as remote and incomparable cultural contexts. strategies
and tactics of successful and unsuccessful, functional and de-functionalised
translating, i.e. cultural identification, are built into his works, comprising a wide
variety of media: installations, video works, films, and textual presentations.
for him, translating is not so much about decoding and recoding the literal
meanings of verbal or visual texts; rather, it is about losing and gaining a “spot”
in a certain cultural experience. that is why writer hu fang made this note
about Jun yang:
chinese restaurants were integral to Jun yang’s development, as he grew
up in the same building as the restaurant run by his parents in Vienna,
always in sight of the signboard with the restaurant name, tianjin, done in
white chinese characters in classic songti script against a blue background
– just like the way that was common in 1930s and ’40s china – in a kind
of distortion of time and space. 393
the affective atmosphere of cultural translation, instead of decoding and
recoding the literal meanings of visual and verbal messages, conditions his video
and film works, such as From Salaryman to Superman (video), Coming Home – Daily
Structures of Life, Camouf lage / Look like Them (video, 2002–2004), A Short Story on
Forgetting and Remembering (16mm film, 2007), Seoul Fiction (16mm film, 2010),
etc. using images, Jun yang tries to capture and keep visible all the relations that
contemporaneity, dense and accelerated, establishes between individuals and the
collective, i.e. individual expression and social cliché, in the midst of differences
between local and global contextualisations of behaviour, acting, and relating to
oneself and others. it is as if this mode of self-reëxamining could neutralise the
traditional oppositions between the rational and irrational, public and private,
the West and the east. 394 from that dramatised and rhetorically and ostensibly
“frozen” neutralisation of oppositions, it is as if a possibility were emerging
to redirect our attention away from the demand of identification and toward
locating the dynamic of meaning and that of affects in those visual, verbal, and
written texts that imitate and transmit “artificially generated cultural syndromes”
into the field of cultural fiction, which, perhaps, grounds the everyday reality
of life itself.
leads to an indication of destruction or to the destruction of cultural experience vis-à-vis identity,
i.e. belonging.
393 fang: “for the forgetting of Memory”.
394 fredric Jameson: The Cultural Turn: Selected Writings on the Postmodern, 1983–1998. london and
New york: Verso, 1998, 64.
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Jun yang’s artistic production is not an artistic practice based on realistic references
of reality as an object of desire, fear, or interest; on the contrary, his practice
transparently shows how a constructed fictional syndrome affects a real trauma, in
the midst of its material phenomenality as concreteness and abstraction both at
once.
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21
Multiple politicAl/sexuAl Bodies.
Between the public and the intimate
tomislav Gotovac 395 studied architecture at Zagreb university. he was an
employee in the administration of the Mladen Stojanović Hospital in Zagreb from
1962 to 1967. he studied at the Academy of Theatre, Film, Radio and Television in
Belgrade. 1967. he was exposed to political repression for his participation in the
film Plastic Jesus in the early1970s. he graduated with film The Verdict.
Gotovac was one of the leading filmmakers 396 in experimental anti-film and
structural film of the 1960s and 1970s. Among his significant films are Straight
Line (Stevens – Duke) (1964), T (1969), Tomislav Gotovac (1996), Feeling 7 (2000), and
the feature film Plastic Jesus (1972), in cooperation with the film director lazar
stojanović. tom Gotovac was active in various artistic practices, from films and
happenings, to photography, performance and conceptual art. regardless of the
medium he used, in his projects Gotovac developed the strategy and tactics of
presenting and expressing “subjectivity in film“. he said on one occasion: “It’s all
a Movie!” and this phrase remained the programmatic concept of his life.
Among the neo-avant-garde experiments he chose artistic behaviourism. researching
the art of performance, Gotovac established his specific “politics of the body” and
“politics of the everyday”, stressing the intimate subject of a man and male, in the
public ideological sphere.
Heads (1960) was an early project – a series of photographs creating an alienated
documentary or overstressed fictionalised procedure of framing one’s own face.
the photo series Breathing the Air (1962) makes us think of infantile behaviourism:
a half-naked man standing in the snow in the act of heartily inhaling the fresh air.
in Suitcase (1964) he documents the quite ordinary situation of carrying a suitcase
in a city. this series of photographs is a visual tale about a trivial daily activity:
just breathing or carrying a suitcase. the transformation of the trivial into the
exceptional is the fascination mechanism with which the film industry creates the
395 Ješa denegri: “the individual Mythology of tomislav Gotovac”, in: Tomislav Gotovac, eds.
Aleksandar Battista ilić, diana Nenadić. Zagreb: croatian film clubs’ Association and Museum
of contemporary Art, 2003, 268–276.
396 hrvoje turković: “tomislav Gotovac: observation as participation”, in: Tomislav Gotovac, 277–
279.
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exceptional place and function of film stars. When the mechanism of constructing
and presenting a “film star“ is found in the empty context of everyday life in
yugoslav so-called socialism, man can suffer an existential breakdown and reject
such a life. Gotovac took pains to present and index absurd behaviourism. for
example, his collages are “annotated“ and “collected“ testimonials, or documents,
about man’s existence in a trivial world of objects, and of documents of used- up
objects, images, words and information. Gotovac used collage to draw attention
to this potential scattering of the consistency of images, entering a world where
experience has been fragmented and left without any coordinates and any means
of orientation.
for example, in the photo series Hands (1964), he presents the act of positioning
hands (on the pavement edge, a corner by the door, the garbage can) by isolating
and overstressing it. think about scenes in crime movies - of the hero shoving
his hand into a garbage can in the street, the viewers expecting him to extract a
gun, a bag of money or a package of heroin. But Gotovac only lays and arranges
his hands in a trivial place. A literal gesture. A promise of something coexisting
with its denial.
his behavioural performances are no emancipating acts of searching for a life of
freedom, or of man reborn, in the spirit of the optimistic and ludic neo-avant-
garde of the 1960s. his body language consists of desperate, limited and emptied
gestures of provocation in the closed and claustrophobic, grey world of so-called
“socialism” which, with exalted rhetoric, offered its people an optimistic chance
to build “a socialist society”. Gotovac reacted to this with excesses meant to
produce a sense of unease and helpless fury in the viewers and in the bureaucrats
of the dominant culture.
Gotovac’s performances were drastic, not because he undressed in public or put
on masks, or exhibited his genitalia, but because he offered these performances as
socially unmotivated acts, absolutely erasing the borderlines between the public
and intimate spheres. his genitals are shown without any special reason. he has no
direct motive for showing them to the accidental passer-by. the aroused anatomy
is literally there and can confuse us because it is both ordinary and sublime.
the artistic production of Gotovac had no utopian projects characteristic of
the idealism of the 1960s and 1970s. he offered transgression and shock as an
unmotivated and arbitrary exhibitionist act right at the middle of everyday
“socialist” existence, in which positive motivation was expected, along with
hard work, obedience, loyalty, a readiness to represent the publicly declared
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social ideals and deny one’s intimate preoccupations. his lack of motive and
the arbitrariness of his body and behaviour, may seem violent, although they
are actually just minimal, very localised, and often even tender gestures of self-
representation in the public or private context. Gotovac shows the discomfort
a man can feel inhabiting his own body, or forcing his body to function in a
strictly controlled micro-social context. the atmosphere of Gotovac’s artistic
life is similar to the atmosphere created in the yugoslav film noir of the epoch or
the American underground movies, expressing a new sensibility about living at the
margins of society which was characteristic of the counter-culture of the 1960s.
57 tomislav Gotovac: Heads, 12 photos/performance, 1970
courtesy tomislav Gotovac institute
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in the transforming photo serials, for example in Heads (1970), we are shown the
process of the artist’s shaving and trimming his hair. you also see him with long
hair and a beard, as well as with a clean-shaven face and hair shaved at the back
of the head. these photographs, which function as documents of a performance,
can be interpreted as: (1) an expression of narcisstic play (one individual in his
own field of sight identified with the centre of the universe; (2) as an expression
of a structuring-processing-photographing act (a careful sequential photographic
process of trimming one’s hair), and (3) as an expression of an auto-erotic symbolic
self-presentation (the transformation of a head into a phallus; the body becoming
an idealised and symbolic sexual organ). these ambiguities are intentional and
characteristic of the artist’s belief that by destroying privacy it is possible to
provoke public conditions and values. Gotovac wished to achieve a provocative
relation between intimate sexual trauma and the political manipulation of human
behaviour.
in the 1970s Gotovac undertook Many completely different Actions.
he ran naked in the city streets (performance Streaking, Belgrade 1971; or the
performance Zagreb, I Love You!, Zagreb 1981). he documented his private life
in the intimate moments of his morning hygiene (photos from the series Rovinj,
Summer 1975). he was photographed naked, in erotic positions (Integral, 1978), also
in a family striptease session with a female partner (Striptease, 1976), in a private
location. for the 10th Music Biennale in Zagreb he did Action 100 (1976), where,
again naked, he performed a variant of hopscotch in the street. he also offered
performances of some of his private pursuits Telephoning, Watching Television,
Begging, Cleaning Public Spaces (Zagreb 1980). he walked naked in the city talking
about a feature film (Talking – Rio Bravo, osijek 1982). the performances and the
photographs of performances should be seen as film narratives. he created a film
without using any filming gear.
Gotovac’s key queer work is his late photo-performance entitled Foxy Mister (2002),
made at the age of 64. it rests on the simple idea of an exchange of identity, during
an erotic and pornographic photo session. Gotovac played the role of the naked
female porno-star from the magazine Foxy Lady. he took erotic and pornographic
positions imitating the woman model from Foxy Lady: an old man imitating a
young female model. his work should be seen as a direct deconstruction of the
presumed horizon of expectation of the viewers, subverting the expected erotic
gratification meant to be produced by an attractive female body. Gotovac uses
a queer performance of queer behaviour/exposing himself, not as a queer activist
wishing to visualize the sexual identities of the Other, but to shatter brutally the
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58 tomislav Gotovac: Zagreb, I Love You!, performance/photos, 1981
courtesy tomislav Gotovac institute
conventions of expected visual gratification required from the entertainment
industry. doing this, Gotovac has also brought up the question of ageism and the
right of old people to find pleasure in sexuality and eroticism.
At first sight, none of these works seem to be political, and yet each of these
performances was an act subverting the presumed normality of the socialist and
post-socialist period of transition in which Gotovac lived. his works were the
signifiers which the artist smuggled into the public field of the art and culture
of the time. he used his body as an instrument creating a micropolitical event
with which the intimate world of the artist as exhibitionist was projected into the
public sphere. in these performances Gotovac came very close to the American
body artists Vito Acconcia or dennis oppenheim, and the czech artists Karel
Miler, petr Štembera or Jan Mlčoch.
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59 susan Bee: Behind Bars, 2009
courtesy susan Bee
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22
Auto-criticisM of suBJectiVisAtioN
painting as postmedia politics
the public sphere in the us changed after september 11. the period of the Bush
presidential administration resulted in the externalisation of the economic and
social crises in the country. in these times of crisis, the critical protocols of the
artwork gained in importance. Art emerged as an instrument to examine the
borderlines of reality and the fiction in the American way of life. Within that
context, some artists entered the realm of reconstruction of “painterly defiance”
to the domination of the totally mediated production, communication and
consumption characteristic for the f lexible potentialities of global neo-liberalism.
painting appeared as a practice of material resistance and critique of the public
social and cultural sphere with procedures of subjectivation – of gender, privacy,
cultural positioning. susan Bee and Mira schor established a radicalised leftist,
feminist and auto-critical process of re-examining the contradictory relations
between the public and the private.
susan Bee and Mira schor’s contemporary painting follows the advanced and
elaborate tradition of American critical social painting397 and relates to the
feminist context of new image painting. 398 their works, however different in terms
of personal inscriptions and character of the pictorial image, i.e. links between
the inner insight and outer appearances of the forms of life, respond to the concept
of painting as a critical text. such painting refers to individual and collective
subjectivations within the structures of power and constellations of identity of the
late, above all, American capitalism and its ideological and political expansions
and crises, as part of the global transition. their painting is American insofar as it
confronts and opposes the market value which is nowadays the prime determinant
of media images produced on a daily basis. their work is a critique of the
representation and appearance of the media in everyday life, in a confrontation
of privacy, memory and feminine biology with pictorial expression and pictorial
symbols. instances include the work of Mira schor Portrait of my Brain (2007)
or Susan Bee’s Human or Inhuman? (2003). these paintings open a subjectivised
397 pam Meecham: “realism and Modernism”, in: Varieties of Modernism, ed. paul Wood. New
haven: yale university press, 2004, 75–115.
398 Anon.: New Image Painting, ed. richard Marshall. New york: Whitney Museum of American Art,
1979.
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perspective of representation i.e. visibility of the forms of life in a pictorial form
(schor) or pictorial narrative (Bee).
contrary to the great masters of American social painting (Ben Shahn, Philip
evergood) with whom they share political interests, schor and Bee embraced
the legacy of expressive engagement i.e. existentialist painting (early pollock,
clyfford still, philip Guston, Karel Appel), adding a distinct feminist notion of
deconstructing the machismo and patriarchality of the abstract expressionists
and lyrical abstractionists. this marked an essential break within the politics of
painting as a political practice of confronting the public and private in the realm
of gendered body which has a capacity of gazing (Mira shor, Sexual Pleasure,
1998), remembering and surviving contemporary life. traditional modernist
critical painting put forward the idea of the power of painting to represent and
communicate the “truth” of human individual and collective life. in the case
of Mira schor and susan Bee, such claim is, true to feminism, removed from
the model of the individual communication of the experience of universality as
was the case with the painters of social art, into the realm of demarcation of
singular painterly acts indexing the potentialities of the universal. this difference
is essentially marked with a feminist stance which in an anti-transcendental way
suggests that the universality of the human (susan Bee, Drive She Said, 2011) is an
effect of singular processes within or beyond the social, cultural and artistic structures.
susan Bee’s painting399 took shape from the 1970s to 2000s as she raised
questions about the nature of critical feminine painting and deconstruction of
the codes, clichés and iconic representations of the hybrid American vernacular
inside the mass culture of modernism. she demonstrated how one signifier from
the history of painting and/or design for advertising in the 1950s and 1960s
would be introduced into the order of contemporary painting, thus becoming
the new sign or structure of signs in the processes of cultural, feminine and political
subjectivation. subjectivation refers to events of becoming a subject in specific
artistic, cultural or social contexts. the visual jargon of graphic design was
introduced into the pictorial genre of figurative painting. Bee’s paintings are
“other” in relation to the history of modernism, albeit made up of signifiers-
as-markings of modernist representations of everyday life or the exceptional
ruptures in its routines. susan Bee works in the domain of the book as an
artwork together with the poet charles Bernstein. With Mira schor she edited
the journal M/e/A/N/i/N/G, including an anthology of contributions to the
399 Miško Šuvaković: “painting After painting: the painting of susan Bee”, in: M/E/A/N/I/N/G 18 (1995),
46–53.
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journal which accompanied its editions.400 she is involved in projects of cultural
activism at the New york art scene.
Mira schor401 is a New york-based artist who explores and advocates the role
of painting in a post-media culture. she exhibited at the New york galleries
Momenta Art, the edward thorp Gallery, the gallery cB1 in los Angeles, and
took part in group exhibitions at the santa Monica Museum of Art, Armand
hammer Museum, MoMA ps1, among others. she engages in practical, activist
and theoretical402 work in the realms of feminism and its history. her research and
activities span formalist and material fascinations with human, cultural and social
symbolisations, i.e. affective events. her painting and artistic work in general is
focused on the realms of representation of the body and realms of exploration of
the relation between the painting and verbal scripture. representing the body
and conceiving the relation between scripture and painting are associated with re-
examining and questioning gender identities, including the artistic, cultural and
historical constructions of gender. schor has a strong interest in the borderlines
between meaning and affect, in terms of pictorial representation and conceptual
assumptions of self-knowledge and self-representability as the knowledge of
the individual and collective “other”. in her work the border lines between the
envisaged knowledge of the self and the other are shown – in expressive and
narrative terms – in relation to the ruptures of political identity and political
awareness in the contemporary crisis of American society.
Critical painting refers to practices of manual pictorial work which conceive
images and “throw” them into the world as provocative and disturbing tokens
of difference and departure from fixed constellations, social norms, unspoken
rules, matrices of identification within the public doxa and accepted horizons of
expectations. today, in the “time of the media”, critical painting is understood as
a precarious subversion of the dominant production and imposition of the mass-
media meaning, i.e. of the ideological sphere of the media. Mira schor and susan
Bee’s painting suggests that precarious subversion of the dominant production
and imposition of the mass-media meaning stands for the politicisation of the visible
as the construct of subjectivation in the realm of social powers, but also in the
400 susan Bee and Mira schor (eds.): M/E/A/N/I/N/G. An Anthology of Artists’ Writings, Theory, and
Criticism. durham: duke university press, 2000; susan Bee and Mira schor (eds.): M/E/A/N/I/
N/G 25th Anniversary Edition, online edition, 2011.
401 http://www.miraschor.com/
402 Mira schor: Wet: On Painting, Feminism, and Art Culture. durham: duke university press, 1997;
Mira schor: A Decade of Negative Thinking: Essays on Art, Politics, and Daily Life and Wet: On Painting,
Feminism, and Art Culture. durham: duke university press Books, 2010.
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realm of resistance to the recognition of gender, notably feminine identity and the
antagonisms between private and public contemporaneity.
deriving political meaning in the history of Western art has a long record of
transformations from apologetic painting in the service of the sovereign and the
church to the critical realist painting conceived as “weapon” in a struggle for
class, race or gender identity, as opposed to a concrete or abstract social order of
power relations. in relation to the modernist paradigms of high and dominant
abstraction, political painting is identified as instrumental, i.e. as painting in the
service of the revolution, leftist politics, critical conf licts with the conditions
and circumstances of the visibility of social antagonisms (susan Bee, Behind Bars,
2009, and Arrested,403 2011).
60 susan Bee: Arrested, painting, 2011
courtesy susan Bee
403 “i imagine you know the story of the image? here it is. it has an interesting personal connection.
Arrested, 2011, which is based on a black and white news photo of my high school friend, emily
socolov’s mother being arrested as a spy in the Mccarthy era of the 1950s. i only found out about
this history when i read the obituary of Judith coplon socolov in the Ny times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/02/us/02coplon.html i used the painting tropes of the 1950s
for framing this painting. from Wikipedia: Judith coplon socolov was an alleged KGB spy whose
trials, convictions and successful appeals had a profound influence on espionage prosecutions
during the Mccarthy era. Judith coplon married one of her lawyers, my friend’s father, Albert
socolo”; from an email writhen to me by susan Bee.
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to the contrary, contemporary political painting embraces deliberate attempts
at waking the potentials of “difference” (feminism) and “antagonism” (the left)
according to the given, individually and collectively, representable conjunctures –
in relation to the dominant forms of life which exclude every attempt at conceptual
and pictorial resistance. this is a struggle for the right to the political – and that
means for the individual engagement in the constellations of neo-liberal de-
politicisation of the forms of life and conditions for perceiving the forms of life as
a non-political economy or behavior in ordinary life. the right to the political is,
in fact, the right to subjective confrontation with the social in all complexities of
life. the right to critical understanding of the subjectivation of the social within
the conf licts of contemporary America is accomplished by means of marked
subjectivation of the pictorial composition of images and expressive inscriptions
of traces.
the political is not perceived as a platform for a critical meta-language that should
replace some other political meta-language in the conf lict of different powers –
it emerges as a practice of subjectivization. subjectivization – performance of
singular self hood – refers to affective events of establishing the self in the world.
on one occasion susan Bee quite clearly traced that complex horizon of humanity
seeking its pictorial expression:
i’ve found, in making my art, solace from both private grief and public
trauma. so our first question for this M/e/A/N/i/N/G forum has great
resonance for me. still, i find my motivation for making a painting or
artist’s book is not necessarily apparent to a viewer. i would say that my
artworks are a kind of Vergangenheitsbewältigung (coming to terms with
the past). this term has been used by postwar Germans to describe their
attempt to confront their recent history, yet, perhaps oddly, i find it suits
my search to find an emotional and intellectual balance through art.
My parents came out of the cauldron of Berlin and Nazi Germany and
palestine to find their way as Jewish artists in America. As the child of
immigrants, i inherited their fears and insecurities as well their pride and
optimism in their new country. the sudden death of my father sigmund
laufer in 2007 was followed by the unimaginable suicide of my 23-year-
old daughter emma Bee Bernstein in 2008. i found that i had to regain my
footing in the world and that through the imaginary narrative of painting
i was able to embody my pain and transform it. But transform it into
what? perhaps i can just say an altered world.404
404 susan Bee, in: Bee and schor (eds.), M/E/A/N/I/N/G 25th Anniversary Edition, 8–9.
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susan Bee is involved in an intricate pictorial practice of confessions, self-criticism
and construction of a possible world of images, conduits and potentialities relating
to the brutality of the real. in her painterly discourse, self-criticism is not some
strictly internal occurrence: it comes as a consequence of a quite different external
“logic” – logic of micro- and macro-political events which frame the transient
forms of life.
As painters, Mira schor and susan Bee problematize the non-transparent meta-
languages of power and criticism of power in the contemporary world, represented
as the “post-political truth of the society”. they come to be politicised with the
pictorial auto-criticism of one’s self hood seeking for sensual regimes of expression,
conducting the auto-criticism of the self as memory, as experience of actuality
and as projection of figures of the future. politicisation means an open, painterly
representable conf lict between the individual and the collective against the social
in relation to one’s own history of identifications, memories, projections, decisions,
traumas, portended chasms or escapes from inner conf licts. in their work, the
individual is experienced as a self-critical provocation of the “liberal aspiration”
to solitary heroic conquests of the West or as a provocation of the individual
struggle for survival on the market – namely, as visualisation of survival in the
antagonistic quotidian life. the collective is recognised either (1) as a hybrid and
f lexible “plurality” on the market of mediated identifications – clichés – related to
the mass consumption of late capitalism, (2) as an articulated set of individualities
that seek a common platform in a f lexible field of plurality, or (3) as a search
for community inside the memories, actualisations of contemporary life and
projections of an immediate future. in such a context, the social should mean
a discovery of “new qualities” pertaining to the individual and the collective.
in other words, the social should mean an attempt at critical and self-critical
articulation of human relations which exceed the “isolated individual” or the
“mechanical sum of isolated individuals” on the global market. the social is a
quality. “the new sociality” is the thing that redirects the political engagement
of the painters from the pictorial as a “realistic” comment of the contemporary
world towards the active subject who appears as a subject of social transformation
– of the class, nation or gender, i.e. class-nation-and-gender, into the complicit,
solidary and mutually supported community of individuals who search for their
place self-critically in relation to the given and imposed structures between the
phantasm and the reality.
representation is advocacy. in an ancient sense, “representation” even means
paying in cash or establishing equivalence in value within the life itself. Accordingly,
representation means establishing the relation of advocacy between objects which
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are mutually different, but through this relation they become associated in
terms of sense, meaning and value. in the process of representing, represented and
representation find themselves in a relation that is, most often, either interpretative
relation or relation of anticipation of the human itself: feminine (Mira schor, Implant,
1992) or family-related (susan Bee, Pieta, 2011).
these questions are important in methodological terms: “What does it mean to
represent something?” or “What does it mean to describe the painted surface of
the canvas?” i.e. “how can they understand the meanings that determine the
pictorial composition?” – in relation with human life itself, in relation with the
concrete lives of susan Bee and Mira shor in contemporary America, within their
private worlds and their complex escapes from privacy into the public life.
Mira schor constructs the political space of privacy. privacy is a space – an illusion
of inner space – which should be brought to political situation by means of self-
criticism. schor describes a space of limited privacy within the global transition.
Mira schor indexes the positions of a woman – painter, writer, theorist and/or
activist in a transitional world:
My relation to privacy is inf lected. No, it is completely dual. i’m like the
British comedian pete cook who once dressed up as Greta Garbo and had
himself driven around in an open-top car yelling at the top of his lungs,
“i want to be alone”. i have a drive for communication — i love to teach,
i’m a politician, preacher, actress manqué, i love conversation, and i’m a
huge consumer of news, information, gossip, a hard copy newspaper/tV
& webholic, an email&facebook addict — but i cannot function without
immense amounts of privacy (according to some of my friends, more
privacy than most people). My home is the opposite of Kryptonite for me
and it takes hours for me to recover a productive train of thought after
i’ve been out of the house. i usually can’t work if anyone is near me. i
can’t screen out other people. i have to be alone to sleep and even then the
presence of my own body breathing and thinking can be an impediment.
My mind comes alive late at night when the city lets go of me, although
unfortunately the need for sleep so that i won’t be a jet-lagged zombie the
next day interferes with the sudden clarity of mind of that quiet moment
within the urban noise and i struggle to fall asleep while scribbling notes
into a notebook after i’ve already turned out the lights.405
What is exceptional in this confession or, better yet, auto-criticism, is the
connection between private self hood and artistic practice, and metaphors of
405 Mira schor, in: ibid., 147–148.
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textual production in the contemporary urban world. Mira schor builds up
the myth about herself as a notion of resistance to the clichés and expectations
of ordinary “civil life”, between the authority of the private identity and the
horizons of public clichés. she develops a similar logic of thinking in her painting
– establishing a connection between the authority of the visible and the horizon
of female subjectivity in relation to the “consumer society” and its quotidian
implications:
As a painter with a strong interest in political activism, who has worked
with sometimes overt, always subtextual political content, i think painting
and other traditional art objects can provide experience that is more than
just a passive relation to commodity: a private engagement with an art
work even if it’s not illustrationally political can transmit a renewed sense
of the value of interiority that too has political meaning. painting has a
material presence that can awaken the viewer to her own embodiment,
bring her to her senses. painting is a time-based medium, not just in the
doing but in the viewing and in the afterthought; it has a dimension of
time that can slow the speed of commodified time. (that some painting
operates at the speed and disposability of commodified time is another
story for another day).406
Accordingly, watching and seeing a picture as representation – and this means
as a visual advocate – is not merely a question of the picture in itself and by
itself, but a question of the “picture of painting” set in specific social, cultural
and artistic contexts. the question is of painting (Past, Present, And, 2009 and
The Past, The Present, The Future, 2009) in the process of production, exchange and
consumption i.e. reception by someone and for someone. that process is a social
practice: the manner of transformation of the pictorial matter in a specific social
context resulting in a product which, in its singularity, resists the products of
mass production and consumption. if that is the case, then painting is an activity
of social material practice of representation which transforms the matter of painting
into painterly representations of the sensual world. in this process performance and
representation constitute the subject of painting i.e. the subject of culture where
painting plays one of the possible roles. the meaning of the painting is that verbal
or conceptual knowledge created through interpretations of the painting as a
painting, as a work of art or a product of historically and geographically specific
cultural practices. the functions of meaning may be entirely different.
susan Bee and Mira schor’s painting is a critical repetition of open-ended symbolic
self-identifications, self-criticism and confrontations with the self as the self-of-
406 ibid., 149–150.
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infraction of sociality within the materiality of painting. it refers to a dialectical
recognition of the situation wherein human forms of life “under threat” are being
questioned and confronted with the self-of-antagonism – whether in terms of the
political relations of power and its repression, or in terms of private tragedies;
whether it is about being a woman, or about one’s anxiety, insecurity, resistance
to repression or drowning in mass clichés. the open-ended referential circulation
between the painted and the social have been established as a recognition of the
difference between the singular and the universal.
61 Mira schor: Past, Present, and..., painting, 2009
courtesy Mira schor
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experiMeNtAl theory
23
A clAustrophoBic eVeNt
Bare life
24
A NArrAtiVe
An utterly ordinary evening – PETIT a
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2000 Manifesta 3, Modern Gallery, Ljubljana
One of the walls invisibly moves and fills in the space.
tomo Savić Gecan
62 tomo savić Gecan: Untitled, Manifesta, Modern Gallery, ljubljana, 2000
courtesy tomo savić Gecan
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A clAustrophoBic eVeNt
Bare life
in the basement of the Moderna galerija in ljubljana, as part of Manifesta 3 (2000),
tomo savić Gecan407 exhibited an empty room painted in white. one of the walls
almost imperceptibly slid towards the inside, gradually diminishing the space.
this work differed considerably from most of the Manifesta 3 exhibits.408 they
mainly comprised “art works” conceived as documents or media presentations of
cultural situations of urban life at the turn of the century. those typical409 works
for Manifesta 3 carried a media message as a particular intervention in specific
cultures and cultural situations.
By contrast, tomo savić Gecan addressed a situation generating primary and
immediate experience on the part of the visitors. they came and passed through
his ambiance. While entering Gecan’s room, a visitor would not notice anything.
he could not notice anything. the situation in the room seemed quite static,
void and invariant. only on the second or third, mostly accidental entry, might a
visitor perceive the space as smaller than before. the “inner drama” of recognizing
the event of loss of space, of the shrinking room, would then begin to unfold.
this was no longer an invariant space, but space of loss. the visitor would become
insecure, and doubly so:
(1) insecure about his/her perception of space, and
(2) insecure about his/her position in an architecture changing – losing – a
dimension.
But, how to perceive what tomo savić Gecan had presented? how to perceive
this slow and inevitable disappearance of space, the shrinking of the space when
confronted with the observer’s body? Gecan’s work demands interpretation.
407 tomo savić Gecan (Zagreb, 1967) is a croatioan visual artist who works in holland. his researches
are connected with conceptual, sculptural and environmental research practices.
408 Anon.: Manifesta 3 – European Biennial for contemporary art (Borderline syndrome. energies of
defence), ljubljana, 2000.
409 Schie 2.0 group, Marjetica potrč, ene-liis semper, Škart.
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perhaps the allusion of a fairly constructed narrative can be used. What would
tomo savić Gecan’s work be like if translated into a fabricated, existentially
motivated narrative on space shrinking as opposed to a human body in an
indefinite life situation?
for instance: A girl woke up. she stretched, yawned and looked around the room.
she woke up in her student dormitory, say, in Berlin. she lay on a large bed
with dark red sheets. she was fully dressed. she wore white sneakers with thick
black laces. she was in hyper-tight light blue jeans. she wore a white roll collar
sports shirt without sleeves. she woke up and twitched. she never lay in bed in
her clothes, especially not with shoes on. the light in the room was strangely
phosphorescent white. the room was fully illuminated. she preferred natural
light. she had no such lighting in her f lat. she frowned. she liked nature. Always,
even in winter, she would keep a window open. And, then, she started to consider
how she had found herself there in the first place. the last thing she remembered
was taking a train to palermo. she sat in the first-class, smoking compartment.
she lit a cigarette, though she normally did not smoke. she wondered where she
had got it from. she stretched out in the seat, tried to cross her legs, but the jeans
were too tight. she stretched her legs. she touched something with the tips of
her sneakers… and then – cut – nothing… total darkness. the next thing she
could remember was waking up in her Berlin apartment, in her favourite red
linen. she lay on a shining royal purple sheet in her sooty sneakers, with traces
of yellowish sicilian dust and dirt. Why was she in Berlin in the first place? how
did she get there? “Bugger, what day is it anyway?” – she muttered angrily. And
sat down. she slipped into her sneakers on the f loor. that wasn’t her f loor. her
f loor had wooden planks: it creaked. this was a silent hard plastic f loor, but the
same colour as the wooden f loor in her Berlin apartment. she was confused and
overwhelmed by fear. she was in some 3d photo-material space resembling her
Berlin room. she swore. she “had to go”. she was thirsty. didn’t know where
to go first. she panicked. said to herself: “Get a grip, girl!” But she could not
calm down, she walked from wall to wall. the walls were photos of her Berlin
room. even framed photos were shot again and mounted on the wall. she was
beating a wall with her fist but could not produce a sound. she felt the blunt
stroke of her fist against the solid surface. she felt uncomfortable in her own
body. everything was squeezing, scratching and pinching. she had to take a leak.
Wondered if she was under surveillance. said: “Never mind”. Went to the corner.
undid a button, unzipped, took off her trousers and panties. squatted and took
a pee. for quite a long time. she smelled the urine. Got up, got dressed. pulled
up her panties and trousers. Zipped and left the top button of her jeans undone.
she needed more air. she wanted to breathe. she reckoned: “if i had a pee, i’m
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not dead!” then she went to her bed, untied the laces on her sneakers and took
them off. her feet were swollen, revealing that she’d had them on for a long
time. she took off her red socks with little yellow f lowers. her feet stank. she
frowned. she put the socks away with her sneakers and climbed onto the bed. she
slanted against the wall, bent her knees and leaned her chin against them. this
posture was relaxing for a moment. she tried to contemplate what had happened.
she had to work on her memory. she said: “recycling memory”. she fell asleep.
she woke up. she didn’t remember how she had found herself on that bed. she
slept again, for a while. she woke up. she realised: “i was awoken by silence!”
you couldn’t hear anything in this room. in her real room in Berlin you could
always hear noise coming through the open window. you could hear silence. her
headache stopped. the silence was overwhelming. she wondered why she had
always pictured silence as white. White. she felt the stink of urine. she stretched.
But, now, the room looked smaller than it had been before she fell asleep. she
had her doubts about it. then she started to look around carefully. everything
seemed closer, though… she doubted herself. she knew that she could not trust
her senses. she felt she was under threat. she got up and walked from the bed to
a photograph on the wall showing the bathroom door. she counted seven steps.
Now she could start checking. she forged a plan. When she falls asleep again and
when she wakes up again she will measure the distance between the bed and the
photograph showing the bathroom door. somehow she felt safer. she was active.
she had a goal. however, the thought of a shrinking room provoked insecurity.
she did not know what to do. she panicked. her bare life was under threat. What is
the bottom line of life? she was scared of suffocating. she was scared of pressure,
of walls squeezing her body, and making a pile of raw meat out of her. in the
room that looked like hers, but was not hers, that was the image of her room...
the room was nevertheless shrinking: yes or no? she was scared. she looked at the
walls and, then, at the ceiling. everything was smaller, the world was becoming
smaller and smaller. she felt pressure. As if the ceiling was falling upon her. she
was drinking water. she was pissing. she slept. she was irritated by the stink of
her urine. she was sleeping. she was waking up. she had headaches. she slept
again. she woke up. she stretched. she got up and tried to walk around the room.
she measured the distance from the bed to the photograph of the door. it was six
steps exactly. she repeated the measuring: one, two, five times. it was always
six steps exactly. however, she was convinced that the room was shrinking. the
room got smaller and smaller. she sat upon the bed. she was completely calm. she
could not tell the time of day and what day it was. she measured the distance from
the bed to the photograph on the wall. it was now slightly less then five steps. the
opposite wall was approaching the bed. the light in the room was more intense.
the breathing was more difficult. As if air was running out. she was hungry. she
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had constipation. she wanted to run, but she had no strength left. she was out
of space, as well. she walked, then sat down. she was hungry. her lips were dry.
Now she was starving, exhausted, scared, appalled. A blend of fear and euphoria.
hunger. she twitched. the light in the room was phosphorescent white. the
room was fully illuminated. As if emanating whiteness. she frowned. the room
was small almost like a box. she breathed heavily. she felt that her pants were
wet. she did not know whether she had spent an hour, a week or most of her life
here. she felt the space compressing. she became aware of loss of life. she was
in a shrinking box. she had been packaged. she screamed. she moved her hands
mutely. there was no one there but her. she was wondering about the engines
moving the wall. No, she could not think about that. she was hungry, thirsty,
in pain, wet, half-naked, trembling, scared, alone. “yes”, she muttered, “i am no
longer related”. she bit her hands. she bit the f lesh of her hands. she felt the pain.
she screamed: “i am in pain”. she got up. the room was so small that she could
not get up. With her fists she struck the wall, which was now quite close to her.
she struck the wall as hard as she could to feel the pain. only that pain justified
her bare life and made it a life.
tomo savić Gecan has displayed a completely empty white room with
phosphorescent lighting. A room with a sliding wall. the narrative on the
“captured girl in a shrinking room” indicates the “feeling” of bare life, indeed, a
form of life expiring in space which, for unknown reasons, almost imperceptibly
runs out. What is the relationship between Gecan’s work and the narrative of the
girl in the shrinking room?
At first sight, tomo savić Gecan’s installation and the story of the girl do not have
much in common except for one detail: the room is shrinking. loss of space in
both situations appears as a danger to the basic “form of life”. in the case of the
girl – this form of life is obviously under threat. in the case of Gecan’s work, the
form of life is merely potentially, merely in allusions, merely under scrutiny... the
narrative of the girl discloses a behavioural, real or fictional event. tomo savić
Gecan lacks the narrative in his ambient work. he works with the zero degree
experience. he works with non-space, to be attributed to any narrative, even the
story of a girl in a shrinking room. And that is the universal and basic element
informing possibilities that a zero degree event anticipates various crisis “form of
life” situations. for zero degree as performed by tomo savić Gecan, its features
always anticipate sense, to a certain degree disclosing its scale in advance.410
410 Jacques lacan: “the Agency of the letter in the unconscious, or reason since freud”, in: écrits:
A selection, 232.
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Form of life, nevertheless, poses a problem here. use of the concepts “life” and “form
of life” owes much to analyses and discussions of differences and contradictions
between the non-representable/mute life of nature and the representable/effable
life of a society/culture, which can even be claimed as “art”. According to Giorgio
Agamben,411 the ancient Greeks lacked an integral term to refer to what we
perceive as life. they used two terms, semantically and morphologically different:
zōē, referring to the sheer fact of common life of all living creatures (animals,
people, or gods) and bios, referring to the form, or a particular way of life on
the part of an individual or a group. in contemporary languages, wherein the
distinction has gradually disappeared from the vocabulary, and where preserved,
in terms like biology or zoology, it no longer marks a considerable difference. A
single term – “life” – has been in use, its opaqueness proportionally growing with
the sacralisation of its referent. “Alive” refers to a sheer common proposition,
nearly always possible to isolate in any of the numerous forms of life. the term
form-of-life, however, pertains to life which can never be separated from its form,
a life wherein it is impossible to isolate anything as bare or sheer life. At this point,
there is a fundamental difference between the theorizing of “life” as conceived
within cultural studies and philosophical interpretations of “life” as evoked
in biopolitical philosophy. cultural studies propose a post post-structuralist
statement that there is no such thing as bare life – merely the textual representations
and presentations as part of the closed circuits of culture. life appears in textual
terms or as “un-bare life”. Biopolitical philosophy advocates an analytical-critical
distinction between “natural” and human, political and intellectual life. life
appears as an event with consequences. it also demonstrates that “sheer” or “bare”
life is, so to speak, a derivative of the relationship between zōē and bios – in fact,
an event produced by operations of power: man is thereby an engine and product
of this process, and Agamben points to the increasingly substantial contradiction
that man must become a machine to be able to produce a man within.
With his installation at the Manifesta 3 exhibition – the room that loses space,
its emptiness and utter absence of life – tomo savić Gecan points to potential
dangers leading every “form of life” to “bare life”. this is the hub of his work
its hidden effect to be disclosed in one’s fear before loss of ‘life’ in an almost
imperceptible event (the sliding of a wall).
411 Giorgio Agamben: “form-of-life”, in: Radical Thought in Italy. A Potential Politics, eds. paolo
Virno and Michael hardt, trans. cesare casarino Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press,
1996, 151–156; Giorgio Agamben: Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. daniel heller-
roazen. stanford cA: stanford university press, 1998, 4, 6.
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63 provisional salta ensemble: Broken Story-Telling: An Utterly Ordinary Evening – PETIT a,
photo-essay, photomontage, 2014
courtesy provisional salta ensemble
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24
A NArrAtiVe
An utterly ordinary evening – PETIT a
He was wonderful, abstract, a well-loved human creature.
He was horrible, concrete, a brutal human creature.
Who is this about? riddles of identity. the eluding of identification. is this about
Marcel duchamp or Živko Grozdanić?412
elaborating contradictions. could he be presented in another way as well?
could he be wonderful, abstract, in fact, an entirely loved human creature free
of adrenalin crises, brutality, concrete particularism, or… What would he (Gera
Grozdanić) look like as he (Marcel duchamp). let us proceed to produce an
asymmetric narrative about him, or to/for him.
scene one
he opened the door. he stepped out of the cab. he observed the number 47. he
started walking toward the building. he was in no hurry at all. he went up a few
steps and found himself at the front door. there were bells sounding from inside:
jing-jang. he went in. A tall woman wearing a black tuxedo, white shirt, and long,
broad trousers approached him. she asked him if there was anything she could do
for him. he answered faintly. his voice reminded one of the noise one produces
when creasing silk: “i informed you this morning that i wanted a partner to go
out with tonight. i would like to take a look. yes, i hope that’s oK with you?!”
she nodded, with her curly hair. she took him, theatrically, into a large room,
where there were about a dozen fully dressed, half-naked, and entirely naked
girls.
scene two
they are riding in a cab. she is in the backseat, next to him. she’s nervous. her
sandal is banging against the seat in front of her. she asks him, a bit frightened:
“Where are you taking me?” he answers, lightly: “We’re going to Nordstrom’s!
you need some clothes. you cannot go among people like that!” she looks at him
suspiciously: “Who is paying for all this? is this an experiment or something? i am
412 Živko Grozdanić (Vršac, 1957) is a postconceptual visual artist from Vojvodina (serbia). he is an
active producer of artworlds (environmental art works, directing museum, political eccology).
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not a guinea pig, am i?” he: “of course not. it is simple. tonight i do not want to
have dinner by myself. i need company. i’ve selected you and paid for your time.
your screwing time has been given 413 to me for this dinner”.
scene three
she was in a large fitting room. A square room with a table and a chair. Antique
furniture, like her great-grandmother’s. she could hardly remember. A hat stand
with coat hangers on it. A large mirror on each wall. through the curtain,
someone handed her a dress. she held the dress in her hand. obviously, it was
his choice. she felt cornered. it was as if she had got caught in a small-game trap.
hunted down. An animal put in a zoo.
scene four
they were sitting at the Club. they had their own private booth. A couple of
tall and slender stemmed glasses were resting on the table. there were candles
burning. one could sense the mild and intoxicating smell of smoke. oriental
smoke. fake oriental smell of candles. New Age. he was leisurely sipping his wine.
she was munching on peanuts or something like peanuts. she noticed he was
actually chewing his wine.
he said: This will be a long and, I hope, pleasant dinner.
she said: Is there a specific reason for that?
No, there isn’t.
Why are we here, then?
I come here for dinner from time to time.
Often?
Not really often.
What does ‘not really often’ mean?
A couple of times a year.
And why tonight?
I was in the area today.
You were in the area today? But it took us an hour to get here from the House!
I mean in the area, in this city.
For you this is ‘this city’, what does that mean?
I’m not sure. I come here, to this city, from time to time, and when I do, I usually come ‘here’
for dinner.
Do you hire a whore every time?
413 Jacques derrida: “Given time: the time of the King“, trans. by peggy Kamuf, in: Critiical
Inquiry 18/2 (1992), 161–187.
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No, of course not. Tonight I didn’t want to be alone. And besides, you’re my date. I don’t
like the word ‘whore’.
You don’t like the word! You’re crazy. But I am a... You’re crazy!
Perhaps, although – I’m perfectly functional. This evening, I was alone in this city.
You’re really bizarre! I don’t understand, what are you trying to say?
You think? Well, sometimes I’m not entirely clear even to myself.
You’ve got issues or something?
Mostly I don’t. This wine is enjoyed only in small sips. Another glass?
Yes! What kind of wine rules are those? You do everything according to the rules. Are you
SM?
I use rules, yes, yes. SM, if you mean that kind of SM – no, I don’t like physical violence.
Neither do I! Finally a point in your favour.
Do you think I deserve it?
What do you do? You know what I do. And you?
Me, hmm: I observe, combine, appropriate, sell, move, and observe.
That’s not a profession, is it?
It could be, couldn’t it?! I’m good at what I do. Though, I’m best at observing.
What is that? What are you trying to pull? Is it a game or something?
Something like that. Actually, it’s my job. The Americans would call it ‘what you do for a
living’.
Couldn’t you be more specific?
I’m trying! But I can’t seem to get there.
But you’re not specific!
I’m not?
What you do, is it like chess?
You’re a chess player?
Not really. I’m more like the guy who’s observing and stimulating that which he’s observing
while others are playing, whereas I keep the score and transmit it.
Man! You’re really complicated. What are you observing? Me? But your gaze is impossible
to pin down! You observe without focus. You’re looking everywhere at once.
That’s rather insightful of you. It’s a skill. Observing like that is not easy to achieve.
Sometimes I can’t understand your every word.
Yes, I’m complicated.
Do you expect me to confess to you? To tell you the truth. Or are you confessing to me?
No! We’re just having a conversation. A conversation and nothing else.
A conversation about what?
About this and that, here and there, there and then. Entirely indifferently.
That word, I couldn’t remember it, I didn’t understand!
Indifferently?
Yes, indifferently!
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There, another word in your vocabulary. Maybe...
What does it mean?
It depends on how you use it in the language.414
I don’t understand.
Try to say it.
Indifferently.
It’s an important word for me.
Why?
Because!
When are you not indifferent?
I’m almost always indifferent.
But when do you happen to not be indifferent?
When I’m having a migraine attack. When I stay home and spend all day in bed with
sunglasses on my eyes and plugs in my ears.
You’re fucking with me?
I’m sorry, but one must speak politely in this restaurant.
Still, you’re not indifferent?
Still, I am.
You’re not!
I am – though sometimes I like to laugh.
Why?
I like it when people laugh, I don’t like it when they cry.
I don’t like tears either, though I cry often. I feel better after a good cry. You?
No, I haven’t cried in a long, long time, maybe since childhood.
Why did you cry that last time?
I had to do something really ugly, which I didn’t want to do.
What was it?
Stop pushing me! It was long ago. I don’t remember. Actually, I only remember one tear,
one hot tear streaming down my face. I swallowed a tear then. It was brackish. After that I
never cried again.
And I cried last night.
You? Why?
They beat me up.
They beat you up? Who beat you up? She did? He did? At the House?
No, no, no, a couple of morons who paid to beat me. She brought them into the room. They
had leather jackets on and she gave them a whip. One of them started hitting me and then the
other. Then... I still feel like crying.
for a long time he kept looking somewhere around her, occasionally through
414 ludwig Wittgenstein: §43, Philosophical Investigations, trans. G. e. M. Anscombe. oxford:
Blackwell, 1986, 20.
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her. they kept quiet. he was entirely calm. she was rather nervous. she was
trembling. he offered her a cigarette.
You don’t know what to say? You’re embarrassed. I’ve ruined your mood. They don’t beat
women in your world, do they?! Or, they don’t beat their own women, but then they go the
House to beat me.
I don’t know. It is something like that, I suppose?
Hmm!
You’re avoiding answering.
Yes, it’s part of the strategy of being indifferent.
What’s that supposed to mean now? Come on, tell me!
A strategy is a master plan of one’s conduct over a period in one’s life.
That sounds very serious.
Yes, pretty serious. So serious that it frightens me sometimes. I’ve always had a strategy.
Me, I make no plans. With me, it’s all random. Although, they do have some kind of plan...
Who are they?
Well, she and the rest of them, at the House where you rented me. They control all of my
time and life.
They own you?
In a way, yes. I’m paying something off. But I can’t talk about that, not even with you.
Don’t. I’ll talk.
Really?!
they eat. they remain quiet for awhile. they take wine in small sips.
It’s quite good. Enjoy it.
I’ve never enjoyed eating. You? You’re obviously enjoying it.
I enjoy observing, combining, appropriating, selling, moving, and observing.
Again, I can’t understand what you’re talking about, but you remind of someone?!
Of whom?
I don’t know. But you definitely remind me of someone.
Could be. I’m entirely transparent and sometimes resemble other people. But even then, I’m
still indifferent, whereas they – most often – are not.
For sure.
I would prefer not to...415
Who are you?
Me? Quite indifferently ‘me’?
You’re a fag, aren’t you?
Hmm.
I’ve offended you. So you’ve got a girlfriend, wife, mistress, whore?
No, as you know, I am...
415 Gilles deleuze: “Bartleby; or, the formula”, in: Essays Critical and Clinical, trans. daniel W.
smith and Nichael A. Greco. Minneapolis: university of Minnesota press, 1997, 68–90.
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Come on,... indifferent, total anaesthesia... I’ve learnt my lesson. I’m not that stupid.
Bravo.
I asked you, are you an artist?
You know, I... there’s nothing special inside or around me. Although some people love me.
But there’s no big passion in that.
I know, you say “I observe, combine, appropriate, sell, move, and observe”.
Yeah, I say that!
Bollocks. Still, you haven’t answered my question? Who are you? Whom are you ‘sleeping’
with (ha ha)!
Right now I’m not sleeping but having dinner.
You’re kidding?
No, I’m serious. But what do you think?
I think that you like playing chess with people, rather than with wooden pieces on a marble
board.
You think?
Yes, that hurts and you couldn’t care less for others and their pain. You don’t care for other
people.
You think that I don’t care because I’m indifferent? Or, because I am another?
Yes... although now you’re speculating again. You’re a speculator.
Would you like a some sweets?
You’re beating about the bush, pouring ash over yourself. You’re miserable.
Come on, let’s get something sweet. I’m miserable when there’s nothing sweet around me.
I don’t want anything sweet. God, you’re awful!
Please... why are you nervous? They’ve got great cakes here, and ice-cream, if you’d prefer.
You should try some.
But this is not about ice-cream, it’s about you.
About me? But you’re the one who’s evading action???
Yes, it’s about you!!!
scene five
he is sitting in a cab. he is alone. he is riding to y. he is slumped back in his seat.
he is dozing. it was a long and difficult night. hardly different, though, from so
many other long nights over the years. he’s observing, combining, appropriating,
selling, moving, and observing. he is utterly indifferent. he resembles M.416 Just
as he was looking at objects, he is now looking at the space in between. he is
416 this story was built around my memories of the Marcel duchamp (1887–1968) “character”. i used
the description of M. d. provided by Beatrice Wood (1893–1998) in her memoir I Shock Myself:
The Autobiography of Beatrice Wood. san francisco: chronicle Books, 2006, 24–25. But this is not a
story about M. d. either, but, in a way, about duchampian contradictions, which come to Živko
Grozdanić too, as well as to every other post-duchampian artist.
322
Experimental Theory
motionless. total anaesthesia. it is all unfolding in his head. he is enjoying his
“autism”, although he is not quite sure of himself.
scene six
she is sitting on the bus. the bus is going to x. she is wearing a black dress with
a single long sleeve. her left shoulder and arm are bare. she is looking good, half-
lit like that. she has taken off her sandals with high heels. her feet are bare. she
can feel pain in her legs and back. the bus is completely empty. she is wondering
when she will get to x. it is not certain whether she made the right choice. she is
afraid. it is all unfolding somewhere beyond her. the fact that none of it depends
on her terrifies her. she is scared.
323
About the Essays
ABout the essAys
tHEorIES oF ModErnISM Politics of time and Space
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: “Modernism revisited” (special issue), ed. Aleš erjavec
and tyrus Miller, Filozofski vestnik 2 (2014), 103–120.
tHE rEturn oF tHE PoLItIcAL in contemoporary Aestehteics,
Philosophy, and Art
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: “Aesthetics in Action”, ed. Krystyna Wilkoszewska,
International Yearbook of Aesthetics 18 (2015), 87–95.
trouBLES WItH tHE EconoMY, GEoGrAPHY And HIStorY.
the Social turn
trans. irena Šentevska, in: “Art and life” (special issue), ed. lev Kreft, Maska
165–168 (2014), 50–55.
GrAY ZonES - PoLItIcAL EconoMY THROUGH ForMS oF LIFE.
Eleven theses on Feuerbach, Friedman, Hayek, and Speculative realism
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: “sive cone: politična ekonomija skozi oblike življenja.
enajst tez o feuerbachu, friedmanu, hayeku, in spekulativnem realizmu”, Borec
67/715–717 (2015), 206–218.
tHE AEStHEtIcS oF dISruPtIon. Platforms of Avant-Garde
Production in Socialist Yugoslavia and Serbia
trans. Žarko cvejić, manuscript.
concEPtuAL Art. the Yugoslav case
trans. Branka Nikolić, in: Impossible Histories – Historical Avant-gardes, Neo-avant-
gardes, and Post-avant gardes in Yugoslavia, 1918-1991, eds. dubravka Đurić and
Miško Šuvaković. cambridge MA: Mit press, 2003, 210–245.
BEYond BordErS: John cage, cold War Politics, and Artistic
Experimentation in the Socialist Federal republic of Yugoslavia
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: The Freedom of Sound. John Cage Behind The Iron Curtain,
ed. Katalin székely. Budapest: ludwig Museum – Museum of contemporary Art,
2013, 28–37.
324
About the Essays
tHE PHEnoMEnoLoGY oF tHE SCREEN (And / or / AS) EVENT.
Musical de-ontologisation
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: Music Identities on Paper and Screen, eds. Mirjana Veselinović
hofman et al. Belgrade: university of Arts in Belgrade, 2014, 19–27.
AEStHEtIcS, PoLItIcS And MuSIc. the context of contemporary
critical theory
trans. Goran Kapetanović, in: New Sound 42 (2013), 17–27.
MuSIc And PoLItIcS. the reconstruction of Aesthetics and the
contemporary World
trans. Žarko cvejić, Music: Transitions / Continuities, eds. Mirjana Veselinović
hofman et al. Belgrade: faculty of Music, 2016, 251–257.
GEnErAL tHEorY oF IdEoLoGY. Architecture
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: Architecture and Ideology, eds. Vladimir Mako et al.
cambridge: cambridge scholars publishing, 2014, 2–12.
ArcHItEcturE AS cuLturAL PrActIcE
the Market’s Appopriation of the Social or the Idiology of the Multitude
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: Istorija umetnosti u Srbiji XX vek. Vol. 1: Radikalne umetničke
prakse, ed. Miško Šuvaković. Beograd: orion_Art, 2010, 925–934.
tEcHnoLoGIES oF PErForMAncE In PErForMAncE Art.
concepts and Phenomenological research
trans. irena Šentevska, in: Teorija koja hoda 10 (2006), 8–20.
tHE AVAnt-GArdE: PErForMAncE And dAncE. Ideologies,
Events, discourses
trans. Žarko cvejić, trans. david ender, “ideologien, events, diskurse in
performance und tanz”, Versehen / Tanz In Allen Medien, eds. helmut ploebst and
Nicole haitzinger. München: e podium & Corpus, 2011, 186–201.
dIScourSES And dAncE. An Introduction to the Analysis of the
Resistance of Philosophy and theory to dance
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: “dance / theories – reloaded” (special issue), TkH
Journal for Performing Arts Theory 18 (2010), 1–13.
325
About the Essays
tHEorEtIcAL PErForMAncE. Performative Knowledge
trans. dragana starčević, in: Maska 90–91 (2005), 67–72.
APProPrIAtIonS oF MuSIc. Postmedia: Music
trans. irena Šentevska, in: Moć žene: Katalin Ladik – Retrospektiva 1962–2010 / The
Power of a Woman: Katalin Ladik – Retrospective 1962-2010. Novi sad: MsuV, 2010,
148–160.
BEYond PAPEr. Postmedia and Flexible Art
trans. Žarko cvejić, Primerjalna književnost 37/ 1 (2014), 131–142.
BIo Art. the Prehuman / the Human / the Posthuman
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: Surplus LIFE: The Philosophy of Contemporary Transitional
Art and Form of Life (Polona Tratnik). ljubljana: transars / horizonti, 2011, 48–94.
SIMuLtAnEouSLY ALWAYS, noW And EVErYWHErE. A real
Fiction
trans. Žarko cvejić, in: Umetnost i politika / Savremena estetika, filozofija, teorija i
umetnost u vremenu globalne tranzicije. Beograd: službeni glasnik, 2012, 637–646.
MuLtIPLE PoLItIcAL/SEXuAL BodIES. Between the Public and the
Intimate
trans. sonja Bašić, in: Zarez 395 (2014), 17.
Auto-crItIcISM oF SuBJEctIVIZAtIon. Painting as Postmedia
Politics
trans. irena Šentevska, in: Umetnost i politika / Savremena estetika, filozofija, teorija
i umetnost u vremenu globalne tranzicije. Beograd: službeni glasnik, 2012, 318–327.
A cLAuStoFoBIc EVEnt. Bare Life
trans. irena Šentevska, manuscript
A nArrAtIVE. one utterly ordinary Evening – PETIT a
trans. Žarko cvejić, manuscript
326
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Introduction
ABout the Author
Miodrag Šuvaković publishes under the name Miško Šuvaković. he received his
phd from the faculty of fine Arts at the university of Art in Belgrade in 1993.
he has been professor of applied aesthetics, faculty of Music in Belgrade (1996-
2015). Šuvaković is professor of applied aesthetics & theory of art and media,
faculty for Media and communications, Belgrade, and dean of faculty for Media
and communications, Belgrade. he is member of slovenian society of Aesthetics,
president of the society for Aesthetics of Architecture and Visual Arts serbia, as
well as second Vice-president of the international Association for Aesthetics.
Šuvaković was a member of the conceptualist Group 143 (1975-1980), a member
of the informal theoretical community “the community for researching
space” (1982-1989) and member of the theoretical-performing organisation
“Walking theory” (2000-to the present), as well as a follower of the new media
and performance artistic and designer platform pse (provisonal salta ensemble,
2008-to the present).
he edited the magazine “Katalog 143” [catalogue 143, 1976-1978] and the
independent theoretical magazine “Mentalni prostor” [Mental space, Belgrade,
1982-1987]. he was a member of the editorial staffs of “transKatalog”
[transcatalogue, Novi sad, 1995-1998], the magazine “teorija koja hoda”
[Walking theory, Belgrade, from 2001], “razlika” [difference, tuzla, 2002],
“sarajevske sveske” [sarajevo Notebook, sarajevo, 2005] and AM [Art Media,
Belgrade, 2012].
he has published or edited 50 books in serbian, slovenian, croatian and
english, among them: PAS TOUT – Fragments on art, culture, politics, poetics and
art theory 1994-1974, Buffalo: Meow press, 1994; Prolegomena za analitičku estetiku
[prolegomenon for analytical aesthetics], Novi sad: Četvrti talas, 1995; Estetika
apstraktnog slikarstva. Apstraktna umetnost i teorija umetnika 20-ih godina, [the
Aesthetics of Abstract painting. Abstract Art and theory of Artists in the 1920’s],
Beograd: Narodna knjiga / Alfa, 1998; Paragrami tela/figure: Predavanja i rasprave
o strategijama i taktikama teorijskog izvođenja u modernom i postmodernom performance
artu, teatru, operi, muzici, filmu i tehnoumetnosti, [paragrams of the Body/figure :
lectures and discussions about strategies and tactics of theoretical execution
in Modern and post-modern performance Art, theatre, opera, Music, film and
techno-Art], Beograd: ceNpi, 2001; Impossible Histories – Historical Avant-gardes,
Neo-avant-gardes, and Post-avant-gardes in Yugoslavia, 1918-1991, co-editor with
dubravka Đurić, cambridge MA: the Mit press, 2003, 2006; Pojmovnik suvremene
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About the Author
umjetnosti [concepts of contemporary Art], Zagreb: horetzky and Ghent: Vlees
& Beton, 2005; Farenhajt 387 –Teorijske ispovesti, [fahrenheit 387 – theoretical
confessions], Novi sad: Orpheus, 2006; Diskurzivna analiza - Prestupi i/ili pristupi
’diskurzivne analize’ filozofiji, poetici, estetici, teoriji i studijama umetnosti i kulure,
[discoursive Analysis – delinquency and/or Approaches to discoursive Analysis
of philosophy, poetics, Aesthetics, theory and studies of Art and culture],
Beograd: university of Art in Belgrade, 2006; Konceptualna umetnost [conceptual
Art], Novi sad: MsuV, 2007; Epistemology of Art – Critical design for procedures
and platforms of contemporary art education, Beograd: tkh, Wien: tanzquartier,
france: pAf st. erme and Antwerp: Advanced performance training, 2008; The
Clandestine Histories of the OHO Group, ljubljana: Zavod p.A.r.A.s.i.t.e., 2009;
Figure u pokretu – Savremena zapadna estetika, filozofija i teorija umetnosti, [figure in
motion - contemporary Western aesthetics, philosophy and theory of art], co-
editor with Aleš erjavec, Beograd: Atoča, 2009; Surplus LIFE: The Philosophy of
Contemporary Transitional Art and Form of Life (Polona Tratnik), ljubljana: transars /
horizonti, 2011; Umetnost i politika / Savremena estetika, filozofija, teorija i umetnost u
vremenu globalne tranzicije [Art and politics / contemporary aesthetics, philosophy,
theory and art in a time of global transition], Beograd: službeni Glasnik, 2012;
Estetika muzike [the Aesthetics of Music], Beograd: orion_Art, 2016 etc.
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Introduction
www.hollitzer.at
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