Fictions critiques |
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Introduction
Angelo Bianco Ileana Pintilie Linara Dovydaityte Yuneikys Villalonga Marina Vishmidt Pedro de Llano Mathieu Copeland Inti Guerrero Tomas Espedal Louise Briggs Anja Isabel Schneider Florencia Malbràn Catalina Lozano Rulfo Béatrice Josse Aneta Szylak Will Bradley Giovanni Carmine |
Marina Vishmidt Marina Vishmidt plays many roles in the art world. An instructor at the Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, she contributes to English and Russian journals, exhibitions, and artistic publications. She is equally involved in editorial projects and in the organization of workshops and roundtables. Her interests focus on the political implication of affectivity and subjectivity in the conceptual practice of feminist artists such as Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Mary Kelly, and Valie Export. Currently she is writing a dissertation on the question of speculation in art at the Queen Mary Marina Vishmidt, born in 1976 in Ukraine. Works between London and Amsterdam. Scattering as Behaviour Toward RiskThe exhibition I would like to propose would be based (mainly) on the FRAC Lorraine collections and it would underscore two of their distinctive features: the high proportion of women artists represented in the collections, and the ‘protocol,’ or the contract or script specifying the manner in which a work is to be exhibited. Such document constitutes at times the only physical presence of the work within the collection. The conjunction of these two aspects summons, in the first place, a curatorial examination of the challenge announced by feminist art practice, at a time this practice was closely intertwined with the historical women’s movement; a challenge to the ontology of art as a separate world, to the ontology of the artist as special (male) individual and to an art system dependent on the valorisation of that individual’s sovereign subjectivity in the form of art commodities. The singularity of the position adopted by feminist politics and feminist theory with respect to the social and aesthetic hegemony of both mainstream culture and “high” art from the 1960s through the 1990s, and the necessity of articulating the psychic with the structural, expressed in the phrase “the personal is political,” is today largely disavowed unless it is recuperated in academic or spectacular ways. In the present, such a normalisation can be queried by exhibition practices which rewrite dominant art-historical narratives. Women’s works figure as a strategic riposte to the anodyne market-friendly effort to present feminist art as just another “movement” among a vast range of expressions of marketable identities and nostalgias. As Griselda Pollock noted in 1988: “All these moves radically challenged what art was thought to be, breaking the modernist myth that art was a separate realm, apart from society and immune to politics and power…I think we owe it to the women of the 1970s and early 1980s to come to appreciate and understand what they have done to the very possibilities of art as part of women’s political struggle.” Eight years earlier, Lucy Lippard had written that feminist art was “a value system, a revolutionary strategy, a way of life.” If the first consideration was a methodological reflection (albeit a method emerging in the process of interchange between specific practices and departing from core political assumptions), the second takes on the form of an argument: how do certain women’s art practices enact a disjunctive dialectic of “performance” as an artistic strategy and “performance” as a key term in modern workplace, as well as other areas of social life that have imbibed market logics? Here, the “protocol” comes to the fore, and the social relations implicit in the legal definition of a work’s ownership and circulation become the work itself: “the subject becomes the protocol.” The inclusion of performances and ephemeral works in the acquisition policy of an art organisation intriguingly resonates with the provision of labour which relies on contingent and inventive performances of the “self” in relation to customer “others.” These “performances” are in turn subject to assessment by performance indicators and functions within a finance-driven economy “performing” in stock markets and for shareholders. The phenomenon of the “experience economy” (Pine and Gilmore, 1999), and the corresponding reproductive labour of “consumer choice” and “self-development’ can thus be linked to Marxist, feminist and art-critical ideas about (surplus) value production in economies oriented to ‘performance’, the structural and symbolic role occupied by women in these economies, and strategies from the past several decades of women’s art production that dramatise these tendencies from the perspective of the affinity between ’women’s work’ and ‘art work’ as realms which are constituted by mutual exclusion but which come into proximity when re-imagined under the common term of ‘services’ (which is indeed how culture is described by government policy reports on the ‘creative industries’). The proximity between these forms of labour and the relational, communicative and low-status labour traditionally, and consistently, performed by women in private or public contexts can be thematised both in the shape of art practices and in critical approaches to the institutions which mediate those practices. Labour is the founding exclusion of art, but it keeps coming back. Andrea Fraser is one artist and writer who has pursued this ‘service-oriented’ form of enquiry most visibly in the past two decades, while the art theorist Sabeth Buchmann has investigated the resonances between the “de-materialisation” of art (the displacement of the production of objects by language, communication and appropriation) and the “de-materialisation” of capitalism (the displacement of industrial production from the West in favour of trade in financial instruments and informational commodities). How do “protocols” refract these conditions, and how can they be integrated into a broader array of performative strategies adequate to the ubiquity of the “performative” in contemporary life and labour? The “immaterial” aspect of the FRAC collection seems to mirror the information commodity’s centrality to production today. The question of ownership with respect to non-physical or procedural objects and to the execution of programmes or rules/roles, is closely tied to the debates concerning the production of subjectivity. Although “subjectivity” is considered integral to the latter-day forms of capitalism, characterized by “creative,” “affective,” or knowledge labour, it can be contended that the production of subjectivity has always been crucial to the mutual reproduction of labour and capital, and to the resulting material class relations. If anything, this production of subjectivity may have only become more intensely alienated and commodified, and adaptability and compliance with these raw deals more in demand. The protocol further evokes the contract implicitly fulfilled by the visitor, or the “public,” in the space where art is displayed and mediated. The public may be said to perform a designated role, not just in the institutional context of an art exhibition, but also in the context of policies of capital accumulation and urban development . This is probably most clearly illustrated, certainly in the UK, by the discourse of “participation” in cultural management and consensus-building. “Participation” refers here to the modernist and post-modernist trope of the viewer ‘completing’ the artwork, and also to the class-based socialisation which produces subjects who can participate appropriately. Visitors, but also administrators, curators, managers, technicians, guards, dealers, publicists, educators and bureaucrats can be seen as reproductive workers in this complex, with the artist as the nodal point, a point of abstention in the whole machine. But along with the suggestive threads which connect the changing nature of capitalist work in general with its iterations in art practice, this narrative has to take account of financialisation, its repercussions in the cultural field, the loss of the relative autonomy (Althusser) of that field, and the resulting irrelevance of the differences between the ‘cultural capital’ that arises there (Bourdieu) and capital as such. With the loss of this autonomy, the zone of indistinction between artist as sovereign subject and artist as ideal (flexible, creative) service worker comes into focus, most precisely through performative practices. At the same time, these practices rehearse the capitalist division of labour which produced art as a separate domain from the early 19th century onwards; the increasing obsolescence of this division in the current phase of capital; and the “circulation of women as signs” (Tickner) across these shifts. The female artist as a peculiar type of service worker complicates the picture, keeping in mind the contradictions between the feminist challenge to the sovereign artist subject, with its demand to socialise and politicise the artist’s role; the persistence of a semiotic and commercial system in contemporary art which reinforces that role, as well as the relatively strong presence of women at all levels of the art system. These contradictions may find a material expression in the proposed exhibition through the use of an argument similar to the one enunciated by Kathi Weeks in her essay “Life Within and Against Work: Affective Labor, Feminist Critique, and Post-Fordist Politics” (2007): “As long as labor is signified and divided by gender, the critique of work as a mode of subjectification must be a feminist project… Confronting the ongoing gendering of work and its subjects would thus be more a matter of expressing feminist political desire than repeating gender identities… not in a claim about who we are but rather in a vision of who we might want to become; not in an essence but in a logic of political desire immanent to existence.” The title of the exhibition would then evoke the ‘risk’ of such a political desire that frames issues between art and labour in feminist terms. At the same time, the exhibition would be an attempt to do away with gender-based identification and with the modes of control implicit in such identification: not so much a “strategic essentialism” of difference (Spivak) but the open-ended subjectivation attendant on a political sequence of struggle which affirms a status quo only in order to dissolve it, like Alain Badiou’s schema of the void of a situation generative of political ‘truths’ or events, Marx’s proletariat as the class which eliminates itself, or Monique Wittig’s discussion of ‘woman’ as a class relation which must be named as such in order to be suspended. ‘Risk’, however, would also signify the variable sphere of the unknown addressed by ‘risk management’ in corporations, and how ‘risk’ acquires this connotation of an unspecified threat which must be foreclosed at all levels of society by ‘technologies of control’ (Deleuze) where any change is conflated with violence, and any risk to corporate profits is a risk to humanity.‘Scattering’ as a mode of becoming-anonymous and becoming-other when faced with the myriad blackmails of identity and the work of maintaining it, performing it, and, in reverse, the scattered and relational experience of social being which always fails to be performed as identity – a mode of speculation. SPACE A: The adjacent space, lit by natural light, houses Natalia LL’s Consumer Art (1972) and Kay Hunt’s photographic installation Homeworkers: Women’s Work (1978), each mounted on a wall. The juxtaposition of these two pieces aims at soliciting reflection on the interrelations between the cartoonish provocation of Consumer Art and the downtrodden domestic pieceworkers of Hunt’s photographs (which were part of a unionising campaign in Britain at the time, as Hunt’s art practice mainly took happened at sites of political mobilisation) might be. The objectification of women in the media and their relegation to low-wage and low-skill jobs were of course equally seen as targets of the feminist movement. Yet, as artistic strategies working with the medium of photography, they each engage with the ‘mass’ nature of the medium and turn it to specific ends. LL blends the advertising campaign with the model photo shoot or even the amateur photo booth shoot and stages a sex-kitten performance that compares photographic technology with commercial imagery as both means of multiplying identity in a deliberate confusion of self and sign. As Achille Bonito Oliva states:‘Rather than plotting psychology these sequences exhibit the surface and the threshold which transmute the body into a sign.’ In Hunt’s images, however, it is not the mutability of identity that is the scandal of the photograph, but its capacity to visualize what is meant to stay invisible, like the activities of the ‘homeworkers’. This is the capacity which renders photography of interest to political campaigns, but which also renders it equivocal in an art milieu, where documentary facticity and emancipatory consequences have long since been picked apart. But aside from discourse on representation, the two pieces stage a dialogue which examines art production as a contested field of different feminist strategies. One strategy could be the disclosure, and erosion, of distinctions between the artist and the housewife, both working out of love. SPACE B: Eileen Cowin’s Sans Titre (1983), which pictures a woman seated with a TV set and a telephone, should be placed near Judith Barry’s installation and mounted at the junction of two walls at a similar angle as the position of the woman in the photograph. There is a correlation between the aesthetics of the two pieces, as well as the claustrophobia of atomised metropolitan apartment life. Cowin’s photograph could almost be a still from one of Barry’s videos from the early 1980s. The odd placement of the piece, leaning at the junction of two walls rather than mounted on the wall, not only carries out a mimetic translation of the scene within the photograph but it creates another dimension of displacement that adds to the ones in Voice off, while also resonating with the telematic anxiety of the situation in Proxy/Coma. The multiplication of personae through different occasions of recording in Garcia’s piece evokes both the embodiment of disparate voices in a phantasmatic space in the Barry video, and the layers of gazes in the Dujourie. On the wall opposite the two screens is Tania Mouraud’s Can I Be Anything Which I Say I Possess? (1971). The other two walls show two series of photographic documents. The first series comprises works by Lygia Clark, currently on display at FRAC: images from Canibalismo and Baba Antropofágica (1973); the second, Mierle Laderman Ukeles’s Maintenance Art actions from the 1970s. Between the two series, at the corner, there should be a round waist-high pedestal-like table which would support a stack of laminated protocols of works present in the FRAC collections. These would only be protocols for ‘immaterial’ work which is made anew for every exhibition by executing a script, like those for Vera Molnar’s Promenade (presque) aléatoire (1998-1999) or Ceal Floyer’s Title Variable (2000). In response to Mouraud’s question, the practices of Clark, Ukeles and the stack of protocols testify to the shifting and relational nature of property, be it identity or the construction of an ‘art’ situation which only comes into being through the participation of a public and the imprimatur of art in a social space. The imbrication of being and having in Mouraud’s work points directly to a central dilemma of capitalist subjectivity, where ‘being’ carries the meaning of individual agency, and ‘having’ can be one of this individual’s activities, grounded in a transparent relation between desire, rationality and acquisition. Such a schema, however, obscures the degree to which the individual agent remains a function of the commodity relations which he or she is supposed to participate in freely, and the extent to which identity is constituted through pre-given social and commercial images.The myth of the individual as an ideal consumer has always been critiqued in feminist theory and politics. Mouraud’s piece, however, seems to signal that radical identities, including feminism, are also subject to consumption: feminism which would confine itself to fostering “equal opportunities” within existing power structures remains a prisoner of the being/having schema. Consumption in another key is also at the center of the two group performances initiated by Lygia Clark. Ukeles wonders if the art system may be persuaded to consume the work she does at home as art if it is done in a museum. STAIRCASE SPACE C: If the piece of furniture used is a desk, the desktop should contain, mounted under glass and resting on a panel (the size and shape of an old-fashioned desk pad), several pages photocopied from Alison Smithson’s novel A Portrait of the Female Mind as a Young Girl (1966). If Lydia Benglis videos are being shown on horizontal screens placed inside the desk drawers, the drawers could be lined with further pages of the novel. If the videos are being played on vertical screens, the additional photocopies are not be needed: the lining should be placed only around the screens, not in empty drawers. The room needs to be partially dark in order to facilitate the viewing of the videos, but there should be enough light to see Vera Molnar’s Promenade (presque) aléatoire (1998-1999) imprinted along the walls and in the corridor. Another small round pedestal-like table set in the corner could have a stack of Mariarosa Dalla Costa and Selma James’s The Power of Women and the Subversion of the Community (1972) pamphlets on it, as well as a reading lamp affixed to the edge. The combination of pieces and interventions in this third space suggests a complex of activist and representational strategies that tangle with the aporia of women as nature/woman as culture in a man’s world, either through glamour and irony, abstraction, unreliable memoir or direct action such as the ‘Wages for Housework’ movement which drew a lot of its arguments from the Dalla Costa and Selma James publication, while they were in turn among its main ideologists and organisers. All these present complex and idiosyncratic responses to feminist problematics in the public sphere, with Vera Molnar’s work as perhaps one pole of detachment and the publication as the other pole of engagement. Yet Molnar’s work can also be seen as very materialist in its concern with formal experimentation, which counters the desire for political experimentation expressed by radical feminism. The politics of formalism were nevertheless a crucial element of the Marxist argument for the autonomy of art, as in Adorno, complicating the formalist/materialist divide (much as structural films did). SPACE D: SPACE E: I would also propose a series of screenings or other events, but the proposal has already far exceeded any tolerable length. This has been my women and work path through the collection of the FRAC Lorraine. Back |