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A nexus and database for thinking about art, history, time and occupation.

Friday
Jan132012

Common notions, part 1: workers-inquiry, co-research, consciousness-raising

[From European Institute for Progressive Cultural Policies]

[Link HERE]

[Excerpt]:

Throughout contemporary history, it is possible to trace a persistent distrust, on the part of movements for social transformation, towards certain forms of knowledge production and distribution. On the one hand, a distrust towards those sciences that aid a better organisation of command and exploitation, as well as distrust towards the mechanisms of capture of minor knowledges (underground, fermented in uneasiness and insubordinations, fed by processes of autonomous social co-operation or rebelliousness1) on the part of those agencies in charge of guaranteeing governmentality. On the other hand, in many cases, there has been distrust towards those supposedly “revolutionary” ideological and iconic forms of knowledge and a distrust of possible intellectualist and idealist mutations of knowledges that initially were born at the heart of the movements themselves. This distrust has lead to impotence in some occasions. In those processes of struggle and self-organisation that have been the most vivid and dynamic, there has been an incentive to produce their own knowledges, languages and images, through procedures of articulation between theory and praxis, starting from a concrete reality, proceeding from the simple to the complex, from the concrete to the abstract. The goal is that of creating an appropriate and operative theoretical horizon, very close to the surface of the ‘lived’, where the simplicity and concreteness of elements from which it has emerged, achieve meaning and potential.

Saturday
Dec172011

Occupy-related essays from E-Flux Journal #30

Monday
Nov072011

Return of an Idea

The notion of an Occupant Art History is at first perhaps a little off-putting. In this moment artwork in support of the occupation does not need to be sorted and explained, it only needs to be made. Besides, art history—along with every historicizing, academic discipline—is empowered to make claims about its subjects because of the distance it maintains from them. The Occupation has no need for distance. It is a movement of presence: physical presence on Wall Street, temporal presence via livestream, presence of mind in the self-reflective working groups.

For many decades, art history has pursued presence only in terms of its scope. Contemporary art, once an arena proper to criticism, has become not only a category of art historical inquiry, but one of the most popular for the rising generation of practitioners. Simultaneously, the number of writers who produce art criticism exclusively dwindles with every passing decade. By itself this state of affairs should only work in support of an Occupant Art History. #OWS is a contemporary event, and one that is grounded in art making, contemporary theory, and even aesthetics. #OWS is also interested in proliferating the number and scope of art projects that fall under its umbrella, not judging their relative value. The disinterested, detached hand of art history should prove welcome.

But the collapse of criticism and art history that has resulted in an expansion of the latter to the detriment of the former has also resulted in the loss of certain forms of critical engagement. The editors of October suggested as much when, in the fall of 2009, they sent around a questionnaire to curators and academics asking about the institutional acceptance of contemporary art as a historical category, and about its “free floating” status with regard to “historical determination, conceptual definition, and critical judgment.”[1] What they describe as its “free floating” status may be in part an effect of the ubiquity of contemporary theories of pluralism and heterogeneity—terms that have somehow been absorbed by our critical consciousness as antithetical to judgment and interest (here I’m invoking Kant). Although #OWS has no stake in determining the aesthetic quality of work produced on its behalf, it is not a movement without criteria for judgment.

What #OWS achieves that contemporary art history currently cannot is the marriage of pluralism and critique. By this I do not mean art for everyone and criticism for the 1%, but rather a system that allows for judgment about artwork without curtailing the diversity of voices or minimizing self awareness and reflexivity. #OWS asks much of its artists, but demands nothing. Art that receives support is generally that which speaks to core values of the participants, expands the material support of the movement, and places communication and connectivity above artist recognition. At the same time, this work often situates artists as skilled laborers—not because these works require expert fabrication, but because the group has real cultural needs that can only be met by skilled individuals: the need for communal self-images, for workshops of horizontal organization, and for visual correspondences to a collective spirit. I would argue that there is a very real return here to what has been an out of fashion teleological notion of history and progress. What’s more, the collective understanding of the function of art has so far been vaguely Hegelian. If a leaderless movement is lead by ideas, aren’t those ideas also the content of its artwork? And as each round of artist proposals is collected and prioritized by the various working groups, the form that these ideas take becomes progressively more appropriate to them—more felicitous. First painting and signs, then participatory musical performances, then interactive web events. These events give form to a spirit advancing new models of direct democracy, imagined communities, and economic and social relationships. They are, as Alois Riegl, an ur-modernist art historian, would argue, the material form of a collective will. And like Riegl, the art historians of Occupy cannot divide design from “fine art” from architecture. Although each guild works within the conditions of its materials, every project must be understood as parts of the collective will-to-form.

For obvious reasons, an Occupant Art History cannot be articulated in a single voice. It would not only be contrary to the spirit of #OWS, it would be unhelpful in practice. Support must be the goal of such an art history—support in the form of sorting documented works, providing historical context, and describing artistic precedent for direct actions. However, in order to avoid turning support into inoculating contextualization and historicization, it must be offered in many voices and registers.  So before giving my take on ways to understand the art work of Occupy in broader historical terms, I would ask that anyone with an art historical inclination offer something in the way of support. At present, the growing archive of #OWS is like any other database. It requires search algorithms in order to be useful. Our work as art historians and critics can be to supply various critical algorithms—after all, in the internet age judgment is not made through qualitative criteria but rather criteria for selection and inclusion. How might this growing archive be organized? Under what critical apparatus can disparate works be collected and understood? What are the historical precedents? And which voices from past generations of art history resonate in this moment? When most of us offered to support #OWS we were asked what skills we could offer. Art historians and critics, this is the call to put those skills to use.

 


[1] October, Vol. 130, (Fall, 2009), pp. 3-124, pp3

Friday
Oct282011

Occupant Art History

#OWS is as much a cultural intervention as it is an economic or political movement. From its inception, art making has been a central task, and work has been donated, documented, and performed in the name of solidarity, critical agency, and socio-cultural experimentation. But as that work accumulates it presents a new need for models of organization and contextualization, especially now that arts organizations have proposed exhibitions.  

                The Occupant Art History section of the website will host any documents relevant to the critical organization or historicization of #OWS visual artwork. This includes discussions of art historical precedent (like mini-histories of past movements relevant to #OWS) as well as new approaches to work generated in the name of the movement. Any art historical or art critical inquiry is welcome. In order to submit work, please use the “contact” form through the Occupennial Website.

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