Monday, 16 May 2011

Politics: How can creative practice be effective politically?

In my own studio practice I am currently grappling with ways the work has the effect of communicating what I believe are global political issues of urgency; relevant to all humanity.
What has resonated for me within the readings of Hito Steyerl and Michael Taussig is the concept of the ‘affect as effect’ within art as implicit; a protest having the potential to effectively result in political change!
I would argue that it takes many cases in point to cause a positive shift towards change; the ‘art-space’ offers a forum to communicate with an audience who is receptive to being challenged. 
Hito Steyerl’s essay ‘Is a Museum a Factory?’ discusses “affect as effect” (31) with reference to “Andy Warhol’s Factory” (p31)
Steyerl claims that the affect of Warhol’s Factory was the revolutionary effect of simultaneously merging popular American culture and art, “unofficial forms of creation” (p31) entered a new stage. Further more Steyerl states that Warhol’s Factory became a “model for a new museum in its productive turn toward being a “social factory.”(p31) As a result – concepts of ‘private and public’ space were rethought as modes of visual exchange consequently expanding the factory’s captive audience.
In contrast Michael Taussig’s ‘The Language of Flowers’, I believe alludes to “affect as effect” as a system to create political undertones within the art.
Taussig analyses the history of natural and botanical imagery within the art of different cultures. He investigates the idea of ‘An art in nature to an art of nature’ by considering the artist’s subversion of the natural laws of nature to conceal and then reveal its significant meaning.
Colombian artist Juan Manuel Echavarria, series of work ‘Corte de Florero’ Taussig states is “reacting against the stupendous violence in his country”. (p99) Echavarria depicts “humanized flowers” (p99) by animating botanical specimens with human characteristics. He intentionally gives the work suggestive titles “names are of consuming importance to the work…” (p101) Taussig asserts that the artwork masterfully engages the viewer in a more meaningful conversation than what s/he would initially have “and this is of the same order of artifice that makes the actual mutilation of the Corte de Florero so powerful too.” (p100)           
Refferences:

Hito Steyerl "Is a Museum a Factory?" e-flux journal reader 2009, Berlin: Sternberg Press, 2009, pp.28-42

Michael Taussig, 'The Language of Flowers", Walter Benjamin's Grave, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2006, pp. 189-218.

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Economies: How does creative practice sit within systems of power and exchange?

Anthropologist James Clifford’s book “On Collecting Art and Culture” (1998) gives a critical analysis of Twentieth Century Western cultural practice and the tradition of collecting objects of “art-culture” (215)  
He cross-examines Western ideas of the “good” verses bad or the “obsessive” practice of collecting, within the historicity of “ethnography as a form of cultural collecting.”(p231)
Clifford claims that it is perceived “the good collector (as opposed to the obsessive, the miser) is tasteful and reflective.”(p219) because  s/he’s is a pursuit of purpose “It’s taxonomic” (p219); serving a social obligation to record and preserve human civilization in order to educate future generations of their cultural past.
Clifford connotes that the “obsessive” collector’s activity is perceived “negatively marked as fetishism.”(p217) s/he is engaged in “a gathering up of possessions in arbitrary systems of value and meaning.” (p217) The ‘obsessive’ is driven by a personal desire to satisfy ownership of an object(s) which are wrongfully horded in a kind of possessive manner and kept as private collections.
My own childhood memories of visiting the Auckland Museum are negative; somewhat depressing and frightening. I experienced the cabinets as prisons of empty ‘vessels’ clinically and coldly displayed. The ‘objects’ appeared sadly displaced from their original existence, their vitality extinguished and reduced to the function of some sort of perverse public entertainment of ‘naval gazing’.   
Clifford believes we need to critically rethink and analyse current western places of cultural-art display and exchange. He appears to think that the current affect of collections is an experience of alienation.  Clifford’s reference to the American Indian student discussing values of tradition within their own culture: - “We live for today and never forget the past.” (p251) suggests significance in understanding their past is remembered with a sense of currency. It’s about recognizing its ‘life-force’ and connecting past and present simultaneously. History is not dead or defunct. It speaks of who we are as humans and gives our personal life meaning and vigor.  
When I also consider Isabelle Graw’s “Beyond Dualistic Art/Market Model” (2009) and her discussion of the “artist’s artist” (p84) whose art by virtue resists becoming an object of ‘ownership’, therefore the work exists as the artist intended and within the context that it was intended, perhaps then this type art work can be seen to escape the sad fate of my ‘museum cabinet’.  
References:
James Clifford, "On Collecting Art and Culture" in The Predicament of Culture:Twentieth Century Ethnography, Literature, and Art, Cambridge. MA Harvard University Press, 1998,pp. 215-251

Isabelle Graw, High price: Art Between the Market an Celebrity Culture, Berlin: Sternberg Press, 2009, pp.81-94 & 112-116

Place: What does it mean to have a creative practice here in Aotearoa New Zealand?

Arjun Appadurai’s book, ’Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalisation’, makes a significant contribution to contemporary social-cultural anthropology. He proposes a radically new and alternative framework for the cultural study of globalization.
Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy”, is a critical analysis of the “politics of Global culture” (p37) within the modern world, one which in his opinion, must be “seen as a complex and overlapping, disjunctive order that cannot any longer be understood in terms of existing centre-periphery models.”(p32) Those already in existence, fail to comprehend a fundamental truth of “disjuncture” and its link to a present day global reality.
Appadurai uses concepts of the “image, the imagined, the imaginary” (p31) as tool to guide our understanding of ‘self’ within the modern world.
He purports that “the world we live in today is characterized by a new role for the imagination in social life.” (p31) “Imagination” Appadurai claims is vital in its role for “something critical and new in the global process: the imagination as a social practice.” One which is not self deluding; that is neither “mere fantasy” (p31) nor “simple escape” (p31) but rather what is offered by Appadurai appears to be a message of “hope.” (p43)
His argument fundamentally claims our global future is dependent on… “Our very models of cultural shape will have to alter as configurations of people, place, and heritage lose semblance of isomorphism.”(p46)
Appadurai states “The past is now not a land to return to in a simple politics of memory. “(p30)
In comparison it’s interesting to consider the research of another cultural anthropologist, Epeli Hau’Ofa and his essay “Our Sea of Islands”. Hau’Ofa offers a differing analysis and critique of the contemporary global environment. One which he purports previously had excluded “Oceania” which he refers to as ‘world enlargement.’(p6) The premise of Hau’Ofa argument is dependent on a return to Oceania’s cultural heritage; their “ancient truth,” (p16) as a means forward. Hau’Ofa states that Oceania’s indigenous ‘identity’ of ‘self’ has been negatively affected by cultural disjuncture. He acknowledges, nevertheless that global expansion has had a “liberating effect on the lives of ordinary people of Oceania” (p10) which profoundly expanded the world “on a scale not possible before” (p10)  
I believe how we imagine the world and how the “imagined world” influences the image of ‘self, to be significant to creative practice within Aoteroa New Zealand. We are a nation of increasing multi-cultural diversity, and perhaps for many of us, personal knowledge of our own cultural heritage is reliant on our imagination alone. Our geographical position offers liberation from the weight of cultural history for many of us. For others, it is a source of conflict of Identity. Both interpretations raise extremely pertinent issues.
However the concept of a constructed ‘self’ has a history in art. There is an innate human desire to make sense of our existence. Perhaps therefore, the function of the artist has never been more important. If we could conceive part of our role is the conscience of contemporary society, persistently evaluating and re’evaluating the world.           
References:

Ajuin Appadurai, "Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Culture Economy", Modernity at Large: Cultural Diamensions of Globalisation, Minneapolis:University of Minnesota Press,1996, pp.27-47

Epeli Hau'ofa, "Our Sea of Islands", A New Oceania: Rediscovering Our Sea Of Islands, Suva, Fiji: The University of the South Pacific, 1993, pp3-16.