Archives for posts tagged ‘ART’

THE FALLACIES OF BIOGRAPHY

The Romantic period of the arts, from roughly the second half of the 18th Century into the early 19th, was a reaction against the Classicist philosophical model put forward by the Enlightenment. Romanticism prized individualism and emotion in the artist, over the rational and logical artist of the neo-classical period. It is from the Romantics that we get the notion of the struggling artist, working in his garret on his masterpiece, ignored by the world, he is probably syphilitic and drunk on red wine. The Romantics (Wordsworth, Keats, Coleridge and Geothe in poetry, Mozart in music, Delacroix, Goya and Turner in painting), are primarily men of the industrial revolution, they are the interpreters for civilization of a world freed from the constrictions of serfdom. This manifests itself in the idea of individualism; the French and American Revolutions are Romantic in their nature, America is still unnaturally in thrall to the individualist notion summed up in its constitution, as too, unfortunately, are the arts.

Let us look at Homer, and the problems that biography pose for us when we do, there are many suppositions about who Homer was, but they must all remain suppositions barring some fantastical archeological discovery. What we deal with, in our discussion of the idea of biography in art, is fact, and fact is troublesome, especially in the area of historical fact. E.H Carr, is his work What Is History? asks us to reexamine our conception of the historical fact. Our image of the past is clouded, not just by the bias of the person recording, but also because of the reason for something being recorded. What we know of ancient Greece, comes from a select few people, mainly in Athens, we know very little of what it was like to be a Spartan, or a Theban, so even beyond examining an historical supposition with a eye trained to look for personal bias, we must also look for the huge gaps in our knowledge of history. The biography of Homer is recorded, but not truthfully, we have records from Lucian, but he is a satirist, not an historian, we know how certain groups perceived Homer, but we have no historical facts relating directly to Homer, we only have historical interpretations of Homer. Our own ideas about Homer are no more than suppositions, and for future scholars they will be little more than historical interpretations, our contemporary classical scholars can only make judgments on and conflations of previous historical interpretations, but, and here is the rub, these investigations can add nothing to the texts of the Iliad and Odyssey, the true areas of importance in our study of Homer. Like Shakespeare, it doesn’t matter who Homer was, it only matters what was written, and if they were written by someone else or through conflation of different sources, it doesn’t really make much difference. Would Hamlet somehow become a different text if Shakespeare were actually a woman? No. It is interesting that we know little to nothing about who wrote some of the best literary texts, but we will argue amongst ourselves about why Van Gogh cut his ear off. It should be enough to admire the work.

The reason for further eliminating the biographical reading of art works, whether that is in poetry, novels, paintings, etc, is expounded again by E.H. Carr. His example comes from Gustav Stresemann, Foreign Minister for the Weimar Republic; upon Stresemann’s death in 1929 he left behind a pile of papers, which have come to the English reader in the form of Gustav Streseman, His Diaries, Letters and Papers. What we must consider in our discussion of the fallacy of biography is how these mass of documents that Stresemann left behind, became the book that we must use to judge his time in office. Working backwards then, the book the English-speaking world has is different from the original in German, it is a selection of the papers and memos most pertinent to English readers. This original book is itself a selection of Stresemann’s full papers, it mainly focuses on the areas of foreign policy in which Stresemann was particularly successful; his dealings with Western Europe, his negotiation of Germany’s entrance into the League of Nations etc, it glosses over his relative failings in his policies with the USSR. So, with each step backwards that we take we move nearer to a complete picture of Stresemann. Except when we get to the actual papers themselves (which were salvaged in 1945 by the English Army), what we see is not a number of historical facts, but merely autobiography. Each of us writes himself, and all biography is first and foremost based upon autobiography, we create our own images for future consumption. In Stresemann’s personal memos, papers, files and diaries he is engaged in the creation of a mirrored self for future posterity, it is impossible to read Stresemann as a man because our interpretations of him are clouded by his own historical bias towards himself. E.H. Carr tells us as much,The documents do not tell us what happened, but only what Stresemann thought had happened, or what he wanted others to think, or perhaps what he wanted himself to think, had happened.
To make an autobiographical reading of a text we are engaged in reading into hearsay to illuminate the fact of a work. To read Stresemann’s documents to form a picture of him, as historical fact, is impossible. If we read On The Road by Jack Kerouac as a semi-autobiographical account of his own years spent on the road we are forced, by Kerouac himself, to accept not just the merits of the text, but what he went through to write it. We cloud our judgment of a novel through childish admiration of what the author’s biography can represent. Kerouac engages himself in the creation of autobiography in his text, this enables the novel to gain a veneer of reality that for large portions lacks much verve, suspense or insight.

Kerouac relies on substandard strands of our schooling that teaches us to see the artist as a grand struggling individualist creating his grand work of art, like Freidrich’s painting Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog; part of any discussion about a work in class focuses on the person who wrote it. The work must stand alone to be truly democratic. Contemporary art criticism places much emphasis on the work being propped up by the artist; the artist must somehow become a figure of great magnitude for his work to also be of great magnitude. The reality is that we are not in an age of figures of great magnitude. Ezra Pound implored us to ‘make it new’, this was Modernism, more or less, but isn’t it funny how the art world has taken it to mean, ‘find us someone new’. The Art Industry relies on money to survive, true novelty is unsellable because the industry doesn’t know how to sell it, a creative industry does not really rely on creativity, what it relies on is more of the same. Let’s take Four Weddings and a Funeral as an example, this film does well, Hugh Grant gets good audience reactions as a bumbling English stereotype, then we get to see more of Hugh Grant in new films, which are generally the same, because the Industry knows how to sell them. Look at film posters, they have set signs for what kind of film they are, the red lettering on white background with enlarged faces and a smattering of out of context ‘praise’. Or for another example let us take Grunge, when Nirvana went stratospheric in 1991 we have hordes of A&R men moving to Seattle like locusts to get another Nirvana on their hands, so they can make money. It is because the Industry knows how to sell this, they can sell Nirvana as music for disenfranchised teens suffering rebellion because they can create this idea of Kurt Cobain as biographically apt for them, they can sell Hugh Grant to middle-aged housewives because he plays the part of the charming stereotypical Englishman. Biography is parasitically attached to an artwork in order for it to become sellable. The art industry relies on the same premise, what we have is not ‘new’ art, but new artists who make old art, the YBAs were not ‘new’, merely successfully sold as ‘new’, and their work over the past fifteen years atones to the fact that Damien Hirst is nothing more than a coffee shop existentialist ripping off ideas that have been floating around for about a hundred years. The newness we may really speak of in contemporary art is not in the art itself but in the Industry, so to truly make something new we would have to get rid of the idea of artistic industry, as it exists now, and so it follows that the next new development in art must be to create a new kind of art industry, not a new kind of art.

Hypothetically, if there were to be a new type of art industry, one that wasn’t so much an ‘industry’, a word carrying connotation of pure economics and the processing of raw materials, via labour, into goods. A Marxist interpretation of the flaws of the art industry in very easy to concoct (although it is not the subject of this essay), but what we should be concerned with is a new way of presenting the reality of art, on a democratic level, whereby figures and money are unimportant. The word hobby isn’t palatable to the art industry, the true hobbyist is the person who does something for the love of it, it presupposes a love that is beyond profitability. A new art industry would place the hobbyist as its king. Once money becomes involved in matters of artistic creation it takes the onus off of creativity and places it on sellability, and one way that the art industry has of ensuring sellability of its product is by creating a fallacy of biography around its product. If you can convince people that the person creating a work has the biographical prerequisites necessary for them to be great you can ensure that work will sell regardless of its merits.

TASHA COX PHOTO SERIES

Here’s a preview of a photo poster series that will be fully exhibited at the 10th Off Modern, on December 3rd at Corsica Studios.

Tasha’s work is often both photographic and performance based, see some more of it HERE

Click the images for lager versions.

NAIL THE CROSS

This weekend sees the return of No Pain In Pop’s fantastic New Cross all dayer ‘Nail The Cross’ across four floors and two venues. Take Courage and Off Modern are curating upstairs at the Amersham Arms. Arch M, Hounds of Hate and Hype Williams all playing live, plus there’ll be an art exhibition and other performances.

FULL LINE-UP:

KODE9 + SPACEAPE - JOKER - IKONIKA - DARKSTAR (LIVE!) - HUDSON MOHAWKE - 20 JAZZ FUNK GREATS DJS - A GRAVE WITH NO NAME - ARCH M - BANJO OR FREAKOUT - BOK BOK (NIGHT SLUGS) - CASPER C (AITBF/BLOGGER’S DELIGHT) - DEEP SHT - DIGNAN PORCH - FEEDING TIME DJS - FOREST SWORDS - GENTLE FRIENDLY - HOUNDS OF HATE - HYPE WILLIAMS - JOY ORBISON (HOTFLUSH/DOLDRUMS) - KINDNESS - MALE BONDING - NO PAIN IN POP DJS - SBTRKT - SEXBEAT DJS -STOPMAKINGME (FABRIC/KILL EM ALL) -THIS IS MUSIC DJS -TRAILER TRASH TRACYS -VERONICA FALLS

tickets can be bought here; http://www.gigantic.com/gigantic/event_gce_13670a.html

VIDEO WORK BY WARREN GARLAND

CLICK HERE TO VIEW

A PROPOSAL

By Suren Seneviratne

ON FOOTBALL

I.

The last 100 years have seen developments in the world of art that have led to certain reactionary critics to proclaim ‘Is it art?’ in the pages of journals and newspapers. We have decided to take this idea through to its most radical and illogical conclusion; FOOTBALL IS NOW ART. Football is the purest mode of artistic expression and as an art form it reaches out to more people then art could ever hope too. Have you ever seen 40,000 people in a stadium devoted to pure pictorial or conceptual art? Football is populism and that doesn’t have to be a dirty thing.

We are tired of elites of all sorts. How can we ever hope to do something new if we segregate ourselves away from the ideas of the average man? This is the age of the common man and we must accept that. Art as a concept in itself is to be replaced with a multitude of new kinds of expression, taken out of the galleries and studios and into the stadia and training grounds. Art as a concept of itself as art is to be brought back to a new year zero; where everything becomes art, the walk home from university, pirate television or reading the newspaper. No more reactionary ‘Is it even ART?’ questions and then counter-reactionary ideas about how they are challenging the idea of ART itself. Art is not a concept to be challenged or debated, it merely is whatever you would like it to be; and here we declare that art is football and football is art.

We must pull art off its pedestal or picture hanging.

II.

Understand now that art is not something because you say it is, or because we or someone else says it is; art as a ‘something’ is to be replaced with art as ‘any thing’. We choose football; from football we can formulate our own theory of art.

Football is art at its most urgent and effective. Being temporal as opposed to rigid it forces its viewer to absorb it in one sitting (unlike the play, which we can mull over or put down in the form of its text; unlike the painting which we can consider at our own leisure; especially unlike the novel, that most unwieldy of forms). One exhilarating teleological narrative pours over the thousands of spectators physically present at its very sight of creation. During its consumption viewers have little time to discuss or interpret proceedings; this is left for after the game. Many choose to focus on direct interaction; “It’s a penalty, it’s a fucking penalty!”

Football is art at its most multifaceted and malleable, its narrative can take any course and its events can elicit any interpretation. Not only does a game of football have a narrative but it is a series of images; of theatre, dance and poetry; it combines all the artistic forms into a single sphere of artistic action and interaction that totally destroys preheld and prejudiced ideas about what art is and does. This action is art at its most kinetic, unpredictable and engaging.

III.

Within the stadia sit thousands of people who receive the art visually and react to it mentally, emotionally and even physically. The artist himself wishes this from the subject whom absorbs his work but has never been able to achieve this on such a scale. The chief artist or commissioner of the artist’s work in football is the chairmen or owner of the club. He needs the art on the pitch to provoke spectator reaction for financial reasons but is not simply a tactless and selfish miser. For him football becomes more than business; the seductive gamble first becomes a passion and then an obsession for some. Just like art an artist’s connection with their work. The football chairman is the art critic or art collector: necessary but also reactionary and dangerous.

On the pitch is where football is art at its most self-evident, the pinnacle of this art is the goal; delivered by a flick of the manager’s brush and a dab of color from an exotic ability. The goal when scored is experienced from different perspectives and the converse realities of thousands of people, all affected diversely by its incidence. Football is as art should be, dynamic, urgent and affecting: not neutralized by critics’ interpretations or pigeonholed by various schools of thought. There is no time for such pondering in the pandemonium (or dejection) following the goal scored or conceded.

Where theatre is contained and guided to its climax, football is unpredictable and erratic, but it is also the form of ultimate constraint; there is no time to go back and touch up mistakes, no time to rethink an ungainly idea; the art of football exists within the set parameters of two sets of forty-five minutes; nothing exists outside of this.

However it does exist outside of the purity of individual vision; it is a ‘game’ remember, a team game, all drama in football is the direct cause of a collective vision. Except it is vision influenced by fate, which produces the most human and ultimately the only REAL drama. It is Shakespearean tragedy, Beckettian delusion or despair and Chaplin-esque physicality.

Football is theatre as Bertolt Brecht had wanted it to be, the proletariat mans’ artistic arena.

And what of the goalkeeper, that great fumbling existential DADA of football; if the goal scored is football’s ultimate artistic achievement then the goalkeeper is taking a white paint brush to the Mona Lisa every single time he plucks the ball out of the air, and he does it beautifully. The beauty of the constructed goal has more value to me than anything by the Dutch masters (except maybe Ajax, and total football).

Drawing endless comparisons between art and football does not further the argument that football is art. Football is art to us because art can be anything. Football is a valid art because to us, anything can be valid as art.

Long Live Football.

By William Hunt and Felix L. Petty

FREQUENCY//NAME//FORMAT

This is a piece that Charlesworth, Lewandowski and Mann did for us for our first exhibition/night in Novemeber; its a list of all the pirate radio stations in London, where you can find them and what style of music they play. If you came you probably got a copy of it as a poster or you might have seen it in the first issue of our zine. Dave Charleworth is going to be doing some more work for us soon, so keep an eye out for that.

For more work by Charleworth, Lewandowski and Mann you can click here.