Three dialectical inversions: images and
afterimages of Artists Anonymous
SHOCK TOLERANCE.
Contemporary art is nothing without its ‘art world’; that complex and mobile
interaction of participants, makers, audiences, institutions, media,
curators, collectors, galleries, museums, ‘alternative’ spaces, critics,
theorists, academies and discourses which give visibility to the work of art
that operates in its midst. And one of the most vivid features of the
contemporary art world is the diversity of practices that are now tolerated
within its circuits of circulation and exchange – tolerated and encouraged,
by a cultural system that is now open to anything, by anyone, from anywhere.
This is not the age of the modernist avant-gardes, no longer the epoch of
conservative order of art, to which and against which those avant-gardes
raised their questions and their objections. Questions such as, why
painting? Why not photography? Why realism? Why not abstraction? Why the
artist as individual? Why not art as a collective practice? Why skill and
craft? Why not technology? Why refinement? Why not mass culture? Why the
material object? Why not art as idea? In their time, all these questions
were direct challenges to the self-preserving definitions that art had made
for itself. And while, if we look back, the outrage provoked by these
questions now seems quaint to us, it’s important to note that in their first
instance, these were shocking events, which challenged art’s aesthetic,
cultural and social legitimacy. Today, the idea that art can and should
produce strong reactions, that it should transgress the limitation of
normative culture, is treated with caution and ambiguity. It is easy to know
how to shock, and who to shock. Harder to know why to shock…
How do the
question of shock connect with the work of the group Artists Anonymous?
Perhaps it has to do with the fact that among the ranks of contemporary
artists working today, Artists Anonymous are distinct in the way that their
work provokes fresh and substantial reflection on the nature of
transgression in contemporary art, without resorting to clichés or
recognisable formulas that would make them simply another gang of enfants
terribles, fit for the entertainment and consumption of a mass public. But
at the same time, Artists Anonymous do not pander to the new mode of
tolerance that exist inside the artworld, which sustains a huge range of
apparently sophisticated, often highly specialist art practices. Artists
Anonymous are not satisfied with making art which becomes the object of the
artworld’s assent and agreement from within its specialist public – art as a
form of intellectual minority culture – but nor do they want to make work
which exploits the spectacle of art’s flirtation with mainstream, mass or
popular culture. Instead, their work attempts to articulate the conditions
of separation that exist between the culture of contemporary art and the
wider culture – and the way in which art currently attempts to manage the
tensions that are produced from this state of distinction and separation.
Critically, what is of interest in the work of Artists Anonymous is how
their apparently aesthetic strategies in fact address themselves to
institutional conditions of art’s distinction from mainstream culture. What
Artists Anonymous experiment with is the actual, current conditions of the
boundary between the art world and mainstream culture, in ways which produce
effects of shock that are not gratuitous, but are rather the result of
discovering the limits of the expectations and assumptions that the current
artworld maintains, even when it believes itself to be tolerant. The way
they achieve this effect – this sensation of difficulty and collision with
the ‘norm’ – is by a combination of techniques and operations that work as
dialectical oppositions, which while distinguishable from each other, come
together in a vivid and excessive recognition of the terms of contemporary
art’s separation from the wider culture it nevertheless addresses.
Because if the world of contemporary art has become more tolerant, as it has
done so the experience of shock has become attenuated, more empty of
meaning, and increasingly seen as a cynical tactic to be employed by
artists, rather than the outcome of an encounter between the work of artists
and the prejudices of others. In Britain, for example, since the rise to
fame of the generation commonly known as the ‘young British artists’, the
idea that contemporary artists exploit offense or shock in order to claim
notoriety and visibility has become a common complaint. What mainstream
commentators often fail to observe is that these tactics of offense and
shock are strongly parasitical on the circuits of media distribution that
they themselves provide. And when such art appears to transgress the norms
of decency, or public morality, or common sense notions about what art
should look like, it really exposes the fact that these boundaries of taste
and propriety are no longer very strongly defended by the culture of the
majority. The mainstream now appears much more tolerant than it ever did of
the apparent transgressions of artists, while at the same time, within the
art world itself, pluralism, diversity and tolerance is the ruling order.
Everything is tolerated; nothing shocks anymore.
The emptying-out of
the experience of shock is such that today shock is seen as a cynical
provocation which ‘we’ – the pubic – consciously refuse to respond to. That
it is easy not
to respond to such provocations is to do with how
such provocations have become highly formulaic – sex, death, violence,
obscenity, triviality, are all recognisable tropes which, historically, have
provoked censure and exclusion from public culture, yet which no longer
produce much hostility because attitudes to what is representable in public
have changed profoundly over the last few decades. At the same time, it is
also ironic that such forms of transgression have come to acquire culture
license precisely because of a changed attitude towards the status of art as
part of contemporary culture; it is now understood that contemporary
artistic practice will invariably probe the terms of transgression, but that
for as long as this operates within the institutional confines of the ‘art
world’, this is acceptable – artists are no longer seen as dangerous
revolutionaries or moral dilettantes, but instead healthy eccentrics whose
activities, while usually incomprehensible to the mainstream public, are
innocuous precisely because of their relative seclusion from it.At the same
time, the ‘art world’ itself is in many ways bored of shock;it is
interesting, when surveying gallery shows or the wandering the ranks of
stands at the latest international art fair, how little contemporary
artistic production seems to wish to confront, antagonise or upset the
dominant consensus among collectors, curators, critics and art’s other
specialist audiences.
To unravel the critical nature of transgression as
it operates in the work of Artists Anonymous, then, it’s worth sketching out
a theory of shock that pays attention to the relationships within culture at
the moments when shock occurs, instead of necessarily examining the content
that is supposed to be shocking. As suggested earlier, the reason that
transgressive art has become hollow, unconvincing and formulaic today is
that the nature of public expectations towards art has changed. This has a
lot to do with how society now attaches importance to what is expressed in
public, in contrast to the more repressed – and repressive – climate against
which earlier avant-garde movements reacted. It is strange today to recall
that in the past, public taste regarding could be offended as much by
abstract painting as it could by explicit pornographic representations. What
connects such apparently divergent reactions is the dominant attitude
towards what constituted order, both aesthetic and moral, and how that sense
of order translated itself into what could or could not be said or seen in
public. What distinguishes today’s liberal culture from the conservative,
traditionalist society of the past is that the distinction between publics
and private spheres of life has become blurred. In terms of personal
morality for example, what people do ‘behind closed doors’ is no longer a
matter for censure in public discourse. Nowadays public mass culture is
cheerfully full of the voyeuristic genre of ‘confessional’ TV, most
explicitly found in such ‘reality’ shows such as Big Brother, in which the
viewing pleasure is derived from watching the exposure and lack of privacy
of others.
This changing nature of how the public sphere is regulated has
also changed the effects that art’s presence has in the public sphere, and
as the mass media have become increasingly important in how reality is
mediated, so art has in many instances been drawn into the spectacular forms
of distribution that the mass media offers. There is no better explanation
for the success of the spectacular art of the last decade, or of the rise of
the celebrity artist, than the part the mass media have played in
integrating the production of art into a broader culture of mass-visibility.
And that visibility is defined by art’s explicit otherness; that to be
visible as art in contemporary culture, it should appear different to other
forms of culture, in some ways apparently alternative, and transgressive
only in forms that are already sanctioned as acceptable. These questions
of division and interaction between typesspectacle, mass-culture, aesthetic
form and institutional separation are in many ways key to the strategies
employed by Artists Anonymous. Where they succeed is by troubling one form
of recognizable division between art and culture with another form of
division. And with each division, we find it split by a further internal
opposition, that speaks of a different question in the encounter between art
and life, or mass culture and the artworld.
The most striking of these,
and the one that most immediately draws us into the complex operations of
their work, is the use of doubling and reversal, in and through painting and
its mirroring in photography. Unlike so many photorealist painters of the
past, Artists Anonymous bringpainting and photography into direct contact
with each other. Instead of the absent photograph providing the model for
the painting which is present, their paintings are presented in pairs with
their ‘afterimages’, photographs of the painting in negative
colour-reversal, presented at the same scale as the painting. That the
paintings are produced from photographic sources, then doubled through
reversal in the paired photograph, sets these pairings as dialectical loops,
in which the original image is no longer important. Colour negatives, in
contrast to black and white negative images, have a visual interest that
goes beyond their status as ‘negatives’. What is striking about the
photograph-painting pairings is that the idea of the ‘negative’ itself
becomes inverted; there is no longer a negative image of a positive image,
or a painting of a photograph, but a painting and a photograph that stand as
inversions of each other, dismissing any idea of an original photograph and
a subsequent painting. This is further complicated by the fact that in many
of the paired works, the painted which suggests itself as the ‘positive’ is
already full of passages of negative inversions, in many cases as if the
physical subjects themselves had been painted with their own inverted
colours. In the dyptich Drugs, these doublings, reversals, and inversions
are pushed to extremes, as the space in which the subjects are seen is
itself a mirror room, where every wall is a reflection.
This
tactic of endless inversion, the negative of a negative which is not a
positive, is a perceptual issue which becomes a conceptual problem, an
aesthetic encounter which becomes a cognitive experience. We have become
accustomed to the experience of a painting of a photograph, just as we have
become accustomed to the experience of a colour photographic negative, so
Artists Anonymouspush us to experience the categories of reality and
representation as something more than can be guaranteed by either of these
technological criteria. That is to say, if we recognise the colour image as
a ‘negative’ we usually assume that there is, somewhere, a ‘correct’
positive image of reality. Or, if we look at a photographic painting, we
assure ourselves of the origin of the painting in the reality of the source
photograph, if not necessarily the reality of the place represented through
the technology of photography. In each of these technological relationships
to reality there is an assumption of a normal functioning of representation,
where reality and image exist in a hierarchy of verifiability. The
doubling-inversions that Artists Anonymous deploy in the paintings and
photographs present us with a shocking experience regarding the conventional
distinction between painting and photography. As photography has tended to
assume the privileged relation to reality in modern visual culture, painting
in its contemporary forms has moved further towards representation that
operates in imaginary or fantastical modes. But the shock offered by Artists
Anonymous is that, now, neither technology of representation offers any
guaranteed access to a prosaic reality. This shock is, it seems, deployed
in the service of a more substantial notion of reality than either
photography-on-its-own or painting-on-its-own can deliver. In the
exhibition-installation ‘Drugs’, one wall next to the diptych was scrawled
with this slogan: “I paint negative abstract photorealistic paintings. What
the fuck are you doing?” What stands out here is that what is painted are
abstract, not simply negative, photorealistic paintings. Here again, Artists
Anonymous set out to collapse an apparent opposition in the history of
avant-garde painting, the conflict between figurative and abstract painting
that preoccupied so much of the modern period. While this was in the end
superseded by the incursion of photography into the rhetoric of painterly
representation, an aspect of abstraction remains important. It was
abstraction that could properly liberate the experience of painting and
looking at the effects of the medium itself – colour, gesture, speed,
non-illusionistic space, flatness etc. – properties which might offer the
optical presence of materiality – a reality in itself, and not merely the
image of a reality elsewhere. By invoking the abstract in their complex
inversions of painting and photography, Artists Anonymous suggest that these
images should be seen an aesthetic reality in and for themselves. What
counts is the experience of the doubling and inversion for itself – an
experience which doesn’t prompt the viewer to search for the ‘origin’ of the
image, but rather encourages us to be aware of the artwork’s capacity to
overcome the subordinate relationship of artwork to reality – whether
painterly or photographic. AA’s images do not represent, but present the
condition of the image when art attempts to address reality.
Of course,
as the infinite doubling and reversal of image-making, painting and
photograph is set into motion, the next loop opens up. What kind of world is
it, in the end, which is being represented here? The world of AA is strange,
but recognisable. A world of fantastical figures, or of figures in clown
masks (but not masked clowns), of erotic or pornographic encounters, of
bodies that are disguised or transformed, all bathed in the acidic,
kaleidoscopic light of AA’s inverted palette. But while the subjects often
seem exotic, these scenes cannot be described as fictions. They do not
pretend to refer to a self-contained reality elsewhere, whether fictional or
fantastic. They are instead stagings, forms of orchestrated display, like
arrested theatre. They are scenes of excess and violence, play and disaster.
Scenes steeped in the visual forms of the commodities of urban mass culture
– although these are the trash of commodity culture, not the slick products
generated by brand industry and the corporate media.
Again this
proposes a doubling-up, an internal complication in the identity of the
protagonists: these wayward bodies are the eccentric manifestations of the
all that is non-orthodox. In another century, these might have been the
figures of bohemia and the sub-culture of the avant-garde, which opposed
themselves to orthodox, catholic propriety. Today these are the bodies of an
extended, popular subculture, which has released itself from the constraints
of puritan orthodoxy. But if bohemian bodies are now part of a bigger
community that no longer requires the marginal social status of bohemia,
this affects how we understand these subjects in relation to the status of
art as a cultural alternative. What we find in these scenes are figures that
represent the heterogeneous bodies of the popular, different to the orthodox
images projected by corporate mass culture, but also distinct from the
now-no-longer bohemian sub-culture of contemporary art. They are not simply
‘incursions’ or ‘appropriations’ of the image of the popular into the
sub-culture of contemporary art. That would be to leave the demarcation line
between mass culture and art intact. Instead, because these figures and
these scenes are generated through the two technologies of photography and
painting, this synthesis foregrounds the cultural problem of that
demarcation. These different technologies – painting and photography –
operate with different allegiances to the mass media on one hand, and
popular culture on the other: while the technology of photography tends to
project the authoritative image of corporate culture onto everyone, painting
is a form of handcraft that ambiguously aligns itself both
with
aristocratic exclusivity, as well as with excluded forms of popular visual
expression. It is not surprising that tattoos, graffiti and body-paint
appear in these images, re-presented through the technique– the ‘skill’ – of
the photorealist easel painter. But while a resistance towards the
imposition of corporate culture is common both to artists and non-artists,
Artists Anonymous do not seem to offer any easy resolution, or wishful
coming-together of these two distinct communities. Artists Anonymous neither
advocate popular culture within the culture of contemporary art, nor propose
art as a culture that is distinct and indifferent to what is outside of it.
These are not figures of real people, then, or of a particular social
‘body’. They are rather symbols of the conflict between the
self-representation of art and of people against the power of a normative,
manufactured culture. If the protagonists of these scenes are in a sense
lacking in identity, it is because the real subject here is the violence
necessary to break the hold of manufactured media culture, and how it
imposessecure, immobile identities on both popular culture art.
This is
perhaps why, in the end, the protagonists we see are always in a state of
disguise, of masquerade, of costume and bodily modification – the final
inversion of identity and non-indentity. In the landscape of manufactured
culture, all identities are immediately visible and transparent, nothing is
obscure or enigmatic, nothing may be hidden; everything must be represented.
With Artists Anonymous, everything is hidden, is a secret, and only reveals
itself to contain its opposite. This is why although a single body, they
remain plural, yet still maintain a certain uncertainty about the extent of
their plurality. Hidden behind masks and first names, they attempt to keep
the attention on the work, and not the ‘identity’ of the artist, that totem
of art’s spectacularisation, its extreme visibility. As the techniques of
artistic tradition are fused with the visual excess of an uncensored popular
aesthetic, and every possible refuge of secure representation – identity –
is dismantled through its dialectical opposite, Artists Anonymous seem to
return, with huge energy, to the modernist project which once looked to
bring art and life together. But instead of fantasising of some false
resolution of art and society, or retreating into an erudite art that wants
nothing to do with the broader culture, the inversions, reflections and
doublings serve to show that art really has no secure identity, and that its
special difference is offered to it on the condition that it cuts its common
ties to the broader culture. It is because it is impossible to securely
identify these figures as neither outside nor inside the culture of art that
they appear threatening – shocking in some sense – to art’s comfortable,
sanctioned distance, the shock of an experience which intermingles popular
and artistic technique in common opposition to the spectacle of manufactured
culture. What Artists Anonymous suggest, perhaps, is that rather than
pretend to find a sentimental meeting point for art and mass culture,
artists might reveal the violence that produces the separation between art
and non-art in the first instance. The shock, then, is in the force
necessary to allow art and mass culture to speak into and through each
other, so that while the division may be stubbornly defended by the arbiters
of the ‘art world’ and the media – anxious to maintain art’s difference and
identity – the falsehood of that distinction, is made vividly, violently
clear.
J. J. Charlesworth © 2008 |