by Miklos Legrady, Toronto Editor

 

Blake Gopnik

Michel Foucault says “in every society the production of discourse is at once controlled, selected, organized and distributed” (The Discourse on Language, Dec. 2, 1970). American sociologist Herbert J. Gans writes of “gatekeepers”. Repeated complaints from peers tell us that over the last decades, academics restricted art to intellectual values, and in doing so they may have throttled the muse, poor thing. Most fine arts producers graduate from similar schools and share the same values, which are reflected in their association, their production, and the systems created thereby – surely a cultural blindness results from such group judgments.

This hegemony includes limiting access to those of the same outlook and language, narrowing the game to believers in a common ideology, in effect creating a tautology. Danielle S. McLaughlin of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association said that when we can no longer explore and express ideas that are troubling and even transgressive, we are limited to approved doses of information in community-sanctioned packets.

Derrida’s method of deconstruction was to look past the irony and ambiguity to the layer that genuinely threatens to collapse that system. He would have loved the notion that to be successful today an artist must create an acceptable persona. It follows that where there’s a territory there must be a script, a model, a style; an orthodoxy that subverts, negates and denies creativity.

What of the present? Blake Gopnik tells us that “We cherish everything in American art that is difficult, conceptual, anti-aesthetic, tough, and unsparing. Those were the neo-Dada values that began to win out in the early 1960s”. At a panel discussion on diminishing public interest in contemporary art, Robert Storr, then MOMA curator, said “in the 1960s the art world moved from the Cedar Tavern to the seminar room.” (Invisible Ink: Art Criticism and a Vanishing Public, May 15, 1996.) We infer that academics gamed the system and tenure track has stifled the arts, till the poor thing is nearly dead. Will art perish? Can we finally dispense with the art object and be just… you know… smart? “Clement Greenberg… warned of applying conceptual order to aesthetic judgment… when critics argue that any emotional or intellectual position must always derive from an existing cultural construct, they… dismiss the feeling of their own experiences…” (Richard Shiff, Cliché and a lack of feeling, The Art Newspaper, 5 June 2015)

So how can we check our attitude and speak a different language? There are other languages than the verbal and it was discarding them that made much contemporary art deplorable.  Albert Mehrabian writes of the relative importance of the words spoken, the tone of voice, and body language.  Neuroscientist Antonio Damassio confirms the existence of acoustic language, visual language, body language  The intellect’s fatal weakness is that it’s limited in knowledge, yet always assumes it know all that’s worth knowing. We not only can but need to overcome our bias. We can see beyond our blind spot once we review the evidence with fresh eyes.

And yet I am reminded that Michel Foucault, in his lectures at the

Denis Dutton

College de France in 1983-84 titled “The Courage of Truth”, warned us of the danger of parrhesia, of speaking openly and honestly against established and vested interests, there’s also  Socrates’ fate.

On the same cautionary note, statistician R.A. Fischer was invited in 1947 to give a series of talks on BBC radio about the nature of science and scientific investigation. His words are so relevant to the arts today; “A scientific career is peculiar in some ways. Its raison d’être is the increase in natural knowledge and on occasion an increase in natural knowledge does occur. But this is tactless and feelings are hurt. For in some small degree it is inevitable that views previously expounded are shown to be either obsolete or false. Most people, I think, can recognize this and take it in good part if what they have been teaching for ten years or so needs a little revision but some will undoubtedly take it hard, as a blow to their amour propre, or even an invasion of the territory they have come to think of as exclusively their own, and they must react with the same ferocity as (animals whose territory is invaded). I do not think anything can be done about it… but a young scientist may be warned and even advised that when one has a jewel to offer for the enrichment of mankind some will certainly wish to turn and rend that person to shreds.” (David Salsburg, The Lady Tasting Tea – How Statistics Revolutionized Science. Holt, N.Y. 2001)

Margaret Heffernan, on the other hand, in her TED talk “Dare to disagree”, insists on the importance of speaking out. “The fact is that most of the biggest catastrophes that we’ve witnessed rarely come from information that is secret or hidden. It comes from information that is freely available and out there, but that we are willfully blind to, because we can’t handle, don’t want to handle, the conflict that it provokes. But when we dare to break that silence, or when we dare to see, and we create conflict, we enable ourselves and the people around us to do our very best thinking.”

And so with Margaret Heffernan in mind we look at three artists to change the way we think about art. These three artists are compromised, yet much of our thinking is based on them. By questioning our premises we can only improve our understanding. Walter Benjamin’s essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” is seen as pure research akin to today’s academic scholarship when it is actually a calculated political marketing tool denouncing individual creativity and promoting the dictatorship of the working class. Walter Benjamin was responsible to the Soviet Writer’s Committee and his work toes the party line; we cannot read Benjamin innocently knowing the political priorities. “Mechanical Reproduction” has no concern for accuracy or facts – woven with flawed assumptions, fact and fiction twisted to fit political theory, the reductions, contradictions, and leaps of faith are obvious; a reality check bounced.

Benjamin writes that talent is meaningless, individuals are worthless, the only worthwhile art is made by the collective; authenticity is archaic. “From a photographic negative, for example, one can make any number of prints; to ask for the ‘authentic’ print makes no sense.” Today, 80 years later, an authentic Ansel Adams or Edward Weston printed by the artist sells for over $80,000 and the reality and worth of authorship have been validated beyond question. Benjamin writes that “The art of the proletariat… brush aside a number of outmoded concepts, such as creativity and genius”. He also tells us that aesthetics are a fascist illusion and the only worthwhile art is political propaganda.

Sol Lewitt – Four Sided Pyramid

Where we thought “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” was research similar to today’s academic scholarship, it is in fact Marxist propaganda. At the core of Benjamin’s argument is that what withers in the age of mechanical reproduction is the aura of the work of art.

He’s wrong in that books are made by mechanical reproduction yet stories and authors retain their aura as much as any work of art. Munch’s The Scream is known from reproduction yet remains haunting, as haunting as any Raven perched upon a bust of Pallas just above my chamber door. Walter Benjamin has been praised as an early Marshal McLuhan, a social scientist able to discern the cultural effects of media. Yet on reading the text we find a political message that strays from the truth and then ignores it. Walter Benjamin was mistaken. Though he writes in a beautiful language, he failed the reality test; we need to acknowledge this and update our history books, to question what we take for granted, in this case our devaluation of aesthetics.

“Ideas alone can be works of art,” Sol Lewitt proposed in his epic “Sentences on Conceptual Art,” a primer on the ins and outs of postmodern art making. Ideas “need not be made physical,” he continued. “A work of art may be understood as a conductor from the artist’s mind to the viewer’s. There’s the possibility that the idea may never reach the viewer, or that the idea may never leave the artist’s mind. But all ideas are art if they are concerned with art and fall within the conventions of art.” (Sol Lewitt, Sentences on Conceptual Art). The contradiction is obvious; if art is a conductor then any idea that remains in one’s mind and never reaches the viewer cannot by definition be art. From experience and history we know that art is content, not conductor; the medium is the conductor. Lewitt escapes criticism by claiming to be a mystic who overleaps logic, but nothing evades logic, not even the illogical. Do we believe that conceptual artists are mystics who overleap logic? In spite of this Sol Lewitt has been recast as the logician par excellence. He said that an idea was art, but he was wrong… an idea is science. Art is in the making, the reality check. If an idea were art, quality is moot as the work (as in work) cannot be judged; they dissolve in the boundless.

Walter Benjamin

In a 1998 panel discussion titled “Vision and Visuality”, sponsored by the Dia Art Foundation, Rosalind Kraus mentioned that Duchamp despised optical, ocular art (except for Manet) and disliked artisanal work, hence the ready-made. Yet ocular, optical art takes years to achieve and artisanal work is done with loving patience, these are things to respect, not to despise. We would be surprised to read that Shakespeare despised grammar, or that Stravinsky loathed musical notes. In a 1986 BBC interview with Joan Bakewell, Duchamp claimed the conceptual mantle when he said that until his time painting was retinal, what you could see, that he would make it intellectual. Today we know that Duchamp made no more paintings after he made painting intellectual. Marcel Duchamp needed to differentiate himself, to create his own brand as a Dadaist. He did this by rejecting the Impressionists. In Cabane’s interview we read that Duchamp wanted to destroy art. He actually destroyed his own ability to make art. “It was like a broken leg,” he said and retired to play chess. If you tell yourself art is not worth the making and say it long enough, eventually you believe yourself and lose interest in making art. Instead of being a cautionary tale, Duchamp is recommended practice today and the results are toxic.

We should no longer think of art as arbitrary but as biology. Denis Dutton described the role of art in a Darwinian theory of evolution in his book and in his Ted talk “The Art Instinct”, where he suggested that humans are hard-wired to seek beauty. “There is evidence that perceptions of beauty are evolutionarily determined… likely to enhance survival of the perceiving human’s genes.” Physicist Paul Dirac said that beauty in one’s equations, if the concept is valid, means a certainty of success. Neuroscientists in Great Britain discovered that the same part of the brain that is activated by art and music was activated in the brains of mathematicians when they looked at equations they regard as beautiful. Then in the 1970s Abraham Moles and Frieder Nake analyzed links between beauty, information processing, and information theory. We now know that beauty and its complex differentiations are crucial for mental health, while science and psychology show that aesthetics are vital to the evolution of consciousness.

We need to reconsider the values we have inherited from Duchamp. How many have a urinal in their living room? Cleverness and toilet humour get tiresome after a while and those who truly believe art is to piss in should leave the field to those with higher spiritual values. Dada has lived its time, has withered and faded, now past the shelf date. These cultural shifts rewriting our mission statement may in fact be the most likely change occurring in the near future; we can help shape that.
In the world of nature we find that a bee’s dance informs the hive of the location of a field of flowers with sun-oriented hourly-based data, including the caloric value of that patch. Such unconscious yet precise content in the dance of a bee leads to far reaching speculation on unconscious content in the artwork of the naked ape.

Volume 34 no 5 May / June 2020

7 thoughts on “The Artwork of The Naked Ape

  1. Duchamp may have well posited a question, that has haunted the background of the modern/post modern age..,”do we deserve beauty?… ” This “take” is an “action” of an artistic decision that only artists “may” answer if they were to assume some sense of relevance in response to modernism/post modernism. And by in large they do not or cannot. Andy Warhol, as much as he suffered inside, would have egregiously answered “NO” if we knew his dream world as a hurt child or the angry man he was. Sol Lewitt would have answered it does not matter but dares you to find his ideas beautiful. Walter Benjamin would say we now have “problems” and Blake Gopnick is wrong about American art from the 60’s … we do not challenge, “unsparingly” challenge art that is tough and conceptual. That is the problem Miklos is laying on us as art is “laid” on us so systemically and prearranged that no outside voice has a chance to influence it, only to cajoled or conform to it. This is the position of McLuhan and Foucault …beware! How are we to answer Duchamp’s decision/question if a per-digested system dictates art on so many fronts… be it academic or market or state sponsored or agreed upon? I would agree that humans are hard wired to beauty but a deep concern of artists has been to show how that hard wiring is “severed”, whether they are conscious of it or not. This “severing” constitutes a large issue we dance around and fear addressing. And this “dance of denial”- our “lost aesthetic”, along with language has become derailed. If we are to create an aesthetic of the “Lost” I would be all for it… because we constantly “hint” at it… it is all around us..we have been swimming in it..but do we “see” it? Where do you dance when no one sees you? Miklos’ article above is a definite launch point …. and clearly shows our “art world” in crisis….go find the bees.

    1. “do we deserve beauty”?… A Denis Dutton youtube video The Art Instinct, says our attraction to beauty is an evolutionary development. Paul Dirac says that when he sees beauty in his math, he knows he’s on the right path. It makes sense to ask if the science behind beauty also applies to fine art. We deserve the stars we reach for, else what is a meta for?

      1. Duchamp put put the notion of “beauty it self” up for grabs. As an essential consideration of retinal art, his dissatisfaction with the entirety of modernism,- in a sense it’s failure to guide or “save us” or “replace” the culture that gave us WW1, agreed upon “beauty” was now up for vengeful reconsideration. His reaction to “the mess” was dada, which is what he posited for “consideration”. I think this is a valuable question to ponder as we peruse the “permanent distortion” — in the art world…?

        1. After Duchamp put beauty up for grabs and discarded the retinal, he stopped painting and eventually stopped making art. Psychologists have peer-reviewed art therapy, how aesthetic function like algorithms and have a positive healing effect on the mind. The converse is also true. A practice of counter-aesthetic strategies will make one sick, as with individuals who play at being mad and then lose their sanity.

          I believe Duchamp made a major contribution to the epistemology of art by defining it’s limits, beyond which you can no longer make art. He rejected the retinal (for which his loathing was well known) and in doing so he discarded a non-verbal modality called visual language. When you stress the intellect to disadvantage your instincts you get hypertrophic breakdown. Duchamp quit making art, except for a sad twenty year project in the small room behind his now empty studio. But the muse was gone, and like any rejected lover she wasn’t coming back.

          We learn that Duchamp made painting intellectual and then he stopped painting. It is important to consider that he could no longer paint after he made painting intellectual. Jasper Johns wrote that Duchamp tolerated, even encouraged the mythology around that ‘stopping’, “But it was not like that…” He spoke of breaking a leg. “You didn’t mean to do it”. (Cabane interviews).

          Duchamp was not perfect, mistakes were made, but he excelled at a persona that we now see as gospel. I’m almost done my book titled “Duchamp was wrong”. I was fortunate that some canonical Duchamp scholars were encouraging, contributed anecdotes and corrected some errors.

          But anyways, according to evidence Duchamp was wrong; when beauty is up for grabs, that creates personal and social conflict, as we have shut down an instinct. When art is anything you can get away with, the worst you can get away with is always the best strategy, leading to a slow ethical and structural degradation of the field. When art is anything you can get away with, what matters is getting away with it. Post modernism may have created the post truth era; the art world may own Donald Trump.

          1. I inherently,.. I tend to agree with your notion of beauty as necessary -and deeply ingrained in our mind and humanity as humane distinction. However the other night, on Netflix I watched the first episode of “The Age of Tanks”… about the thoroughly absurd technological developments of warfare in the first world war. It is wildly appropriate to the Duchampian age which has bellowed forth. This epoch of absurdity–The Age of Tanks– rained down on the European continent as absurdity played out, the age of modernism’s promise left dead in it’s tracks. [“Time’s” tracks, not tank tracks, although they are functionally the same here.} The whole scale black humor was for all to see and participate in and ,indeed, they did. Hundreds of thousands of people washed up in sheer lunacy, insanity of national proportions where any sense of rationality was GONE. With this mass insanity riding herd over the vast traditions of European populations and then with the Americans joining in… what was Duchamp or Breton to do? Duchamp opted for the question of this madness and with a certain sense of nasty resentment — he sent his vote in with “Fountain” — from NYC. His surrounding reputation was much greater than any art he may or may not have created. So… He very much questioned, and I feel this is very much left out of many discussions of Duchamp, whether at this junction in history, is man capable to the entitlement of beauty?? Is there “what’s left” of man to available beauty “to be seen” and made “known” to what is left of man– at this point in history. The question is ceaselessly left on the back burner as we parade further down the unknown trail of human endeavor, one tragic absurdity after another. Indeed, WW1 was only a precursor to the follies of WW2. To a certain “aesthetic” point, Duchamp felt vindicated. And he and only he is “welcome” to that satisfaction. The rest of us are complicit in “some , way” in the culture that lives on absurdity that brought us “Fountain”, at least in his mind. The problem is too many “art types” try to share that satisfaction–WRONG… that is cheap and cynical and has, as Miklos points out, set us on many bad tracks from which we are trapped in and struggling to get out.. Only one Duchamp has lived. It takes an artist to question the notion of beauty, he has… what is your art response… world?

          2. I agree with you, but find that beauty may be different than expected. I’m starting to see it as an algorithm, based on Dirac’s statement that when he find beauty in his equations then the math is usually correct.

          3. Beauty is now harder than ever to “discern”, and, ironically, we need it now more than ever. The disposable nature of our culture means we have no sense of posterity, we search NOT for the compliant algorithms manifest in our art..{ie not manifest} but rather what gets our attention. This is the world of “distraction”. This very condition is neglected by our wonderful critical art world officials…..and they are unaware as they woefully respond beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Big problem.

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