The Art of Diremption: On the Powerlessness of Art by Leonhard Emmerling (review)

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW Pub Date : 2024-03-12 DOI:10.1353/abr.2023.a921778
Gavin Sourgen
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Although he never pitches it as a dilemma, <em>The Art of Diremption</em> certainly reads as a response to one. As Emmerling sees it, the \"assumption that art has a unique ability to bring truth to light\" is born out of, among other things, a fundamental misunderstanding of \"the dialectic of appearance and elusion\" in art, and a lost sense of how this \"reveals [the] truth about its dual composition as reality and appearance.\" In other words, by forsaking a nuanced understanding of a crucial differentiation between appearance and reality—\"the key differentiation in aesthetics,\" as he sees it—and laboring under a misplaced burden of uncomplicated mimesis, we fail to see that art relinquishes its ontological status as art at the very moment it insists on having a clear intent and impact. When art is \"semantically overdetermined,\" when \"the modernist paradigm of the opposition between art and society that is coming apart at the seams is looked upon as no longer appropriate yet indispensable,\" the \"discourse on art has to be pumped full with the force of the radical as a compensatory surrogate.\" In this way, art is \"inflated by … moral fervour,\" and \"the sweeping proclamations about art not only reek of arbitrariness\" but ultimately \"fail its object.\" Such beliefs are also, above all else, counterproductive in bolstering arguments for the value of aesthetic judgment as a means <strong>[End Page 35]</strong> of moral good because any insistence upon the moral worth of a work of art, and any attempt to measure and justify the range of its influence, is bound to produce the wrong kind of diremption: not the generative and unifying force of internal doubt and uncertainty at the heart of aesthetic engagement, but pronounced critical hostility and division.</p> <p>Emmerling sees this current overinvestment in the notion of art as a reconciler of social disparity and a deliverer of moral good to be the product of an \"ethical turn,\" a \"paradigm shift\" that occurred in \"the last observable phase of a specific history of art since Nietzsche, in which all hope lies in liberation through art.\" By taking Nietzsche's belief in \"Art and nothing but art\" as \"life's great enabler, seducer, stimulant\" at face value, critics and artists erroneously insist that, \"Not only should art hold a particular morality, but also judge and comment on political events from an artistic-moral perspective, and through the respective constellations and situations it creates, … must propose solutions to overcome social ills.\" Emmerling's thesis rests on the assertion that while many have been at pains to claim for art a special power to reconcile contradictions, it is its capacity for diremption, the \"uncoupling of beauty and truth\" and the \"self-perpetuating process of diversification, in which it divides itself and splits up,\" that art demonstrates its greatest value. When art makes no conspicuous or extravagant assertions about being a site of radical freedom, when art relinquishes its desire to be a powerful medium of social transformation and insists instead on its autonomy and the autonomy of subjective judgment, it establishes its consideration as \"the political praxis of freedom.\" \"Art,\" Emmerling posits, \"requires an ethics of powerlessness, which rejects the discourse of impact and power, in order to enable a politics of art, at the heart of which lies the permanence of reflection, unfoundability of thought and the emergence of form as the event of the new.\"</p> <p>To arrive at this...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":41337,"journal":{"name":"AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"AMERICAN BOOK REVIEW","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/abr.2023.a921778","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Art of Diremption: On the Powerlessness of Art by Leonhard Emmerling
  • Gavin Sourgen (bio)
the art of diremption: on the powerlessness of art Leonhard Emmerling
Translated by Parnal Chirmuley
Seagull Books
https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/A/bo165272877.html
164 pages; Print, $24.50

While the precise object of his discontent is never explicitly stated, Leonhard Emmerling's antipathy toward a pervasive "overburdening of art as the great redeemer"—one that has produced "an almost relentless spate of exposures and revelations, interventions and calls to participation" in the contemporary art world—seems to have in mind a growing belief in the merits of social justice art and, perhaps more damningly, those who naively assume a stable relation between intention and embodiment, conception and reception. Although he never pitches it as a dilemma, The Art of Diremption certainly reads as a response to one. As Emmerling sees it, the "assumption that art has a unique ability to bring truth to light" is born out of, among other things, a fundamental misunderstanding of "the dialectic of appearance and elusion" in art, and a lost sense of how this "reveals [the] truth about its dual composition as reality and appearance." In other words, by forsaking a nuanced understanding of a crucial differentiation between appearance and reality—"the key differentiation in aesthetics," as he sees it—and laboring under a misplaced burden of uncomplicated mimesis, we fail to see that art relinquishes its ontological status as art at the very moment it insists on having a clear intent and impact. When art is "semantically overdetermined," when "the modernist paradigm of the opposition between art and society that is coming apart at the seams is looked upon as no longer appropriate yet indispensable," the "discourse on art has to be pumped full with the force of the radical as a compensatory surrogate." In this way, art is "inflated by … moral fervour," and "the sweeping proclamations about art not only reek of arbitrariness" but ultimately "fail its object." Such beliefs are also, above all else, counterproductive in bolstering arguments for the value of aesthetic judgment as a means [End Page 35] of moral good because any insistence upon the moral worth of a work of art, and any attempt to measure and justify the range of its influence, is bound to produce the wrong kind of diremption: not the generative and unifying force of internal doubt and uncertainty at the heart of aesthetic engagement, but pronounced critical hostility and division.

Emmerling sees this current overinvestment in the notion of art as a reconciler of social disparity and a deliverer of moral good to be the product of an "ethical turn," a "paradigm shift" that occurred in "the last observable phase of a specific history of art since Nietzsche, in which all hope lies in liberation through art." By taking Nietzsche's belief in "Art and nothing but art" as "life's great enabler, seducer, stimulant" at face value, critics and artists erroneously insist that, "Not only should art hold a particular morality, but also judge and comment on political events from an artistic-moral perspective, and through the respective constellations and situations it creates, … must propose solutions to overcome social ills." Emmerling's thesis rests on the assertion that while many have been at pains to claim for art a special power to reconcile contradictions, it is its capacity for diremption, the "uncoupling of beauty and truth" and the "self-perpetuating process of diversification, in which it divides itself and splits up," that art demonstrates its greatest value. When art makes no conspicuous or extravagant assertions about being a site of radical freedom, when art relinquishes its desire to be a powerful medium of social transformation and insists instead on its autonomy and the autonomy of subjective judgment, it establishes its consideration as "the political praxis of freedom." "Art," Emmerling posits, "requires an ethics of powerlessness, which rejects the discourse of impact and power, in order to enable a politics of art, at the heart of which lies the permanence of reflection, unfoundability of thought and the emergence of form as the event of the new."

To arrive at this...

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权力的艺术:莱昂哈德-艾默林的《艺术的无力感》(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 箝制的艺术:The Art of Diremption: On the powerlessness of art Leonhard Emmerling 翻译:Parnal Chirmuley 海鸥图书 https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/A/bo165272877.html 164 页;印刷版,24 美元。50 虽然莱昂哈德-艾默林从未明确指出其不满的确切对象,但他对当代艺术界普遍存在的 "艺术作为伟大救赎者的过度负担 "的反感--这种反感在当代艺术界产生了 "几乎无休止的曝光和揭露、干预和呼吁参与"--似乎与那些日益相信社会正义艺术的优点的人有关,也许更可恶的是,与那些天真地假定意图与体现、构思与接受之间存在稳定关系的人有关。尽管艾默林从未将其视为一种困境,但《欲望的艺术》无疑是对这种困境的回应。在艾默林看来,"艺术具有揭示真理的独特能力 "这一 "假设 "的产生,除其他原因外,还源于对艺术中 "表象与隐喻的辩证关系 "的根本误解,以及对这种辩证关系如何 "揭示其作为现实与表象的双重构成的[]真相 "的迷失。换句话说,由于放弃了对表象与现实之间关键区别的细致入微的理解--正如他所认为的 "美学中的关键区别"--并在不复杂的模仿的错位负担下苦苦挣扎,我们看不到艺术在坚持具有明确意图和影响的那一刻就放弃了其作为艺术的本体论地位。当艺术 "在语义上被过度确定",当 "艺术与社会之间的对立这一现代主义范式在接缝处分崩离析,被视为不再合适却又不可或缺 "时,"关于艺术的话语就必须充满激进的力量,作为一种补偿性的代用品"。这样一来,艺术就 "被......道德狂热所膨胀","关于艺术的一概而论不仅充满了武断的味道",而且最终 "辜负了它的目标"。这种信念在支持审美判断作为道德善的一种手段的价值方面,首先也是适得其反的,因为任何对艺术作品的道德价值的坚持,以及任何对其影响范围进行衡量和论证的尝试,都必然会产生一种错误的判断:不是审美参与的核心--内部怀疑和不确定性--的生成和统一力量,而是明显的批判敌意和分裂。埃默林认为,目前这种过度投资于艺术作为社会差异的调和者和道德善的传递者的观念,是 "伦理转向 "的产物,是 "自尼采以来特定艺术史的最后一个可观察到的阶段 "发生的 "范式转变",其中所有的希望都在于通过艺术获得解放。批评家和艺术家们信奉尼采的 "艺术,除了艺术别无其他 "的信念,将其视为 "生命的伟大推动者、诱惑者、刺激者",错误地坚持认为:"艺术不仅应该持有一种特定的道德观,还应该从艺术-道德的角度来判断和评论政治事件,并通过其创造的各自的星座和情境,......必须提出克服社会弊病的解决方案。"艾默林的论点基于这样的论断:尽管许多人都不遗余力地宣称艺术具有调和矛盾的特殊力量,但艺术的最大价值却在于其 "美与真脱钩 "和 "自我延续的多样化过程,在这一过程中,艺术将自身分割开来 "的 "去蔽能力"。当艺术不再显眼或奢侈地宣称自己是激进自由的场所时,当艺术放弃成为社会变革的强大媒介的愿望,转而坚持自己的自主性和主观判断的自主性时,它就确立了自己作为 "自由的政治实践 "的考虑。"艾默林认为,"艺术需要一种无权力的伦理,它拒绝影响力和权力的话语,从而促成一种艺术政治,其核心在于反思的永恒性、思想的不稳定性以及作为新事件的形式的出现"。为了实现这一点......
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