装置艺术与审美自主性的问题:朱利安·雷庞蒂斯奇与观者的份额

IF 1 2区 艺术学 0 ART JOURNAL OF AESTHETICS AND ART CRITICISM Pub Date : 2020-08-13 DOI:10.1111/jaac.12735
KEN WILDER
{"title":"装置艺术与审美自主性的问题:朱利安·雷庞蒂斯奇与观者的份额","authors":"KEN WILDER","doi":"10.1111/jaac.12735","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Intermedial art, as it emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, constituted a threat not only to the medium specificity of modernism, but also to the artwork as self-contained autonomous object. That this threat was real is evidenced by the ubiquitous presence of installation art. While only named as such toward the end of this period, installation art––a label still rejected by some of its founding artists––is exemplary of such hybrid practices. Its supporters and critics drew a contrast between, on the one hand, modernism's aesthetic engagement with a medium-specific (and self-sufficient) “object,” and, on the other hand, new so-called nonaesthetic “practices” engaging the “literal” spectator within her own space, such that the space of the gallery or situation is drawn into the encounter. So, while in 1967, Michael Fried writes disparagingly of the notion that “someone has merely to enter the room in which a literalist work has been placed to become that beholder, that audience of one” (<span>1998</span>, 193), Claire Bishop echoes such a claim when she suggests that “an insistence on the literal presence of the viewer is arguably the key characteristic of installation art” (<span>2005</span>, 6). Despite diametrically opposed critical evaluations of such situated art, a curious consensus emerges around a beholder whose “share” is characterized as a “being present.”</p><p>It is indicative because it allows us to see an interrelation “between the anti-objectivist impulse of theories of aesthetic experience and the impulses toward the dissolution of the concept of the work in artistic practice”; thus, the opposition toward objectivism in a philosopher like Rüdiger Bubner is <i>at the same time</i> a “reaction to the destruction of the traditional unity of the work in contemporary art,” exemplified, of course, by installation art (Rebentisch <span>2012</span>, 10).</p><p>The object is aesthetic not by virtue of qualities that <i>precede</i> the experience of such an object (that is, guaranteed by production), but only when the encounter with the artwork initiates a specifically aesthetic experience. This is not “a return to subjectivism that would sacrifice the art critical discourse and with it any consideration of questions of productions aesthetics” (130–131), but rather a recognition that art critical discourse necessarily <i>follows</i> aesthetic experience and is, thus, constitutive of such aesthetic objects through processes of reflective transformation.</p><p>Through such discursivity, Rebentisch seeks to avoid the pitfalls of an objectivism conceived as self-referential, and a subjectivism that posits the subject's aesthetic experience <i>as its own object</i>. She defines the aesthetic experience of installation art as a relation that does, indeed, involve aesthetic distance, in that it “brackets” the object not just as a self-referential “thing,” but through an event-like experience: a bracketing that highlights the performative role of the subject. But here, minimalism/installation art reveals a structural aspect of <i>all</i> art, namely, “the double and reciprocally referential presence of the aesthetic object as thing and as sign, its ‘stage presence’” (69). This constructs a tension between that which is representing and that which is represented: a tension that Fried rejects by claiming a self-sufficiency of the aesthetic object that, in its “instantaneous” appreciation, overcomes any dependence <i>upon</i> the beholder. For Rebentisch, installation art, therefore, transgresses not so much the “idea of autonomous art” but rather “an objectivist misunderstanding of it” (14).</p><p>Rebentisch's position offers a rebuttal to those, such as Osborne (<span>2013</span>), who suggests that critically engaged contemporary art is, by definition, non or even antiaesthetic. Indeed, her wider stated project is “to rehabilitate philosophical aesthetics as a <i>critical</i> project” (Rebentisch <span>2012</span>, 16). At the same time, she maintains that installation art represents an ideological rejection of context-independent art. Rebentisch recasts aesthetic autonomy not as the self-sufficiency of the object, but as a semblance (an experience bracketed from the spheres of practical and theoretical reason) that forces us to confront the ethical and political situation <i>where</i> we encounter the artwork. The situatedness of installation art is thus constitutive of the work's meaning while subject to acts of negation. And here, as Chytry (<span>2014</span>, 469) notes in his review of Rebentisch's book in <i>The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism</i>, “the social dimension [enters] the experience of art precisely through her insistence on the public discursivity that necessarily completes aesthetic experience as she has defined it.”</p><p>Rebentisch's defense against the charge of subjectivity is thus founded upon the fact that the recipient does not exercise “complete control over the subjective powers at work” (271) but is caught in a process of oscillation that cannot be arrested, as we are confronted with our own historically and socially specific assumptions. Here, meaning and material “exist in the aesthetic experience only in dynamic and antagonistic interrelation” (114).</p><p>This is where Rebentisch's account, despite a lack of acknowledgment, is reminiscent of aspects of Wolfgang Iser's aesthetics of reception, developed in relation to literature. Both conceive aesthetic distance not as an <i>escape</i> from a work's social and historic context, but as a potential to open up another perspective on what might otherwise be habitual: to confront dominant modes of thought. Here, the recipient's role is performative. Indeed, for Iser, representation is both an act of performance (a bringing forth in its staging something that is not given) and a semblance (denying its status as a copy of reality): “The aesthetic semblance can only take on its form by way of the recipient's ideational, performative activity, and so representation can only come to fruition in the recipient's imagination; it is the recipient's performance that endows the semblance with its sense of reality” (Iser <span>1989</span>, 245).</p><p>While Rebentisch makes no reference to Iser's use of the blank, she does refer to Heidegger's characterization of the “gap” as an “emptiness” that is not a nothing, but a “bringing-forth with implications for establishing a place or situation” (Heidegger <span>1997</span>, 123–124). Rebentisch emphasizes the antagonistic tendency of such scenes or situations “to fall apart again and again in these very processes, only to be collected and arranged in potentially new and different ways by a renewed reading” (<span>2012</span>, 245–246). But against Rebentisch, I want to argue that this is not merely a process of interpretation, but one of <i>critical</i> retrieval of the creative processes that constitute the work (Wollheim <span>1980</span>).</p><p>One might think of Cornelia Parker's 1991 installation <i>Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View</i>, a suspended reconfiguration of charred fragments from a garden shed blown up by the British Army at Parker's behest. Here, the explosion, the recovery of scattered material, and painstaking configuring of the installation are all crucial to the work's meaning. But this is not merely a case of the reconstruction of the artist's decisions of making. The notion of critical retrieval offers the opportunity to expand upon the role of the imagination in mediating between a work's <i>presentation</i> and <i>reception</i>. For Iser, negativity “initiates those processes of imagination which are necessary to bring out the virtuality of those conditions” (<span>1989</span>, 142) through the use of blanks or disconnections placed within the text by the author. Acts of ideation and projection, while indeterminate, are therefore <i>licensed</i>. Nevertheless, Iser states that the “iconic signs of literature constitute an organization of signifiers which do not serve to designate a signified object, but instead designate <i>instructions</i> for the <i>production</i> of the signified” (<span>1978</span>, 65). This demands the reader/beholder's share. In the case of Parker's installation, it requires us to bring to mind the violence of the nonpresent causal event, which is brought into tension with a static display that is only animated by the beholder's movement. The indexical signs of installation art thus problematize the beholder's orientation in its deepest sense, reflecting not only the work's locative function—by bringing our spatial orientation in play—but also our ideological orientation: enticing us into an encounter organized by the kinetic potential of the space while simultaneously repulsing us (reminding us of our externality to the work's virtual realm).</p><p>If aesthetic autonomy is recast as a dynamic operating with respect to the ethical and political situation where we encounter the artwork, then what role does framing play? The question is pertinent, given installation art's immersiveness—a being <i>inside</i> rather than <i>outside</i> the work—and if installation art is to avoid degenerating into the kind of spectacle Rosalind Krauss claims, wrongly (I believe), to be its <i>inherent</i> condition.</p><p>And yet site specificity, while a feature of some installations, is not a <i>necessary</i> condition, as Parker's <i>Cold Dark Matter</i>—a work subject to multiple iterations—would attest to. Indeed, the double localization of art (that is, a context sensitivity to host space <i>and</i> the social frameworks that influence reception) is a factor of many works that, while site-responsive, are not specific to any one location.<sup>2</sup> What <i>is</i> relevant is how, in its framing, installation art acknowledges the configurational properties that structure the relation between what we might call (after Kemp <span>1998</span>), its inner and outer reality (the apparatus of its conditions of access). This requires us to negotiate the relation between the bracketed world of the artwork and that which it has been bracketed from: the actual world from which it has been separated, rather than self-contained. Here, extrinsic factors intrude but are scrutinized. Indeed, for Iser, there is a “continual oscillation between the bracketed world [of the artwork] and that which it has been separated from” (<span>1989</span>, 239). And far from eschewing framing devices, I believe installation art constructs a tension (or “slippage”) between the literalness of the host space and the work's virtual realm, such that the imagination plays a role in negotiating its <i>degrees of virtuality</i>.</p><p>Perhaps recognizing something of the above, Rebentisch reflects upon the fact that it is often not clear which concept of site is being employed in any instance, maintaining that “for art that thematizes its double context, the simple reference to the concrete and social context in which the work stands is insufficient to explain its specific context-reflexivity” (<span>2012</span>, 222). Rather, she maintains that it is only through the specifically <i>aesthetic</i> engagement with aesthetic objects that the concept of the work is “internally tied to that of aesthetic experience” (233). This demands aesthetic distance, and hence some notion of framing. Rebentisch cites Heidegger in “The Origin of the Work of Art”: “What is here called figure, <i>Gestalt</i>, is always to be thought in terms of the particular placing (<i>Stellen</i>) and framing or framework (<i>Ge-stell</i>) as which the work occurs when it sets itself up and sets itself forth” (Heidegger <span>1971</span>, 64; cited in Rebentisch <span>2012</span>, 233). This is interpreted through a logic that Rebentisch terms “parergonal,” after Derrida's use of <i>parergon</i> in his <i>The Truth in Painting</i> (<span>1987</span>, 15–147), and which pervades <i>all</i> art. Rebentisch echoes Derrida when she states: “It is a characteristic mark all aesthetic experience that the question of what constitutes the work of art and what is ascribed to it as merely external must remain open” (<span>2012</span>, 244).</p><p>One might agree but emphasize the role imaginative and cognitive projections play in orienting the beholder to the work's conditions of access (its bracketing, or <i>framing</i>) and the shifting relation between its inner and outer apparatus. This is not dependent on site-specificity, as <i>Cold Dark Matter</i> demonstrates. And to argue, as Rebentisch does, that “no space will ever appear as simply neutral again, least of all the white cube” (250) need not devalue the genuine distinction between installations that merely require a generic kind of framing through such a white cube environment, and those that are, indeed, site-specific, in that they draw upon historical and locational narratives particular to the actual site.</p><p>Installation art, thus conceived, constitutes a space that while virtualized—removed from functional imperatives—compels acts of imagination/ideation by problematizing our habitual dispositions. But in the most critically pertinent forms of practice, these processes <i>do not take place in isolation from context</i>, in that external factors impinge upon such processes of negotiating the work's conditions of access. While all installations engage an organizing of the space of the gallery or situation in which we encounter the work, the extent to which the wider conditions of access enter into the work's semantic content varies widely, from works that mimic the self-sufficiency of modernist sculpture (despite our occupying of an immersive position “inside”), to those that draw the spatial and ideological conditions of access into the imaginative and ideational encounter.<sup>3</sup></p>","PeriodicalId":51571,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF AESTHETICS AND ART CRITICISM","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/jaac.12735","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Installation Art and the Question of Aesthetic Autonomy: Juliane Rebentisch and the Beholder's Share\",\"authors\":\"KEN WILDER\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jaac.12735\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Intermedial art, as it emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, constituted a threat not only to the medium specificity of modernism, but also to the artwork as self-contained autonomous object. That this threat was real is evidenced by the ubiquitous presence of installation art. While only named as such toward the end of this period, installation art––a label still rejected by some of its founding artists––is exemplary of such hybrid practices. Its supporters and critics drew a contrast between, on the one hand, modernism's aesthetic engagement with a medium-specific (and self-sufficient) “object,” and, on the other hand, new so-called nonaesthetic “practices” engaging the “literal” spectator within her own space, such that the space of the gallery or situation is drawn into the encounter. So, while in 1967, Michael Fried writes disparagingly of the notion that “someone has merely to enter the room in which a literalist work has been placed to become that beholder, that audience of one” (<span>1998</span>, 193), Claire Bishop echoes such a claim when she suggests that “an insistence on the literal presence of the viewer is arguably the key characteristic of installation art” (<span>2005</span>, 6). Despite diametrically opposed critical evaluations of such situated art, a curious consensus emerges around a beholder whose “share” is characterized as a “being present.”</p><p>It is indicative because it allows us to see an interrelation “between the anti-objectivist impulse of theories of aesthetic experience and the impulses toward the dissolution of the concept of the work in artistic practice”; thus, the opposition toward objectivism in a philosopher like Rüdiger Bubner is <i>at the same time</i> a “reaction to the destruction of the traditional unity of the work in contemporary art,” exemplified, of course, by installation art (Rebentisch <span>2012</span>, 10).</p><p>The object is aesthetic not by virtue of qualities that <i>precede</i> the experience of such an object (that is, guaranteed by production), but only when the encounter with the artwork initiates a specifically aesthetic experience. This is not “a return to subjectivism that would sacrifice the art critical discourse and with it any consideration of questions of productions aesthetics” (130–131), but rather a recognition that art critical discourse necessarily <i>follows</i> aesthetic experience and is, thus, constitutive of such aesthetic objects through processes of reflective transformation.</p><p>Through such discursivity, Rebentisch seeks to avoid the pitfalls of an objectivism conceived as self-referential, and a subjectivism that posits the subject's aesthetic experience <i>as its own object</i>. She defines the aesthetic experience of installation art as a relation that does, indeed, involve aesthetic distance, in that it “brackets” the object not just as a self-referential “thing,” but through an event-like experience: a bracketing that highlights the performative role of the subject. But here, minimalism/installation art reveals a structural aspect of <i>all</i> art, namely, “the double and reciprocally referential presence of the aesthetic object as thing and as sign, its ‘stage presence’” (69). This constructs a tension between that which is representing and that which is represented: a tension that Fried rejects by claiming a self-sufficiency of the aesthetic object that, in its “instantaneous” appreciation, overcomes any dependence <i>upon</i> the beholder. For Rebentisch, installation art, therefore, transgresses not so much the “idea of autonomous art” but rather “an objectivist misunderstanding of it” (14).</p><p>Rebentisch's position offers a rebuttal to those, such as Osborne (<span>2013</span>), who suggests that critically engaged contemporary art is, by definition, non or even antiaesthetic. Indeed, her wider stated project is “to rehabilitate philosophical aesthetics as a <i>critical</i> project” (Rebentisch <span>2012</span>, 16). At the same time, she maintains that installation art represents an ideological rejection of context-independent art. Rebentisch recasts aesthetic autonomy not as the self-sufficiency of the object, but as a semblance (an experience bracketed from the spheres of practical and theoretical reason) that forces us to confront the ethical and political situation <i>where</i> we encounter the artwork. The situatedness of installation art is thus constitutive of the work's meaning while subject to acts of negation. And here, as Chytry (<span>2014</span>, 469) notes in his review of Rebentisch's book in <i>The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism</i>, “the social dimension [enters] the experience of art precisely through her insistence on the public discursivity that necessarily completes aesthetic experience as she has defined it.”</p><p>Rebentisch's defense against the charge of subjectivity is thus founded upon the fact that the recipient does not exercise “complete control over the subjective powers at work” (271) but is caught in a process of oscillation that cannot be arrested, as we are confronted with our own historically and socially specific assumptions. Here, meaning and material “exist in the aesthetic experience only in dynamic and antagonistic interrelation” (114).</p><p>This is where Rebentisch's account, despite a lack of acknowledgment, is reminiscent of aspects of Wolfgang Iser's aesthetics of reception, developed in relation to literature. Both conceive aesthetic distance not as an <i>escape</i> from a work's social and historic context, but as a potential to open up another perspective on what might otherwise be habitual: to confront dominant modes of thought. Here, the recipient's role is performative. Indeed, for Iser, representation is both an act of performance (a bringing forth in its staging something that is not given) and a semblance (denying its status as a copy of reality): “The aesthetic semblance can only take on its form by way of the recipient's ideational, performative activity, and so representation can only come to fruition in the recipient's imagination; it is the recipient's performance that endows the semblance with its sense of reality” (Iser <span>1989</span>, 245).</p><p>While Rebentisch makes no reference to Iser's use of the blank, she does refer to Heidegger's characterization of the “gap” as an “emptiness” that is not a nothing, but a “bringing-forth with implications for establishing a place or situation” (Heidegger <span>1997</span>, 123–124). Rebentisch emphasizes the antagonistic tendency of such scenes or situations “to fall apart again and again in these very processes, only to be collected and arranged in potentially new and different ways by a renewed reading” (<span>2012</span>, 245–246). But against Rebentisch, I want to argue that this is not merely a process of interpretation, but one of <i>critical</i> retrieval of the creative processes that constitute the work (Wollheim <span>1980</span>).</p><p>One might think of Cornelia Parker's 1991 installation <i>Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View</i>, a suspended reconfiguration of charred fragments from a garden shed blown up by the British Army at Parker's behest. Here, the explosion, the recovery of scattered material, and painstaking configuring of the installation are all crucial to the work's meaning. But this is not merely a case of the reconstruction of the artist's decisions of making. The notion of critical retrieval offers the opportunity to expand upon the role of the imagination in mediating between a work's <i>presentation</i> and <i>reception</i>. For Iser, negativity “initiates those processes of imagination which are necessary to bring out the virtuality of those conditions” (<span>1989</span>, 142) through the use of blanks or disconnections placed within the text by the author. Acts of ideation and projection, while indeterminate, are therefore <i>licensed</i>. Nevertheless, Iser states that the “iconic signs of literature constitute an organization of signifiers which do not serve to designate a signified object, but instead designate <i>instructions</i> for the <i>production</i> of the signified” (<span>1978</span>, 65). This demands the reader/beholder's share. In the case of Parker's installation, it requires us to bring to mind the violence of the nonpresent causal event, which is brought into tension with a static display that is only animated by the beholder's movement. The indexical signs of installation art thus problematize the beholder's orientation in its deepest sense, reflecting not only the work's locative function—by bringing our spatial orientation in play—but also our ideological orientation: enticing us into an encounter organized by the kinetic potential of the space while simultaneously repulsing us (reminding us of our externality to the work's virtual realm).</p><p>If aesthetic autonomy is recast as a dynamic operating with respect to the ethical and political situation where we encounter the artwork, then what role does framing play? The question is pertinent, given installation art's immersiveness—a being <i>inside</i> rather than <i>outside</i> the work—and if installation art is to avoid degenerating into the kind of spectacle Rosalind Krauss claims, wrongly (I believe), to be its <i>inherent</i> condition.</p><p>And yet site specificity, while a feature of some installations, is not a <i>necessary</i> condition, as Parker's <i>Cold Dark Matter</i>—a work subject to multiple iterations—would attest to. Indeed, the double localization of art (that is, a context sensitivity to host space <i>and</i> the social frameworks that influence reception) is a factor of many works that, while site-responsive, are not specific to any one location.<sup>2</sup> What <i>is</i> relevant is how, in its framing, installation art acknowledges the configurational properties that structure the relation between what we might call (after Kemp <span>1998</span>), its inner and outer reality (the apparatus of its conditions of access). This requires us to negotiate the relation between the bracketed world of the artwork and that which it has been bracketed from: the actual world from which it has been separated, rather than self-contained. Here, extrinsic factors intrude but are scrutinized. Indeed, for Iser, there is a “continual oscillation between the bracketed world [of the artwork] and that which it has been separated from” (<span>1989</span>, 239). And far from eschewing framing devices, I believe installation art constructs a tension (or “slippage”) between the literalness of the host space and the work's virtual realm, such that the imagination plays a role in negotiating its <i>degrees of virtuality</i>.</p><p>Perhaps recognizing something of the above, Rebentisch reflects upon the fact that it is often not clear which concept of site is being employed in any instance, maintaining that “for art that thematizes its double context, the simple reference to the concrete and social context in which the work stands is insufficient to explain its specific context-reflexivity” (<span>2012</span>, 222). Rather, she maintains that it is only through the specifically <i>aesthetic</i> engagement with aesthetic objects that the concept of the work is “internally tied to that of aesthetic experience” (233). This demands aesthetic distance, and hence some notion of framing. Rebentisch cites Heidegger in “The Origin of the Work of Art”: “What is here called figure, <i>Gestalt</i>, is always to be thought in terms of the particular placing (<i>Stellen</i>) and framing or framework (<i>Ge-stell</i>) as which the work occurs when it sets itself up and sets itself forth” (Heidegger <span>1971</span>, 64; cited in Rebentisch <span>2012</span>, 233). This is interpreted through a logic that Rebentisch terms “parergonal,” after Derrida's use of <i>parergon</i> in his <i>The Truth in Painting</i> (<span>1987</span>, 15–147), and which pervades <i>all</i> art. Rebentisch echoes Derrida when she states: “It is a characteristic mark all aesthetic experience that the question of what constitutes the work of art and what is ascribed to it as merely external must remain open” (<span>2012</span>, 244).</p><p>One might agree but emphasize the role imaginative and cognitive projections play in orienting the beholder to the work's conditions of access (its bracketing, or <i>framing</i>) and the shifting relation between its inner and outer apparatus. This is not dependent on site-specificity, as <i>Cold Dark Matter</i> demonstrates. And to argue, as Rebentisch does, that “no space will ever appear as simply neutral again, least of all the white cube” (250) need not devalue the genuine distinction between installations that merely require a generic kind of framing through such a white cube environment, and those that are, indeed, site-specific, in that they draw upon historical and locational narratives particular to the actual site.</p><p>Installation art, thus conceived, constitutes a space that while virtualized—removed from functional imperatives—compels acts of imagination/ideation by problematizing our habitual dispositions. But in the most critically pertinent forms of practice, these processes <i>do not take place in isolation from context</i>, in that external factors impinge upon such processes of negotiating the work's conditions of access. While all installations engage an organizing of the space of the gallery or situation in which we encounter the work, the extent to which the wider conditions of access enter into the work's semantic content varies widely, from works that mimic the self-sufficiency of modernist sculpture (despite our occupying of an immersive position “inside”), to those that draw the spatial and ideological conditions of access into the imaginative and ideational encounter.<sup>3</sup></p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":51571,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"JOURNAL OF AESTHETICS AND ART CRITICISM\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2020-08-13\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/jaac.12735\",\"citationCount\":\"1\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"JOURNAL OF AESTHETICS AND ART CRITICISM\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jaac.12735\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"艺术学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"ART\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JOURNAL OF AESTHETICS AND ART CRITICISM","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jaac.12735","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ART","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

摘要

在20世纪60年代和70年代兴起的中间艺术,不仅对现代主义的媒介特殊性构成了威胁,而且对艺术作为独立自主的对象构成了威胁。无处不在的装置艺术证明了这种威胁是真实存在的。虽然装置艺术是在这一时期末期才被命名的,但它是这种混合实践的典范——这个标签仍然被一些创始艺术家所拒绝。它的支持者和批评者提出了一个对比,一方面,现代主义的审美与媒介特定的(和自给自足的)“对象”的接触,另一方面,新的所谓的非审美“实践”吸引了“字面上的”观众在她自己的空间里,这样的画廊或环境的空间被吸引到相遇中。因此,尽管在1967年,迈克尔·弗里德(Michael Fried)轻蔑地写道,“某人只需要进入放置文字主义作品的房间,就可以成为那个观察者,那个观众”(1998,193),克莱尔·毕晓普(Claire Bishop)回应了这样的说法,她认为“坚持观众的文字存在可以说是装置艺术的关键特征”(2005,6)。尽管对这种定位艺术的批判性评价是完全相反的,一种奇怪的共识出现在一个观察者身上,他的“分享”被描述为“存在”。它之所以具有指示性,是因为它让我们看到了“美学经验理论的反客观主义冲动与艺术实践中作品概念消解的冲动之间的相互关系”;因此,像r<s:1>迪格·布纳(diger Bubner)这样的哲学家对客观主义的反对同时也是“对当代艺术作品传统统一性破坏的反应”,当然,装置艺术就是一个例证(Rebentisch 2012, 10)。对象的审美性不是由于其在体验这种对象之前的品质(也就是说,由生产保证),而是只有当与艺术品的接触引发了一种特定的审美体验。这并不是“回归到主观主义,牺牲艺术批评话语及其对作品美学问题的任何考虑”(130-131),而是承认艺术批评话语必然遵循审美经验,因此,通过反思性转化过程构成这些审美对象。通过这样的话语,Rebentisch试图避免被认为是自我参照的客观主义的陷阱,以及将主体的审美经验作为其自身对象的主观主义。她将装置艺术的审美体验定义为一种关系,这种关系确实涉及审美距离,因为它不仅将物体作为一种自我指涉的“事物”,而且通过一种类似事件的体验来“括号”:一种突出主体表演角色的括号。但在这里,极简主义/装置艺术揭示了所有艺术的结构方面,即“审美对象作为物和符号的双重和相互参照的存在,它的‘舞台存在’”(69)。这在表现者和被表现者之间构建了一种张力:弗里德通过声称审美对象的自给自足来拒绝这种张力,这种审美对象在其“瞬时”欣赏中克服了对观察者的任何依赖。因此,对于Rebentisch来说,装置艺术并没有违背“自主艺术的理念”,而是“对它的客观主义误解”(14)。Rebentisch的立场反驳了Osborne(2013)等人的观点,后者认为批判性参与的当代艺术从定义上来说是非审美的,甚至是反审美的。事实上,她更广泛的项目是“恢复哲学美学作为一个关键项目”(Rebentisch 2012, 16)。同时,她认为装置艺术代表了对语境独立艺术的意识形态拒绝。Rebentisch将审美自主性重新塑造,不是作为对象的自给自足,而是作为一种表象(一种从实践和理论理性领域中汲取的经验),迫使我们面对我们遇到艺术作品时的伦理和政治状况。因此,装置艺术的情境性构成了作品的意义,同时又受制于否定行为。在这里,正如Chytry(2014, 469)在《美学与艺术批评杂志》(The Journal of Aesthetics And Art Criticism)上对Rebentisch的书的评论中指出的那样,“社会维度(进入)艺术体验正是通过她对公共话语的坚持,而公共话语必然完成了她所定义的审美体验。”因此,Rebentisch对主体性指控的辩护是建立在这样一个事实之上的,即接受者并没有“完全控制工作中的主观力量”(271),而是陷入了一个无法被阻止的振荡过程,因为我们面临着我们自己的历史和社会特定假设。 在这里,意义和材料“只以动态的、对立的相互关系存在于审美经验中”(114)。这就是Rebentisch的描述,尽管缺乏承认,让人想起沃尔夫冈伊瑟尔的接受美学的各个方面,与文学有关。两人都认为审美距离不是一种对作品的社会和历史背景的逃避,而是一种打开另一种视角的潜力,这种视角可能是习惯性的:面对占主导地位的思维模式。在这里,接受者的角色是表演性的。事实上,对伊瑟尔来说,再现既是一种表演行为(在其舞台上呈现出未被给予的东西),也是一种表象(否认其作为现实副本的地位):“美学的表象只能通过接受者的观念性、表演性活动呈现其形式,因此再现只能在接受者的想象中实现;正是接受者的表演赋予了这种外表以真实感”(Iser 1989, 245)。虽然Rebentisch没有提到伊瑟尔对空白的使用,但她确实提到了海德格尔对“间隙”的描述,即“空虚”,它不是什么都没有,而是“建立一个地方或情况的暗示”(Heidegger 1997, 123-124)。Rebentisch强调这种场景或情境的对抗倾向“在这些过程中一次又一次地分崩离析,只有通过重新阅读才能以潜在的新的和不同的方式收集和安排”(2012,245-246)。但与Rebentisch相反,我想说这不仅仅是一个解释的过程,而是对构成作品的创造性过程的批判性检索(Wollheim 1980)。人们可能会想到科妮莉亚·帕克(Cornelia Parker) 1991年的装置作品《冰冷的暗物质:爆炸的景象》(Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View),这是一件悬空的作品,将英国军队在帕克的要求下炸毁的花园棚屋中的烧焦碎片重新组合在一起。在这里,爆炸、散落材料的回收、装置的精心配置都是作品意义的关键。但这不仅仅是一个艺术家决策重建的案例。批判性检索的概念提供了扩展想象力在作品呈现和接受之间调解作用的机会。对于伊瑟尔来说,消极性“通过作者在文本中使用空白或断线,启动了那些必要的想象过程,以引出那些条件的虚拟性”(1989,142)。因此,思想和投射的行为虽然是不确定的,却是许可的。然而,伊瑟尔指出,“文学的标志性符号构成了一个能指组织,它不是用来指定一个所指对象,而是指定生产所指的指令”(1978,65)。这需要读者/旁观者的参与。在帕克的装置作品中,它要求我们联想到不存在的因果事件的暴力,这种暴力被静态的展示带入紧张状态,这种展示只会被观察者的运动所激活。因此,装置艺术的指标性标志在其最深刻的意义上使观者的取向成为问题,不仅反映了作品的位置功能——通过让我们的空间取向发挥作用——而且还反映了我们的意识形态取向:引诱我们进入由空间的动态势组织的相遇,同时排斥我们(提醒我们我们对作品的虚拟领域的外部性)。如果审美自主性被重塑为一种动态的操作,与我们遇到的艺术作品的伦理和政治情况有关,那么框架扮演什么角色?考虑到装置艺术的沉浸感——置身于作品内部而非作品外部——以及装置艺术是否要避免堕落为罗莎琳德·克劳斯(Rosalind Krauss)错误地(我相信)声称的那种奇观,这是它的固有条件,这个问题是相关的。然而,场地的特殊性,虽然是一些装置的一个特点,但并不是必要条件,正如帕克的《冷暗物质》——一个多次迭代的作品——可以证明的那样。事实上,艺术的双重本土化(即对宿主空间和影响接受的社会框架的语境敏感性)是许多作品的一个因素,尽管它们对场地有反应,但并不特定于任何一个地点相关的是,在其框架中,装置艺术如何承认构成我们所谓的(在Kemp 1998之后),其内部和外部现实(其访问条件的装置)之间关系的配置属性。这就要求我们协商艺术作品的被括起来的世界和它被括起来的世界之间的关系:它被分离出来的现实世界,而不是自我包含的世界。在这里,外部因素介入,但被仔细审查。 事实上,对于伊瑟尔来说,“在(艺术作品的)被括起来的世界和它被分离出来的世界之间存在着一种持续的振荡”(1989,239)。我相信装置艺术并没有回避框架装置,而是在宿主空间的字面性和作品的虚拟领域之间构建了一种张力(或“滑脱”),这样想象力就在协商其虚拟程度方面发挥了作用。也许认识到上述的一些,Rebentisch反思了这样一个事实,即在任何情况下,通常都不清楚使用的是哪种场地概念,他坚持认为“对于将其双重语境主题化的艺术,简单地参考作品所处的具体和社会语境,不足以解释其特定的语境反身性”(2012,222)。相反,她坚持认为,只有通过与审美对象的特殊审美接触,作品的概念才“与审美经验的概念内在地联系在一起”(233)。这需要审美上的距离,因此需要一些框架的概念。Rebentisch在《艺术作品的起源》中引用了海德格尔的话:“这里所说的图形,格式塔,总是被认为是根据特定的放置(Stellen)和框架或框架(Ge-stell)来思考的,当作品将自己设置起来并将自己展示出来时,它就会发生”(Heidegger 1971, 64;引用于Rebentisch 2012, 233)。在德里达在他的《绘画中的真理》(The Truth in Painting, 1987, 15-147)中使用了“parergon”一词之后,Rebentisch通过一种逻辑来解释这一点,这种逻辑遍及所有艺术。Rebentisch附和德里达的说法:“这是所有美学经验的一个特征标志,即什么构成了艺术作品,什么被归因于它仅仅是外部的问题必须保持开放”(2012,244)。有人可能会同意,但强调想象力和认知投射在引导观者进入作品的条件(其支架或框架)以及其内部和外部设备之间的转换关系方面所起的作用。正如《冷暗物质》所证明的那样,这并不依赖于位点特异性。就像Rebentisch所说的那样,“没有空间会再像单纯的中性一样出现,尤其是白色立方体”(250),不需要贬低装置之间的真正区别,这些装置只需要通过这样的白色立方体环境进行一般的框架,而那些装置确实是特定于场地的,因为它们借鉴了实际场地的历史和位置叙述。因此,装置艺术构成了一个空间,虽然它被虚拟化了,但却摆脱了功能上的要求,它通过质疑我们的习惯倾向来强迫我们的想象/创意行为。但是,在最关键的相关实践形式中,这些进程并非孤立地进行,因为外部因素影响了这些谈判作品获取条件的进程。虽然所有的装置都参与了画廊空间的组织或我们遇到作品的情况,但进入作品语义内容的更广泛条件的程度差异很大,从模仿现代主义雕塑的自给自足的作品(尽管我们占据了一个身临其境的位置“内部”),到那些将空间和意识形态条件带入想象和观念遭遇的作品
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Installation Art and the Question of Aesthetic Autonomy: Juliane Rebentisch and the Beholder's Share

Intermedial art, as it emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, constituted a threat not only to the medium specificity of modernism, but also to the artwork as self-contained autonomous object. That this threat was real is evidenced by the ubiquitous presence of installation art. While only named as such toward the end of this period, installation art––a label still rejected by some of its founding artists––is exemplary of such hybrid practices. Its supporters and critics drew a contrast between, on the one hand, modernism's aesthetic engagement with a medium-specific (and self-sufficient) “object,” and, on the other hand, new so-called nonaesthetic “practices” engaging the “literal” spectator within her own space, such that the space of the gallery or situation is drawn into the encounter. So, while in 1967, Michael Fried writes disparagingly of the notion that “someone has merely to enter the room in which a literalist work has been placed to become that beholder, that audience of one” (1998, 193), Claire Bishop echoes such a claim when she suggests that “an insistence on the literal presence of the viewer is arguably the key characteristic of installation art” (2005, 6). Despite diametrically opposed critical evaluations of such situated art, a curious consensus emerges around a beholder whose “share” is characterized as a “being present.”

It is indicative because it allows us to see an interrelation “between the anti-objectivist impulse of theories of aesthetic experience and the impulses toward the dissolution of the concept of the work in artistic practice”; thus, the opposition toward objectivism in a philosopher like Rüdiger Bubner is at the same time a “reaction to the destruction of the traditional unity of the work in contemporary art,” exemplified, of course, by installation art (Rebentisch 2012, 10).

The object is aesthetic not by virtue of qualities that precede the experience of such an object (that is, guaranteed by production), but only when the encounter with the artwork initiates a specifically aesthetic experience. This is not “a return to subjectivism that would sacrifice the art critical discourse and with it any consideration of questions of productions aesthetics” (130–131), but rather a recognition that art critical discourse necessarily follows aesthetic experience and is, thus, constitutive of such aesthetic objects through processes of reflective transformation.

Through such discursivity, Rebentisch seeks to avoid the pitfalls of an objectivism conceived as self-referential, and a subjectivism that posits the subject's aesthetic experience as its own object. She defines the aesthetic experience of installation art as a relation that does, indeed, involve aesthetic distance, in that it “brackets” the object not just as a self-referential “thing,” but through an event-like experience: a bracketing that highlights the performative role of the subject. But here, minimalism/installation art reveals a structural aspect of all art, namely, “the double and reciprocally referential presence of the aesthetic object as thing and as sign, its ‘stage presence’” (69). This constructs a tension between that which is representing and that which is represented: a tension that Fried rejects by claiming a self-sufficiency of the aesthetic object that, in its “instantaneous” appreciation, overcomes any dependence upon the beholder. For Rebentisch, installation art, therefore, transgresses not so much the “idea of autonomous art” but rather “an objectivist misunderstanding of it” (14).

Rebentisch's position offers a rebuttal to those, such as Osborne (2013), who suggests that critically engaged contemporary art is, by definition, non or even antiaesthetic. Indeed, her wider stated project is “to rehabilitate philosophical aesthetics as a critical project” (Rebentisch 2012, 16). At the same time, she maintains that installation art represents an ideological rejection of context-independent art. Rebentisch recasts aesthetic autonomy not as the self-sufficiency of the object, but as a semblance (an experience bracketed from the spheres of practical and theoretical reason) that forces us to confront the ethical and political situation where we encounter the artwork. The situatedness of installation art is thus constitutive of the work's meaning while subject to acts of negation. And here, as Chytry (2014, 469) notes in his review of Rebentisch's book in The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, “the social dimension [enters] the experience of art precisely through her insistence on the public discursivity that necessarily completes aesthetic experience as she has defined it.”

Rebentisch's defense against the charge of subjectivity is thus founded upon the fact that the recipient does not exercise “complete control over the subjective powers at work” (271) but is caught in a process of oscillation that cannot be arrested, as we are confronted with our own historically and socially specific assumptions. Here, meaning and material “exist in the aesthetic experience only in dynamic and antagonistic interrelation” (114).

This is where Rebentisch's account, despite a lack of acknowledgment, is reminiscent of aspects of Wolfgang Iser's aesthetics of reception, developed in relation to literature. Both conceive aesthetic distance not as an escape from a work's social and historic context, but as a potential to open up another perspective on what might otherwise be habitual: to confront dominant modes of thought. Here, the recipient's role is performative. Indeed, for Iser, representation is both an act of performance (a bringing forth in its staging something that is not given) and a semblance (denying its status as a copy of reality): “The aesthetic semblance can only take on its form by way of the recipient's ideational, performative activity, and so representation can only come to fruition in the recipient's imagination; it is the recipient's performance that endows the semblance with its sense of reality” (Iser 1989, 245).

While Rebentisch makes no reference to Iser's use of the blank, she does refer to Heidegger's characterization of the “gap” as an “emptiness” that is not a nothing, but a “bringing-forth with implications for establishing a place or situation” (Heidegger 1997, 123–124). Rebentisch emphasizes the antagonistic tendency of such scenes or situations “to fall apart again and again in these very processes, only to be collected and arranged in potentially new and different ways by a renewed reading” (2012, 245–246). But against Rebentisch, I want to argue that this is not merely a process of interpretation, but one of critical retrieval of the creative processes that constitute the work (Wollheim 1980).

One might think of Cornelia Parker's 1991 installation Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View, a suspended reconfiguration of charred fragments from a garden shed blown up by the British Army at Parker's behest. Here, the explosion, the recovery of scattered material, and painstaking configuring of the installation are all crucial to the work's meaning. But this is not merely a case of the reconstruction of the artist's decisions of making. The notion of critical retrieval offers the opportunity to expand upon the role of the imagination in mediating between a work's presentation and reception. For Iser, negativity “initiates those processes of imagination which are necessary to bring out the virtuality of those conditions” (1989, 142) through the use of blanks or disconnections placed within the text by the author. Acts of ideation and projection, while indeterminate, are therefore licensed. Nevertheless, Iser states that the “iconic signs of literature constitute an organization of signifiers which do not serve to designate a signified object, but instead designate instructions for the production of the signified” (1978, 65). This demands the reader/beholder's share. In the case of Parker's installation, it requires us to bring to mind the violence of the nonpresent causal event, which is brought into tension with a static display that is only animated by the beholder's movement. The indexical signs of installation art thus problematize the beholder's orientation in its deepest sense, reflecting not only the work's locative function—by bringing our spatial orientation in play—but also our ideological orientation: enticing us into an encounter organized by the kinetic potential of the space while simultaneously repulsing us (reminding us of our externality to the work's virtual realm).

If aesthetic autonomy is recast as a dynamic operating with respect to the ethical and political situation where we encounter the artwork, then what role does framing play? The question is pertinent, given installation art's immersiveness—a being inside rather than outside the work—and if installation art is to avoid degenerating into the kind of spectacle Rosalind Krauss claims, wrongly (I believe), to be its inherent condition.

And yet site specificity, while a feature of some installations, is not a necessary condition, as Parker's Cold Dark Matter—a work subject to multiple iterations—would attest to. Indeed, the double localization of art (that is, a context sensitivity to host space and the social frameworks that influence reception) is a factor of many works that, while site-responsive, are not specific to any one location.2 What is relevant is how, in its framing, installation art acknowledges the configurational properties that structure the relation between what we might call (after Kemp 1998), its inner and outer reality (the apparatus of its conditions of access). This requires us to negotiate the relation between the bracketed world of the artwork and that which it has been bracketed from: the actual world from which it has been separated, rather than self-contained. Here, extrinsic factors intrude but are scrutinized. Indeed, for Iser, there is a “continual oscillation between the bracketed world [of the artwork] and that which it has been separated from” (1989, 239). And far from eschewing framing devices, I believe installation art constructs a tension (or “slippage”) between the literalness of the host space and the work's virtual realm, such that the imagination plays a role in negotiating its degrees of virtuality.

Perhaps recognizing something of the above, Rebentisch reflects upon the fact that it is often not clear which concept of site is being employed in any instance, maintaining that “for art that thematizes its double context, the simple reference to the concrete and social context in which the work stands is insufficient to explain its specific context-reflexivity” (2012, 222). Rather, she maintains that it is only through the specifically aesthetic engagement with aesthetic objects that the concept of the work is “internally tied to that of aesthetic experience” (233). This demands aesthetic distance, and hence some notion of framing. Rebentisch cites Heidegger in “The Origin of the Work of Art”: “What is here called figure, Gestalt, is always to be thought in terms of the particular placing (Stellen) and framing or framework (Ge-stell) as which the work occurs when it sets itself up and sets itself forth” (Heidegger 1971, 64; cited in Rebentisch 2012, 233). This is interpreted through a logic that Rebentisch terms “parergonal,” after Derrida's use of parergon in his The Truth in Painting (1987, 15–147), and which pervades all art. Rebentisch echoes Derrida when she states: “It is a characteristic mark all aesthetic experience that the question of what constitutes the work of art and what is ascribed to it as merely external must remain open” (2012, 244).

One might agree but emphasize the role imaginative and cognitive projections play in orienting the beholder to the work's conditions of access (its bracketing, or framing) and the shifting relation between its inner and outer apparatus. This is not dependent on site-specificity, as Cold Dark Matter demonstrates. And to argue, as Rebentisch does, that “no space will ever appear as simply neutral again, least of all the white cube” (250) need not devalue the genuine distinction between installations that merely require a generic kind of framing through such a white cube environment, and those that are, indeed, site-specific, in that they draw upon historical and locational narratives particular to the actual site.

Installation art, thus conceived, constitutes a space that while virtualized—removed from functional imperatives—compels acts of imagination/ideation by problematizing our habitual dispositions. But in the most critically pertinent forms of practice, these processes do not take place in isolation from context, in that external factors impinge upon such processes of negotiating the work's conditions of access. While all installations engage an organizing of the space of the gallery or situation in which we encounter the work, the extent to which the wider conditions of access enter into the work's semantic content varies widely, from works that mimic the self-sufficiency of modernist sculpture (despite our occupying of an immersive position “inside”), to those that draw the spatial and ideological conditions of access into the imaginative and ideational encounter.3

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism publishes current research articles, symposia, special issues, and timely book reviews in aesthetics and the arts. The term aesthetics, in this connection, is understood to include all studies of the arts and related types of experience from a philosophic, scientific, or other theoretical standpoint. The arts are taken to include not only the traditional forms such as music, literature, landscape architecture, dance, painting, architecture, sculpture, and other visual arts, but also more recent additions such as photography, film, earthworks, performance and conceptual art, the crafts and decorative arts, contemporary digital innovations, and other cultural practices, including work and activities in the field of popular culture.
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