Monday, 12 November 2018

WRITING ABOUT ART TODAY MEANS BEING WRITTEN ONTO

1. What to say with an exhibition?

I used to believe the following to be true: The medium of art exhibition is an ineffective way to share information to viewers.

It's true in the sense that I don't usually go into exhibition spaces in order to learn something. But these sorts of jaded rules are meaningless in reality. What is information, or learning, anyway?

Things are also curiously hard to keep apart. You deal with your breakup in doing your performance piece and the other way around. And if you're an artist who's given an exhibition space and, coincidentally, got stuff to say, why wouldn't you voice it through your exhibition?

You know it's not ideal, but nothing ever is. So many other things play out in the process. An exhibition is the outcome from the crude equation of Life divided by Conditions times Chaos. You already know from the get-go how small your influence over the end result might be.

When writing about a show, should I try to suss out the formula I mentioned above? Should I be aware of what were the conditions of production? I should, but sometimes I wonder if that isn't taking away the power of the artist to present us with the works, without needing to point toward interpretative devices lurking somewhere next to them, the institution hosting the exhibition, or the world at large?

Or is there another formula at play, one in which your need to say “I did this, not some imaginary community” derives from an equation of Privilege times Ego minus Urgency plus Charisma? OK I admit this is getting a little fuzzy.

Privilege allows you to think you're doing it all by yourself. Those least vulnerable are the ones least dependent on communities. On the other end, there are those who are too scarred by past trauma to be amongst other people again. And why would you want to rely on such a messy thing as other people if you really don't have to?

The white cube with its modernist autonomy might be problematic, but I bet many artists long to be left alone and show their work in the way they want to, independent of who they are. Another question entirely is whether or not society should support these activities of self-expression.

Being able to control your creative output and own it are crucial aspects of artistic work, especially when it's the only thing under your control, as Olivia Laing, in their book The Lonely City, makes clear when writing about the artist Henry Darger who was alone for most of adult life, creating a visual world of drawings, paintings, and text, only unearthed posthumously, in a cramped apartment with very little means.

Perhaps that's why legendary recluse artists such as David Hammons (or any of the artists presented in Martin Herbert's book “Tell Them I Said No”) refuse to open the proverbial door when fame comes knocking. It would lead into other people stepping all over your process.

2. Community and art

Rejecting all communal notions from one's practice cuts to the core of the history of Western modern and contemporary art. It is carried by the idea of autonomous works that happen in a kind of vacuum, devoid of outside world.

It's a political project, as well. Independency is Nordic welfare society at its utopian best: everyone is taken care of and given equal opportunities so no-one is dependent on their friends or families.

But then this is reality for less and less people, all the while art is becoming more and more the place where rehearsals for community-building take place. This happens partly because conservative austerity politics need a band aid (UK art institutions give a deeply unsettling example of this), but also because contemporary art practices are changing from within.

Public has become the primal form of new art, and exhibition the secondary one. The word public here acts as a placeholder for assemblies, collectives, public gatherings, non-patriarchal familial constellations and so forth.

It makes sense that the latest Helsinki-based art organization born from the ashes of Checkpoint Helsinki (which, fittingly, came into existence to oppose the building of a museum) calls itself Publics, produces mostly talks and hosts events, and seems not to be putting up exhibitions anytime soon.

Another new local enterprise, Museum of Impossible Forms, is operating on a similar vein while referring in its name to the concept of museum, which the art historian Camiel van Winkel calls the end destination for all things avant-garde.

What was once the fringe program (talks, workshops) is now the headliner. When I look around, I can see some people having not really realized this. Others are angry, even. “Why is art about the other stuff nowadays?” This is another way of saying “I''m white and feel like I can't get enough exposure.”

In addition to how petty such statements ring, it's mindless to get riled up for all the retreats and workshops & complain how art itself has been forgotten. These events are what art is today. It's not about some limp relational turn anymore, but moreso that art is now being done by people who might possess different needs from those who came before, ie. basically white privileged men. Although in most cases this change hasn't reached the highest offices of art power.

The point is obviously not to say that what all non-white artistic practices add up to is some delightful communal picnic, but that art in the West is getting a reboot. And in order to do that, you need to retreat, take stock, plan, discuss, build a strategy, gather the troops, care for others and stay warm.

The shock that well-off, liberal white people are currently channeling by accusing identity politics, which has come to mean “not white hegemonic culture”, is the direct result of feeling like outsiders in the plethora of communal activities taking over (especially the local nodes) of the art world.

It follows that no one might need the kind of formalist-modernist, theme-led exhibitions we are mostly seeing today, made by curators and artists who received a similar education in taste, class, and thinking.

3. Will anything change?

Change never comes at once. White male painters following the macho-mythical abstract expressionist credo still seem to sell just fine, and formalist exhibitions will be a thing for decades to come in some form or another, be it by artists of any identity.

And people in leading positions don't give up their power without a fight. Since old institutions are unwilling to change their practices, from hiring to bathroom policies and from curatorial thinking to their relationship with the state, new institutions will pop up, as perhaps could be said was the case with Publics and Museum of Impossible Forms.

The fruits of modernism are still edible. But if we think about the leading critical discourse, the most on-demand artists, or the most talked-about art-related books currently published, then in that realm doing exhibitions today is getting close to proclaiming you're a Cubist. The performance of professionalism today requires you organize a retreat.

In a country like Finland where considerable support for art abound, the community-building in art can result in a group of well-funded (and -meaning) artists creating images of how such an activity might look like, usually for an institution who wants to be seen as Ethical.

Art becomes a rehearsal for life, removed from any other agency than art professionals' need to seem like they're renewing themselves to suit the times. But perhaps this is needed. They are stories and we live from stories.

Many of us might feel disappointed after attending to these social art-gatherings. They are followed by another one, on a different topic, and then again another one, all the while we try to keep our own lives afloat.

We might do less modernist exhibitions, but we still have busy, precarious, and very modern lives. That's how art happens today to the people who live it: through an endless, drowning stream of deadlines and unmissable events. The difference between a retreat and a corporate team-building exercise can seem non-existent at times.

Unfortunately, art will most likely always be exploitative in some way. Artists won't be paid, producers and directors will, or vice versa. Only selected few will succeed, even if the selection criteria changes, and the many left behind should shut their traps and be happy that at least someone is finally getting that extra funding.

There's nothing so ethical and urgent that we artists couldn't turn it into blatant careerism. And you can't really be angry at that. As I said earlier, life is not ideal. Rent is rent. We do what we can, under circumstances we can't fully control. Good intentions vs. needs we can't surpass, all that.

Managing a nuanced perspective on things becomes particularly vexing when you're feeling overwhelmed by the extreme, life-destroying urgency of climate change, for example. You don't want the many shades of truth, but just the one. An artist has gone through these motions only to realize that, say, flying to biennials is bad for the environment and a grueling way to live, too. So they turn their own realization into a dictum and hold everyone up to this standard of their own making.

This is grossly self-centered, and uneven, because everyone has different reasons for doing what they do. We can't force each others as individuals to do things in a different way just because that way fits us and our abilities. Universalism and essentialism are not needed here, either.

Conducting change obviously requires listening, and a cool head. Mostly nothing about the art world caters for such qualities, which is why we have the kinds of lives we do. We are finding ourselves in a paradoxical situation: Artists are engaging in new kinds of thinking in settings that are, at their core, hostile to the idea of sustained attention. Infrastructural change in art couldn't be more urgent: the structure of doing things is in direct violation with what most of us would like to do.

What is perhaps not always understood is the magnitude of such change. Most art institutions think, in Finland at least, that they can go about their business as usual just as long as they cherry-pick a more “diverse” set of artists for their events. But you cannot include people, aggressively marginalized by the state and white patriarchy, into the inner sanctums of art and expect them to not turn around the very structures and ways of doing art. It's not only a matter of who is doing the art, but under what terms, and for what end.

This much is clear to most people working in the lower confines of the art world, where everything isn't about pleasing your donors or Ministry of Culture. But understanding something is not the same as changing it.

black and white image with following text on each four corners respectively: for the content and to be social, not for the content but to be social, for the content not to be social, not for the not to be social I need to be here. In the midlde a bigger text: "why did you come?"
Kim Modig: Social Anxiety Matrix #2 (2017)


4. Whose standards?

I argue that, collectively and unconsciously, we still regard the solo exhibition, or the museum group show, or the inclusion to a big biennale, or the star guest visiting your insitution or city, to be the gold standard. The archetypes haven't changed yet. This is why we all still talk about museums and refer to them in titles and texts, although a growing number of us artists work in a way that has little connection to what happens within those walls. When will we cut the cord for good? And can you survive outside?

Everything is still in relation to the old models, or simply just made in the same way but with a different topic, which means that a way of life an exhibition tries to depict is not really meant to enter the building. Think of it like this: Exhibitions about queer art should be presented in a way that is inviting to queer life.

Consider also how European Futurism and Surrealism looked like white boys with rich parents fooling around. Art is how you live. So what would art spaces look like if their very infrastructure would reflect some other lives? What if those spaces wouldn't look like the lives of upper-class people, with designer glass at the museum café, expensive jewelry at sale in the museum shop, and the exhibitions spaces made to look immaculate? But contemporary art has never been about class revolution, but the cementing of its horizontal power structure while adding a new coat of paint on it.

Before depression hits, let us return to the question of reading a show, and to a compound issue, that of subjectivity.

5. Everything affects everything

Do I look at the artwork without any “external” explanation? And is it really a matter of either-or: Either I look at the works only, or I take into account everything else? It's not. Things bleed and stick to each other. I find it impossible to take anything apart from another thing, without at least a thread hanging between them, holding up a connection. You can try it yourself. Imagine a box with a lid and try now to remove the lid.

Is the name of the artist in the title of an exhibition the perfect example of the fact that we are still simple creatures who cannot think in fluid ways about object-subject relations and multiplicity of agencies?

Or, we can think about them, you know, pick up a Karen Barad book and quote it, but we're still seemingly far from such boundless thinking managing to change the way our world works. It's little like the situation above with exhibitions and the much-needed modes of producing and experiencing art.

Even though we know it's not the artist who, in this multi-actor sense, does a show on their own, we still insist on placing the artist's agency above anyone and anything else's. And this is why our whole thinking must change if we want to get rid of the long shadows of modernism and colonialism in art.

Is there a threshold in having an agency in something? What still counts as influencing a work of art? The line is impossible to draw. I'm thinking of Iggy Lond Malmberg and their solo performance Boner (Baltic Circle, 2014), where Malmberg said something like perhaps we perform Hamlet so often because the crown in the storage of a theater wants us to do so.

Free, individual will is getting to be a thing of the past, and perhaps this mythical freedom has been unfathomable to almost everyone except for the ones who came up with it, ie. the men in charge. So how should we begin to write about shows under this new sun of intra-agencies, where we are constantly pushing and pulling each other unknowingly, blurring the lines that used to separate me from you or from a thing?

It's not new. This stimulating yet confusing problem of multiple agencies simultaneously in play has always existed in our attempts to say something. When you try to express yourself, you end up bringing in so many other things to the forefront. Our bodies emit all kinds of data from smells to affects, and our words and actions carry infinite interpretative possibilities.

Let me return to the question of information from which this text begun. Maybe the exhibition is not at all any worse a communication platform than, for example, talking to another person. To write about an exhibition is to unearth both what I assume the show is trying to say, but also what it's saying regardless its makers' best attempts. This is the case with any human communication.

Here, we need to make a decision. It's up to you whether you want to believe the human, or the artwork, in front of you or not. If you don't, you can read them in the worst possible way. Sometimes that's healthy, sometimes violently cynical.

You could say noise is always there, surrounding the signal. The receptor can, by all means, concentrate on the noise only and deem the message meaningless, or to excavate the signal out from the static and consider its intent. Again, the noise is at times more exciting than what is being communicated, so the choice is not so clear-cut.

In informal art discourse, née bar talk, née the talk that actually molds our attitudes much more than any seminar or book can ever do, we often look for problems in something we've just experienced together. The show was horrible, the talk was sub-par, the event was pointless, the commercial galleries in our home town are all crap. This is how many of us talk (kudos to you if you ever don't!), and this is how we connect. We congregate around faults.

What is it in the structure of our art worlds that make us retort to this conscious amplification of noise and diminishing of signal? I think it's a question worth pondering. Is it the precariousness? That we're all scared for our livelihood and/or legitimization, and so we want to drag other initiatives down to level the playing field?

5. Aftermath: writing?

These, I feel, are the two main trajectories at play in art today: The fundamental change in the very forms of how art is done, experienced and presented (for whom and by who), and secondly, the revolutionary expansion of agency, which will sooner or later change our understanding of authorship and creator-mediator-spectator dynamics.

But all of this is not simply a matter of disseminating information, like I said in the beginning, but of, well, I'd like to leave that part open. I'll end with a rumination on writing.

To understand how those trajectories play out in our practices, we can think of how to write about art today. One tactic could be to think more about who is this for. If this is not for me, what am I doing here? Furthermore, if this thing here leaves me cold, why wouldn't I go somewhere warm? And yet sometimes it might prove wise to test different climates. But for one last time, all these maxims become meaningless in life, where choices are rarely binary. And sometimes there is no choice. You just are somewhere.

I could also propose we start from an understanding that being in the same space with artworks is not a one-sided affair. When entering an exhibition, you might want to ask yourself: Who is this "I" that is hanging out with the exhibition here today and what does this I do to the exhibition, and vice versa?

The chameleon once again faces the choice between a reflexive urge to fuse in with the surroundings, or a Promethean obsession to challenge your environment. You are marking the space with your energy. Is it healing, antagonizing, wobbly, or dry kind of energy?

This unbound and always changing multiplicity is who I am, and it's what an artwork with which I'm spending time, has to deal with too. And how the work conducts that dealing reverberates back to me. I am not only writing criticism about artworks: The works are writing on me.


Published subsequently in Sorbus Gallery's upcoming publication, 2019