Volume XIV A
Winter 2015
Canvas
The McGill Undergraduate Journal of Art History and Communication Studies
Cover Photo
Ida LĂŚrke Hansen Untitled, 2014 Issue Volume XIV Winter 2015 McGill University Montreal, Quebec
3
Jemma ElliottIsraelson
Erica Morassutti EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
EDITOR
Erin Havens LAYOUT AND DESIGN EDITOR
Klea Hawkins EDITOR
Karly Beard EDITOR
Catherine LaMendola EDITOR
Carolyn Buszynski EDITOR
Nancy Li EDITOR
Krystin Chung EDITOR
Jennifer Mueller EDITOR
Benjamin Demers EDITOR
Funding for this journal has been generously supplied by the AHCSSA and the AUS Journal Fund. The opinions expressed by the contributors do not +" "00 /&)6 /"ij" 1 1%,0" ,# &)) +&3"/0&16H ,2/ IJ+ + & ) 0-,+0,/0H ,/ 1%" +3 0 !&1,/& ) , /!F ,3"/ /1&01 ! "/(" +0"+ )&3"0 &+ ,-"+% $"+F "/ 0&*-)" 6"1 01/&(&+$ 01&)) )&#" &* $"0 + " #,2+! ,+ +01 $/ * 1 &+01 $/ *F ,*m&! ) "/("
4
Jennifer Mueller
p. 9
Sara Kloepfer
p. 31
Josh Falek p. 43
MĂŠlanie Wittes
p. 55
Klea Hawkins p. 73
Anthony Portulese
p. 89
Vidal Wu p. 105
Lexi Stefanatos
p. 123
Krystin Chung p. 143
Willa Meredith
p. 155
55
What’s in a Name?
11"/ ,# ,/$"/6 ,+ "/+&+$ 1%" "1/,-,)&1 + 20"2*T0 Qingming /,))H /"3&,20)6 11/& 21"! 1, &2 &+$
Scene of the Crime:
%" "$ 6 ,# "*&+&01 "/#,/* + " /1 +! "52 ) 00 2)1
Unproductive Reflections:
,4 /!0 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6 ,# q!&0r &)&16
Spilling Over Colonial Enclosures:
+!&$"+,20 /1&010 +! "-/"0"+1 1&,+0 &+ 1/""1 +! +! /1
The Grotta Grande:
%" &00,)21&,+ ,# ,2+! /&"0 "14""+ /1 +! 12/"
Where am I, Monet?:
%" 1"/ &)&"0 ,# 1%" / +$"/&" %/,2$% %"+,*"+,),$& ) "+0
Who Carries the Big Stick?
%" "$2) 1&,+ ,# + !& + ,/+,$/ -%6
A Biography of Abundance:
12!6 ,# 1%" +0""+ &3"0 "%&+! 1%" ,**,!&1&"0 "-& 1"! &+ "3"+1""+1%K "+12/6 21 % 1&))K &#"
All Eyes on CBC/Radio-Canada:
/&1& ) + )60&0 ,# 2 "/1 /,&5T0 -/&+$ 9A8; Strategy Announcement
The Elation of The Low:
+!6 /%,)T0 +! "ČŹ ,,+0T0 ,2)"3"/0"*"+1 ,# &$% /1
6
Note to the Reader On behalf of the Editorial Board, I am delighted to present you with the fourteenth volume of Canvas. As the only undergraduate academic journal of Art History and Communication Studies at McGill University, Canvas aims to provide students with the opportunity for publication and showcase the remarkable academic talent present within our joint faculty. This edition of Canvas features ten exemplary essays that discuss 0-" 10 ,# 3&02 ) +! -,-2) / 2)12/" ȩ,* 1%" #,2/1""+1% "+12/6 to the present. The journal begins with an exhaustively researched piece by Jennifer Mueller, who engages with the subject of forgery in the work of a Qing Dynasty master. Next, Sara Kloepfer discusses an ongoing piece of performance art by Columbia student Emma Sulkowicz as an act of protest against the institutional bias obscuring sexual assault on campus, situating the work in a longer tradition of feminist performance art. In the following essay, Josh Falek masterfully weaves personal narrative with radical disability theory, expanding on an existing model of queer phenomenology. Next, Mélanie Wittes explores street and land art as a means of resistance to the ongoing oppression faced by Indigenous people in Canada, followed by Klea Hawkins, who examines the interweaving of art and nature in Renaissance gardens. Wading through the watery depths of a Monet mural, Anthony Portulese introduces a novel approach to the artist’s work. Vidal Wu brings us back to the -/"0"+1H "5-),/&+$ 1%" /"$2) 1,/6 %&01,/6 +! )"$&0) 1&3" ȩ *"4,/( surrounding Canadian pornography, before Lexi Stefanatos takes us to seventeenth-century Holland, where the trappings of the Dutch ,),+& ) "+1"/-/&0" 4"/" /"ij" 1"! &+ 1%" & ,+& 01&)) )&#" - &+1&+$0 produced at the time. Next, Krystin Chung undertakes a critical
7
analysis of a statement recently released by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The journal concludes with a discussion of the contemporary art market and how we attribute value to art, as Willa "/"!&1% !"Ȫ)6 "5-) &+0 4%6 1%" *,01 "5-"+0&3" 4,/( 6 )&3&+$ artist sold at auction to date is a lurid orange sculpture of a giant balloon dog. The creation of this publication would not have been possible with,21 1%" ,))" 1&3" "Ȭ,/1 ,# !"!& 1"! 1" * ,# &+!&3&!2 )0F &/01H would like to thank the authors for their courage and willingness to 0% /" 1%"&/ &!" 0H +! 1%"&/ 2+ij $$&+$ - 1&"+ " !2/&+$ 1%" "!&1&+$ process. I am also incredibly grateful for my team of editors, their grammatical zeal and keen attention to detail. In addition, I would like to thank previous editor-in-chief Kathryn Yuen, whose guidance was indispensable to the project, and layout editor Erin Havens, 4%,0" !"0&$+ 1 )"+10 /" /"ij" 1"! &+ " % - $" ,# 1%&0 " 21&#2))6 executed publication. On behalf of the entire Canvas team, I would like to thank the McGill Art History and Communication Studies Students’ Association and the McGill Arts Undergraduate Society Journal Fund for their generosity in funding the production of the journal. Finally, I would like to extend the warmest of thanks to the professors, lecturers and teaching assistants of the Art History and Communication Studies department. It has been a tremendous privilege 1, )" /+ ȩ,* 6,2 ))F
Erica Morassutti !&1,/K&+K %&"#
9
What’s in a Name? A Matter of Forgery Concerning the Metropolitan Museum’s Qingming Scroll, Previously Attributed to Qiu Ying
By Jennifer Mueller
What’s in a Name? A Matter of Forgery Concerning the Metropolitan Museum’s &+$*&+$ Scroll, Previously Attributed to Qiu Ying The &+$*&+$ 0% +$%" of the Four Ming Masters tu
,
variously
[Shen
Zhou
(1427-
translated as -/&+$ "01&3 ) 1509), Wen Zhengming ,+ 1%" &3"/H ,&+$ -/&3"/ #,/
(1470-1559), Tang Yin
1%" &+$*&+$ "01&3 )H and Up
(1470-1523)], was alleged
1, 1%" -&1 ) 1 &+$*&+$, has
to have painted a version
enjoyed a steady popularity
of the &+$*&+$ handscroll;
as a narrative scroll subject,
however, Qiu Ying is likewise
+!
01
one of the most copied of all
The painting is a depiction
Chinese painters.03 Whether
of the daily life and activities
Qiu Ying in fact ever painted
of a bustling riverside town,
the
with
,-&"0 4"/" -/,)&IJ F
the
subject
usually
scroll
is
Why
uncertain.04 would
the
*" 02/&+$ "14""+ IJ3" +! earliest forgers of Qiu’s work ten metres long. Song artist
choose to fake a work that
Zhang Zeduan’s
(1085-
may have perhaps never been
&+$*&+$ handscroll,
painted by the artist? Many
held in the Palace Museum in
copies of the purported “Qiu
Beijing, is considered one of
Ying” handscroll -/&+$ "01&3 )
the greatest Chinese paintings
,+ 1%" &3"/ can be found,
created: it is also one of the
including
*,01 ȩ".2"+1)6 #,/$"!F
held
1145)
02
Ying
Qiu
(ca.1494-1552), one
01 Julia Murray, “What is ‘Chinese Narrative Illustration’?” The Art Bulletin 80 no. 4(1998): 605. 02 Su-Chen Chang, Improvised Great ages: The Creating of Qingming Shengshi (University of British Columbia: PhD. Dissertation, 2013): ii. Zhang Zeduan’s work and the subject in general will heretofore be referred to as the Qingming scroll.
at
the the
handscroll Metropolitan
03 Sherman E. Lee, “Literati and Professionals: Four Ming Painters,” The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art 53 no.1(Jan., 1966): 25. The Metropolitan Qinming handscroll will be referred to as Spring Festival. 04 Ellen J. Laing, “Suzhou Pian and other dubious paintings in the received oeuvre of Qiu Ying.” Artibus Asiae 59, no. 3-4 (2000): 9>9H .2,1&+$ %&1IJ")!H V %T&+$K*&+$ 0% +$K%, t’u,” 2.
11
Museum of Art, New York (Fig. 1).
Figure 1. Anonymous [prev. at-
Although it is now considered to
tributed to Qiu Ying (
be a copy, the scroll is in reality one many to bear the name and characteristics of the painter. Qiu Ying’s reputation as a painter and as one of the Four Ming Masters, his
meticulous
brushwork
(the
gongbi style, which will be discussed later), and the sustained popular
)], Spring
"01&3 ) ,+ 1%" &+$*&+$ &3"/ ( ), Qing dynasty 18th (?) century, handscroll, ink and colour on silk, 29.8 x 1004.6 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
appeal of the &+$*&+$ subject
authorship of such a work
were enough to encourage a
was so credible. Through an
profusion of fakes. A second
exploration of Qiu’s artistic
explanation
identity and his style, and
might
be
the
fact that since there was
by
no such scroll in existence,
patronage
the possibility of possessing
with the production context
the ‘genuine’ scroll would
of other &+$*&+$ s c r o l l s ,
increase
I
its
market
value.
In this paper I argue
comparing
will
in
patterns his
career
demonstrate
Metropolitan is
of
the
-/&+$ "01&3 )
that the reason that forgers
scroll
consistent
would sign Qiu Ying’s name
Qiu Ying’s accepted œuvre.
on their works is because his
Regardless
of
with
whether
an
13
authentic copy of the work exists
Figure 2. Detail of anonymous’
today it is very likely that Qiu painted
-/&+$ "01&3 ) ,+ 1%" &+$*&+$
the subject, so that if forgers were +,1 4,/(&+$ ȩ,* %&0 ,/&$&+ ) 4,/( they would use their knowledge of his brushwork and aesthetic tropes to paint a “Qiu Ying” &+$*&+$ scroll. The particular version of the -/&+$ "01&3 ) discussed here is held in the A.W. Bahr collection at the Metropolitan in New York. Even at the time of its acquisition in 1947, Alan Priest, then curator of Far Eastern
&3"/F
14
Art, described the scroll as
attributed paintings in his
“optimistically”
inscribed
book /1&+$ 1 1%" %,/", likely
with Qiu Ying’s name.05 The
because of his uncertainty
seeming inexistence of the
regarding
its
provenance.
genuine “Qiu Ying” &+$*&+$ In sum, the identity of the scroll
confounded
authentic “Qiu Ying &+$*&+$”
connoisseurs who equivocate
painting has not been agreed
on
uponH if
no
has its
legitimacy
authentic
with
painting
it
at
all
exists.
to
In comparison with
compare it against. It has
the other three Ming Masters,
been proposed that artists
Qiu
painting the scroll worked
details are sparse at best.
ȩ,* + 2+IJ+&0%"! !/ Ȫ 1% 1 Qiu Qiu Ying had created, but
Ying’s is
biographical
primarily
known
for his versatile brushwork
1%" ), 1&,+ ,# 02 % !/ Ȫ &0 &+ )2!&+$ -/,IJ &"+ 6 &+ 1%" unknown, and its existence
(baimiao) and (gongbi) styles.08
dubious.06 A version of the
All sixteenth-century sources
scroll held in the Liaoning
indicate that Qiu Ying was
Provincial
was
born in Taicang, although
thought by several scholars
the scholar Stephen Little
studying the Suzhou forgery
proposes Qiu Ying’s ancestral
industry to be painted by Qiu
home was Nanyang in Hubei
Ying, but it has since proven
Province.09
to be misattributed.07 James
other contemporary masters,
Cahill does not discuss, or
&2 )"Ȫ +, ,/-20 ,# 4/&11"+
even reference the &+$*&+$
material, nor was he given
amidst
a full biography; his tomb
Museum
all
Qiu’s
other
05 Alan Priest, “Spring Festival on the River.” The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, 6 10(June 1948): 283. 06 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 272. See Laing’s discussion (267-8) on mid-sixteenth century forgers Wang Biao and son Wang Jingxing who are responsible for many of the scrolls signed with Qiu Ying’s name, and produced at least one copy of Spring Festival on the River. 07 Chang, “Improvised Great Ages,” 40.
In
contrast
to
inscription, although it was likely made, does not survive; 08 Stephen Little, “The Demon Queller and the Art of Qiu Ying,” Artibus Asiae 46 1/2(1985): 6. 09 Little, “Demon Queller,” 43-44 cited in Laing, “Problems in Reconstructing the Life of Qiu Ying,” Ars Orientalis 29(1999): 73.
15
and despite being acquainted
Yuanbian
with the cultural elite in
(1525-1590).13
Qiu
Ying
lived
for
Suzhou, even his birth date
much of his active career
remains
in Suzhou
uncertain.10
The
artist belonged to a lineage
, present-day
Jiangsu
province: an
,# -/,IJ &"+1 /1&010H +! &2 economically prosperous and was pupil to Zhou Chen,
culturally rich city in addition
who was himself the pupil
to a burgeoning centre for
of
the selling of fake paintings.14
highly
regarded
Chen
Xiang. According to Cahill,
27%,2 -& +H translated
“it was [Zhou] who raised
Suzhou pieces or fakes, were
the
of
commercial productions of
[Suzhou] painting to a level
minor artists that were mostly
commensurate with that of
copies and forgeries of earlier
the scholar-amateur side.”11
masters.15 Chinese art scholar
Qiu Ying made copies of
Ellen J. Laing states that the
the many Tang and Song
favourite Suzhou pian in Qiu
dynasty paintings to which
Ying’s time were those in
he had access, drawing on
which Qiu excelled, including
earlier paintings “to lend an
his
air of antique authenticity”
of
to his pictures.12 In addition
V"5" 21"! &+ ȩ"0%H --" )&+$
to his stylistic inspiration,
colour and meticulous detail
Qiu also produced copies of
on silk.”16 According to Cahill,
originals on commission for
Qiu
patrons such as renowned
employed as a forger, with
Ming dynasty collector Xiang
13 Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 204; Su-Chen Chang, “Improvised Great Ages,” 52. 14 Bruce Rusk, “Artifacts of Authentication: People Making Texts Making Things in Late Imperial China,” Antiquarianism and Intellectual Life in Europe and China, 1500–1800, ed. François Louis and Peter Miller (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2012): 180. 15 Cahill, Pictures for Use and Pleasure: Vernacular Painting in High Qing China (Berkley, CA: University of California Press, 2010): 8. 16 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 267; “Qiu Ying’s Delicate Style,” Ars Orientalis 27(1997): 59.
professional
side
10 Laing, “Sixteenth-Century Patterns of Art Patronage: Qiu Ying and the Xiang Family,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 111, no. 1(Jan. – Mar., 1991): 1. 11 James Cahill, Parting at the Shore: Chinese Painting of the Early and Middle Ming Dynasty 1368-1580 (New York and Tokyo: Weatherhill, 1978): 168. 12 Cahill, The Painter’s Practice: How Artists Lived and Worked in Traditional China (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994), 91.
speciality, famous
may
as
replicas
compositions
have
also
been
Figure 3. (Top) Qiu Ying (
), -/&+$ ,/+&+$ &+ 1%" + ) " (
), Ming dynasty, handscroll, ink and colour on silk, 30.6 x 574.1 cm. National Palace Museum, Taipei. Figure 4. Detail of Qiu Ying’s Spring Morning in the Han Palace.
17
works
more
accomplished
with the cultural elite of
+! /"IJ+"! 1% + 1%" ),4K
Suzhou
and
level artists producing fakes
patrons,
he
for “equally low-level and
incapable of participating in
undiscerning
buyers.”17
their world on their terms.
Qiu Ying was likely
Not being recognized as their
literate
to
a
very
had
wealthy
“simply
was
limited
social equal, he is not named
degree, though the charge that
in their writings.”21 Few of
he could not write at all, or that
Qiu’s paintings are dated, the
his signatures were inscribed
ambiguity helping to disguise
by others, is almost certainly
the presence of forgeries.22
untrue.18 The fact that Qiu
Qiu’s indeterminate biography,
wrote no poetic or lengthy
made more complicated by
inscriptions
probably
mythicized tales of his life,23
due to his lack of ability to
further adds to his attraction
compose,19 and was likely the
0
was
basis for the charge of his illiteracy. this literati
Notwithstanding
social and
impediment, critics
# )0&IJ )" Before
I
* 01"/F explore
the false attribution of the Metropolitan &+$*&+$ scroll a
highly
brief discussion of Qiu Ying’s
esteemed Qiu Ying despite his
style will be necessary. Qiu’s
status as a professional artist
technique and idiosyncrasies
and humble origins, due to
are discussed at length in
1%" 02-"/&,/&16 ,# %&0 IJ$2/" Laing’s “Qiu Ying’s Delicate - &+1&+$ +! 1%" /"IJ+"*"+1 Style,”
where
she
exposes
of his brushwork.20 It must be
some of the ways in which
remembered, however, that
a painting may pose as an
although Qiu Ying mingled
authentic copy or a forged
17 Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 210; Su-Chen Chang, “Improvised Great Ages,” 96. 18 Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 202. 19 Laing, “Reconstructing Qiu Ying,” 79. 20 Marilyn and Shen Fu, Studies in ,++,&00"2/0%&-I %&+"0" &+1&+$0 ȩ,* 1%" Arthur M. Sackler Collections in New York (Princeton and Washington, D.C. 3rd Ed. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1987), 8.
copy.24 In other words, a 21 Laing, “Reconstructing Qiu Ying,” 79. 22 Ibid., 80. 23 Laing, “Sixteenth-Century Patterns of Art Patronage: Qiu Ying and the Xiang Family.” Journal of the American Oriental Society 111, no.1(Jan. – Mar., 1991): 1, note 3. 24 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 278-80.
18
work may be a legitimate
particular
copy, painted in much the
but no others.
same
one must work with objects
way
as
Qiu
might
master’s 28
work,
To do this,
copy a Northern Song work;
!"IJ+&1&3")6 11/& 21"! 1, 1%"
alternatively, it may be a
artist. However, when the
blatant forgery by the hand of
set of paintings examined to
an enterprising copyist.25 We
determine such traits have
could examine the &+$*&+$
been misattributed, it becomes
scroll using Stanley-Baker’s
!&ȯ 2)1 1, /" ,+ &)" 1%,0"
method of dismissing any
traits as being representative.
and all paintings as genuine as
a
beginning
carefully
attributing
%" 1 0( ,# !"IJ+&+$
point,
the ‘Qiu Ying style’ is an
only
elusive one. Scholars hold
Ȫ"/ !"IJ+&1&3" "3&!"+ "F26
varying
opinions
The opposite, more common
what constitutes (as Fu and
method of weeding out fake
Fu describe) Qiu’s uniquely
- &+1&+$0 ȩ,* + /1&IJ & ))6 &!"+1&IJ )" &+ij 1"! Ś23/" )),40 20 1, of “distinguish elements shared
a
about
1/ &10F
singular,
+01" !
markedly
distinct style, it is perhaps
6 ,+)6 1%" IJ+"01 ,# s &2 more appropriate to say that Ying’s] high quality works.”27
Qiu Ying was the master of
In 12!&"0 &+ ,++,&00"2/0%&-H appropriating the styles of other 2 +! 2 !"IJ+" 1%&0 -/, "00 maters – arguably more than as
a
discovery
of
traits
thirty.29 Qiu Ying’s “jadelike”
that invariably recur in a
quality of painting is situated
25 Ibid., 293-94; “Qiu Ying’s Delicate Style,” 65, note 36. Laing explains, “In addition 1, ,21/&$%1 #,/$"/&"0H / +$" ,# ȩ 2!2)"+1 practices (such as replacing signatures, applying impressions of faked artist’s seals, combining spurious colophons with authentic paintings, or combining authentic colophons with counterfeit paintings) were employed by unscrupulous dealers in China.” 26 Joan Stanley-Baker, Old Masters Repainted: Wu Zhen (1280-1354), Prime Objects and Accretions (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1995). Stanley-Baker uses this method to argue that all but three paintings ascribed to Wu Zhen are misattributions or forgeries. 27 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 271.
within the context of Suzhou "&+$ "+1/" #,/ % +!& / Ȫ0 such
as
embroidery
and
lacquer, all of which have qualities in common with 28 ship, 16. 29 39.
Fu and Fu, Studies in ConnoisseurLaing, “Qiu Ying’s Delicate Style,”
19
painting:
a
rich
surface,
How can we reconcile
!" ,/ 1&3" ij 1+"00H +! $/" 1 the connoisseurial imperative precision of workmanship.30
concerning a distinctive ‘hand’
The “lapidary” character of
4%"+ &2 &+$T0 $&Ȫ 4 0 1,
Qiu’s brushwork, “as if [his
sublimate any personal style
paintings] had been carved in
in his work, distinguished
jade,” alludes to the precise
only by a high sophisticated
details of Qiu’s most polished
brush
productions.31 Cahill argues
Ellen Laing and connoisseur
that Qiu Ying “is strangely
Xu Bangda refute the idea
invisible
that Qiu lacked a distinctive
as
an
artistic
technique?
personality … One looks in
style.34
vain for some small outbreak
opinion
of
a
style is an embodiment of
turn of line that betrays the
perfection, where any hand
person behind the brush.”32
or object out of place, any
Cahill explains the problem
imperfectly
of talking about the work of
object, or other “mis-detail”
individuality,
even
The
Scholar
connoisseurial
of
Qiu
Ying’s
symmetrical
&2 qV!&ȯ 2)1 1, !&0 200H " 06 belies a hand other than Qiu to describe”), arguing that
Ying’s.35 Osvald Sirén detects
the meaning and expression
forgeries
of Qiu Ying’s painting “lie
a
almost exclusively in pictorial
basis, comparing their less-
values.”33 This position makes
than-perfect character with
of
similarly
&1 !&ȯ 2)1 1, !&0 "/+ +6 Qiu’s
Qiu
Ying
on
connoisseurial
reputed
meticulous
outbreak of individuality in
brushwork.
Qiu’s artistic persona, which
- &+1&+$ 4%"/" 1%" IJ$2/"0
would prioritize the subject
possess
of
features and colour that is
his
painting
over
the
nuances of his brushwork. 30 31 32 33
Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 209. Ibid., 204. Ibid., 203. Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 203.
36
For Sirén, a
generalized
facial
34 Laing “Qiu Ying’s Delicate Style,” 39. 35 Ibid., 63. 36 Osvald Siren, Chinese Painting: Leading Masters and Principles (New York: Ronald Press, 1956-58), Vol. 4:214, as quoted in Laing, “Qiu Ying’s Delicate Style,” 58.
20
“applied without much regard
,# - &+1&+$I - /1 ȩ,* %&0
to light and shade or the
decision to leave many of
tactile qualities of the objects,”
his works unsigned, Qiu’s
would be dismissed as a fake.37
limited
The
amateur
literacy
prevented
%&* ȩ,* &+0 /& &+$ "51"+!"!
painting style favoured by
colophons on his paintings.
the literati “with its disdain
This
may
have
been
one
#,/ 1" %+& ) IJ+&0% +! &10 reason forgers may have found reliance on highly personal, " 0&)6
&!"+1&IJ )"
working
016)"0H so
under
appealing.
his
In
name
addition,
was especially susceptible to
the profusion of &+$*&+$
imitation.”38 Yet it was also
scrolls
easy to copy an artist such
and composition meant that
as Qiu Ying because of the
a forged imitation of Qiu’s
sublimation of his artistic
% +!0 /,)) 4 0 !&ȯ 2)1 1,
technique in his work. The
!&01&+$2&0% ȩ,* )"$&1&* 1"
distinctive gongbi brushwork
copy of Zhang Zeduan’s work.
style of Qiu Ying, while not
of
varying
Su-Chen
quality
Chang
requiring imitation of the
!&0 200"0 !&Ȭ"/"+1 *"1%,!0
0-" &IJ &16 ,# 1%" * 1"2/K
of
style, would be harder to prove
notes that certain techniques,
a forgery. This made, and still
such as gai and # +$H gave
copying
paintings,
and
* ("0 &1 !&ȯ 2)1 1, "51/ 1 - &+1"/0 Vȩ""!,* +! /,,* Qiu’s distinctive stylistic traits,
to interpret the themes [of the
thus determining a work’s
&+$*&+$ scroll] and contrive
legitimate
new
or
illegitimate
paintings
under
a
provenance.39 %" ȩ".2"+1 particular composition.”40 The absence of inscriptions on
fen-pen copying technique, a
&+$*&+$ handscrolls further
method for making copies “so
coincides with Qiu’s methods
exact … they could be confused
37 38 39 ship, 16-17.
Ibid. Cahill, Painter’s Practice, 135. Fu and Fu, Studies in Connoisseur-
with 40 Ages,” 56.
the
originals”
may
Su-Chen Chang, “Improvised Great
21
have been used to create the
bustling activity is painted
Metropolitan’s -/&+$ "01&3 )H in the gongbi style, for which and other “Qiu Ying” &+$*&+$
Qiu
was
known.
scrolls.41 Thus it is possible
translated
that Qiu’s painting – original
brushwork,”
as
Roughly
“meticulous
gongbi !&Ȭ"/"!
,/ !/ Ȫ M * 6 % 3" 1 ,+" 0&$+&IJ +1)6 ȩ,* 1%" ȩ"" time existed.42 On the other
and
expressive
hand, it is also possible that
style prized by the amateur
mendacious forgers had never
scholar-painter. Other such
seen the original: renowned
practitioners of this technique
collector and connoisseur Li
included Qiu’s contemporary
Baoxun claimed that although
Tang
he had seen many of Qiu
brushwork is recognizable in
Yin.45
The
sketchy
gongbi
&+$T0 - &+1&+$0H Ȫ"/ #,/16 -/&+$ "01&3 ) 1%/,2$% 1%" IJ+" years he never saw a genuine
contours of the brush, the use
&+$*&+$ scroll by the artist.43
,# ,),2/H +! 1%" IJ+" ) 6"/0
The
Metropolitan’s
eighteenth-century
of ink wash on silk. (Fig. 3)
Spring
Another hallmark of
"01&3 ) scroll exhibits many
Qiu Ying’s artistic identity
of the features common to
is his attention to detail.
Qiu Ying’s reputation. The
This is partly due to Qiu’s
scene is “lined with shops,
conscientious brushwork, and
stores, eateries, and stalls, and
partly due to his carefully
1""*&+$ 4&1% 1%" 1/ ȯ ,# planned compositions, which gentry and rustic pedestrians,
/" )&01& ))6 ), 1" IJ$2/"0 +!
peddlers,
porters,
architectural elements within
and carters, all climaxed with
the picture plane. The obvious
a scene of the imperial palace
horizontality of -/&+$ "01&3 )H
and garden.”44 All of this
concomitant with its nature
strollers,
41 Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 204. 42 Laing, “Suzhou,” 272, note 35. Laing is citing Yang Renkai, ed., Zhongguo shuhua (Shanghai: Guji chubanshe, 1990), 478. 43 Laing, “Suzhou,” 272. 44 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 269.
as a handscroll, allows the artist to create a progressive composition 45
in
which
Cahill, Vernacular Painting, 13-14.
22
characters can be viewed one
painter’s style. The minutely
ČŞ"/ +,1%"/F %" 0 /,)) $&3"0 detailed
nature
of
the
little meaning when viewed
Metropolitan
all at once. It is an “unfolding
/"Äł" 10 0-" 10 ,# &2 &+$T0
narrative� requiring the slow,
genuine works. Ellen Laing
deliberate and tactile process
agrees
of unrolling a handscroll to
Xu
be appreciated.46 The painting
a distinctive hand of the
is “believed to be an idealized
artist in his work and goes
depiction of the realm in
so far as to say, “one of Qiu
peace
Ying’s personal achievements
and
prosperity
that
-/&+$ "01&3 )
with
Bangda
connoisseur in
discerning
was created to legitimize the
&+ IJ$2/" - &+1&+$ 4 0 1%"
reign of a Song-dynasty (960-
creation of a distinct feminine
1279).�47
the
# & ) +! IJ$2/ ) 16-"F %&0
veracity of this statement, the
!&01&+ 1 IJ$2/" 16-" + "
&+$*&+$ scroll was certainly a
taken as a characteristic of
popular subject and provided
his hand.�49 Presenting
viewers
profusion
ostensibly authentic painting
,# IJ$2/"0 +! !"1 &)H48 such
with which to compare the
as
Qiu
anonymously painted scroll
Ĺ“uvre.
best accomplishes the task of
being
establishing Qiu Ying’s style.
disproved as being a Qiu
One of the most meticulously
Ying painting and not even
executed of his (ostensibly)
produced during the Ming
genuine
dynasty,
Leaving
with
aside
a
is
customary
Ying’s
ostensible Despite
in
works
is
an
Spring
The
Metropolitan
,/+&+$ &+ 1%" + ) "H
"01&3 )
nonetheless
National Palace Museum in
relates the essence of the
Taipei. (Fig. 3) The + ) "
-/&+$
46 Murray “Chinese Narrative Illustration,â€? 605. 47 Elizabeth Kindall, “Visual Expe/&"+ " &+ 1" &+$ 27%,2 S ,+,/&IJ T +! ‘Famous Sites’ Paintings,â€? Ars Orientalis (2009): 147. 48 Murray, “Water Under a Bridge: Further Thoughts on the Qingming Scroll,â€? Journal of Song-Yuan Studies 27 (1997): 100-1.
"5"*-)&IJ"0 1%" !")& 1" /20% technique and high degree of 49 51.
polish
Laing
describes
Laing, “Qiu Ying’s Delicate Style,�
23
as Qiu’s signature feature.50
Fang.53 Despite working in
The + ) " scroll,
this style, Cahill argues that
much is
like
-/&+$ "01&3 )H
vignettistic,
and
-/&+$ ,/+&+$ &+ 1%" + ) "
allows
is an original composition
for a close examination of
that could not be confused
&+!&3&!2 ) IJ$2/"0 +! 1%"&/ with works by the two Tang employments.51 The viewer’s
painters, nor considered an
omniscience allows him or
,/!&+ /6
her to see that the styles
works.54 The expressiveness
of
,# 1%" IJ$2/"0 &0 ,+0&!"/ )6
+ ) "
and
Spring
,-6 Ȫ"/ 1%"&/
"01&3 ) /" !&Ȭ"/"+1 "+,2$% superior to the detail in Spring to
distinguish
the
‘hand’
"01&3 )H in which the hands
of the artist, as argued by
+! # "0 ,# 1%" IJ$2/"0 /"
Laing and Xu Bangda, but
,Ȫ"+
similar enough to see the
%" 0*&)&+$ * )" IJ$2/"0 &+
connection between the two.
1%" )"Ȫ ,# IJ$2/" < + "
The
compared
“fastidious
descriptive
)2*0&)6
and
!"-& 1"!F
contrasted
technique” for which Qiu
with the austere expressions
Ying is known is visible in
of the palace ladies. Even
both paintings.52 However, the
1%" &+!&3&!2 ) IJ+$"/0 ,#
representational accuracy of
,*- / 1&3")6 *&+,/ IJ$2/"0
+ ) " far surpasses Spring
are distinguishable at a glance.
"01&3 )H as one can see in the
-/&+$
"01&3 )
consistent
is
faces of the palace ladies.
certainly
(Fig. 4) Qiu worked in the
the “Qiu Ying style,” but
conservative, representational
its
style of painting palace ladies
“fastidious detail” is surpassed
originated by the two Tang
by a genuine work by Qiu, such
artists Zhang Xuan and Zhou
as + ) ". Nevertheless,
50 Ibid., 52. 51 Dore J. Levy, “Vignettism in the Poetics of Chinese Narrative Painting,” Alexandra Green, ed., Rethinking Visual Narratives ȩ,* 0& I +1"/ 2)12/ ) +! ,*- / 1&3" "/spectives (Hong Kong University Press, 2013): 38. 52 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 265.
without an original &+$*&+$
meticulousness
with and
53 Cahill, “Paintings Done for Women in Ming-Qing China?” Christensen Lecture, Stanford, May 16 2002; Cahill, Vernacular Painting, 18. 54 Cahill, Parting at the Shore, 202.
24
scroll
painted
by
Qiu
composition and manner of
Ying to compare with the
execution
Metropolitan’s
individual
scroll,
understandable
it
that
is
help
distinguish
works.
At
the
the
same time, their similarities
painting’s attribution would
reveal which aspects of the
be believed. This brings us
works were most essential to
to the question of what, in
their documentary function
fact, makes an extended and
+!
2)12/ ) 0&$+&IJ + "F57
!"1 &)"! IJ$2/" - &+1&+$ Thus the similarities between &+$*&+$ scroll? Art historian
Zhang Zeduan’s scroll and the
,!"/& ( %&1IJ")! !&3&!"0 anonymously authored scroll the
Beijing
attributed to Qiu Ying, besides
handscroll by Zhang Zeduan
the the Ming period clothing
into three categories: those
and customs of the latter,58
with a house-building scene,
reveal stylistic characteristics
those with a dragon boat
that
regatta in the imperial palace,
emblematic of Qiu.
and
copies
those
details
of
the
with
such
as
additional theatre
performances.55 However, this
were
considered
Already in the late Yuan
dynasty
artists
were
transitioning to a professional,
!,"0 +,1 !"IJ+" 4% 1 02 '" 10 monetized form of patronage must be included in a &+$*&+$ 4%& % !&Ȭ"/"! 0&$+&IJ +1)6 scroll to be considered as
ȩ,* 3 ),/&0"! 1%" S * 1"2/T
such. In fact, this elusive
mode
of
!"IJ+&1&,+ &0 * !" 4,/0" 0 pleasure.
creating The
rise
art
for
of
an
the &+$*&+$ “was one of the
exchange of art for money,
most eagerly accepted subjects
$&Ȫ0H
,/
# 3,2/0
V 20"0
+! *,01 ,Ȫ"+ ,))" 1"! +! doubt about the accuracy of viewed paintings in the Ming-
the later division between
Qing era.”56 &Ȭ"/"+ "0 &+
57 Maxwell K. Hearn, “An Early Ming Example of Multiples: Two Versions of Elegant Gathering in the Apricot Garden,” Smith and Fong: 253; Robert E. Harrist Jr., “Connoisseurship: Seeing and Believing,” Smith and Fong: 300. 58 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 272; Murray, “Water Under the Bridge,” 99-102.
55 Laing, “Suzhou Pian,” 271-2, quot&+$ %&1IJ")!H V %T&+$K*&+$ 0% +$K%, 1T2HW 9F 56 Su-Chen Chang, “Improvised Great Ages,” 56.
25
amateurs
and
professionals
the ‘artist-in-residence’ was
…
Ultimately,
this
kind
-/,IJ1 )" +! 0" 2/"H 21
of
patronage
may
have
also more restrictive of his
determined
some
stylistic
ȩ""!,* 1, - &+1 0 %" %,0"F
changes in the art of the
It is also during one of these
time.”59 Being a professional
residencies
painter
Qiu
would have been most likely
Ying was remunerated for
to paint the &+$*&+$ scroll.
his
meant
work,
that
unlike
scholar-painters
amateur
who
gave
that
Qiu
Ying
Qiu Ying’s three major patrons were Zhou Fenglai
$&Ȫ0 ,# - &+1&+$0 1, ȩ&"+!0 (1523-55),
Xiang
and colleagues. A letter to
(1525-90),
Chen
his patron at the Han-lin
Ȫ"/ 8<>>r.62 It is probably
Academy
&*-,00& )" 1, !"IJ+&1&3")6 01 1"
in
the
imperial
Yuanbian Guan
(d.
court lends insight into his
the order of Qiu Ying’s three
life as a professional painter,
major patrons – a lamentable
calling
lacuna in the narrative of
attention
to
his
subordinate status.60 Qiu had
Qiu’s
three
levels
of
patronage:
have provided us with the
“the
one-time
customer,
approximate dates of many of
but
intermittent
his paintings.63 If we accept, as
and
‘sustaining’
Karen S. Wong and Cahill do,
maintained
that Xiang was the last of Qiu’s
him for long periods of time
three major patrons it follows
as an artist-in-residence in
that he must have spent a
the
loyal
supporter, patrons
their
who
life,
which
would
homes.”61 %" IJ+ ) considerable amount of time
category of patronage, that of 59 Chu-tsing Li, Introduction to sec. II (Patronage in Suchou), Artists and Patrons (Kress Foundation Department of Art History, University of Kansas, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, 1989): 91. 60 Reproduced in Cahill, Painter’s Practice, 36 and Jean-Pierre Dubosc “A Letter and Fan Painting by Ch’iu Ying,” Archives of Asian Art (1974): 108-110. 61 Laing, “Reconstructing Qiu Ying,” 79-80
with him before his death in 1552.64 Xiang Yuanbian was arguably the most important patron of Qiu Ying, and Qiu 62 Laing, “Ch’iu Ying’s Three Patrons,” Ming Studies 8(Spring 1979): 49-56 63 Laing, “Reconstructing Qiu Ying,” 80 64 Wong, “Artists and Patrons,” 157.
26
created
various
important
works during his residence
his mother, cost 100 ounces.68 Both
prices
with Xiang, such as the /!"+ exorbitant
would
when
compared
,# ")#K +',6*"+1 handscroll
with
and &3" ,/*0 ,# 2 +K6&+F65
professional
The types of large pieces being
neither
commissioned by his major
reputation of Qiu Ying nor
patrons
the
closely
correspond
other
seem
contemporary painters,
the
with
prominent
comparable
technical
with the possibility of Qiu
skill.69 If Qiu indeed painted a
Ying painting the demanding
version of -/&+$ "01&3 )H or if
&+$*&+$ scroll.
%" ,+)6 ,*-)"1"! !/ ČŞ ,#
However,
it is also conceivable that
the work, it likely would have
Qiu painted the piece for
been during his time as an
the open market, as it was a
artist-in-residence with one
predictably popular piece that
of his three major patrons.
would fetch a high price.66
ČŞ"/ ))H 1%" &+$*&+$ scroll
Qiu was a well-paid
was
a
subject
particularly
artist. In 2-"/Äł2,20 %&+$0H
favoured by wealthy patrons.70
Craig
discusses
Valerie Hansen argues that
the prices paid for labour-
the scrollâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s large size and
intensive
use of expensive silk and
Clunas silk
paintings,
giving the example of Qiu
pigments
Yingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s -/&+$ 1 1%" + ) ",
patronage, if not imperial â&#x20AC;&#x201C;
which cost 200 ounces (liang)
and certainly a buyer who
of silver.67 &2T0 0&$+&IJ +1)6 1%"
" /1
21/ H
wealthy
,2)! ČŠ,+1 1%" ,01 ,# 02 %
shorter scroll % , "+$#2 as /&1&+$
suggest
expensive
undertaking.71
What &+$*&+$
patron Zhou Fenglai (1523-
signature of â&#x20AC;&#x153;Qiu Yingâ&#x20AC;? so
8<<<r 0 &/1%! 6 $&ČŞ #,/
68 Clunas, Elegant Debts,127. 69 Ibid. 70 Su-Chen Chang, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Improvised Great Ages,â&#x20AC;? 56. 71 Valerie Hansen as cited in Julia K. Murray, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Water Under a Bridge: Further Thoughts on the Qingming Scroll,â&#x20AC;? Journal of Song-Yuan Studies 27 (1997): 102-103.
Cahill, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Artists and Patrons,â&#x20AC;? 15. Laing, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Suzhou Pian,â&#x20AC;? 267-268. / &$ )2+ 0H 2-"/Äł2,20 %&+$0H
with
the
commissioned by his regular
65 66 67 126-7.
scroll
made
the
27
desirable a forgery, and why
scroll is consistent with Qiu
was such an object remain
Ying’s œuvre and it is indeed
so
possible
marketable
throughout
that
the
genuine
the Ming-Qing period? The
- &+1&+$ "5&010F + "Ȭ" 1H 1%"
Qing
Metropolitan’s
dynasty
Metropolitan
-/&+$ "01&3 ) scroll (Fig. 1)
century
is simply one of the many
1%" &3"/
examples of the “Qiu Ying”
,#
signed scrolls of the &+$*&+$ of shanghe tu. As Craig Clunas explains, with painting, it was not simply the subject matter and appearance of the work that
mattered:
“association
and ‘biography’ were equal, if
not
more
important,
determinants of price.”72 That is, the name of “an artist so obscure that his or her name was obliterated [was] replaced with that of Qiu Ying,” in order that the work “might have some commercial value, as
it
otherwise
wouldn’t
have had.”73 A forger who signed his work as “Qiu Ying” capitalized on the plausibility of Qiu’s authorship, that the scroll would be considered an authentic work. The &+$*&+$ 72 / &$ )2+ 0H 2-"/ij2,20 %&+$0I Material Culture and Social Status in Early Modern China. (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1991), 127. 73 Cahill, “Paintings Done for Women,” Christensen Lecture.
eighteenth-
-/&+$ "01&3 ) ,+ is
an
example
1%"
,**,!&IJ 1&,+
Qiu
Ying’s
name.
28
Bibliography
Cahill,
James. Chinese Painting. New York: Crown Publishers, 1972. 144-148.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Châ&#x20AC;&#x2122;iu Ying.â&#x20AC;? Dictionary of Ming Biography 1368- 1644. ed. L. Carrington Goodrich and Fang Chaoying. Vol 1. New York: Columbia University Press, 1976. 255-57.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Paintings Done for Women in Ming-Qing China?â&#x20AC;? (Previously titled: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Passages ,# ")1 &#"I "+/" %&ČŞ &+ &+$K Qing Figure Painting.â&#x20AC;?) Christensen Lecture, Stanford, May 16 2002.
)2+ 0H / &$F 2-"/Äł2,20 %&+$0I 1"/& ) 2)12/" and Social Status in Early Modern China. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1991.
Parting at the Shore: Chinese Painting of the Early and Middle Ming Dynasty 1368-1580. New York and Tokyo: Weatherhill, 1978.
Clunas, Craig, and Zhengming Wen. â&#x20AC;&#x153;â&#x20AC;&#x2122;Friendsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;, Clients, Customers.â&#x20AC;? Elegant Debts: The Social Art of Wen Zhengming, 1470-1559. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 2004. 113-140.
Pictures for use and pleasure: Vernacular painting in high Qing China. Berkley, CA: University of California Press, 2010. 1-29.
Cooke Johnson, Linda. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Place of â&#x20AC;&#x153;Qingming Shanghe Tuâ&#x20AC;? in the Historical Geography of Song Dynasty Dongjing.â&#x20AC;? Journal of SongYuan Studies 26(1996). 145-182.
The Painterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Practice: How Artists Lived and Worked in Traditional China. New York: Columbia University Press, 1994.
Dubosc,
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Types of Artist-Patron Transactions in Chinese Painting.â&#x20AC;? Li ed., Artists and Patrons, sec. Introduction.
Fong,
Cahill, James and Silbergeld, Jerome. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Chinese Art and Authenticity.â&#x20AC;? Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 55 no.1(Autumn 2001): 17-36. Chang,
Su-Chen. Improvised Great ages: The Creating of Qingming Shengshi. University of British Columbia: PhD. Dissertation, 2013.
Jean-Pierre. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Letter and Fan Painting by Châ&#x20AC;&#x2122;iu Ying.â&#x20AC;? Archives of Asian Art (1974): 108-112.
Wen. Beyond representation: Chinese painting and calligraphy, 8th14th century. Vol. 48. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1992. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Problem of Forgeries in Chinese Painting. Part one.â&#x20AC;? Artibus Asiae 25 no.2/3(1962): 95-119 + 121-140. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Why Chinese Painting Is History.â&#x20AC;? The Art Bulletin 85 no.2( Jun., 2003): 258280
Jennifer Mueller â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Jennifer is an undergraduate studying art history and
international
relations
at
McGill.
Her
primary research interests are in eighteenthcentury
British
and
French
art,
particularly
portraiture, but she is also passionate about Ming period Chinese painting and Canadian Inuit sculpture. Lately, Jennifer has focused on sociological aspects of museum practice, including the restitution of plundered cultural objects.
29
Bibliography
Levy, Dore J. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Vignettism in the Poetics of Chinese Narrative Painting.â&#x20AC;? Green, Alexandra, ed. Rethinking Visual // 1&3"0 ČŠ,* 0& I +1"/ 2)12/ ) and Comparative Perspectives. Hong Kong University Press, 2013. 27-40. Hansen, Valerie. The Beijing Qingming Scroll +! &10 &$+&IJ + " #,/ 1%" 12!6 ,# Chinese History. Journal of Sung-Yuan Studies, Department of East Asian Studies, University at Albany, 1996. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Mystery of the Qingming Scroll and its Subject: The Case Against Kaifeng.â&#x20AC;? Journal of Song-Yuan Studies 26 (1996): 183-200.
Li, Chu-tsing, ed. Artists and Patrons: Some Social and Economic Aspects of Chinese Painting. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1989. Little, Stephen. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Demon Queller and the Art of Qiu Ying (Châ&#x20AC;&#x2122;iu Ying).â&#x20AC;? Artibus Asiae 46 1/2(1985): 5-128. McCausland, Shane, and Yin Hwang, eds. On Telling Images of China: Essays in Narrative Painting and Visual Culture. Hong Kong University Press, 2013. Murray,
Julia K. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Water Under a Bridge: Further Thoughts on the Qingming Scroll.â&#x20AC;? Journal of SongYuan Studies 27 (1997): 99-107.
Harrist, Robert E., Jr. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Connoisseurship: Seeing and Believing.â&#x20AC;? Smith and Fong eds., Issues of Authenticity, 293-310.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;What is â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Chinese Narrative Illustrationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;?â&#x20AC;? The Art Bulletin 80 no.4(1998): 6026 1 5 .
Hearn, Maxwell K. â&#x20AC;&#x153;An Early Ming Example of Multiples: Two Versions of Elegant Gathering in the Apricot Garden.â&#x20AC;? Smith and Fong eds., Issues of Authenticity, 221-258.
Priest, Alan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Spring Festival on the River.â&#x20AC;? The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, 6 10 ( June 1948): 280â&#x20AC;&#x201C;292.
Hsingyuan,
Tsao. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Unraveling the Mystery of the Handscroll â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Qingming shange tuâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;.â&#x20AC;? Journal of SongYuan Studies (2003): 155-179.
Hyland, Alice R.M. Deities. Emperors, Ladies and Literati: Figure Paintings of the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1987. Kindall,
Laing,
Elizabeth. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Visual Experience in 1" &+$ 27%,2 S ,+,/&IJ T and â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Famous Sitesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Paintings.â&#x20AC;? Ars Orientalis (2009): 137-177. Ellen Johnston. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Chinese PalaceStyle Poetry and the Depiction of a Palace Beauty.â&#x20AC;? Art Bulletin 72, no. 2 ( Jun., 1990): 284-295.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Châ&#x20AC;&#x2122;iu Yingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Three Patrons.â&#x20AC;? Ming Studies 8(Spring 1979): 49-56. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Problems in Reconstructing the Life of Qiu Ying.â&#x20AC;? Ars Orientalis 29(1999): 698 9 . â&#x20AC;&#x153;Qiu Yingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Delicate Style.â&#x20AC;? Ars Orientalis 27(1997): 39-66. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sixteenth-Century Patterns of Art Patronage: Qiu Ying and the Xiang Family.â&#x20AC;? Journal of the American Oriental Society 111, no.1( Jan. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Mar., 1991): 1-7. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Suzhou Pian and other dubious paintings in the received oeuvre of Qiu Ying.â&#x20AC;? Artibus Asiae 59, no. 3-4 (2000): 2652 9 5 . â&#x20AC;&#x153;The State of Ming Painting Studies.â&#x20AC;? Ming Studies 1977, no. 1 (1977): 9-26. Lee, Sherman E. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Literati and Four Ming Painters.â&#x20AC;? of the Cleveland Art 53 no.1( Jan.,
Professionals: The Bulletin Museum of 1966): 2-25.
Rusk, Bruce. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Artifacts of Authentication: People Making Texts Making Things in Late Imperial China.â&#x20AC;? Antiquarianism and Intellectual Life in Europe and China, 1500â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1800. Ed. François Louis and Peter Miller. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2012: 180-204. Osvald
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Smith, Judith G., and Wen Fong, eds. Issues of authenticity in Chinese painting. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1999. Stanley-Baker, Joan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Forgeries in Chinese Painting.â&#x20AC;? Oriental art 32, no. 1(1986): 54-66. Old Masters Repainted. Wu Zhen (12801354), Prime Objects and Accretions. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1995. Wang, Sarah. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Consistencies and Contradictions: From the Gate to the River Bend in theâ&#x20AC;? Qingming shanghe tu.â&#x20AC;?â&#x20AC;? Journal of Song-Yuan Studies (1997): 127-136. Wong, Kwan S. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hsiang YĂźan-pien and Suchou Artists.â&#x20AC;? Li ed., Artists and Patrons, sec. II (Patronage in Suchou). %&1IJ")!H
,!"/& (F Châ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ing-ming Princeton
% +$ 0"K12 +T0 shang-ho tâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;u. University, 1965.
Young, Martie Wing. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Paintings of Châ&#x20AC;&#x2122;iu Ying: A Preliminary Survey.â&#x20AC;? PhD dissertation Harvard University, 1962.
31
Scene of the Crime: The Legacy of Feminist Performance Art and Sexual Assault
By Sara Kloepfer
Scene of the Crime: The Legacy of Feminist Performance Art and Sexual Assault 1 IJ/01 $) + "H 1%" 1973,
artist
Ana
Mendieta
Columbia University campus
performed +1&1)"! q -" "+")
looks like any other. Students
in response to the rape and
walk between classes, toting
murder of one of her peers at
backpacks and books, chatting
the University of Iowa (Fig. 2).
amongst themselves. Then, a
For her piece, Mendieta invited
),+" IJ$2/" !&0/2-10 1%" &!6))& classmates to her apartment. scene
–
woman
Upon entering, they found
mattress
her body bloodied and bound,
across the quad. Her name
simulating the scene as it
is Emma Sulkowicz, and she
had been reported by the
is a visual arts major in the
press.
middle of her senior thesis
Sulkowicz use performance
lugging
a
young
a
twin
Both
Mendieta
and
project, 11/"00 "/#,/* + "I to politicize the personal and Carry That Weight (Fig. 1). In
to call attention to the sexual
-/&) 9A8:H 2)(,4& 7 IJ)"! violence faced by women. By sexual assault complaint with
exploring Mendieta’s piece as
Columbia
part of the legacy of feminist
against
another
student. The university found
performance
him not guilty. To protest
Sulkowicz’s
this verdict, Sulkowicz has
show how 11/"00 "/#,/* + "
committed to carrying a dorm
/"ij" 10
mattress around campus until
0"+ " 1%"/",#N&+ 0, &"1 )
Columbia expels her alleged
reactions to sexual assault
rapist, or until she graduates.
on
Sulkowicz’s
piece
art
project,
I
% +$"0N,/
university In
informing will 1%"
campuses.
examining
the
engages in a long history
respective works of Mendieta
of
and Sulkowicz, it will be
feminist
performance
art as a means of protest. In
%")-#2) 1, !"IJ+" 1%" 1"/*
33
“performance art” itself. At its
and claiming autonomy and
most basic level, performance
agency,
art is an act presented to an
engages
audience. It may be scripted
of feminism. Female artists
or unscripted, spontaneous or
are drawn towards a focus
orchestrated, with or without
on autobiography as a means
audience participation, live or
of
via media. Performance art
narratives. Performance allows
can occur anywhere for any
women to place themselves,
performance in
key
art
discourses
displacing
dominant
)"+$1% ,# 1&*"H +! + ,Ȫ"+ " )&1"/ ))6 +! IJ$2/ 1&3")6H 1 repeated when accompanied
the centre of their work and
by
instructions.
to assert themselves as active
Performance artists challenge
and self-determining agents
the viewer to approach and
of
a
set
of
conceptualize in
own
narratives.02
the
work
As a politicized strategy
unconventional
ways,
of engagement, performance
breaking ideas
their
down
about
traditional
what
art
is.
Many performance art
art
acknowledges
women’s
bodies as testaments to and subversions
of
patriarchal
pieces conceive of the artist
oppression. Both performer
as both subject and object.
+! 3&"4"/ /" IJ$2/"! 0
%"&/ 20"0 /" ,Ȫ"+ /,,1"! active
subjects,
exchanging
in the bodies and experiences
and negotiating meaning in
of
and
“the real social condition of
are “made performative by
everyday life.”03 Through these
[artists’] consciousness of them
negotiations, performance art
and the process of displaying
,Ȭ"/0 1%" -,00& &)&16 #,/ 0, & )
them
and
artists
themselves
for
exploring
audiences.”01 the
political
change.
This
and
melding of the personal and
lived experience, disrupting
political is not only central to
male-centric
body
By
narratives,
01 Marvin Carlson, Performance: A Critical Introduction (New York: Routledge, 2004), 5.
02 Jayne Wark, Radical Gestures: Feminism and Performance Art in North America (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2006), 32. 03 Wark, Radical Gestures, 31-32.
35
36
feminism, but also especially
month, Mendieta invited her
powerful in the spheres of
classmates to her apartment,
art and activism. However, an
where she enacted Untitled
emphasis on the personal is not
q -" "+"r. Upon entering
to be confused with isolated
1%/,2$% !,,/ )"Ȫ ' /H
individualism,
Mendieta’s classmates found
artists
as
women
commonly
seek
to
%"/ 01/&--"! ȩ,* 1%" 4 &01
combat the way in which the
down and bent over a table,
art world has mythologized
blood smeared on her lower
1%" IJ$2/" ,# 1%" * )" /1&01K
,!6 +! -,,)&+$ ,+ 1%" ij,,/
as-genius.04
on
at her feet. Her hands bound
personal narrative is rather
to the table, broken dishware
a means of humanizing and
and bloodied clothes strewn
bringing to light women’s
/,00 1%" ij,,/H "+!&"1
lived
had arranged the room so
Emphasis
experiences,
IJ+!&+$
and
,++" 1&,+0
similarities
among
+! that it resembled reports of them.
the crime scene. Mendieta
Ana Mendieta’s work
recalled that her audience
"5"*-)&IJ"0 %,4 -"/#,/*&+$ “all sat down, and started the female body is a means
talking about it. I didn’t move.
of
women’s
I stayed in position about an
experiences. In March 1973,
hour. It really jolted them.”06
as
politicizing an
art
student
at
the
University of Iowa, Mendieta
Mendieta
went
on
to stage variations of the
4 0 V*,3"! +! ȩ&$%1"+"!W scene throughout the year, by the brutal and highly publicized rape and murder
challenging
students
to
,+ȩ,+1 1%" 3&,)"+ " ,# / -"F
of fellow student Sara Ann
She posed semi-naked and
Otten.05
bloody outside on campus,
The
following
04 Ibid., 36-37. 05 Elizabeth Manchester, “Ana Mendieta Untitled (Rape Scene) 1973,” Tate, accessed November 20, 2014, http://www.tate.org.uk/art/ artworks/mendieta-untitled-rape-scene-t13355/ text-summary.
once with a fellow student standing
over
her
taking
pictures as though recording 06
Manchester, “Ana Mendieta.”
37
the accident for the press or
its
police.
Mendietaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Mendietaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
graphic
tableaux are not reenactments;
political
ČŠ *&+$
,#
artistic
interpretation poses a powerful
1%"6 /" !/ 4+ ČŠ,* 1%" challenge *"!& T0
implications,
/ -"
to
rape
culture.
Thirty years later, the
and, according to the artist
work of Emma Sulkowicz is
herself, are â&#x20AC;&#x153;a reaction against
taking up the same protest.
the idea of violence against
This time, however, the artist is
women.â&#x20AC;?07 The purpose of
actually the victim. Sulkowicz
these works was to elicit a
claims that during consensual
/"0-,+0" ČŠ,* 1%" 2!&"+ "F sex in her dorm room, she 6 -"/#,/*&+$ &+ !&ČŹ"/"+1 was anally raped by fellow ), 1&,+0H "+!&"1 ČŹ" 1"! student, a
feminist
across the
intervention
campus
horror
of
that the
kept attack
Paul
Nungesser.
Sulkowicz did not initially /"-,/1 1%" 11 (H 21 ČŞ"/ meeting two other women
ČŠ"0%H !"* +!&+$ /" 1&,+F who also claimed Nungesser These acts underline
had assaulted them, all three
the reality that no space,
decided to report their cases
domestic or otherwise, could
to Columbiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s administration.
be considered â&#x20AC;&#x153;safeâ&#x20AC;? in light
Columbia
of Ottenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s attack, that all
Sulkowiczâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s charges for six
women carry the knowledge
months.
that
denied
they
are
constantly
in danger. By showing the
did
not
When the
hear
Nungesser
charges,
all
three cases were dismissed.
V*"00W +! &!"+1&ČŤ&+$ 4&1% Sulkowicz appealed, but the and performing the victim, "+!&"1
,+ČŠ,+10
dean refused to overturn the
1%" verdict.
Under
Columbiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
0-" &IJ &16 ,# / -"H /" (&+$ 6) 40H %&0 !" &0&,+ 4 0 IJ+ )F08 the
silence
rendering
it
anonymous and general. By embracing the personal and 07
Manchester, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Ana Mendieta.â&#x20AC;?
08 Vanessa Grigoriadis, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Meet the College Women Who Are Starting a Revolution Against Campus Sexual Assault,â&#x20AC;? The Cut, New ,/( "!& H ) 01 *,!&IJ"! "-1"* "/ 98H 2014, http://nymag.com/thecut/2014/09/emma-sulkowicz-campus-sexual-assault-activism. html.
Figure 2. (Top) Ana Mendieta. Untitled ( -" "+"). 1973. Photograph. The Estate of Ana Mendieta Collection, New York. Figure 3. (Bottom) Emma Sulkowicz in her studio at Columbia University, with the rules of engagement for 11/"00 "/#,/* + "I //6 % 1 "&$%1 on the walls. Photography by Jennifer S. Altman, ČŠ,* V + 11/"00H "3"/ #,/ /1 +! ,)&1& ) /,1"01W 6 , "/1 *&1% q %" "4 ,/( &*"0; The New York Times Company, 21 Sep. 2014; Web; 19 Nov. 2014). Figure 1. (Pages 34-35) Emma Sulkowicz performing 11/"00 "/#,/* + "I //6 % 1 "&$%1 on ,)2* & +&3"/0&16T0 *-20F %,1,$/ -%6 6 +!/"4 2/1,+H ČŠ,* V ,)2* & 12!"+1 //&"0 Mattress Around Campus Until Her Alleged Rapist Is Expelledâ&#x20AC;? by Andrew Burton ( "116 * $"0; Getty Images, 5 Sep. 2014; Web; 19 Nov. 2014).
39
Sulkowicz, along with
her statement as audio.11 She
twenty-two other Columbia
soon focused on the mattress
and
alone, deciding the simplest
Barnard
students,
IJ)"! &1)" in
April,
,*-) &+1 and most public action would
accusing
the
be to carry it. Titled Carry That
administration of systematic
Weight:
mishandling
2)(,4& 7T0
assault
of
cases.09
claims
that
made
errors
sexual
11/"00 "/#,/* + ", -&" "
/"Äł" 10
Sulkowicz
the conditions of her attack
administrators
in her own dorm bed: â&#x20AC;&#x153;that
and
disrespectfully
acted
during
0- " % 0 " ,*" ČŠ 2$%1 #,/
the
meâ&#x20AC;Śand I feel like Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve carried
hearing process.10 She began
the weight of what happened
expressing
outrage
there with me everywhere
publicly: interviewing with
since then.â&#x20AC;?12 Sulkowicz notes
news outlets, appearing with
that a mattress is â&#x20AC;&#x153;the perfect
her
0"+ 1,/ &/01"+ &))& / +! 1 size for [her] to just be able press conference about sexual
to carry it enough that [she]
assault,
could
and
posting
â&#x20AC;&#x153;rape
continue
with
[her]
listsâ&#x20AC;? with other students in
day but also heavy enough
campus bathrooms, publicly
that [she] ha[s] to continually
+ *&+$ %"/ ))"$"! 11 ("/ 0 struggle with it,â&#x20AC;? paralleling a warning to other students. Then Sulkowicz found
her
daily
psychological
struggle with her rape.13 The
powerful
* 11/"00 &0 %" 36 N IJȪ6
outlet for her anger: art. First,
-,2+!0 N +! &!"+1& ) 1, 1%"
another,
more
0%" * !" 0%,/1 3&!", 1% 1 standard issue one on which showed her dismantling a bed,
she said the rape occurred.14
with the police station tape of
11 Roberta Smith, â&#x20AC;&#x153;In a Mattress, a Lever for Art and Political Protest,â&#x20AC;? The New York Times, September 21, 2014, http://www.nytimes. com/2014/09/22/arts/design/in-a-mattress-a-fulcrum-of-art-and-political-protest.html?_r=0. 12 Columbia Daily Spectator, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Emma Sulkowicz: Carry That Weight,â&#x20AC;? YouTube, 2 September 2014. 13 Ibid. 14 Stassa Edwards, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Carry that Weight: The Revival of Feminist Performance Art,â&#x20AC;? The Hairpin, September 29, 2014, http://
09 ** ,$)"/H V 12!"+10 IJ)" #"!"/ ) complaint against Columbia, alleging Title IX, Title II, Clery Act violations,â&#x20AC;? Columbia Daily Spectator, April 24, 2014, http://columbiaspecta1,/F ,*m+"40m9A8;mA;m9;m012!"+10KIJ)"K#"!"/ )K complaint-against-columbia-alleging-title-ix-title-ii-clery. 10 Grigoriadis, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Meet the College Women.â&#x20AC;?
40
Like
most
is normally found in our
performance art, the piece has
bedroom out into the light is
)" /)6 !"IJ+"! - / *"1"/0H supposed to mirror the way which Sulkowicz terms “rules
I’ve talked to the media.”16
of engagement.” Displayed in
By visually manifesting the
her studio on campus, the
psychological
rules are: the performance
the attack, Sulkowicz both
will last until her rapist leaves
demands
campus (or she graduates); the
refuses
mattress will only be carried
privilege of anonymity. Her
on campus; and she cannot ask
performance centres on a body
for help, but can accept help
/" ,+01&121"! Ȫ"/ 3&,) 1&,+ N
weight
recognition her
attacker
of and the
&# ,Ȭ"/"!F q &$F :r 2)(,4& 7 by both her alleged rapist and rarely
walks
someone
far
lending
without
the legal system protecting
a
%&* N +! 1%" - &+ ,# 1% 1
hand
and entering into “the space
reconstitution. As Sulkowicz
of
states, it is “an endurance
in
performance,” a
“collective Just
as
resulting carry.”15
performance
Sulkowicz’s
-&" " ij2 12 1"0 "14""+ 1%" and
art
piece.”17
Intensely
personal
aggressively
political,
solitary and the participatory,
Carry That Weight renews a
it blurs the lines between
1960s tone of radical feminist
private and public, personal
consciousness-raising.
and
literally
"4 ,/( &*"0 characterizes
bringing the scene of the
Sulkowicz as a “messianic”
crime
is
artist, but as Mendieta’s piece
typically intimate and private
proves, her work is simply
– into plain sight, Sulkowicz
an expansion of the legacy
relocates the subject of rape
of
in
art.18 The history of feminist
political. –
a
public
“carrying
By space
that
consciousness: something
that
thehairpin.com/2014/09/carry-that-weight-therevival-of-feminist-performance-art. 15 Smith, “In a Mattress”
feminist
The
performance
16 Columbia Daily Spectator, “Emma Sulkowicz.” 17 Ibid. 18 Smith, “In a Mattress”
41
art is a history of the female
performance
body and the ways it has
"Ȭ" 1&3" &+ !/ 4&+$ 11"+1&,+
been
that
to the gendered oppression of
violence is internalized, and
women. Sadly, the fact that
the
expression
these performances still exist
of residual trauma. Mendieta
suggests that there has not
and
""+ *2 % -/,$/"00 Ȫ"/ ))F
terrorized,
how
subsequent Sulkowicz’s
embodied
performances that
within
suggest the
discourse
surrounding rape, there is no separation between the personal and political or the private and public. Mendieta performs the role of victim, implying
this could happen
1, *"H &1 ,2)! % --"+ 1, +6 woman. Sulkowicz takes this idea
one
step
further
by
saying it did happen to me. By owning her accusation, and -,&+1&+$ %"/ IJ+$"/ +,1 ,+)6 at her assailant but also at the university, Sulkowicz acts as both object and subject of
her
piece,
victim
and
accuser. As a public protest against Columbia’s lackluster response to accusations of sexual
assault,
Carry That
Weight has inspired “solidarity carries” This
across
shows
the
that
globe.
feminist
art
is
still
Bibliography ,$)"/H ** F V 12!"+10 IJ)" #"!"/ ) ,*-) &+1 against Columbia, alleging Title IX, Title II, Clery Act violations.â&#x20AC;? Columbia Daily Spectator. Spectator Publishing Company, 24 April 2014. Accessed November 19, 2014. h t t p : / / c o l u m b i a s p e c t a t o r. c o m / n e w s / 2 0 1 4 / 0 4 / 2 4 / s t u d e nt s - f i l e federal-complaint-against-columbiaa l l e g i n g - t i t l e - i x - t i t l e - i i - c l e r y. Carlson,
Marvin. "/#,/* + "I /&1& )
+1/,!2 1&,+. New York: Routledge, 2004. Columbia Daily Spectator. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Emma Sulkowicz: Carry That Weight.â&#x20AC;? Online video clip. ,2 2 ". YouTube, 2 Sep. 2014. Web. 19 Nov. 2014.
Edwards, Stassa. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Carry That Weight: The Revival of Feminist Performance Art.â&#x20AC;? The Hairpin. Michael Macher, September 29, 2014. Accessed November 19, 2014. http://thehairpin.com/2014/09/ c a r r y - t h a t - we i g h t - t h e - r e v i v a l of-feminist-performance-art. Grigoriadis, Vanessa. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Meet the College Women Who Are Starting a Revolution Against Campus Sexual Assault.â&#x20AC;? The Cut. September 21, 2014. Accessed November 19, 2014. http://nymag.com/ thecut/2014/09/emma-sulkowiczcampus-sexual-assault-activism.html.
Manchester, Elizabeth. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Ana Mendieta Untitled q -" "+"r 8@>:FW 1"F 01 *,!&IJ"! October 2009. http://www.tate.org. uk/art/artworks/mendieta-untitledrape-scene-t13355/text-summary. Smith, Roberta. â&#x20AC;&#x153;In a Mattress, a Lever for Art and Political Protest.â&#x20AC;? %" "4 ,/( Times. September 21, 2014. Accessed November 19, 2014. http://www.nytimes. com/2014/09/22/arts/design/ in-a-mattress-a-fulcrum-of-artand-political-protest.html?_r=0. Sulkowicz,
Wark,
Emma. â&#x20AC;&#x153;My Rapist Is Still on Campus.â&#x20AC;? Time. May 15, 2014. Web. 19 November 2014.
Jayne. !& ) "012/"0I "*&+&0* +! "/#,/* + " /1 &+ ,/1% *"/& .
Montreal: McGill-Queenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s University Press, 2006. Accessed November 19, 2014. http:// w w w. m qup . c a / r a d i c a l - g e s t u r e s products-9780773529564.php.
Sara Kloepfer â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Sara Kloepfer is a U3 Cultural Studies major with a double minor in Art History and Communications. She is drawn to contemporary art, especially IJ)* +! -%,1,$/ -%6F + %"/ ,4+ 4/&1&+$H 0%" engages with power dynamics relating to gender, race, and sexuality. She wrote this piece to highlight the unacknowledged institutional bias towards covering up rape on college campuses.
43
45
Unproductive Reflections: Towards A Queer Phenomenology of (dis)Ability
By Josh Falek
+-/,!2 1&3" "ij" 1&,+0I ,4 /!0 2""/ Phenomenology of (dis)Ability A family tree is not just
an
intimate
history,
relying upon her experiences 0 *,01 !"IJ+&+$ #,/ 1%" 1"51F
but an elaboration of one’s
Therefore, while her narrative
own
between
presents a dearth of disability
horizontal and vertical axes,
discourse, this absence makes
these charts delineate those
apparent those bodies that
who have begotten and those
are unaligned in the most
begot. Sara Ahmed utilizes
material
source.
Set
this key structure in 2""/ by %"+,*"+,),$6
Moreover,
examining
Ahmed’s
explain
silences, one can utilize these
that queerness is a moment
voids for the cultivation of
of
phenomenologies
of
when one’s body is misaligned
unproductive.
Ahmed’s
with social order, pointing
critique of heteronormative
towards
linearity can be complicated
slantwise
to
sense.
disorientation,
other
potentials.
01
the
%&)" %*"!T0 !"IJ+&1&,+ by embracing radical models &0 "51/"*")6 ȩ2&1#2)H 1%"/" of exists
the
possibility
to
disability,
incorporating
conceptions of accessibility
--/,-/& 1" 1%&0 ȩ *"4,/( and barriers to the discussion. for those whose bodies are
A phenomenological model
not only misaligned socially
of disability will investigate
but
4% 1 !"IJ+"0 -,&+10 ,/ , '" 10
physically,
diagnosis
and
through (dis)ability.
as divergent barriers, as lines
This is not to say that Ahmed
do not merely extend, but
forgets ability, but instead,
encounter and pass through
remains
within
what they point towards. I
tradition:
will argue that barriers can
strictly
phenomenological
01 / %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6I /&"+1 1&,+0H '" 10H 1%"/0 (Durham: Duke +&3"/0&16 /"00H 9AA=rH 8=<
1 0 /"ij" 1&3" 02/# "0H rather
than
as
arresting
forces. Expanding on Ahmed’s
47
phenomenology, I will put
anchoring.”06 Each of these
forward a new understanding
points (im)presses upon the
of how objects and orientations
,!6H Ȭ" 1&+$
-/,!2 "
/"ij" 1&,+0
,# through
unproductivity. Ahmed
,/-,/" )&16
“accumulat[ing]…to
create lines” in the direction situates
her
of
our
orientation.07
Such
phenomenology around the
lines also maintain normative
body, which she argues has
power dynamics, for anyone
0-" &IJ ,/&"+1 1&,+ 1% 1 who
turns
away,
describes our extensions into
objects
space.02 The body is said to
)&+"0H &0 !"- /1&+$ ȩ,*H +!
either be oriented, at home
potentially threatening, the
and comfortable inhabiting
dominant social structure.08
space, as if one was wearing
Ahmed
a warm set of footie pajamas,
as such a turn, as it requires
or disoriented, with nauseous
either
awareness
(gendered)
of
its
lack
)&$+*"+1 +! IJ1F03 orientation
is
of Our
outside
towards of
situates an
these
queerness ‘improperly’
object
or
orientation.09 Ahmed reaches
determined
this
by the proximity of other
her
points to our body, and in
Ponty’s
turn our body determines
"/ "-1&,+H 4%& %
which of those points is most
1% 1 + Ȭ" 1&3")6 .2""/
proximate.04 Therefore, we are
direction is achieved when
not only oriented, but oriented
the axis are reoriented to
1,4 /!0 +! 4 6 ȩ,* ,1%"/ be points, namely, objects and
conclusion reading
of
through Merleau-
%"+,*"+,),$6
slant-wise,
0-" &IJ"0
rather
vertical/horizontal,
,#
due
than to
futures.05 %*"! ) /&IJ"0 1% 1 1%" /"ij" 1&,+ ,# )&+" 1 these objects or points are landmarks, “that give us our 02 03 04 05 24.
%*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6H 35. %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6H 35. Ahmed, 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6H 73-74. %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 20-
a 45° angle.10 Therefore, to 06 07 08 167. 09 10
%*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 9. Ahmed, 2""/ %"+,*,+,),$6H 30. Ahmed, 2""/ %"+,*,+,),$6, 165Ahmed, 2""/ %"+,*,+,),$6H 154. Ahmed, 2""/ %"+,*,+,),$6H 163.
48
be queer is to be diagonal
barrier-as-blockage
is
in a world premised on the
nearly
enough
straightness of an allegiance
to express the precarity of
to
inaccessibility.
the
horizontal-vertical
complex
not
Barriers
are
5"0F 1 &0 ȩ,* 1%&0 -,&+1H not merely a stop sign that 1% 1 &1 &0 "+"IJ & ) 1, 12/+ 1, cause
pause
or
exclusion.
radical models of disability
Phenomenologically,
to
inspect
barriers
Ahmed’s account of linearity.
mirrors.
question
and
While disability has
are
these
more
like
As light strikes
the mirror’s surface, it is
""+ 1%",/&7"! !&Ȭ"/"+1)6 /"ij" 1"! 4 6 ȩ,* 1%" across time and space, recent
barrier. More rarely, it will
“radical” models of disability
be
have illuminated the process of
through
social construction, in which
only when colliding at a
existing
0-" &IJ"! *,!"H !&/" 1&,+ +!
power
structures
transmitted the
&!"+1&ȫ !&Ȭ"/"+ "0H 4%& % orientation
of
completely barrier,
but
collision.
It
are then deemed unacceptable
does not completely eliminate
and thus, labelled disability.11
one’s ability to act, but creates
F F &1%"/0 #2/1%"/ !"IJ+"0 and produces new forms of disability, barriers
explaining prevent
how
access
to
production.
These
are
squarely
placed
barriers down
certain things. People who are
the normativity-reproducing
unable to pass through these
Y-vertical axis of Ahmed’s
//&"/0 /" 1%"+ !"IJ+"! phenomenological strata. Not as
un-able,
and
therefore,
"3"/6 /"ij" 1&,+ 1/ +0-,/10 ,+"
dis-abled.12 However, for a
to queerness; one can graze
queer
these barriers, transmitting a
phenomenological
ȩ *"4,/(
,#
!&0 &)&16H form of opaque light, a ghost
11 A. J. WithersH &0 &)&16 ,)&1& 0 +! Theory q )&# 5H F FI "/+4,,! 2 FH 9A89rH <F 12 Theory, 5.
WithersH &0 &)&16 ,)&1& 0 +!
compared to a transmission that strikes the barrier at the "5 1 0-" &IJ &16 +""!"! #,/
49
bypass. This proposal provides
to queerness but not to the
a much-needed obstruction to
label of “Gay.”13 The response
Ahmed’s “lines,” which may
/" "&3"! *,01 ,Ȫ"+ 1,
" &+1"/0" 1"!H 21 ,Ȫ"+ 4&1% #,)(0 /" "&3&+$ ,+IJ/* 1&,+ the possibility of the turn. The
of my deviance was: “How
mirror model seeks to provide
do you know if you haven’t
for
without
kissed/loved/etc. a boy yet?”
possibility of turn. For further
Their queries were a direct
explication, I turn to my own
response to my questioning of
experiences to trace out the
compulsory
history
they questioned my identity
encounters
and
formation
of
my queerness and disability. I have known I was
because
heterosexuality;
it
threatened
dominant
social
This
debated telling my parents
example
for some time, but feeling
Ahmed
overwhelmed
I
are
applied
blurted out my secret to my
and
discipline
sister.
producing normative power
Word
day,
soon
spread
just
structure.
queer since I was ten. I
one
is
the
of
one
the
claims
ȩ,* *6 0&01"/H 1, *6 *,1%"/H dynamics.14
small
way
that
these
axes
to
manage queerness,
However,
their
to my father, to my aunt,
questioning only served to
who then won ten dollars
disorient me further, for my
ȩ,* *6 2+ )" ,Ȭ ,# + ,)! choice of identity had never 4 $"/ * !" Ȫ"/ 4 1 %&+$
been solely due to my object-
me
the
choice, but also due to a
relative familial acceptance,
minimal orientation towards
there was no possibility of
masculinity.
dance.
Despite
/" ,$+&1&,+ ȩ,* +6 0,/1 ,# these
repetitive
Therefore, questions,
grander societal mirror. My
insults to the basis of my
orientation,
queerness, served to inspire
turned
strictly
4 6 ȩ,* %"1"/,+,/* 1&3&16H deeper gender exploration to brought
greater
proximity
13 14
%*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 179. %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 179.
50
ensure absolute validation of
could feel at home no matter
my identity. Having learned
what physical room I was
ȩ,* *6 /" "+1 / &173 % in, for I was always in a chat that
adulthood
ȩ,* &!"+1&16
follows
room. Too deeply oriented
,+IJ/* 1&,+H 4 6 ȩ,* %"1"/,+,/* 1&3&16
1/&"! 1, IJ+! 1% 1 0 *" to be folded in, my lack of 3 )&! 1&,+ ȩ,* *6 .2""/ straightening
directed
me
community. However, due to
towards a search for other
the rural geography of North
queers, which I only knew to
Carolina, this did not take
exist within sexual exploits.
the
form
My repeated turn to the chat
of joining a Gay Straight
room, and towards queerness,
Alliance, but through a turn
took the form of an alternative
towards my most familiar
bodily horizon, which then
object,
impressed
age-appropriate
the
computer.
itself
upon
my
The computer appears
body.17 The repeated tracings
for me just as the table
of my teenage impulsions
appears
could
most
familiar
for
not
disappear
into
Husserl and Ahmed.15 Just
heteronormativity,
as their orientation towards
architectural “desire lines,”
writing directed them toward
they merely inscribed these
inhabiting rooms that allowed
deviations further into my own
them to write, I inhabited
landscape the more I followed
the many chat rooms that
1%"
allowed me to reach across
V,Ȭ
,2/0"W
like
- 1%F18
This was not just
the internet.16 In these spaces,
an
I was able to expand and
It was an expansion of my
inhabit, so long as I didn’t
orientation.
mention my age. Otherwise, I
ȩ,* *6 #,/*"/ !"*&
would hear a chorus of “Come
focus and unable to bypass
back in a few years, kid.” I
the youth consent laws that
15 16
17 144. 18
%*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 33. %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 33.
extracurricular
activity.
Disoriented
%*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 142 %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 176.
51
("-1 *" ȩ,* "+$ $&+$ &+ did doing. My near academic my lust, I almost failed my
failure lead to the barriers,
eighth grade science class,
which lead to my diagnosis,
passing by just a few marks.
prescription,
My parents did the thing
years of pill swallowing. I
any reasonable middle-class
* Ȭ" 1"! 1, 1%&0 ! 6H 0
Jewish parent would: they had
continue to take Adderall.
their child tested for ADHD
This interaction with
at the recommendation of
the barrier was not just a
the school counsellor. Bingo!
/",/&"+1 1&,+H 21 /"ij" 1&,+F
Diagnosis,
My
prescription,
and
object-choice
(gender)
they told me it would all
created
get better now. Through this
queerness.
action,
was
towards this divergent point,
held under the straightening
I bracketed that future of
gaze of the medical model
- 00&+$ 1% 1 "&$%1% $/ !" IJ+ )
of disability. My expansion
exam. This academic barrier
into it was amended, for
worked as a mirror to divert
while they could not control
my path, to change what it
my
meant for this object to be
my
queerness
queerness,
they
could
control how distracted I was. There to
Ahmed’s
is claim
truth that
“Orientations toward sexual
impressed
a
eight
line As
upon
towards I
my
turned
skin.
Having more than grazed that *&//,/H *6 )&$%1 /"ij" 1"! 1 an obtuse angle. For it was
, '" 10 Ȭ" 1 ,1%"/ 1%&+$0 not simply an intersection, that we do.”19 It is very clear
but a collision. Barriers such
%,4 1%&0 !&Ȭ"/"+1 #,/* ,# as these do not just create desire, inhabiting chat rooms
new trails, they expose the
+! 12/+&+$ 12/+ 4 6 ȩ,* objects that have the greatest 1%" K 5&0 +,1 ,+)6 Ȭ" 1"! consequence on our most the way I did other things, but also the way in which I 19
%*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 170.
primary
point:
the
While
body. bodies
52
do not have direction, moving
is
in a direction may replicate
two components: label and
those lines upon the skin,
opportunity. To be pointed
manifesting
If
towards one, may yield the
repetition shapes the body,
other in greater proximity.
then to have your body so
However, without one being
texture.20
why
disability
!&0,/&"+1"! 0 1, " /"ij" 1"! labeled is
more
is
the
than
shaping,
transportation,
it
as
disability
requires
unproductive,
merely
as
the
!&Ȭ"/"+ "F
the
towards the labeling allowed
body. It is the permanence of
for this opportunity to trace
a turn. If these barriers are
itself onto my skin.
situated directly upon the
my line more askew and
Y-axis, then any non-vertical
proximity
movement is punished by
object
recontextualization
of
6
exists
-/,5&*&16
With
amended,
itself,
crashed
the into
"&+$ /"ij" 1"! ,210&!" ,# my line. There was no turn these barriers. One could say
,2)! % 3" * !" Ȫ"/
that to approach a barrier and
reaching this mirror, there
" /"ij" 1"! ,214 /!0 4,2)! was no way to orient myself require transmission at an
!&Ȭ"/"+1)6I Ȫ"/ *6 )&$%1 4 0
angle preferably at least that of
/"ȩ 1"! /,00 1%" 3,&! +!
Merleau-Ponty’s queer 45°.21
into that cold Psychiatrist’s
This is why investing in
,ȯ "H 4 0 01 0 !&3"/$"+1H
queerness brings only queerer
!&0 )"!H 2+ )"F 6 Ȭ" 1&+$
things. It is only through
the proximity and orientation
these turns that one feels the
towards
texture of the skin retain a
the mirror creates identity.
particular permanence. Had
There are other more
so
many
I never turned to queerness,
obvious
who knows if I would have
1 0 /"ij" 1&3" //&"/0I
ever been diagnosed? This
* //& $" 3,40 ,Ȫ"+ &+ )2!"
20 21
Ahmed, 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 28. %*"!H 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6, 163.
the
ways
objects,
question
that
if
one
points
will
53
take the other “for richer
+! " /"ij" 1"! 01/ &$%1 (
for
into
poorer,
for
better
for
worse, and in sickness and in
the
horizontal-vertical
axes of homonormativity. This
%" )1%FW 1 &0 +,1 ,Ȫ"+ 1% 1 is another instance in which the other will respond “No,
the state’s systems of power
only in sickness, I don’t want
) ") !&Ȭ"/"+ " 0 !&0 &)&16H
you when you’re healthy.” I
unqueering
have been seeing the same
However, my line will always
person for nearly a year and
remain queer in so many other
a half now. As both of us are
ways, for the only way I want
neurodivergent,
unaligned
to marry him is if we are sick.
with what is conceptualized
I will not take him in health.
as the mental normality, and
Not all lines extend
as he is a Canadian and I am
similarly, but all lines may be
American, we have had many
forced to change direction.
conversations as to what it will
Just as I had hoped to have
mean in the future for me to
*&//,/ /"ij" 1 ( 1,
obtain permanent residence
*"
and health care in Canada.
queerness at an early age,
Although we are both opposed
1%&0 *&//,/ /"ij" 1"! ( 1%"
to marriage, it has always been
decisions that would enable
mentioned as a last resort to
the formation of an identity.
ensure health and happiness.
Proximity
one’s
line.
,+IJ/* 1&,+ ,# *6
only
explains
2/ )&$+*"+1 4 6 ȩ,* 1%" distance; it does not explore state and dominant structures
the ways in which these
of power is one that can only
objects
be maintained so long as I can
upon our skin. These marks
impress
themselves
Ȭ,/! *"!& 1&,+ &+ + ! F are not only determined by But if either of us got sick(er),
our closeness to an object,
I would be “taking him in
21 1%" &)&16 #,/ &1 1, /"ij" 1H
sickness,” not “in health.” Our
direct, and connect to our
slantwise line may hit a barrier
bodies. Our bodies are always
54
marked not only by the turns, but by the objects. They are +, )"00 Ȭ" 1&+$ 1% + 4" are. Through Ahmed’s 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6 and disability
radical
discourse,
one
can produce not only novel conceptions of disability but trace its labeling, exposing what objects, what choices, and it
what to
identities
greater
yield
proximity.
Phenomenology is a crucial access
point
marginalized told
to
allow
stories
within
for
to
be
contexts
of
choices, objects and futures, and there is a very clear need for greater works on Queer phenomenology of disability. Discussions of barriers are nothing
new
to
disability
studies, but at its root, this unique intersection of critical 1%",/6 ,Ȭ"/0 &+0&$%1 &+1, potential
and
precarity.
It
exposes how the tenderest of for
impressions one’s
can
allow
extension
across
space and through time to be altered into permanence.
55
Bibliography Ahmed, Sara. 2""/ %"+,*"+,),$6I /&"+1 1&,+0H '" 10H 1%"/0. Durham: Duke UP, 2006.
Withers,
A.
J.
&0 &)&16 ,)&1& 0 +! %",/6.
Halifax, N.S.: Fernwood Pub., 2012.
Joshua Falek â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Joshua Falek is in their last year at McGill University
and
is
currently
studying
queer
theory, neoliberalism and disability studies. At the current moment, they are most interested in the intersections between Jewish and queer conceptions of lineage and futurity. Their favourite +&* )0 /" 10H '"))6 IJ0% +! $& +1 0.2&!0F
57
Spilling Over Colonial Enclosures: Indigenous Artists and Representations in Street and Land Art
By MĂŠlanie Wittes
Spilling Over Colonial Enclosures: Indigenous Artists and Representations in Street and Land Art Indigenous
art
has
"5&01"+ " &+ + ! +! / Ȫ
,Ȫ"+ ""+ 20"! 0 1,,) ,# their own identities outside resistance to the continued
of colonial institutions. These
oppression
of
outlets become canvases for
peoples
Canada,
in
colonial
Indigenous
structures
institutions
Indigenous
people
to
re-
and
appropriate
land
that
was
While
once theirs and to make their
much of this contemporary
decolonizing art accessible to
resistance art is exhibited in
4&!"/ 2!&"+ "F 4&)) IJ/01
art galleries and, to a lesser
begin with a discussion of
extent, in museums, there
the role of museums (and, to
are
through
some extent, art galleries) in
which Indigenous resistance
the perpetuation of colonial
is disseminated. Two such
structures
places are in the street and
imposed
on the land. Indigenous street
people. Next, I will explore
and land art have become
the ways in which street
increasingly
artists
other
within of by
the
persist.
where
venues
prevalent active
decolonization Indigenous
project executed
on
identities Indigenous
represent
their
identities outside of colonial &+01&121&,+ ) ,+IJ+"0 +! &+
non-
urban spaces, looking at the
alike.
works of Red Bandit. I will
In this essay, I argue that
then examine the creation
street
art are a
of accessible decolonizing art
means by which Indigenous
both on reserves, through the
people assert their continued
work of Tom GreyEyes, and
01 Street art in this essay refers to art that is generally done in a more urban setting and that is exposed on any sort of human-made structure, such as buildings or fences. 02 I am not referring to the land art *,3"*"+1 which occurred in the 1960s and 1970s, but rather to land art in a general sense, meaning art that uses as its primary medium the land and nature.
in non-reserve urban areas,
Indigenous 01
and
and
people
and land
02
through the work of Chris Bose. Finally, I will end with a discussion of the ways in
59
which land art can express
objects that would have been
Indigenous identities through
used in ceremonies were taken
its
ȩ,*
mix
of
and
traditionalism
contemporaneity
by
exploring
of
-",-)"0H
,Ȫ"+ 4&1%,21 ,*-"+0 1&,+F04
work
These captured objects were
Cheryl
L’Hirondelle.
then given to museums and
Many
Canadian
art galleries, in particular the
large
National Gallery of Canada in
collections of art made by
Ottawa (NGC) and the Royal
museums
the
+!&$"+,20
hold
+!&$"+,20 -",-)"0 ȩ,* 1%" Ontario Museum in Toronto.05 land now considered Canada. Much
of
these
collections
Though the Potlatch + 4 0 /"*,3"! ȩ,* 1%"
are due to the fact that the
Indian Act in 1951, the legacies
early twentieth century in
of the ban remain on display
Canada was considered the
in art galleries and museums.
“age of great collecting” for
The
museums.03 This collecting,
objects
practice
of
(which
collecting are
then
%,4"3"/H 4 0 ,Ȫ"+ //&"! ,21 constructed as ‘artifacts’) can in a manner quite detrimental
thus be understood as a form
to
of
Indigenous
peoples.
conquest,
whereby
the
The Potlatch Ban, instated
collected artifacts are viewed
in 1884 under the Indian
as a sign of victory of the
Act,
conquerors over a conquered
prevented
peoples
all
Indigenous
over
Canada
people. Once these artifacts
ȩ,* -/ 1& &+$ 1/ !&1&,+ ) have been collected, they are ceremonies and rituals such
then made to conform to a
as the Potlatch, which is a
new social order imposed
$&ȪK$&3&+$ by
#" 01
Indigenous
-/ 1& "! by the venue in which they
peoples
of
1%" &IJ ,/1%4"01 , 01F Because of this ban, many 03 Douglas Cole, -12/"! "/&1 $"I %" / * )" #,/ ,/1%4"01 , 01 /1&# 10 (UBC Press, 1995), 279.
are being displayed.06 Indeed, 04 Ibid., 249, 253. 05 Ibid., 254. 06 Constance Classen and David Howes, “The Museum as Sensescape: Western Sensibilities and Indigenous Artifacts,” in "+0& )" '" 10I ,),+& )&0*H 20"2*0 +! 1"/& ) Culture, ed. Elizabeth Edwards et al. (New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2006), 209.
60
the
ethnographic
museum
museums, though, in reality,
was supposed to represent
few objects in their natural
a model of an ideal colonial
environments
empire, perfectly controlled
V /1&IJ & ))6 1"*-,/ ) )&#"W
and imposed upon the people
of artifacts in a museum.11
native to the land.07 This
Galleries and museums thus
space of “law and order”
create
creates a point of contact for
what traits of indigeneity are
Westerners to experience a
S 21%"+1& HT 4%& % /" ,Ȫ"+
safe interaction with ‘other
traits that are temporalized
worlds’
in
that
Western of
conform
to
representations
non-Western
cultures.08
Indeed, the ‘artifacts’
a
a
survive
narrative
pristine
past,
the
about
rather
than in a dynamic present. As elucidated by historian *"0
)&Ȭ,/!H
*20"2*0
displayed serve as metonyms
and galleries become contact
that
zones of ongoing encounters
create
an
image
of
the imaginary Other.09 The
between
galleries
museums
people complicit in ongoing
determine the authenticity of
colonialism) and the colonized,
objects, as they decide what
which
is to be kept or discarded,
them as colonial institutions.12
and
displayed or stored away.10 These are been
‘authentic’ presented conserved
as for
colonizers
thus The
(or
characterizes notion
of
objects
‘authenticity’ can be extremely
having
limiting
many
for
Indigenous
identities because it serves
decades or even centuries in
to
a pristine state through their
that do not conform to the
exhibition in galleries and
mold of what is deemed to
07 Ibid., 210. 08 Ibid., 203, 210. 09 Sven Ouzman, “The Beauty of Letting Go: Fragmentary Museums and Archaeologies of Archive,” in "+0& )" '" 10I ,),+& )&0*H 20"2*0 +! 1"/& ) 2)12/", ed. Elizabeth Edwards et al. (New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2006), 271. 10 Ibid., 274.
delegitimize
identities
be ‘authentic.’ As Indigenous 11 Classen and Howes, “The Museum,” 215. 12 "ȳ"6 3&! ")!* +H V ,+1 1 Points: Museums and the Lost Body Problem,” in "+0& )" '" 10I ,),+& )&0*H 20"2*0 +! terial Culture, ed. Elizabeth Edwards et al. (New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2006), 253.
61
artist
and
advocate
Kent
for many Indigenous artists
Monkman explains, “Under
such as Kent Monkman, one of
the
‘cultural
the purposes of their art is to
preservation’ and ‘ethnology,’
mark a space for their enduring
these
-/"0"+ "H 4%& % &0 ,Ȫ"+
guise
of
contrived
romantic
images ultimately serve a more
space of resistance against
sinister agenda of cultural
colonialism and its legacies.15
and
racial
If
As
be
discussed,
depicted as relics of the past,
museums
have
and romantic casualties of
designed
to
a dying race, they would
accurate image of Indigenous
be
irrelevant,
people and their identities.
future.”13
Indigenous artists in Canada
Native
and
obliteration:
people
could
innocuous, without
a
previously galleries not portray
and been an
Museums and galleries – and
% 3" ,Ȫ"+ "5-/"00"! #"")&+$
the romanticized image of
that
Indigenous people that they
themselves”
perpetuate – can therefore be
and galleries and that they
very problematic, because, by
feel marginalized by them.16
depicting Indigenous people
Though contemporary works
as communities or artifacts
by
of
further
exhibited in these institutions,
Indigenous
such as in the ( %ĕ+ exhibit
people in the present. Jarrett
at the NGC in 2013, their
Martineau and Eric Ritskes,
presence there continues to
two academics who study
be an exception instead of the
decolonization
and
norm. Before ( %ĕ+, it had
praxis, argue that art-making
been twenty-one years since
has always been integral to
“Fugitive Indigeneity: Reclaiming the Terrain of Decolonial Struggle Through Indigenous Art,” " ,),+&7 1&,+I +!&$"+"&16H !2 1&,+ ] , &"16 3.1 (2014): 9. 15 Ibid., 1. 16 Susan D. Dion and Angela Salamanca, “inVISIBILITY: Indigenous in the City-Indigenous Artists, Indigenous Youth and the Project of Survivance,” " ,),+&7 1&,+I +!&$"+"&16H !2 1&,+ ] , &"16 3.1 (2014): 165.
the
the
past,
erasure
they of
theory
Indigenous survival.14 Thus, 13 Kathleen Virginia Ritter and Tania Willard, " 1 1&,+I /1H &- ,- +! ,/&$&+ ) Culture (Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery in collaboration with Grunt Gallery, 2012), 14 Jarrett Martineau and Eric Ritskes,
they
do in
Indigenous
not
“see
museums
artists
are
62
the last major exhibition of
public. She is one of many
contemporary Indigenous art
street artists who participated
at the NGC with the exhibit
in the Decolonizing Street Art
+!H -&/&1H +! ,4"/ in 1992.17
convergence of August 2014.
For certain Indigenous artists,
She explains that, given that
street
therefore
she grew up in a â&#x20AC;&#x153;very white,
become venues to exhibit their
very colonialist environment,â&#x20AC;?
and
land
4,/( ,210&!" ,# 1%" ,+IJ+"0 0%" % 0 #,2+! &1 !&ȯ 2)1 1, inherent in museums and
connect with her Indigenous
galleries:
identity
â&#x20AC;&#x153;[Indigenous
art]
and
to
view
it
IJ$%10 1, /" )&7" +!&$"+,20 positively.19 Her art focuses on alternatives. ij,40H
[â&#x20AC;Ś]
2&)!0
Creativity +!
the importance of traditional
0-&))0 styles
in
revitalizing
over and through colonial
Indigenous
enclosures, exceeding them.â&#x20AC;?18
epistemologies.20 For example,
By working outside of the
she created a spray-painted
physical
piece of what appears to be a
and
metaphorical
boundaries
of
cultures
and
colonial
man whose face is styled as a
institutions, Indigenous artists
traditional Northwest Coast
can
mask. (Fig. 1) His tongue is
represent
according
to
themselves own
out and he sports a side-swept
identities.
hairstyle. His face is primarily
Red Bandit, a mixed
painted in red, but he has
self-determined
+!&$"+,20
their
-"/0,+
ČŠ,* very bold white teeth. This
Canada, is one such artist
face seems to represent four
who uses street art as a means
things. First, it would seem to
to represent her identity as
represent the Canadianization
a contemporary Indigenous
of
person by exhibiting her work outside of galleries in order to make it visible to a vast 17 Ibid., 165. 18 Martineau and Ritskes, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Fugitive Indigeneity,â&#x20AC;? 4.
an
Indigenous
identity.
19 â&#x20AC;&#x153;ITW #4 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Red Bandit,â&#x20AC;? YouTube video, 3:32, posted by â&#x20AC;&#x153;Decolonizing Street Art,â&#x20AC;? August 31, 2014, https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=TPZwOVQK6nY. 20 Red Bandit, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Red Bandit: Decolonizing Streetart,â&#x20AC;? Decolonizing Street Art, accessed Nov. 30, 2014, http://decolonizingstreetart.com/.
6363
The red and white colours are
reminiscent
of
the
+ !& + ij $H 4%&)" 1%" face itself looks traditionally Indigenous. Thus, I would argue that this face represents the dynamic and changing nature of Indigenous (and of all) identities. Second, given that the man has a modernlooking hairstyle, I would contend that he represents the
fact
that
Indigenous
people do not solely exist in a static past, but rather actively exist in the contemporary and ever-changing present, and that they have identities
Figure 1. (Top) Red Bandit, +1&1)"!H Spray paint on cement wall, Montreal; Accessed Dec. 1, 9A8; ȩ,* 1%" " ,),+&7&+$ 1/""1 /1 4" 0&1" <http://decolonizingstreetart.com/artists/ red-bandit/>. Figure 2. (Bottom) Red Bandit, Untitled, Wheatpaste on stucco wall, Montreal; Accessed Nov. :AH 9A8; ȩ,* 1%" " ,),+&7&+$ 1/""1 /1 4" site <http://decolonizingstreetart.com/artists/ red-bandit/>.
64
that
are
rediscovered
and
of Indigenous people has been
reinterpreted.21 Third, given
erased in these urban centres,
that the red paint overpowers
in what Dene scholar Glen
the white, I would posit that
Coulthard has termed “urbs
this is perhaps representative
nullius.” The purpose of “urbs
of Red Bandit’s Indigenous
nullius” is to erase Indigenous
identity
life in an urban context by
overpowering
identity
as
a
her
Canadian.
/")"$ 1&+$
+!
,+IJ+&+$
Finally, given once again the
Indigenous people to reserves,
prominence of the red paint
prisons, and “other carceral
over the white, this image
venues
may represent the continual
and history texts” in order
resistance
to further settler expansion
of
Indigenous
such
as
museums
people to assimilation. Red
+!
Bandit therefore presents the
streets
dynamic nature of identities
a metaphor for the colonial
and
Indigenous
process.24 Therefore, in order
identity in particular very
to decolonize urban centres, it
visible in an urban setting.
is important to reclaim such
makes
A
themselves
The
become
population
spaces through the presence
of Indigenous people live in
of Indigenous people and,
non-reserve
centres.
by extension, their art.25 A
Indeed, nearly half of all
second important piece by
Indigenous youth in Canada
Red Bandit, also shown at
live
the 2014 convergence, is a
in
large
$"+1/&IJ 1&,+F23
urban
non-reserve
urban
centres, many of whom live
wheatpaste
of
a
raggedly-
near large cities like Toronto
shaped traditional Northwest
or Montreal.22 Yet the presence
Coast-style thunderbird. (Fig.
21 Kathleen Virginia Ritter and Tania Willard, " 1 1&,+I /1H &- ,- +! ,/&$&+ ) Culture (Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery in collaboration with Grunt Gallery, 2012), 9. 22 Marianne Ignace and George Ignace, “Tagging, Rapping, and the Voices of the Ancestors: Expressing Aboriginal Identity Between the Small City and the Rez,” in The Small &1&"0 ,,(I + 1%" 2)12/ ) 212/" ,# * )) &1&"0 (Vancouver: New Star Books, 2005), 305.
2) The meaning behind this piece is that, though Red 23 Martineau and Ritskes, “Fugitive Indigeneity,” 7. 24 Ritter and Willard, " 1 1&,+, 11. 25 Martineau and Ritskes, “Fugitive Indigeneity,” 7.
65
Banditâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s culture is struggling
are formed, be they in urban
to remain strong and present
or rural spaces, on buildings
within the Canadian context,
or
she and the people of her
is fundamentally based on
culture
power
land-acquisition and resource
cultural
extraction for capital gain,
to
have
reclaim
the their
the
land.
Colonization
identity.26 This piece depicts
4%& % % 0 1%" &+1"+!"! "ČŹ" 1
a very traditional Northwest
of dispossessing Indigenous
Coast symbol, but alters it
-",-)"0
to
represent
situation
that
ČŠ,*
1%"
) +!F
the
present
Thus, â&#x20AC;&#x153;decolonization must
her
culture
involve forms of education
faces, which is representative
that
too of the struggles that she
peoples to land and the social
faces with her own cultural
relations,
identity.
) +$2 $"0 1% 1 /&0" ČŠ,*
Red
Bandit
is
reconnect
Indigenous
knowledges
and
therefore contemporizing her
the land.â&#x20AC;?27 The education,
cultural traditions and is, by
in this context, is provided
virtue of creating street art,
through street and land art,
making her identity as an
which
Indigenous woman visible in
artists to reconnect with their
daily urban spaces in order
land-based
to
GreyEyes, an interdisciplinary
make
herself
and
her
allows
Indigenous
identities.
Tom
nation present and relevant
&+Ĩ q 3 ',r /1&01 Ȋ,*
in
This
Arizona, makes art as a way of
constitutes a resistance to the
reclaiming a part of his own
enduring colonial structures
identity.28 He explains that he
that
erase
the
visibility
creates street art in order to
of
Indigenous
peoples
make it accessible to people
in
the
modern
Canada,
day.
through
such
processes as â&#x20AC;&#x153;urbs nullius.â&#x20AC;? Identities are tied to the land on which those identities 26
Decolonizing Street Art, â&#x20AC;&#x153;ITW #4.â&#x20AC;?
living in reserves, because 27 Matthew Wildcat et al., â&#x20AC;&#x153;Learning ČŠ,* 1%" +!I +!&$"+,20 +! 0"! "! $,$6 and Decolonization,â&#x20AC;? " ,),+&7 1&,+I +!&$"+"&16H !2 1&,+ ] , &"16 3.3 (2014): 1. 28 Tom GreyEyes, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Outside Art,â&#x20AC;? last *,!&IJ"! "-1"* "/ =H 9A8:H http://greyeyesart. com.
these communities do not
This mural (Figs. 3 and 4)
necessarily
galleries
incorporates many traditional
where they can see artwork.
Diné symbols. For instance,
These
places
the hummingbird “represents
become
spaces
“the
have
therefore to
message,”
spread is
manifestation of a blessing.”31
,Ȫ"+ ,+" ,# !" ,),+&7 1&,+F29
The man and woman in the
GreyEyes was integral
centre of the mural represent
in the Fuzzy Mountain Mural
the male-female duality that
Project, the aim of which
is the essence of Diné life and
was to turn an abandoned
existence. The hair of both the
community
the
man and the woman is tied
of
in a bun (tsiyeel) to represent
into
pride in the Diné way of life,
remote Navajo, a
which
perseverance and is a physical
centre
in
community New
Mexico
“community
canvas.”
29 Jarrett Martineau, “An Interview with Tom GreyEyes on Street Art, Honor the Treaties and ‘Dreaming a New World Into Being,’” " ,),+&7 1&,+I +!&$"+"&16H !2 1&,+ ] Society 3.1 (2014): 227. 30 “Outside Art.”
30
as hair in Diné culture holds knowledge and wisdom. The squash, which is a central 31
Ibid.
67
food in many North American Indigenous
cultures,
holds
a political message: namely, of
â&#x20AC;&#x153;the
seeds
of
change
we must plant in order to revitalize our traditional food systems as a means to assert food sovereignty.â&#x20AC;?32 The bear represents protection and the need to protect the DinĂŠ way of life. The principal tenets of DinĂŠ philosophy are written out, such as +&10Ä&#x201D;%Ä&#x201D;(""0 (critical thinking and mental strength) and iinĂĄ (the importance of DinĂŠ standards of living for quality of life). Finally, in 32
Ibid.
Figure 3. q "ČŞr ,* /"6 6"0H 2776 ,2+1 &+ 2/ ) /,'" 1, Spray paint on building, Navajo, "4 "5& ,J "00"! " F 8H 9A8; ČŠ,* 1%" Tom GreyEyes website <http://greyeyesart.com/ tagged/greyeyesartoutside>. Figure 4. Tom GreyEyes, 2776 ,2+1 &+ 2/ ) /,'" 1, Spray paint on building, Navajo, New "5& ,J "00"! " F 8H 9A8; ČŠ,* 1%" ,* GreyEyes website <http://greyeyesart.com/ tagged/greyeyesartoutside>.
large red print there is the word â&#x20AC;&#x153;DECOLONIZE.â&#x20AC;? This mural the
therefore
decolonization
promotes of
the
DinĂŠ way of life through the integration of traditional practices daily This
and
living mural
beliefs
into
(GreyEyes).33 accomplishes
1%/"" &*-,/1 +1 1%&+$0I IJ/01H it once again highlights the 33
Ibid.
68
dynamic nature of Indigenous
general
identities
was colonized for its natural
by
introducing
really.
[…]
traditional symbols onto a
resources,
contemporary
-",-)" /" 02Ȭ"/&+$ ȩ,*
structure
(a
and
Canada
Indigenous
community centre). Second, it
genocide
makes traditional Diné beliefs
wants to remain in control
central in the community,
over these resources and strip
presenting a Diné worldview.
them of their rights.”34 For
Third,
Bose, Indigenous rights, and
it
incorporates
because
Canada
principles of Diné education,
thus
Indigenous
identities,
which
are
inherently
connected
I
would
argue
represents that education is
to the land. One mural that
central to the decolonization
he presented at the 2014
project.
Decolonizing
This
mural
Street
Art
therefore contemporizes and
convergence depicts salmon
decolonizes the Diné identity
swimming in a river that
by reconnecting this identity
gradually
to the land and to physical
and
structures (such as community
5) This piece, he says, is a
centres) that exist on the land.
political
A artist art
third
who
is
Chris
Indigenous
creates Bose
street of
becomes
more
more
polluted.
statement
(Fig.
against
mining. In August 2014, a mine spill at Mount Polley
the
in British Columbia leaked
N’laka’pamux nation. Though
toxic materials into Quesnel
his street art is presented in
Lake, some of which may
2/ + 0- "0H %" ,Ȫ"+ - &+10 "3"+12 ))6 /" % 1%" &IJ scenes of the land. He argues
Ocean. Bose explains that this
that all forms of colonial
environmental disaster will
violence are connected: “The
Ȭ" 1 +!&$"+,20 -",-)" ,#
way we treat the earth is
the interior and south-central
the way we treat Indigenous
British Columbia, because they
women,
34 “ITW #6 – Chris Bose,” YouTube video, 3:51, posted by “Decolonizing Street Art,” September 5, 2014.
and
women
in
69
4&)) "&1%"/ " " 1&+$ 1,5& IJ0%H the landscape, symbolically ,/ 4&)) +,1 % 3" +6 IJ0% )"Ȫ claiming space.”36 The land to eat whatsoever. Above the
is
mural, a Secwepemc prayer
maintaining
is written, expressing thanks
identities
to the Creator for giving life
a
and asking that the Creator
peoples on the land. Cheryl
help keep all living beings
L’Hirondelle,
strong, even in the face of
artist of mixed Indigenous
environmental
destruction.35
(Métis and Cree) and European
This mural presents ways in
(French, German, and Polish)
which Indigenous identities
heritage and member of Beat
may be connected to the
Nation, creates land art in
land, and demonstrates why
order to mark her continued
it is important to achieve
presence on the land. Her
environmental
piece
order
to
justice
achieve
in
justice
therefore
integral
Indigenous
and
presence
to
to
of a
claiming
Indigenous multimedia
2/,++!+) +! q4 - %1
œ* &0(,+&( + 0(&6)
for Indigenous peoples, in
was
both rural and urban areas.
rocks on the shoulder of the
While
created
by
(2004) stacking
some
TransCanada highway, where
Indigenous artists incorporate
it cuts through the Stoney
the land into their street
reserve (Fig. 6).37 The stones
art, others incorporate art
write out in Cree syllabics
into their land. Indigenous
“4 - % 4 - %1 œ* &0(,+&( +
cultural knowledge reinforces
0(&6H” which means, “look at
the
notion
land
and
that
both
the
1%&0 )"Ȫ,3"/ q01/&- ,# r ) +!FW38
people
are
This is a political statement
connected. Thus, Indigenous
that emphasizes how small the
land art “strip[s] down the
36 Ritter and Willard, " 1 1&,+, 12. 37 Though this art was done directly on the land, it resembles street art in that it /" 1"0 V1 $HW 4%& % &0 $/ ȯ1& 1"/* 20"! 1, mean an anonymous signature of one’s name or a representation of one’s identity. Thus, although 01/""1 +! ) +! /1 20" !&Ȭ"/"+1 +3 0"0 #,/ their art, they can be very similar in their meanings and purposes. 38 Ibid., 86.
the
urban environment to reveal the roots of places; cultural narratives are etched onto 35
Decolonizing Street Art “ITW #6.”
Figure 5. Chris Bose, UntitledH -/ 6 - &+1 ,+ /& ( 4 ))H ,+1/" )J "00"! ,3F :AH 9A8; ȩ,* 1%" Decolonizing Street Art website <http://decolonizingstreetart.com/artists/chris-bose/>. Figure 6. Cheryl L’Hirondelle, 2/,++!+) +! q4 - %1 œ* &0(,+&( + 0(&6rH 2004, Stacked stone on gravel, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver; Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture, by Kathleen Ritter and Tania Willard (Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery in collaboration with Grunt Gallery, 2012) 87.
71
land allotted to Indigenous -",-)"0
Ȫ"/
dynamic in its traditionalism
,),+& )&0* and
contemporaneity,
one
was (and is), compared to
that is informed by the land,
the size of the land that they
+! ,+" 1% 1 &0 + ȯ/* 1&,+
inhabited pre-contact and that
of her continued existence
4 0 02 0".2"+1)6 1 ("+ ȩ,* as them
by
colonial
It
therefore
the
land
by In
addition,
person.
Though museums and
highlights
galleries perpetuate harmful
and
experienced
Indigenous
Indigenous
settlers.
injustices
dispossession
an
peoples.
L’Hirondelle
notions of authenticity and erroneous
perceptions
of
Indigenous art and cultures, street
and
land
art
in
draws a connection between
contemporary culture have
her contemporary land art
0"/3"! 0 "Ȭ" 1&3" *"!& #,/
practice and the land art
Indigenous artists to assert
created by ancient peoples –
their continued presence in
namely, the art of petroglyphs
Canada and to create their
and pictographs. In so doing,
own identities outside of the
she has created an artwork
,),+& ) ,+IJ+"0 ,# *20"2*
that is at once traditional
and gallery spaces. Indigenous
and contemporary in its use
artists achieve this through
of stone. She explains that
their
her art is meant to “make a
land, both urban and rural, in
mark
the
which they create decolonized
continued existence of who I
spaces within communities.
commemorating
re-appropriation
of
* +! 4%"/" IJ+! *60")# The land serves as a way using this language that is old
of
and alive, resilient and ever-
!&Ȭ"/"+1 + 1&,+ )&1&"0F +6
present as the stones I pick up
Indigenous street artists, such
and stack.”39 The identity that
as Chris Bose, believe that the
L’Hirondelle presents through
decolonizing project unites
the land is therefore one that is
Indigenous
39
Ibid., 86.
connecting
people
(and
of
perhaps
72
even
non-Indigenous)
project as a whole in that it
peoples across the country.
subverts the colonial invention
Indeed, Indigeneity can be
of
understood
as
position
Ultimately, Indigenous street
of
marginalization
and land art is a strong tool
40
and
political
a
oppression,
rather
of
national
political
boundaries.
resistance
and
than simply as a marker of
activism. It is also a tool of
origin on land, which unites
unity, in that the art is not
41
Indigenous peoples globally.
only used as a way to connect
Forming a global community
Indigenous peoples with one
of Indigenous street artists
another, but also with other
can therefore act as a means
cultures
of advancing the decolonizing
without concern for borders
40 Decolonizing Street Art, “ITW #6.” 41 Dorothy L. Hodgson, "&+$ 0 &H " ,*&+$ +!&$"+,20 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2011), 37.
or institutional limitations.
and
communities,
Mélanie Wittes —
Mélanie Wittes is a U2 student pursuing Honours in Anthropology and a double minor in International Development Studies and Indigenous Studies. She is interested in contemporary Indigenous issues and representations of Indigeneity in the Canadian ,+1"51F 0&!" ȩ,* %"/ !"*& -2/02&10H Ĩ) +&" is VP External for the KANATA Indigenous studies community at McGill and an active member of H + &+1"/+ 1&,+ ) "1%+,$/ -%& IJ)* #"01&3 )F
73
Bibliography Bose, Chris. Untitled, Spray paint on brick wall, Montreal; Accessed Nov. 30, 2014 ȩ,* 1%" " ,),+&7&+$ 1/""1 /1 website <http://decolonizingstreetart. com/artists/chris-bose/>. Classen, Constance, and David Howes. “The Museum as Sensescape: Western Sensibilities and Indigenous Artifacts.” In Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture, edited by Elizabeth Edwards, Chris Godsen, and Ruth Phillips, 199-222. New York: BloomsburyAcademic,2006. Cole, Douglas. Captured Heritage: The Scramble for Northwest Coast Artifacts. Vancouver: UBC Press, 1995. Dion,
Susan D., and Angela Salamanca. “inVISIBILITY: Indigenous in the CityIndigenous Artists, Indigenous Youth and the Project of Survivance.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society 3.1 (2014): 159-188.
")!* +H
"ȳ"6 3&!F V ,+1 1 ,&+10I Museums and the Lost Body Problem.” In Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture, edited by Elizabeth Edwards, Chris Godsen, and Ruth Phillips, 245-267. New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2006.
GreyEyes, Tom, Fuzzy Mountain Mural Project, Spray paint on building, Navajo, New Mexico; Accessed " F 8H 9A8; ȩ,* 1%" ,* /"6 6"0 website <http://greyeyesart. com/tag ged/greyeyesartoutside>. GreyEyes,
Tom. “Outside Art.” Last *,!&IJ"! "-1"* "/ =H 9A8:F http://greyeyesart.com.
Hodgson, Dorothy L. Being Maasai, Becoming Indigenous. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2011. Ignace, Marianne, and George Ignace. “Tagging, Rapping, and the Voices of the Ancestors: Expressing Aboriginal Identity Between the Small City and The Rez.” The Small Cities Book: On the Cultural Future of Small Cities, 303-318 Vancouver: New Star Books, 2 0 0 5 . “ITW #4 – Red Bandit,” YouTube video, 3:32. Posted by “Decolonizing Street Art,” August 31, 2014. <https:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPZwOVQK6nY>. “ITW #6 – Chris Bose,” YouTube video, 3:51, posted by “Decolonizing Street Art,” September 5, 2014. <https://www. youtube.com/watch?v=yv1mCfcydC8>. L’Hirondelle, Cheryl. uronndnland (wapahta ôma iskonikan askiy), 2004, Stacked stone on gravel, Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver; Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture, by Kathleen Ritter and Tania Willard (Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery in c o l l a b o r a t i o n with Grunt Gallery, 2012) 87.
Martineau,
Jarrett. “An Interview with Tom Greyeyes on Street Art, Honor the Treaties and ‘Dreaming a New World Into Being.’” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society 3.1 (2014): 225-231.
Martineau, Jarrett, and Eric Ritskes. “Fugitive Indigeneity: Reclaiming the Terrain of Decolonial Struggle Through Indigenous Art.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society 3.1 (2014): I-XII. Ouzman, Sven. “The Beauty of Letting Go: Fragmentary Museums and Archaeologies of Archive.” Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture, edited by Elizabeth Edwards, Chris Godsen, and Ruth Phillips, 169-301. New York: Bloomsbury Academic,2006. Red
Bandit, “Red Bandit: Decolonizing Streetart.” Decolonizing Street Art. Accessed Nov. 30, 2014. < http://decolonizingstreetart.com/>.
Red Bandit, Untitled, Spray paint on cement wall, ,+1/" )J "00"! " F 8H 9A8; ȩ,* the Decolonizing Street Art website <http://decolonizingstreetart. com/artists/red-bandit/>. Red Bandit, Untitled, Wheatpaste on stucco wall, Montreal; Accessed Nov. 30, 2014 ȩ,* 1%" " ,),+&7&+$ 1/""1 /1 website <http://decolonizingstreetart. com/artists/red-bandit/>. Ritter, Kathleen Virginia and Tania Willard. Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture. Vancouver: Vancouver Art Gallery in collaboration with Grunt Gallery, 2012. Wildcat,
Matthew, Mandee McDonald, Stephanie Irlbacher-Fox, Glen Coulthard. “Learning f r o m the Land: Indigenous Land Based Pedagogy and Decolonization.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society 3.3 (2014): I-XV.
75
The Grotta Grande: The Dissolution of Boundaries Between Art and Nature
By Klea Hawkins
The Grotta Grande: The Dissolution of Boundaries Between Art and Nature
Figure 1. Bernardo Buontalenti, and Giorgio Vasari, Exterior view of the façade Grotta Grande, Boboli Garden, Florence, 1556 – 60 and 1583 – 89.
With the Renaissance revival classical in
and
celebration
antiquity,
the sixteenth-century Italian
of
garden sought to revive the
gardens
glory and culture of classical
sixteenth-century
Italy
antiquity, it simultaneously
became a prominent feature of
sought to claim superiority
the villas, palaces and estates
over it.01 This notion becomes
of
and
evident in the seventeenth-
inspiration
century cliché that referred
for the Renaissance garden
to Italy as “the garden of the
the
nobility.
upper While
classes
) /$")6 *" ȩ,* ) 00& ) world.”
02
The Renaissance
sources such as Pliny the
garden was a place where
Elder’s
the reborn classical and the
Ovid’s
12/ ) &01,/6 and "1 *,/-%,0"0H
the
0 )" +! * $+&IJ "+ " ,# 1%" sixteen-century Italian garden was unprecedented. Although
01 Claudia Lazzaro, “Introduction,” in %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) +1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%" / +!
/!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ ) 1 )6 (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1990), 5. 02 John Dixion Hunt, “The Garden on the Grand Tour,” in /!"+ +! /,3"I %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+ &+ 1%" +$)&0% * $&+ 1&,+I 1600-1750 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986), 9.
77
modern
came
into
being.
I wish to argue that, in the
The common topos of art and
late
nature, which played out in
seventeenth-century
classical antiquity, becomes
consciousness
paramount in the sixteenth-
/&$&!&IJ"!HW04 the Grotta Grande
century
In
had the ability to transform
the garden not only did art
the mind of the visitor by
and nature collide, but art
immersing him or her into
had the ability to disguise
an alternate or other-worldly
itself as nature, and nature
reality – an illusionistic world
as
dissolving
where art and reality collided.
demarcations between art and
Through an analysis of the
nature particularly dominate
sensory
the garden grotto. Whereas
4&1%&+ 1%" IJ/01 % * "/ ,#
the Renaissance Italian garden
the three-chambered Grotta
traditionally
Grande we will see how the
art.
Italian
These
garden.
exuded
order,
sixteenth-
and
early “when
was
elements
less
at
play
rationality, and restraint in
Ȭ" 1&3" -,4"/ ,# 1%" $/,11,
organization and layout, the
had the ability to perceptually
grotto was a zone of chaos
deceive
and irrationality.03
visitor, particularly through
The Grotta Grade (Fig. 1 & Fig. 2), situated in the in
Florence,
is
a
early
modern
the interpenetration of art and nature.
northeast corner of the Boboli Garden
its
Between
1556
and
1560, the artist Giorgio Vasari
prime example of this chaotic
2+(+,4&+$)6 "$ + 1%" IJ/01
irrationality. Art and nature
stage of what would become
become
the Grotta Grande when he
indistinguishable
ȩ,* ,+" +,1%"/ 4&1%&+ 1%" erected
a
classical
portico
Grotta Grande: it is a place
&+ ȩ,+1 ,# 0* )) IJ0%-,+!
of mystery and confusion.
in
03 Naomi Miller, “Humanist Conceits: Renaissance Gardens,” in " 3"+)6 3"0I "ij" 1&,+0 ,+ 1%" /!"+ /,11, (New York: George Braziller, 1982), 53.
the
Boboli
Garden.
It
was only with the death 04 Joscelyn Godwin, “Garden Magic,” in %" $ + /" * ,# 1%" "+ &00 + " (London: Thames & Hudson Ltd, 2002), 153.
78
of
Cosimo
de’
Medici
in
“wrought by no artist’s hand.
1574 and the ascension of
But
grand-duke
cunning
Francesco
de’
Nature
by
had
her
imitated
own art;
Medici that Vasari’s portico
for she had shaped a native
saw
development.
arch of the living rock and
architect-engineer
0,Ȫ 12Ȫ .”06 While the arch
Bernardo Buontalenti added
of Diana’s grotto was shaped
an additional level to the
by nature in imitation of
classical portico in order to
art, the arch of the façade of
accommodate the proposed
Buontalenti’s Grotta Grande is
construction of the three cave-
shaped by art in imitation of
like chambers of the Grotta
nature. The chalky limestone
Grande. The realization of the
spunga that drips over the edge
grotto’s completion in 1593,
,# ,1% 1%" / % +! /,,ij&+"
with its rustic architecture
of
In
further 1583
the
grotto’s
exterior
1% 1 ,+ " )"! /1 ȩ,* + 12/" recalls the natural stalactites +! + 12/" ȩ,* /1H 4 0 1%" found in caves. The dripping epitome of the illusionism and
stalactitic forms of the upper
irrationality characteristic of
level of the grotto stand in
Mannerist art.
stark
The
05
ambiguity
contrast
to
Vasari’s
and
classically inspired façade of
confusion between art and
Tuscan columns and statuary
nature that the Grotta Grande
below.
addresses was not only a
forms
concern raised by modern
of
Renaissance man, but one
however,
which had also preoccupied
*"/$&+$ 4&1% 1%" /1&IJ " ,#
the ancients. Ovid in his
what appear to be the natural
"1 *,/-%,0"0
forms of the stalactites. The
describes
the grotto of Diana as one 05 Pamela Coombes, “The Medici Gardens of Boboli and Luxemburg: Thoughts on their Relationship and Development (Master’s thesis, McGill University, 1992), 36-37.
The of
the
the façade
architectural upper
level
transform,
intersecting
and
06 Quoted in Claudia Lazzaro, “Ornaments of Nature,” in %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + "
/!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) 1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%" / +! /!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ ) 1 )6 (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1990), 61.
79
Figure 2. Bernardo Buontalenti, Interior of the Grotta
/ +!"H 4&1% ȩ"0coes by Bernardino , "11&H IJ$2/"0 by Piero Mati, and plaster cast copies of Michelangelo’s /&0,+"/0, Boboli Garden, Florence, 1583-1585.
Figure 3. Bernardo Buontalenti, Interior of the Grotta Grande, View of the , 2)20 4&1% ȩ"0coes by Bernardino Pocetti, 1583-1585.
Figure 4. Michelangelo, /&0,+"/0, marble, Accademia, Florence, 1520-1534 (installed in the Grotta Grande in 1585 and removed to the Accademia in 1908 – plaster casts currently replace them)
80
ambiguity generated between
which combine a variety of
architectural
/1&IJ & ) +! + 12/ ) * 1"/& )0
and
natural
forms – the aforementioned
– stucco, terracotta, 0-2+$ H
illusionistic play between art
and /, &))"H to list a few –
and nature – announces the
merge, creating a multimedia
intention of the entire grotto,
environment where art and
and foretells what awaits the
nature become indiscernible
visitor in its interior.
ȩ,* ,+" +,1%"/F V +0-&/"!
Traversing the Grotta
by nature, [the Grotta Grande]
Grande’s threshold, moving
also imitate[s] the vestiges of
ȩ,* 1%" "51"/&,/ &+1, &10 ancient rustic grottoes that interior, the visitor would
still survived,” states Lazzaro.07
% 3" *,3"! ȩ,* 4% 1 4,2)! Leon
Battista
Alberti’s
have perhaps been a hot and
familiarity with the ancient
bright Florentine day into the
practices of decorating and
dark, cool and damp world of
designing grottoes is revealed
the grotto. The participatory
in a passage in his "+ ,,(0
dimension
on Architecture: “the ancients
moving
of
the
through
visitor is
used to dress the Walls of
a necessary element when
their Grottoes and Caverns
attempting
understand
with all Manner of rough
the fully immersive, bodily,
Work, with little Chips of
and sensory experience the
Pumice.”08 This play between
visitor would undergo upon
+ 12/ ) +! /1&IJ & ) &0 )0,
entering this other worldly
employed by Bunotalenti in
environment.
the Grotta Grande in order to
to
architecture
space
The and
rustic dripping
/" )) +! /" 1" 1%" "Ȭ" 1 ,#
01 ) 1&1"0 IJ/01 "+ ,2+1"/"! an ancient ruin rediscovered on
the
grotto
exterior
here
of
the
and resurrected. “It is the idea
dominate
and
of antiquity incarnate,” argues
overwhelm the space. The man-made stalactitic forms
07 58. 08
Lazzaro, “Ornaments of Nature,” Miller, “Humanist Conceits,” 35.
81
Naomi Miller.09 Thus, upon "+1"/&+$ 1%" IJ/01
) /$"
/601 ) ,4) IJ))"!
% * "/ with water and stocked with
of the Grotta Grande, the
IJ0%H 4%& % 4 0 020-"+!"!
visitor is immediately thrust
ȩ,* 1%" $/,11,T0 , 2)20 q &$F
into by
a
world
dominated
3).11 This novel experiment
“theatrical
illusion.”10
4,2)!
The seemingly rational and
% 3"
IJ)1"/"!
1%"
exterior daylight through the
orderly space of the garden
/601 ) IJ0% ,4) +! ,+1, 1%"
gives way to the irrationality
$/,11,T0 4 ))0F %" /"ij" 1&,+0
characterized by the grotto’s
and
interior.
1%" *,3"*"+1 ,# 1%" IJ0%
Art’s
mimicry
of
shadows
caused
by
the natural is in this space
in the crystal bowl would
paramount.
have
However,
further
heightened
before
the seemingly magical play
visually
of light and shadow across
comprehend or attempt to
and throughout the grotto’s
make sense of the natural
interior.
the
visitor
could
With
+! /1&IJ & ) ")"*"+10 1 movement play
within
added
the
visitor
Grotta
through the space of the
Grande’s interior, his or her
grotto, the entire room would
senses
been
seem to be in motion. This
Carefully
constant play of shimmering
would
overwhelmed.
the
of
the
have
hidden in the walls were
)&$%1H /"ij" 1&,+0 ,# 0% !,40
thin tubes dripping water
and water across the grotto’s
over the stucco stalactites.
surfaces, as well as the visitor’s
%" ij,,/H -2+ 12 1"! 4&1% own movement through the hidden
water
jets,
would
space not only animated the
soak the unsuspecting visitor.
entire room, but made it
Although it only remained
come alive. Added to this was
in place for a short time, Buontalenti’s design included 09 Ibid., 37. 10 Coombes, “The Medici Gardens of Boboli and Luxembourg,” 37.
11 Claudia Lazzaro, “The Source for Florence’s Water in the Boboli Garden,” in The
1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) 1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%" / +! /!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ ) 1 )6 (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1990), 201.
82
the sound of water: constant,
between art and nature would
intense, and echoing, dripping
not only have confused and
!,4+ +! ,Ȭ 1%" 01 ) 1&1& deceived forms.
This
would
visitors
in
their
have
traditional understandings of
added an auditory dimension
the two, but would have also
to a total immersive bodily
triggered unexpected wonder
and
and delight. Like the early
illusionary
The
experience.
man-made
and
the
modern
in
the
Grotta Grande would become
Grotta Grande would have
ever more intriguing when
thus elicited multi-sensorial
the “wonders of art and the
natural
elements
2+!"/( **"/H the
/"0-,+0"0 ȩ,* 3&0&1,/0J +!H wonders of nature”14 were if Mannerism in the arts was,
fused
as Jocelyn Godwin suggests,
boundaries obscured.
“partly
search
for
and
their
new
The
challenges, one of which was
boundaries
the imitation of living and
and nature is evidenced in
moving nature,”12 the Grotta
Francesco Bocchi’s description
Grande realized this goal.
of
bodily,
a
together
the
dissolution
of
between
art
Grotta
Grande
in
This
other-worldly,
his guidebook to Florence
or
transcendental
ȩ,* 8<@8F " ,$+&7&+$ V1% 1
experience elicited by the
the
Grotta
Bocchi
Grande,
whose
vault
was
in
commented
ruins,” upon
meaning was “never spelled
the “animals and serpents
out by its creators,”13 can
"*"/$&+$ ȩ,* 1%" IJ002/"0
perhaps be best attributed to
and breaks in the structure.”15
the fact that art and nature
He
were in a constant state of
2+IJ+&0%"! * / )" 0 2)-12/"0H
ij25 The
+!
saw
1/ +0#,/* 1&,+F /&0,+"/0 (Fig.
indistinguishable
play
12 Godwin, “Garden Magic,” 174. 13 Joscelyn Godwin, “Grotesqueries,” in %" $ + /" * ,# 1%" "+ &00 + " (London: Thames & Hudson Ltd, 2002), 146.
Michelangelo’s 4), installed
14 Lorraine Daston and Katherine Park, “Wonders of Art, Wonders of Nature,” in ,+!"/0 +! 1%" /!"/ ,# 12/"I 88<AK8><A (New York: Zone Books, 1998), 260. 15 Lazzaro, “The Source for Florence’s Water,” 206.
83
in the four corners of the $/,11,T0 IJ/01
1%" + 12/ ) +! 1%" /1&IJ & ) &0
% * "/ &+ further evident in an analysis
1585, as attempting with all
,# 1%" /,11 / +!"T0 IJ/01
1%"&/ *&$%1 1, /" ( ȩ"" ,# chamber. Here the boundaries the stone which possessed
between
them in hopes of evading the
become ever more obscured.
structure’s
Bernardino
imminent
ruin.
art
and
nature Poccetti’s
While art’s mimicry of the
ȩ"0 ,"0 ,3"/&+$ 1%" 4 ))0
natural inspired delight, it
of the upper level and vault
too was capable of eliciting
of
this
terror. A similar passage is
a
naturalistic
found in the account of Fynes
setting for Piero di Tomasso
Moryson, who upon visiting
Mati’s stucco and stalactite
another
mythological
of
Buontalenti’s
chamber
provide landscape
and
pastoral
grottoes at Pratolino describes
scenes (Fig. 5 & Fig 6).19 While
it as a “cave strongly built, yet
the men, women, animals,
by art so made, as you feare
trees, and waterfalls depicted
to enter it, lest great stones
in
should fall upon your head.”
landscape slowly merge into
ability
naturalistic
to
the porous stalactitic rocks,
create the idea of illusionary
they simultaneously emerge
ruin can best be understood
ȩ,* 1%"*F
as a form of “clever deceit.”17
This
16
Buontalenti’s
Pocetti’s
John Dixon Hunt notes, “it is
transformation
constant or
/1T0 &+IJ+&1" - &16 1, ,21!, metamorphosis of art into natural
things,
still
stone and stone into art has
being seen to imitate them
provoked scholars such as
that is striking.”18
Hunt to suggest an Ovidian
Confusion
while
between
16 John Dixon Hunt, “Art and Nature,” in /!"+ +! /,3"I %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + "
/!"+ &+ 1%" +$)&0% * $&+ 1&,+I 8=AAK8><A (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986), 92. 17 Lazzaro, “The Source for Florence’s Water,” 206. 18 Hunt, “Art and Nature,” 93.
interpretation of the Grotta Grande’s visual and sculptural program. This interpretation 19 Lazzaro, “The Source for Florence’s Water,” 202.
84
becomes
particularly
appealing when applied to & %") +$"),T0
#,/"*"+1&,+"!
/601 ) IJ0%
bowl suspended beneath the
2+IJ+&0%"! vault’s oculus may then be
marble sculptures, /&0,+"/0.
interpreted as symbolizing the
While
“‘waters above the heavens’
Bocchi
understood
Michelangelo’s sculptures
+,+IJ+&1, which poured down in the
as
attempting
Deluge.”21
to evade disaster, the early
While Michelangelo’s
modern visitor would have
/&0,+"/0
also most certainly associated
11"*-1&+$ 1, "*"/$" ȩ,*
Michelangelo’s /&0,+"/0 with
the stone, like Tomasso Mati’s
the
012
mythological
tale
of
may
indeed
be
, +! 01 ) 1&1" IJ$2/"0H
Deucalion. According to Ovid
they also draw attention to
in his "1 *,/-%,0"0H the gods,
their production. That is, they
angered by the impiety of
V"5"*-)&ȫ 1%" -/, "00 ,#
human kind, destroy the world
creating art out of nature.”22
through the unleashing of a
Art is not only an extension of,
ij,,!F %" ,+)6 14, 02/3&3,/0H but rather inherent in nature. Deucalion
and
his
wife
In this view Michelangelo’s
Pyrrha, are then responsible
+,+IJ+&1, sculptures
for its regeneration. Out of
seen as imprisoned within the
the
and
stone, a notion suggested by
Pyrrha throw behind their
Michelangelo himself when
backs
he writes,
stones
Deucalion
slowly
emerges
the
can
be
this new civilization.20 The
The best of artists hath no thought to show Which the rough stone &+ &10 02-"/ij2,20 0%")) Doth not include. To /" ( 1%" * / )" 0-"))
0 )) 1%" % +! 1% 1
20 John Dixon Hunt, “Ovid in the Garden,” / %&1" 12/ ) 00, & 1&,+ &)"0H no. 3 (January 1983): 3-4.
21 Godwin, “Grotesqueries,” 146. 22 Lazzaro, “The Source for Florence’s Water,” 206.
world’s
new
& %") +$"),T0
civilization. 2+IJ+&0%"!
/&0,+"/0H in an attempt to /" ( ȩ"" ȩ,* 1%" 01,+" 1% 1 constricts them, may thus be interpreted
as
representing
85
Figure 5. Piero di Tomasso Mati, Pastoral Scene, North Wall, Grotta Grande, Boboli Garden, Florence, 1583-85. Figure 6. Piero di Tomasso Mati, Mythological Scene, South Wall, Grotta Grande, Boboli Garden, Florence, 1583-85.
86
0"/3"0 1%" / &+ + do.23
Renaissance garden as well as
The
oppositional
art and nature within a binary
categories of art and nature
system of antitheses suggests
developed
that the Renaissance garden
in
Aristotelian
1%" &+ &)&16 1, IJ5 ,/ ), 1"
thought, and still held by most
did
early
â&#x20AC;&#x153;prevailing
modern
Europeans,
not
cohere
with
the
epistemological
are in the Grotta Grande
and
discursive
structuresâ&#x20AC;?
shattered, for the â&#x20AC;&#x153;realms of art
of the period.26 While art
and nature [are] intertwined
and nature had traditionally
into single objects.â&#x20AC;?24 Jacopo
been seen as separate, in
,+# !&, IJ/01 ") ,/ 1"! ,+ the Renaissance garden this 1%"
,)) ,/ 1&3" ,/ Äł2&! categorization
relationship
between
art
of
opposites
could no longer be applied.
and nature in 1541 when he
Rather,
described
Renaissance
nature â&#x20AC;&#x153;produce something
garden as a â&#x20AC;&#x153;third nature.â&#x20AC;? This
that is neither one nor the
notion was later developed in
other, and is created equally
1559 by Bartolomeo Taegio in
by each.â&#x20AC;?27Art and nature are
his treatise &)) where he
united into an inseparable
wrote, â&#x20AC;&#x153;nature incorporated
whole.
the
together
art
and
with art is made the creator
The notion of a third
and connatural of art and
nature is particularly pertinent
ČŠ,* ,1% &0 * !" 1%&/! to the Grotta Grande, for it is nature, which I would not
best understood as a hybrid
know how to name.â&#x20AC;?25
entity.
The
Within
the
grotto
enigmatic character of the
art and nature contain one
23 Baldwin Brown, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Notes on â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Introductionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to Sculpture,â&#x20AC;? in 0 /& ,+ " %+&.2" 6
&,/$&, 0 /& (New York: Dover Publications, Inc.), 180. 24 Daston and Park, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wonders of Art, Wonders of Nature,â&#x20AC;? 255. 25 Luke Morgan, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Monster in the Garden: The Grotesque, the Gigantic, and the monstrous in Renaissance Landscape Design,â&#x20AC;? 12!&"0 &+ 1%" &01,/6 ,# /!"+0 +! "0&$+"! +!0 -"0I + +1"/+ 1&,+ ) 2 /1"/)6 31, no. 3 (2011): 173.
another so perfectly that they are not only indistinguishable 26 Ibid., 177. 27 Claudia Lazzaro, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Nature and Culture in the Garden,â&#x20AC;? in %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + "
/!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) 1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%" / +! /!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ ) 1 )6H (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 1990), 9.
87
ȩ,* ,+" +,1%"/H 21H "3"+ contemporary
sixteenth-
more poignantly, they are
century French potter and
capable
garden
of
deceiving
the
designer,
Bernard
visitor about their origins.
Palissy imagined his wholly
The “raison d’être” of the
/1&IJ & ) $/,11, 1, " V0,
grotto’s
close to nature, that it would
“hybrid
objects
undermined the nature-art
be
opposition.”28 That which was
[…] holding no appearance
thought to be understood and
neither of form of art, nor
known was subverted in the
of sculpture, nor the labor
Grotta Grande. The constant
of the hand of man.”31 This
oscillation or transformation
also seems to be Buontalenti’s
of art into nature and nature
intent in his Grotta Grande.
into
was
to
describe
something
According to Joscelyn
Bartolomeo Taegio and others
Godwin, the “esoteric goal” of
did “not know how to name,”
1%" IJ/01 % * "/ ,# 1%" /,11
and thus, for a lack of a more
Grande would have urged the
adequate
was
more “philosophical pilgrim,”
described as a “third nature.”
or philosophical viewer, to
Language was incapable of
contemplate “the origin of life
describing that which the
on earth, of humanity, and of
passions felt and the “rational”
the rebirth of the true man.”
mind understood. Lorraine
32
Daston and Katherine Park
illusionary world of the Grotta
both
could
Grande, early modern visitors
and did trespass against the
would have been prompted to
boundary between art and
question their own ontological
nature,
with
understanding of what art
the impact of things seen
and nature were; and whether
with one’s own eyes.”30 The
they themselves, like the men
29
art
impossible
vocabulary,
assert,
but
“words
seldom
28 Daston and Park, “Wonders of Art, Wonders of Nature,” 280. 29 Luke Morgan, “The Monster in the Garden,” 173. 30 Daston and Park, “Wonders of Art,”
Thus immersed within the
and women who emerge out 277. 31 32
Ibid., 286. Godwin, “Grotesqueries,” 148.
88
of the pebbles thrown behind the backs of Deucalion and Phyrra, were in fact born of nature. These
questions
raised and provoked by the play and confusion between art and nature in the Grotta Grande
are
those,
which,
in the seventeenth-century, would lead to the birth of the Age of Reason. Both Francis Bacon and René Descartes, by “appealing to the stock objects of the 2+!"/( **"/+ and grottoes,” would attempt to dissolve the oppositional categories of art and nature IJ/01 -/,-,0"! 6 /&01,1)"F 33
art
This confusion between and
nature,
however,
would continue to inform philosophical debates well up into the eighteenth-century and beyond. 33 292.
Daston and Park, “Wonders of Art,”
89
Bibliography Brown, Baldwin. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Notes on â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Introductionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to Sculpture.â&#x20AC;? In 0 /& ,+ " %+&.2" 6 &,/$&, 0 /&H 179-199.Trans. Louisa S. Maclehose. New York: Dover Publications Inc., 1960. Coombes,
Pamela. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Medici Gardens of Boboli and Luxembourg: Thoughts on their Relationship and Development.â&#x20AC;? Masterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s thesis, McGill University, 1992.
Lazzaro,
Daston, Lorraine and Katherine Park. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wonders of Art, Wonders of Nature.â&#x20AC;? In Wonders +! 1%" /!"/ ,# 12/"I 88<AK8><AH 255302. New York: Zone Books, 1998. Godwin, Joscelyn. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Garden Magic.â&#x20AC;? In %" $ + /" * ,# 1%" "+ &00 + "H 153-180. London: Thames & Hudson Ltd., 2002. Godwin, Joscelyn. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Grotesqueries.â&#x20AC;? In %" $ + /" * ,# 1%" "+ &00 + "H 127-152. London: Thames & Hudson Ltd., 2002. Hunt, John Dixon. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Art and Nature.â&#x20AC;? In /!"+ +! /,3"I %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + "
/!"+ &+ 1%" +$)&0% * $&+ 1&,+I 8=AAK8><AH 90-100. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986. Hunt,
Lazzaro, Claudia. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction.â&#x20AC;? In %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) 1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%" / +! /!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ ) 1 )6H 1-7. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1990.
John Dixon. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Ovid in the Garden.â&#x20AC;? / %&1" 12/ ) 00, & 1&,+ &)"0H no. 3 ( January 1983): 3-11.
Hunt, John Dixon. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Garden on the Grand Tour.â&#x20AC;? In /!"+ +! /,3"I %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+ &+ 1%" +$)&0%
* $&+ 1&,+I 8=AAK8><AH 3-10. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986.
Claudia. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Ornaments of Nature.â&#x20AC;? In %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) 1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%" / +!
/!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ )
1 )6H 47-68. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1990
Lazzaro, Claudia. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Source for Florenceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Water in the Boboli Garden. In %" 1 )& + "+ &00 + " /!"+I /,* 1%" ,+3"+1&,+0 ,# ) 1&+$H "0&$+H +! /+ *"+1 1, 1%"
/ +! /!"+0 ,# &51""+1%K "+12/6 "+1/ ) 1 )6H 191-214. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1990. Miller, Naomi. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Humanist Conceits: Renaissance Gardens.â&#x20AC;? In " 3"+)6 3"0I "Äł" 1&,+0 ,+ 1%" /!"+ /,11,H 35-58. New York: George Braziller, 1982. Morgan, Luke. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Monster in the Garden: The Grotesque, the Gigantic, and the monstrous in Renaissance Landscape Design.â&#x20AC;? In Studies in 1%" &01,/6 ,# /!"+0 +! "0&$+"! +!0 -"0I +
+1"/+ 1&,+ ) 2 /1"/)6 31, no. 3 (2011): 167-180.
Klea Hawkins â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
)" 4(&+0 4&)) " $/ !2 1&+$ 1%&0 6" / ČŠ,* McGill University with a bachelorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s in art history and German language. She has always found the early modern period particularly fascinating, but
Professor
Vanhaelenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
seminar
course,
â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Moving Image,â&#x20AC;? sparked her interest in Renaissance conceptions surrounding art and + 12/"F %" /,11 / +!"H + /1&IJ & ) 3"/+H thus seemed the perfect object of analysis.
91
Where am I, Monet?: The Water Lilies of the Orangerie Through a Phenomenological Lens
By Anthony Portulese
Where am I, Monet?: The Water Lilies of the Orangerie Through a Phenomenological Lens The MusĂŠe de lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Or-
historians tend to discuss the
angerie is a quaint art gallery
entire series as a homogenous
nestled deep within the pic-
* 00 ,# Äł,/ ) ) +!0 -"0F
turesque Tuileries Garden in
Produced during the last few
Paris. Hovering shyly over the
decades of his life, most of
right riverbank of the Seine,
the 1"/ &)"0 are said to re-
1%" / +$"/&" &0 ,ČŞ"+ ,21-
Äł" 1 %&0 -%60& ) %" )1% 1 1%"
shone by its neighbours, the
time. Accordingly, reputable
enormous Louvre and the
recorders of Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s career,
exquisite Orsay. Visitors to
such as Steven Levine, Clara
1%" $ /!"+ /" ,ČŞ"+ 2+ 4 /" Rachman and John House, that an arresting exhibit by
have only ever assessed the
the renowned French impres-
artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s works in a biographical
sionist Claude Monet resides
context. In this essay, I shall
within.
Entitled
6*-%Ĩ 0H pursue a less traditional cri-
the collection consists of a
tique. Through careful obser-
series of oil paintings in-
vation the 6*-%Ĩ 0 murals of
spired by the artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s back-
the Orangerie, I will attempt
yard garden in Giverny â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the
to interpret these works in a
last 1"/ &)&"0 murals ever
manner independent of the
to be created by the artist.
artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life and personal be-
However, tourists and
)&"#0F ,/" 0-" &IJ ))6H 4&))
passersby are not the only
discuss the phenomenologi-
parties to overlook the Water
cal relationship between the
&)&"0 of the Orangerie; they
murals and the viewer and
/" 2/&,20)6 0"+1 ČŠ,* /1 attempt to understand the historical
discourse.
While
6*-%Ĩ 0 in connection to
1%"6 /"-/"0"+1 ,+)6 ČŠ 1&,+ the observerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s perceptual exof the many 1"/ &)&"0 paint-
perience. Ultimately, I pro-
ings completed by Monet, art
pose that 1"/ &)&"0 locks the
93
spectator in an ontological
duced the murals housed in
limbo between imagination
1%" / +$"/&" #,/ 1% 1 0-" &IJ
and reality, triggering a pow-
display, helping to design the
"/#2) !&0"* ,!&*"+1 ČŠ,* room, establish the lighting the self. It is in this inter-
and request that the 6*-%Ĩ 0
mediate space, where all cul-
remain
turally and politically biased
non-travelling
methods of interpretation are
According to biographer John
assuaged, that the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
,20"H -/&,/ 1, 1%" ,ČŻ & )
6*-%Ĩ 0
obtains
a
permanent, exposition.01
its
phe-
grand opening, Monet told
worth.
This
,+" ,# 1%" "5%& &1T0 IJ/01 3&0-
essay will therefore be less
itors that the paintings â&#x20AC;&#x153;only
concerned with what these
acquire their full value by the
murals â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;sayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to the viewer, but
comparison and succession
more so with what they â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;doâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
of the whole series.â&#x20AC;?02 To this
through the physical and sen-
! 6H 1%,0" 0-" &IJ 1"/ &)&"0
sual response they provoke.
survive in the same group-
nomenological
ing that Monet had intended Part I: The Exhibition What
distinguish-
es this particular 1"/ &)&"0
and planned when he painted them. As such, it is reasonable to argue that the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 6*-%Ĩ 0 collection
consti-
,))" 1&,+ ČŠ,* 1%" !,7"+0 121"0 !"3& 1&,+ ČŠ,* ,+of others within Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rep-
ventional grouping of the art-
ertoire exists in the layout of
istâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s botanical-themed works.
the museum itself. When the
MusĂŠe
de
+ &*-,/1 +1 IJ/01 01"-
lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Orangerie IJ/01 in unravelling the phenom-
,-"+"! &+ 8@9>H IJ+" /1 ,+-
enological undertones of the
noisseurs were surprised to
Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)&"0 is to
learn that Monet had played
discuss the role of the exhibi-
a large role in the exhibitâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s preparation. In fact, he pro-
01 Â John House, ,+"1I /,* 12/" &+1, Art (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986), 213. 02
Ibid.
94
tion space in the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ex-
en the real distance between
change with the works of art.
the images and the observer
The solid, unpresumptuous
and create the illusion of a
4%&1" 4 ))0H Äł,,/H +! "&)&+$ â&#x20AC;&#x153;single, continuous canvas.â&#x20AC;?03 eliminate distractions and di-
Accordingly, the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
rect the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s complete fo-
four 1"/ &)&"0 will be hereto
cus onto the artwork. A faint,
ČŞ"/ " /"#"//"! 0 0,)" &*-
scattered daytime light is dis-
age, painting, artwork, et cet-
sipated through a double-glass
era in order to demonstrate
"&)&+$ +! !&ȳ 1"! &+ the idea of singular unity 4 6 1% 1 "+02/"0 +, /1&IJ & ) among the individual pieces shadow is cast upon the sur-
of this particular collection.
face of the 6*-%Ĩ 0, prevent-
The gaps between the
ing any distortion of colour
paintings heightens the con-
(Fig. 6). Displayed in thin gold
tinuity between them. While
ČŠ *"0 1% 1 ")&*&+ 1" 1%" /-
two of the gaps form arch-
rier between wall and paint-
ways to a white round cor-
&+$H 1%" *2/ )0 IJ)) 1%" 3&"4-
ridor, the other two consist
erâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s entire perceptual space.
,# 0* ))H *,2Äł $"! !,,/0
In conjunction with
in the wall. When a viewer
expositional
features,
is inside the room, he or she
the ovular dimensions of the
perceives the ovular wall as
/,,* &10")# &+Äł2"+ " 1%" , -
a uniform white surface and
serverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s experiential encoun-
becomes optically trapped and
ter with the paintings. The
immersed within the space.
elliptical rondure of the space
This ultimate â&#x20AC;&#x153;garden rotun-
induces a strong panoram-
! W "ČŹ" 1 /" 1"0 - +,/ *-
these
& "ČŹ" 1 *,+$ 1%" *2/ )0F ic aesthetic, which places the The fact that all of the mu-
viewer inside the work of art,
rals share a common height
/ 1%"/ 1% + &+ ČŠ,+1 ,# &1F04
#2/1%"/ &+1"+0&IJ"0 1%&0 "ȏ" 1F This feature helps to less-
03 Oliver Grau, &/12 ) /1I /,*
))201/ 1&,+ 1, **"/0&,+ (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003), 141. 04
Amanda Boetzkes, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Phenomenology
95
Now that the role of
Part II: Colour
the exhibition space and the intentional continuity of the image has been established, we can begin a phenomenological analysis of Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s artwork in the Orangerie. In order to better understand the perceptual exchange between the spectator and the painting, this essay will analyze two major components of the exhibition: colour and composition. This pair of distinct qualities will be explored in accordance with phenomenology, where meaning is de/&3"! ČŠ,* 1%" *,!" &+ 4%& % the viewer interacts with and interprets the work of art, or in other words, the subjective, reciprocal experience of the viewer with that work of art. This philosophy shall thenceforth be employed to explain the observerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s relationship with the piece and elaborate on his or her experiential comprehension of the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)&"0. and Interpretation beyond the Flesh,â&#x20AC;? Journal of Art History 32, no. 4 (2009), 697.
As is the case with several Impressionist artists and their works, Monet employed a technique of contrast in the 6*-%Ĩ 0. The many colours found in the mural evoke the appearance of changing light through
opposing
colours
without the use of dark tones or shadows.05 This creates the /"0-)"+!"+1 "ČŹ" 1 ,# + 12/ ) light on the waterscape of 1"/ &)&"0H which adds a tem-,/ ) Äł,4 1, 1%" &* $" +! gives life to the water. The painting presents a delicate and complex combination of various hues of pink, blue, green, yellow, brown and orange, which collectively contribute to the strong earthly sensuality of the whole piece. The
close
resemblance
of
these colours to those found in nature strike up a visceral response within the observer.06 The unique positioning of colours both beside and 05 Lionello Venturi, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Aesthetic Idea of Impressionism,â&#x20AC;? Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 1, no. 1 (1941), 35. 06 Â Paul Crowther, %" %"+,*"+,),$6 ,# ,!"/+ /1I 5-),!&+$ ")"27" +! ))2*&+ 1&+$ Style (London: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2012), 111.
97
Figure 6. 6*-%Ĩ 0 permanent exhibition (facing the west wall), Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris, France.
98
within one another in Water
ings.08 These lone colours do
&)&"0 q4&1%,21 !"IJ+&1&3" ,/-
not exist in the same percep-
ders in the water-air space, as
tual complex as those placed
the strong colours of the tree
beside other colours, even if
bark and leaves are hugged by
they are optically identical.09
1%" 0,ČŞ"/ ,),2/0 ,# 1%" 4 -
In the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)-
1"/H Äł,4"/0 +! 0(6r /" 1"0 ies, a similar principle occurs ,)! -/"0"+ " 1% 1 &0 !&ČŻ-
through
cult to visually organize. The
,# ,+1/ 01H 4%& % *,!&IJ"0
piece transforms the care-
the actual colours observed
fully modulated colour pas-
in the natural landscape. The
sages into spatial masses and
challenge to visually isolate
relations that are expressed
and
through
lours gives rise to a sense of
facets
of
colour.07
this
phenomenon
contextualize
the
co-
Moreover, the 360° invasion
animated
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;atmosphereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
by
of this chromatic destabiliza-
breaking up the tones of the
tion allows the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s eyes
painting and appearing to de-
to use the artworkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s coalesc-
materialize the work in or-
ing array of colours to â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;feelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
!"/ 1, IJ5 1%" 1"/ &)&"0 in
the nature rather than â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;seeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
1%" 3&"4"/T0 -"/ "-12 ) IJ")!F
it, thus permitting a sense of
It should be noted that
physical movement and cor-
several art historians have
poral relation to the painting.
taken a more biographical
As
discussed
by
approach, arguing that Mon-
French philosopher Maurice
"1T0 02ČŹ"/&+$ ČŠ,* 1 / 10 &0
Merleau-Ponty, the colours of
responsible for this degree of
any arbitrary image are not
visual distortion on his pan-
the same colours that are indi-
els. However, a curious para-
vidually applied onto the can-
dox presents itself, for Monet
vas â&#x20AC;&#x201C; that is, colours that are
underwent two surgeries in
&0,) 1"! ČŠ,* 1%"&/ 02//,2+!07 Crowther, %" %"+,*"+,),$6 ,# ,!"/+ /1, 117.
08 Crowther, %" %"+,*"+,),$6 ,# ,!"/+ /1, 111. 09 Venturi, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Aesthetic Idea of Impressionism,â&#x20AC;? 35.
99
1923 that â&#x20AC;&#x201C; according to noted
within the unity of the four
Monet historian Carla Rach-
actual paintings and their spe-
man â&#x20AC;&#x201C; alleviated his symp-
&IJ ), 1&,+0 ,+ 1%" 4 ))0F
toms.10 Moreover, several Wa-
SÄł,4 ,# ,),2/ 3 )2"T /"#"/0 1,
1"/ &)&"0 pieces produced both
an optical spectrum of rela-
-/&,/ 1, +! ČŞ"/ %&0 !& $+,0&0 tive lightness and darkness of in 191211 contain stylistically
,),2/ 1% 1 0%&ČŞ0 +! !/&3"0
similar colour and structural
the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s gaze all around
motifs. While the condition
the artwork12, enabling the
* 6 % 3" ČŹ" 1"! %&0 4,/( &+ 3&"4"/T0 11"+1&,+ 1, Äł,4 some way, it is contentious to
ČŠ,* *2/ ) 1, *2/ ) 4&1%,21
presume that the dense and
+6 "ČŹ,/1 ,/ ! * $" 1, 0"+0,-
jumpy brushstrokes are not
ry experience (for argumentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
simply a part of Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s style
sake, only in this portion of
as an Impressionist painter,
the paper shall the 1"/ &)-
but rather the consequenc-
ies of the Orangerie be refer-
es of illness. It would be al-
enced in the plural). Let us
most
conclude
envision a viewer in the Or-
that Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cataracts were
angerie standing at the ovular
wholly responsible for the
roomâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s centre, at the inter-
fuzziness of colour contours
section of a theoretical hor-
in 1"/ &)&"0 post-surgery,
izontal and vertical axis (the
particularly
%,/&7,+1 ) 5&0 /2+0 ČŠ,* 1%"
cavalier
to
those
murals
destined for the Orangerie. The
6*-%Ĩ 0
not
west wall to the east wall, and 1%" 3"/1& ) 5&0 /2+0 ČŠ,* 1%"
only stir up feelings of inte-
north wall to the south wall),
gration into nature with its
4%"/" 1%" - +,/ *& "ČŹ" 1
colour contrast and assort-
of the garden rotunda would
*"+1H 21 - /1& 2) / SÄł,4 be at its maximum potential of colour valueâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; seems to exist 10 Â Carla Rachman, ,+"1 (London: Phaidon Press Limited, 1997), 340. 11
Rachman, ,+"1, 339.
(Fig. 5). If this viewer were to stare at one of the two â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;westâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 12 Venturi, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Aesthetic Idea of Impressionism,â&#x20AC;? 35.
and â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;eastâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 1"/ &)&"0 paintings (Fig. 1 & Fig. 3), perceive its colour value, and then make a 180°-turn to the painting on the polar opposite end of the ovular room, his or her eye would perceive the polar opposite colour value. The same
Figure 1. West Wall: Claude Monet. 6*-%Ĩ 0 M "Äł"10 !T / /"0, 1920-1926, oil on canvas 200 x 850 cm, MusĂŠe de lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Orangerie, Paris, France. Figure 2. South Wall: Claude Monet. 6*-%Ĩ 0 M " * 1&+ ) &/ 25 0 2)"0, 1920-1926, oil on canvas, 200 x 1275 cm, MusĂŠe de lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Orangerie, Paris, France. Figure 3. East Wall: Claude Monet. 6*-%Ĩ 0 M "0 !"25 0 2)"0, 1920-1926, oil on canvas, 200 x 1700 cm, MusĂŠe de lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Orangerie, Paris, France. Figure 4. North Wall: Claude Monet. 6*-%Ĩ 0 M " * 1&+ 25 0 2)"0, 1920-1926, oil on canvas, 200 x 1275 cm, MusĂŠe de lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Orangerie, Paris, France.
"ČŹ" 1 --" /0 &# 1%" 3&"4-
viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s gaze is perpendicular
er follows a similar rotation
to the horizontal axis), then
in observing the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;southâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; and
make a 180°-turn to the oth-
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;northâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 1"/ &)&"0 murals (Fig.
er long painting in the ovu-
2 & Fig. 4). However, if that
lar room, their eyes would
viewer were to observe one
perceive the exact same co-
of the north or south Water
lour value as they did on the
&)&"0 paintings in the room,
previous long painting. This
but this time at its centre (or
phenomenon illustrates the
any other point so long as the
existence of a continuous belt
101
of colour value that compels
liquescence of the structural
the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s gaze around the
and compositional elements
room continuously without
of the mural. The brown
any beginning or end to the
tree trunks sweep vertically
optical value spectrum. This
across the imageâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s docile wa-
sensation prompts a strong
ters; their willow leaves fall
experience of physical move-
ČŠ,* 2+0""+ / + %"0 +!
ment within the artwork and
slide down the canvas in long,
the spectator, enlivening the
powerful strokes of luscious
reciprocal
be-
greens. The trees help to con-
tween them.13 Furthermore,
stitute the foreground of the
the never-ending rotation of
painting and bring the viewer
the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s focus, trapped
into relative proximity to the
within the value spectrum of
scene of nature that encircles
the painting, temporarily in-
them. The background of the
activates the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s normal
lily pond dominates the art-
motor coordination by hin-
work and occupies most of
dering the bodyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ability to
1%" 3&"4"/T0 -"/ "-12 ) IJ")!F
connection
!"IJ+" &10")# &+ /") 1&,+ 1, 1%" %" Ȋ $&)" )&)6 - !0H $"+space around it.14 Ultimately,
1)" Äł,4"/0H +! 1%"&/ ),,0"
the observer becomes disasso-
petals delicately caress the
& 1"! ČŠ,* %&*0")# ,/ %"/0")# 02/# " ,# 1%" 4&+!K/2Ȳ"! â&#x20AC;&#x201C; or â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;lostâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; â&#x20AC;&#x201C; in the work of art. Part III: Composition
4 1"/H 4%& % /"Äł" 10 !2)) )&$%1 ČŠ,* 1%" ),2!6 0(6 +! humid air (which is evident
A second distinct fea-
through the moist quality of
ture of Impressionist art that
the colours). It is this aquatic
emerges when observing the
structural motif in 1"/ &)&"0,
Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)&"0 is the
the blurring of what is identi-
13 Boetzkes, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Phenomenology and Interpretation beyond the Flesh,â&#x20AC;? 694, 708. 14 Crowther, %" %"+,*"+,),$6 ,# ,!"/+ /1, 124.
IJ )" &+ 1%" *2/ ) +! 4% 1 is not15, that gives life to the 15 Forrest Williams, â&#x20AC;&#x153;CĂŠzanne and French Phenomenology,â&#x20AC;? Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 12, no. 4 (1954), 485.
102
painting’s illusive, bodily ef-
of natural environment and
fect. The water, sky, and even
the viewer’s mental impres-
the lilies lose all of their dis-
sion overcomes the laws of
tinct contours, and mesh into
gravity in the space of the
one
motif.
image, and permits an out-
In the futile attempt to com-
of-body experience for the
partmentalize these indiscrete
viewer.18 %" /"+!"/"! "Ȭ" 1
contours, the observer’s mind
is that the viewer feels as if
becomes entangled with the
1%"6 /" ij, 1&+$ ,3" 1%"
artwork in a sort of limbo
epicentre of the lake, rather
where subconscious contem-
than standing along its pe-
-) 1&,+ ij,2/&0%"0 +! )) -/"-
riphery or submerged within
conceived, conscious notions
it. The viewer does not travel
or assumptions of the artwork
around the lake. Instead, the
or its meaning are thereby
lake travels around the view-
non-categorical
eliminated. %" 3&"4"/ IJ+!0 er. As with the blurring con16
%&*0")# ,/ %"/0")# ,+ȩ,+1-
tours of colour and the value
"! 6 1%&0 4 1"/6 0 "+" ȩ,* spectrum contained within all angles and is immersed
the mural, the viewer is once
into the space of the image
again perceptually ‘lost’ with-
with an indeterminate per-
in 6*-%Ĩ 0 as he or she and
spective. Forced out of their
the artwork fuse together.
inner, secure distance – their
The observer has now giv-
sense of form, perspective
en up the distanced role of
and colour blurred, and their
‘viewer,’ who simply looks
familiar view of near and far
at a painting, to one encased
, 0 2/"! M 1%" 3&"4"/ !/&Ȫ0 within the orchestrated exinto the exclusivity of the water landscape . The synthesis 17
perience created by the artist. Part
16 Boetzkes, “Phenomenology and Interpretation beyond the Flesh,” 691. 17
Grau, &/12 ) /1, 142.
IV:
Closing
Colour 18
Remarks
and
Grau, &/12 ) /1, 142-3.
compo-
103
sition have both played predominant roles in evaluating the meaning of the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)&"0. A major way in which a viewer interprets a work of art is in his or her physical reaction to the art-
Figure 5. Colour Value Spectrum of the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 6*-%Ĩ 0
1"/ &)&"0â&#x20AC;&#x2122; various uses of colour and valueH along with its structural obscurity and indecisiveness, allows for the spectator to lose his or her
work itself. It is clear that
awareness of self while tem-
within the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s psyche of
seum, yet not quite in Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)&"0 porarily existing in an intergenerate a dynamic struggle mediate place: not in the muperception and sensual experience and what is realistic and objective versus what is
garden. This disembodiment of the viewer, summoned by a removal of perceived rational-
illusionistic and subjective.19
ity, leads to the development
19 Forrest Williams, â&#x20AC;&#x153;CĂŠzanne and French Phenomenology,â&#x20AC;? 485-6.
4%, IJ+!0 %&*0")# ,/ %"/0")#
of a single image-observer
104
encapsulated in a realm that
cernment and appreciation of
is somewhere between our
works beyond the time con-
world and the world of the
straints and stylistic bound-
painting. As the viewer is ab-
aries of the postmodern age.
20
sorbed within the quasi-natural biosphere of the mural, the Orangerieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1"/ &)&"0 collection lures the observer into an ambiguous place between his or her sense of imagination and his or her sense of reality. It is my hope that this essay has illuminated the unexplored methods of study for this famous collection of iconic Impressionist works, and quite possibly for all of the 1"/ &)&"0 panels that Monet produced during his lifetime. Moreover, I hope to have provided new insight into phenomenological techniques that are clearly applicable to Monetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work and the works of other artists ČŠ,* 1%" *-/"00&,+&01 "/ F Undoubtedly, the MusĂŠe de lâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Orangerie is a predecessor of installation art and aids in deducing the relevance of subjective experience in our dis20 Boetzkes, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Phenomenology and Interpretation beyond the Flesh,â&#x20AC;? 710.
105
Bibliography Boetzkes, Amanda. “Phenomenology and Interpretation beyond the Flesh.” Journal of Art History 32, no. 4 (September 2009): 690-711. Crowther, Paul. %" %"+,*"+,),$6 ,# ,!"/+ /1I 5-),!&+$ ")"27" +! ))2*&+ 1&+$ Style. London: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2012. Grau, Oliver. &/12 ) /1I /,* ))201/ 1&,+ 1, **"/sion. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003. House, John. ,+"1I /,* 12/" &+1, /1F New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986. Rachman,
Carla. ,+"1F on Press
London: Limited,
Phaid1997.
Venturi, Lionello. “The Aesthetic Idea of Impressionism.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 1, no. 1 (Spring 1941): 34-45. Williams, Forrest. “Cézanne and French Phenomenology.” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 12, no. 4 ( June 1954): 481-492.
Anthony Portulese —
Anthony Portulese is a second-year Pharmacology student
with
a
minor
in
Art
History.
),+$0&!" %&0 0 &"+1&IJ * &1&,+0H %" !"3"),-"! #"/3&! &+1"/"01 +! --/" & 1&,+ #,/ /1 ȩ,* + early age and throughout his youth spent much time reading about Monet and the Impressionists. He is immensely excited to share his thoughts on 1%" IJ+ ) 4,/(0 ,# %&0 # 3,2/&1" /1&01 &+ +3 0F
107
Who Carries the Big Stick? The Regulation of Canadian Pornography
By Vidal Wu
Who Carries the Big Stick? The Regulation of Canadian Pornography It may come as a sur-
regulatory system.01 The com-
prise to note that the Canadi-
bination of social conserva-
an Radio-television and Tele-
tism and legislative inertia
communications Commission
has led to the scattershot con-
is involved in the production
sideration of pornography by
and regulation of Canadian
various government bodies.
pornography (or in broad-
Moreover, pornography and,
casting parlance, “adult con-
subsequently, societal stan-
1"+1WrJ Ȫ"/ ))H &1 &0 0&*-)6 dards for pornography and another type of content that
other adult content, is a polit-
is distributed through tele-
& ) *&+"IJ")! 4&1% # / *,/"
vision,
telecommunications,
-,)&1& ) -&1# ))0 1, " 02Ȭ"/"!
radio and other communica-
1% + -/,IJ10 1, " "+',6"!F
tive technologies, thus fall-
In this essay, I would
ing under the jurisdiction of
like to survey the overlapping
the Broadcasting Act of 1991.
/"$2) 1,/6 ȩ *"4,/(0 1% 1
However, an otherwise banal
work to control the produc-
administrative formality has
tion and distribution of Cana-
revealed the more surprising
dian pornography and sexual-
lack of legislation surround-
ly explicit content. By drawing
ing the production, distribu-
a conceptual map of the or-
tion, standards and regula-
ganizational bodies, I would
tion of pornography. This can
like to suggest a number of
partially be attributed to the
implications that suggest a
historical tendency of tech-
0%&Ȫ &+ 0, &"1 ) 3&"40 1,4 /!0
nology to outstrip the law’s
liberalization, or an otherwise
ability to deal with pornogra-
more tolerant view of sex and
phy, especially as new media
pornography. I would like to
falls outside of the Canadian
01 Michael Kanter, /,%& &1 ,/ "$2) 1"DI %" / 0"/ "-,/1 +! "4 --/, %"0 1, ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ (Toronto: Osgoode Hall Law Journal, 1985), 177.
109
make explicit the inconsis-
,+1"+1W &0 ,Ȫ"+ 20"! &+
tent way in which pornogra-
terms of community stan-
phy is irregularly regulated
dards and regulation, each
/,00 !&Ȭ"/"+1 '2/&0!& 1&,+0 with their own disadvantages. and in doing so, highlight
These semantic and termi-
some
turning
nological issues intersect in
points that have worked to
ways that complicate existing
inform how Canadians and
problems in federal jurispru-
our government think about
dence which “trickle down”
pornography. Through this, I
into
would like to suggest a new
to
important
provincial
approaches
pornography
regulation.
conception of pornography
The principal problem
that acknowledges its social
with “pornography” lies in
and economic contribution
its hazy etymology and per-
to the Canadian media land-
0&01"+1 /"0&01 + " 1, !"IJ+&-
scape, and call for its con-
tion; the resulting ambiguity
sideration
% 0 -/"3"+1"! &1 ȩ,* "&+$
alongside
other
forms of Canadian content. There
general
prudence, certainly a prob-
consensus that the legisla-
lem not unique to Canada.
tive and common vernacular
Established in 1983, the Spe-
used to discuss pornography,
cial Committee on Pornog-
obscenity or adult content is
raphy and Prostitution (oth-
either inadequate, antiquat-
erwise known as The Fraser
ed or both. Despite its wide-
Committee) declined to pro-
spread
3&!" 4,/(&+$ !"IJ+&1&,+ ,#
use,
is
a
"Ȭ" 1&3")6 !"-),6"! &+ '2/&0-
“pornography”
% 0 /"* &+"! 2+!"IJ+"! +! “pornography” for its public is perhaps, all the better for
hearings, stating that “[they]
it. That said, “pornography”
believed that one of the im-
and “obscenity” are general-
portant functions of the pub-
ly used in federal and crimi-
)& %" /&+$0 4 0 1, )" /+ ȩ,*
nal literature, whereas “adult
Canadians how they used the
110
term and what sort of material their usage encompassed.â&#x20AC;?02 Generally, pornography was seen to fall on either side of the spectrum; on one hand, pornography as merely sexually explicit with little to no emphasis on violence or forbidden (that is, illegal) acts, and on the other, pornography with a message of sexual exploitation and degradation, â&#x20AC;&#x153;with [a] portrayal of men as aggressors and women as subordinate.â&#x20AC;?03 A 2007 Parliamentary report summarizes the challenge:04
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Some people consider any depiction of nudity ,/ 0"52 ) 1&3&16 1, " -,/+,$/ -%& F % 1 &0 , '" 1&,+ )" 1, ,1%"/0H %,4"3"/H &0 +,1 0"52 ) ,+1"+1 -"/ 0"H ,/ S"/,1& HT 4%& % !"-& 10 +,/* ) ,+0"+02 ) 0"52 ) 1&3&16H 21 * 1"/& ) &+ 4%& % ,+" ,/ *,/" - /1& &- +10 /" !"*" +"!H !"$/ !"! ,/ 20"! &+ 0,*" * ++"/F ,/+,$/ -%6H ,/!&+$ 1, 1%&0 3&"4H &0 * 1"/& ) 1% 1 ,+!,+"0 ,/ encourages sexual debasement. Such a distinc1&,+ 210 /,00 ,+3"+1&,+ ) !"IJ+&1&,+0 " 20" &1 *" +0 1% 1 3"/6 "5-)& &1 0"52 ) !"-& 1&,+0 + " ))"! S"/,1& HT 4%&)" 0"52 ) * 1"/& ) 4&1% /") 1&3")6 2+"5-)& &1 21 !"*" +&+$ ,+1"+1 + " ))"! S-,/+,$/ -%6FT 1 1%" 0 *" 1&*"H *2 % ,+3"+1&,+ ) -,/+,$/ -%6 !"-& 10 + ("! 4,*"+H and it is argued that such material perpetrates &* $"0 ,# 4,*"+ 0 0"52 ) , '" 10 +!H 1%20H + 3& 1&*&7" 4,*"+ !&/" 1)6 +! &+!&/" 1)6FW
02 Canada. ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ &+ + ! I "-,/1 ,# 1%" -" & ) ,**&11"" ,+ ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+F qOttawa: Minister of Supply and Services Canada, 1985) 9. 03 ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ &+ + ! H @F 04 Lyne Casavant and James R. Robertson, %" 3,)21&,+ ,# ,/+,$/ -%6 4 &+ + ! (Ottawa: Parliamentary Information and Research Service: Current Issue Review).
111
Current federal legislation re-
IJ+!0 ,*- / )" *"/& +
ij" 10 1%&0 ,+#20&,+H 4&1% 1%" example in the Miller test determ “pornography” only ap-
veloped in the &))"/ 3F )&#,/-
pearing once in Section 163.1
nia (1973), also known as the
of the Criminal Code of Canada
Three Prong Obscenity Test. It
in reference to child pornog-
consists of three parts: wheth-
raphy. Instead, “obscenity” is
er the average person would
,Ȫ"+ ") ,/ 1"! 0 /, !"/ IJ+! 1% 1 1%" 4%,)" 4,/( -category that while lacking in
peals to a “lewd curiosity,”
0-" &IJ &16H &0 0,*"4% 1 20"-
whether the work depicts or
#2) 0 ij"5& )" 01 +! /! 1% 1 !"0 /& "0H &+ + ,Ȭ"+0&3" 4 6H /"0-,+!0 1, 0%&Ȫ0 &+ -2 )& sexual conduct (or excretory acceptance: “Any publication
functions), and whether the
a dominant characteristic of
work lacks serious literary,
which is the undue exploita-
/1&01& H -,)&1& ) ,/ 0 &"+1&IJ
tion of sex, or of sex and any
3 )2"F &$+&IJ +1 %"/" &+ ,1%
one or more of the following
the Canadian and American
subjects, namely, crime, hor-
standards for obscenity is an
ror, cruelty and violence, shall
emphasis on contemporary
be deemed to be obscene.”05
community standards of tol-
What is considered “undue
erance, which informs much
exploitation” has been the
of the regulatory apparatus-
subject of cases like F 3F Butler
es surrounding adult con-
(1992), in which the Supreme
tent rather than the explicit
Court noted that the Commu-
act or depiction of sex itself.
nity Standards Test concerns
Other than the Crim-
itself primarily with what Ca-
inal Code, Canada Customs is
nadians would tolerate other
the only other federal means
Canadians to be exposed to.
for the control of sexually ex-
The Community Stan-
plicit material. In 1895, the
! /!0 1"01 ȩ,* F 3F 21)"/
department created an inter-
05 8.
Criminal Code of Canada, 1985 s 163-
nally circulated list of banned
112
books and periodicals that, by
&0 !"$/"" ,# % /* &+Äł& 1-
the listâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s suspension in 1958,
ed by â&#x20AC;&#x153;obsceneâ&#x20AC;? materials, to
had accumulated more than
who or in what way is un-
1,100 titles. The list was nev-
clear. However, there is a fo-
er released publicly and had
cus on disproportionate harm
no organized review process
towards children and partic-
or any established criteria
ularly women. AdditionallyH
for determining material of
jurisprudence has provided a le-
â&#x20AC;&#x153;immoral or indecentâ&#x20AC;? char-
gal precedent similar to that of
acter.06 In 1985, these pow-
other countries for determin-
ers were deemed to apply
ing community standards of
to a broader range of mate-
tolerance. Canada Customs has
rials by administrative ac-
also been historically invested
tion than criminal prosecu-
in the control of sexually ex-
tion (or in other words, the
plicit material. Together, these
â&#x20AC;&#x153;obscenityâ&#x20AC;?
and
organized policies and bod-
thus incompatible with the
&"0N ),+$0&!" 1%" Canadian
Charter. The
201,*0 /&ČŹ
% /1"/ ,# &$%10 +! /""!,*0
was subsequently amended
and the /, ! 01&+$ 1Npro-
standard)
1, /"Äł" 1 1%" /&*&+ ) ,!"H 3&!" *2 % ,# 1%" )"$ ) ČŠ *"and i0 01&)) &+ "ČŹ" 1 1,! 6F07 , /&"Äły summarize, on the federal level, there are 0"3"/ ) 0&$+&IJ +1 1,/0 +! policies that inform the governmentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s position on pornography and sexually explicit content. First, the Criminal Code acknowledges that there 06 Christopher Gudgeon, %" ("! /21%I %" +1,)! 1,/6 ,# "5 &+ + ! (Vancouver: Greystone Books) 164. 07 Lyne Casavant and James R. Robertson, %" 3,)21&,+ ,# ,/+,$/ -%6 4 &+ Canada.
work that informs more localized forms of regulation. Provincial
controls
more directly target the control of pornographic materials. There are currently seven -/,3&+ & ) IJ)* , /!0 1% 1 assign
ratings,
information
pieces, and license distributors, theatres and in some cases, retailers: British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Alber-
113
ta, Manitoba, Ontario, Que-
02/-/&0&+$)6 IJ"/ " -2 )& ,--
bec and the Maritimes (New
position, the OFRBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s powers
Brunswick, Nova Scotia and
were challenged under Sec-
Prince Edward Island). For-
tion 2(b)â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s new provisions of
merly known as the provin-
the Charter. In March 1983,
cial Board of Censors, the
the Ontario Divisional Court
Ontario Film Review Boardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
found that the Boardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s power
policies and legal challenges
1, !")"1" ,/ + IJ)*0 *201 "
set the precedent for provin-
supported by explicit guide-
cial review agencies across
lines which do not abridge the
the country. Established by
% /1"/T0 ČŠ""!,* ,# "5-/"0-
the Theatres and Cinematog-
sion. The court upheld that
raphers Act of 1911, the Board
direct
dealt primarily with protect-
under the federal criminal
&+$ %&)!/"+ ČŠ,* 1%" V ,/-
jurisdiction, and as a result,
/2-1&+$ +! &**,/ )W &+Äł2-
the Board changed its focus
prohibition
remains
"+ " ,# IJ)*0H )" !&+$ 1, 1%" Ȋ,* "+0,/0%&- 1, ) 00&IJ precedent-setting
establish-
tion. However, as Taryn Sirove
*"+1 ,# 1%" IJ)* ) 00&IJ 1&,+ noted in her study of Ontario system in the 1940s and the
IJ)* /"$2) 1&,+H 1%" /"02)1&+$
more explicit censorship of
action by the Board mere-
&*-,/1"! IJ)*0 &+ 1%" 8@<A0F08
ly â&#x20AC;&#x153;cloaked the powers [the
It wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t until 1981 that the
OFRB] retained to cut and ban
Act was enforced in order
3&!", +! IJ)*H +! 1%" 02 0"-
to require that independent
quent enabling legislation, &))
IJ)*0H &+ !!&1&,+ 1, 4&!")6 ?9H + 1 1, *"+! 1%" +1 /&, !&01/& 21"! * &+01/" * IJ)*0H %" 1/"0 1H actually expanded undergo Board review pri-
the Boardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s reach to include
or to screening.09 Sparking a
1%" ) 00&IJ 1&,+ ,# )) %,*"
08 Eric Veilette, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The day Shakespeare was banned,â&#x20AC;? Toronto Star. August 20, 2010. 09 Taryn Sirove. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Freedom, Sex & Power: Film/Video Regulation in Ontarioâ&#x20AC;? I / !2 1" ,2/+ ) ,# /1 &01,/6H &02 ) /1 and Theory (2008): 32.
video.â&#x20AC;?10 To add to the secrecy, the Board has never pub10 Sirove, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Film/Video Regulation in Ontario,â&#x20AC;? 33.
114
licly released its criterion for
the notion of diversity as a
"+0,/&+$H ) 00&ȫ&+$ ,/ --
criterion of inclusion and ex-
-/,3&+$ IJ)*0 #,/ !&01/& 21&,+F clusion.”12 Third, censorship Sirove notes a number
amounts to a process of (de)
of critical issues that arose as
legitimation that among other
a result, namely the implicit
things, denotes a Western co-
institutionalization of value
lonial bias, especially towards
judgments about pornogra-
sexually
phy and art that the OFRB
used in artistic practices.13
represents, and the Board’s
explicit
The
other
content primary
tactic of limiting distribu-
issue raised pertains to the
tion through fee structures
OFRB’s practice of requiring
to avoid making those value
, /! --/,3 )H ) 00&IJ 1&,+
'2!$*"+10 "5-)& &1F %" IJ/01 and a fee for those services issue is articulated in three
prior to the distribution of a
points. First, the provision of
IJ)*F
exemptions to “high art” in-
website, the Board “screens all
stitutions reinforces a distinc-
!2)1 0"5 IJ)*0 &+
tion between art and everyday
with guidelines dealing with
life that depoliticizes alterna-
areas such as consent, physi-
tive images for their “artful-
cal abuse, coercion, humilia-
ness” and limits their use in
tion, degradation, and so on,”
active discourse.11 Second, in
echoing language used in the
response to right-wing femi-
Criminal Code regarding ob-
nist oppositions to all censor-
scenity. This regulatory mea-
ship, Sirove argues that “op-
02/" "Ȭ" 1&3")6 , 0 2/"0 1%"
position to censorship serves
value system implicit in the
,/!&+$ 1, 1%" ,/! + "
+,1 1, $2 / +1"" !&3"/0&16 ȩ"" approval process, supporting of censorship, but to regulate
Sirove’s suggestion that fee
membership in the critical
structures
community by appealing to 11 Sirove, “Film/Video Regulation in Ontario,” 36.
approximate
the
12 Sirove, “Film/Video Regulation in Ontario,” 41. 13 Sirove, “Film/Video Regulation in Ontario,” 44.
115
powers of federal jurisdic-
tual and emotional equality of
tion by exercising power over
both sexes in programming.â&#x20AC;?
IJ)*T0 !&01/& 21&,+ / 1%"/ While referencing the supple1% + /"$2) 1&+$ 1%" IJ)* &10")#F mentary Sex-Role Portrayal In addition to government
bodies,
Code for Television and Radio
industry
Programming, the CAB draws
associations also apply regu-
their conception of exploita-
lations and standards to the
1&,+ ČŠ,* )"$ ) -/" "!"+1H
distribution of adult content.
- /1& 2) /)6 ČŠ,* 1%" ,+ "-1
Chief among them is the Ca-
of â&#x20AC;&#x153;undue exploitationâ&#x20AC;? that is
nadian Broadcast Standards
thought to disproportionately
Council (CAB), an indepen-
ČŹ" 1 4,*"+ +! %&)!/"+ &+
dent, non-governmental or-
the Criminal Code. While there
ganization that administers
is a common perception that
standards to private broad-
there is a degree of â&#x20AC;&#x153;harmâ&#x20AC;?
casters. Of particular interest
01"**&+$ ČŠ,* 3&,)"+1 +!m
is their Code of Ethics, which
or
indirectly refers to adult con-
women, there is a lack of con-
tent in two instances: Sex-
sensus amongst feminist cri-
Role Stereotyping (Clause 3)
tiques as to the nature of this
and Television Broadcasting
harm, and moreover, it is rec-
(Clause 10). Clause 3 states that
ognized that statistical and ex-
â&#x20AC;&#x153;recognizing that stereotyp-
perimental evidence is unable
ing images can and do have a
to establish a causal link be-
demeaning
images
of
+"$ 1&3" "ČŹ" 1H &1 0% )) " 1%" tween pornography and harm responsibility of broadcasters
towards women.14 This repli-
to exhibit, to the best of their
cates the same issue of deter-
ability, a conscious sensitivity
mining what exploitation is,
to the problems related to sex-
and how it operates within a
/,)" 01"/",16-&+$H 6 /"ČŠ &+-
given
&+$ ČŠ,* "5-),&1 1&,+ +! 6 1%" /"Äł" 1&,+ ,# 1%" &+1"))" -
media. Clause 10, which con-
14 Casavant and Robinson, %" 3,)21&,+ ,# ,/+,$/ -%6 4 &+ + ! H 2-3.
116
cerns itself with television
1/""1 / *"! "0&/" and
broadcasting, requires broad-
01 +$, &+ /&0.15 The im-
casters to only air content
plicit (de)legitimation of se-
4&1% , /0" ,/ ,ČŹ"+0&3" ) +-
lect values are enforced by a
guage or that is sexually ex-
) 00&IJ 1&,+ Ȋ *"4,/( 1% 1
plicit during the â&#x20AC;&#x153;late viewing
,*-)&0%"0 1%" 0 *" "ČŹ" 10
period,â&#x20AC;? otherwise known as
as a prohibition under federal
the â&#x20AC;&#x153;watershed hourâ&#x20AC;? of 9:00
jurisdiction. The CAB, on the
PM to 6:00 AM. During this
other hand, operates with-
time, broadcasters must take
in the industry to essential-
measures to warn their view-
ly reinforce existing regula-
ers of adult-oriented content,
tions on private broadcasters:
thus allowing viewers to make
to acknowledge harm under
informed decisions about the
the obscenity standard of the
content they wish to consume.
/&*&+ ) ,!"H and to enforce
Most of the complaints sub-
the â&#x20AC;&#x153;watershed hourâ&#x20AC;? that is
mitted to the CRTC regarding
a preexisting condition in a
adult content take issue with
majority of broadcasting li-
one or both of these claus-
censes awarded by the CRTC.
"0H 4%& % /" ,ČŞ"+ &+ )2!"! Here, we recognize that in adas conditions of broadcasting
dition to government policies
licenses issued by the CRTC.
and bodies that regulate sex-
Several
are
ually explicit content, there
Chief
are a host of â&#x20AC;&#x153;satelliteâ&#x20AC;? bodies
among them is that the pow-
that reinforce many policies
worth
points
noting
here.
"/0 ,# -/,3&+ & ) IJ)* /"3&"4 ,# 0&*&) / #,/ " +! "ȏ" 1F boards have historically been
%" ,+Äł& 10 "14""+
subjectively applied without
federal, provincial and in-
any regulatory recourse or
dustry approached to regula-
'201&IJ 1&,+J 0,*" +,1 )" tion were noted in the Fraser IJ)*0 4"/" out
"+0,/"! 4&1%-
explanation,
including
Committee Report of 1985, 15 banned.â&#x20AC;?
Veillete, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The day Shakespeare was
117
which has informed much of
and eliminate the need of the
our current policies towards
community standards test.16
pornography. Despite almost
In many ways, the
none of its recommendations
Fraser Report was ahead of
being enacted, the Report re-
its time. In a section devot-
mains a surprisingly balanced,
ed to broadcasting and the
thoughtful and sensitive ap-
CRTC, it reiterates the im-
proach that is invaluable to
portance
contemporary policy debates.
what
Among its many recommen-
or “indecent” content, as well
dations, it called for the re-
as an acknowledgement that
of
reconsidering
constitutes
“obscene”
*,3 ) ,# V, 0 "+"W ȩ,* emerging media is quickly criminal and federal legisla-
outstripping legislation’s reg-
tion, a revision of the Criminal
ulatory capacities.17 A review
Code with particular attention
of the Report notes that “it
paid to the eschewing of the
rejects simple deterrent-ori-
Community Standards test,
ented solutions” and that “the
and greater transparency in
Committee
Canada Customs with explicit
pornography
regulations (rather than in-
tion are symptoms of deeper
ternal policy guidelines or
social problems.”18 Even if al-
memoranda)
the
most none of the recommen-
distribution of pornographic
dations were implemented,
materials. The Report also out-
one can trace the nuanced,
lines a proposal for a three-ti-
fairly liberal attitudes of Ca-
er system for the regulation
nadians
of
material
phy: one that values individ-
which would, among other
ual liberty, an appreciation of
"+"IJ10H
,/!&+$)6 0"1 ,+-
a diversity of sexualities and
trols based on the type of con-
human dignity. The echoes of
regarding
pornographic
tent, protect values of equali16 +! ȩ""!,* ,# "5-/"00&,+
16 ! H 12. 17 ! H 24. 18
recognizes and
towards
that
prostitu-
pornogra-
,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ &+ + ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ &+ + Kanter, /,%& &1 ,/ "$2) 1"DH 194.
118
these are heard in the histo-
ing attitudes of the Canadian
ry of increasing liberalization
public, allowing the theory
that sees the production and
of an overall liberalization of
consumption
pornography
attitudes to be anchored in
"-1"!N&# +,1 0&$-
empirical and qualitative re-
+&IJ +1)6 !,4+-) 6"!N 0 1,)-
search. The Report makes this
erable community practices.
clear in asserting that “con-
1 &1)6
%" *,01 0&$+&IJ +1 certed action and attention to
implication of the Fraser re-
the issues is needed if we are
port is the relationship it pos-
to have lasting solutions to the
es between harm and the com-
problems which pornography
munity
Whereas
and prostitution engender.”19
the bulk of regulatory mech-
The overview of the
anisms assume that there is
regulatory environment and
some potential of harm in the
clear delineation of the tra-
unregulated distribution of
jectory of social attitudes en-
sexually explicit content, the
gendered in the development
Fraser report is the only doc-
of jurisprudence and the Fra-
ument that not only acknowl-
ser report serve to better ar-
"!$"0 1%" ij2&! + 12/" ,# ,*-
ticulate
munity standard, but actually
is perceived and regulated
outlines what that standard
today. From this, we can at-
&0 &+ &10 1&*"K0-" &IJ ,+-
tempt to understand the ap-
text and situates that within a
proval of licenses for private
history of changing attitudes
adult-oriented
towards
and
ers by the CRTC. Beginning
sexuality. Its interdisciplin-
with Hustler TV in 2004, the
ary account of public consul-
Adult Entertainment Chan-
tations and academic input
nel and Vanessa in 2007, and
makes the document one of
Northern Peaks in 2008, the
1%" 0,)" 11"*-10 1 &!"+1&ȫ-
move to allow pornography
standard.
pornography
ing and addressing the chang-
19 ! H 3.
how
pornography
broadcast-
,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ &+ + -
119
on public airwaves was not made with any explicit statement or change in policy; it simply happened. Considering the contentious role of pornography in the public sphere over the past century, this is an unprecedented move that suggests an increasing liberalization of the Canadian media environment. Adult services are granted Category 2 licenses, which requires that the services not be “bundled,” or in other words, do not obligate subscribers to purchase another service and to ensure that subscribers have the ability to not receive adult ,+1"+1F + /"3&"4 ,# 1%" /"$2) 1,/6 ȩ *"4,/( #,/ + dian broadcasting services, Dunbar and Leblanc note that:
V + ,2/ 3&"4H 1%" 1"$,/6 9 /2)" /"* &+0 3 )&! 0&+ " &1 -/,3&!"0 ,+02*"/0 4&1% 1%" ,-1&,+ ,# 02 0 /& &+$ 1, !2)1 -/,$/ **&+$ % ++")0H ,/ (""-&+$ 1%"* ,21 ,# 1%"&/ %,*"0H 4&1%,21 % 3&+$ 1, 0 /&IJ " ,1%"/ +,+K !2)1 % ++")0 1% 1 1%"6 *&$%1 4&0% 1, , 1 &+F q " 4,2)! +,1" &+ - 00&+$H %,4"3"/H 1% 1 ,1%"/ + !& + 0"/3& "0 /" * /("1&+$ !2)1 ,+1"+1 0 - /1 ,# 0"/3& "0 1% 1 #" 12/" * &+01/" * *,3&"0 1, )) $"0 ,# 3&"4"/0%&- M 0, 1%"/" &0 +,1 +6 ,+0&01"+ 6 &+ 1%" --)& 1&,+ ,# 1%&0 -/&+ &-)"Fr
V + 1%" ,1%"/ % +!H 1%" 1"$,/6 8 /2)" --" /0 1, run counter to consumer demand by forcing con02*"/0 1, 1 (" *,/" 0"/3& "0 1% + 1%"6 4 +1F %" *,20" 0%,2)! +,1 % 3" 1, 02 0 /& " 1, 1%"
1-
+&- % ++") &+ ,/!"/ 1, 4 1 % 1%" %""0" % ++")FW20
20 Laurence J.E. Dunbar and Christian Leblanc, "3&"4 ,# 1%" "$2) 1,/6 / *"4,/( #,/ /, ! 01&+$ "/3& "0 &+ + ! H” 177.
120
Here, the report explicitly
another sector of the broad-
notes that the CRTC has a ten-
casting industry should be ex-
dency to permit the bundling
tended to its right to regulato-
of services in the absence of
ry measures that support the
-,1"+1& ) ,+ij& 1 4&1% 0,-
economic and cultural pro-
cietal values, to allow the
duction of Canadian content.
market to determine the best
It is necessary then,
way to package and distribute
to consider the position of
broadcasting services. I sug-
pornography in the Canadian
gest that this practice, while
media landscape. Here, we can
not explicit in any CRTC
look to the /, ! 01&+$ 1 of
policy, avoids potential skir-
1991, which outlines the crit-
mishes with public opinion
ical role of the broadcasting
while undermining the entire
system to operate in the pub-
-/"*&0" ,# 2+!)&+$N1% 1 lic interest, contribute to the &0H 1, ,Ȭ"/ ,+02*"/ 3 )2" creation and presentation of and allocate revenue towards
Canadian programming and
smaller private broadcasters.
be of a “high quality” that rep-
This can be understood as,
resents the diversity of Cana-
at best, an undervaluation of
da’s population and values.21
the
Canadian
pornography
Of particular interest
industry, and at worst, a hy-
is whether the pornography
pocrisy that denies Canadi-
can fall under Section 3(g) of
an pornography the right to
the /, ! 01&+$ 1’s mandate
“shelf space” as a competitive
to which “the programming
broadcasting enterprise, thus
originated
limiting its opportunities for
undertakings should be of
growth. The question of eval-
high standard.” Determining
uating the “cultural value” of
this seems imperative to mov-
Canadian pornography aside,
ing towards a reconsideration
pornography’s relatively ge-
of pornography in the Cana-
neric
dian media landscape, where
treatment
as
simply
21
by
broadcasting
2/ 2)12/ ) ,3"/"&$+16H 37-38.
121
a passive acknowledgement
en seriously as a distinctly
is no longer adequate in light
Canadian industry, product
of the industry’s (economic,
and labour force to be reck-
if not cultural) contributions
oned with. It is a disservice
to the Canadian media land-
that Canadian pornography
scape. The question, in light of
receives little attention and
the CRTC intervening in trivi-
support, despite it being a
al issues of Canadian content
-/,IJ1 )" +!
quotas, is not one of morality,
industry in a heavily saturat-
but of acknowledging por-
ed marketplace. Statistics are
nography on the same level as
!&ȯ 2)1 1, IJ+! +! /" ,Ȫ"+
other forms of Canadian con-
!&ȯ 2)1 1, 3"/&ȫH 21 9AA=
tent, and furthermore, con-
study estimates that Canada
sidering the role of regulation
draws in $1 billion per year
in the promotion and pro-
&+ /"3"+2" ȩ,* 1%" -,/+,$-
duction of that content. Can
raphy industry alone,22 with
pornography be in the public
production
interest? If so, what role does
primarily in Montreal and
regulation play in maintain-
Toronto. One of the largest
ing a competitive place for
digital distributors of pornog-
Canadian
mitigat-
raphy worldwide, Pornhub,
ing harm (if any) towards the
is actually based in Montreal;
vulnerable and marginalized,
while the lack of government
and asserting Canadian val-
acknowledgement may be at-
ues in the media landscape?
tributed to the general lack of
I am inclined to be-
regulation around new media
lieve that there is not only a
content, certainly the govern-
place in the media landscape
ment and the CRTC can take
for
pornography,
an interest in supporting the
but that due to the liberal-
undeveloped market poten-
ization of pornography and
tial of Canadian pornography.
content,
Canadian
sex, pornography can be tak-
,*-"1&1&3"
centers
based
22 Ropelato, Jerry. “Internet Pornography Statistics” 2006.
122
Economic consider-
legislation and implicit val-
ations aside, there is as much
ue systems dilute the clarity
potential in supporting por-
with which Canadians per-
nography as a distinctly Ca-
ceive
nadian cultural product. The
the overall media landscape.
historical discourses on sex-
This also weakens the pow-
uality, gender, representation
er of regulatory bodies when
and
implications
jurisdictions are so closely
generated by censorship mea-
aligned with one another as
sures are proof enough that
to be nearly indistinguishable.
Canadians are invested in sex.
Additionally,
Canada has a wealth of unique
move towards the licensing of
linguistic and racial histories
adult content channels is an
that have all contributed to the
overall positive one. Not only
conversation, and documents
!,"0 &1 !"*,+01/ 1" 0%&Ȫ &+
like the Fraser Report suggest
attitudes regarding sex and
that Canadians have a general
its representations, but it also
consensus that the expression
recognizes the existence and
of these ideas is aligned with
potential of broadcast and dis-
material
pornography
within
the
,+ "-1&,+0 ,# ȩ""!,* ,# tribution undertakings that speech and personal liberty,
may yet prove to be a boon to
both of which are entrenched
the Canadian media industry
in the legal and social foun-
as a whole. To that end, the
dations of Canadian society.
history of regulation is a rel-
To some extent, the
atively tame one without sig-
overlapping and contradicto-
+&IJ +1 ,+ij& 10 1% 1 % 3" !"-
ry regulatory bodies have had
railed the liberalization of sex
1%" "Ȭ" 1 ,# *&0/"-/"0"+1-
+! ,!&"0 ȩ,* ,+0"/3 1&3"
ing the dangers of pornog-
value systems. This can only
raphy in society. That is not
be read as a victory for rights
to say that there is no harm;
entrenched in both the Fraser
simply that the scattershot
Report and the Charter, specif-
123
ically those pertaining to liberty over one’s body and one’s claim to deploy their material sexuality as they please without
state As
intervention.
societal
values
change over time, we may hopefully look to the Canadian pornographers to lobby government agencies for the right to claim “shelf space” as a uniquely Canadian export, a 0&*-)" ȯ/* 1&,+ ,# 1%" " ,nomic practices already taking place in urban centers across the country. This may lead to regulatory support for space, equipment, the development of labour and the catalyzing of the Canadian porn economy. Where the regulatory system has created a broadcasting industry, perhaps the pornography industry can take a more active role in shaping its niche within jurisprudence and the public sphere.
Bibliography Casavant, Lyne and Robertson, James R.. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Evolution of Pornography Law in Canada.â&#x20AC;? /)& *"+1 /6 +#,/* 1&,+ +! "0" / % "/3& "I 2//"+1 002" "3&"4 84-3E. Ottawa: Library of Parliament, 2007. Print.
Sirove, Taryn. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Freedom, Sex & Power: Film/Video Regulation in Ontario.â&#x20AC;? I
/ !2 1" ,2/+ ) ,# /1 &01,/6H &02 ) Art and Theory 2:1 (2008): 31-54. Print. Veillette, Eric. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The day Shakespeare was banned.â&#x20AC;? Toronto Star. 20 Aug 2010. Print.
Dunbar, Laurence J.E. and Leblanc, Christian. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Review of the Regulatory Framework for BroadcastingServicesinCanada.â&#x20AC;?31August2007.Print.
KKK V 2/3"0H 200&+$ +! ""/I +1 /&, IJ)* censorship in the 1940s.â&#x20AC;? Silent Toronto. 26 Sep 2011. Web.
Gudgeon, Christopher. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Porn to Be Wild.â&#x20AC;? The ("! /21%I %" +1,)! 1,/6 ,# "5 &+ Canada. Vancouver: Greystone Books, 2003: 160-185. Print.
KKK V "01/& 1"!I +1 /&, IJ)* "+0,/0%&- &+ 1%" 1950s.â&#x20AC;? Silent Toronto. 30 Nov 2011. Web.
Kanter, Michael. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Prohibit or Regulate?: The Fraser Report and New Approaches to Pornography andProstitutionâ&#x20AC;? 0$,,!" )) 4 ,2/+ ) 23.1 (1985): 171-194. Print. &+ ,)+H )&ČŹ,/!F V %" /, ! 01&+$ 1 and its Public Policy Principles.â&#x20AC;? 2/ 2)12/ ) ,3"/"&$+16I %" " ,+! "+12/6 ,# + !& + /, ! 01&+$F Ottawa: Standing CommitteeonCanadianHeritage,2003.Print. ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+ &+ + ! I "-,/1 ,# 1%" -" & ) ,**&11"" ,+ ,/+,$/ -%6 +! /,01&121&,+F Ottawa, Canada: Minister of Supply and Services Canada, 1985. Print. Ropelato, Jerry. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Internet Pornography Statistics. ,- "+ "3&"40F 2006. Web.
Vidal Wu â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Vidal Wu is a Cultural Studies and Commu+& 1,+0 12!&"0 012!"+1 &+ %&0 IJ+ ) 6" / 1 McGill.
His
research
focuses
on
interdisci-
plinary approaches to new media, queer identity
and
sexuality,
disability
and
fashion.
125
127
A Biography of Abundance: A Study of the Unseen Lives Behind the Commodities Depicted in SeventeenthCentury Dutch Still-Life
By Lexi Stefanatos
A Biography of Abundance: A Study of the Unseen Lives Behind the Commodities Depicted in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Still-Life
V 1&))K)&#" -/,2!)6 -/"1"+!0H 21 ,+)6 -/"1"+!0H 1% 1 &10 0,)21" 2+/" )&16 &0 1%" 0&*2) /2* ,# /" ) -/"0"+ "F 1 - / !"0 1%" ,*-)"1")6 # (" 0 1%" ,-6 ,# ,*-)"1")6 /" ) ,/&$&+ )F 21 &1 )"10 20 020-" 1 &1 * 6 " )6&+$F 10 "*-% 0&0 &0 ,+ 1%" ,*-)"1"+"00H 1%" â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
,+0-& 2,20+"00H ,# &10 # ("/6FW
Harry Berger, Caterpillage
%"+
,+ČŠ,+1"! To borrow the Dutch idiom,
with Floris van Dijckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s &! the
still-life
genre
claims
Table with Cheese and Fruit [c.
to be + "/ %"1 )"3"+H VČŠ,*
1615] (Fig. 1), one wonders
)&#"W ,/ V ČŞ"/ )&#"HW02 but in
about the possibility of this
what way does seventeenth-
table existing in real life.01
century Dutch still-life really
To what extent is the viewer
exist
to believe that a family has
or
disappeared
just
as copy,
a
representation + "/ %"1 )"3"+?
moments
Since its enormous rise
before, leaving a neatly twisted
in popularity in Netherlandish
apple peel precariously falling
culture over the course of the
over the edge of the table?
seventeenth century, Dutch
01 It must be noted that this painting is not signed or dated, but that its attribution to Floris van Dijck has generally been accepted. Scholars have suggested that there seems to have been very little stylistic change between his earlier and later works, allowing them to approximate the date of this painting to around 1615, placing it between two similar works dated 1610 and 1622, the latter of which is on loan to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. Alan Chong and Wouter Kloek, 1&))K &#" &+1&+$0 ČŠ,* 1%" "1%"/) +!0 8<<AK8>9A (Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum, 1999), 130.
still-life has been renowned #,/ &10 * $+&IJ "+1 /" )&0*H intricate detail, and admirable 02 Harry Berger, Jr., 1"/-&)) $"I "ij" 1&,+0 ,+ "3"+1""+1%K "+12/6 21 % 1&))K &#" &+1&+$ (New York: Fordham University Press, 2011), 5.
129
rendering of texture.03 Yet,
viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s attention by way of
according
the artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s own choices about
Harry has
to
art
Berger,
been
historian
the
genre
â&#x20AC;&#x153;hamstrung
by
pictorial
conventions.
As
Svetlana Alpers has articulated,
iconography.â&#x20AC;?04 As such, the
seventeenth-century
body of art historical discourse
art is unique in that it is
pertaining
has
an art of describing. Alpers
narrow
distinguishes descriptive art
recent
by placing it in opposition
scholarship has reinterpreted
to the tradition of narrative
the
art in Italy, and suggests that
been in
to
still-life
exceedingly
scope.
However,
traditional
0&$+&IJ + "
3 +&1 005
11/& 21"!
Dutch
1, the Dutch presented their
still-life, and demonstrated
art as describing the world
1% 1 01&))K)&#" - &+1"/0 ,ČŞ"+ as it appears to be seen.08 Yet, showcase a commitment to
such
describing
can
only
truthiness06 and realism while
happen through the artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
)0, "+$ $&+$ &+ /"Äł" 1&3" "6"0 +! 1%/,2$% %&0 / ČŞ ,# form of irony in which they
representation.
Description
showcase their showcasing.07
never is reality â&#x20AC;&#x201C; it can only
0 /"02)1H 1%" /1&IJ & ) 0-" 1 be reality as it is -"/ "&3"!. It of still-life is brought to the 03 Chong and Kloek, 1&))K &#" &+1&+$0 ČŠ,* 1%" "1%"/) +!0, 39. 04 For more on iconography see "&+/& % Ĺ&#x201D;)ČŻ+ +! /4&+ +,#0(6F "/$"/H Caterpillage, 1. 05 The term 3 +&1 0 refers to the ephemerality and emptiness of worldly pos0"00&,+0H +! &0 ,ČŞ"+ --)&"! 1, 01&))K)&#" 0 reminder of the transience of life on earth. This is observed through the common motif of the skull, but also in representations of dead Äł,4"/0H &+0" 10H * 1"/& ) -,00"00&,+0H "1 F "" Linda DeGirolami Chenyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Symbolism of +&1 0 in the Arts, Literature, and Museumâ&#x20AC;? for further discussion. 06 Truthiness is a term coined by Stephen Colbert on %" ,) "/1 "-,/1 in 2005. It refers to a quality of evasiveness: â&#x20AC;&#x153;truthiness is what you want the facts to be, as opposed to what the facts are. What feels like the right answer as opposed to what reality will support.â&#x20AC;? Harry Berger applies this term to the project of iconography in his book Caterpillage. Berger, Caterpillage, 5. 07 Berger, Caterpillage, 6.
is clear then, that the word S!"0 /& &+$T &0 ČŹ,/!"! 0"+0" of ambiguity. If description is subjective, how does its elusive quality relate to the seemingly triumphant realism characteristic of Dutch stilllife? To provide an answer, I will explore Floris van Dijckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s &! )" 4&1% %""0" +! /2&1 [c.1615] and Jan Jansz van 08 Svetlana Alpers, The Art of Describ&+$I 21 % /1 &+ 1%" "3"+1""+1% "+12/6 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983), xx.
130
131
Figure 3. (Top) Claes Jansz Visscher – +orama of Amsterdam, 1611, engraving. Figure 2. (Bottom) Jan Jansz van de Velde – Glasses, Smoking Implements, and Cards, 1653, oil on canvas.
Figure 1. (Pages 126-127) Floris van Dijck – Laid Table with Cheese and Fruit, c.1615, oil on wood.
133
de Veldeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ) 00H *,(&+$ tumultuous religious and
*-)"*"+10H
+!
/!0 political
change.
Despite
[1653] (Fig. 2) in order to
their
illuminate the observable
&+!"-"+!"+ " ČŠ,* - &+
tension between the seen
in 1581, the Dutch endured
and the unseen. Ultimately,
!" !"0 ,# ,+Äł& 1 "#,/"
I would like to suggest
- &+ ,ČŻ & ))6 /" ,$+&7"!
that still-life painting is
their
both representative of, and
1648.
a product of, the social,
the
cultural,
and
achieved an unprecedented
of
position of power in the
power that were present
seventeenth-century global
in
trade industry. As a result,
political,
economic
discourses
the
century
seventeenth-
Dutch
Republic.
Throughout
the
declaration
of
independence
in
Simultaneously,
09
Dutch
Republic
a wealthy merchant class rose to prominence, and
sixteenth and seventeenth
the
centuries,
the
Dutch
became one of the most
Republic,
also
known
as the United Provinces of
the
underwent
Netherlands, a
period
of
Amsterdam
important ports
harbour European
receiving
exotic
09 Julie Berger Hochstrasser, Still &#" +! / !" &+ 1%" 21 % ,)!"+ $" (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007), xv.
134
$,,!0 ČŠ,* /, !F10 Claes Jansz
Visscherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
depicted in still-life painting.12
engraving,
In claiming to be naer
+,/ * ,# *01"/! * [1611]
%"1 )"3"+, one might suggest that
(Fig. 3), illustrates the bustle
still-life is devoid of narrative.
of interaction between traders
However, I will attempt to
ČŠ,* /,2+! 1%" 4,/)!F demonstrate in what follows The Maid of Amsterdam sits
that, in fact, the reality is
across the bank and â&#x20AC;&#x153;receives
entirely the opposite. Every
with great pleasure all the
object depicted in still-life
most prominent people of
painting has its own cultural
the world, all with their most
history â&#x20AC;&#x201C; its own â&#x20AC;&#x153;trajectory,â&#x20AC;?
excellent
to
trading
goods.â&#x20AC;?11
borrow
%" IJ 1&,+ /" 1"! 6 1%&0 Arjun engraving
operates
in
a
My
anthropologist
Appaduraiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
project,
then,
term.13 is
to
similar way as still-life; both
enliven three of the most
work to conceal the true
prominent objects depicted
nature
in still-life paintings â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dutch
and
of
the
histories
provenance of
exchange
cheese,
Chinese
porcelain,
surrounding the commodities
+! 1,
, ČŠ,* 1%" V "4
they depict. By having the
Worldâ&#x20AC;?14 N 6 /" 1&+$ #,/
Maid of Amsterdam passively
1%"* 4% 1 $,/ ,-61,ČŹ ))0
/" "&3" $,,!0 ČŠ,* /,2+! a â&#x20AC;&#x153;cultural biography.â&#x20AC;?15 Each the world, the exploitative
object evokes a contemporary
history
narrative of some facet of
of
expansion
Dutch is
colonial
obscured.
It
has cleverly been observed that the nature of the goods that the Dutch had access to during this period reads as though one were taking an inventory of all the objects 10 Chong and Kloek, 1&))K &#" &+1&+$0 ČŠ,* 1%" "1%"/) +!0, 19. 11 Ibid.
Dutch
culture,
economic
12 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 1. 13 Arjun Appadurai, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction: commodities and the politics of value,â&#x20AC;? in %" 0, & ) )&#" ,# 1%&+$0I ,**,!&1&"0 &+ 2)12/ ) -"/0-" 1&3", ed. Arjun Appadurai (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986), 5. 14 I have used the term â&#x20AC;&#x153;New Worldâ&#x20AC;? in quotations so as to emphasize the problematic nature of claiming the discovery of a land where there were already settled peoples. 15 $,/ ,-61,ČŹH V %" 2)12/ ) &,$raphy of things: commoditization as process,â&#x20AC;? in %" 0, & ) )&#" ,# 1%&+$0I ,**,!&1&"0 &+ 2)12/ ) -"/0-" 1&3", ed. Arjun Appadurai (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986).
135
prosperity,
or
politics.
As
biography for these goods,
Appadurai suggests, in order
4&))H 0 ,-61,ČŹ % 0
to
suggested,
fully
understand
the
ask
questions
human and social context of
similar to those I would ask
commodities, or â&#x20AC;&#x153;things,â&#x20AC;? we
about a person: what are the
must trace their trajectories
biographical
â&#x20AC;&#x201C;
their
inherent in the objectâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s status
uses â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and focus on their
in Dutch culture? How are
historical circulation.16 I will
these
therefore focus on the unseen
Where does the object come
lives behind the abundance
ČŠ,* +! 4%, * !" &1D % 1
of
depicted
has been its career and what is
in Dutch still-life in order
considered an idea career for
to elucidate their status as
it?18 In doing so, I hope to make
social and cultural objects.
salient some of the cultural,
In considering the cultural
economic,
status of the material goods
narratives of the seventeenth-
depicted in these paintings,
century
their
forms
and
commodities
it is important to remember that
still-life
possibilities
possibilities
realized?
and
political
Dutch
Republic.
Figured
most
paintings
prominently in van Dijckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
themselves also functioned
&! )" &1% %""0" +! /2&1
as commodities at this time.
is the pile of three large half-
As art historian Julie Berger
wheels of cheese at the center
Hochstrasser argues, still-life
of the table. Among the still-
paintings had an implicitly
life paintings of the early
/"Äł"5&3" #2+ 1&,+ &+ " /)6 decades of the seventeenth seventeenth century Holland;
century,
they celebrated the Dutch
locally available commodities
culture of commodities as
seem
commodities
imposing
themselves.17
In creating a cultural 16 Appadurai, â&#x20AC;&#x153;commodities and the politics of value,â&#x20AC;? 5. 17 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 6.
to
domestic have
and
held
positions
in
quite the
arrangements of goods.19 The 18 ,-61,ČŹH V %" 2)12/ ) &,$/ -%6 of things,â&#x20AC;? 66-67. 19 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 24.
136
economic importance of the
sustaining the Dutch economy
dairy industry was widely
and trade relations. It has
acknowledged,
been noted that there were
mentioned
"3"+ &+ 1%" 0 &"+1&IJ ,+1"51 * +6 !&ȏ"/"+1 3 /&"1&"0 +! of
seventeenth-century
specialties of Dutch cheese
medical treatises addressing
at the time. On any given day
1%" %" )1% "+"IJ10 ,# 3 /&,20 at the market, one could buy foods.20 Hochstrasser points
sheep or goat cheese, gepersde
to Dordrecht physician Johan
(pressed) cheese, spits (sharp),
van
(,*&'+!" (cumin), soetmelcsehe
Beverwyckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
popular
manual on animal byproducts,
(sweet-milk),
which opens with a series of
tafel (table) cheese, and ontbeyt
verses extolling Dutch dairy
(breakfast)
goods with an unmistakable
these
sense of pride; â&#x20AC;&#x153;but what
been distinctive and easily
the cow gives is above all to
recognizable, and therefore
be prized; whoever doubts
able to evoke a strong sense
this just look at Holland,
of pride in the city or region
that send their rich product
where it was manufactured.23
to all distant lands, since it
Historian
is serviceable for all willing
has noted a certain level of
teeth; they send it in all
â&#x20AC;&#x153;dietary
!&/" 1&,+0H ČŠ,* 1%"&/ #2)) ) -H existed
pollen
(balls),
cheese.22
cheeses
All
would
Simon
of
have
Schama
democracyâ&#x20AC;?
that
in
Dutch
society,
the
poorer
classes
useful sustenance, food when
where
in need.â&#x20AC;?21 The high honour
of
conferred upon the humble
and artisans, as well as the
dairy
underlines
Ȳ2"+1 /&01, / 6H )) 0 1
importance.
down to consume a breakfast
Perhaps most importantly, it
that consisted of more of
also highlights the role played
less the same ingredients â&#x20AC;&#x201C;
its
by 20 21
product economic
the
dairy Ibid., 25. Ibid.
industry
seasonal
farm
workers
in 22 27-28. 23
Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", Ibid., 28.
137
bread, butter, and cheese.24
commodity all together, or
The
/"*,3"! ČŠ,* 1%"&/ 202 )
seventeenth-century
saying, â&#x20AC;&#x153;( 0 ,)) +!0 /,,!H commodity sphere.27 Dutch ( 0 ,)) +!0 /&'(!,*â&#x20AC;? (cheese
cheese was exchanged in the
Hollandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
bread,
cheese
domestic as well as global
Hollandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
riches)
reminds
market; as such, there was
us of its value for the Dutch
a sense of deep gratitude
people.25 It is clear that the
and
prominence
terms of achieved prosperity
given
to
the
accomplishment
in
cheese in van Dijckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s still-
/"Äł" 1"! &+ 1%" -/"0"+ " ,#
life echoes its status as a
the humble wheel of cheese.28
source of pride in the Dutch diet and agrarian economy. Contrary
to
Igor
What
makes
van
Dijckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s still-life particularly interesting
are
the
subtle
,-61,ČŹT0 02$$"01&,+ 1% 1 elements
of
disorder
that
culture
to
rupture
the
works
to
resist
threaten
,**,!&IJ 1&,+H &+ 1%" 0" otherwise
harmonious
of Dutch cheese, its status as
arrangement of objects. As
both a commodity with high
Norman Bryson has noted,
exchange value, as well as a
the degree of disorder in
cultural object of national
Dutch
pride
increase
was
celebrated.26
still-life
seems
to
proportionally
to
,-61,ȏ 02$$"010 1% 1 &+ 1%" Ȳ2"+ " +! 4" )1% order
for
objects
to
be
depicted in the scene.29 Here,
0 / )&7"!H 1%"6 *201 IJ/01 " a Venetian-style wine glass singularized â&#x20AC;&#x201C; that is, either
is tipped over, spilling its
-/"3"+1"! ČŠ,* " ,*&+$ contents onto an assortment 24 Simon Schama, %" * // 00*"+1 ,# 1%" & %"0I + +1"/-/"1 1&,+ ,# 21 % 2)12/" &+ 1%" ,)!"+ $" (Berkley: University of California Press, 1988), 174. 25 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 30. 26 A clear example of this phenomenon is the case of public monuments. They are -/"3"+1"! ČŠ,* "&+$ ,**,!&1&7"! 6 "/1 &+ groups of interested individuals in order to pre0"/3" 1%"&/ 01 120 0 2)12/ ) , '" 10F ,-61,ČŹH â&#x20AC;&#x153;The cultural biography of things,â&#x20AC;? 73.
of broken walnuts, hazelnuts, and breadcrumbs haphazardly strewn across the crisp white 27 Ibid. 28 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 33. 29 Norman Bryson, ,,(&+$ 1 1%" 3"/),,("!I ,2/ 00 60 ,+ 1&)) &#" &+1&+$ (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990), 121.
138
damask.
A
pewter
plate
teeters dangerously upon the
1%"6 -/,3,("! /"Äł" 1&,+ ,+ the material wealth that was
"!$" ,# 1%" 1 )"H /"Äł" 1&+$ acquired, and the dilemma a
halved
yellow
apple
in
such acquisition of wealth
its smooth surface. To the
posed for the predominant
)"ČŞH /,4+&+$ --)" -"")H Calvinist values at the time. deliberately twisted to reveal
Without a doubt, the engine
both he interior and exterior
that spurred the spectacular
sides, falls over the edge of the
increase
table. Whereas the browning
the seventeenth century the
peel shows signs of age, the
most was global trade.32 In
halved apple is still crisp and
the coming paragraphs, I will
in
wealth
during
4%&1" 0 &# ČŠ"0%)6 21H %&+1&+$ explore the narratives within at a tension between order
the trade industry through
and disorder. It has been
the
suggested
porcelain
and
tobacco
ČŠ,*
V "4
,/)!FW
that
the
drastic
changes experienced during the
seventeenth
examples 1%"
of
Chinese
century
In van Dijckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s &!
inspired a period of renewed
Table with Cheese and Fruit,
0")#K/"Äł" 1&,+
both the olives and apples are
+!
0")#K
determination in the Dutch
contained
population
style
that
manifested
within
porcelain
orientaltableware.
itself in a palpable anxiety
Due to interest in its â&#x20AC;&#x153;exoticâ&#x20AC;?
about identity in the art that
nature and striking blue color,
was produced.30 As Bryson
0& + -,/ ") &+ 4 0 ČŠ".2"+1)6
articulates, still-life paintings
depicted in Dutch still-life.33
established
Prior
a
dialogue
to
the
seventeenth
"14""+ 1%" +"4)6 Ȳ2"+1 century, porcelain was rarely society
and
its
material
possessions.31 In many ways, 30 Angel Vanhaelen, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introductionâ&#x20AC;? (lecture, McGill University, Montreal, QC, September 2, 2014). 31 Bryson, ,,(&+$ 1 1%" 3"/),,("!, 104.
seen in Europe. As a very costly
commodity,
it
was
usually only found in royal 32 33 122.
Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 4. Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !",
139
collections.34 However, with
Dutch Republic was due to
the establishment and entry
,,16 -12/"! ČŠ,* 1%" /&3 )
of
Portuguese.38
the
Dutch
East
India
Company into Asian trade,
porcelain
-,/ ") &+ 4 0 &*-,/1"! ČŠ,* that China through exchange of
for
The
was
was
captured
of
a
produced
export
in
type solely
Jingdezhen,
/1 +! / ČŞH )),4&+$ 1%" China, under the emperor Dutch to become the principal
Wan-li.39 Within the Dutch
suppliers of the commodity
Republic, a steady market
throughout Europe.35 As well,
for porcelain was sustained
the presence of and fascination
by
with Asian porcelain all over
the
wealthy
) 00 4%,
merchant
,2)! ČŹ,/!
2/,-" &+Äł2"+ "! 1%" ), ) certain measure of luxury. Dutch ceramic industry to
Eventually,
the point where the style
demand for porcelain began
became known as something
1, &+Äł2"+ " -/,!2 1&,+ &+
characteristically
Dutch.36
%&+ 1, /"Äł" 1 2/,-" +
sixteenth
tastes.40 An example of this is
Portuguese
the tall, straight-sided bowl
Throughout
the
century,
the
&*-,/1"!
-,/ ") &+
China.
Many
the
European
Ȋ,* IJ$2/"! &+ 3 + &' (T0 - &+1&+$ and
containing the Dutch apples.
such
It was known as a (/ &K(,-
as King Philip II of Spain,
(crow-cup), and was produced
Duke
in China purely for export.41
humanist
scholars,
Albrecht
Archduke
rulers
of
Ferdinand
Bavaria, II
of
In order to understand
Tirol, Emperor Rudolph II of
the appeal of goods with distant
Prague, and Queen Elizabeth I
geographic origins, I return to
of England, collected it.37 The
38 Ibid., 124. 39 Further research into the conditions of production of Chinese porcelain and the internal dynamics of producing commodities purely for export is outside of the scope of this paper, but would be important to consider in terms of porcelainâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;cultural biographyâ&#x20AC;? in a more detailed study. Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! Trade, p. 126. 40 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 128. 41 Ibid.
IJ/01 //&3 ) ,# 0&$+&IJ +1 amount of porcelain in the 34 35 36 37 123.
Ibid. Ibid. Ibid. Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !",
140
Arjun Appadurai, who argues
control in the trade industry.
that commodities have social
Dutch trade was an example of
lives and that politics create
what Appadurai calls â&#x20AC;&#x153;cultural
the link between the act of
economies of distance,â&#x20AC;? where
exchange and the attribution
!&ČŹ"/"+ " 4 0 ,+" ,# 1%"
of value.42 The seventeenth-
most important preconditions
century European conception
of trade.45 It was because the
of the world considered the
porcelain was made in such
crossing of transoceanic and
an exotic and foreign location,
transcontinental
and
space
to
that
it
transcended
be central in the creation of
distance and time, that is was
value.43
determination
endowed with such value.
of what can be exchanged,
While porcelain was
The
where, when, and by whom,
1%" IJ/01 ,**,!&16 ,# V"5,1& W
as well as what drives the
origins to attract the eye of
demand for the goods of
Dutch traders and merchants,
â&#x20AC;&#x153;others,â&#x20AC;? is entirely a social
it was not the last.46 The
problem.44 Not only is it a
Dutch Republicâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s competition
social problem, but this is also
with
what Appadurai is referring
European
to when he suggests that the
necessitated the creation of
process of value creation is
the West India Company. It
political. Evidently, the power
was
of the European market in its
successful than its Eastern
demand for Chinese porcelain
counterpart, but nevertheless
Spain
far
and
trading
less
other empires
economically
1, 20" 0%&ČŞ &+ -/,!2 1&,+ brought a vast array of new in order to serve European
commodities to the Dutch
+""!0 +! 1 01"0 /"Äł" 10 table.47 Chief among them their privileged position and
was tobacco.48 Van de Veldeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
42 Appadurai, â&#x20AC;&#x153;commodities and the politics of value,â&#x20AC;? 3. 43 Byron Ellsworth Hamann, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Interventions: The Mirrors of 0 "+&+ 0: Cochineal, Silver, and Clay,â&#x20AC;? /1 2))"1&+ XCII, no. 1-2 (2010) : 14. 44 Appadurai, â&#x20AC;&#x153;commodities and the politics of value,â&#x20AC;? 11.
45 Arjun Appadurai, ,!"/+&16 1 ) /$"I cultural dimensions of globalization (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996), 71. 46 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 148. 47 Ibid., 159. 48 Ibid., 171.
141
) 00"0H *,(&+$ *-)"*"+10H 1% 1H V1%"6 !, 1%&0 0 ,Ȫ"+ 0 and Cards is an example of
they like, and they call this:
the still-life sub-genre – the
drinking a person’s health
1 ('"0H ,/ 1," ('"0 – created
with a Pipe of Tobacco.”50
as
tobacco’s
Emanuel van Meeteren also
exceptional popularity. The
noted the foreign origins of
painting depicts a long and
tobacco in his history of the
a
result
of
IJ /,20 %"*- 4& ( 4&1% "1%"/) +!0H 01 1&+$H Vȩ,* burning tip lying across a
/ 7&) +! ȩ,* 1%" %,/"0
straight white pipe, out of
of Peru, there was brought
4%& % )2*- ,# IJ"/6 0% a dried herb which we call has fallen onto the table. The
Nicotiana.”51 In the same text,
round bowl of the pipe echoes
van Meeteren records that
the shape of the hazelnuts
tobacco arrived in Europe
behind it. A pewter plate
“in many shapes, wound and
containing rolled tobacco sits
rolled.”52 Indigenous labour
on the table next to a glass of
is
wine, a tall, cylindrical glass
in this observation, as he
of beer, and a deck of playing
notes that tobacco arrived
cards. The simple table and
in Europe already prepared,
near pitch-black background
to some degree, to smoke.53
leave the
no
suggestion
implicitly
of
%"
context
or
space.
encountered
Tobacco
was
grown
the
in the “New World,” where &+!&$"+,20
-",-)"0
referenced
21 %
Caribbean,
tobacco and
IJ/01 in began
&*-,/1&+$ &1 ȩ,* -/"0"+1K
IJ/01 day Trinidad and Tobago and
,Ȭ"/"! ,)2* 20 -&-"H "+"72") 0,,+ 1%"/" Ȫ"/F + thereby
introducing
Europeans.49 sources
it
to
Contemporary described
indigenous
practice
the of
smoking tobacco by noting 49
Ibid., 173.
North America, circa 1620, 50 Ibid. 51 Ibid. 52 Ibid. 53 Similar to the case of the Chinese porcelain, further research into the cultivation of tobacco in North and South American, both prior to Dutch arrival and during the period of colonization, is important to this study but is beyond the scope of this paper to discuss at length.
142
the Dutch began trading for
and eastern Dutch Republic
tobacco
English
was growing very rapidly,
colony of Virginia.54 Despite
and the excess workforce was
some
utilized for labour-intensive
its
with
the
skepticism
addictive
volatile
regarding
qualities
economic
and
value,
tobacco
cultivation.57
compelling
links
Such
between
tobacco became fashionable
trade,
and acceptable in the Dutch
tobacco resulted in powerful
Republic by the middle of the
commercial and governmental
century â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a fact corroborated
interests working to improve
by its appearance in van de
the social stigma associated
Veldeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s still-life.55 Throughout
with
the
been hypothesized that the
seventeenth
century,
prosperity,
smoking.58
and
It
has
,-&+&,+0 /"$ /!&+$ 1%" "ČŹ" 10 creation of the still-life subof tobacco on physical health
genre known as the 1 ('"0
were
provides
very
divided.
It
is
evidence
that
reveling to note that medical
smoking did in fact become
opinions about tobacco use
socially respectable in the
0""*"! 1, 0%&ČŞ &+ -,0&1&3" latter half of the century, but direction as it became more
how is this represented in
socially acceptable and, as a
van de Veldeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ) 00"0H *,(&+$
result,
economically
*-)"*"+10H
valuable. Between 1610 and
The
1620,
more The
Dutch
began
revealing
+!
/!0?59 narratives
tobaccoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
exotic
cultivating their own tobacco
origins are downplayed in
domestically, which allowed
this painting as the smoking
1%"* 1, &+Äł2"+ " 1%" -/& " implements are presented as of foreign tobacco on the
simply one component of a
Amsterdam
The
typically Dutch social evening
rural population in the middle
of drinking and playing cards.
54 174. 55 56
market.56
Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", Ibid., 177. Ibid., 180-181.
A local beer is presented in a 57 58 59
Ibid., 181. Ibid., 184 Ibid., 185.
143
- 0$) 0H commonly associated
painting, and is presented
with a game which required
1, /"Äł" 1 &10 0, & ) 01 120
the glass to be passed around
within the Dutch Republic.
"14""+ ČŠ&"+!0H " % ,#
As
much
as
still-
whom were expected to drink
life strives towards realism
down to the next ring in one
in its painterly technique,
gulp.60 The only commodities
the objects depicted, in one
depicted
painting
not
way or another, are always
domestically
are
representative of social and
the hazelnuts and the wine.
cultural narratives that are
However, it is important to
)"ČŞ ,+ " )"! &+ 1%"&/ 01 120
note that both of these goods
as material goods, as well as
were sourced form within
in the paintingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s own status
Europe, and, therefore, would
as a commodity. In looking
not
back
produced
have
this
been
associated
at
the
trajectory
of
with as much foreign or
these objects, we have seen
exotic appeal.61 The narratives
local pride and industry, a
of
and
fascination with the exotic,
indigenous labour are here
production changes in China
assimilated into a humble and
as a result of the power of the
familiar Dutch drinking scene,
Dutch trading empire, and
encouraging the viewer to
assimilation of foreign rituals
associate tobacco and the act
within domestic culture â&#x20AC;&#x201C; all
of smoking with his own daily
of which have become salient
realities, while obscuring the
in considering their cultural
cultural origins and political
biographies. Contrary to what
discourses that allowed for
we have long been led to
tobacco to be present on the
believe, still-life paintings are
Dutch table at all. In this
not photographic snapshots.
way, tobacco is mediated as
Rather, they have social lives
a cultural object by still-life
of their own and are privy
60 Chong and Kloek, 1&))K &#" &+1&+$0 ČŠ,* 1%" "1%"/) +!0, 206. 61 Hochstrasser, 1&)) &#" +! / !", 61.
to the cultural, economic,
trade,
prosperity,
144
and of
political power
discourses
that
the
artist
has been subjected to. As noted by art historian David Freedberg, “it is precisely in the area of the relationship between and
epistemology
visual
representation
that the art historian has distinctive
contribution
to
Beyond
make.”62
simply
a
epistemological
understanding
of
the
historical backgrounds of the goods depicted in still-life, the representation of objects in Dutch visual culture allows for the elucidation of their status as commodities with social lives. While Svetlana Alpers has argued that much of this epistemological
knowledge
is presented in art through the act of describing, I would argue instead that the visual language
of
commodities
is far more of a social and cultural construction than a representation + "/ %"1 )"3"+F 62 David Freedberg, “Science, Commerce, and Art: Neglected Topics at the Junction of History and Art History,” in /1 &+ %&01,/6H &01,/6 &+ /1I 12!&"0 &+ 0"3"+1""+1%K "+12/6 21 % culture, ed. David Freedberg and Jan de Vries (Santa Monica: The Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1991), 415.
145
Bibliography Alpers, Svetlana. %" /1 ,# "0 /& &+$I 21 % /1 &+ 1%" "3"+1""+1% "+12/6. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983. Appadurai, Arjun. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction: commodities and the politics of value.â&#x20AC;? In The 0, & ) )&#" ,# 1%&+$0I ,**,!&1&"0 &+ 2)12/ ) -"/0-" 1&3", edited by Arjun Appadurai. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986. ----------
Berger,
,!"/+&16 1 ) /$"I 2)12/ ) !&*"+0&,+0 of globalization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996. Harry Jr. 1"/-&)) $"I "Äł" 1&,+0 ,+ "3"+1""+1%K "+12/6 21 % 1&))K &#" &+1&+$. New York: Fordham University Press, 2011.
Bryson, Norman. ,,(&+$ 1 1%" 3"/),,("!I ,2/ 00 60 ,+ 1&)) &#" &+1&+$. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990.
Hamann,
Byron Ellsworth. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Interventions: The Mirrors of 0 "+&+ 0: Cochineal, Silver, and Clay.â&#x20AC;? /1 2))"1&+ XCII, no. 1-2 (2010).
Hochstrasser, Julie Berger. 1&)) &#" +! / !" &+ 1%" 21 % ,)!"+ $". New Haven: YaleUniversityPress,2007. ,-61,ČŹH $,/F V %" 2)12/ ) &,$/ -%6 ,# 1%&+$0I commoditization as process.â&#x20AC;? In %" 0, & ) )&#" ,# 1%&+$0I ,**,!&1&"0 &+ 2)12/ ) -"/0-" 1&3", edited by Arjun Appadurai. Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,1986. Schama,
Simon. %" * // 00*"+1 ,# & %"0I + +1"/-/"1 1&,+ ,# 21 % 2)12/" &+ 1%" ,)!"+ $". Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.
Vanhaelen,
Angela. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction.â&#x20AC;? Lecture at McGill University, Montreal, QC, September 2, 2014.
Chong, Alan, and Wouter Kloek. 1&))K &#" &+1&+$0 ČŠ,* 1%" "1%"/) +!0 8<<AK8>9AF Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum, 1999. Freedberg, David. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Science, Commerce, and Art: Neglected Topics at the Junction of History and Art History.â&#x20AC;? In /1 &+ %&01,/6H &01,/6 &+ /1I 12!&"0 &+ 0"3"+1""+1%K "+12/6 21 % culture, edited by David Freedberg and Jan de Vries. Santa Monica: The Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1991.
Lexi Stefanatos â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Lexi Stefanatos is a third-year undergraduate student, majoring in Art History with minors in Philosophy and Economics. She was initially drawn to still-life painting by its elusive qualities and the precarious nature of the objects it depicts. In taking an interdisciplinary approach, Lexi uses this paper as an opportunity to look at the â&#x20AC;&#x153;thingsâ&#x20AC;? in still-life paintings as worthy objects of analysis in their own right.
147
All Eyes on CBC/RadioCanada: A Critical Analysis of Hubert Lacroixâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Spring 2014 Strategy Announcement
By Krystin Chung
All Eyes on CBC/Radio-Canada: A Critical Analysis of Hubert Lacroixâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Spring 2014 Strategy Announcement On
June
2014,
cratic ideals that structure the
released
nation strongly informs its
â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us All,â&#x20AC;? a strate-
mandate. As such, the mes-
$6 ++,2+ "*"+1 ČŠ,* -/"0&-
sage in â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us Allâ&#x20AC;?
dent and CEO Hubert Lacroix
merits
that articulated a commit-
because its content implicates
ment to the legacy of CBC as
all members of the public
â&#x20AC;&#x153;the public space at the heart
broadcasterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s vast audience.
of our conversations and our
While the goals of this plan
experiences as Canadiansâ&#x20AC;? in
appear transparent, success-
light of a changing media en-
fully attaining them means
vironment. The plan is char-
that the Canadian population
acterized by an emphasis on
must assume a watchdog role,
implementing a number of
observing the measures of ex-
transformations that will con-
" 21&,+ / 1%"/ 1% + IJ+!&+$
tribute to the ability of CBC to
satisfaction in the mere prom-
CBC/Radio-Canada
26,
01
critical
examination
,ČŹ"/ V ,*-"))&+$ + !& + ise of an open public space. content across all genres, and
Bearing in mind that the way
adapt to audienceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s preferenc-
in which we as users are in-
es.â&#x20AC;?
Äł2"+ &+$ 1%" 3 01 +! # 01
02
In its constitution as a
Canadian Crown corporation,
changes in the media market
the pressure on CBC to act in
actually demands this kind of
accordance with the demo-
/"0-,+0" ČŠ,* ,2/ -2 )&
 Hubert  Lacroix,  â&#x20AC;&#x153;A  Space  For  Us  All,â&#x20AC;?  CBC/Radio-ÂCanada  vid- eo,  13:21,  June  26,  2014,  http://www. cbc.radio-Âcanada.ca/en/explore/strate- gies/2020/. 02  â&#x20AC;&#x153;A  Space  For  Us  All,â&#x20AC;?  last  PRGLÂżHG -XQH KWWS FEFUF- blog.com/strategic-Âplanning/a-Âspace- for-Âus-Âall-Â2/?lang=en.
broadcaster, this essay com-
01
pels readers to consider that the true nature of â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us Allâ&#x20AC;? as a plan born of an alarming necessity for CBC to modernize and stabilize is
149
obscured by the reassuring
bly linked to the government;
rhetoric of the video message.
its very existence depends on
Rather than a synthesis, the
taxpayer dollars. Not only
following essay will function
does this mean that CBC goals
as a critical analysis of “A
must correspond to federal
Space For Us All” and CBC at
legislation dating back to the
large. Its purpose is to both
1991 Broadcasting Act, but it is
&!"+1&ȫ &+1"/0" 1&,+0 4&1% the sole broadcaster amongst theoretical concepts and as-
its private competitors to feel
sess these connections by pin-
1%" +"$ 1&3" "Ȭ" 10 ,# $,3"/+-
pointing nuances unique to
mental cuts in public broad-
the circumstances of CBC. To
casting funding. Nonetheless,
begin, “A Space For Us All”
CBC claims to serve as Cana-
will be situated vis-à-vis three
da’s foremost collective voice.
key actors in the Canadian
By purporting to represent
media realm: the state, the
Canadian perspectives, CBC
market,
society.
has become a prime source of
Next, the strategy will be re-
national consciousness. How-
lated to the notion of the pub-
ever contrived it may be, this
lic sphere. Finally, I will con-
relationship to Canadian con-
clude with an examination of
sumers has endowed CBC
14, 0-" &IJ 4")# /" $, )0 "+-
with a considerable degree of
compassed in “A Space For Us
power
and
civil
in
the
media
))W +! /"ij" 1 ,+ 1%" 4 60 &+ landscape over the course which they connect to serving
the
public
of
its
existence.
interest.
Social theorist Michel
It is the duty of CBC to
Foucault posits that power, a
respond to the ever-changing
0%&Ȫ&+$ !6+ *& -/"0"+1 &+
needs of its nation in a way
all sorts of human relations, is
that is reliable, adaptive, and
unstable. According to Fou-
up to date. As Canada’s public
cault, the key to gaining and
broadcaster, CBC is inextrica-
maintaining power is the ac-
150
.2&0&1&,+ ,# 0-" &IJ (&+!0 ,# by the corporation’s Executive knowledge.03 When Lacroix
Vice President of English Ser-
asserts that CBC must “pay at-
vices, Heather Conway, as fol-
tention to the business envi-
lows: CBC’s costs continue to
ronment” and “have the cour-
outweigh its revenues.05 How-
age and conviction to change
ever, a more detailed investi-
[its]
an
gation is necessary to better
awareness of the transitory
understand why this is the
nature of power dynamics
case. “A Space For Us All” ac-
and the need to constantly re-
knowledges that government
plan,”
he
reveals
ij" 1 ,+ +! 00"00 -/,$/"00 &+ spending on public broadcastorder to stay on track.04 Ac-
ing has waned considerably
quiring the knowledge neces-
in recent years. In addition to
sary to succeed in today’s
this, the revenue model of the
business
broadcasting
environment
re-
industry
has
quires a comprehensive un-
changed. Television subscrip-
derstanding of the means of
tions – once the largest reve-
communication
which
nue generator for Canadian
market actors are drawn. As
broadcasting – are no longer a
CBC sets out to secure a stable
0&$+&IJ +1 0,2/ " ,# #2+!-
+! 0201 &+ )" IJ+ + & ) #2-
ing.06 In addition to this, as
ture, it is responding to the
companies looking to allocate
to
- / !&$* 0%&Ȫ0 $,3"/+&+$ 1%" marketing funds turn increasmanner in which people consume information. The current market circumstances of CBC have been summarized Michel Foucault, “The History of Sexuality,” in Power/ Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings 1972-1977 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1980), 188. 04 Lacroix, “A Space For Us All.” 03
Hubert Lacroix, Heather Conway and Louis Lalande, “Why Is A Transformation Required At CBC/ Radio-Canada?” CBC/Radio-Canada video, 5:19, June 25, 2014, http://www. cbc.radio-canada.ca/en/explore/strate- gies/2020/resources/. 06 “A Space For Us All Sum- mary,” CBC/Radio-Canada, accessed October 24, 2014, http://www.cbc.ra- GLR FDQDGD FD B¿OHV FEFUF GRFXPHQWV explore/transforming/a-space-for-us- all-summary-v12-en.pdf. 05
151
ingly to global Internet play-
"5 *-)"H 1%" +,+K-/,IJ1 ,/$ -
ers, the broadcasting land-
nization Friends of Canadian
scape
Broadcasting
looks
drastically
recently
con-
!&Ȭ"/"+1 &+ 1"/*0 ,# !3"/1&0-
demned Prime Minister Ste-
ing revenues.07 In light of
phen Harper’s treatment of
these conditions, CBC plans
CBC, accusing Harper of lac-
1, --/, % /&0( !&Ȭ"/"+1)6 &+ ing its Board of Directors with 1%" #212/" 6 0%&Ȫ&+$ &10 &+-
Conservative
vestments and entering into
and making excessive funding
new
relationships
cuts.08 Such criticisms may at-
with partners whose support
test to why CBC can never
could
be
business help
temper
any
fully
Party
allied
donors
with
the
tensions that arise while the
notion of civil society and
corporation implements its
&10
new
state
strategy
goals.
+ +,1%"/ "Ȭ,/1 1,
0"- / 1&,+ and The
the
ȩ,*
1%"
market.
aforementioned
* &+1 &+ -,4"/H &0 0%&Ȫ-
approach of styling content
ing its focus towards the indi-
towards the individual exem-
vidual to help guide invest-
-)&IJ"0 1%" ,11,*K2- ,+3"/-
ments
relevant
gence concept described by
content. Presumably, an ap-
media studies scholar Henry
proach that is dedicated to
Jenkins when he states “Con-
forming
02*"/0 /" &+ij2"+ &+$ 1%"
in
more
strong
individual
bonds aligns with the aspect
production and distribution
of civil society that insists on
of media content.”09 What is
governmental accountability. “Free the CBC: Harper Can’t Drown Us All Out!” Friends CBC and the Canadian gov- of Canadian Broadcasting, accessed "/+*"+1 -/" )2!"0 ȩ,* October 24, 2014, http://www.friends. ca/freethecbc/. being a completely nonparti- 09 Henry Jenkins, “The Cultur- san voice in civil society. For al Logic of Media Convergence,” In- ternational Journal of Cultural Studies 07 “A Space For Us All Sum- 7:33 (2004): 36, accessed October 22, mary.” 2014, doi: 10.1177/1367877904040603.
Still, the connection between
08
152
unique about CBC’s current
surpassed the limits of con-
situation is that while the
ventional
bottom-up model is seen to
terms of its traditional char-
be at play, so too is Jenkins’
acteristic of one-way trans-
top-down convergence mod-
mission and shortcomings in
el, wherein “media compa-
content variety.11 Interestingly,
nies are learning how to ac-
Jenkins states that “some-
broadcasting
in
")"/ 1" 1%" ij,4 ,# *"!& times, corporate and grasscontent”.10 On one hand, CBC
roots convergence reinforce
is working to increase its rev-
each other, creating closer,
enue potential by resorting to
more rewarding relations be-
new methods of delivering
tween media producers and
content. As the corporation
consumers.”12 In the case of
0%&Ȫ0 ȩ,* "&+$ -/,!2 "/ CBC and Canadian consumto a multiplatform broadcast-
"/0H 1%&0 0""*0 1, " IJ11&+$
er, its scale – in terms of both
description, so long as the lat-
&+ȩ 01/2 12/" +! 4,/(#,/ " ter remains alert in the rela– will decrease. On the other
tionship. The ‘rewarding’ as-
hand, these measures are be-
pect
ing taken in order to cultivate
manifests in the following
a more committed viewer-
way: in working to respond to
ship, and consumers are the
the technological demands of
ones driving this goal. Lac-
consumers, CBC’s promise to
roix’s characterization of Ca-
also
nadians as “digitally sophisti-
the individual fosters an on-
cated
hungry”
going dialogue that promotes
underscores the widespread
innovative conversation and
and
of
this
consider
relationship
the
will
of
ability of Canadians to use a variety of digital platforms,
11
which indicates to CBC that
12
the national population has Jenkins, “The Cultural Logic of Media Convergence,” 37. 10
Lacroix, “A Space For Us
All.” Henry Jenkins, “Introduc- tion: Worship at the Altar of Con- vergence,” in Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide (New York: NYU Press, 2006), 18.
153
collaborative
creation.
role in public political dis-
Here, we reach the so-
courseâ&#x20AC;?.14 As much as CBC
cial and cultural core of what
would like to create an ideal
â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us Allâ&#x20AC;? is really
public sphere, the fact that its
about: an open public space.
space would be one facilitated
In overseeing the three key
by
areas of vision, listening, and
means it would not develop
storytelling, CBC sets out to
organically and is therefore
bolster a fundamental agent
already
,# !"*, / 6I ČŠ""!,* ,# "5-
ČŠ,* 1%" &!" )F %&)" &1 * 6
pression. Its vision can be in-
respond to the need for dia-
terpreted as a reinvigoration
logue
of the original public sphere,
said dialogue will be guided
developed to encourage the
by the content CBC chooses to
expansion of the media sys-
produce. Granted, by catering
tem as well as critical think-
more towards the individual,
ing. However, scholars like
this content should already be
a
national
one
step
between
institution
removed
Canadians,
"1/,0 ,0&IJ!&0 % 3" &!"+1&IJ"! &+ /" 0&+$)6 /"ij" 1&3" ,# ,+why this ideal is virtually un-
sumersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; concerns. It is there-
attainable today, citing the
fore pertinent to consider
critique by JĂźrgen Habermas
how this individualized ap-
that the public sphere has
proach intends to have a two-
been damaged due to the ex-
#,)! "ČŹ" 1F &/01)6H + )67&+$
tension of the state and capi-
,+02*"/ ! 1 $ 1%"/"! ČŠ,*
talism.13 ,0&IJ!&0 /"&1"/ 1"0 tools like online questionmedia studies scholar Stig
naires would allow for a more
Hjarvardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s criticism that â&#x20AC;&#x153;it is
tailored system where output
national media that continue
is concerned. Secondly, this
to play the most important
approach provides augmented
3HWURV ,RVLÂżGLV Âł0HGLD Policy  in  the  Public  Interest,â&#x20AC;?  in  Glob- al  Media  and  Communication  Policy  (New  York:  Palgrave  MacMillan,  2011),  31.
opportunity to Canadian sto-
13
rytellers. In this way, CBC en ,RVLÂżGLV Âł0HGLD 3ROLF\ LQ the  Public  Interest,â&#x20AC;?  37. 14
154
visions Canadians in their
judged not only on a national
public
both
basis, but according to subna-
responsive participants and
tional, regional, ethnic, or lin-
active
creators.
guistic categories.”16 As such,
At this point, we can
this political welfare goal is
piece together that “A Space
also a social one. Not only
For Us All” aims to work in
does this goal intend to allow
the public interest. Two of its
more Canadians to have a
aims, which are categorized
voice, it also aligns with me-
here as welfare goals, attest to
dia studies scholar Jonathan
this. Firstly, the corporation
Hardy’s description of what
&+1"+!0 1, ,Ȭ"/ 0")&+" 0"/-
scholar Graham Murdock sees
vices to each region in which
as a necessity in the modern
it has a presence, making in-
public sphere: “to have access
cremental
where
to the broadest range of view-
necessary. Importantly, this
points, expressed in the wid-
,Ȭ"/ &+ )2!"0 0"/3& " 1, *&-
est range of possible voices
nority language communities
and forms.”17 Another rele-
as one such addition. This is a
vant goal is CBC’s promise of
political welfare goal insofar
variety
as it pertains to the value of
gramming that is “distinctive-
egalitarian provision.15 At the
ly Canadian” as well as “smart,
same time, communications
!&Ȭ"/"+1 ȩ,* 1%" -/&3 1"
theorists Jan van Cuilenburg
broadcasters, creatively ambi-
and Denis McQuail describe
tious, and risky.”18 It is clear
space
as
additions
by
providing
pro-
acts of social welfare as valuing “social order and cohesion Jan van Cuilenburg and Denis McQuail, “Media Policy Shifts: Towards a New Communications Policy Paradigm,” European Journal of Communication 18:181 (2003): 185, accessed October 22, 2014, doi: 10.1177/0267323103018002002. 15
Van Cuilenburg and Mc- Quail, “Media Policy Shifts,” 185. 17 Jonathan Hardy, “Media Cultures, Media Economics and Media Problems,” in Critical Political Econ- omy of the Media: An Introduction (London;; New York: Routledge, 2014), 69. 18 Lacroix, “A Space For Us All.” 16
155
why this goal would be of so-
the
& ) "+"IJ1 1, + !& +0I
public
interest.
0 #2)IJ))0 &10
greater variety in program-
goals for 2015, it will have to
ming
" ,-"+ 1, 1%" "3"/K0%&Ȫ&+$
would
undoubtedly
make for a richer exchange of
dynamics of the Canadian
cultural expression. However,
media landscape. Transition-
the way that CBC plans to ex-
&+$ ȩ,* ,+3"+1&,+ ) -/,-
ecute
content-related
ducer to a multi-platform
$, ) &0 6 0&$+&IJ +1)6 /"!2 -
broadcaster is not an easy
ing their labour force. Conse-
task. Although the Canadian
quently, the welfare aspect of
population
this
is
highly
1%&0 $, ) &0 )"00 3& )" ȩ,* + competent in terms of digital economic standpoint. While a
access, it cannot be denied
smaller workforce might be
that
*,/" "ȯ &"+1H 4"
existing
demographic
++,1 obstacles lie in the way of
deny that as far as innovation
total and smooth transition.
and employment opportuni-
As
reassuring
as
a
new
1&"0 $,N14, ("6 0-" 10 ,# strategy might sound it is economic welfare, according
imperative to critically assess
to van Cuilenburg and Mc-
the
contents
of
“A
2 &)N1%" 2+!6&+$ 2+&3"/0 ) Space For Us All”, for only logic has always seemed to be
in
that two minds are better
4"
than one.19 Each of these goals
and the initiative to remain
demonstrates that, while it
watchful
sometimes
shares
in
the
struggle faced by many organizations to act in conjunction with its principles at every
turn,
CBC is
indeed
concerned with catering to Van Cuilenburg and Mc- Quail, “Media Policy Shifts,” 185. 19
our
understanding
IJ+!
1%" as
do
(+,4)"!$" consumers.
156
Bibliography CBC/Radio-Canada. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us All Summary.â&#x20AC;? Accessed October 24, 2014. http://www.cbc.radio-canada.ca/_files/cbcrc/documents/ explore/transforming/a-spacefor-us-all-summary-v12-en.pdf. CBC/Radio-Canada. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us All.â&#x20AC;? Last *,!&IJ"! 2+" 9=H 9A8;F %11-Imm cbcrcblog.com/strategic-planning/a-space-for-us-all-2/?lang=en. Foucault, Michel. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The History of Sexuality.â&#x20AC;? In ,4"/m +,4)"!$"I ")" 1"! +1"/3&"40 +! 1%"/ /&1&+$0 8@>9K8@>>, 183-193. New York: Pantheon Books, 1980. Friends of Canadian Broadcasting. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Free the CBC: Harper Canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t Drown Us All Out!â&#x20AC;? Accessed October 24, 2014. http://www.friends.ca/freethecbc/. Hardy, Jonathan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Media Cultures, Media Economics and Media Problems.â&#x20AC;? In /&1& ) ,)&1& ) ,+,*6 ,# 1%" "!& I + +1/,!2 1&,+, 57-76. London; New York: Routledge, 2014.
,0&IJ!&0H "1/,0F V "!& ,)& 6 &+ 1%" 2 lic Interest.â&#x20AC;? In ), ) "!& +! ,**2+& 1&,+ ,)& 6, 23-44. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2011.
Jenkins, Henry. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction: Worship at the Altar of Convergence.â&#x20AC;? In ,+3"/$"+ " 2)12/"I %"/" )! +! "4 "!& ,)lide, 1-24. New York: NYU Press, 2006. Jenkins, Henry. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Cultural Logic of Media Convergence.â&#x20AC;?
+1"/+ 1&,+ ) ,2/nal of Cultural Studies 7:33 (2004): 33-43. Accessed October 22, 2014. doi: 10.1177/1367877904040603. Lacroix, Hubert. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Space For Us All.â&#x20AC;? CBC/Radio-Canada video, 13:21. June 26, 2014. http://www.cbc.radio-canada.ca/en/explore/strategies/2020/. Lacroix, Hubert, Heather Conway and Louis Lalande. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Why Is A Transformation Required At CBC/Radio-Canada?â&#x20AC;? CBC/Radio-Canada video, 5:19. June 25, 2014. http:// www.cbc.radio-canada.ca/en/explore/strategies/2020/resources/. Van Cuilenburg, Jan and Denis McQuail. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Media ,)& 6 %&ČŞ0I ,4 /!0 "4 ,**2nications Policy Paradigm.â&#x20AC;? 2/,-" + Journal of Communication 18:181 (2003): 181-207. Accessed October 22, 2014. doi: 10.1177/0267323103018002002.
Krystin Chung â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Krystin Chung majors in Art History and minors in Communication Studies at McGill University. Currently in her third year of study, she has unearthed a passion for researching issues related to Canadian media policy and understanding how they may be situated with respect to our national history as well as the global media environment in which we exist.
159
The Elation of the Low: Andy Warhol’s and Jeff Koons’s Bouleversement of High Art
By Willa Meredith
%" ) 1&,+ ,# 1%" ,4I +!6 /%,)T0 +! "ČŹ ,,+0T0 Bouleversement of High Art Following the era of post-abstract
the ordinary person.01 One no
expressionism,
longer had to defer to the
during which the Modernist
â&#x20AC;&#x153;good eyesâ&#x20AC;? of those in the
theories of Clement Green-
ranks of Clement Greenberg.02
berg reigned high, Pop artists
The
widespread
ap-
such as Andy Warhol began to
peal and accessibility of both
breach high modernismâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ten-
Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work
uously maintained creed that
has led some critics to refer to
/1 " 21,+,*,20 ČŠ,* )&#"F them as populist artists. Yet it The Pop art movement ush-
&0 !&ČŻ 2)1 1, /" ,+ &)" + )-
ered â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;lowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; culture into the
leged populist cause with the
privileged space of the gallery
massive sums demanded by
N 0- " ČŠ,* 4%& % &1 % ! their work. Importantly, how ""+ -/"3&,20)6 "5 )2!"!F "ČŹ
ever,
Koons, following in the Pop
Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
tradition pioneered by War-
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; and â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;lowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; categories of
hol, has integrated popular
art, the certainty of the values
culture and Greenbergian no-
of â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;goodâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; and â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;badâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; taste with
tions of kitsch into his work.
which they are aligned be-
In their embrace of the every-
come,
day, Warhol and Koons have
categories. I argue that, by el-
"ČŹ" 1&3")6
")"3 1"!
through
Warhol
subversion
altogether,
of
and the
unstable
1%" evating the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;lowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
high-Modernist category of
within the symbolic space of
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;lowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; culture into the conse-
the gallery, Koons and Warhol
crated space of â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; art. Ar-
01 â&#x20AC;&#x153;The ordinary person,â&#x20AC;? in this &+01 + "H + " !"IJ+"! 0 0,*",+" 2+# *&)& / with the terms associated with high-Modernist art theory and criticism. Much of high-Modernist art was, and to a certain extent still is, inaccessible because people unversed in its theories 4"/" "5 )2!"! ČŠ,* --/" & 1&+$ 0&+$2) / work of art. 02 Arthur Danto, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Banality and Cel" / 1&,+I %" /1 ,# "ČŹ ,,+0HW &+ ++ 12/ ) ,+!"/0I 00 60 ČŠ,* 1%" - "14""+ /1 and Life (New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2005), 295.
thur Danto has argued that Pop art, by the 1980â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, had become â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; art because it could be easily understood by
161
overthrow the authority held
% *- !/ * 1& ))6 /"!"IJ+"!
by the elite03 1, .2 )&ȫ S$,,!T notions of what art was. His taste and displace it to the
insertion of a banal everyday
masses, thereby exposing the
object into the realm of ‘high’
vulnerabilities of cultural hi-
/1 /"3" )"! 1% 1 1%" ) 00&IJ-
erarchy
cation of art as ‘high’ or ‘low’
and
value
0601"*0 N 1%,0" 4%& % was not a quality inherent in Greenberg’s high modernist
an art object, but rather one
terms
.2 )&IJ"! 6 &10 "5&01"+ " &+
sought
to
avow.
The system in ques-
the space of the gallery. Foun-
tion would be the ‘art world,’
tain further implied that ‘high’
or more precisely, the art
art, too, was ultimately a
market. As Thierry de Duve
commodity.
and Rosalind Krauss have ar-
"01%"1& ȩ,* 1%" 3"/+ 2) /
gued, the art market – as it is
of consumer culture, Warhol
indeed a market – treats
reiterated
works of art as commodities
language of the readymade
and therefore absorbs their
with his 1964 /&)), ,5 (Fig. 2)
aesthetic quality into the sole
0 + ȳ,+1 1, /""+ "/$T0
value of exchange.04 Marcel
ȩ 2$%1 ) &* 1% 1 1%" /" )*
Duchamp proposed the inter-
of art was autonomous. By de-
minable question “What is
ploying the aesthetics of com-
art?” with his 1917 readymade
mercial art, Warhol more suc-
work, a white porcelain uri-
Borrowing
the
his
Duchampian
&+ 1)6 ,+ij 1"! 1%" 1"/*0 ,#
nal entitled Fountain (Fig. 1).
art and commodity that Du-
By
champ’s 1917 Fountain IJ/01
displacing
a
mundane,
#2+ 1&,+ ) , '" 1 ȩ,* &10 suggested. Warhol’s new yet original setting to the privi-
familiar language spoke the
leged space of the gallery, Du-
vernacular of mass culture
03 “The elite” in this instance refers both to art and cultural critics as well as the wealthy patrons of the arts whose values create a given cultural discourse that assumes hegemony over another, i.e. Clement Greenberg. 04 Thierry de Duve and Rosalind Krauss, “Andy Warhol, or The Machine Perfected,” October, vol. 48 (1989): 9.
and worked to include the ev"/6! 6 &+1, 1%" !"IJ+&1&,+ ,# ‘high’ art, further complicat-
162
ing conceptions of ‘high’ and
the sensual anesthesia pre-
‘low’
culture.
scribed by Duchamp, it none-
Duchampian
theless retains the sensibility
0-&/&1 ,# "01%"1& &+!&Ȭ"/-
of the readymade in that it
ence, Warhol extended the
resembles its referent. It does
readymade paradigm by quot-
so, however, in an up-scaled,
ing the visual culture of mass
stainless steel rendition. In
consumerist society. By creat-
spite of his unorthodox use of
ing a generic surface that did
the readymade, it is only
not claim authenticity, origi-
through
the
artist’s
nality or autonomy, Warhol
above-mentioned
artistic
disavowed
Greenbergian
forebears that viewers and
terms of aesthetic judgment
critics alike are prepared to
In
the
N 1"/*0 1% 1 0""( 1, !"IJ+" accept Koons’s work as art.05 ‘high’ art. Any inclination to
Though Duchamp would like-
judge the artistic merit of
ly be critical of the visual
/&)), ,5 would be a false
-)" 02/" ,Ȭ"/"! 6 )),,+
start. Its commercial aesthetic
,$H I argue that the object’s
and
visual appeal and accessibility
of
standardized production
mode any
revitalizes
are
ception of the creative act, in
not hinged on its conception
that it enacts a more impas-
as
0&,+"! /"0-,+0" ȩ,* %&0
value
arrest
judgments a
that
commodity.
While Warhol’s art is
viewership
Duchamp’s
than
con-
Fountain
emphatically banal, Koons’s
would, for example. It is pre-
work is uncomplicatedly ap-
cisely the concept of the cre-
pealing. Though Warhol’s art
ative act that shapes Koons’s
is indeed fun and appealing,
artistic production with ref-
/&)), ,5 resides in the realm
erence to the politics of taste
,# "01%"1& &+!&Ȭ"/"+ "F )-
1% 1 !&Ȭ"/"+1& 1" S%&$%T ȩ,*
though Koons’s )),,+ ,$
‘low’ art. Koons himself stated
(Fig. 3) does not subscribe to
05 287.
Danto, “Banality and Celebration,”
163
that he “was telling the bour-
cept of the art object, rather
geois to embrace the thing
than its aesthetic value.08 Dan-
that it likes, the thing it re-
to’s
sponds to.”06 Rather than po-
meanings’ dictates that the
sitioning his work as a point
artist’s
of communion between the
should emerge through the
artist
artwork’s formal and aesthet-
and
his
audience,
concept
of
‘embodied
intended
qualities.09
message
Koons’s )),,+ ,$ is a tran-
ic
Concerning
sponder: its bright and shiny
Warhol’s /&)), ,5, its com-
02/# "0 --" ) 1,H /"ij" 1H +! mercial aesthetic implies its ȯ/* 1%" 1 01"0 ,# %&0 -/"-
,**,!&IJ"! &!"+1&16F +"
sumably kitsch-loving public.
could not ground, in visual
The symbolic space of the gal-
terms, a distinction between
lery confers a ‘high’ status to
art and reality, between /&)),
)),,+ ,$, and in turn, ele-
and Brillo. While the former
vates the mass appeal with
is a work of art, the latter is a
which it registers. The taste of
throwaway
container,
1%" * 00"0 % 0 ""+ ȯ/*"! /%,)T0 0&*2) / ) by the massive sums the elite
and ,+ij -
tion of the two raises the
classes have deemed )),,+ question of the dual identity Dog to be worth – 58.4 mil-
of
lion dollars, to be precise.07 Danto
has
claimed
art. We can situate War-
hol’s /&)), ,5 in dialogue
that Warhol’s /&)), boxes ush-
with
Duchamp’s
ered in “the end of art” for
readymade,
they introduced the idea that
launched as a form of institu-
anything could, in fact, be art.
tional critique in order to
Artistic merit was now de-
evince the art establishment
/&3"! ȩ,* 1%" &!" ,/ ,+-
as the primary determinant of
06 Danto, “Banality and Celebration,” 290. 07 “Koons’s Puppy Sets $58 Million Record for Living Artist,” http://www. bloomberg.com/news/2013-11-13/koons-s-puppysets-58-million-record-for-living-artist.html accessed 3 Nov 2014).
08 Arthur Danto, “The End of Art: A Philosophical Defense,” History and Theory, vol. 37, no. 4 (1998): 129. 09 Arthur Danto, “Introduction: Art /&1& &0* Ȫ"/ 1%" +! ,# /1HW &+ ++ 12/ ) ,+!"/0I 00 60 ȩ,* 1%" - "14""+ /1 and Life (New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2005),13.
which
original was
164
art.10 However, Warhol’s /&)), !&Ȭ"/"+1& 1"0 ȩ,* 2 % *-T0 Fountain in that it is a simulacral rendering of its referent, while Fountain is simply an isolated commodity taken out of its regular circulation. By mapping a commercial aesthetic on IJ+" /1 , '" 1H /%,) ), 1"0 /&)), ,5 simultaneously in the landscape of consumerist society and in the realm of ‘high’ /1F /%,)H #,)),4&+$ ȩ,* Duchamp, breached the aura of ‘high’ art by making direct address to the consumer within the viewer. De Duve has argued 1% 1H 6 ,+ȩ,+1&+$ 3&"4"/0 with a consumer good in an art-context, Warhol “registers... in any case what [viewers] have already become: they are consumers and the painting is commodity.”11
Warhol uses
commercial, or ‘low’ art not so as to elevate its status to ‘high’ /1H 21 &+01" ! 1, ,+ij 1" 1%" two and symbolically level the categories. occupation
/&)),Ts in
the
gallery
10 David Cottington, “Modern Media, Modern Messages,” Modern Art: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 31. 11 de Duve, “Andy Warhol,” 9.
165
Figure 1. / ") 2 % *-H ,2+1 &+H 8@8>F %,1,$/ -%"! 6 )ȩ"! 1&"$)&17H 8@8>F ) 7"! ceramic with black paint, 15 x 19 1/4 in. x 24 5/8 inches.
Figure 3. (Top) Balloon Dog (Orange), 1994, high chromium stainless steel with transparent colour coating, 121 x 143 x 45 inches. Figure 5. q ,11,*r %&1+"6 Äł6"/0 " /&+$ 1%" 0),$ + V BW Figure 2. (Right) Andy Warhol with Brillo Box (Soap Pads), 1964. Synthetic polymer paint and silkscreen on wood, 17 1/8 x 17 x 14 inches.
167
demonstrated was
not
but
it
that
art
turned.”13 If the art world
autonomous,
holds such a ‘privileged
in
fact
position,’ as Greenberg
within
the
would have it, Warhol’s
same capitalist system
engagement with ‘mass
as
goods
culture triviality’ is to
Brillo.
enact an aesthetic bou-
saw
leversement of the terms
circulated
consumer
like Greenberg
pop culture as the arche-
1% 1 !"IJ+"! S%&$%T +!
typal commodity. Gilles
‘low’ culture in order to
Deleuze has argued that
reveal the parallels be-
“the simulacra is the ave-
tween consumer society
nue by which an accept-
and the art market. The
ed ideal or privileged po-
art historian Robert Pin-
sition
12
challenged
could
be
cus-Witten has claimed
or
over-
that Koons, too, “recog-
12 Christina Chang, “Beyond Pop’s Image: The Immateriality of Everyday Life,” Bulletin of the University of Michigan Museum of Art and Archaeology 15 (2003): 7, accessed November 20, 2014.
nizes that works of art in 13 Gilles Deleuze and Rosalind Krauss, “Plato and the Simulacrum,” October, vol. 27 (Winter 1983): 9.
168
a capitalist system are inevita-
of â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;kitsch:â&#x20AC;&#x2122; )),,+ ,$ can be
bly reduced to the condition
considered the embodiment,
of commodity.â&#x20AC;?14 Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s art
or even the epitome of kitsch.
is the banal commodity of the
&10 %H 0 !"IJ+"! 6 /""+-
everyday. Koons, on the other
berg, is the avenue through
% +!H /" 1"0 Äł 4)"00)6 "5"-
4%& % 1%" ,2/$",&0&" 0 1&0ČŤ
cuted luxury consumer objet
their desire to acquire cultur-
!T /1F While Warhol referenc-
) -&1 ) N )1%,2$% &1 4 0
es the commodity in simu-
not genuine culture, but only
lacral
form,
masqueraded as such, it was
with
the
Koons
begins
commodity:
his
thus understood as being of
readymades are made of tra-
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;badâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; taste.16 Koons is emphat-
!&1&,+ ) %&$% /1 * 1"/& )0 N ic in that he wants to make materials that were eschewed
art that appeals to his viewer-
by Duchamp and Warhol in
shipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s taste. He makes work
favor of the ordinary, trivial,
essentially without pretense.
and
prosaic.
In other words, Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ap-
The May 2013 issue of
peal to the masses is deliber-
New York Magazine declared
ately
transparent,
and
he
Koons the most successful
* ("0 +, "ČŹ,/1 1, 3"&) 1%"
American artist since Warhol.
,**,!&IJ"! 01 120 ,# %&0
The article claims that â&#x20AC;&#x153;Koons
4,/(F %&0 1 "ČŹ" 1&3")6 &+-
has made a name for himself
verts
Greenbergâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
manufacturing toys for rich
that
kitsch
,60 N "5 1&+$ - $ + *,+2-
as genuine.â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work
ments to mass culture trivial-
is
polemic
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;masquerades
cunningly
sincere.
ity.â&#x20AC;?15 His â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;paganismâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; is in ref-
Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s silk-screened
erence to his appropriation of
work engages with the mod-
the Greenbergian conception
"/+&01 &!" ) ,# Äł 1+"00 q4&1%
14 V ,4 "ČŹ ,,+0 " *" 2-"/star,â&#x20AC;? http://www.artnews.com/2007/11/01/top1"+K /1+"40K01,/&"0K%,4K'"ČŹK(,,+0K " *"K K superstar/ accessed 24 November 2014. 15 /) 4 +0,+H V "ČŹ ,,+0 &0 1%" Most Successful American Artist since Warhol. So Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the Art World Got Against Him?â&#x20AC;? in New York Magazine May 2013, 35.
attention to surface) while simultaneously integrating elements which had previously 16
Chang, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Beyond Popâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Image,â&#x20AC;? 7.
169
been denied â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; art status
58.4 million dollars â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the
by the hegemony of modern-
highest sum ever paid for the
ist theory.17 /%,)T0 Äł 1 02/-
work of a living artist.18 This
face seamlessly references the
unprecedented sale begs ques-
consumer culture that the
tions of how we critically
*,!"/+&01 &!" ) ,# Äł 1+"00 evaluate and attribute value to sought to remain autonomous
art. What has allowed â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;kitschâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
ČŠ,*F )),,+ ,$Ts aggran-
to enter the privileged space
dized scale emphasizes its
of the Whitney, and further,
perfectly
why
executed
veneer,
has
the
Whitney
echoing Modernist paintingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
ordained
the
emphasis on surface. Koons
,#
S0")IJ"K1 (&+$T
has thus twisted the Modern-
of
the
art
practice 0
- /1
experience?
&01 &!" ) ,# Äł 1+"00 &+1, %6-
The advent of Pop in
perbolized rendition of kitsch.
the sixties enacted a revolu-
Warhol and Koons both ap-
tion in taste. By bringing ac-
pear not only to subvert and
cessible, appealing, and fun
,+Äł 1" *,!"/+&01 1"/*0 ,# art into the museum and galâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; art and â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;kitsch,â&#x20AC;&#x2122; but in
lery
doing
breached the high modernist
so
also
negate
any
claims to cultural hegemony
space,
Pop
artists
2/ +! "ČŹ" 1"! 1%" ),00 ,#
!"IJ+"! ),+$ 1%"0" )&+"0F power and authority that critKoonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s of
what
monumentalization Greenberg
ics like Greenberg held over
would
what constituted art as im-
likely categorize as â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;lowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; cul-
portant and â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;goodâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;.19 Cultural
ture heightens the tensions
hierarchy, in regard to taste,
IJ/01 /" 1"! 6 /%,)T0 !&0-
had been overturned. While
tension of modernist catego-
Warhol and Koons both claim
ries. Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s )),,+ ,$ was
to give their viewership what
very recently purchased for
they want to see, very few
17 Alex Kitnick, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Andy Warhol: Surface Tension,â&#x20AC;? in Pop Art: Contemporary Perspectives, exh. cat. (Yale, New Haven, and London: Princeton University Art Museum and Yale University Press, 2007),104.
18 V "ČŹ ,,+0 &0 (BW %11-Imm444F 3 +&16# &/F ,*m 2)12/"m9A8;mA>m'"ČŹK(,,+0K4%&1ney-retropective# accessed 25 November, 2014. 19 Danto, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Banality and Celebration,â&#x20AC;? 296.
170
members of the audience are
mass ego.â&#x20AC;?22 The mirrored
likely to be buyers. However,
surface of )),,+ ,$ symbol-
it is with reference to their
ically acts as a receptor. Rob-
responses that purchases in
ert Rauschenberg pushed the
1%" *&))&,+0 /" '201&IJ"!F20 It
concept of art as a receptor in
is at this juncture where Du-
opposition to the Abstract Ex-
champâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s concept of the cre-
pressionist
ative act is updated: it is not
treated a work of art like a
only the meaning of the work
communication device. His
that is completed by the view-
%&1" &+1&+$ series (Fig. 4) of
er â&#x20AC;&#x201C; its actual valuation hing-
1951
es upon the viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s response.
events
In 2004, /1 "40 listed Koons
than imposing any artistic vi-
as one of the ten most expen-
sion on the viewer.â&#x20AC;?23 The ex-
sive living artists of all time.
pressive brushstrokes of Ab-
In the article, Tobias Meyer,
stract Expressionist painting
Sothebyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s worldwide head of
were meant to convey the in-
contemporary art, stated, â&#x20AC;&#x153;If
teriority of the artist, whose
there is a consensus among
* +&#"01 0-" &IJ &16 ,+#"//"!
the larger public that an artist
their work a unique status.
is important, the collecting
,)),4&+$ ČŠ,* ,+ "-12 )
community will support the
artists
market.â&#x20AC;?
Meyer
/%,) !"- /1"! ČŠ,* 1%&0
direct
impetus in favor of imparting
correlation between price and
his art with a generic quality.
an
perceived
Unlike the paintings of Ab-
contribution to art history.21
stract Expressionists, Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s imperative is
silk-screened canvases are not
claims
Further, there
artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
is
a
tradition
â&#x20AC;&#x153;registered and
like
activity
that
external rather
Rauschenberg,
1% 1 %&0 4,/( V/"Äł" 10 1%" vessels of self-expression that 20 K &!FH 9@<F 21 â&#x20AC;&#x153;The 10 Most Expensive Living Artists,â&#x20AC;? http://www.artnews.com/2004/05/01/ the-10-most-expensive-living-artists/ accessed 6 Nov 2014.
22 V "ČŹ ,,+0HW%11-Imm444F' K,+)&+"F com/koons.html accessed 1 Nov 2014. 23 David Hopkins, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Re-Thinking the 2 % *- ČŹ" 1HW &+ ,*- +&,+ 1, ,+1"*porary Art since 1945 (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006),147.
171
are meant to imply his own
#,/ 02 1)" 3 /& 1&,+0 ČŠ,* ,+"
psychological space.24 He saw
copy to the next. Alex Kitnick
art as being nothing more
has
than a mere commodity. This
silk-screening mode of pro-
philosophy guided the mode
duction as suggestive of the
of production at his famed
artist functioning as a corpo-
Factory. The silk-screen pro-
rate
cess used to render Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
claiming a corporeal connec-
multiple /&)), boxes not only
tion to his work, his detached,
allowed the artist to be physi-
serialized mode of production
described
entity.26
Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Rather
than
))6 !"1 %"! ČŠ,* %&0 /1 instead implies a corporate production
but
also
relationship to his art. Similar
approximated the depersonal-
to commercial modes of pro-
ized
of
duction, Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s artistic out-
production.
put is entirely predicated on
machinery
assembly-line
While )),,+ ,$ and
his
viewershipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
response.
/&)), ,5 are each conceived
This plays into the Ducham-
of as multiples, )),,+ ,$Ts
pian dictum that privileges
mode of production strays
the viewer as fundamental to
ČŠ,* /%,)T0 &+ 1% 1 &1 "*-
the creative act. Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mode
ploys an expensive, lengthy
of production may approxi-
process under the hands of
mate that of a corporate enti-
hundreds of variously skilled
ty, but his imperative that â&#x20AC;&#x153;itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
artisans and technicians.25 The
all about youâ&#x20AC;? implies a popu-
mathematical precision with
list
which it is rendered departs
cause
as
its
impetus.
Concerning what ac-
ČŠ,* 1%" 01 +! /!&7"! *,!" tually happens between his of the silk-screen process em-
work and the viewer, Koons
ployed by Warhol that allows
has claimed that the universal
24 Alex Kitnick, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Andy Warhol: Surface Tension,â&#x20AC;? 102. 25 V "ČŹ ,,+0 +1"/3&"4"! 6 ,*& Campbell,â&#x20AC;? http://www.interviewmagazine.com/ /1m'"ČŹK(,,+0K+ ,*&K *- "))m "00"! 9? ,3 2014.
appeal and accessibility of his work is predicated on his desire to liberate the â&#x20AC;&#x153;bourgeois 26
Kitnick, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Surface Tension,â&#x20AC;? 102.
173
Figure 4. Robert Rauschenberg, White Painting [seven panel], 1951. Oil on canvas, 72 x 125 x 1 1/2 inches.
174
guiltâ&#x20AC;? that is a reminder of his
kitsch aspect of )),,+ ,$H
viewerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s class position.27 The
while simultaneously turning
creative act he conceives of
it
ostensibly intends to suspend
cultural
awareness of ones implicitness in the class system and enact a moment of liberation ČŠ,* &1F ,4"3"/H 0""&+$ 0 S(&10 %T N 1"/* 4%,0" &*plications
Koons
is
surely
4 /" ,# N --" )0 1, ,2/geois !"0&/"H does this encounter not then instill a wish for upward
mobility?
Meyer
claims, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The desire that Koons creates with people is very much about possession.â&#x20AC;?28 Of )),,+ ,$H Koons has been said to have made the perfect object, one of â&#x20AC;&#x153;industrial perfection
and
uncomplicated
beauty.â&#x20AC;?29 If everyone wants to possess this object, do its elite upper class buyers not absorb the desires and tastes of the masses, while their acquisition symbolically serves to !&ČŹ"/"+1& 1" 1%"*D +! 6 virtue of the price paid â&#x20AC;&#x201C; do the elite not legitimate the 27 ,11 ,1%(,-#H "ČŹ ,,+0I "1rospective (Yale University Press, 2014), 223. 28 4 +0,+H V "ČŹ ,,+0W &+ "4 ,/( Magazine May 2013, 32. 29 Ibid., 30.
into
a
valuable good?
Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s current retrospective at the Whitney is one of the most buzz worthy events in the art world. The /"Äł" 1&3"
%/,*"
02/# -
es of )),,+ ,$ and other 4,/( ČŠ,* %&0 Celebration series have invited many a selfie-taker to upload a picture of 1%"&/ /"Äł" 1&,+ 1, 0, & ) *"dia, attesting to the age-old bourgeois desire to not only attain cultural capital but to also be seen consuming it. It also harkens back to the â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;desire to possessâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; mentioned by Meyer. While galleries and museums traditionally have a â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;no-photoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; policy, the Whitney has encouraged the prac1& "H !&01/& 21&+$ Äł6"/0 1% 1 exclaim â&#x20AC;&#x153;KOONS IS GREAT FOR SELFIES!â&#x20AC;? (Fig. 5) on site. 30
While Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work might
be capitalizing on mass appeal, the Whitney appears to 30 V ,,+0 &0 --6 1, " 1%" ")IJ" of Summer,â&#x20AC;? http://nymag.com/thecut/2014/07/ '"ČŹK(,,+0K&0K% --6K1,K "K1%"K0")IJ"K,#K02**"/F html, accessed 30 Nov, 2014.
175
be making an appeal to the
remains: is he critical of or
bourgeois desire to be seen
complicit with the art es-
consuming art. The buzz gen-
tablishment? The Whitneyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
erated by the online collection
Äł6"/0 +,1 ,+)6 &+3&1" -2 )&
,# ,,+0K0")IJ"0 +,1 ,+)6 -/,-
participation, but also sanc-
liferates Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s brand, but
tion the exhibitionist bour-
also will eventually be used
geois
as a variable that art dealers
quiring cultural capital. This
and auction houses will use
inclusive approach helps to
to measure the artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s contri-
buttress
bution to art history. Thomas
claims. However, his osten-
Crow has described Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
sibly populist cause is com-
/&)), ,5 display within the
plicated by his apparent cap-
gallery space as an â&#x20AC;&#x153;exposĂŠ of
italization
complacent
and bourgeois desire, which
consumption.â&#x20AC;?31
performance
Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
of
of
ac-
populist
mass
appeal
While Warhol implicates the
0""*0 1, ČŻ/* %&0
viewer as a passive consum-
plicity with the art market.
er, Koons activates his view-
Both
,*-
Duchamp
and
ersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; desire (to possess or to be
Warholâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s seminal positions in
seen consuming art) to stim-
the history of art are charac-
ulate the sale of his art. Has
terized by their oppositional
,,+0H 1%"+H /"!"IJ+"! 1%" attitudes toward the art esâ&#x20AC;&#x2DC;creative actâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; as being the mo-
tablishment. Fountain mocked
ment in which one captures
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;highâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; art by bringing the low-
an upload-able image of him
"01 ,# ),40 N -/"3&,20)6
or herself consuming art?
#2+ 1&,+ ) 2/&+ ) N &+1, 1%"
Though Koons wants to and indeed does make art
consecrated
gallery
space.
Warhol sought to disavow
1% 1 .2&1" )&1"/ ))6 /"Äł" 10 artâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s noble content by makthe mass ego, the question 31 Hal Foster, â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Return of the Real,â&#x20AC;? in The Return of the Real: Avant-Garde at the End of the Century (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996), 277.
ing its commercial character blatantly conspicuous. Having established their respective
176
artistic practices as the points
success for it inspires critical
of
Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
debate,33 only adding to the
own, we might be inclined
buzz around his work. Koons
to see Koons as sharing their
has called his )),,+ ,$ a
antagonistic attitudes towards
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Trojan Horse.â&#x20AC;?34 He has cun-
the art establishment. Koons,
ningly exploited the art mar-
however,
that
("1 &+ ,/!"/ 1, !")&3"/ $&ČŞ
his work is â&#x20AC;&#x153;anti-criticism
whose impetus is to symboli-
[and] anti-judgment.â&#x20AC;?32 In any
cally dismantle cultural hier-
case, as Kelly Devine Thom-
archy by reconstituting high
as has argued, Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s crit-
art through bourgeois appeal.
departures
is
for
emphatic
ical ambiguity is vital to his 32 V "ČŹ ,,+0 +1"/3&"4"! 6 ,*& Campbell,â&#x20AC;?http://www.interviewmagazine.com/ /1m'"ČŹK(,,+0K+ ,*&K *- "))mH "00"! 9? November, 2014.
33 V %" "))&+$ ,# "ČŹ ,,+0HW %11-Imm www.artnews.com/2005/05/01/the-selling-of'"ČŹK(,,+0mH "00"! 8 ,3H 9A8;Fr 34 300.
Danto, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Banality and Celebration,â&#x20AC;?
Willa Meredith â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Willa Meredith is currently in her third year of study in the Art History department at McGill. In light of "ȏ ,,+0T0 2+-/" "!"+1"! 0 )"H &)) 2+!"/1,,( the research for this paper in the hopes of answering her own questions about the contemporary art * /("1F %" 01&)) +T1 IJ$2/" ,21 4% 1 "5 1)6 0%" thinks of Koons, but a few of her favorite artists /" & "& "&H %/&0 IJ)&H +! & % /! ,00"F
177
Bibliography V ,4 "ČŹ ,,+0 " *" 2-"/01 /HV /1 "40H http://www.artnews.com/2007/11/01/ top-ten-artnews-stories-howj e f f - k o o n s - b e c a m e - a - s up e r s t a r / (date of last access 24 Nov., 2014). V %" "))&+$ ,# "ČŹ ,,+0HW /1 "40H %11-Imm w w w. a r t n e w s . c o m / 2 0 0 5 / 0 5 / 0 1 / 1%"K0"))&+$K,#K'"ČŹK(,,+0m q! 1" of last access 1 Nov., 2014).
V "ČŹ ,,+0HW ,2/+ ) ,# ,+1"*-,/ /6 /1 +)&+"H http://www.jca-online.com/koons. html (date of last access 1 Nov., 2014). V "ČŹ ,,+0 +1"/3&"4"! 6 ,*& *-bell,â&#x20AC;? Interview Magazine, http:// w w w. i n t e r v i e w m a g a z i n e . c o m / a r t / j e f f - k o o n s - n a o m i - c a mp b e l l / (date of last access 28 Nov., 2014)
â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Ten most Expensive Living Artists,â&#x20AC;? /1 "40H http://www.artnews.com/2004/05/01/ the-10-most-expensive-living-artists/ (date of last access 6 Nov., 2014).
Kitnick, Alex. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Andy Warhol: Surface Tension,â&#x20AC;? in ,- /1I ,+1"*-,/ /6 "/0-" 1&3"0H exh. cat., 96-111, Yale, New Haven, and London: Princeton University Art Museum and Yale University Press, 2007.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Koonsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Puppy Sets $58 Million Record for Living Artist,â&#x20AC;? ),,* "/$H http:// www.bloomberg.com/news/201311-13/koons-s-puppy-sets-58-million-record-for-living-artist.html (date of last access 3 Nov., 2014).
V "ȏ ,,+0 &0 --6 1, " 1%" ")IJ" ,# 2**"/HW "4 ,/( $ 7&+"H http://nymag.com/ thecut/2014/07/jeff-koons-is-hap-6K1,K "K1%"K0")IJ"K,#K02**"/F%1*) (date of last access 30 Nov., 2014).
Chang, Christina. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Beyond Popâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Image: The Immateriality of Everyday Life.â&#x20AC;? 2))"1&+ ,# 1%" +&3"/0&16 ,# & %&$ + 20"2* ,# /1 +! Archaeology 15 (2003): 5-23. Accessed November 20, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.0054307.0015.101. Danto, Arthur. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Banality and Celebration: The /1 ,# "ČŹ ,,+0HW &+ Unnatural ,+!"/0I 00 60 ČŠ,* 1%" - "14""+ /1 +! &#", 286-302, New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2005. Danto,
Arthur. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Introduction: Art Criticism ČŞ"/ 1%" +! ,# /1HW &+ Unnatu/ ) ,+!"/0I 00 60 ČŠ,* 1%" - "14""+ /1 +! &#"H 3-18, New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2005.
Danto, Arthur. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The End of Art: A Philosophical Defense,â&#x20AC;? in History and The,/6H vol. 37, no. 4, (1998): 127-143. de Duve, Thierry, and Rosalind Krauss, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Andy Warhol, or The Machine Perfectedâ&#x20AC;? in 1, "/H vol. 48 (1989): 3-14. Deleuze, Gilles and Rosalind Krauss, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Plato and the Simulacrum,â&#x20AC;? 1, "/H vol. 27 (MIT press, Winter 1983):. 45-56. Cottington,
David. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Modern Media, Modern Messages,â&#x20AC;? in ,!"/+ /1I "/6 %,/1 +1/,!2 1&,+H 56-83, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Foster, Hal. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Return of the Real,â&#x20AC;? in The Return of the Real: Avant-Garde at the End of the Century, 127-168, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Whitney Museum Earnestly Proclaims â&#x20AC;&#x153;KOONS IS GREAT FOR SELFIES!â&#x20AC;? Gizmodo, http://gizmodo.com/whitneymuseum-earnestly-proclaimskoons-is-great-for-1648869927 (date of last access 1 Nov., 2014). David
Hopkins, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Re-Thinking the Duchamp ČŹ" 1HW &+ ,*- +&,+ 1, ,+temporary Art since 1945 (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006), pp. 145-163.
4 +0,+H /)F V "ČŹ ,,+0 &0 1%" ,01 2 "00ful American Artist since Warhol. So Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the Art World Got Against Him?â&#x20AC;? in "4 ,/( $ 7&+" May 2013. Rothkopf, Scott. "ČŹ ,,+0I "1/,0-" 1&3"F New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014. V "ČŹ ,,+0 &0 (BW +&16 &/H http://www. vanityfair.com/culture/2014/07/ jeff-koons-whitney-retropective# (date of last access, 25 Nov., 2014
178
Editorial Board Karly Beard is both an Art History and English Literature Major, and has been editing for Canvas for two years. She loves being a part of Canvas because it fosters community within the Art History/Communications department, and because she enjoys exchanging ideas and critical theory on visual culture. She is graduating McGill this year and is very excited to have more ȩ"" 1&*" 1, "+',6 -,"1/6H /1H 4/&1&+$ +! 1/ 3")F
Carolyn Buszynski is a fourth year Cultural Studies major, minoring in Com*2+& 1&,+ 12!&"0F %&0 &0 %"/ IJ/01 6" / ,+ +3 0T0 "!&1&+$ , /!F %" )0, "!&10 #,/ ) 1"H 1%" +"4 IJ)* 2+!"/$/ !2 1" ',2/+ )H +! &0 &+3,)3"! &+ 1%" McGill Students’ Cancer Society as VP Communications. Carolyn does not yet know what her life post-graduation will look like, but she hope it will &+ ,/-,/ 1" %"/ ),3"0 ,# 1/ 3")&+$H !"0&$+H )&1"/ 12/"H +! IJ)*F
Krystin Chung approaches editing for Canvas the same way she does dipping into a dessert: with an open mind and plenty of enthusiasm. Sweet tooth aside, she loves travelling, strolling the streets on a Sunday, and standing before a Monet painting for hours on end. She is in her third year, majoring &+ /1 &01,/6 +! *&+,/&+$ &+ ,**2+& 1&,+ 12!&"0 +! IJ+!0 /" !&+$ essays by her peers to be enriching, enlightening, and so very enjoyable!
Ben Demers is a second-year Cultural Studies and Urban Systems student, with Minors in Communication Studies and Management. Though Art &01,/6 +! ,**2+& 1&,+0 /" 1 1&*"0 + ,!! * 1 %H %" IJ+!0 +3 0 + insightful location to explore the blend of their theories on representation.
179
Jemma Elliott-Israelson is in her second year of an honours degree in Art History with minors in Classics and Italian. Her research includes text-image connections in the Pre-Raphaelite movement, female portraiture of the sixteenth-century Venetian courtesan Veronica Franco, British coronation portraiture, and the declining roles of the British aristocracy in the nineteenth century through John Singer Sargent’s portraits.
Erin Havens is currently pursuing an undergraduate degree with majors &+ ,1% /1 &01,/6 +! ,*-21"/ &"+ "F %,2$% 1%" - &/&+$ * 6 1 IJ/01 0""* ,!!H /&+ 4&)) /$2" 1% 1 )&+(0 "14""+ 1%" 14, IJ")!0 /" " ,*&+$ increasingly pertinent as the relationship between art and technology blurs. She hopes to further explore this intersection and its implications, especially within the context of a world that dwells increasingly in the hyperreal.
Klea Hawkins will be graduating this year with an art history major and a German language minor. She joined Canvas because she values good writing, and wanted to better understand the editing and publication process. Her interests include Medieval and Renaissance art, as well as early twentieth-century art, literature and culture.
Catherine LaMendola is a U2 Art History student minoring in Anthropology, ,/&$&+ ))6 % &)&+$ ȩ,* )) 0H "5 0F ),+$ 4&1% "!&1&+$ #,/ +3 0 1%&0 6" /H she currently serves as co-president of McGill’s Fridge Door Gallery. She is most interested in contemporary art and hopes to one day curate for a living, 21 #,/ +,4 0%" + *,01 ,Ȫ"+ " #,2+! Ȭ"&+ 1&+$ %"/0")# 1 + 5 4%&)" complaining about how cold it is outside.
180
Nancy Li is currently in her third year of pursuing a Joint Honours degree in Art History and Political Science at McGill. Contemporary East Asian art captures a special place in her heart and encompasses a wealth of potential for further research. Through her interdisciplinary training in art history and politics, she hopes to further explore the nuances of the increasing intersection and mĂŠlange of Eastern and Western cultures and its dynamic political reverberations.
Erica Morassutti will be graduating this spring with a major in Art History and minors in Italian and Communication Studies. Her research interests include early modern visual culture, postcolonial art history, medieval architecture and feminist theory.
Jennifer Mueller is an undergraduate studying art history and international relations at McGill. She is a research assistant at the Burney Centre and is interested in the visual culture of the long eighteenth century in Britain and France, especially so-called â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;conversation piecesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; and portraiture. In her other studies she has focused on the protection of world heritage sites and ethics in contemporary museum practice. Jennifer hopes to pursue her graduate studies in art history.
181