blackbird online journal spring 2002 vol.1 no. 1

 

MARK HARRIS | On Aspects of the Avant-garde

Commodity critique has played a role in claims by visual artists and critics that their positions are independent. Is it strange that we reward artists who are able to create a demand for a new commodity, a hyper-commodity, which is supposed to critique (by celebrating) our dependence on other commodities? Like Warhol? Or like much work of the late 80s?

And there's a poster by Koons [slide 12: Jeff Koons] using advertising to serve as the basis for an artwork that is a reproduction of that advertisement.


Jeff Koons

One problem with commodity critique is that like many attempts to establish distinctions between our pleasures—saying, this is good, that's bad—it falls back on class divisions, especially when it is being appraised. The poor's commodities are bad (kitsch, pornography, chat shows, Budweiser), my ones (art, instead of kitsch, art again, instead of pornography)—there's a Mapplethorpe photograph [missing image: Robert Mapplethorpe], a Yuskavage photograph . . . [slide 13: Lisa Yuskavage] so art instead of pornography, critique instead of chat shows, and of course gin instead of Budweiser. They're all good.


Lisa Yuskavage

We borrow from each other and slum around a bit, but the distinctions remain. It's related to the issue where time and again censorship effectively prevents one class from having access to what another has on the grounds that they can't handle it. The nineteenth-century suppression by government of written pornography intensifies as the working class becomes more literate. In our own times, Jane Juffer has shown how attempts to stop the transmission of pornography on daytime cable don't affect male viewers but only stop housewives from watching it. It's only when their husbands are at work can they become private consumers.

I did a whole class on art and pornography, which is why I'm bringing these issues up. The difficult question to address here, with art and pornography, is what entitles some people to think they should be legislating other people's pleasure, that most mutable and elusive of experiences?

But then for a number of reasons I'm not convinced that the critique of commodities is honest except where it concerns issues raised in the debate around globalization—like unfair wages, working conditions, environmental damage, excessive subsidies. The critique tends to focus on our intoxication with commodities as if we had no way to articulate or modify this relationship. As if every second of our close engagement with all the stuff around us wasn't an ongoing reappraisal of that relationship, whether through sensations of pleasure or impulses of self-expression. This is not to say that commodities are in themselves good, but just that we manage to deal with them effectively. We use commodities for self-definition but this use is invariably so finely tuned, so intimately felt, that the influence exerted by commodity and consumer is mutual.

The Marxist aesthetician W. F. Haug claims that these attunements are turned back on the commodifiers, particularly through the use of clothing to express sexuality, which compels a response from manufacturers.

Who is in control then? The commodity or the consumer?

I think you will agree that this range of delicate responses gets made within the marketplace; that there is no "outside," outside the market. The idea that selecting alternatives to mainstream commodities avoids capitulation to the market is only a reprise of what we've seen happening to the avant-garde, the delusions of the avant-garde. Your rejection becomes incorporated. In any case these alternatives are themselves commodities of equal intricacy and expressiveness.

Consider, for example, the subtle coding around tatoos. The fine adjustments, moment by moment, that constitute a resistance to conformity simply continue on another level. And this is one reason why the narratives of overwhelming economic forces don't entirely convince. Heidegger's concept of enframing and Lefebvre's concept of everydayness as pernicious deterministic influences on our lives are, I think, resisted at every turn by people as they determine their own inventive responses.

 


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