Many times throughout the history of visual culture, particularly in the Western, the image of the female body has been meticulously transformed or created to meet ideals of desire, knowledge, and religious devotion: the female body as an object of erotic proximity, the female body as an object of Science, the female body as an object of divine creation, and so the list goes. The Wax Venuses (the Anatomical Venuses) are objects of Scientific, Artistic, and Religious devotion that crystallize well this apotheosis.
The Wax Venus Project is an unfinished investigation into multiple systems of visual representation exploring longstanding aesthetic relations between Death, Ecstasy, and Anatomy manifested in the creation of the Wax Venuses.
The piece aims to be a non-directional 'system of meaning' composed of images resembling Aby Warburg's Bilderatlas Mnemosyne–a sort of study that seeks to trace aesthetic relations in image-making by identifiable subjects, yet it is non-conclusive and incomplete in nature.
Concordia University
March 2023
Preliminary Snapshots and Materials
Following the investigation of Joanna Ebenstein and the Morbid Anatomy Museum presented in the book The Anatomical Venus (2016), perhaps the most complete project on the subject yet, I aim to move my study beyond the scope of the history of Artistic and Scientific representation, and bring it closer to a parallel, yet equally radical project, the philosophy of George Bataille, particularly the notions treated in his book Erotism. Death and sensuality (1957). The study tracing the aesthetic developments leading to the conception of the Wax Venuses by Ebenstein and her peers indeed follows a line of subjects that Bataille extensively deals with throughout his philosophy: an articulation of death-erotism-religion-ecstasy. In Erotism, Bataille approaches these from a far more existential front, and although the work of Bataille is in fact brought up in Ebenstein’s book, throughout the study of ecstatic waxworks as a genre it has been scarcely addressed, and so, there are still a handful of insightful connections that can be drawn between these two parallel projects.
I have by chance come across a delightful discovery I am happy to present. Two images contemporary to each other: the panel "God Separating Light From Darkness" painted by Michelangelo (c. 1512), and the depiction of the Aztec's last New Fire Ceremony according to the Codex Borbonicus (c. 1507) both represent the original moment of creation of their own universe, two universes that have not yet met. The two images illustrate the first Light out of total Darkness giving origin to their cosmos, containing striking similarities yet more insightful differences. Starting from the ceremonial centres in which they were conceived, The Temple of Huixachtlan and the Sistine Chapel (both architectural complexes of religious transition) I explore notions of liminality, Light and Darkness, and original creation in both, the Aztec and Catholic cosmologies.
Concordia University
March 2023
One night in the year 1507, in the Basin of Mexico surrounding the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, the last pre-columbian New Fire Ceremony was celebrated. Occurring only every fifty-two years, it marks the reset of the xiuhmolpilli (Calendar Round), one of the most important events in Aztec cosmology[1]. The ceremony recreated the originary moment in which light was first created in darkness giving origin to time. The ritual involved the whole city (the largest of Mesoamerica[2]) strict participation, the procedure was: all fire illumination in the city was to be extinguished, letting the night sky submerge the city into its total darkness. Meanwhile, the priests walked up to Huixachtlan to conceive the ceremony with a human sacrifice, at midnight, the offering would take place in a high-ground platform Temple, a fire was lit from the chest of the sacrificed warrior, and from this very flame, the priests would then light up the fire of the Temple’s torch. This fire was to be seen from the far-out, all-obscured city, indicating the successful reset of the calendar. This exercise was neither a simulation nor a commemoration, for them, it was an actual event of cosmic transition (recreation), in which the city, and their whole world, was suspended in a spatio-temporal void[3]–under the all-washing sky of Night, the darkest night, the threshold that opened into an original state of creation
One year later, by the other side of the Atlantic, Michelangelo had begun to paint the ceilings of the Sixtine Chapel to illustrate a story that unfolded from a similar origin: the creation of light out of total darkness. Commissioned by Pope Julius II, the frescos of the Sistine Chapel’s ceiling (1508 – 1512) narrate the Biblical creation according to the Book of Genesis. The work is divided into multiple scenes that adhere to the architecture of the vaulted ceiling, yet the architectonic elements that appear to support the structure and its images are painted (virtual architecture). In each scene, a light-blue sky fills the background or hosts the scene (virtual sky). In fact, it is believed that prior to Michelangelo’s work, the Chapel’s ceilings were painted of a blue sky with golden stars[4] (refer to figure 3.); (a paradoxical sky: a sky that is Day and Night at the same time). Under that sky that covers the chapel, another religious event of paramount transition takes place: the papal conclave.
Liminality in religious architecture conveys more than the conception of a ceremonial space of temporal occupation (an inhabitable building which hosts events of spiritual transition guided by the highest-ranked priests); the ceremonial temple, strictly, a space for divine transition and transformation, opens for its participants a threshold into a state of spatio-temporal void, in such dimension, the space is turned negative against the totality of its surrounding environment, defining the spatio-temporal specificity in which the religious event takes place. Happening in a rigorously calculated time and space, upon entering the ceremonial building the participants are allowed into a space charged with divine qualities, in this respect, each temple can be understood as threshold architecture; a space of liminal suspension.
The following analysis opens an investigation into two religious centres of liminal transition, The Temple of Huixachtlan, in which the New Fire Ceremony took place, and the Sistine Chapel, primarily, focusing on the image of “God Separating Light From Darkness” painted by Michelangelo (c. 15012), and the representation of the Last New Fire Ceremony according to the Codex Borbonicus (c. 1507). Fundamental to their religious practices, both civilizations created images that illustrated their relationship with the sky as a divine territory. I explore the religious imagery produced in such devotion, in two ceremonial centres in which that imagery was conceived, finding “contrasting similarities” shared by Catholic and Aztec cosmology and iconography.
The Temple ofHuixachtlan was the ceremonial centre where the sacrifice and burning of the New Fire took place, it remains underneath an unknown location at the heights of the Basin of Mexico, yet to be re-discovered. The only evidence we have about its existence and the ceremony is found in the Codex Borbonicus, on which we base our image-architecture analysis.
Description of the space: an upper-front view of an open-air platform standing at a higher height from its ground, accessed by the front up a brief stair. The dimensions are not particularly rectangular but appear to follow an order of 90º angles. In the middle, the burning torch is being lit up by 4 dressed-up priests. The torch is decorated with 3 circles. A rectangular arch suspended above the entrance decorated with 3 icons of the cardinal points (Aztec quincunx) representing space and time. Following the sacrifice–which is not present in the image–the scene depicts the moment in which the light breaks through the darkness and (re)sets the motion of time.
“God Separating Light From Darkness” is the first of the nine panels in the Genesis chronology, it depicts God’s first act of creation: Light. The scene is placed above the viewer’s head, with God floating inside a rectangular image separating light from darkness with his hands, his body breaks a diagonal division between shadows to what appears to be illuminated clouds. At the center, the movement of his clothes traces an undefined circle, found inbetween two well-defined circles outside of the scene. The image of the conception is supported by 4 men who sit at the capital of painted columns. Next to it, the scene of another sacrificial burnt offering: The Binding of Isaac.
Both images share a few iconic similarities, for they represent the same moment, the image of the conception is layered behind a series of layers of ornamented architectural structures and 4 men, and both contain three sequential circles organized in horizontal sequence Yet, their differences are more insightful to for the purpose of our analysis.
In both, Mesoamerican and Catholic cosmology, darkness is understood as the liminal condition precursive to all being, before time and space: a total state of non-being; and light, its ontological counterpart, as the original force conceived out of this non-state, the first force of formation for all transformation. “God Separating Light From Darkness” illustrates a powerful image, the starting point of Catholic cosmology, the first light, the first day; from the same principle, but in contrasting manner to Aztec cosmology, which finds its origin in the first night. This is an ontological distinction of importance to understand each of these civilizations’ relation to the sky as divine territory.
In the Genesis frescoes, the sky is depicted as present, as the medium of light, while in the New Centre Ceremony illustration, the sky is absent, and light is presented as the interruption of (dark) sky. Conversely, the architecture of both ceremonial centers is covered by an all-washing sky, in the Sistine Chapel, the light of Day is depicted (the sky is virtually present and serves to cover the sacred space from the actual sky), in Huitzilopochtli, the darkness of Night is enacted (the open-air temple only becomes sacred once the sky falls upon it).
A third distinction is that in the Genesis fresco is that the deity is present at the moment of conception, whereas in The New Fire Ceremony depiction, the deity is absent, or rather abstracted; the divine force is represented by fire. This leads us to our next difference, in Genesis, light seems to be more of an abstract force, it precedes the sun and the day, while in the New Fire Ceremony, light had always been a material force, for them, the first material: fire.
Overall, both images contain a narration of their original moment, the first narration, embodied in their ceremonial temples, these images decorate the successful transition of a religious event to future generations, in record, the moment is safeguarded in the collective memory of such civilization (transmission of religious values). Painted during the same period of time–yet apparently, under a different sky, these civilizations had not yet come in contact by the time they created these images, but still contain striking iconographic similarities, to that, one might want to provide an archetypal explanation of the ‘nature’ of human world-making; to me, it is more insightful to explore by difference than by similarity, for studying the difference in the representation of light, deity, and the human figure in each, allows us into a more complex understanding of each culture’s history of cosmovision, the architecture of their world, the architecture of their sky.
Bibliography
Farah, Kirby, and Susan Toby Evans. “The Aztec New Fire Ceremony and the Illumination of the Night.” In Night and darkness in ancient Mesoamerica, 238–58. Louisville, Colorado: University Press of Colorado, 2021. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv21v2b70.
Miller, Mary Ellen. The art of Mesoamerica: from Olmec to Aztec. 4th ed. World of art. London: Thames & Hudson, 2006. http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy0709/2006900518.html.
Zappella, Christine. “Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.” Smarthistory, August 9, 2015. https://smarthistory.org/michelangelo-ceiling-of-the-sistine-chapel/.
[1] Kirby Farah and Susan Toby Evans, “The Aztec New Fire Ceremony and the Illumination of the Night,” in Night and darkness in ancient Mesoamerica, 1 online resource (xvii, 351 pages) : color illustrations, maps vols. (Louisville, Colorado: University Press of Colorado, 2021), 238–58, https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv21v2b70. p.254
[2] Mary Ellen Miller, The art of Mesoamerica: from Olmec to Aztec, 4th ed, World of art (London: Thames & Hudson, 2006), http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy0709/2006900518.html.
[3] Farah and Toby Evans, “The Aztec New Fire Ceremony and the Illumination of the Night.” p.254
[4] Christine Zappella, “Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel,” Smarthistory, August 9, 2015, https://smarthistory.org/michelangelo-ceiling-of-the-sistine-chapel/.
The present is a critical commentary on the work of Mexican artist Teresa Margolles based on Cuauhtémoc Medina's text "Zones of Tolerance". Beyond the moral controversies that usually constrain the criticism of her work, I propose neither an interpretation nor a review, but a simple presentation of the work and its context. Entering the Zone of Tolerance: a space defined by compliances of many sorts (criminal, governmental, institutional, and the spectator itself); we arrive at notions of "gore economics," "necropolitics," "poetics of brutality," among other aesthetic and political terms of violence's grammar.
Concordia University
December 2020
Margolles and SEMEFO
Teresa Margolles is a Mexican conceptual artist; with 30 years of trajectory, she has become one of the most recognized and discussed artists in the panorama of Mexican contemporary art. Born Culiacan Rosales, the biggest city in the state of Sinaloa, and one of the most important points for drug trafficking and therefore, an area whose population and economic infrastructure have been subject to conditions of extreme violence midst cartel wars and the failed “administration” of these by the State. This geographical space of constant violent contestation has determined her entire artistic practice, which she has focused solely on explicitly denouncing and exploring the aesthetics and sociocultural implications of death, tragedy, and trauma resulting from the failed neoliberal policies of a narco-state–whose gore economics reduces bodies to mere currency and surplus.
Her earliest work, which Cuauhtémoc Medina’s–notorious curator and longtime supporter of Margolles–regard in his text “Zones of Tolerance”, refers to a series of controversial ready-mades consisting of residual forensic matter. The work was made as part of the “SEMEFO” art group (short for “Servicio Médico Forense”: Mexico’s National Institute of Forensic Science). Violence and criminality were not new topics in Mexican art, yet the introduction of forensic matter as a potential art object into institutional circles of exhibitions was, so to speak, a radical motif; highly criticized as acclaimed, it turned the conversation into an ethical controversy between the spectator, the institution, and the artist. It sought to bring into question the corruption of the multiple systems that allow this art to exist.[1]
To my understanding, Margolles’ concept is very clear: to depict necropolitics as an established system of governance in Mexico. Defining Necropolitics, as Achille Mbembe conceptualized it, conveys the exercise of control over mortality as the deployment of power in means of doing polities.[2] Philosopher Sayak Valencia has addressed Mexico’s own ‘Economy of Death,’ in which the extreme violence on the everyday basis oppressing the populations becomes not only ordinary but necessary for the organization and functionality of the colonial and postcolonial capitalism; murder becomes then systematic murder under this model of gore capitalism.[3]
Margolles’ work needs to be conceived within this realm to fully understand her controversial discourse. Margolles and SEMEFO work on what I define as the “poetics of brutality”. The poetics of brutality is what artists create when they frame or recontextualize real violence to present it as an aesthetic object for critical analysis. This object exists to document and denounce. The poetics of brutality convey the crude or explicit depiction of wrongful suffering.
Bringing the politics of mortality to the field of artistic representation naturally conveys a call for awareness that Margolles has been careful to maintain. However, the discursiveness of these artworks is always backed by a poetic approach to the art-object. SEMEFO, and the criticism made around it insists that these practices are based on an investigation of violent death and the aesthetic process that unfolds from it, the ‘life of the corpse’, or the ‘sociocultural implication of the corpse’ SEMEFO claims to study, are mere “intellectual rhetoric” that backs up the representational labour of conceptual art. This is completely identifiable and canonic in the art produced within Mexico’s artistic circle at that time and until today. [4]
It is not my attempt to swamp my critique under the never-ending debate that measures the ethical conflicts in the production and marketability of this kind of art. Rather, I aim to analyze the context (zone) in which Margolles’ art is allowed to exist (tolerance), with the hopes of arriving at new grounds in our understanding of Art and Violence: a twofold business.
Zones of Tolerance
What are these ‘zones’ that Medina proposes? Where are they and what is tolerated within them, I consider it to be just a matter of interpretation by the reader, they are cognitive processes to interpret Margolles’ art.
The first zone that comes to our mind when we encounter a Margolles’ artwork is situated specifically in the place where murder was committed, where the ‘life of the corpse’ begins, the matter is ‘rescued’ by the artist that will keep it safe from oblivion, this forensic matter will undergo a set of procedures so it can become a medium of its own, and ultimately serve as public evidence that this object is a result of systematic murder tolerated and perpetuated in specific areas.
The second act of tolerance also happens in our imaginary: it is our denial to solve the mystery of these procedures, because it is precisely in this grey area in which the magic of art happens. How does Margolles is able to (il)legally retrieve gallons of water from autopsy rooms, chemically treat it so it is safe to interact with it, smuggle it into Venice or New York, and get away with everything? This is a question we all ask to ourselves but have no actual intention of solving, since it entails the use of illegal and unethical operations, to which we as spectators, and the Art Institutions comply. Medina addresses the irony of these transnational operations very well, and it is what I think he ultimately refers to as a Zones of Tolerance. The fact that official art institutions and the Mexican government recognize and promote Margolles’ art implies not only the evidence that the legal, social and forensic system is broken, but that she also corrupts these systems so that her art can exist. In Medina’s words: ‘The space of tolerance Margolles’ art occupies is a gift of inefficiency and institutional complicity.’ (p.48).
I’d like to wrap up this review with a very personal thought, in which I conceive that Margolles’ forensic art gains most of its meaning from being an experience of ethical tension: the Zone of Tolerance is everything between the viewer and the artwork. The Zone of Tolerance in not only a delimited physical area of permissiveness, but a state of mind in which the viewer is allowed to experience violence from the safety of a gallery room. The spectator feels uncomfortable of what they encounter but to some degree tolerates and accepts the violence presented as something out of their reach, unsolvable, unfixable. At the same time, implies that the action of viewing is an individual contribution since it raises individual and collective awareness of the subject in question. This momentum is a zone of tolerance perse. The viewer has no option but to move on to the next piece to be captivated by a different aesthetic narrative, distracting themselves from the tragedy just witnessed.
Medina is clever to address these tensions and contradictions between art, spectator, and institution, but he is not concerned of ethical implications as much as he is with poetic interpretations. For him, the concept of ‘Zone of Tolerance’ is a political statement to validate her art within his textual analysis in the means of producing meaning for the artworks; we shall take into consideration, always, that the majority of contemporary conceptual artworks are composed by both, the material object, and the textual discourse that validates them as manifestations of intellect and sensitivity. Margolles’ “conceptualism” does not really depend much on these textual analyses, but it will remain at the forefront of the conversation that regards aesthetics, ethics and political allowance, which art critics, historians, and curators focus the most.
Bibliography
Emmelhainz, Irmgard. 2019. ‘La crítica y la revolución cultural en México.’ Campo de Relámpago. From http://campoderelampagos.org/critica-y-reviews/19/12/2019
Medina, Cuauhtémoc. 2001. “Zones of Tolerance: Teresa Margolles, SEMEFO and Beyond.” Parachute, no. 104 (October): 31–52. https://search-ebscohost-com.lib-ezproxy.concordia.ca/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aft&AN=504977388&site=ehost-live&scope=site.
Valencia, Sayak, and Olga Arnaiz Zhuravleva. 2019. “Necropolitics, Postmortem/Transmortem Politics, and Transfeminisms in the Sexual Economies of Death.” Tsq: Transgender Studies Quarterly 6 (2): 180–93. https://doi.org/10.1215/23289252-7348468.
Course: Latin American Contemporary Art - ARTH 398
An essay on two similar artists: Margolles (Mexican) and Salcedo (Colombian), whose art deals primarily with topics of violence, trauma, and memory in political tension; and who both enjoy a particular kind of treatment from their respective States and Art Institutions.
Concordia University
May 2021
Context
In this review of the work of Teresa Margolles and Doris Salcedo, I attempt to provide the reader with a grounded historic-political context for the works discussed first as I open debate regarding the State and its corresponding Cultural Institutions that facilitate this art to be of international relevance. As much as Salcedo and Margolles promote a critical and radical vision towards the failed politics of the State, the same state has officialized their discourses through its Cultural-Institutional arm to represent their countries in the highest competitions and exhibitions, such as Biennials and Museums in the West.
For if we go into the higher interests of our administrations, producing competent art at a global level has been paramount, since Modernization, to present a nation as a universal power among other nations.[i]
In Latin America, art has exponentially developed a highly political character throughout the 20th century, and although its authoritarian governments have been known for suppressing intellectual criticism against them (especially coming from the arts), as Latin American countries in its entirety have been subjected to the same hegemonic project of globalization, in turn, has also given rise to global programs of art circulation. For Margolles and Salcedo, who became internationally known in the late ’90s creating neo-conceptual art and ready-mades within a well established global network of art, the development of the free art market, the increasingly powerful curatorial/intellectual context in contemporary art, and the funding of art institutions in favor of private and state interests was opening up several channels for artistic experimentation and political critique in which powerful and intriguing art (mostly conceptual) was demanded.
It is precisely in this internationalist context of critique and multiculturalism that the work of Margolles and Salcedo has been highly acclaimed for one clear reason, they have radicalized the practice of conceptual art, as they have been concerned that the tragic narrative of violence and decomposition they work with, is traced to the very specific raw material of the trauma; I explain: they use real matter left of the story they present, forensic material, corpse remains, weapons, abandoned belonging by victims of violence, and so on. While this narrative may seem familiar to some, it is very controversial when it is elevated to broader diverse audiences, as people naturally question the ethic of their work. A lot of debate and discontent has arisen in the general public and the critics regarding the moral, the corruption, and the actual quality of their works. The critiques, in my opinion, are often valid, still, there is something undeniable of their practices that deserves acknowledgment and admiration, both have developed creative and powerful languages of social realism that set a high bar for Latin American critical art.
As for the institutions, if we dare to look closely, the state is very much concerned with art (if it’s a tool or a threat) as an apparatus that consolidates ideology and culture. In this sense, Slavoj Žižek points out to us at the beginning of his book “The Parallax View” that there is an established and conflicted trinity between elites (the groups in power), brutalviolence (as a way of governing/sustaining power), and the fine arts (as the aesthetic-sensitive representation of these).[ii] I will emphasize later on this matter. So, while in the spheres of the ‘high culture’ history is commonly delighted as an aesthetic experience, the real tragedy, that of war, that of fear, reaches its highest peak when it is converted into art. In literature, the plastic, scenic and cinematographic arts the narrative of human suffering is treated until it becomes a phenomenal representation-interpretation of tragedy, this not only for the privileged few but for the masses in general; as most of the art produced in the XX century and so forth is meant to reach mass audiences. To produce and perform art at the scale Margolles and Doris do requires mediation, funding, and permission from corresponding powers, mostly art institutions.
While artists work on what is relevant to their reality and collective history, the institutions in charge of generating and managing culture indeed depend on the artists. In that sense, it seems that the artistic narrative that triumphs is the one that is in accordance with the desires of the institutions and those of the popular audience, even if these desires constantly clash. However, when the discourse of art is conflictive, cynical, and puts at risk the legitimacy of the state and its institutions, does the exhibition space–commonly institutional and linked to the State– not serve as a “tolerance zone” for protest and radicalisms?
Long before museums became zones of tolerance, Latin American artists already had a history of assuming important roles in interpreting the tragic events that mark their populations as narratives of cultural value, of utmost relevance not only to the elites, but their discourse has been consolidated with a higher social purpose. In literature and the visual arts, there is a large repertoire of oppositional theory and art in Latin America. As far as the visual arts are concerned, conceptual art established itself as an effective apparatus of ideology around the world (conceptualism)[iii], in Latin America, there are important avant-garde conceptual art interventions that could be understood under the main purpose of social realism.
What is in the essence of much of Latin American conceptualism is the pain and tragedy that governs our societies and writes our history, failed states, war, political conflict, corruption and drug trafficking have become the conditioning factor of the various realities experienced in Latin America. For some time now, several artists have been denouncing various problems in the lower and higher fields of culture.
A bit of history…
Since the beginning of the 20th century, the wounds of colonization– to say it in a romantic manner– continued to fester on a continental level, creating new forms of precariousness and violence. The anguish in the aftermath of colonization and independence wars on the continent and its peoples were already illustrated by modernist painters prior to conceptualism, such as those of the Muralist movement present in Mexico, Cuba, Argentina, and Uruguay.[iv] Telling the complicated ‘Latin experience’ was a good rhetorical resource for art during the first half of the century. However, these artists, mostly charged with leftist political ideology, held a positive and hopeful view towards the partidocracy and the State (with Marxist values). Therefore art was not used as a radical protest against the oppression of the nation-state, nor did it highlight the atrocities of the nation-state towards its populations in the present.
A few years later the fever of Modernity in Latin America had died down and what remained was the apex of American imperialism and predatory globalization that centered Latin America once again as the strategic playground for Western powers and local rulers. Interest in the continent’s southern hemisphere’s natural resources and labor force became the catalyst for an endless series of violent conflicts and systematic oppression. Many genocides, displacements, civil wars, coups d’états’, dictatorships, and political persecutions occurred openly perpetuated and financed by the global powers.
It is in this context that the artist with its creativity, intellect and sensitivity becomes a suitable mediator of social discontent, and art, as the state censors and suppresses it, gains rhetorical power and legitimacy.[v] And so denouncement became inevitable, the artist acquires, almost unwittingly, a social responsibility to act against silence. As Margolles rightly said: ‘What else can we talk about?[vi] However, the tactics to convert art into protest were diverse in the localities and evolved over time.
Dating from the late ‘60s deeply political avant-garde art movements in Argentina (Tucumán Arde and the Comité Coordinador de la Imaginación Revolucionaria, 1968), in Mexico, almost simultaneously, as social decay and state oppression became increasingly shocking, to counter the officialist rhetorics of progress, a lot art was produced collectively with the social focus of denouncing systematic violence (Los Grupos). If anything, conceptualism in Latin America was guided by its commitment to developing a social realism of impact, well described by artist Juan Pablo Renzi, ‘we aspire to turn each piece of reality into an art object that turns upon the consciousness of the world, revealing the intimate contradictions of this class society.‘[vii]
In the last period of the twentieth-century geopolitical conflicts had multiplied and intertwined with a larger systematic problem that had developed particularly in Colombia and Mexico: drug trafficking (narcotráfico). The state conveniently ceases to be the main apparent enemy to its people, and by the 1980s organized crime (the cartels) had become extensive organizations of war and government to which the state supposedly fought against as a matter of national security. The reality is much more complicated. In Mexico on the one hand the cartels were organized into the first continental infrastructure for drug trafficking (mainly cocaine) to the United States, led by Felix Gallardo (aka El Jefe de Jefes) starting in Colombia, Felix established the first distribution network that made the Cali Cartel and the Medellin Cartel (led by Pablo Escobar), as well as the united cartels in northern Mexico extremely powerful and wealthy. In Colombia, this was unleashed alongside a ‘civil war’ considerably more violent than Mexico’s situation at the time, as armed insurgent groups and self-defense groups had been fighting for years for the political power and territory control. ‘Las FARC’ (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia), which was financed by massive kidnappings, displacements, and drug trafficking,[viii] sustained a civil war against the consolidated right-wing paramilitary groups such as the ‘AUD’ (United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia) led by the very powerful Carlos Castaño Gill, financed by displacements and sale of land to particulars, land rights, transnational corporations (such as Chiquita Brands)[ix] and also drug trafficking. In Colombia, the paramilitary groups, in particular the AUD, were for many years the unofficial armed wing of the state. There are countless deaths that this armed conflict left and the damage it caused is irreparable. It is in this niche of this ‘irreparability’ that Salcedo’s art is born.
Colombia’s civil war could be a more complex and political conflict than the case of the drug violence on Mexico’s northern border, yet they have parallel motives and in their essence are the same: Conflict between armed groups for power over land and resources, as well as for the drug trafficking routes that finance their activities. These armies of organized crime (call them cartels, paramilitaries, self-defense groups, insurgent groups) defend not only political management interests, but also financial interests for transnationals, therefore they are not alien to the national economy, they are elemental to it, and are closely linked to the government, or are the government itself. Inside these forms of government–commonly denounced as ‘narcogobierno‘, ‘narco-paramilitarismo‘, ‘FARCgobierno’–the more the state colludes, the more difficult it becomes to pinpoint the ultimate culprits of the atrocities committed, the more difficult it becomes to conceive of justice and thus the more impossible it becomes to restore the social fabric.
Margolles and Salcedo
It is in this context of systematic violence and despair that Margolles and Salcedo, almost simultaneously begin to produce art to counteract the silence and the impunity left by these ‘civil’ wars. However, something remarkable of their art is that this would not only function as local-social interventions, but as an amplification of the local conflict to the highest spheres of culture (the international). For their art, it would already be part of an international contemporary art circuit in an expanding market, following this, the logistics of its production and exhibition would become more costly and complex, requiring also a certain degree of complicity from cultural-state institutions.[x]
This is a bit more evident in the case of Margolles, as she requires noticeable illegality to be able to smuggle forensic remains transnationally, such as her intervention in the Venice Biennial and the multiple pieces mentioned by Cuauhtémoc Medina in his promotional essay “Zones of Tolerance“. In the case of Doris, it does not requires much to figure out about the permission and collaboration of the State to carry out her performances/installations. For example, the one she carried out in the Palace of Justice in Bogota in 2002, entitled “Empty Chairs of the Palace of Justice”, a consensual performance-intervention that lasted 53 hours. Yet the most notable collaboration of the Colombian government with Doris would take place recently, in 2016, when the weapons surrendered by FARC from the Peace treaty were disposed at Doris’ will to create a piece of work to conmemorate the end of this civil war.
This decision was probably made anticipating that Doris would make the weapons a monument to the resolution of the conflict. However, Doris chose to melt down the weapons and use the iron to collectively create, together with women victims of the conflict, a piece composed of cocked plates that would form the floor of the what now is the art gallery ‘FRAGMENTOS’, intended to exhibit political and socially useful art.[xi]
There is a substantial concept underlying ‘FRAGMENTOS’ which is also present in most of Margolles’ art, that of ‘anti-monumentality‘. While a monument is meant to be a proud commemoration, most monuments also sing songs of war and pain. They still have the common purpose of remembering and being an ideological maintenance apparatus. A peace monument would be meaningless to a deeply wounded people who could never recover what has been taken from them during the civil wars of drug trafficking and paramilitarism as in the case of Mexico and Colombia. An anti-monument, would rather be an act of collective memory that pays homage to no one, on the contrary, it is a lament.
In respect of ‘Fragmentos‘, which as I mentioned, was created with the fusion of 60 tons of weapons surrendered by the FARC in the peace agreement of 2016, Salcedo tells us that she was not interested in building a vertical monument (obelisk) of victory, since no one is a winner in a war, she seeks a horizontal monument, which does not oversee the people but instead remains below them.[xii] The iron of the melted weapons would be treated with hammers by several women victims of the war until it becomes plates that would form the floor of the gallery. The argument that Salcedo clearly explains is that these plates are fragments of memory and trauma, this is the fixed interpretation of the work.
For these pieces, the viewer is supposed to look at them with a disconcerted sadness, contrary to the way an honorary monument is to be observed, the anti-monument is then an aesthetic object-experience that projects pain, and triggers the viewer to mourn for a pain that surely did not experience. This mourning projected by these works specifically narrates the tragedy of forced displacement. What are the unoccupied and deranged ‘furniture’ presented in ‘Unland’ (1995-98)[xiii] if not fragments of something that was lost? The issue of forced displacement is also addressed by Margolles in many of her works, the most specific perhaps being her sculpture ‘La promesa‘ (The Promise) composed of the remains of an abandoned house in Ciudad Juárez. Here she was in charge of directing the demolition of an abandoned house, one of the 120’000 abandoned houses in the city due to forced migration as a result of drug war violence.[xiv] The house, which is a lost memory, a broken promise, is recontextualized to become a sculpture, and therefore embodies many memories–conceptually of course–reduced to a wall of dust.
‘Fragmentos‘ and ‘The Promise‘, as their names suggest, are works composed of fragments of memory and broken promises (Margolles refers to them as ‘compacted memory‘), an odd figure: the fragmentation of mind (immaterial) put together by the fragmented–now compacted–residual matter of tragedy (material). A light breaks through such fragmentation, opening way for a reversed journey, one which begins in the viewer’s eyes, leading the way of a vortex that never ends but leaves one wandering a low-resolution territory: between remembering tragedy and the tragedy of remembering.
Acknowledging the creative effort that Salcedo and Margolles have developed to denounce the consequential violence of failed states, I want to wrap up this analysis by raising awareness in the reader that political art is never to be interpreted as separated (or dismissing) from the Institution that hosts it, and the financial and political logistics that it implies. At a time when there is no room for the political persecution of artists (at least in the West, at least apparently), it would seem that freedom of expression does not represent any kind of threat to the State; on the contrary, these expressions are at work in consolidating its ever-deceptive historical narratives and adorning the decaying project of “social reconciliation”.
Notes
[i] Briefly mentioned in Barriendos, “Geopolitics of Global Art.” p.110
[vi] Emblematic title for her contribution to the Mexican Pavillion in the 53rd Venice Biennale.
[vii] Renzi is cited by Luis Camnitzer in “Tucumán arde: Politics in Art.” p.62.
[viii] El Tiempo, “Las FARC y el Narcotráfico.” 2000
[ix] In 2007 Chiquita Brands plead guilty before the U.S. Department of Justice for “Making Payments to a Designated Terrorist Organization” (financing paramilitary groups in Colombia). Chiquita Brands agreed to pay a $25 Million fine. U.S Department of Justice, “Chiquita Brands.” 2007.
[xi] This gallery is located in the address Cra. 7 #6-16, Bogotá, Colombia. For more info, visit https://www.plataformaarquitectura.cl/cl/919532/fragmentos-nil-contra-monumento-granada-garces-arquitectos
[xii] Mentioned by Salcedo in the video “Fragmentos” produced by Mimbre, 2018
[xiii] Salcedo, ““Interview with Charles Merewether.” 1998
[xiv] Addressed by Margolles in the video interview about her piece “La Promesa” by Periscopio Muac, 2015
WORKS CITED
Anreus, Alejandro. (2012). Chapter 9, Siqueiros’ travels and “alternative muralism” in Argentina and Cuba. In A. Anreus, L. Folgarait, & R. A. Greeley (Eds.), Mexican muralism: A critical history (p. 243). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Barriendos, Joaquín. “Geopolitics of Global Art: The Reinvention of Latin America as a Geoaesthetic Region.” In The global art world: audiences, markets, and museums, Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2009, pp. 98-114.
Camnitzer, Luis. “Tucumán arde: Politics in Art.” In Conceptualism in Latin American Art: Didactics of Liberation, Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007, pp. 60-72.
Carvajal González, Johanna. 2018. “El Relato de Guerra: Cómo El Arte Transmite La Memoria Del Conflicto En Colombia.” Amerika, no. 18 (June). OpenEdition. doi:10.4000/amerika.10198.
Gallo, Rubén. “Adventures in collectivism during the 1970’s.” In Collectivism after Modernism: The Art of Social Imagination after 1945, Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press, 2007, pp. 165-190.
Medina, Cuauhtémoc. “Zones de Tolérance: Teresa Margolles, Semefo and Beyond.” Parachute 104, 2001. pp. 33-52.
Merewether, Charles. “Interview with Charles Merewether (1998).” In Doris Salcedo, London: Phaidon Press, 2000, pp. 134-145.
Ramírez, Mari Carmen. “Tactics for Thriving on Adversity: Conceptualism in Latin America, 1960-1980.” In Inverted Utopias: Avant-Garde Art in Latin America, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004, pp. 53-71.
U.S. Department of Justice. “Chiquita Brands International Pleads Guilty to Making Payments to a Designated Terrorist Organization And Agrees to Pay $25 Million Fine.” News release, March 19, 2007. Accessed May 4, 2021. https://www.justice.gov/archive/opa/pr/2007/March/07_nsd_161.html.
Course: Latin American Contemporary Art - ARTH 398
An essay on "Latin American Conceptualism", a term which describes no particular art movement but encompasses many motifs in Postmodern Latinoamerica's art production and commercial circles.
Concordia University
February 2021
There is a common interest that prevails among historians, critics, and the people to reach a consensus of what ‘Latin American conceptualism’ is in general terms. Not only in the plastic arts we find these attempts to conceive Latin America as a unified culture, “Latin” music and literature are also often overlooked as a broad aesthetic category. It is first necessary to point that Latin American Conceptualism is not–and has never been–an “Art movement” of its own, with a specific set of values and technics respective to a local time-space specificity. The term is rather useful to contextualize the historical motives and conditions that turned conceptual art–once a desperate counter-cultural act of emergency–into a dominant form of discourse in contemporary art in Latin America. Furthermore, most of the art that is subject to critique under the concept of “Latin American Conceptualism” in Academia and the industry is naturally political and critical to the systems of power; it aligns itself in a social utility. Some of the streams of conceptualism–whose artworks won’t be discussed here–have taken completely divergent paths to that of social realism.
While the insistence on consolidating a Latinamerican type of art corresponds for the most part to flattering postcolonial perspectives the West has set on Latin America’s history and populations, there is in fact a material ‘common ground’ in which most of these conceptual artworks were created: the unconformity in the political and the social dimensions of economic, political and military oppression. The ambition to trace the genealogy of Latin American conceptualism as an artistic movement of its own begins then with the premise that most of the conceptual art that brought international attention to Latin America is linked to contexts of oppression. Broadly speaking one can identify that from 1950-70, Latin American populations underwent similar processes of urbanization[i], economic reformism, the growth of mass media, and the clashing political ideologies of liberal capitalism with Marxist-Leninist communism. Within Latin American regimes of violence, conceptual art became a sensible effective resource to counter the hegemonic official rhetorics of modernity and progress.
In this sense, people identify some similarities in the tactics across the continent and in the problems that art addresses. The social interventions and demonstrations that required collective work occurred in Mexico’s by ‘Los Grupos’[ii], in Argentina stands out ‘Tucumán Arde’ in 1968, and later on in Chile’s ‘Escena de Avanzada’ during Pinochet’s dictatorship (1973). Urban interventions in the city’s visual mechanisms and public infrastructure such as boards, counteracting propagandistic symbols scattered around the city and altering street signalization.
This type of interventionist and uncomfortable-ish art has been cataloged by many as Guerrilla Art. In the West, around the 60s activism and art practice were merging strongly and one of the most relevant shapes it took was the Guerrilla Art movements, as it became a situationist and immediate form of protest against the global powers and modern Imperialisms. While I wouldn’t affirm that the interventions held by Tucumán Arde and Grupo Pentagono were thought out in this fashion, it does follow the same logic of immediacy, public visibility, strategic location, low budget, and the disregard for traditional technic-aesthetic canons.
These particular logistics of production are basic to understanding the shift from the modernist vanguards in painting and sculpture –figurative, abstract, concrete art prominently present in the continent[iii]– towards a more idea-based artistic approach. In some way, art needed to be responsive and needed to have the capacity to grow collective sensibility by unconventional means of representation, this means, art needed to detach from its premises of elitist, high-culture and find ground in the popular. The idea required to be liberated from the traditional craftsmanship of fine art as so it can reproduce itself to the masses without depending on financial aid from the sponsoring State.[iv] Art then needed to be relatively quick to produce and clear enough for the interpretation of the general population, i.e. a painting can take a lot of time to make, and its reproduction is thought to weaken the value of its specificity, on the other hand, a print that is meant to circulate across localities is cheaper and easier to produce and can carry out concrete ideas without the need of complex interpretation.
In this sense, a lot of artists opted for the ‘appropriation’ of circulating media by making use of the existing structures of mass communications. Notably in this matter is Grupo Suma in Mexico, who printed on newspapers and official documents stained signs and crude images of the social reality. In the aspect of material circulation of the works of art (ideas), some artists printed (literally) their ideas into the material commodity flux of the market by altering products of everyday use with messages of social and political critique. The point of this was to create a circuit of ideology that does not depend on a centralizing system of control. The market, according to its liberal principles, is supposed to function this way, self regulative and independent of the State’s intervention. The Brazilian artist Cildo Meireles subverts this notion ironically by printing messages in two of the most celebrated commodities, paper bills, and Coca-cola bottles, putting them back in circulation and therefore creating a work of art that mediates itself, and which accomplishes its meaning when the inadvertent audience (that who holds the bottle) is met by a message that turns its ordinary consumption practice into a transgressive individual reflection.[v]
These particular types of artworks were not only expanding the desire to hack the existing infrastructures of monetary and commodity value for the sake of art, but they were also challenging the idealism of what objects can or cannot be considered as art. A matter that, lucky enough for them, is up only for the artists and the institution to decide.
The action of interfering (or not) an object as means to conceive it and present it like a work of art is what is now generally known as the ready-made. Discovered by Duchamp back in the 40’s, highly developed by Latin American conceptual artists in the last period of the XX century. We could say these were the baby steps for what Latin American artists would later evolve the ready-made practice.
This art, meant to “destroy the idealistic separation between the piece and its reality”[vi] , social realism, critique to the system and the local authorities through the recontextualización of ordinary objects became an easy, fashionable way to create value for the audience, the artists, and the Institutions that sponsored these artworks. As the techniques and possibilities of conceptual representation evolved and were accepted in institutions (for example, Mexican Collectives and the Instituto Di Tella in Argentina relations with the American art institutions are known), they become much more challenging and controversial for the public that experiences them.
What we know today as ‘contemporary art’ is the consolidation of various conceptual currents in a post-modernist framework, these work on the idea behind the object, in which this artistic object can be an installation or a ready-made sculpture, it does not matter as long as the idea behind the piece is powerful.
Even if the early stages of conceptualism were grounded outdoors from the mediation of public institutions and the State, Conceptualism gained its worldwide legitimacy due to the acceptance and accommodation into Art Institutions (mostly international), the expansion–or the creation–of the ‘Art Industry’ as a global network of Museums, fairs, curators, intellectuals, merchants, and the growing market demand for art sales. We shall not understand Latin Conceptualism out of this context. While it is true that some of the early art was meant to be revolutionary and to “fight against economic dependency”,[vii] because of these artists’ close links with the Western growing international art system, these movements were swallowed as “artistic peripheries” of a specific geopolitical region: Latin America. This consolidates what Joaquín Barriendos suggests as the ‘geoasthetic region’.[viii] In the eyes of the West, Latin America can be understood as a geoasthetic region that produces political art. This art not only sells well, it also fits the strategic plans of museums to incorporate art from all around the world.
The following generation of artists (around the 90s – till today), usually referred to as neo-conceptualist were already designing artwork whose value and function was to be measured in the parameters of international art exhibition. In the case of Mexico, Miguel Calderón, Yoshua Okón[ix], Gabriel Orozco, Cruzvillegas, Teresa Margolles, Lozano-Hemmer, Aldo Chaparro, and so on, are celebrated as leading contemporary artists, not only by fair’s curators but by the Governmental State and its international affairs institutions.[x] This period marks when conceptualism stops being a ‘tactic for thriving on adversity’ and becomes a culturally necessary discourse accommodated by the State.[xi] As of now, Conceptual art remains critical and political, but it has lost, in its majority, its radical drive against the systems of power. If it produces enjoyment (like Orozco) or shame (as Margolles), it stimulates only the emotions of the viewer without threatening any order or making those in power to feel uncomfortable.
The institutional allowance and marketability for Conceptualism and neo-Conceptualism opened up divergent paths for the art practice in which it has become more difficult to trace conceptualism as a single movement. Even if the insistence on understanding Latin America’s cultural productions in a universalistic-homogenous manner prevails, there is not a single substantial ideology that unites these practices across diverse contexts, therefore they better be understood as phenomena, rather than as a movement or a geoaesthetic category.
Notes
[i] Mari Carmen, “Tactics for Thriving on Adversity.” p.58
[iii] Concrete art was particularly dominant in Brazil, in which influenced by modernist ideals of functionality, technological determinism were copped by visual artists, architects and technocrats politicians. This was countered by an emerrging art movement named as ‘Neoconcretism’ lead by Lygia Clark, they broke with idealist premise that form follows function. The main ideological ruptures of this movement are addressed in Lygia’s manifesto ‘We Refuse’, 1966.
[viii] Joaquín Barriendos, “Geopolitics of Global Art.” p.98, 10
[ix] Calderon and Okón produced the polemic installation ‘A propósito’ in 1997, constructed of stolen stereos in Mexico City. The work of art was later exhibited abroad in “Lifting. Theft in Art” 2007-2008 curated by Atopia Projects. Tania Ragasol “A propósito”.
[x] Biennales and International contests are regularly financed/sponsored by the state. In the case of México, it is by The National Council For Culture And The Arts (CONACULTA), The Institute of Fine Arts (INBA), The Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE), The National University of Mexico (UNAM), Patronato Del Arte Contemporaneo (PAC) as noted in the official announcements, see for example: e-flux, “Teresa Margolles at 53rd Venice Biennale”, 2009.
[xi] The most noticeable example of this is in recent times is the mega-project of reconstructing the park Chapultepec in Mexico City. Multimillionaire project of urban infrastructure granted to the conceptual artist Gabriel Orozco. Sparkinlg a lot of discontent and debate within the scene. See in cited works Minera, “Chapultepec o el precio de la desolación”, 2021
WORKS CITED
Barriendos, Joaquín. “Geopolitics of Global Art: The Reinvention of Latin America as a Geoaesthetic Region.” In The global art world: audiences, markets, and museums, Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2009, pp. 98-114.
Camnitzer, Luis. “Tucumán arde: Politics in Art.” In Conceptualism in Latin American Art: Didactics of Liberation, Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007, pp. 60-72.
Dos Angos, Moacir “”Cildo Meireles. Inserciones en Circuitos Ideológicos.” DAROS, 2017. https://www.daros-latinamerica.net/es/ensayo/cildo-meireles-inserciones-en-circuitos-ideol%C3%B3gicos
Gallo, Rubén (2007) “Adventures in collectivism during the 1970’s” In Collectivism after Modernism: The Art of Social Imagination after 1945, Blake Stimson and Gregory Sholette (eds.), 165-190, Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press.
Minera, María. “Chapultepec o el precio de la desolación: carta a Gabriel Orozco.” NEXOS, January 2021. https://cultura.nexos.com.mx/chapultepec-o-el-precio-de-la-desolacion-carta-a-gabriel-orozco/
Ramírez, Mari Carmen. “Tactics for Thriving on Adversity: Conceptualism in Latin America, 1960-1980.” In Inverted Utopias: Avant-Garde Art in Latin America, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004, pp. 53-71.
For this assignment, I was asked to make a critical commentary on Susan Sontag's essay "In Plato's Cave". Taking into consideration changes in the nature and context of the Photographic Image ever since the publication of the text, in this analysis, I revisit some of its most relevant arguments applied to contemporary photography, primarily, dealing with digital and computational photography.
Concordia University
February 2023
In Plato’s Cave.
“In Plato’s Cave“, Susan Sontag’s opening essay of her book “On Photography” (1977), offers insightful observations on the photographic image and its effects. Primarily dealing with fundamental issues in photographic production and reception, the text introduces a set of radical ideas at the core of her inquiry; photograph-as-deception, photograph-as-desire, photograph-as-environment…among many. Throughout the text, she identifies a series of (apparently) non-changing qualities in the nature of the photographic image with notorious precision, for many of her notions remain prominently active and revisited in the theoretical and philosophical study of aesthetic phenomena in the present day.
The book was published forty-five years after the publication of Walter Benjamin’s “A Short History of Photography” (1931) and “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” (1935), and only three years prior to the publication of Roland Barthes’ “Camera Lucida” (1980). All of which are considered theoretical landmarks in the critical study of the photographic image, highly regarded in academic circles and obligatory readings for most undergraduate students of artistic disciplines. In retrospection, I allow myself to make the following observation: while not explicitly, all these works recognize the photographic image as the sensual object at the center of the 20th-century milieu.
Unlike Benjamin and Barthes, in “In Plato’s Cave”, Sontag is less concerned about what the photographic image is, but what the photographic image does. For her study does not dwell deeply into the ethics of image-making and the transformative effects photographic reproduction has in all object, but into the effects of image reception in the collective (social) and individual psyche, one might say, she is regarded with “the ethics of seeing”.
Sontag’s critique–along with that of Benjamin and Barthes–asserts to crystalize a particular sensible milieu (of late-Modernity), a period of time in which photographic production and reproduction had taken a central place in the structuring of perceptual reality. Starting somewhere around the World Wars and concluding with Digitalization–I will argue–, we no longer find ourselves in that epoch, yet, if we are to understand the world through the flow and mediation of signs, the technological developments that characterize the early 21st-century experience have moved photographic production and consumption even forward in the construction of the sensible sphere.
In present day, almost all personal device that enables social interaction must possess the capacity to produce, or at least, process (photographic) images. This is something of paramount importance to keep in consideration as we are revisiting the writing of a 20th-century theorist who had just started to notice photography’s shift from the occasional to the ordinary. In this sense, to photograph is no longer a duty reserved for the photographer but a matter of all-usage for all users; an ordinary obsession to turn reality into souvenir. In this respect, the ethics of seeing that Sontag problematizes in photography have not changed in principle but have since become more complex.
Ever since the publication of the essay, the photographic image underwent two paramount shifts in its natural and technical condition; first, the coming of digital photography, and second, the broader “universal” process of Digitalization and the Internet. Digitalization is, so far, the technological shift most characteristic of the early 21st century, for it has rearticulated entirely the modes of value production and abstraction; allowing for the acceleration of both. Posing drastic changes in the modes of production and circulation of images, as much as how these shaped the sensible and economic reality of an ever-more “interconnected” world.
The breaking point had occurred two years prior to the publication of “On Photography”, with the invention of the self-contained (portable) digital camera by Steven Sasson in 1975, which set loose the photograph from its medium specificity of film (chemical gelatine silver process) and printmaking (analog process of reproduction), allowing the photograph to emerge and move more easily. Screen and photographs were about to come together as a medium of their own. The digital turn in display technology of the late 2000’s and early 2000’s sophisticated screen and camera into a single compact carriable device, advancing the photograph to an ever more ubiquitous presence.
Comparable to her metaphorical observation: “photographs have become part of the furniture of the environment”[1], today one might assertedly claim that the screen is part of the “furniture environment” (if not the environment itself), furthermore, one can understand the device screen-camera as the threshold that immerses a person into its–digital–environment.
Moving towards Computational Photography, the digital photograph opens an interesting derivate to Sontag’s observations on the camera as a device that captures (1.) absence (pseudo-presence), and (2.) disappearance.[2] Both motifs of the non-being, or the already-gone. The paradoxical intervention that all light-capturing devices exercise on time: in its effort to capture reality, a photograph can only capture what is no longer real. Each record–Sontag is clear about this–does not capture reality but only an interpretation of it. Computational photography, one of the latest developments in digital photography (all smarthphones are equipped with this technology), operates in the exact same principle of pseudo-presence and interpretation.
It is a computational (programmed) process of composition similar to that of compression, it works the following way: to create a single photograph, the digital camera captures multiple frames in less than a second, the apparatus layers the frames on top of one another, and accommodates/combines/suppress the pixels from the multiple layers into one in order to compose what would be, according to its machine’s aesthetic criteria, the best possible image.
The conceived photograph is a made-up composition resulting from the machine’s own aesthetic determination, the moment-in-time that the camera captured never really occurred, it is an interpretation.–Yet how come can it be real still? What’s the substance that grants a moment its realness in a digital condition? To solve these questions seems an irrelevant project to me, although, I recognize that Sontag seems to have assertedly opened the way into this inquiry years prior to computational cameras having begun to capture non-existent moments.
“All photographs testify to time’s relentless melt”[3],
accounting for the all-evanescent objects in time, I wonder yet if there is a difference between the objects-in-time and the objects-of-time, a question that Sontag does not seem to entertain; such distinction, I think, would have been an insightful philosophical entry as we dwell deep into the photographs transgressive relation to time.
About Truth
Sontag, like many of her peers, was invested in the hopeless quest for truth. She brings forward her intention and its impossible conclusion as the starting point, “In Plato’s Cave“, the opening words into her inquiry, serve first as an indexical-literary reference to an originary problem underlying all aesthetic investigation: the confliction of image-reality. Secondly, a suggestive lead: that perceptual reality is the ever-resulting unbalance between truth and deception. Recurrent notions in her essay and overall work: deception, interpretation, transfixiation, illusion, transparency, epiphany–all terms of transformative revelation; they imply the truth-behind something, she uses these to describe the photograph’s epistemology and its limits.
So far, the advent of computational photography, along with more recent generative technology for image-making (AI Art, deep-fake, to same a few)–all used as technologies of deception with positive or negative effects–defines a time in which truth seems to have taken a backseat to other forms of illumination and seduction, the condition many have described as Post-truth. “In Plato’s Cave,” we are reminded that this condition of deceit is not a temporary phenomena but more of an ontological preoccupation, for which she goes all the way back to one of the very first philosophical questions: what’s real? So radical is her motive, that many of her arguments apply not exclusively to photography but to all image-making technology, and that is, to my own judgment, what makes her writing so competitive against time’s relentless melt.
Notes
[1] Susan Sontag, “In Plato’s Cave,” in On Photography, 2019. P. 23
As my midterm exam, I was asked to explain the following concepts according to material reviewed and discussed in class:
(Citations not included in this copy)
- Violence (On Benjamin and Harendt)
- Public Sphere (On Habermas)
- Representation
- Decolonization
Concordia University
March 2022
Violence (On Benjamin and Arendt):
In Western historical thought, violence is generally regarded as a manifestation of power with severity, such relation of forces and its resulting harm can only be measured in the dimension of the moral. This means, violence is most of the time condemned, but it is considered either bad or necessary as it relates to principles of justice. For some thinkers, violence is always instrumental, as a means to an ends, while others have suggested that violence can sometimes lack apparent instrumental reason, which would be, pure rage.
The materialist approach of Walter Benjamin (1921) considers violence as a product of history. He regards it in relation to law and justice, distinguishing between 3 forms of violence. First, law-instating violence, which means the creation of power through law. For example, at the conclusion of a revolution, new laws are set and power relations are reconfigured, if I understand correctly, for him, the creation of law is itself the creation of violence since it establishes that everything outside that frame will be definitely violent. Second, law-preserving violence, as a means of control, is maintained by institutions and forces like the military and police. And third, what he calls divine violence (law-destroying), which could be conceived as pure destruction without instrumentality or means that can be understood in a political dimension, it, therefore, exists outside of the logic of legality.
There is a lot of debate of what ‘divine violence’ actually means, for me, he is trying to make sense in a theological reason of violence as a manifestation of force that is total, pure, and irrational, just “as-God’s-will”.
In modern terms, I like to think of divine violence as when the hooligans or sports fanatics flip cars on the streets for celebration. Another example can be found in Drill rap or any gang-related music, which are violent statements that often materialize into real violence. The same way one hooligan gang agrees on an encounter with a rival team gang only for the sake of violence and virility, in music, the cult and exercise of violence becomes a liberating force while it calls for a radical organization of power that cannot be contained within the margins of legality, it is just self-expression, and persues no political project to turn the illegal into legal, since in such contexts illegality has proven a more natural system of power and self-governance.
‘Power is indeed of the essence of all government, but violence is not. Violence is by nature instrumental; like all means, it always stands in need of guidance and justification through the end it pursues. And what needs justification by something else cannot be the essence of anything.’ Arendt, in Crises of the Republic (1972)
Hannah Arendt has a distinct view of violence. While she also holds that violence is instrumental, meaning that it can be justified by ends that relate to politics (Finlay, 2009), but key point is that she opposes the idea of violence as a manifestation of power, for her, violence is the opposite of power. A state of power requires no violence, if we consider power as a collective enterprise, the institution is the political materialization of power, but institutions need to be supported by people, when it lacks the support of the power of the people, it needs to exercise violence. For her then power and violence have a negative relation, absolute power gives no space to violence and vice versa.
Liberal Public Sphere (Jürgen Habermas):
The concept of the ‘liberal public sphere’ is commonly attributed to Jürgen Habermas’ conceptualization of the ‘public sphere’. For him, the ideal scenario for human political organization is allowed by the fact that people have the capacity to get together and exchange views, ideas, and interests in order to achieve deliberatively fair consensus in decision-making (policy making). This logic is what sets the basis for democracy, which is why his conception of public sphere is regarded as ‘liberal’. For Habermas, communicative rationality is essentially democracy.
Let’s consider that the public sphere Habermas describes has its beginning in a period of time prior to mass media (mass society), thus thinking about ‘collective thought’ was difficult, indeed, there was no need for collective consensus since it was the Kings that ruled through absolute power. It is with the liberal ideas of the Enlightenment that we start to even consider the collective body as a matter of interest for politics, as power was shifted from the sole command of the monarch to a more rational group of leaders (politicians). It is precisely Enlightenment political philosophers that regard the public, it is the main idea that the people replace the king as the source of legitimate authority (Then & Now, 2019) . The elites (newly created bourgeoisie) had to start listening to the people, or at least, control them.
It is this type of sphere of intellectuals, businessmen, and politicians that represent the first public sphere. Now when we talk about the ‘Liberal’ public sphere, we are referring to this specific model of deliberative democracy that Habermas identifies.
Representation:
To bring into the sensible what is not there. Something that is not physically present can thus be represented as a symbol or a sign through the use of language. We make sense of the world through representation, we do so by Language: signs and images is what represent things.
Stuart Hall (1997) distinguishes 3 dimensions of representation.
First is the reflective: Language reflects directly what the object is. Language as a mirror of reality. Good contemporary examples could be a catalogue, an instructive, or a photograph and its description. Take the following photograph for example:
Here both the photograph and its description are meant to represent what is there.
Next, the intentional: This is the notion that language expresses solely what the messenger aims to say. ‘Words mean what the author intends they should mean‘, says Hall (p.25)
A good example of this is to look at Facebook’s court defence, in which Zuckerberg argues that his company is a ‘technology company‘ and not a ‘media company’. Facebook operations and its effects are the same regardless of how it is framed, yet there is an intention to shift the perception of people and the law in regard to the social responsibilities of the company by imposing a specific meaning to it.
Third, the constructionist: the idea that meaning–and thus our sense of the world–is entirely constructed in/by language. This means, “meaning” do not exist as a given thing, we construct it by making use of representational systems. For this I like to think also of the legislative system but more profoundly on how it shapes our understanding of morality, civility, and the evil, serving as a moral and disciplinary guide in which the societies organize the material conditions of the world.
Decolonization:
Decoloniality is a school of thought that aims to study and ultimately dismantle the power relations of Coloniality. Coloniality being the power metric of Colonialism, is what allows the material conditions for Modernity (in Europe) and the maintenance of its hegemonic rhetoric. Coloniality is itself a decolonial concept because it makes evident that the colonial rule is one of domination and underdevelopment.
This acknowledgement is born in the Third World, particularly in Latin America. Walter Mignolo & Catherine E. Walsh Walsh (2018) attribute the introduction of such dichotomy Coloniality/Decoloniality and the junction Coloniality-Modernity to the Peruvian philosopher Aníbal Quijano in the ’90s. His essay ‘Coloniality of Power, Eurocentrism, and Latin America‘ (2000) published at the end of the decade, provided a very solid ground for the material and intellectual project of Decoloniality to kickstart in Latin America (Gandarilla Salgado et al., 2021), expanding onto many other regions and intersectional fields of study such as Feminism, Migration Studies, and so on. The goal of Epistemological Decolonization is the destruction of the coloniality of world power (Quijano, 2007), the theory and practice of such a project is what we call ‘Decolonization’.
Following my commentary on Susan Sontag's essay "In Plato's Cave", I retrieve two notions of photographic potency of recurrent tension in her work: horror and truth. In the present fragments, these two notions guide us beneath grounds to find a particular type of photograph: the unearth's objects and their (un)fortunate image.
Concordia University
January 2023
Today the world is pierced, like an Emmentaler cheese, with artificial cavities where humankind has deposited its most destructive capacity and its surplus. In this essay, I am interested in two particular types of holes: clandestine mass graves and mines, both products of two main lethal enterprises, war and extractivisim respectively. These excavations are the axis of this exercise, in which I attempt to revisit, invert, and rephrase, as many others have done before me, what does it mean to live in Plato’s cave–or the longstanding question of reality being composed by images. I am concerned with the sort of images that are kept within the dark confinements of dismal holes, and what can we learn about the reality hidden underneath them.
On Caves
We begin our inquiry into the unearth already inside an originary space for human claustrophilic immersion: the cave. It is believed that caves contain, what some call, the cradle of humanity: parietal rock paintings, most commonly regarded as “prehistoric art”. Based on the assumption that the origin of technic and language marks the origin of humankind, images and tools are both technologies considered the most primitive evidence of human activity. We may–or not–agree that either cave paintings or the most ancient excavated tools can account for the first signs of our presence. The first “signs” of human signs are kept underneath the surface of Earth’s matter, and it is our exploration of the depths of such matter that has led us to multiple miraculous discoveries of the first pasts, as well as to the most disastrous ones.
Caves are dark places inhabited by different sorts of creatures. Humans are a kind of animal with physically limited sensing capacities that rely heavily on a narrowed, short-sighted vision to operate in their environment. Otherwise unexplorable, the intervened caves testify that the invention of devices of light strictly precedes the invention of the painted images they contain. Primordially managers of light and its energy, these creatures achieved to extend their natural visual capacity with devices powerful enough to turn the world to its negative, illumination technology created darkness and vice-versa. It was in such obscurity that the human created its first dimension.
Plato’s allegory of the cave is an interesting reflection on the human condition being grounded in aesthetic phenomena, that all we can sense is all we can know, and that there is much more to what we are able to sense. While Plato never thought about these radical creatures that invented themselves by creating images in dark spaces, he was aware, though, that humankind found itself in obscurity, and that reality was just as far as its perception could break through the total confinement of darkness.
A material interpretation of Plato’s allegory of the cave would find at its core the idea that perceptual reality is the product of a negotiation between light and obscurity. The resulting images, byproducts of a lighting device, are what constitute the subject’s reality. Sontag picked up on Plato’s allegory to address the seemingly unchanging condition that reality is, for a human, an illusion composed by a set or sequence of images; that we make sense of the world, for the most part, through the material or immaterial object that is the image. In this sense, reality is not the antonym of illusion, rather illusion is a component of reality.
San José
It was on August 2010 that the mine of San José collapsed in Caldera, Chile. Trapping 33 miners inside and were alive. By the end of the month their rescue had become an international effort in which multiple private and governmental enterprises contributed with financial and technological support to carry out the most ambitious rescue yet. Its live stream was one of the most televised events in history. The miners were rescued alive. The criminal case concluded with no imputations to anyone. Sebastian Piñera, then president of Chile, had in his hands the perfect card that would lead to his reelection years later.
There is something so grotesque about this case being a story with successful conclusion. Photographs and videos surely did not contribute to the mobilization of consciousness against the necro-industry of mining, rather they served as examples of what can be achieved when human intelligence and resources are organized rightly into a project bounded by universal moral conventions. I do not think that Piñera was aware of what was at stake here, but he surely understood right the specificity of that moment and the moral impulse, as Sontag would put it, that the photographs and videos of the successful rescue would drive, politically and socially, the scenario of demise that images constitute.
Dark Epiphany. On The Aesthetics of Disappearance
Sometime last year I encountered a photograph that moved me deeply. It was posted on Twitter by a mother that had for years looked for his son underneath the soil of northern Mexico. She was part of the collective “Madres Buscadoras” (Seeking Mothers), an informally articulated organization of mothers that look for the corpses of their disappeared sons by carrying out the most thorough forensic investigation–among many other grotesque tasks the State refuses to do–of exploring, digging, archiving, and chemically testing the human remains they unearth from every pit they come across. She was announcing with strange excitement that her search had finally concluded. It was a photograph of a half-unburied, mid-sized human skull; she wrote: “I have found him, I recognized him instantly for the shape of his jaw, this is my boy”. The photograph was in itself powerful enough to ruin one’s day, but I was most deprived by my inability to comprehend the type of sign the boy’s skull had transformed into.
Photographs and bones are both objects whose most tragic function is when they serve as evidence of horror. For our kind, bones had always meant a confirmation of death, if we’re lucky, they are processed in ritual. Burial practices mark a moment of reconciliation with the fact of our discontinuity, such realization is an originary human condition. Whenever we find death without procession it means tragedy, testifying either an accident or a sinister dispositive. In fact, each civilization has evolved its own ways of turning corpses into dispositives of different sorts; and ever since we have cameras, we no longer have to imagine the type of grammar that sophisticated violence articulates, it has been recorded, revealed.
In some way, photographs have turned horror incomprehensible. Because photographs are not bound to linguistic grammar, the dictionary is often not enough for us to put into words certain things when images speak their most extreme language, and that amplitude–that which exceeds our comprehension–is the quality that makes art simultaneously beautiful and horrific. This obscenity, which Susan Sontag had recognized to be mediated by the taboo and the moral, has only proliferated with the increasing production and reproduction of images in what she calls the modern world. She argued that the omnipresence of photographs had created the conditions for a “negative epiphany”, a moment of anaesthezia that characterizes our experience of the world. She used the concept to explain the contradictory nature of images that simultaneously make us feel while making us numb. She was concerned about the sensible dimensions of horror, worried that it had exceeded us.
In a present governed by the digital image, a world that Sontag did not live enough to experience, the recognition she makes seems more like a prediction. In some respect, there is nothing novel or interesting in finding bones by the side of the road, but for these mothers, seeking after these tragic images has become their only possibility of reconciliation with reality; a reality the remaining world agrees to overlook with fear and silence.
I can’t escape the concept of epiphany to make sense of this sort of reversed burial, of what sort of light comes out of the holes that mothers open to find death and hopefully, peace. At a stage in which one can acknowledge death but not reconcile with her until she reveals herself physically, first as evidence, then as photograph, for some unfortunate others death and peace become indivisible in a sudden moment of dark epiphany.
The present fragments are retrieved from a lengthy project on Lascaux's Hall of Bulls cave paintings. Following George Bataille's radical investigation into the "origins of Art and Humankind", this text introduces some derivative questions I seek to articulate on Death and Image through a series of technical, yet speculative connections: corpse-as-device, light-as-obscurity, among others; for only material speculation, rather than interpretation, might allow us into the mysteries kept within these caves not to find truth but its opposite: chance.
(Citations not included in this copy)
Concordia University
October 2022
(Excerpt)
Part 2. The corpse, a technology of memory
Regardless of the original intentions the earliest human had for drawing, this accounts for one of the first technologies of memory for which it captures–by artifact– an image of a material present to preserve it against the erosion of time: the continuity of human experience. I now want to emphasize the notion of death. Death is involved here not in a ritualistic character but in the material in two respects. First, it is believed that the torches these people used to illuminate the cave were made of animal grease5, here the death of the creature and the substance of its body are thus intrinsically integrated into the process leading this activity. Second, and this is my major contribution to the analysis, is that the corpse of the animal could not only be a matter of material resource (food, covering, grease), but becomes an object of aesthetic quality, an object studied by the human for its difference, and its shape and attributes assimilated and reproduced pictorially.
The question is, why analyze the corpse and not the living body standing in grace as depicted in the caves? Let us not forget these images belong in a deep, dark space, given the careful inscription of the beast’s attributes, the precise dimensions of its form, and even the depth of its form, it is just logical to suppose that it could have not been achieved only by means of observation and innate memory, but that a referential image/object needed to serve human contemplation in a state of immobility. The image could have not been the result of an ethereal, phenomenal experience of witnessing and remembering. Unless they possessed a quality of photographic memory that we’ve since lost, the human brain cannot by its own imprint images and preserve them for further replication without the use of a technology of memory. Instead of thinking that they observed “scenes” and brought them into the caves to reanimate them, I propose that a meticulous study of the creature’s shape in a state of immobility was thus necessary. The corpse, for instance, might not have been present during its drawing, but it had been analyzed priorly, as an object of difference.
The human, before knowing it is human is a beast. Yet it is a beast conscious of the death it has brought upon the multiple beasts that surround, threaten and help its own existence and the ones it protects, these radical creatures bear terrified at what they no longer are, and for whatever reasons, have chosen to depict these different beings (animals) in the most grandiose and advanced way available to them.
For instance, this contraposes the general notion that these pictorial practices were ritualistic, as for hunting as commonly argued. Let me stress again the idea that for this sensible exercise (image-making), hunting precedes the pictorial practice and not the other way around. That is to say, there is no way to prove these images are created as the means for achieving an undisclosed capacity, but given that the images can’t be created without a total investment of human will upon the beast’s body, we are certain that they can only come from–as a result of–hunting.
Part 3. The creation of darkness through light
We can’t affirm whether this pictorial activity was exclusive to cave-like dark spaces, or if only the ones done in caves have been preserved, thought, we can’t ignore that the crucial decision for these people to choose deep darkness for this to take place, responds to a particular need followed by a deliberate determination (discern) inaccessible for our present comprehension. Nevertheless, there are just a few speculations available to us to make sense of humans’ earliest sensible interventions in their environment and the creation of their own environment.
Let us imagine for a second the total darkness of the world at night before sustainable systems of lighting, while we cannot know how these creatures related to this immense obscurity, for them to find a place that remains dark against the totality of its surrounding, changing environment (dark even at day), and the decision to intervene on it with light technology (torches and painting) conveys the creation of a space, architectural if you dare. In Lascaux, light and darkness define one another in a negative relation, functionally they are not only creating illumination but creating darkness as something that fills up a space, and the images, in their phenomenal condition, are brought to life only in a moment granted by a device of light, and along with that light, they will vanish until they are once again discovered.
Course: Technology and Contemporary Art - ARTH 353
An essay on Robbie Barrat, exploring Technic and the Art-object in Generative Art and its growing industry through the philosophical insights from Hui, Simondon, Berardi.
(Citations not included in this copy)
Advances in technics and aesthetics in contemporary Digital Art are frequently discussed in relation to Cybernetics, Art History, and Politics. In this comprehension, I will be looking into Robbie Barrat’s work, a computational artist whose technicity consists mainly in the training of neural networks to create visual representations (image-painting), what is commonly regarded as Generative Art, or GAN Art (Generative Adversarial Network). The relevance of his work lies in the technical specificity he has developed for his computer to become a creative subject. In part, his works can be as a useful visual reference that points to where technology and applied data science in the Arts might be heading towards; but also, how the mentioned can serve as tools for research in aesthetics and language, by providing insights that otherwise would be difficult to achieve solely by using the logic specific to the human brain. I regard the computer as a ‘creative subject’ in Barrat’s process because the computer is not merely a tool, as in any GAN conclusion, the artist must allow the machine for a certain level of creative determination, it is within this unexpectancy that the magic of art occurs. The visual compositions then result from his collaboration with a machine, lighting up a way to look into the processes individuation of each, the artist, and its technical object as they involve in technical reciprocity in order to create a work of art. Furthermore, I attempt to make sense of this reciprocity in the domain of cosmotechnics, as developed by Yuk Hui, to run a semiotic analysis of digital contemporary art and its condition in the markets by making an example out of Barrat’s disruptions. I hereby break with the homogenous technologism that narrows our general understanding of the human-machine relation in respect to art.
I came across Barrat’s work just in 2018 on Twitter, he was training a neural network that created ‘its own’ classical paintings, namely Landscapes and Nude Portraits. I was moved by the way his work was contrasting–or bridging–which such clarity some of the notions concerning techno-aesthetics, which at that time, were heavily influenced by the training of neural networks–the AI aesthetics ongoing configuration–, against the aesthetic logic models established in classical painting and in West’s Fine Arts in general. What called my attention initially was encountering a GAN that was not built upon a sea of innumerable metadata, instead, it was trained on a very specific set of imagery (data) that belonged in very defined aesthetic categories, for an example a classical oil, or a piece of haute-couture. Artifacts that are designed with a high degree of technical craftship would then train the network so it can imagine possibilities on its own. The images that result from running the GAN are eerie but feel familiar nonetheless, because they were brought to existence using elements of
composition–such as certain colors and dimensions– that we’ve longtime understood, and usually conceive as natural forms in the realm of Fine Arts. The base of such weirdness characteristic to a GAN piece is the degree to which the produced image blurs, moves across, or neutralizes the lines of aesthetic delimitation between the abstract, the figurative, and the concrete, essential in the eyes of the human to understand an artistic composition. In other words, it can provide refreshing insights outside of the methodological frameworks by which we understand form and representation in the Fine Arts. A heavily human-influenced computer, an AI, as much as it is working in a closed system of references, has total disregard of broader categorical developments important for the history and ontology of the visual.
In his relatively short career, Barrat has gained considerable recognition, usually attributed to his young age, his artworks are both challenging but visually/conceptually relevant for the people. When he got out of Highschool he had an internship at NVIDIA, where he had access to great computational power, the things that he learned and tested there, I suppose, would be crucial for the further development of his own creative language. He got particular attention from the broader public with his project ‘Neural Network Balenciaga’, which consisted in feeding the algorithm with images of Balenciaga runways to train the AI to create its own interpretation of a Balenciaga runway. This quickly captured the attention of the luxury retail giant SSENSE’s board of content creators, who later promoted the work by publishing an interview with him titled ‘Do Androids Dream of Balenciaga SS29?’. He was 18 when his artwork was the first that was uploaded to the NFT platform SuperRare ‘Nude Portrait #1’ on April 2018. Later that year Christie’s held their first ‘Tech Summit’, its theme was the blockchain, and they distributed onee piece of Barrat’s collection of Nudes in 200 fragments as NFTs. The next edition of the Christie’s ‘Tech Summit’ in 2019 theme was Generative Art. There is a lot to unpack regarding the Market interest in Barrat’s work and in GAN in general. For instance, we could locate it within the artificial hype that Christie’s and SuperRare were pushing to promote the newly created NFT economy as a financially stable system. In this sense, Christie’s intervention in the blockchain economy was a statement in an effort to convince the public and collectors that NFT art was more than a pyramid scheme of speculative collectibles and that it was, indeed, an actual Art movement, and therefore a matter of technical and aesthetic seriousness.
Attracting the attention of these industry giants has rendered much of the writing done about his work for journalistic and marketing purposes, telling us more about the Art industry’s relation and future plans with Digital Art than of the implications of his technics in Art-research creation. While Christie’s and other giants in the crypto marketing complex make a case example of Barrat’s work in their effort to accommodate Digital Art into the logistics of the Art Market by pushing the narrative that blockchain technology is the pathway into building a decentralized infrastructure of wealth distribution to benefit creators, other texts, such as SSENSE’s interview, try to explore the potential of GAN use in other sectors of creative industries like in Fashion’s processes of design and creative direction. At the same time, they used his work as a proxy to promote Balenciaga, which is one of SSENSE’s bestselling brands. I do not doubt SSENSE’s good intentions in promoting the work of a young talented artist exploring the limits of fashion design with technology, it should be addressed though, that the interest of such a big retailing corporation in computer-generated art can only underlie in the utility that such Art can have to maximize profits.
Furthermore, none of those conversations are able to detach from the idealization of AI technology as a tool for the production of symbolic and capital value. We can observe, in a broader discussion, that much of the questions asked in regard to the relation of technology-art, are placed upon the technical objects that such relation produces; the apparatus, if it is the piece or a mechanism, is judged by its capacity to produce, reproduce, reveal, reorganize a certain set of values. With machine learning this conversation gets interesting, as it supposes that such processes can be automated and optimized with enough computational power beyond the limitations of the human condition.
It is this possibility of an automated reproduction of value that is at stake in the imaginary of Christie’s, SuperRare, and other platforms trying to knot a system in which blockchain technology and GAN ‘advances’ the conditions for production and commerce of works of art. It is value the central axis of their approach. Moreover, what is an NFT if not a resignification of the symbolic and capital value of a digital (object) asset? On the other hand, in SSENSE’s interview, Arabelle Sicardi approaches Barrat’s work from the perspective of ‘Creative Direction’, discussing the possibilities of AI applied to Fashion design, they draw the idea of AI as a tool for creating new things. First, we need to understand Creative Direction as a practice component of the larger process of Merchandising. Creative direction is the axis that conducts the processes of thinking, designing, producing, marketing, and ultimately selling a product. Creative direction is defined by productivity.
I consider these approaches a misunderstanding of the actual reconfiguration of value implicit in Barrat’s work, which lies in the process of individuation of its algorithm, and not on the technical application of such as a ‘machine that produces art’. As Barrat makes a selection of artworks that already underwent a process of curation and archive, he becomes a mediator of aesthetic value that will be suitable for the machine he has designed. Barrat’s preference to explore these notions through the use of Fine Arts is not independent of the discipline of selecting, organizing, and maintaining artifacts in an effort to consolidate a collective memory, which was the prime interest of the museums curating and preserving these pieces in the first place, understanding the role that Museography had–or intended to have– of mapping the history of the human intellect and creativity from the West’s perspective. The computer (machine) when is fed with such curated imagery, has the task to make a reinterpretation of such aesthetic values that had been previously carefully selected but it does so by neutralizing the symbolic and working solely on the aesthetic composition. What we have is then an abstract compression of fragments of a mediated collective memory, a technical reimagination of the Nude and the Landscape as categorical visual form.
In cosmotechnics, Yuk Hui would regard Barrat’s AI within the realm of techno-organicism. The process of individuation of such machine is its becoming organic, yet it can never become an organism of its own. Hui holds that the technical objects first became organic with Cybernetics, since it is the relation of information feedback that allows the machine out of the mechanical condition and sets it to a recursive logic. The recursive expansion of the digital (through operations of feedback), overcomes the dualist logic of antithesis between the organism and machine that prevailed in general ontology, he states ‘the becoming organic of machines is in the process of producing a new totality through exponentially stronger connectivity and algorithms.’ Having algorithm technology in mind, he opens the question of what is the role of art in this epoch of organic machines? This question is of paramount importance for the art market circuit of production-commerce, as it is a central inquiry for philosophers and critics working across semiotics, technics, and aesthetics, an ultimately, it poses a challange for the artists that see no intersection of art and technology, but regard it as the same technē (the Greek work which mean both art and technic). I consider Barrat on the latter, as he is clear that his GAN is not a creative individual of its own, but a medium whose mode of existence is transformative interoperation between computational power (technic) and aesthetic values (wich are indeed technic as well as they are materialized through pixel organization, the prime matter of such art).
With the invention of the camera, pictorial representation no longer depended on the motor skills of the painter, ‘liberated’ from the medium specificity of the brush and the paint’s plasticity, picture was now created through the impression of light by a technical process that was not plastic but chemical. As the camera captures everything within the realm of the visible, the artist’s task ceases to be the impression of what is visible in the light but to explore the sensible beyond the visual realm of light. Franco Berardi defines sensibility as
the faculty that enables human beings to understand what cannot be expressed in forms that have a finite syntax (such as the verbal form). He conceives sensibility and aesthesia as the two main abilities that constitute aesthetic perception, for him, it holds a direct symbiotic connection with technological transformation. The camera elevated the plastic artist’s
challenge to sophisticate the level of aesthetic perception, because the challenge was then to materialize what is invisible to light, opening the path for abstraction and conceptualization, which intended to represent/materialize ideas and feelings rather than moments or stories. Just as the camera opened the path for different possible sensitivities in both, film and plastic arts, the introduction of algorithmic thinking also lights up new ways to materialize (visually) what cannot be thought conceived solely through the mechanism of light or with syntax.
Berardi considers rhythm as the common substance of signs, within his theorical frame work, semio-capitalism, he conceives the creation and circulation of value to be in a constant process of acceleration, at the rhythm of information machine interoperating making an abstraction of space and time. The rhythm of info-acceleration was first depicted in the Arts with Futurism, which, he notes, defined the relation between art and the social mind through the introduction of the cult of energy. The industrial mechanical machines allowed the abstraction of use value and productive work (as Marx described) in the industrial economies, but as we go through the first half of the XX century, with the introduction of Cybernetic science, mechanics were transforming into feedback machines. It was around the end of the 60’s that the official shift from the mechanic age into the computational age was announced (for the Arts) at MoMa’s exhibition titled ‘The Machine as Seen at the End of the Mechanical Age’ (1968), which happened at the same year of the emblematic exhibition ‘Cybernetic Serendipity’ in ICA, London. Both exhibitions were somehow intended to promote a new vision of world, the milieux of human connaturality with the new computer machines. This was backed by technology corporations that were becoming increasingly powerful and global through the establishments of the first global networks. Some years later, already at a stage on late-Modern capitalism, the techno-linguistic devices that derived from this shift in power, had created a new hegemonic dimension of abstraction, digital abstraction, which adds up as a layer on top of the capital abstraction (Marx). In this level of abstraction, information takes the place of things, and transformation and production no longer happen in the material condition of bodies, but in the network of accelerated in-flow of information allowed by computational infrastructures. As we can observe in what happened with the camera, and with the industrial mechanics of reproduction, then with cybernetics, then with digitalization, sign and meaning are constantly achieving new levels of abstraction as technological transformation occurs.
The following image shows the results of searching for Barrat’s image in Google’s ‘Lens’ for image recognition. It discloses a set of images with similar features in composition, none of them done through GAN. This gives us an extraordinary insight, because it reveals that the abstract-figurative neutralization done by a machine, was done in a similar way by a human mind before, yet none of these images were fed into the GAN that Barrat trained.
As we move back and forward between value (re)configuration and algorithmic creation, we find ourselves in the field of the technical specificity of digital matter, it is important here to lay out the constitutes of matter for as GAN art goes and how it gets its form. In his book ‘On Mode of Existence of Technical Object’, a fundamental piece of work for Hui’s thought and mine, Gilbert Simondon writes:
‘Matter is matter because it contains a positive property that allows it to be modeled. To be modeled is not to undergo arbitrary displacements but to organize matter’s plasticity according to definite forces that stabilize the deformation. The technical operation is a mediation between an inter-elementary ensemble and an intra-elementary ensemble. The pure form already contains actions, and the raw material is the capacity of becoming; the actions contained in the form encounter the becoming of the matter and modulate it. In order for the matter to be able to be modulated in its becoming, it must have a deformable reality.’
Now, I want to apply this to the condition of AI and GAN generated art. It is important because such art’s plasticity consists of one of the prime matter/substances of our time: digital data. In the realm of the visual, it is almost always materialized by pixels, just as everything we encounter at the light of the screens that surrounds us. Digital matter is a compound of several other technical processes occurring simultaneously. In the case of algorithmic configuration and creation, the ‘deformable reality’ (of a matter) is given when such matter is digitalized, a work of art can be modified and turned into a new composition when its image is digitalized. But it is not only a matter of bringing things into the digital realm, it is mostly about the (coding) mechanisms that are collectively designed and optimized that allow the evolution of technology in respect of contemporary digital art.
On a final note, I want to focus more specifically on the last crucial component of the process of individuation of a GAN algorithm, which is its Open-source nature: the track of possibility for such technology to evolve. What cosmotechnics provides is a theoretical framework by which we can conceive this art as an effect of individuation that is not individual (as authorship), but is a result of psychic and collective effects of the technological, the natural, and the social. Both Hui, and Simondon, regard the struggle for reappropriation of technology. And this is particularly important in the nature in which GAN art is created. GAN art is able to exist and expand through a collective network of sharing technicity and advancing on it. Barrat shares his codes as a fundamental component of his work, as his work is based on prior codes that were shared online and allowed him to advance on them. The piece becomes meaningful as it exposes its processes of individuation. It sums to the struggle of accessibility, contributing to the annihilation of the paradigm of the computational technical object as a black box, the technical and theoretical mechanisms are revealed and put up for use and optimization. Therefore, the transparency of processes is not only a gesture, it is an actual component of the work.
Yuk Hui does not address Rabbat’s work directly, but in his chapter ‘The Status of Machine Intelligence Today’, while talking about Art and Automation, he brings up the piece ‘Edmond de Belamy’ (2018), an AI-generated portrait that ‘broke’ the internet when it sold as the most expensive AI-generated piece to date *at Christie’s*, it was authored by a marketing collective. The piece was created using a code written and uploaded (as Open Source) by Robbie Barrat, naturally causing controversy in the media regarding authorship and authenticity. In this sense, Robbie’s work embodies the succession of Open Source in a fundamental contradiction, as Open Source breaks with conditions of impossibility by destroying the functionality of ownership and allowing accessibility and potency, it easily becomes an artifact for speculative capitalism, reinforcing the abstraction of value and the skepticism of machine-human relations. Nevertheless, what concerns us is something far beyond the matter of ‘authorship’, and we disregard the conditions of the Art Market system, instead, we are following a line of work that concerns the actual relation of technical processes applied to art. If Walter Benjamin opened the question of how mechanical technology transforms art, Hui reverses it by asking, how art transforms technology? My own is: how can we use technology applied to Art creation as a method to study the history of human aesthetic sensitivity?