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Visual Culture Questionnaire Svetlana Alpers PDF

48 Pages·2007·1.16 MB·English
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VisualCultureQuestionnaire SvetlanaAlpers;EmilyApter;CarolArmstrong;SusanBuck-Morss;TomConley;Jonathan Crary; ThomasCrow;TomGunning;MichaelAnnHolly;MartinJay;ThomasDacosta Kaufmann;SilviaKolbowski;SylviaLavin;Stephen Melville;HelenMolesworth;KeithMoxey; D.N.Rodowick;GeoffWaite;Christopher Wood October,Vol.77.(Summer,1996),pp.25-70. StableURL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0162-2870%28199622%2977%3C25%3AVCQ%3E2.0.CO%3B2-G OctoberiscurrentlypublishedbyTheMITPress. YouruseoftheJSTORarchiveindicatesyouracceptanceofJSTOR'sTermsandConditionsofUse,availableat http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html.JSTOR'sTermsandConditionsofUseprovides,inpart,thatunlessyouhaveobtained priorpermission,youmaynotdownloadanentireissueofajournalormultiplecopiesofarticles,andyoumayusecontentin theJSTORarchiveonlyforyourpersonal,non-commercialuse. Pleasecontactthepublisherregardinganyfurtheruseofthiswork.Publishercontactinformationmaybeobtainedat http://www.jstor.org/journals/mitpress.html. EachcopyofanypartofaJSTORtransmissionmustcontainthesamecopyrightnoticethatappearsonthescreenorprinted pageofsuchtransmission. TheJSTORArchiveisatrusteddigitalrepositoryprovidingforlong-termpreservationandaccesstoleadingacademic journalsandscholarlyliteraturefromaroundtheworld.TheArchiveissupportedbylibraries,scholarlysocieties,publishers, andfoundations.ItisaninitiativeofJSTOR,anot-for-profitorganizationwithamissiontohelpthescholarlycommunitytake advantageofadvancesintechnology.FormoreinformationregardingJSTOR,[email protected]. http://www.jstor.org WedNov713:13:062007 Visual Culture Questionnaire* 1. It has been suggested that the interdisciplinary project of "visual culture" is no longer organized on the model of history (as were the disciplines of art history, architectural history, film history, etc.) but on the model of anthropology. Hence, it is argued by some that visual culture is in an eccentric (even, at times, antagonistic) position with regard to the "new art history" with its social-historical and semiotic imperatives and models of "context" and "text." 2. It has been suggested that visual culture embraces the same breadth of practice that powered the thinking of an early generation of art historians-such as Riegl and Warburg-and that to return the various medium-based historical disciplines, such as art, architecture, and cinema histories, to this earlier intellectual possibility is vital to their renewal. 3. It has been suggested that the precondition for visual studies as an interdisciplinary rubric is a newly wrought conception of the visual as disembodied image, re-created in the virtual spaces of sign-exchange and phantasmatic projection. Further, if this new paradigm of the image originally developed in the intersection between psychoanalytic and media discourses, it has now assumed a role independent of specific media. As a corollary the suggestion is that visual studies is helping, in its own modest, academic way, to produce subjects for the next stage of globalized capital. 4. It has been suggested that pressure within the academy to shift toward the interdisciplinarity of visual culture, especially in its anthropological dimension, parallels shifts of a similar nature within art, architectural, and film practices. * This questionnaire was sent to a range of art and architecture historians, film theorists, literary critics, and artists in the winter of 1996.The responses follow. OCTOBER 77, Summer 1996, pp. 25-70. 0 1996 Editors, OctoberMagazine, Ltd. Anamorphic Art History SVETLANA ALPERS EMILY APTER When, some years back, I put it Jean Baudrillard's vision of that I was not studying the history of America as a country of lonely screens Dutch painting, but painting as part flickering in a holographic landscape of Dutch visual culture, I intended projects consciousness as thoroughly something specific. It was to fociis on abstracted from its corporal envelope: notions about vision (the rrtechanisnt it is a dream of absolute simulation, of the eye), on image-making devices depleted sociality, and image disem- (the microscope, the camera obscura), bodiment set in the context of a and on visual skills (map-making, but suburban mirage. The arrival of virtual also experimenting) as cultural images and cyber-optics on the scene resources related to the practice of of disciplinary debates over visual painting. This had the additional culture seems to be the inevitable benefit of granting painters a seri- extension of this Baudrillardian ousness that was appropriately visual nightmare. in nature-treating them as skillful Though cyber-culture may as observers and representers instead of yet have no distinctly recognizable as moral preachers. form or singular visual style, it does The term "visual culture" I owed seem to stock its images from the to Michael Baxandall. But rriy use of dark side of corporate, computer the notion was different from his technoculture, and to have conferred because of the nature of the case. The favor on spectral poststructural iden- difference image/text was basic, in tities. Mobilizing ghostly, derealized both historical and in critical tenns, to selves within a dirty realist, sleaze, or the enterprise. But I was dealing with a pulp tradition (a tradition drawing culture in which images, as distin- visually on sci-fi, cartoons, comics, guished from texts, were central to the graffiti, porn, fanzines, slash and snuff representation (in the sense of the for- movies, film noir, flight simulation, mulation of knowledge) of the world. I surveillance cameras, and technical was not only attending to those visual imaging), cyber operates through a skills particular to Dutch culture, but combination of ontological projection claiming that in that place and at that and ethical subjection. In this anamor- time these skills were definitive. phic picture, boundaries between On such an account, visual cul- spectatorial ego and image collapse: ture is distinguished from a verbal or being and image, depending on the textual one. It is a discriminating angle or optical investment, morph notion, not an encompassing one. into each other. Intersubjectivity is Disciplinary boundaries, like differ- replaced by interactivity, and virtue ences between artistic mediums, are a (governed by the delirious ethics of subject of investigation, not of denial. the alibi) is located in the virtual. History of Art, UC Berkeley New media and the evolving Visual Culture Questionnaira aesthetics of cybervision call for CAROLARMSTRONG alternate art-historical formations based on different modes of visual interpretation. Formalist approaches One of the things that seems to to painting, thematic considerations go with the shift from old disciplinary of typologies and topologies of art, structures like art history to new inter- iconology, the social history of art disciplinary models such as that of and the history of material artifacts, visual culture is a predilection for the seem on the surface to have little disembodied image, and with it a dis- relevance to visual futurism, whereas trust of the material dimension of discourses in psychoanalysis, gender, cultural objects, such that to consider, race, technology, and global econom- to value, or to pleasure in the materi- ics seem obviously, if divergently, ality of a made object is to exercise pertinent. the fetishism of the old art history An obvious question thus and thereby to submit to the forces of emerges: will the oneiric, anamorphic, the market, to the policing of the junk-tech aesthetic of cyber-visuality canon, and to the structures of social find a place in the discipline of art and sexual domination that go with history (the field that has historically them. Within this model, paintings storehoused, interpreted, and pedi- and such are to be viewed not as par- greed visual culture), or will it remain ticularized things made for particular in the academic clearinghouse of cul- historical uses, but as exchanges cir- tural studies? For the moment, cultural culating in some great, boundless, studies seems to be the site of cyber's and often curiolrsly ahistorical eron- web. That said, issues of appraisal, oiny of images, subjects, and other inventory, patronage, provenance, representations. reproduction, authentication, appro- That within the increasingly priation, copyright, insurance, and cyberspace model of visual studies, censorship-crucial to the practice of "text" is the mother-model for utter- art history as it relates to the global art ances, performances, fashionings, and market sincc time immemorial-may sign collocations of all kinds is not give art history a central role and a unrelated to this disembodiment of different life in cyberspace. the cultural object. I sometimes French and Comparative Literature, wonder if this is not simply a new face C'CLA put on the old contempt for material crafting, the surface and the superfi- cial, as well as tire old privileging of the verbal register that went with tradi- tional humanist notions of idea or ut pictura poesis, or with the iconographics of the old art history. Certainly it speaks to an indifference to questions of difference-an indifference, even a 28 OCTOBER hostility, to thinking that there might stand the particular intelligence be any foundational differences involved in material facture. And last, between media, kinds of production, I would propose that the differences or modes of sign, or that those differ- between kinds of production, be they ences might matter to either the literary or pictorial, painterly, sculp- producer or the consumer of a given tural, photographic, filmic, or what object. A prime example of that have you, matter absolutely, that they would be the notion that the differ- are the source of whatever particular ence between a literary text and a interest a given object holds and the painting is a non-problem: that both locus of whatever philosophical work are equally representations; that the it does, and that to ignore those dif- distinction between verbal signs on a ferences is to submit utterly to the page, produced and taken in a partic- system of exchange and circulation in ular temporal fashion, and marks on which any cultural object undeniably a thickened material surface, pro- participates. duced and taken in a different Art History, fashion, is not worth making, and has Graduate Center, CUNY no implications of any significance. While there is much that I take to be advantageous about the model of visual culture, especially if what one wants to give an account of is cul- ture at large rather than particular cultural objects, I find the above propositions to be unfortunate on a number of counts. Indeed, in all instances, I think the contrary of what is proposed is true. First, the material dimension of the object is, in my view, at least potentially a site of resistance and recalcitrance, of the irreducibly particular, and of the sub- versively strange and pleasurable. It is, again at least potentially, a pocket of occlusion within the smooth func- tioning of systems of domination, including the market, hierarchical thought-structures, and subject-posi- tionalities: a glitch in the great worldwide web of images and repre- sentations. Second, to subsume material objects within the model of "text" is to discredit and misunder- Visual Culture Questionnaire SUSAN BUCKMORSS within a new interdisciplinary field of visual studies? What would be the episteme, or theoretical frame, of such a The production of a discourse of field? Twice at Cornell over the past visual culture entails the liquidation decade we have had meetings to discuss of art as we have known it. There is no the creation of a visual studies pro- way within such a discourse for art to gram. Both times, it was painfully clear sustain a separate existence, not as a that institutionalization cannot by practice, not as a phenomenon, not as itself produce such a frame, and the an experience, not as a discipline. discussions-among a disparate group Museums would then need to become of art historians, anthropologists, double encasings, preserving art computer designers, social historians, objects, and preserving the art-idea. and scholars of cinema, literature, Art history departments would be and architecture-did not coalesce moved in with archaeology. And what into a program. Still, visual culture of "artists"? In the recently expired has become a presence on campus. It socialist societies, they printed up call- has worked its way into many of the ing cards with their profession listed traditional disciplines and lives there confidently after their name and in suspended isolation, encapsulated phone number. In recently restruc- within theoretical bubbles. The psycho- tured capitalist societies, they became analytic bubble is the biggest, but caught in a dialectical cul-de-sac, there are others. One could list a attempting to rescue the autonomy common set of readings, a canon of of art as a reflective, critical practice texts by Barthes, Benjamin, Foucault, by attacking the museum, the very Lacan, as well as a precanon of texts by institution that sustains the illusion a long list of contemporary writers. that art exists. Artists as a social class Certain themes are standard: the demand sponsors: the state, private reproduction of the image, the society patrons, corporations. Their products of the spectacle, envisioning the Other, enter the market through a dealer- scopic regimes, the simulacrum, the critic system that manipulates value fetish, the (male) gaze, the machine and is mediated by galleries, museums, eye. Today the phrase "visual studies" and private collections. Tomorrow's calls up 202 entries in a keyword artists may opt to go underground, search at the Cornell University much like freemasons of the eigh- Libraries. There is a media library, a teenth century. They may choose to cinema program, an art museum, a do their work esoterically, while theater arts center, two slide libraries, employed as producers of visual and a half dozen possessively guarded, culture. department-owned videocassette play- Their work is to sustain the criti- ers. If the theoretical bubbles burst, cal moment of aesthetic experience. there remains this infrastructure of Our work as critics is to recognize it. technological reproduction. Visual cul- Can this be done best, or done at all, ture, once a foreigner to the academy, OCTOBER has gotten its green card and is here not understand the description of to stay. "anthropological" models and "socio- Silent movies at the beginning historical" models as antithetical of the century initiated the utopian poles of this theoretical project. Any idea of a universal language of interpretation worth its salt demands images, one that could glide over both. It needs to provide a socio- political and ethnic borders, and set historical and biographical story of to right the Tower of Babel. Action origins that estranges the object from films and MTV at the end of the cen- us and shows us that its truth is not tury have realized this idea in immediately accessible (the object's secularized, instrumentalized form, prehistory), and a story of deferred producing subjects for the next stage action (its afterhistory) that comes to of global capitalism. In this way, visual terms with the potency of the object culture becomes the concern of the within our own horizon of concerns. social sciences. "Images in the mind While the Internet is the topic motivate the will," wrote Benjamin, and the medium for new courses in alluding to the political power of digital culture, it is striking to anyone images claimed by Surrealism. But his who has visited the Internet how visu- words could provide the motto as well ally impoverished a home-page can for the advertising industry, product be. Cyberdigits reproduce the moving sponsoring, and political campaign- image haltingly, and the static image ing, whereas today the freedom of unimpressively. The possibility of expression of artists is defended on computer screens replacing television formal grounds that stress the virtual- screens may mean a great deal to ity of the representation. The images stockholders of telephone companies, of art, it is argued, have no effect in but it will not shake the world of the the realm of deeds. visual image. Aesthetic experience A critical analysis of the image (sensory experience) is not reducible as a social object is needed more to information. Is it old-fashioned to urgently than a program that legiti- say so? Perhaps the era of images mates its "culture." We need to be that are more than information is able to read images emblematically already behind us. Perhaps discus- and symptomatically, in terms of the sions about visual culture as a field most fundamental questions of social have come too late. It is with nostalgia life. This means that critical theories that we boycott the videostore and are needed, theories that are them- insist upon seeing movies on the big selves visual, that show rather than screen. argue. Such conceptual constella- The producers of the visual tions convince by their power to culture of tomorrow are the camera- illuminate the world, bringing to women, video/film editors, city consciousness what was before only planners, set designers for rock stars, dimly perceived, so that it becomes tourism packagers, marketing consul- available for critical reflection. I do tants, political consultants, television Visual Culture Questionnaire producers, commodity designers, lay- TOM CONLEY out persons, and cosmetic surgeons. They are the students who sit in our classes today. What is it they need to What you have assembled is know? What will be gained, and by cause for both laughter and alarm. I whom, in offering them a program in shall try to explain why by moving visual studies? from point three to points two, one, Government, and four, respectively. Cornell University Alarm. The riotion that visual ctilttlre is based on disembodied images is fraudulent. Images are by definition riddled and stippled with language. Images cannot be disem- bodied, even if they deny the presence of the languages inhering in them. Without those languages they would fail to be images. Everything we know about dialogue and dialogzsm, concepts vital to communication, psychogenesis, subjectivity, literature, poetry, and the apprehension of expression in general, depends on the immiscible qualities of image and language. The two arc different and exclusive but constitutive of one another. To say, then, that visual studies is producing "subjects for the next stage of globalized capital" is Itldicrous. Ry adhering to the miscibil- ity of image and language we tend to fracture the unity of meaning-a result of the valorization of the one to the detriment the other-that ideology purveys. When we see that language is the welcome other in visual culture, we have at our behest a modest but effective, tactical means of challenging strategies aimed at the globalization of capital. If, then, we build visual culture on the models of the generation of Riegl and Warburg, we must realize that the return is fraught with a logic OCTOBER of displacement: what is entailed with gain from study of the growth of visual the return? a return to law and order? culture within the academy, then, is a return to illusions of philological obtained when we discover that it can- bedrock? to big daddies whose images not find a disciplinary place. For that need to be revered and hated? a reason its production of analysis con- recidivism of nostalgia and a love of stitutes a space, always in process, in a discipline of yesteryear? The return condition of reinvention, that cannot can be used to displace the past into be localized. The attempt to track a the present. In other words, the pattern (as suggested in point 4) Oedipal model implied by the through "art, architectural, and film authority of these figures can be practices" betrays the mobility of redirected along transverse itiner- visual culture insofar as it engages aries. One feels a sense of alarm over motion, the creation of discourse the somewhat narrow definitions of and space, to the detriment of the culture that accompany the work of delimitation of place, the strategy that these historians, but one takes plea- defines a discipline. Space and move- sure in using them as needed, like ment come with invention, and visual intellectual socket wrenches, in our culture is a practice of wit, that is, the critical toolboxes. joy of invention. Laughter. If visual culture is ( 0 Romance Languages black day) abandoning art history, and Literatures, architectural history, political history, Harvard University film history, literary history, cultural history, universal history, etc., we need only remember how much his- tory constitutes a system of mendacity. We produce fictions of the past in order to deal with what we "would prefer not to" say, meaning that something must remain camouflaged in the present. When in doubt (a) use the subjunctive or (b) historicize! Recourse to anthropology is no panacea, since it remains a discipline built over the nightmares of history: it redeems "man" in view of violence enacted by man. The anthropologist is generally the necrophile tending over cadavers of history. If anthropol- ogy is the domain of visual culture, then we can proudly say that it is a discipline. One of the pleasures that we JONATHAN CRARY others responding to these questions, I have tried to show how vision is never separable from larger histori- Admittedly the words "vision" cal questions about the construction or "visual" appear in the titles of cer- of subjectivity. Especially within tain texts I have written and courses I twentieth-century modernity, vision have taught. However, with increas- is only one layer of a body that can be ing frequency they are terms that shaped or managed by a range of trouble me when I hear them external institutions and techniques, deployed within the expanding and it is also only one part of a body visrlality industry of conferences, capable of inventing new forms, publications, and academic offerings. intensities, and strategies of living. One of the things I have tried to do Thus any critical enterprise or new in my work is to insist that historical academic precinct (regardless of its problems about vision are distinct label) that privileges the category of from a history of representational visuality is misguided unless it is artifacts. No matter how often the relentlessly critical of the very two may seem to overlap, they are processes of specialization, separation, fundamentally dissimilar projects. and abstraction that have allowed the Therefore I don't have much interest notion of visuality to become the in a visual studies if it is simply an intellectually available concept that it enlarging or updating of traditional is today. So much of what seems to categories of imagery, if it is a stak- constitute a domain of the visual is ing out of some new cafeteria of an effect of other kinds of forces and contemporary media products and relations of power. mass-cultural objects as a field of If there has been a recent emer- inquiry. I don't know if this in fact is gence of visual studies, it is, in part, being done anywhere, but it is cer- because of the collapse of certain tainly easv to imagine it happening. A enduring assumptions about the sta- persistent temptation is to maintain tus of a spectator. Like so many the fiction of a continuous historical subareas of the human sciences, a dis- space in uhich all images are cipline built around the idea of the assumed to have some prinlary visual gaze takes on a practical existence at values. This in turn allo.r\.s the the moment of the disintegration and (sonletinles covei-t) preservation of a dispersal of its purported object. This detached and contemplative observer turn is something neither to lament and the conducting of business as nor celebrate, but it is nonetheless usual. crucial to understand the conditions Perhaps more importantlv, I that have brought about such a shift. ~oulcble ~kepticalo f an\ undertak- To the disappointment of some (and ing$ that set up \ision in such a .it7a\ to the bafflement of those bored that it bccalne an autonomous or with typographic culture), the analy- self-.jt~stifii1 1g problcln. I.ike some sis of those conditions would not

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and semiotic imperatives and models of "context" and "text." 2. It has been It has been suggested that pressure within the academy to shift .. tourism packagers, marketing consul- .. sound art-historical scholarship. If it . Jonathan Culler, Framing the Sign: Criticism and Its Institutions (Norman
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