Installation view of ROPE DRAWING NO. 19, REDUX by Brian O’Doherty in FORTY. Courtesy MoMA PS1. Photo Pablo Enriquez.
Perhaps there is an unconscious agreement to
withhold a definition of post-modernism, partly because everyone's
definition will expose the confusion the word is designed to cover.
Modernism ended when the unexpected no longer arose
from the expected territory, when we were deprived of the need that
prompted us to recognize the solution.
The work of Brian O'Doherty, who served as editor of this magazine in the early 1970s, is included in "Forty,"
a group exhibition at MoMA PS1 marking the institution's fortieth
anniversary. It's an occasion for us to publish writing by and about
O'Doherty from our archives online. "Decoding O'Doherty" by Saul Ostrow,
a monographic 2007 essay responding to a traveling retrospective,
offers a thorough overview of his work as an artist. As an editor,
O'Doherty introduced the "Issues and Commentary" rubric to A.i.A.,
creating a platform for writers to sound off on pressing artistic and
social matters of the day. In one of his early columns for the
department, O'Doherty tries to make sense of post-modernism.—Eds.
Now that the modernist era (1848–1969?) is over, many of us are
camped around the exit of that vertiginous tunnel peering back in and
reporting to each other what the passage through—squeezed by the giant
muscle of historical inevitability—was like. What appeared so diverse
when we were in transit now assumes, in all its forms, a certain
familial appearance. The pride we had in that diversity—that our own age
was unique because it had no single complexion—has been humbled. Time
will further clarify the “look" of the modernist era, will graft its
artifacts together into a discernable modernist style, underlining those
key tics and mannerisms by which an age betrays its visual habits.
Soon, along with the Renaissance and Baroque, we will capitalize
Modernism.
And so we speak of post-modernism—a word that came into common usage
in the late sixties. Though it is our diagnosis for what surrounds us,
one never hears it defined. Perhaps there is an unconscious agreement to
withhold a definition, partly because everyone's definition will expose
the confusion the word is designed to cover. Even trying to define it
now seems a consciousness about our consciousness that is a leftover
habit from a previous age.
Of the many processes that characterized modernism two seem of
importance here. One, the progressive loss of an idealism (or
anti-idealism—modernism always produced these dialectical twins) that
lurked behind most of its endeavors. Second, the gradual development—as
the first disappeared—of complicated strategies by which thought could
be conducted and art made. This was marked by an increasing
paradoxicality which became institutionalized, providing well-defined
limits within which modernism could maintain its "movements," its
illusions of progress, its eventually smug avant-gardism.
The risks that modernism cultivated now seem to us distinctly less
radical. Assured even in its doubts, cultivating its dilemmas with
virtuosity, it authenticated itself by a tradition disguised as the lack
of one. As confident of the future as it was doubtful of the present,
it ever approached its own vindication. The void, once so delicately
sounded by the formal and linguistic implements that modernism
perfected, is now our common and factual environment, energized here and
there by that leftover process modernism bequeathed to us—process
itself. For process is the last resort of an art surfeited with paradox
and deprived of confidence. Art partially mobilizes itself out of its
stasis by tasks and procedures which mimic and parody life, thus
exposing life's artificiality and donating to it some semblance of
art—usually by virtue of these two current academies of order and chaos.
Much of this is done under the aegis of finding a morality in the
materials. But this—as well as the search for new materials and
media—can be seen not as an enterprising expansion of art's capacities,
but as a failure of the imagination, a further loss of confidence by an
art that for the first time is pondering its self-liquidation. Just as
the growth of the industry to "explain" art to every citizen may be a
sign not of greater sympathy and understanding, but of cultural fatigue.
Modernism ended when the unexpected no longer arose from the expected
territory, when we were deprived of the need that prompted us to
recognize the solution.
When modernism's clear lines of discontinuity were formally dissolved,
it became obvious that modernism itself could be looked on as a
Post-Romantic age—an addition to tradition rather than a break with it.
In the post-modernist devolution, doubt has no context to give it
meaning, choice is deprived of any authority (even that of chance), and
expectation forestalled. Nothing commands our allegiance, and if it
does, it is by definition worthless. A move in one direction immediately
reveals its hollowness by calling up alternatives and opposites that
are themselves hollow. Assurance is self-delusion, and self-delusion
does not provide assurance. Modernist art resulted from the exploitation
of contradictions, or from an escape into an absolutism which such
contradictions simultaneously promised and revoked. By the end of
modernism, contradiction (and history) expired in a parody of the
dialectical process—an attempt to prolong an art-making process that had
become impossible. This impossibility is not the modernist
"impossible," with its overtones of conquest and transcendence, but
simply the recognition that if something could not be done it should not
be attempted. Modernist silence—that glamorous self-exile with its
sardonic mask—has been succeeded by an angry dumbness.
This anger is post-modernism's main emotional content—fundamentally
an anger at being forced to contemplate its own obsolescence. This has
gone in a number of directions. The means of art, occasionally worried
to yield some morality, are more often subjected to an immense distaste;
ambiguous relations with materials have been displaced by irritation,
for materials only reflect empty dilemmas. And since in post-modernism
all the strategies of modernism have become highly conscious, there is
equal distaste for the habits of mind that could bring art to such a
pass. To apply these strategies now is to raise a headstone over one's
efforts before one begins. And previous art—the art in the
museums—exists across an abyss. It seems the product of minds that, no
matter how pressed, still had options open to them, and illusions enough
to make them workable. The resentment arising from our toleration of
the intolerable declares previous art irrelevant—as indeed it is to
artists' dilemmas now.
This post-modernist hatred—of materials, of previous art, of a habit
of mind that will not let us alone—focuses the activities that now stand
in in the place of art, each cherishing its own fallacy.
Is not the exacerbated social conscience also a way of finding
certainties that art no longer affords? Is not the move away from the
gallery an attempt to prolong it by making the world a gallery?
(It is small enough now.) Is not the flight from the object to words an
attempt to obscure our state with a discourse which—as words do—makes
art's translucency comfortably opaque? Is not the new realism an attempt
to find (as Western art traditionally does) certainties that can
restore confidence? Is not the lyrical painterliness a way of ignoring
the whole problem by accepting an exquisitely marginal position in
return for small satisfactions?
I think it was Nietzsche who said that we have art to prevent us from
dying of the truth. Now we have the truth and it may be that art is
dying of it. If this were true then it would, in that laborious habit
from which we cannot escape, be grounds for confidence; it would be a
certainty we could begin to perplex. Or must we be reduced to the
thought that the threat of obsolescence is sometimes the preface to a
transformation of usage?
No comments:
Post a Comment