PARTICIPATION
EDITED BY CLAIRE BISHOP
LONDON/CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS: WHITECHAPEL/MIT PRESS, 2006
207 PP./$22.95 (SB)
Claire Bishop has emerged as one of the key critics in recent
discussions on community public art. One of her first major
contributions was an essay called "Antagonism and Relational
Aesthetics." (1) In it she argues that critics should attempt to
define some of the criteria with which we might judge the new
community-based and collaborative art of the 1990s. New work is more
difficult to assess, she argues, because it does not reach a level of
reflexivity with regard to a medium or a site. Bishop contends that just
because a work encourages dialogue and participation, this alone does
not make it democratic. What types of relations are being produced, she
asks, for whom, and why? (2)
Defending the work of Thomas Hirshhorn and Santiago Sierra against
the "relational aesthetics" of Liam Gillick and Rirkrit
Tiravanija, Bishop counterposes an "avant-garde rhetorics of
opposition and transformation" against poststructural
"strategies of complicity." (3) In the work of artists like
Hirshhorn, there is a readmittance of a degree of autonomy that is based
neither in the contradictions of Clement Greenberg's revolutionary
art-at-a-standstill nor Theodor Adorno's negative dialectics and
modernist refusal. Making use of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal
Mouffe's theory of radical democracy, Bishop calls for the analysis
of "relational antagonism" at the level of criticism and not
as a prescription for aesthetic theory and practice. Relational
antagonism exposes what is repressed in the idea of social harmony that
is noticed in some of the more utopian moments of contemporary community
art: namely, aesthetic criteria. Because of this particular
psychoanalytically informed structure, readers of Bishop's work
should be aware that this is not a simple matter of shifting priorities
from politics to aesthetics but an effort at criticism that takes social
antagonism into account.
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More recently, Bishop defined the emphasis on collaboration and
participation in contemporary art as "the social turn." (4)
She argues here that socially collaborative art constitutes "what
avant-garde we have today: artists using social situations to produce
dematerialized, antimarket, politically engaged projects that carry on
the modernist call to blur art and life." (5) She contends that
because the "politics of inclusion" operate in tandem with
state and corporate interests, works need to be discussed as art and not
only in the context of their stated ethical intentions.
The essay takes issue with Grant Kester's critique of
avant-garde art that takes a critical distance from its audience and
that in some cases risks offense, shock, or didacticism. Bishop states
that the "discursive criteria" of socially engaged art should
not be to renounce authorial control nor to withdraw from the logic of
aesthetic autonomy as the precondition for art's
instrumentalization. Given the arguments of his 2004 publication
Conversation Pieces, Kester's response to the essay made some
rather predictable statements. (6) Among these is the reiteration of his
critique of the "quasi-detached perspective of the artist," a
quality or set of characteristics that he should ascribe to the field of
aesthetic production rather than to individuals. Kester opens his essay
with the salvo: "I was surprised to learn from Claire Bishop ...
that 'politically engaged' collaborative art practice
constitutes today's avant-garde." (7)
What was less predictable was Kester's subsequent positioning
of Bishop in the context of queer theory, using Douglas Crimp's
dispute with the editors of October and Eve Sedgwick's notion of
"paranoid consensus" as a means to distance his position from
structuralism, psychoanalysis, and Marxism--thereby avoiding questions
of relative autonomy. These criticisms are precisely what make
Participation a welcome intervention in the discussion. Kester's
critical strategy brings to mind the ways in which contemporary public
art criticism is not being framed. He seems to suggest that Bishop is
defending a "straight" view of the aesthetic against
"queer" activist destabilizations. If Kester appears to pose
the problem of art/politics in the terms of something like
straight/queer, what Bishop is asking us to consider is closer to what
feminist and queer theory defines as the sex/gender system. In this
sense, art is not to politics as male is to masculine, but both operate
in relation to their subjectively and dialectically intertwined logics
and rationales: art/politics/desire. What runs across these mutually
exclusive yet always relationally defined spheres is the concept of
autonomy, which in today's counter-globalization context is more
often encountered in relation to direct democracy than to cultural
production.
Bishop's edited collection of documents contains theoretical
essays, artists' writings, and critical and curatorial papers that
date from 1959 to the present. While the book's stated goal is to
"provide a historical and theoretical lineage for recent
socially-collaborative art" (12), it will likely serve as her best
defense in the face of recent criticism. Her introduction makes clear
that, for her, participation means political commitment and critical
thinking over and above physical involvement and proximity. Her
selection of texts will not satisfy everyone's particular genealogy
of the new community art. It is my view, however, that many readers will
welcome this collection as Bishop's refusal to remain satisfied
with the existing terms of discourse.
MARC JAMES LEGER is an independent scholar living in Montreal.
NOTES 1. Claire Bishop, "Antagonism and Relational
Aesthetics," October, No. 110 (Fall 2004) 51-79. 2. Ibid., 65. 3.
Ibid., 71. 4. Claire Bishop, "The Social Turn: Collaboration and
Its Discontents," Artforum, Vol. 44, No. 6 (February 2006),
178-183. 5. Ibid., 179. 6. Grant Kester, "Another Turn,"
Artforum, Vol. 44, No. 9 (May 2006), 22. 7. Ibid.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.