|
I
Any time we either produce or understand any utterance of any reasonable
length, we are employing dozens if not hundreds of categories
George Lakoff: Women, Fire and Dangerous Things.
List
making is a significant part of John Yeadon's obsessive process of aesthetic
production. He acknowledges the powerful influence of Hogarth's Analysis
of Beauty, with its witty selections of compartmentalised "things",
its ironically exemplary categorisations. Both the humour of Hogarth and
the underlying significance of the joke, inform the way that Yeadon relates
groups of objects in his recent series of works which he groups under
the overall title of "Viol Bodies" and "Comparative Anatomy".
Before
there is zoology there must be natural history, classification precedes
analysis. The foundations of our knowledge and of our psyche lie in lists,
taxonomies, mnemonics, stories and poetic devices, thus category is the
basis of culture. Lists fascinate, they draw us in, they seduce us into
acceptance of ways of ordering the world. From the genealogical lists
of the bible - who begat whom - indeed, from the very earliest written
documents - inventories and accounting lists - through the statistical
lists and censuses of the Roman empire, the taxation records of mediaeval
kings and queens, the new knowledge based on the lists of Linnaeus and
Mendeleyev, down to the double helix and beyond, they structure our being
and define what is possible, what can exist.
Literature
loves lists. At the birth of the novel we find Defoe carefully enumerating
the contents of Crusoe's wrecked ship, salvaged to the island. The archetype
of the new individual of capitalist culture begins his allegory by making
a list. At the other end of modernity - the high modernism of T S Eliot
counts them all out:
O dark dark dark. They all go into the dark,
The vacant interstellar spaces, the vacant into the vacant,
The captains, merchant bankers, eminent men of letters,
The generous patrons of art, the statesmen and rulers,
Distinguished civil servants, chairmen of many committees,
Industrial lords and petty contractors, ...
(from East Coker)
Later still in the twentieth century, Jorge Luis Borges plays with the
concept of category, dividing animals into:
1. those that belong to the Emperor,
2. embalmed ones,
3. those that are trained,
4. suckling pigs,
5. mermaids,
6. fabulous ones,
7. stray dogs,
8. those included in the present classification,
9. those that tremble as if they were mad,
10. innumerable ones,
11. those drawn with a very fine camelhair brush,
12. others,
13. those that have just broken a flower vase,
14. those that from a long way off look like flies.
(from The Analytical Language of John Wilkins)
While lists and classifications may thus be either devices of coercion
and power or objects of amazement and delight, while they can function
as shackles or as ornaments, it is, it seems to me, a particularly English
quality of Yeadon's art to bring together the serious and the frivolous
aspects of category to create something disturbing and subversive. English
culture is the home of the anorak, the obsessive, the hobbyist, of train
spotters, cricket statisticians and record collectors (as portrayed in
Nick Hornby's High Fidelity). All these activities work only through a
kind of suspension of disbelief. You have to take them straight-faced
and serious. Once you admit humour, they become merely ridiculous.
But England is also the home of hypocrisy. When Macaulay remarked that
nothing was so ridiculous as the British public in one of its "periodic
fits of morality", he could have been describing the activities,
two hundred years later, of Mary Whitehouse invoking an obsolete statute
to imprison a writer for sexual thoughts; seeking to deny the existence
of an unacceptable sexuality through the erasure of its voice.
In the end it may be not the poets, as Shelley believed, but the comics
who are the unacknowledged legislators of mankind. Humour is always subversive.
Oppressors can never understand the jokes that undercut their authority.
Mary Whitehouse, like Margaret Thatcher, was famously impervious to laughter,
but laughter has been aligned with rebellion and resistance at least from
the beginnings of the modern age. The art works above all others that
ushered in the age of enlightenment - Beaumarchais' Barber of Seville
and Marriage of Figaro were revolutionary precisely because they dared
to make fun of the nobility and to oppose to the worthless pomposity of
the aristocracy, the wit, intelligence and humour of an emerging democratic
class. The fear of laughter by authoritarians is traced through a web
of political and sexual intersections in Umberto Eco's The Name of the
Rose.
Sexual repression, in England or elsewhere, is profoundly linked to political
power. That is part of the source of Beaumarchais' significance, since
both plays revolve around illicit sexual liaisons which transgress class
boundaries. As sexual repression is aligned with fascism, so sexual and
political liberation are allied in the modernist project. Thus the anarchist
Gustave Courbet painted the shockingly explicit Origin of the World. Thus
a high court judge worried that Lady Chatterley's Lover might fall into
the hands of wives or servants. Most recently in popular literature (Joanne
Harris) and film (Lasse Hallstrom), a promiscuous, atheist single mother
overthrows fascist patriarchal power through the revolutionary consciousness
of sexual bliss, symbolised as Chocolat..
In
the 1960s, while John Yeadon was beginning his career, a profound shift
in sexual sensibility began within European and North American culture.
Sexual and political revolution fused together in a unique moment of youthful
celebration and feast of misrule. Student riots began as demands for the
sexual desegregation of university accommodation and came to the point
of threatening state power on both sides of the Atlantic. The partial
failure and setbacks of that revolution have to be judged in the light
of its achievements, most importantly of all in gender and sexual politics
- the rights of women, the end of prohibitions on contraception and divorce,
the legalisation of male homosexuality.
The
completion of that liberatory project is perhaps the last remaining item
on the agenda of the modern. The weapons in the hands of the revolutionaries
are irreverence, wit and the infinite subversiveness of pleasure. John
Yeadon's humorous taxonomies of musico-phallic objects are located centrally
in that continuing revolution.
Will
Barton. August, 2002.
|