Current
preoccupation with figuration and its surface treatment in painting have
produced an amazing dearth of proper historical analysis. Curatorial pseudo-insights
are once again the order of the day: and the artists once again have a
market to produce for. All these fashionable rhapsodies have led to embarrassing
omissions and liberal mystifications and obfuscations. If we are to make
any critical approaches towards the understanding of current art practice
then some attempt at historical clarification is a fundamental, initial
requirement. Those practitioners who ignore and refuse such attempts,
do so at their peril. Such perilous living may be profitable but not commendable.
In
1940 in his book Rabelais and His World (MIT Press, 1968, Trans. H Iswolsky)
Mikhail Bakhtin, the Russian semiotician, outlines the notion of grotesque
realism; this is useful in consideration of the 'world turned upside down',
carnivalesque imagery that was prevalent in the middle ages with respect
to the transformation of ecclesiastic imagery. The central principle of
grotesque realism is degradation; that is, the lowering of everything
that is high, the bringing down to a material, bodily element everything
spiritual, ideal and abstract.
The
bodily element, in terms of a social body, is opposed to the highly individualised
bourgeois notions of the material, biological individual centred around
the bourgeois ego. It is epitomised by the picture of people growing through
the process of degradation and the consequent resurgence of life. Within
grotesque realism the bodily functions become enlarged, exaggerated; this
is the positive and assertive character of this form of realism. It is
related strongly to the images of the natural world, to the images of
birth, life, death, the sowing of seed, the fertility of the ground, and
the growth of natural forms. These images are also of the human world,
and therefore they are of the genital organs, the belly, the arse, etc.
The imagery is topographically consonant with its ideas. Although its
central point and manifestation is one of degradation, it is to be seen
in a highly positive character. This degradation is not such that it simply
brings down, but it brings down in order to produce a rebirth; therefore
it brings down those things that it is important to destroy in order that
this rebirth can occur. This transformational quality is central.
In
the middle ages the carnival was used partially as a time for the letting
off of steam. For one day, for one week, for one month, people could let
the world turn upside down; they could be kings and queens for a short
time. In doing this it acted as a safety valve and this mechanism allowed
the hierarchies that were in power for the rest of the year to retain
that power; this is the negative side of the carnival.
Carnival
time was often a time of crisis. The outcome of this crisis depended upon
the strength and nature of the powers that were involved. Le Roy Ladurie
has pointed out in his book Carnival (Scolar Press, London, 1980, Trans.
M Feeney) that in Romans in 1579- 80 reactionary elements gained power
simply because of the possibility of sudden and effective action that
carnival offered. The use of disguises was extremely important. They allowed
the covering up of the identity of groups of people and therefore the
possibility of distinguishing friend from foe in the chaos that ensued
became very difficult. The disguise is instant pseudo self-transformation.
If the disguise is removed the real individual is shown. In grotesque
realism this can be turned upon its head so that the image of the real
individual can be seen as a disguise and therefore potentially able to
be taken off. In this way the self-transformational aspect of this occurrence
can be seen more clearly; underneath this initial image appears the new
person, the new group of people, the new society. In Walter Benjamin or
Towards a Revolutionary Criticism (Verso, London, 1981) Terry Eagleton
has pointed out that this self-transformatory notion is paralleled by
that moment of revolutionary redemption that Walter Benjamin called Jetzeit.
Benjamin's notion of Jetzeit is one where the determinisms, either from
an astrological or an historical point of view, are violently fractured
by the carnivalesque rhetoric of liberation.
There
are other ways in which Bakhtin's ideas can be seen as related to Lukacs'
notion of critical realism (G Lukacs, The Meaning of Contemporary Realism,
Merlin, London, 1963, Trans. J & H Mander); and he can be seen to
be building in a positive fashion upon this in a similar way to that which
Lukacs endeavoured to do in his elaboration of socialist realism. That
Bakhtin is a materialist first and foremost is clear; his continuous attempt
to bring everything back to the material level runs deeply through his
discussion of Rabelias. Eagleton has also pointed out parallels between
Bakhtin's deconstruction and contemporary notions of deconstructivism.
It is his historical materialism that distinguishes him however; for although
the subject at the centre of Bakhtin's carnivalesque imagery is in some
ways deconstructed, taken apart, decentred; it is also filled up with
the new materiality, filled up to excess, bursting with life. In this
return to materiality, the imagery and the discourse return to materiality
and they bring down to that level everything that pretends to be 'other',
that is everything that is idealist.
If
we consider the history of popular culture in the light of these notions
we at least have some sort of starting point; we also have the possibility
of understanding a way of producing a new attitude to discursive and art
practice which entails the consideration and the centrality of self-transformational
attitudes.
That
materialism and inversion are central to any view of popular culture is
in contradistinction to the centrality of idealism in high culture. This
formulation is of course nothing new. In some forms it could be seen to
merely reiterate the Platonic position with respect to the artist; that
is, the artist is seen as somebody who is potentially dangerous, subversive
of the ideal state. What is surprising, however , is the way in which
it has been possible foe various societies to sustain forced ignorance
of this formulation of the two streams of culture. One seems to have thrust
its way in to such a point that the other is hardly considerable at all.
Those who hold the greatest power will sustain their own high culture
to the exclusion of popular culture(s). It is only recently that this
position has started to be reversed. The function of high-art images is
most easily seen in the Christian tradition; the use of images can be
seen as essentially Aristotelian, or at least Thomist. The binding together
of an epistemology, a theology and a theory of art, is the structure that
is at the heart of European high art. Art is seen a revelatory, it is
seen a revealing the hierarchies of the status quo. It is against this
view of art that the position of grotesque realism must be set.
Its
oppositional quality is clear. However what might be seen as problematic
is its seeming dependence for its own continuance upon its antithetical
nature with respect to this vast idealistic superstructure. It only becomes
less problematic once it is understood that its transformational qualities
are based around the continuing reaction to the circumstances within which
people find themselves and the contradictions that are held within their
own lives. Contradictions in people's lives are not going to disappear,
although the nature and the site of these contradictions may change. It
is in this sense that it is a realism; it is based upon real contradictions.
These contradictions are made apparent by a social dynamic of s distinctly
non-historic, non-determinist kind. A well sorted teleology is not available.
A set, or sets of sets of strategies for the social dynamic, however,
is. The possibility of social change is fundamental to the notion of popular
culture and carnival clears the ground for this to occur. In the light
of this iconoclastic nature can be understood. the nature of relationships
and the gaps between epistemic breaks, material transformations or revolutions,
paradigm shifts and fractures in discursive and visual practice are extremely
complex and unclear. This lack of clarity most obvious in the case of
carnival where there is a discursive and visual practice which is fractured
and there is also the possibility of a material fracture. Carnival is
both a representation of the world and of the world itself; therefore
the fractures that it either represents or creates are interwoven and
inseparable. Its imagery and practice are so bound up with material bodily
functions that there is no possibility of the imagery being seen in an
autonomous light separated from the practices of the social section involved.
Indeed it allows a certain autonomy of this social section by its very
practice. As discursive and visual practice and its products become separated
so the products become increasingly iconic. This increasing iconicity
parallels a decreasing power for social change. The icon is a product
of and produces social determinism; iconoclasm produces and is a product
of social transformation. Iconicity is a facet of the socialisation of
idealism, iconoclasm is the material fracturing of iconicity. However
there is no possibility of a simple resolution of the nature of the causal
relationships between these different fractures and transformations. The
study of particular historical examples can elaborate the nature of previous
fractures and transformations and open the way to a production of a more
general theory of the production of fractures and transformations. This
historical study entails the historical study of popular culture. Popular
culture is not to be seen as a simple string of fractures and transformations,
but it is the complex made up of such strings and the stringing together
of the gaps between fractures and transformations and the attempts at
fractures and transformations. This complexity and its resonances within
current art practice must be understood and careful critical consideration
must wrest the significant from the lies and silences of the fashionable
rhapsodist.
Graham Howard
1983
From
the "Dirty Tricks" catalogue of 1984, this text is an extract
from an article on Grotesque Realism by Graham Howard.
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