Why did
Andy Warhol
decide to enter the music business by producing the Velvet Underground,
and what did the band expect to gain in return? What made
Yoko
Ono use the skills she developed in the artistic avant-garde in pop
music, and what in turn drew John Lennon to visual art? Why, in 1980s West
Germany, did
Joseph Beuys
record a pop single and artists such as Walter Dahn,
Albert
and Markus Oehlen, and
Michaela Melián
form bands? What role does utopia play in the pop music and art of Brian
Eno,
Laurie Anderson, and Fatima Al
Qadiri? And, vice versa, did dystopias of transgressive imagery and noise
lead the artist group
COUM Transmissions
to make music as Throbbing Gristle?
In
Double Lives in Art and Pop Music, Jörg Heiser argues that
context shifting between art and pop music is an attempt to find solutions
for contradictions faced in one field of cultural production. Ever since
Duchamp's
readymade and
Hugo Ball's sound poetry, the
definition of art has widened and dissolved to a point where nearly
anything geared toward an art audience can be considered an artwork. Today
it has become convention to praise art as a way of questioning
conventions, not least in regard to conventional borders between
disciplines, media, and genres. However, heroic claims of dissolving
borders have become a way of kicking at doors that are already wide
open—in a political and economic environment defined by neoliberal
deregulation and flexibilization geared toward new markets, and permeating
every social and cultural sphere.
It has thus become increasingly important to discuss the relationship
between different fields of cultural production. This book does just that,
looking closely at the careers of artists and pop musicians who work in
both fields professionally. Historically, these figures provoked cognitive
dissonance, but the seeming acceptance and effortlessness today of current
border crossings can be deceptive, since they might be serving vested
economic or ideological interests. Exploring the intertwined histories of
pop and art from the 1960s to the present, Heiser shows that those leading
double lives in art and pop music may often be best able to detect these
vested interests while pointing toward radical alternatives.
Jörg Heiser (*1968) lives in Berlin. He is co-editor of Frieze magazine, writes for the national daily Süddeutsche Zeitung, and is a frequent contributor to art catalogues and publications. He curated the exhibitions “Romantic Conceptualism” (2007, Kunsthalle Nürnberg, BAWAG Foundation Vienna) and “Funky Lessons” (2004/2005, BüroFriedrich Berlin, BAWAG Foundation Vienna).