Introduction
Alexandra M. Kokoli
(excerpt, p. 9-13)
© JRP|Ringier, Les presses du réel, Alexandra M. Kokoli
THE PREMISE OF THE ‘POSITIONS' SERIES ‘TO QUESTION ARTISTIC
AND CURATORIAL PRACTICES FROM THE SINGULAR POSITION OF AN
ARTIST WHO WRITES [AND, I WOULD ADD, TALKS] BOTH ON HIS/HER
OWN WORK AS WELL AS THAT OF OTHER ARTISTS'
(1) IS FULFILLED IN
AN EXEMPLARY FASHION IN THE CAREER OF SUSAN HILLER TO DATE.
Not only has she produced a multitude of texts, mostly in the
form of improvised talks on art, artists, and – simultaneously
– culture, politics, science, the unconscious, but she has often
engaged with words, writing, voices and languages in her art
practice. Her automatic writing projects, such as
Sisters of
Menon (1972,
Notes added 1979), broach the permeable boundary
between writing and drawing through automatism, while weaving
an anti-Oedipal non-narrative tale that places the subject in
intimate networks of kinship rather than casting her/him as the
outcome of separation.
Lucid Dreams (1982), part of a series of
blown up and re-photographed Photomat pictures of her own
body in poses breaching the conventions of ID or indeed portrait
photography, subsequently covered in layers of paint and
automatic mark-making, question the soundness of pinning down
identity in visual representation while subverting the modernist
associations of gesturalism. One of her latest video works,
The Last Silent Movie (2007) is an auditory collage of oral enunciations
in extinct and seriously endangered languages, often
spoken by their last known speaker. Certainly not silent but evoking and perhaps also redressing silencing, this video is no
ordinary ‘movie' as it rejects visual representation (the screen
remains black throughout), creating instead a space for reflection
and potentially meditation.
(2) It is, simultaneously, a collection
of archives in which the recordings were sourced – the
product of ‘research', sublating, as Hiller's work so often does,
hierarchical divisions between knowledge and intuition.
Voices, words and language are important, both as building
blocks and subject matter. Yet, at first glance it might
seem like an oxymoron that, in her texts, Hiller often defends
the self-sufficiency of the artwork, her own and that of other
artists. The value and role of words
about art is far from
taken for granted, and much of what's included here has only
been produced in response to requests to Hiller by editors
and conference organisers to address specific issues, the work
of other artists or talk about her own, from an artist's perspective.
While impressively articulate and informed, Hiller is
one of the few to repeatedly note that the artist's views
aren't and shouldn't be taken as the final word on anything,
including their own work.
(3) Nor are they explanatory, but a differently
framed, perhaps less central, aspect of their output.
In doing this, Hiller isn't merely being egalitarian, let alone
humble, but is instead pinpointing a persistent problem in
art writing – art criticism and often art history too – that
uses artists' words as explanations, proving that although
the author may be dead, the authority of the artist when (s)he
speaks is still strangely unquestioned. She shows caution and
occasionally an outright unwillingness to speak in too much detail
about her own work, to say ‘too much', lest she misleads
by leading too firmly. ‘If talking and thinking were sufficient,
and working with ideas was enough, why make art?'
(4)
This rhetorical question should probably be reversed:
what is the point of talking and writing about art at all? This
collection bravely poses the question and, to a degree, provides
clusters of equivocal and complex answers. The internal, perhaps
paradoxical tension in this book – texts and talks by a
confident, articulate and passionate, but also cautious and often recalcitrant speaker and writer, who takes speaking and
writing very seriously but also considers them as somehow lacking
– is typical of Hiller's whole production and worldview.
Hiller finds herself both inside and outside/beyond, within and
against (conceptualism; gesturalism; in some ways, feminism)
and embraces these contradictions wholeheartedly, as she considers
them an inherent part of art practice.
(5) She has often
spoken about her precarious, yet (or, thus) privileged position
as a woman and a foreigner, an American long settled in
London
(6): an outsider who is within, but who retains the sharpness
of observation that, for most, is worn out through familiarity,
dulled by the ambiguous privilege of being ‘at home':
‘I never heard a woman called a cow until I came to England',
reads the text of item
008: Cowgirl from the installation
From the Freud Museum (1992–1994); the boxed item has more recently
been expanded into an independent series of five works,
Outlaw Cowgirl (2004–2005).
(7)
This is the work of the artist, not an anthropologist.
Hiller's past as an anthropologist, and one registered for a PhD
for that matter, is often brought up, to her annoyance. On the
one hand, her academic training might be used to convey credibility
and depth to her output, which is superfluous: such attitudes,
moreover, reveal a fundamental, if unacknowledged, contempt
for art practice in general, for what it can do, grossly
underestimating its particular subtlety and power. On the other
hand, it misrepresents Hiller's views of anthropology and obfuscates
the reasons for its rejection by her:
A long time ago, when I was doing postgraduate work in
anthropology, I was so intensely moved by the images I
saw during a slide lecture on African art that I decided
to become an artist. My previously inchoate thoughts
and feelings about anthropology as a practice and about
art as a practice seemed to fall into place in one complex
moment of admiration, empathy, longing and selfawareness.
I promised myself to happily abandon the
writing of a doctoral thesis whose objectification of the contrariness of lived events was destined to become
another complicit thread woven into the fabric of ‘evidence'
that would help anthropology become a ‘science'.
In contrast, I felt art was, above all, irrational, mysterious,
numinous: the images of African sculpture I was
looking at stood as a sign for all this, a sign whose
meaning, strangely, was already in place awaiting my
long-overdue recognition. I decided I would become not
an anthropologist but an artist: I would relinquish factuality
for fantasy. The final pleasure for me that afternoon
in the African art lecture was making a quick
drawing of each slide image as it flashed on the screen.
Sketchy and vigorous, those little pictures inserted me
neatly into a modernist tradition dating back to the
turn of the century, when European artists had begun to
make a practice of drawing from ethnographic models,
using these exotic objects as a kind of charter of possibilities
[…] And the pleasures of drawing bypassed
words, which was wonderful, too. Words ‘about' the peoples
represented by the marvellous sculpture seemed redundant;
the more facts, analyses and theories I had
learned, the further away I felt from any real connection
with them, and what I wanted was connection, empathy,
identification. And yet … What I was not then able
to see is that repudiating an objectifying discourse (anthropology)
in favour of a subjectifying discourse (art)
does not even begin to resolve the extraordinary lived
contradictions of merely being a subject in a culture
that […] does not allow ‘a synthesis between ideology and
poetry'.(8)
This is no evangelical narrative: the advent to art is immediately
qualified and problematised; there is no resolution, just
the beginning of another journey, full of obstacles and perils.
However, I see this event, different versions of which are often
repeated, as Hiller herself acknowledges above, as the equivalent
of a primal scene – the birth of the artist at the expense
of the death of the anthropologist and emerging scholar – simultaneously
obscured and signposted through a series of screen
memories, compromise-formations by critics seduced by convenient
couplings or hyphenated formulations like ‘art and anthropology',
or ‘science-art'.
(9) Abandoning studious note taking in
favour of excited sketching marks a threshold that is deliberately
and irrevocably crossed. Yet, while rejecting a way of
knowing and producing knowledge that is indivisible from forms
of violence and domination,
(10) Hiller also establishes, in action,
a kind of translatability between disparate discourses, between
art and anthropology.
(11) This does not mean that art and anthropology
are alike, or that scholarship and art practice have
much in common. But it does carve out a platform for potential
engagement and suggests an equivalence in the partiality and
specificity of each party, casting them both as ways of knowing.
Art, therefore, doesn't need anthropology to probe culture.
As a matter of fact, in Hiller's case at least, art can be an
anti-anthropological alternative.
Talking about art is perhaps an apt and still necessary
strategy for making exactly this point: that art is its own
system of signification, a self-sufficient way of knowing and
making knowledge that converses with, draws on, influences
and critiques others. The fact that this act of translation is
required has to do with discrepancies in public literacy in
different languages – it is not indicative of hierarchies among
the languages themselves.
(...)
1.
Lionel Bovier and Fabrice Stroun, ‘Introduction',
David Robins, The Velvet Grind:
Selected Essays, Interviews, Satires (1983–2005), JRP|Ringier, Zurich / Les presses
du réel, Dijon 2006, p. 9.
2. See also Mark Godfrey,
The Last Silent Movie, Matt's Gallery, London 2008.
3. See, for example, Hiller, ‘Portrait of the Artist as a Photomat',
Thinking About
Art: Conversations with Susan Hiller, ed. Barbara Einzig, Manchester University
Press, Manchester 1996, p. 63.
4. ‘The Performance of the Self: Hidden Histories (Jackson Pollock)', in this volume,
Section I.
5. ‘I am determined to insert my work with automatism within and against the tradition
of the gestural in modern art […]' Hiller, ‘Looking at new work: An interview
with Rozsika Parker',
Thinking About Art, p. 54. On her ‘within and against' position
in relation to conceptualism, see ‘3,512 words: Susan Hiller with
Jörg Heiser
and
Jan Verwoert'; in relation to feminism, see ‘Women, Language and Truth', both in
Section II.
6. Hiller, ‘Susan Hiller in Conversation with Andrew Renton', Adrian Searle (ed.),
Talking Art I, ICA, London 1993, p. 99.
7.
Outlaw Cowgirl was recently shown at the BAWAG Foundation. See Rachel Withers,‘On the Trail of the Outlaw Cowgirl',
Outlaw Cowgirl and Other Works, BAWAG
Foundation, Vienna 2008, p. 30–58.
8. ‘Editor's foreword', Susan Hiller (ed.),
The Myth of Primitivism: Perspectives on
Art, Routledge, London 1991, p. 1–2. The quote ‘a synthesis between ideology and
poetry' is a paraphrase from Roland Barthes,
Mythologies, trans. Annette Lavers,
Vintage, London 1973, p. 158–159.
9. Hiller expresses her misgivings about such hybrids in ‘The Provisional Texture
of Reality (On
Andrei Tarkovsky)' (Section I).
10. On the rejection and critique of anthropology, see particularly ‘Sacred Circles'
and ‘An Artist Looks at Ethnographic Exhibitions', both in Section II.
11. This view of translatability is indebted to Benjamin's observation that ‘the
kinship of languages manifests itself in translations' and, crucially, in the possibility
of translation. Benjamin notes, nevertheless, that ‘kinship does not necessarily
involve likeness', and that the only common ground required is, on the one
hand, ‘the intention underlying each language as a whole' to strive towards ‘pure
language' and, on the other, their mutually complimentary failure to do so. Walter
Benjamin, ‘The Task of the Translator',
Illuminations, ed. Hannah Arendt, Pimlico,
London 1999, p. 74.