Tag Archives: Crimp

Assignment Two preparation: Notes from ‘The Feathers of the Eagle’ by Sven Lütticken

In this essay Lütticken considers that a reappraisal of appropriation art (‘AA’) is needed, moving away from the stance that appropriation is critical in nature.  He looks at the argument that the more radical appropriationists were modern ‘mythologists’, inspired by Barthes.

Contemporary culture built on appropriation – digital technology has made it easier to reuse and manipulate images – photoshop, TV channel-hopping.

AA – emerged in 1980s > ‘clear intimations of transgression and illegality’ (p.109).  Objections to claims that appropriation art is an ‘artistic strategy’  – why should it have special status? > Crimp (who supported AA) ‘if all aspects of culture use this new operation, then the operation itself cannot indicate a specific reflection upon the culture’ (Crimp 1982, cited in Lutticken 2005:109)

Graw – AA theory treats the appropriation artist as a ‘fully conscious, detached and critical subject’ (p.110), therefore denying that influence of the appropriated material may affect outcome of the new work.  Goes against post-structuralist views on originality and authorship.

Barthesian thefts

c.1980 – Richard Prince (rephotographed contemporary ads), Sherrie Levine (rephotographed well-known photographs) and Louise Lawler (rephotographed works of art).  Considered by Crimp and [Hal] Foster to be ‘Barthesian mythologists who ‘steal’ and subvert media myths’ (p.111).  Crimp on Levine: ‘Drawn to pictures whose status is that of a cultural myth …[she] steals them away from their usual place in our culture and subverts our mythologies’ (Crimp 1977/79, cited in Lutticken, 2005:111)

Barthes’ ‘Myths’ – discussed in his Mythologies (1957) > bourgeois ideologies of our time – ‘hijacking signs and giving them a saturated surplus meaning’ (p.111). ‘Myth was a second-degree semiotic system grafted onto a first-degree one’ (ibid.)  Example of black soldier saluting before the French flag – literal meaning but also second ‘mythical’ meaning – signified greatness of France, its universal principals, different races pledged their allegiance.

Barthes > defined his mythology as a synthesis of semiology and ideology.  Historical dimension present in latter.  Positioned himself as a mythologist of modern media (p.112)

AA anticipated by Flaubert – ‘Bouvrard et Pecuchet’ > re-writing,copying, appropriating > second-degree writing – quoting and paraphrasing. Turned into a progressive strategy by Barthes > ‘hints at a true mythology in which logos and mythos critcize, transform and liberate each other’ (p.114)

Divine spirit, conquest, imperialism

Marcel Broodthaers – ‘The Eagle from the Oligocene to the Present’ exhibition (1972) – ‘direct artistic response to the challenge posed by Mythologies’ (p.114).  Eagle – real bird (not imaginary) yet with mythical connotations (Zeus’ pet) >  shows how ‘an object can be appropriated by myth and still have same meaning on different levels’ e.g. power, authority, divine spirit, imperialism etc.

Broodthaers then presented photos and slideshows of eagles on various products.  Oppitz (an anthropologist) claimed that Broodthaiers weakened the mythical power of eagle by multiplying eagles.  [CS note – link here with Benjamin and the art of mechanical reproduction – weakening of the original]

Photographs and readymades

Barthes ‘advocated stealing myths rather than specific images or texts’ (p.116).   Image or text (or fragment of one) in new context can make the myth it hosts explicit – more common in visual art than in literature.  Camera ‘facilitates the two-dimensional appropriation of objects’ (p.116) > Duchamp’s readymades can be viewed as ‘a radical manifestation of a culture informed by photography’ (p.116)

Barthes – ‘recasts the distinction between first- and second-degree (mythical) semiological systems as the difference between denotation and connotation’ (p.116) > reading of pasta advert in ‘Rhetoric of the Image’ (Barthes 1964, cited in Lutticken, 2005:117)) > cliché of ‘Italianness’

Readymades – ‘ordinary objects which serve as their own representation through alteration of context and negation of their original function: in the process they accrue strangely solipsistic surplus meanings’.

Duchamp’s appropriated industrial images – ‘the negated and represented element is already a representation, already a negation of presence’ (p.117).

Broodthaers – also used images as readymades > photography became more dominant in his work – moved further away from the appropriation of images as objects to the appropriation of images through photography/re-photography.

‘Art which aims to reflect on media myths by a conceptual use of photography risks becoming mythified itself’ (p.118) > embodies the myth of ‘critical’ art.

Decodings

Situationists International – ‘the re-representation of images in an artistic context would only mean their integration into an art world that is itself part of spectacle’ (p.119) so SI détournement (= subverting elements of popular culture) had to go further > demands for ‘the negation of art itself as one prerequisite for an end to the spectacle’ (p.119)

Debord’s spectacle = representation > the spectacle of commodities – ‘Duchamps’ appropriated images but [and] all his readymades would be representations, or at least elements within the spectacle as the hieroglyphic transcription of social relations’ (p.119) >> Marx – commodity fetishism.

De Brosses – posited that ‘fetishism was the most original and primitive form of myth’ (p.120) > commodity fetishm is therefore defined by Marx as ‘a creature of myth’. Myth and capitalism > Debord and Raoul Vaneigem >> the spectacle is a representation of myth.

Debordian view – ‘The destruction of spectacular myth and its fetishist illusions cannot be achieved by a mere artistic appropriation of commodity-images’ (p.121) > ’Situationist détournement is the proper way of appropriating spectacular myth’ (p.121)

Sameness and repetition

Debord and Deleuze – concentrated on the temporal dimension of myth, drawing from work of modern mythologists such as Eliade.  Mythic time – ‘cyclic repetition of archetypal events in a remote, aboriginal past’ (p.121) > Debord  – pseudo-cyclic time of the spectacle.

Deleuze ‘identifies representation with the copying of models, and hence with mythical repetition; in this respect mass culture as a culture of cliches remains in thrall to myth.  Art can appropriate these representations and turn them into something else’ (p.122) > Pop art starts in the artificial and then can turn into the simulacrum.

Warhol – emphasised the second-degree nature of his images > often repeated into grids ‘to empty out the image’.  Strong fetishist and believer in mythical commodity – ‘his repetitions reinforce the images of the spectacle, and bring them into question precisely by doing so’ (p.122)

Inside myth

Warhol – started to be aware of copyright problems so started to take his own photographs – 1981 Myths portfolio.

Louise Lawler – makes numerous photographs of works by Warhol > appropriation of appropriation

Pop – omitted from discussion of AA – why? Is its ‘embrace of the commodification of art [was] too uncomfortably close to home?’ (p.124)

Defenders of ‘critical’ art – both Pop and Situationism undermined art – Pop ‘for’ the spectacle, Situationism against it. Pop’ collapsed the difference between artistic and other commodities’, Situationism ‘demanded the abolition of both artistic and other commodities’ (p.124) >> ‘Both can serve as a corrective for the tendency to idealise art as inherently critical’ (p.124)

Crimp – ‘doubted that critical reflection on culture could use a procedure that is an important part of the same culture’ i.e. appropriation (p.124)  Appropriations can end up reinforcing myths.  Second-degree mythology can also become its own myth – the myth of appropriation.

Criticality – ‘Criticality’ is only to a limited extent a result of the artist’s subjective intentions. Nor is it a stable attribute of any image or text. Rather, it is something that results from the use of a text or image by an artist or critic, or other viewers.’ (p.125, author’s italics)

My thoughts

Lütticken’s essay takes a completely different angle on appropriation than my other readings so far.  Although easy to read I found it quite difficult to digest, hence a number of readings and  these fairly detailed notes.  One of my initial issues was to convince my brain to retain the meaning here (and as used by Barthes) of the word ‘myth’ to refer to a dominant ideology of our time rather than a folklore legend.  I was also glad that I had read about the ideas of Benjamin, Debord and the Situationists before tackling this essay as having some knowledge of these helped my comprehension immeasurably.

I find the concept of appropriation of appropriation interesting – with the passing of time there is always the possibility that, through the receipt of additional mythical connotations, an appropriated image may end up losing its original individuality, its own message.  Hence the work of artists such as Louise Lawler (appropriating the appropriated work of Andy Warhol) and Michael Mandiberg (appropriating the appropriated work of Walker Evans) are important in keeping the intentions of edginess, the subversiveness that characterises so much of appropriation art works at their inception.

Bibliography

Lütticken, S. (2005)  ‘The Feathers of the Eagle’. In: New Left Review 36 November-December 2005.  [online].  At: http://dspace.ubvu.vu.nl/bitstream/handle/1871/21431/182536.pdf?sequence=2  (accessed on 08 March 2016)

Assignment Two preparation: Notes from ‘Appropriation in Contemporary Art’ by Hayley Rowe

Appropriation  = act of borrowing or reusing existing elements within a new work.Postmodern appropriation artists are keen to repudiate the notion of ‘originality ‘ (eg Barbara Kruger).   The borrowing of existing elements > recontextualisation > allowing  the viewer ‘to renegotiate the meaning of the original in a different , more relevant, or more current context’

Marcel Duchamp – first artist to use appropriation.  Concept of ‘readymades’ – taking everyday object and asking viewer to consider it as art > appropriation.

Appropriation – art of the 1980s.

‘The concepts of originality and of authorship are central to the debate of appropriation in contemporary art’ (p.2)

Author – one who originates or gives existence to a piece of work > authorship ‘determines a responsibility for what is created by the author’  Appropriation can support view that ‘authorship in art is an outmoded or misguided concept’ > Barthes’ ‘Death of the Author’ > ‘it is the language which speaks; not the author.’ (Barthes 1967, cited in Rowe, 2011:2)

Viewer less likely to consider role of the artist of the appropriated work when forming their interpretation and opinion of it if they are aware of the work from which it was appropriated > questions more likely to arise about the current validity of the work and the issues raised by the re-contextualising of the original > ‘The birth of the reader must be at the death of the author.’ (Barthes 1967, cited in Rowe, 2011:2-3)

Opposing view offered by Irvin (see my post here on Irvin’s essay) – appropriation can strengthen the concept of authorship within art.

Rowe – authorship is a concept that we must consider when considering appropriated works > evidence suggests that authorship is important within appropriation in contemporary art – but maybe we should consider a diminished authorship in light of Barthes’ arguments.

Originality is central to debate of appropriation.  What is originality?  Quality of creation – two way approach > i) property of work itself or ii) as a property of the artist.  Many appropriation artists keen to deny notion of originality.

Julie Van Camp: ‘We value originality because it demonstrates the ability of the artist to advance the potential of an art form’ (Van Camp 2007, cited in Rowe, 2011:3) > problematic – Sherrie Levine copied Evans’ photographs > not original but advanced the art form by raising awareness of existing imagery.  We tend to equate originality with aesthetic newness – should a new concept be considered unoriginal?

Barbara Kruger – utilises media imagery to try to interpret consumer society > ‘asks us to rethink the images we consume on a daily basis in terms of perception and how underlying messages function within this imagery’ (p.5).  Less abstract work than Duchamp > possibly more accessible with wider audience.

Pictures  – 1977 exhibition curated by Crimp – using appropriation to address the consumption of imagery and displaying it as a new mode of representation > Sherrie Levine, Troy Bauntuch, Robert Longo.

Richard Prince – focuses on the re-photography of high-end adverts less the captions > interest in commodity and consumption. Very little alteration > questions of originality and authorship >> ‘I never associated advertisements with having an author’ (Prince 2007, cited in Rowe, 2011:7)

‘The discourse and attention surrounding the concept of appropriation means we must consider it an art form’ (p.7)

My thoughts:

A gentle introduction into the world of appropriation art, with the dialogue about some of the main players together with examples of their work being helpful.  I must admit to disagreeing with Rowe’s statement ‘The discourse and attention surrounding the concept of appropriation means we must consider it an art form’ (p.7) in her closing paragraph.  I do not find Rowe’s reasoning to be strong enough in my opinion to justify her conclusion – I would consider factors such as the huge diversity of approaches and forms to be found within appropriation art to be more pertinent.

Bibliography

Rowe, H. (2011) ‘Appropriation in Contemporary Art’. In: Student Pulse 3 (06) [online]. At: http://www.studentpulse.com/articles/546/appropriation-in-contemporary-art  (accessed on 08 March 2016)

Assignment Two preparation: Notes on appropriation from ‘Beginning postmodernism’ by Tim Woods

‘Beginning postmodernism’ by Tim Woods (Woods, 2009) was one of the recommended reads from my tutor in her feedback report on my first assignment.  These notes are taken from chapter five which looks at postmodernism in visual art, sculpture, and the design arts.

Appropriation = leasing or borrowing

‘Appropriation’ > popular postmodernist term – similar to poststructuralist view that people can only borrow from an existing database => there is no longer any originality available.

Artists: Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, Jeff Koons, Sherrie Levine.

Two main (opposing) positions:

  • Appropriation looks back to earlier art – ‘both imitating previous styles and taking over specific motifs or even entire images’ (p.155) .  ‘“Appropriation”, like myth, is a distortion rather than a negation of prior semiotic images’. (p.155). Retains original connotation but also shifts them to create a new sign >> the original remains unchanged whilst the new work recontextualises.  Principal theorists: Craig Owens, Hal Foster, Douglas Crimp, Benjamin Buchloh
  • Appropriation art is informed by ‘the sense of the decline and impending death of art’  (Kuspit 1993, cited in Woods, 2009:155)   Principal theorist: Donald Kuspit

Hal Foster – two types of postmodernism – one of reaction and one of resistance. (p.156)

  • Reaction – recycling of ‘worn-out styles like neo-classicism’ – Mariani (artist), Jencks (theorist)
  • Resistance – mainly from left-wing and feminism – political issues

Matter of debate as what exactly is reacted against or resisted.

Craig Owens – looks at postmodernism as ‘the return of the allegory’. – work which ‘is synthetic; it crosses aesthetic boundaries’ producing ‘a confusion of boundaries’ (Owens 1980, cited in Woods, 2009:157).  Appropriation is one of a number of strategies characterising contemporary art and differentiating it from modernist art.  Use of photo-mechanical reproduction in order to challenge art’s uniqueness and aura – empties images of their significance  through generation of images through reproduction of other images > Warhol (soup cans, Marilyn Monroe), Nam June Paik (tv installations),  Levine (parodic photographic reproductions).

Bibliography

Woods, T. (2009) Beginning Postmodernism (2nd ed.)Manchester: Manchester University Press