We live âunder the conditions of image saturationâ, writes Yale University art historian David Joselit, who argues, after Bruno Latourâs actor-network theory, that images, âthrough the capacity for replication, remediation, and dissemination at variable velocitiesâ, have vast power and that it is necessary to understand and harness their power âfor progressive endsâ.
What I particularly like about this succulent little book is Joselitâs forensic attempts to pin down terms, to make things clear, to say what he is trying to do. This includes a specially commissioned set of diagrams, deployed with variable success, with which he tries to capture the complex spatial and temporal nature of his words.
Central to this is the value or the currency of art (hence, by implication, some forms of architecture, which is my field). Joselit defines three types of art. One is âneoliberalâ: investments sold in prestigious auction houses, infinitely reproducible and migrant - âcontemporary global artworkâ gaining value through translation. The second, which he calls âfundamentalistâ, includes native objects that derive value from being ârooted to a specific placeâ. The final type is the âdocumented objectâ that is accompanied by so much information that it can move without drastic loss of value. This leads to a discussion of artâs âdiplomatic portfolioâ. Art can be used as leverage in games of power - in which museums play a major part.
Joselit notes a shift in contemporary art towards a âmanipulation of populations of imagesâ, a key exemplar being Sherrie Levineâs Postcard Collage #4. These draw attention away from what is being presented and towards âtheir framing networksâ - the individual experience of looking at each one, the awareness of more and so on. He makes a call for a revised critical methodology reflecting a shift from âan object-based aesthetics in both architecture and art to a network aesthetics premised on the emergence of form from populations of imagesâ.
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Artâs interface with architecture comes where the latter has tried to generate form from fields of information - âa population, or currency, of imagesâ, as in parametric designs in which the architectural surface, for example Foreign Office Architectsâ Yokohama International Port Terminal, can adjust in response to changing conditions via information on site, or a design brief morphed into form through algorithms. Ironically, such buildings rarely constitute data in pure built form, and often exemplify Joselitâs particular bete noire, âobject based aestheticsâ, owing to the large dose of design input (and fashion consciousness) administered to them by skilful architects who still have a strong influence on the final outcome. I feel troubled by the translation of Joselitâs theories from art into architecture: if our buildings are to evolve out of information, the quality of that information will need to be gathered more rigorously and critically than it is at present. However, I also feel a sense of inevitability.
In this context, architecture begins to take on the characteristics of a âformatâ - âdynamic mechanisms for aggregating contentâ, the World Wide Web being one. Joselit contends that âwhat matters most is not the production of new content, but its retrieval in intelligible patterns through acts of reframing, capturing, reiterating and documentingâ. This - âthe Epistemology of Searchâ - is the networked capability of art. Its power is in its ability to make âcomplex and multivalentâ links, a currency, Joselit argues, that must be used for âpurposes other than financial profitâ. What a lovely idea.
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After Art
By David Joselit. Princeton University Press. 136pp, ÂŁ13.95. ISBN 9780691150444. Published 13 November 2012
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