{"title":"The issue is moot: Decolonizing art/artifact","authors":"R. Phillips","doi":"10.1177/13591835211069603","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article seeks to step back from the long-standing debate between art and artifact—aesthetics and science-- understood as terms that reference central concerns of the quintessentially modern Western disciplines of art history and anthropology. In their landmark edited volume The Traffic in Culture: Refiguring Art and Anthropology, George Marcus and Fred Myers explored the growing convergences exhibited by the concerns and methods of practitioners of the two disciplines, both in the academy and the museum. By training our attention on contemporary artworlds—understood as systems—they illuminated the exchanges of aesthetic and conceptual ideas and forms that have brought Western and non-Western arts into shared discursive and real spaces. Yet in the quarter century since the book’s publication there has been a noticeable retreat from attempts by the proponents of visual studies and an expanded visual anthropology to actualize disciplinary convergences. The boundaries that separate art and anthropology have not been dissolved. Art historians and anthropologists continue to ask different questions and to support different regimes of value. From the author’s vantage point in a settler society currently directing considerable energies to institutional projects of decolonization the old debates have rapidly been receding as a new ‘third term’ – Indigenous Studies-- intrudes itself on the well trodden terrain. Not (yet) definable as a discipline but, rather, maintaining itself as an orientation, Indigenous Studies nevertheless renders the earlier disciplinary debates moot. Place, rather than time-based, collective rather than individual, holistic rather than either disciplinary or interdisciplinary, Indigenous Studies formulations exert decolonizing pressures on institutions that are rapidly mounting. Using Anishinaabeg: Art and Power, a show in 2017 at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), as a case study, this article shows how an exhibition moved representation away from the art/artifact dichotomy as well as from contested strategies of ‘inclusion’ and pro forma recognitions of ‘Indigenous ontology’ toward a genuine paradigm shift.","PeriodicalId":46892,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Material Culture","volume":"27 1","pages":"48 - 70"},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2021-12-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Material Culture","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/13591835211069603","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
This article seeks to step back from the long-standing debate between art and artifact—aesthetics and science-- understood as terms that reference central concerns of the quintessentially modern Western disciplines of art history and anthropology. In their landmark edited volume The Traffic in Culture: Refiguring Art and Anthropology, George Marcus and Fred Myers explored the growing convergences exhibited by the concerns and methods of practitioners of the two disciplines, both in the academy and the museum. By training our attention on contemporary artworlds—understood as systems—they illuminated the exchanges of aesthetic and conceptual ideas and forms that have brought Western and non-Western arts into shared discursive and real spaces. Yet in the quarter century since the book’s publication there has been a noticeable retreat from attempts by the proponents of visual studies and an expanded visual anthropology to actualize disciplinary convergences. The boundaries that separate art and anthropology have not been dissolved. Art historians and anthropologists continue to ask different questions and to support different regimes of value. From the author’s vantage point in a settler society currently directing considerable energies to institutional projects of decolonization the old debates have rapidly been receding as a new ‘third term’ – Indigenous Studies-- intrudes itself on the well trodden terrain. Not (yet) definable as a discipline but, rather, maintaining itself as an orientation, Indigenous Studies nevertheless renders the earlier disciplinary debates moot. Place, rather than time-based, collective rather than individual, holistic rather than either disciplinary or interdisciplinary, Indigenous Studies formulations exert decolonizing pressures on institutions that are rapidly mounting. Using Anishinaabeg: Art and Power, a show in 2017 at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), as a case study, this article shows how an exhibition moved representation away from the art/artifact dichotomy as well as from contested strategies of ‘inclusion’ and pro forma recognitions of ‘Indigenous ontology’ toward a genuine paradigm shift.
本文试图从艺术与人工制品美学和科学之间长期存在的争论中退一步,这些争论被理解为参考了典型的现代西方艺术史和人类学学科的核心问题。乔治·马库斯和弗雷德·迈尔斯在他们具有里程碑意义的《文化交通:重新塑造艺术和人类学》一书中,探讨了这两个学科的实践者在学术界和博物馆中所关注的问题和方法所表现出的日益增长的趋同。通过将我们的注意力放在当代艺术世界——被理解为系统——他们阐明了美学和概念思想和形式的交流,这些交流将西方和非西方艺术带入了共享的话语和真实的空间。然而,在这本书出版后的四分之一个世纪里,视觉研究的支持者和扩展的视觉人类学实现学科融合的尝试出现了明显的退缩。艺术和人类学之间的界限并没有消失。艺术史学家和人类学家继续提出不同的问题,支持不同的价值体系。从作者的角度来看,在一个移民社会中,当前将大量精力投入到非殖民化的制度项目中,旧的辩论已经迅速消退,因为一个新的“第三术语”-土著研究-侵入了早已涉足的领域。土著研究(尚未)被定义为一门学科,而是维持自己作为一种方向,尽管如此,它使早期的学科辩论变得毫无意义。地点而不是时间为基础,集体而不是个人,整体而不是学科或跨学科,土著研究的形式对正在迅速增加的机构施加非殖民化压力。本文以2017年在皇家安大略博物馆(ROM)举办的展览Anishinaabeg: Art and Power为例,展示了一个展览如何将表现从艺术/人工制品的二分法,以及有争议的“包容”策略和对“土著本体论”的形式承认转向真正的范式转变。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Material Culture is an interdisciplinary journal designed to cater for the increasing interest in material culture studies. It is concerned with the relationship between artefacts and social relations irrespective of time and place and aims to systematically explore the linkage between the construction of social identities and the production and use of culture. The Journal of Material Culture transcends traditional disciplinary and cultural boundaries drawing on a wide range of disciplines including anthropology, archaeology, design studies, history, human geography, museology and ethnography.