{"title":"Michel Foucault' filosoofiline nägemine kujutava kunsti näite põhjal","authors":"Mirjam Lepikult","doi":"10.12697/BJAH.2016.11.05","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In examining Michel Foucault’s philosophical vision I have used Gilles Deleuze’s definition: “A seer is someone who sees something not seen.” Being situated on the border between the discursive and the non-discursive, images offer an opportunity to get out of the discursivity; this rupture enables one to see and say something new. The images carry in themselves “an uncertainty essential for creativity”. This property relates images to Foucault’s philosophical vision, aimed at destroying the evidence characteristic of a historical formation in the sphere of what is seen and what is said. In addition, one can notice three different directions in Foucault’s understanding of art, which correspond to different periods in his thinking. In his first work Folie et deraison. Histoire de la folie a l’âge classique (1961) there is a vertical view. Influenced by Martin Heidegger’s ontological conception of art, Foucalt sees images as “growing out of the Earth”, as a specific truth which he valued highly during this period.” Archeologie du savoir (1969) reveals a different vision of art. In this work, Foucault stressed that, at least in one of its dimensions, art is a discursive practice “at the most superficial (discursive) level”. In this “superficial” phase, his account of art may be compared to George Dickie’s institutional theory of art. I call the gaze moving along the surface the horizontal . However, as early as the 1970s, Foucault’s understanding of art becomes spherical : art lacks an ontological dimension; instead, images emerge in a historical fabric, within a network of power, as a result of complex interaction between various forces. Foucault participates in this “fight” mainly at the discursive level, but he does not suffocate images with text; instead, he revitalizes them, making them visible again in a novel way. Eventually the question arises whether the direction of the view has an effect on the interpretation of art. Firstly, there is the problem of value. In a broader wider perspective, the vertical is inherently tied to this. It touches on hierarchy, on looking up from below and the awe this invokes. A connotation is assigned to divine structures and the symbolic significance of such things. Growing from the artist’s hand via forces unknown, self-made artworks thus evoke a different kind of reverence than those produced merely on a flat surface. Foucault’s earlier works in his vertical period reference visual art notably more than his later works. Pictures made in the vertical seem to offer him more inspiration. It is only during this period that pictures speak to him, later it would be reversed – he would speak of the image. Admittedly he never finished his horizontal interpretation, producing only a barebones sketch. Such an approach does not demand viewing or listening to the art itself, but rather offers a possible way to hold a discussion on it. Maybe Foucault just did not have the time to write on the horizontal or maybe it simply did not engage him enough. The horizontal approach, specifically the version put forth by Dickie is a consumer-centric vision. Art would mean a market that is based purely on supply and demand. With this approach, artworks tend to contract the one time use and disposability of commodities. Secondly, there is the issue of visual art’s material or virtual nature. Words like verticality and Earth remind us that art has been material (until now) and thus literally originates from the ground. One can easily argue that works come from the Earth and emerge with the help of the artist, as Heidegger claimed. If we say that artworks have been material until now, we draw attention to the evolution of art as a configuration of shining pixels on a computer screen. The screen may be material but how and in what way is the light emitted from the tiny points of light material? However one approaches it, the virtual image is material in a different way than traditional works of art. Might it be that Foucault’s spherical view is a good fit for analyzing such virtual art?","PeriodicalId":52089,"journal":{"name":"Baltic Journal of Art History","volume":"11 1","pages":"89-108"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2016-11-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Baltic Journal of Art History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.12697/BJAH.2016.11.05","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ART","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In examining Michel Foucault’s philosophical vision I have used Gilles Deleuze’s definition: “A seer is someone who sees something not seen.” Being situated on the border between the discursive and the non-discursive, images offer an opportunity to get out of the discursivity; this rupture enables one to see and say something new. The images carry in themselves “an uncertainty essential for creativity”. This property relates images to Foucault’s philosophical vision, aimed at destroying the evidence characteristic of a historical formation in the sphere of what is seen and what is said. In addition, one can notice three different directions in Foucault’s understanding of art, which correspond to different periods in his thinking. In his first work Folie et deraison. Histoire de la folie a l’âge classique (1961) there is a vertical view. Influenced by Martin Heidegger’s ontological conception of art, Foucalt sees images as “growing out of the Earth”, as a specific truth which he valued highly during this period.” Archeologie du savoir (1969) reveals a different vision of art. In this work, Foucault stressed that, at least in one of its dimensions, art is a discursive practice “at the most superficial (discursive) level”. In this “superficial” phase, his account of art may be compared to George Dickie’s institutional theory of art. I call the gaze moving along the surface the horizontal . However, as early as the 1970s, Foucault’s understanding of art becomes spherical : art lacks an ontological dimension; instead, images emerge in a historical fabric, within a network of power, as a result of complex interaction between various forces. Foucault participates in this “fight” mainly at the discursive level, but he does not suffocate images with text; instead, he revitalizes them, making them visible again in a novel way. Eventually the question arises whether the direction of the view has an effect on the interpretation of art. Firstly, there is the problem of value. In a broader wider perspective, the vertical is inherently tied to this. It touches on hierarchy, on looking up from below and the awe this invokes. A connotation is assigned to divine structures and the symbolic significance of such things. Growing from the artist’s hand via forces unknown, self-made artworks thus evoke a different kind of reverence than those produced merely on a flat surface. Foucault’s earlier works in his vertical period reference visual art notably more than his later works. Pictures made in the vertical seem to offer him more inspiration. It is only during this period that pictures speak to him, later it would be reversed – he would speak of the image. Admittedly he never finished his horizontal interpretation, producing only a barebones sketch. Such an approach does not demand viewing or listening to the art itself, but rather offers a possible way to hold a discussion on it. Maybe Foucault just did not have the time to write on the horizontal or maybe it simply did not engage him enough. The horizontal approach, specifically the version put forth by Dickie is a consumer-centric vision. Art would mean a market that is based purely on supply and demand. With this approach, artworks tend to contract the one time use and disposability of commodities. Secondly, there is the issue of visual art’s material or virtual nature. Words like verticality and Earth remind us that art has been material (until now) and thus literally originates from the ground. One can easily argue that works come from the Earth and emerge with the help of the artist, as Heidegger claimed. If we say that artworks have been material until now, we draw attention to the evolution of art as a configuration of shining pixels on a computer screen. The screen may be material but how and in what way is the light emitted from the tiny points of light material? However one approaches it, the virtual image is material in a different way than traditional works of art. Might it be that Foucault’s spherical view is a good fit for analyzing such virtual art?
在考察米歇尔·福柯的哲学视野时,我使用了吉尔·德勒兹的定义:“先知是看到未被看到的东西的人。”图像处在话语与非话语的边界上,提供了一个脱离话语的机会;这种决裂使人能够看到和说出新的东西。这些图像本身带有“创造力必不可少的不确定性”。这一属性将图像与福柯的哲学视野联系起来,旨在摧毁在所见所言领域中历史形成的证据特征。此外,我们可以注意到福柯对艺术的理解有三个不同的方向,这三个方向对应于他思想的不同时期。在他的第一部作品中,Folie et derison。1961年出版的《istire de la folie al ' 经典》有一个垂直视图。受海德格尔艺术本体论观念的影响,福柯将图像视为“从地球中生长出来”,是他在这一时期非常重视的一种特定的真理。《考古学家》(Archeologie du savoir, 1969)揭示了一种不同的艺术视角。在这部作品中,福柯强调,至少在它的一个维度上,艺术是一种“在最肤浅的(话语)层面上”的话语实践。在这个“肤浅”的阶段,他对艺术的描述可以与乔治·迪基的艺术制度理论相提并论。我把沿着表面移动的凝视称为水平凝视。然而,早在20世纪70年代,福柯对艺术的理解就变成了球形:艺术缺乏本体论维度;相反,图像出现在历史结构中,在权力网络中,作为各种力量之间复杂相互作用的结果。福柯主要在话语层面参与这种“斗争”,但他没有用文本来窒息图像;相反,他使它们重新焕发活力,以一种新颖的方式让它们再次出现。最后的问题是,观察的方向是否对艺术的解释有影响。首先是价值问题。从更广泛的角度来看,垂直方向与此密切相关。它涉及到等级制度,从下往上看,以及由此引发的敬畏。一种内涵被赋予神圣的结构和这些东西的象征意义。通过未知的力量从艺术家的手中生长出来,自制的艺术品因此引起了一种不同于那些仅仅在平面上生产的艺术品的崇敬。福柯在他的垂直时期的早期作品比他的后期作品更多地参考了视觉艺术。垂直拍摄的照片似乎给了他更多的灵感。只有在这段时间里,图画才会对他说话,后来情况会逆转——他会谈论图画。诚然,他从来没有完成他的横向解释,只产生了一个基本的草图。这种方法不需要观看或聆听艺术本身,而是提供了一种可能的方式来进行讨论。也许福柯只是没有时间在横向上写作,或者只是没有让他足够投入。横向方法,特别是Dickie提出的版本是一种以消费者为中心的愿景。艺术意味着一个纯粹基于供求关系的市场。通过这种方式,艺术品倾向于收缩商品的一次性使用和一次性使用。其次是视觉艺术的物质性或虚拟性的问题。像垂直和地球这样的词提醒我们,艺术一直是物质的(直到现在),因此字面上起源于地面。人们可以很容易地争辩说,作品来自地球,并在艺术家的帮助下出现,就像海德格尔所说的那样。如果我们说艺术品到现在为止都是物质的,我们就会把人们的注意力吸引到艺术作为电脑屏幕上发光像素的配置的演变上。屏幕可能是物质的,但光是如何以及以什么方式从光材料的微小点发射出来的呢?无论你如何对待它,虚拟图像都是以一种不同于传统艺术作品的方式成为物质的。也许福柯的球形视角很适合分析这种虚拟艺术?
期刊介绍:
THE BALTIC JOURNAL OF ART HISTORY is an official publication of the Department of Art History of the Institute of History and Archaeology of the University of Tartu. It is published by the University of Tartu Press in cooperation with the Department of Art History. The concept of the journal is to ask contributions from different authors whose ideas and research findings in terms of their content and high academic quality invite them to be published. We are mainly looking forward to lengthy articles of monographic character as well as shorter pieces where the issues raised or the new facts presented cover topics that have not yet been shed light on or open up new art geographies.