作家、劳工组织、批评体系和社会模式中的集体艺术

IF 0.6 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
R. Mader
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In their attempts to clarify and classify this trend, whose reality can no longer be gainsaid owing to its omnipresence, most publications and events initially started from a rather broad, and thus vague, understanding of the collective. Nevertheless, the tension between the creative individual and the collective remained central to the narrative put forward in numerous contributions. Those texts originating from artistic and/or curatorial practice – i. e., from the art world itself – often were written in a legitimating style which, combined as it often was with inventive text and image elements, appeared intended confidently to position collective forms of organisation (cf. Baukrowitz 1994; Bianchi 1999; Block/Nollert 2005). Based on this, the diversity of the formats that have since been established was emphasised, as were the advantages of this mode of working and organising. So far, there has been hardly any question as to the social structure within which this mode of working has been able to gain its considerable resonance; neither have scholars investigated how the individual groups relate to their political and social framework, what kind of self-image they derive from this, or how they relate the ›we‹ they have created to the group’s individual members. Against this backdrop, the present article proposes an interpretation of collective authorship as a complex and dynamic constellation of elements that develops and positions itself within a field of tension generated by the various notions of authorship, the organisation of work, criticism of the prevailing system, and competing models of society. The notion of a ›constellation‹ appears particularly suitable here because it suggests a ›bigger picture‹, yet at the same time allows to crystallise, for concrete situations (such as specific collective associations), »the elements of their respective special relationship, and what may conceivably emerge from them in concrete terms« (Mersch 2015, 166). The present article outlines and traces these relationships based on a selection of such collective associations, intending to show where and how – despite specific contextual difference – common concerns and overarching trends may be identified. 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Well-founded discussions of select examples, or instances of reasonably systematic contextualisation, may only be found from the mid-2000s onwards (e. g. Lind 2007). And it was only in the 2010s that art historians and scholars from other disciplines became interested in collective working modes. In their attempts to clarify and classify this trend, whose reality can no longer be gainsaid owing to its omnipresence, most publications and events initially started from a rather broad, and thus vague, understanding of the collective. Nevertheless, the tension between the creative individual and the collective remained central to the narrative put forward in numerous contributions. Those texts originating from artistic and/or curatorial practice – i. e., from the art world itself – often were written in a legitimating style which, combined as it often was with inventive text and image elements, appeared intended confidently to position collective forms of organisation (cf. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近,印度尼西亚艺术家团体ruangrupa被指定为2022年第15届文献展的集体联合总监,这个集体已经到达了艺术世界的中心。这一概念不仅包括一个群体的组织形式,而且还指定了一种与外部合作、反思和培养表象的特定模式。在他们的策展方式中,ruangupa呈现了一种极其全面的集体概念,其中浓缩了艺术领域中可以观察到的各种集体愿望,这些愿望已经传播了一段时间。早在20世纪90年代,艺术界就出现了集体艺术中个体层面的增加。这不仅体现在不同形式的集体联系之间日益增长的差异上,这种差异几乎不能再用类型学来表示;向集体的转变也反映在展览中,这反过来又经常涉及来自哲学、文化研究或社会学领域的理论考虑,将“集体转向”解释为“时代的标志”。从艺术史上讲,对集体的审视是一个相对年轻的现象,它表现出一系列特定主题的特性。虽然艺术史分类尤其对这种“非常规”艺术工作模式(Thurn 1991, Stahlhut 2019)保留了基本的保留意见,但最近,文化研究方法倾向于提出基于诸如共谋(Ziemer 2013)或合作(Schneider 2006)等概念的类型学。在所有这些贡献中,作者身份是分析的中心“轴”。然而,在视觉艺术领域,个人作者身份在很长一段时间内几乎没有受到挑战,为了给集体协会腾出空间,这既不是唯一的,也不是近几十年来艺术家集体联合的最重要原因。然而,拒绝“单一”的创造概念经常被引入作为最重要的理论分析参考;相比之下,伴随甚至促进了这一现象蔓延的社会因素,如果有的话,往往只是有选择性地指出。从2000年代中期开始,可能只能找到对选定例子或合理系统背景化实例的有充分根据的讨论(例如:林德2007)。直到2010年代,艺术史学家和其他学科的学者才开始对集体工作模式感兴趣。在试图澄清和分类这一趋势时,大多数出版物和事件最初都是从对集体的一种相当广泛的、因而模糊的理解开始的。尽管如此,创造性个人和集体之间的紧张关系仍然是许多贡献中提出的叙述的核心。那些源自艺术和/或策展实践的文本-即。,从艺术世界本身-通常是写在一个合法的风格,结合,因为它往往是创造性的文字和图像元素,似乎有意自信地定位集体组织形式(参见Baukrowitz 1994;比安奇1999;2005块/ Nollert)。在此基础上,强调了已经建立的形式的多样性,以及这种工作和组织模式的优势。到目前为止,几乎没有任何问题,这种工作方式能够在社会结构中获得相当大的共鸣;学者们也没有研究个体群体是如何与他们的政治和社会框架联系起来的,他们从中获得了什么样的自我形象,或者他们如何将他们创造的“我们”与群体的个体成员联系起来。在此背景下,本文提出了对集体作者身份的解释,认为集体作者身份是一个复杂而动态的元素星座,它在由各种作者身份概念、工作组织、对现行制度的批评和社会竞争模式产生的紧张领域中发展和定位自己。“星座”的概念在这里似乎特别合适,因为它提出了一个“更大的图景”,但同时也允许在具体情况下(如特定的集体协会),“它们各自特殊关系的要素,以及可能从它们中以具体方式出现的东西”(Mersch 2015, 166)。本文根据这些集体关联的选择概述和追踪这些关系,旨在显示在何处以及如何-尽管具体的背景差异-可以确定共同关注和总体趋势。这最终导致了对这些个别现象的复杂解读。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Das Kollektive in der Kunst zwischen Autor*innenschaft, Arbeitsorganisation, Systemkritik und Gesellschaftsentwurf
Abstract At the latest with the designation of Indonesian group of artists, ruangrupa, as collective co-directors of documenta fifteen in 2022, the collective has arrived at the centre of the art world. This notion includes not only the organizational form of a group, but also designates a specific mode of cooperating with outsiders, of reflecting and of cultivating appearances. In their curatorial approach, ruangrupa present an extremely comprehensive conceptualisation of the collective, in which the various collective aspirations observable in the art field, which have been spreading for some time now, are condensed. As early as the 1990s, there has been, in the art world, an increase in individual facets of the collective. This is evidenced not only by the growing differentiation between different forms of collective associations, which can hardly be represented in a typology anymore; the turn towards the collective is also reflected in its being addressed in exhibitions, which in turn often refer to theoretical considerations derived from the fields of philosophy, cultural studies, or sociology, interpreting the ›collective turn‹ as a ›sign of the times‹. Art-historically speaking, the examination of the collective is a relatively young phenomenon which exhibits a range of subject-specific peculiarities. While art-historical classification, in particular, retains fundamental reservations about this ›unconventional‹ artistic working mode (Thurn 1991, Stahlhut 2019), rather more recent, cultural studies approaches tend to put forward typologies based on such notions as complicity (Ziemer 2013) or collaboration (Schneider 2006). In all these contributions, authorship is the central ›axis‹ of analysis. However, the breaking up of individual authorship, which in the visual arts remained virtually unchallenged for a very long time, to make room for collective associations, has been neither the only nor the most important reason, in recent decades, for artists to associate collectively. The rejection of a ›singular‹ notion of creation is nevertheless often introduced as the most important theoretical-analytical reference; social factors, by contrast, which have accompanied or even promoted the spread of the phenomenon, are often pointed out only selectively, if at all. Well-founded discussions of select examples, or instances of reasonably systematic contextualisation, may only be found from the mid-2000s onwards (e. g. Lind 2007). And it was only in the 2010s that art historians and scholars from other disciplines became interested in collective working modes. In their attempts to clarify and classify this trend, whose reality can no longer be gainsaid owing to its omnipresence, most publications and events initially started from a rather broad, and thus vague, understanding of the collective. Nevertheless, the tension between the creative individual and the collective remained central to the narrative put forward in numerous contributions. Those texts originating from artistic and/or curatorial practice – i. e., from the art world itself – often were written in a legitimating style which, combined as it often was with inventive text and image elements, appeared intended confidently to position collective forms of organisation (cf. Baukrowitz 1994; Bianchi 1999; Block/Nollert 2005). Based on this, the diversity of the formats that have since been established was emphasised, as were the advantages of this mode of working and organising. So far, there has been hardly any question as to the social structure within which this mode of working has been able to gain its considerable resonance; neither have scholars investigated how the individual groups relate to their political and social framework, what kind of self-image they derive from this, or how they relate the ›we‹ they have created to the group’s individual members. Against this backdrop, the present article proposes an interpretation of collective authorship as a complex and dynamic constellation of elements that develops and positions itself within a field of tension generated by the various notions of authorship, the organisation of work, criticism of the prevailing system, and competing models of society. The notion of a ›constellation‹ appears particularly suitable here because it suggests a ›bigger picture‹, yet at the same time allows to crystallise, for concrete situations (such as specific collective associations), »the elements of their respective special relationship, and what may conceivably emerge from them in concrete terms« (Mersch 2015, 166). The present article outlines and traces these relationships based on a selection of such collective associations, intending to show where and how – despite specific contextual difference – common concerns and overarching trends may be identified. This, ultimately, results in a complex reading of those individual phenomena.
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Journal of Literary Theory
Journal of Literary Theory LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM-
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