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Theories about the relationship between Art

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* * * * * Debates regarding what art is considered to represent Example related to History of Visual Arts ... L.H.O.O.Q, 1920 for a Paris Dada ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theories about the relationship between Art


1
Theories about the relationship between Art
Society(Socio-historic dimensions)
  • References to Readings Today
  • Becker, Howard. Art Worlds", and
  • Bourdieu, Pierre. "Who Creates the 'Creator'?
    "The Circle of Belief
  • Inglis, David. Thinking Art Sociologically
  • Mitchell, W.J.T. Offending Images..
  • Recommended
  • Becker The power of inertia

Bill Viola Crossings (detail)
2
Course Organization
  • Handout 1 Syllabus and Preliminary Reading List
  • Resources (on web)
  • http//webdav.sfu.ca/web/cmns/courses/2011/488
  • note
  • Importance of attendance participation
  • Proper use of citations to acknowledge sources

3
Finding out about artistic events issues
  • Library Resources
  • Music http//www.lib.sfu.ca/researchhelp/subject
    guides/fpa/music.htm
  • Dance http//www.lib.sfu.ca/researchhelp/subjectgu
    ides/fpa/dance.htm
  • Visual Arts http//www.lib.sfu.ca/researchhelp/su
    bjectguides/fpa/visarts.htm

4
Other Sources
  • Cultural Sections of papers like The Georgia
    Straight
  • broader Sunday New York Times -- Arts and
    Leisure Section (in library)
  • Other magazines and journals devoted to the arts
  • Web sites, blogs etc showcasing art,
  • ex. http//www.agitart.org/

5
A few events in Vancouver this week art,
revolution and ownership
6
Swarm 12 Public Open-house of Artist-Run
CentresSept 8 9
  • http//swarm.paarc.ca/
  • The Pacific Association of Artist-Run Centres
    will hold their annual festival, Swarm, to mark
    the kick-off of Vancouvers artist-run centre
    programming season. Two nights full of gallery
    hopping, public projects, and artist collectives
    will leave you feeling inspired. Swarm is always
    a fun party and a great way to connect with our
    alternative art scene.  

7
Some Common-sense approaches to Art
(Artist)/Society Relations
  • Art as
  • historical record (events, practices, values)--
    notion of Zeitgeist (spirit of the time) or
    mentalities
  • Measure of civilization (with predictable stages
    of development)
  • Predictor or instigator of socio-political or
    cultural change (theories of the avant-garde)

8
Some Common-sense approaches to Art/Society
Relations
  • Art as historical record (events, practices,
    values)-- notion of Zeitgeist (spirit of the
    time) or mentalities

9
Measure of civilization (with predictable stages
of development)
  • Ex. representation of perspective in
    neo-classical painting. Jacques Louis David c.
    1889. The lictors bringing to Brutus the bodies
    of his sons

10
Predictor or instigator of change (theories of
the avant-garde)
Pink Bloque (2001-2005) Dancing in Dissent
protesting racism sexism at street dances
http//www.pinkbloque.org/
11
Disciplinary Differences Internal vs. External
Approaches
  • internal (humanities) -- arts outside social
    processes
  • Artistsolitary creator, exceptional genius
    (humanistic approach)
  • Arts, aesthetics as universal
  • external (social sciences interdisciplinary
    approaches) --art world(s) socially constructed
  • importance of social context, processes
    structures for understanding the
    production/creation, mediation
    reception/consumption of the arts, recognition
    processes, their uses, functions, meanings

12
Theories of Art and Society (Different
Intellectual Traditions Roots)
  • Humanistic disciplines (history, literary
    studies)
  • Formerly --great events, individuals, canons
  • Some interdisciplinary (ex. Cultural studies)
  • Iconographic formalist frameworks
  • Visual and Performing Arts
  • perspective of art-makers critics
  • Anthropology
  • functions of the arts symbolic representations,
    others
  • ex. Religious, ritual
  • Psychology
  • cognition perception
  • Philosophy
  • Aesthetics, knowledge etc.
  • Sociology Communications many approaches
    (focus of the course)

13
Some Internal Debates What is Art? Who Are
Artists?
  • emphasis on
  • Gifts, talent, innate characteristics, vision (of
    Artists)
  • expression of eternal truths (artists, publics)
  • Ex. Notion that Greek Aesthetic Values (like
    Ideals of Beauty Bodily Proportions) express
    universals
  • Relations to natural world or real) through
    material or embodied practices
  • Mimesis (representation)
  • Imitatio (simulation, copy)

14
Artists presentations of the relations of their
work to social issues institutions
  • Three examples
  • Cai Guo-Qiang interview Art21(Art in the 21st
    Century) PBS
  • If time Olympic Ceremony Controversy
    (enhancement of Cai Guo-Qiangss Footprints of
    History firework performance
  • http//blog.art21.org/2008/08/22/cai-guo-qiang-res
    ponds-to-olympics-fireworks-controversy/
  • Olafur Eliasson
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vjKl0tb3VmfQ
  • Taryn Simon on her creative practices
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vjKl0tb3VmfQ

15
Internal Approaches --
  • Systems of ranking art forms
  • avant-garde vs. traditionalists etc.
  • Subjects or content (ex. French Academy rankings
    by categories history of religious, landscape,
    portrait, still life, genre)
  • Medium (ex. visual arts painting, sculpture,
    architecture, photography, performance art,
    conceptual art etc.)
  • Styles, tastes and genres
  • Socio-political or ideological criteria (art for
    arts sake, social realism, arts activism etc.)
  • Canons essential components of dominant art
    system, influential artworks that participants
    must know understand
  • More recently place of social historical
    processes in defining art what/who gets
    included in canons

16
Internal Approaches --
  • Genres, stylistic movements, forms of expression
  • Canons essential components of dominant art
    system, influential artworks that participants
    must know understand
  • More recently The New Art History cultural
    studies in the humanities (differs from social
    scientific interpretations
  • place of social historical processes in
    defining art what/who gets included in canons

17
What is art? Who decides?Ex. Marcel
Duchamp--Readymade Sculptures vs. conventional
techniques (challenging definitions of what is
art and who decides)
Fountain, original (left) and recreations of lost
1917 Original Who decides what is art? the
artist, experts, publics??
18
Other Examples of Challenges to the Canon
Authority
(l.)Leonardo DaVincis so-called Mona Lisa c.
1503 (r.) Marcel Duchamps L.H.O.O.Q, 1920 for a
Paris Dada show.
19
Non-western cultural traditions
(l.)Leonardo DaVincis so-called Mona Lisa c.
1503 (r.)Book cover from Cultural Studies for
Beginners by Sardar Van Loon.
20
Rethinking institutionalized exclusionary
practices Differencing the Canon
  • Guerilla Girls poster

21
References to Artistic Canons as way of
establishing credibility authority within art
worlds
Jean August Dominique Ingres, Grande Odalisque
(1814), oil on canvas.
22
Another Example
Manet Olympia 1863.
23
Yasumasa MorimuraAppropriation art Twins
24
External Approaches to Thinking about
Art/Society Relations
  • art should be contextualized (situated in
    social, political historic contexts)
  • search for patterns rather than exceptions
  • What do successful artists have in common?
  • What characteristics do fans share?
  • How do artistic institutions or networks
    function?
  • What do the arts have to do with economics,
    politics and culture?
  • Can the arts redress injustices, help people
    recover from trauma, communicate values that
    change the world?

25
External Approaches
  • Often a wider range of art forms studied (not
    just high culture but also pop culture, folk
    culture, outsider art, etc..)
  • Stronger focus on institutions processes of
  • Production-creation
  • (training, collaboration networks etc.)
  • Mediation
  • (gatekeepers, facilitators etc.)
  • Reception, consumption
  • (tastes, audiences, publics, markets)

26
Importance of social processes for recognition of
the arts artists Visitors to the Louvre Museum
in front of Mona Lisa (old hanging)
27
Artists, the arts and societyRecognition
processes
  • Banksy museums as authorities
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vlW-rt3jyZU8
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vfZK7D6WqzR0

28
Early Social Scientific Approaches to the study
of Art/Society Relations
  • Art and Society
  • Art History Criticism (Interpretation of
    artworks as symbolic forms with cultural
    meanings) Erwin Panofsky, Arnold Hauser, Pierre
    Francastel, John Berger, etc..
  • Marxist Traditions T. Adorno, W. Benjamin,
    Heidigger (Francfort School), H. J. Jauss (School
    of Constance), Janet Wolff, Lucien Goldmann,
  • Art in Society
  • practices institutions such as patronage,
    connoisseurship, publics, fans (M. Baxandahl,
    T.J. Clark etc.)
  • styles as social networks (M. Schapiro, C.
    Ginzburg)
  • Art as Society

29
Variety of external approaches
  • Different degrees of importance of social
    construction of reality
  • Debates about symbolic vs. material dimensions
  • Varied assumptions about society how to study
    it
  • Examples two different approaches Becker
    Bourdieu

30
Pierre Bourdieu
1930-2002
  • Marxist, critical theorist
  • Emphasis on
  • Social and political structures material
    conditions as limits to freedom of agency
  • Power relations within the field of artistic
    production
  • Creation of belief in the power of symbolic goods
    (art, artistic reputations etc.) and their
    conversion into economic and social capital
  • Core notions Habitus, field of cultural
    production (history position in it),
    domination, distinction (taste class), praxis,
    doxa
  • hierarchical model
  • Relationships marked by class conflict and power
    struggles

31
Howard Becker
  • Symbolic interactionist
  • http//home.earthlink.net/hsbecker/
  • Early work on labeling theory and social actors
    (a different way of thinking of agency)
  • Emphasis on
  • Sense-making (interpretive)
  • Human interaction identity-formation
  • Consensus conventions
  • Art-making as a collective activity
  • Notion of different types of art worlds
  • Strong sociological background but also a
    performing artist (jazz musician)

32
Many people know that I used to play the piano
for a living, in taverns, for dances, weddings,
bar mitzvas, Safeway employees Christmas parties,
and so on. Here is a picture of the Bobby Laine
Trio, circa 1950 (Bobby Laine, tenor Dominic
Jaconetti, drums Howie Becker, piano),
performing at the 504 Club, which was located at
504 W. 63rd St. in Chicago from Howie Beckers
homepage
33
Art Political Representations
34
Debates regarding what art is considered to
represent
  • Example related to History of Visual Arts
  • rendering of reality (nature), mimesis
  • as world view in a specific place time
  • as product of solitary genius (Renaissance)
  • made by system of production reception
  • as social process (symbolic material)

35
Critiques of Externalist/Internalist Stances
  • extreme reductionism vs extreme formalism
    (Scylla Charybdis metaphor)
  • reductionism
  • art reduced to social process (ignores specific
    characteristics of aesthetic forces)
  • Formalism
  • focus on limited range of aesthetic qualities
    --ignores importance of social processes
    context

36
Recent Controversy over what art represents (EU
public art project--Brussels)
L-The sculpture resembles a giant model kit with
snap-out pieces. (CBC) R-Romania is depicted
as a vampire theme park. (CBC) See also CBC
coverage (link) Jan 14 2009 British (Telegraph)
coverage and video Bulgaria as a toilet link
37
Theories about changes in ideas about what art
represents over time (Jurt)
  • rendering of reality (nature), mimesis,
    imitatio
  • as world view in a specific place time
  • as product of solitary genius (Renaissance)
  • Artists vision (19th romanticism)
  • made by system of production reception
  • Socio-political processes (symbolic material)

38
Externalist Views
  • art should be contextualized (situate in social
    historic contexts)
  • search for patterns (regularity) rather than
    exceptions
  • What do successful artists have in common?
  • What do fans share?
  • How do institutions function?
  • wider range of art forms studied (high culture,
    pop culture etc..)
  • Stronger focus on institutions processes of
  • Production-creation
  • (training, collaboration networks etc.)
  • Mediation
  • (gatekeepers, facilitators etc.)
  • Reception, consumption
  • (tastes, audiences, publics, markets)

39
Note to Users of these Outlines-
  • not all material covered in class appears on
    these outlines-- important examples,
    demonstrations and discussions arent written
    down here.
  • Classes are efficient ways communicating
    information and provide you will an opportunity
    for regular learning. These outlines are
    provided as a study aid not a replacement for
    classes.

40
If time.
41
Art Society example
  • Videoclip Excerpt from Cai Guo-Qiang interview
    Art21(Art in the 21st Century) PBS
  • Olympic Ceremony Controversy (enhancement of
    Guo-Qiangss Footprints of History firework
    performance
  • http//blog.art21.org/2008/08/22/cai-guo-qiang-res
    ponds-to-olympics-fireworks-controversy/
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