sensible and intelligible: towards an erotics of artists’ books

Formalist criticism asks us to look at art objects in terms of their materials. When we’re talking about pictures or the plastic arts, this is pretty easy to do. In literature, I think it tends towards looking at how the literature is made, and thus a structural approach would be appropriate (The ‘material of language’ being itself either etymology or a range of linguistic studies, including structural linguistics. Whilst this level of examination is full of insight, a formalist literary critic would, I think, tend to use them at one or two ‘removes of complexity’. That is, they would inform a structuralist criticism of the work.)

Perhaps the easiest way to see formalist criticism is over against what it is not, what it reacts against. It reacts against over-interpretation; the tendency to ask, not ‘what is the work?’ , but ‘what does it really mean?’. The aesthetics of formalist criticism try to stay with the values actually intrinsic to the work, and the formalist critiques the interpretive (hermeneutic) approach, because it inevitably moves away from the work. Layers of interpretation shroud the work in a kind of fog of meaning, through which it is hard to see what really makes the artwork moving. Thus the formalist offers a different answer to ‘what the artwork really is’. It is not ‘what it really means’, but what exactly it actually is.

If, then, we were to characterise the formalist and the interpretive positions in some way that reflected their relationship to our experiences as observing and reflecting beings, we might do worse than to characterise formalism as emphasising more attention to the sensible aspects of experience, and hermeneutics as emphasising the intelligible. For in the one there is a concentration on what the material form can tell us, and in the latter there is a concentration on what we can deduce synthetically from the form (bringing with us extrinsic understanding). Handling these terms roughly, I will conflate the sensible with the empirical, and the intelligible with the rational. The former pairing seems to describe the worldview emphasised by formalism, and the latter that emphasised by hermeneutics.

I introduce these terms because they have been thoroughly explored by philosophers. Kant tells us that experience must arise from both the empirical experience and our rational intelligence, and that to enter the realm of experience is to include as a necessary predicate of ‘experiencing’, certain synthetic a priori categories of intelligibility, that, in short, ‘give form form’. Both are necessary components of our experience of reality, and of any claim to objectivity.

If we want to understand an artwork, might it not be the case that we might need (and are certainly already employing) both approaches there, too? It might. And perhaps on a larger scale we do. It’s true that critical fashions come and go, and with new sweeps of the critical radar, new critical approaches tend to revivify our understanding of work. But what if we were to systematically include both critical approaches in our studies? What would this be like?

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It’s easy to read Susan Sontag’s essay Against Interpretation as a formalist stance. Away with interpretations getting in the way of us seeing what work really is, it says. She says ‘in place of a hermeneutics of art, we need an erotics of art’. Sontag argues that we need to ‘recover our senses’. This moves strongly towards the sensible and the formalist. But it would be a mistake to read it solely in that light. Sontag doesn’t rail against all interpretation. She doesn’t mean ‘interpretation in its broadest sense’, by which light she might well be acknowledging that which was to develop as poststructuralist conceptions of epistemology and ontology as examining the interpretive histories that give rise to aspects of human society. Though Sontag cites Nietzsche  ‘there are no facts, only interpretations’, we might read Foucault here just as successfully. But Sontag does get pretty formalist. The meaning of a work of art is illusory, she says. But she also admits that interpretation can be a ‘means of revising, of escaping the dead past’, (when it is not reactionary, ‘impertinent’, ‘cowardly’ or ‘stifling’).

My reading is that Sontag moves against interpretation as a corrective, aiming to ‘recover our senses’, over against interpretation run rampant. But in her mitigations of interpretation she seems to allow that it is not always in the wrong, just out of balance. It is too tempting to read Sontag’s essay as a jeremiad against interpretation; I think it aims more towards a balance.

And this I think is illustrated most tellingly in the essay’s closing line ‘in place of a hermeneutics, we need an erotics of art.’ An erotics, though sensible, though concerned with experiencing the tactile and visual and other material qualities of the work, is no mere formalism. An erotics is also a system of desires, those of the object and the subject (and is a system where the ‘view’ works both ways, with the object becoming the subject and vice versa), and the exchanges between the two. (Something that should remind us more of the interpretive turns of hermeneutic approaches where the object/subject divide is constantly crossed by any worthwhile reflective practice.) Just as to ‘experience experience’, we require both the sensible and the intelligible faculties of mind, to have ‘an erotics of art’ would necessitate both the formal senses, and the interpretive noos that allows us to perceive the desires (the intentions, even) of the other. Unbalance either aspect, and the system begins to fall to pieces.

The majesty of art is that it does give us this sense of the other. I do not ‘interpret’ the music of Bach in the overly codified measures that Sontag criticises, because I am not a baroque music scholar (though I am aware that such interpretation exists, and I take pleasure in hearing the Radio 3 punditry explore such: classical music critics seem to enjoy a fine balance of formal and interpretive critique). I lack that extrinsic knowledge. But I do interpret the presence of Bach, and of the musicians, and of the centuries of other listeners somehow there in the music. For me, that is a powerful part of how I respond, and it seems so intermingled with the sensible qualities of the music I can barely describe it as interpretive. Nevertheless it is there, and I take pleasure in feeling (as I believe) how the others have felt, of being in concord with their feelings for this music. That seems to me to reflect an erotic understanding of the piece. I feel not only ravished by sound, but also held in the (usually imaginary) presence of all those I have shared that powerful impression with. Though the power of it begins with the senses, there is a kind of a priori capability to feel this as a person in common with others.

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One of the strongest intentions I uncovered while exploring other artists’ books artists’ practices, was that they had a strong impetus towards making work for others. The book, with its wide reaching and socially important means of distribution, and its equally important formal capabilities of narrative (with its corresponding empathetic capability), has a twofold presence. Firstly, it is very often a means of such contact. It has such capabilities and artists use them. Secondly, and more universally, it is reified as the symbolic book. Even if it cannot be read, even if it cannot be shared, it promises this (if there we
re no promise of reading, the nailed-shut book sculpture would be meaningless). The sense of commonwealth in books has had a long history as ‘the republic of letters’, and it has developed in many other more or less tacit forms as well. The world of artists’ books seems to be one such.

The quality that books have to amplify this connotation of a shared experience, both actually through the mechanisms of books, and symbolically, through the promise of reading and its republics, seems important to artist who make them. And I think this is because they more easily afford an experience of an erotics of art.

Books bring together formal mechanisms, modes of distribution and spheres of discourse, the presence of other media and roles for the artist, and in their symbolic role they connote a strong ‘public field’ of shared experience. This is the mysterious power of the printed word and the reason ‘printing offices’ dub themselves ‘sacred ground‘. Amongst their other felicities for the artist, using books gives access to this commonwealth, and, in doing so, they amplify the presence of that erotics of art that vivifies materials and intentions alike.

mining, surfing and storytelling

A quotation from a 2003 article by Henry Jenkins entitled Transmedia Storytelling:

Many of our best authors, from William Faulkner to J.R.R. Tolkien,
understood their art in terms of world-creation and developed rich
environments which could, indeed, support a variety of different
characters. For most of human history, it would be taken for granted
that a great story would take many different forms, enshrined in stain
glass windows or tapestries, told through printed words or sung by bards
and poets, or enacted by traveling performers.

I haven’t yet read further into the subject, but it seems to me that world-creation (or something like it) takes other forms too, that we might not recognise as marketable, or, in fact, as relating to the same world. In fact, I would want to break down the notion of world-creation as such in terms of character and setting, to ask whether creators who bash away at consistent themes in different ways can sometimes be creating a recognisably related view of a set of topics that fans can view across both settings. For instance, for me, David Milch’s John from Cincinnati works on similar themes to Deadwood. Addiction, forgiveness of the self and others, transcendence through the organising power of symbols… etc (and the same ensemble of faces keep showing up in different roles). A parallel dimension, if you will.

Miracles happen in JFC, but don’t they happen in Deadwood too? Jane finds a little happiness and Hearst leaves without destroying everything. (And as many possibilities are denied amidst appalling agonies of irony: Hostetler’s death, for one.) We don’t recognise them as miracles at the time, because the story is told in a different way, and we get to allow ourselves a bit more of a feeling of knowing how it came about, of glimpsing (through the language, largely) what we think of as the forces that bring such events to pass. Whereas in JFC they just surf in from somewhere outside the plot. (Or they seem to, perhaps because John’s language itself is impenetrable to such a degree.)

I don’t know whether one could seriously hold this comparison up to the light, but it points up that we also hold valuable creators (like Milch) who make powerful stories that on one level deny the extension of the world that spin offs, franchises and sequels allow. Yet on another level their stories and their human consistency interweave them in topics that are of such wide interest as to enmesh them as parables of real life. (I don’t mean, by the way, that Buffy and Tolkein don’t do that.) And, anyway, there’s a spinoff book from Deadwood for example. But this takes the form of almost philosophical disquisitions by Milch and his players on the nature of the story and its characters, inviting us to extend its meaning by extending our interpretation deeper into it, rather than simply extending the region the plot covers. To ‘mine’ it, if you will. What would it have meant if the Deadwood films had come about? Would it have meant that Deadwood became a transmedia story? Or just that the story itself got finished?

Of course, telling a story over more than one medium does make it transmedia, purely in terms of its media support. But perhaps there’s a different distinction to be made — one that we might have to call something else — that is less about spreading the story over different media, as much as it is about the narrative’s fragmentation and appearance from different angles. For example, if Deadwood had been completed as a pair of films or as a mobile phone novel, it would doubtless share consistency with the story told in the HBO series. But if I propose, for example, that Milch’s oeuvre examines many of the same themes from different ‘dimensions’ (a clumsy word for what I mean, sorry), then there’s a coming together of something from different approaches involved (even if they happen to be based in the same medium). This opens up my idea of what this world-creating actually comes from. Need it imply a map? Or, if I watch the same ensemble do a series of plays, might I not, as a viewer, be able to construct relationships between the possibly disparate narratives? I’ll read on, of course, but I’m as aware as I can be that a whole lot of successful TV hangs together at the moment because their stories are solidly built, and this, surprisingly, makes them more accessible to the real world. Mad Men and The Wire seem to modulate themselves towards different aspects of their subjects (The century of the self and the intermeshing of society, politics, education and the media, respectively). They don’t seem to me to be designed around opening up franchises:but they do open up connections to their sources.

Perhaps it’s just this: a well-told story always invites us to explore further, because of its self-consistency. It need not be intentionally porous, because our imaginations work best on something we can believe in. If multi-platform storytelling is for anything other than novelty’s sake, it will need to engage with the distinctive voices of its forms. I think that to identify the mere presence of different media with the dimensionality that a truly multivocal or multi-storied approach would take, would be a mistake. But I don’t need to labour my muddled point any further. There is, after all, an ancient chant of computer operators that goes ‘garbage in, garbage out’. This is as true of stories as anything else.

the republic of whoever is there

Cultivation Theory

How do societies exchange normative ideas? Does the telly affect what we think is right?

If we want to consider, in books, what the ‘republic of letters‘ brings about ( we usually link it to the emergence of the Enlightenment ), what does publishing, in its varied forms, including electronic media, bring about today?

There are lots of small enclaves in whatever the ‘republic’ is today (and that’s not even a particularly relevant term anymore, though it does conjure that sense of a shared socially constructed view of an imagined world made real).

Cultivation theory seems like a good place to set out from, even if only to kick it to death in the process.

Cosmological World-Making

Watching a snippet of John Mullan’ s How Reading Made us Modern last night, my ears pricked up when the good professor intones the fact that in pre-eighteenth century England, the only books you’d find most places would be the Bible, Pilgrim’s Progress, “and perhaps some choice work of Christian devotion”.

Would it be possible, I thought, to write a view of Pilgrim’s Progress as fan fiction? Bunyan’s certainly a fan of the good book, and as for world-making, there’s a whole Christian cosmology in there that seems to still be pretty popular. As for governance of the formal boundaries and schisms of the field as such, no-one does sectarian suspicion quite like the church, and the very word canon meant church law before it meant anything else. (I think). And as for the Author of some of the texts in question…

To really get at this field (‘Christian textuality and its fans’?) is a gargantuan task of Foucauldian proportions; mapping its powers and proclivities. One would have to perform a bit of sleight-of-hand to avoid exposing any such essay to the vast gulf that it opens up. But it does open it up.

Still haven’t read any of Jenkins’ views on the subject of authorial identity fandom, but I think I’ll be carrying some baggage in there with me.

prelusory gymnastic

“The time comes when a man should cease prelusory gymnastic, stand up, put a violence upon his will, and for better or worse, begin the business of creation.”

Robert Louis Stevenson

Swallow

originally uploaded by Ferdi’s World.

  "It is an owl that has been trained by the Graces. It is a bat that loves the morning light. It is the aerial reflection of a dolphin. It is the tender domestication of a trout."

Says Ruskin. Whilst not wishing to argue I quail at the trout. Or should that be ‘trout at the quail’?

Dinner anyone?

Pic by Ferdi.

Strange Ritual

David Byrne- Strange Ritual

Faber, London 0571177212

We spend years learning how the wires are connected. We must eventually learn, by rote, that pulling on this particular string, as odd as it seems, will connote happiness, and this string, which our guts tell us denotes fear and anger, will, to the contrary, signal to the outside world a sense of well-being. I often sing with all my might, and I find that all I’ve accomplished is to convey a sense of energy being expended and a desperate need to communicate something. Often, no one is able to figure out exactly what it is I’m trying to communicate. I myself often feel that I’ve touched something deep as my voice rises into a sudden, painful, sharp edge and I assume and hope that the exact same feelings are reconstructed inside the minds and hearts of the listeners, but it isn’t always true. The audience often only watches in puzzlement as I produce a series of nonsensical, confusing, conflicting sounds that somehow they know denote intense emotional states, but they don’t know which ones they are. Just like all our facial expressions, my strings are attached in all the wrong places.

pill orchard


pill orchard, originally uploaded by aesop.

This image comes from some work I did yesterday at the community orchard in Pill. I’ve been thinking about a ‘book distributed in space’- one that happens as a real space (either as an installation, or, as here, only at the point of recording).  This has obvious similarities with the way that our experience of the environment works on a semiotic level. We read a city’s signs much as we would a multi-authored text. some of what we see is in fact signification of the most classic sort: signs, writings. Others include behaviour and historical traces left on the environment.

With this idea I’m trying to work on a form of ‘book-making’ that tilts my point of view out of the reverie of the page, and into real life. As you can see, it’s obviously still at an experimental stage, but I’m finding things out about the different rhetorical effects that the combination of space, word and camera achieve- to say nothing of the aspects of the installation that briefly exists. In this image I’ve come a little further along the road to clarity with the large bold words (my first experiment was illegible because it was just handwritten on paper), and elements like the path have been used to reinforce the spatial aspect. There’s an argument between flat and deep readings here, because the simple left to right flat reading doesn’t work. It has to be read as a space in order to be construed. When finally presented in book form, on flat pages, this technique will, I think, become even stranger than it is now. It also suggests a commentary on or echo of our ‘reading tactics’ in/of the world. Are we reading surfaces or structures? Straight lines or spaces? Is there an element of time to our perception, or is it more-or-less instant, arriving at the speed of perception (usually light)?

I also want this work to fit into my series on Whistling Copse, though here, the commodity and land are public, in contrast to Whistling Copse, which was emphatically and tragically not.

In this picture I’m starting to learn more about how I might use the contours of different objects to play with the space more: the grass obscures the feet of some of the stands- why not play with this? A sign could peer out from behind a bush.

I’m aware of the fact that the signs would present an even more unsettling, flat appearance if they were more carefully placed facing the camera, ie not at slight angles, but I’m entertaining the idea that I want to retain lots of evidence of the artifice (hence also the unashamed use of masking tape, which was nonetheless very necessary in the breeze).

As it happened I didn’t have enough juice in my batteries to finish this shoot, which I initially cursed as it would be next to impossible to set up the shoot again, but I have enough of a sequence here to study the effect, and I will continue the experiment, with the added experiment of a caesura into a different spatial arrangement, most probably an entirely different space.
I’d like to continue in an urban setting, where the signs would become softer edged by comparison with the more similar environment, but I can’t afford to leave a half dozen music stands in the street to get pinched! I need a half dozen assistants to hold onto them!

Emblems on the Streets

I’m doing a project at work right now involving transcribing and working with listings from old Bristol directories. My work involves looking for artisans and artists and creating relationships of place and time for various trades. However, one of the things I’m struck by is the vast variety of different shop signs there must have been.

green man

squirrel

ship

ring of bells

little tower

white hart

fountain

crown

hole in the wall

bear

white horse

black horse

etc, etc. Some streets must have been teeming with animals, ships, kings and miniature architecture of all kinds. It would be an interesting art project to realise a couple of 18th century Bristol streets by their shop signs alone. Especially when we consider what the urban landscape has become because of adverisements.

Borges Quotation

“People say that life is the thing but I prefer reading,” says Borges. It is interesting that Borges, who, if anyone could, could see the way that the alphabetic world composes the life we live in, post-Gutenberg, bothers to set a distinction between the two. We are situated readers of the world itself, characters in our own emplotment.

I’m working on material that will help me towards expressing this. Mostly involving music stands and bits of paper.

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