Tracing Change
This article sets out to consider art
as a catalyst for change. Art projects that are actively exploring aspects of
social engagement will be examined in the wider context of UK Government policy
that endorses the arts as a tool central to regeneration and social change.
This will then be followed by a look at the legacy of these projects both
within social thought and art practice.
This article is
intended as a step towards both comprehending and complicating the politics and
art histories that lead to particular projects, rather than an attempt to cover
all aspects of socially engaged work.
New Labour cultural
policy advocates art being used as a tool for social improvement. Blair's
art-friendly ideology can be seen to echo the discourse of the earliest debates
on arts function for social good, as promoted by thinkers such as William
Morris. Emphasis on residencies and art in the community in current cultural
policy can also be directly linked to the practices of community artists in the
seventies in Britain. These projects remained marginalised during the market
led 80s and are only now resurfacing in many different guises. With the
incredible resurgence of the cultural value of the arts with the Young British
Artists and "Cool Britannia" in the mid nineties, the government
quickly realised the capital gained through promoting the "creative
industries" as one of the UK's third largest economies (1).
Tessa Jowell, the
British Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, recently stated:
"The arts have
an intrinsic merit and should be valued in their own right. Their enjoyment is
an end in itself. But the arts also have the power to affect change, helping us
to build a more secure and more prosperous future[...] If you want to tackle
racism, you can do so creatively through the arts; if you want to improve
literacy, you can do so effectively working with the arts; and if you want to
regenerate a rural or urban environment, then arts projects have demonstrated
their power to affect change." (2)
This belief in
tackling social issues through creative methodologies is a basis for community
art projects, allowing art to facilitate and alleviate a collective concern.
The danger is that this discourse has begun to over-simplify practice that
refutes such responsibility to "change" and increases derision from
an art world suspicious of "engaged" practices. Policy has had a
noticeable impact on how art is used and perceived within the UK. New arts
institutions have appeared in economically under served communities and public
art projects have become commonplace across the country (3).
Groups of artists
such as the Artists Placement Group (4) have been using art as a method of
direct communication and key to social and political environments since the
1970s. The embracing of these values by the current government, however, has
lead to further rebellion and resistance by artists and collectives today who
value the importance of remaining artist led rather than policy driven.
As roles shift and
the artist becomes more like a civil servant, the tendency demonstrated by the
art community has been to withdraw, where possible, from public funding and
maintain an opposition to the State and its embodiment of control, regulation
and hidden agendas. In the preface to the book "Art for All?" Ingrid
Swenson states, "The amount of money the State should give to support
culture seems to us secondary to the question of why there should be public
support at all." (5)
Art practices
sometimes labeled as "socially engaged," have developed from this
political environment where everyone is now considered an artist and where
"everyone has an opportunity to develop his or her creativity." (6)
These practices tend to step beyond being oppositional to the State, and engage
critically in acts of altruism and service by harnessing projects to set up
platforms for potential change through collaboration.
"Team
Build" (October 2001) was organised to invite debate about the role of the
artist when being invited into the work place to effect change. (7) The project
emerged from conversations between B+B and Anna Best on the potential and
problematic of Anna Best's "Year of the Artist'" residency at [a-n]
The Artists Information Company (2001). (8)
Best organised
"Away Weekend" for the staff of [a-n], which involved paint balling
and playing physical and mind games as a means of team building. The result of
Anna Best's residency was not immediately apparent to convey to those outside
the experience and the act of researching and organising a group trip left
little time for reflection. There was an element of surprise for the staff (not
knowing where the bus was taking them) which meant that staff were
inadvertently part of a live performance, but the experiences they were to
endure could have potentially had a real impact in the work place. In the
event, the weekend was given over to practical questions and internal office
politics. The after effects of Anna's residency remain relevant to the
organisation but not necessarily to a wider group of people.
Best's residency
explored the effects of a performative collaboration and the manipulation and
awakening of a group of participants, within a relationship based on trust (but
not necessarily collaboration) with the artist. "Team Build" set out
to question what the role of the artist is in staging and pulling off such an
event. Where does the artistic integrity lie in such a project, and how do we
trace the effects of the artist's intervention?
The conflicting
approaches and concerns that came up at "Team Build" led on to
thoughts about the coexisting motivations of rebellion and responsibility,
performance and function and respect and risk in socially engaged projects. The
second part of this article traces these elements back through tendencies in
art practice of the 1960s and 70s, namely the direct actions of Joseph Beuys
and informal happenings of Allan Kaprow.
Joseph Beuys, while
working towards direct change through collective movements, maintained the
illusion of the myth of the artist. His protests and actions were led by a
utopian manifesto to change the understanding of art by placing it at the
centre of the everyday. In December 1971 the action "Overcome Party
Dictatorship Now" was organised by Beuys as a demonstration in
Grafenberger Forest against the proposed extension of the Rochus Club Tennis
Courts which were to destroy large parts of the woodland. The protest was
attended by fifty of Beuys' students. They swept the woodland paths with birch
brooms and painted white crosses and rings on the trees that were due to be
felled.
A project that
shares some of the utopian ideals of Beuys' collective actions is the
"Biogas" project (1997) by Superflex, a collective based in Denmark.
"Biogas" was launched in a village in Tanzania, Africa as a
collaboration with residents, scientists and development workers, to experiment
with a self-sufficient unit that uses biological waste and solar heat instead
of fire wood to generate power. The resulting prototype is a bright orange
balloon that is installed in the family's backyard, acting both as a functional
source of energy and a public sculpture. The project is a serious and well
planned collaborative gesture towards change in a specific context, but one has
to ask what effect it has had in real terms - have many residents bought the
Biogas unit and have other developing countries adopted it as an alternative
method of generating energy? The measure of success for the Biogas project may
lie in the mere gesture of that one prototype and the subsequent unquantifiable
effects it has had in the Tanzanian village, among scientists and in the art
community. Perhaps it is the transaction of responsibilities and the growing
network of collaborations that "extend the life of artworks and ideas from
the past towards an uncertain future." (9)
Beuys' action
"Overcome Party Dictatorship Now" was a demonstration against the
destruction of the woodland and at the same time a wider political statement
reflecting Beuys' teachings on direct democracy through art. Artists, such as
Superflex have attempted to move on from preaching utopian ideals towards
focusing on a "realistic utopia" for a specific locality. This
involves creating structures or platforms for dialogue and exchange in response
to a situation rather than enforcing direct action in accordance with a set of
universal ideals. The artist often adopts a responsive, utilitarian role at a
localised level.
In the UK the
integration of art into the Government's policy on social inclusion and
regeneration relies heavily on utopian notions of art as an empowering tool.
Beuys believed he was empowering people to approach life creatively. This
therapeutic role influenced many artists through a global, unifying project of
direct democracy. "Beuys framed his work as a form of homeopathic therapy:
the Art Pill." (10) He was involved, integral to and embodied democratic
change while at the same time led his followers towards enlightenment. The
"art pill" is now dished out by New Labour in an attempt to empower
and effect change through the participatory values of art.
The projects
described here do not tend to swallow the "art pill" very easily and
there is often another side to the "altruistic act" of socially
engaged art.
Meyer Schapiro was
writing about political and aesthetic rebellion through his social critique of
capitalism, in America in the 1930s. Schapiro's teachings condemned the effects
of capitalism and sought freedom through reclaiming subjectivity (11). He
called on artists to acquire courage to act on and change society. (12) Alan
Kaprow was a student of Schapiro's and took on this task to change society
through his "Happenings."
Kaprow's
"Fluids" (1967) involved the building of 30 walls of ice in public
spaces in Pasadena and Los Angeles. They were built and watched melting by
local people in each site. This was collective, participatory labour
undertaking an obsolete, ephemeral act. Kaprow saw it as a "dystopian
allegory of capitalist production and consumption." (13))
Kaprow's actions
became more open to chance and randomness; "events occurred in different
cities, on unmarked stretches of highway, simultaneously, at unspecified times,
at whim [...]."(14) The relevance of chance and accident to break from the
systems and make a different sphere of understanding that was not controlled by
the market, can also be heard in the compositions or "chance
operations" of Kaprow's mentor, John Cage.
Kaprow was
interested in getting rid of his audience. As he began to depart form the
spectacle his happenings became "activities" which only involved
volunteer participants. The experience of the few people involved was essential
and ephemeral.
Eventually, even
the documentation and lasting effect of the spontaneous event became a burden.
This constant departure from control, regulation and framing is also apparent
in current projects in their uneasy, complex relation to state agendas.
For example,
"Valley Vibes" and "Mobile Porch," are two projects that
focus on specific urban environments and the use and make-up of notions of
community. "Valley Vibes" is a sound machine on wheels which is used
by those that hire it out to play and record their own music, poetry or special
events. It is a collaboration between Jeanne van Heeswijk and Amy Plant to
investigate, indirectly, the perspectives and reactions towards regeneration of
residents in four different London Boroughs. (15)
The "Vibe Detector"
acts an instrument and resource for people to hire out and use, and has been
collecting the sounds of each event, from poetry readings to children's
parties. The "Vibe Detector" primarily exists as a tool for recording
and researching, rather than as an art object.
"Mobile
Porch," created by artists Kathrin Bˆhm and Stefan Saffer and architect
Andreas Lang (www.mobileporch.net), is a prototype for creating private
situations in public spaces. A large structure is placed in public spaces and
used in a myriad of ways - some organised and some spontaneous. The artists
explain the idea behind their "including art practice" is to find new
partners and contexts, challenge new meanings for art and reconsider art's
social relevance.
The initial
frameworks of the "Vibe Detector" and of "Mobile Porch" are
built to be reworked and changed. These structures retain enough informal
autonomy to reflect the needs of their users rather than acting as top-down
models of "inclusion." The autonomy exists in their physicall
self-contained forms, which then can be put to many uses. It is relevant that
the artistic autonomy of the project is not reliant on having a single author.
The incessant
transgression of Allan Kaprow can be connected to actions and collaborations such
"Valley Vibes" and "Mobile Porch." Autonomy and subversion
are a significant element of Kaprow's actions and this trickles through to
current practices such as these where the gesture, action and performance means
there is not one direct application for change, but many contradictory
questions.
The understanding
and manipulation of the "rules" in current projects, however, are
more connected and dependent on each other as the artists see themselves as
part of the system rather than outside it. The relationships are more blurred
and actions involve subtle shifts and suggestions rather than attempt to
overhaul the status quo. Actions and events have transgressed from being
"anti-" to "extra-" or "meta-". (16)
One could argue that
both Beuys and Kaprow were involved in this "anti-" approach; working
against the system to provide an alternative space or platform, to reclaim ones
subjectivity. To some extent, this train of thought is reflected in current
practices, but the notion of "them and us" is obliterated through
some socially engaged practices which attempt change and empowerment through
collaboration with the state or institution. These projects rely very much on
chance and subversion in order to maintain autonomy from the directly political
aspects of empowerment and change, thus maintaining elements of usefulness and
uselessness throughout.
Maurice O'Connell,
for example, in his "Penryn Valley Project"(ongoing), is an
initiative by the artist to redevelop a part of the town of Penryn using
alternative methods of regeneration. By trying to become a member of the local
council, O'Connell is proposing partnerships, training and events in the valley
as an alternative to big budget entertainment centres. In the UK, artists are often
parachuted into areas of regeneration to work with communities, but here the
artist has set up a dialogue independent of the agendas of commissioning bodies
or sponsors. The gesture of the artist is to promote long term change as an
undercover artist - very few people in the locality know of Maurice's true
profession. Without such preconceptions, chance and subversion have the
opportunity to come through the actions and events themselves rather than the
expectations that the label "artist" often brings with it.
Notions of change
are directly linked to ideas of empowerment. The theory of collaborating,
giving, empowering and effecting change is fraught with contradictions and
overlaps. The notion of the gift and of social responsibility, the significance
of chance encounters and risky interventions all set up different relations
between artists and participants/audiences.
Optimism for change
is reflected in the writing of Marcel Mauss and George Bataille. Their notion
of the gift is an alternative "to the rationalist calculation of
capitalist exchange." Bataille describes his gift as the gift of
subjectivity, that by giving one is exhibiting one's power; one is escaping
from the "imposition of objective rational necessity," that is, the control
of consumerism/capitalism.(17)
While Bataille and
Mauss have based their research and understanding of the gift on
anthropological studies of non-western rituals, one could interpret Kaprow's
"Fluids" or the sweeping actions of Beuys as empowerment through
subversive collective rebellion; the events give freedom and voice outside of
the capitalist system. This optimism and the idealist notion of freedom as
subjectivity is crushed by Derrida. While Bataille went so far as to say that
the notion of the gift is the reclaiming of subjectivity in that it opens an
area of freedom and play, Derrida says the very idea of the Gift is madness. It
only gives to the extent it gives time (the gap between the gift and
counter-gift): "The giver as subject initiates, the giver creates demands
and determines the very nature of the exchange. It is thus for that subject an
escape from rational discourse (which demands the individual as object)."
(18)) So, here we
have the reality of the exchange and the power relations at play. The act of
giving (commissioning or intervening) always results in an exchange.
Derrida in his
critique of the gift describes this need to escape from rational discourse as
futile- that by seeking to escape and lose itself, the subject draws the world
to it. (19) This seems to tally with the practices of artists who are placing
themselves (or being placed) in social structures (such as hospitals, local
governments, schools or corporations), in order to "subvert from
within." These actions of subversion which may or may not effect change,
are swallowed by the structure and the whole system moves along Ð the
relationships that are set up and the inherent exchange or reciprocity this
implies means that change occurs in a myriad of undetectable ways.
Current practices
such as those mentioned here focus on that exchange and reciprocity rather than
the privileged act of giving. Unlike Beuys' collective actions and protests,
Superflex, O'Connell, Best and the "Valley Vibe" and "Mobile
Porch" projects are proposing systems and prototypes to be critiqued and
manipulated. The aim is for long term change, but change that is decided on the
unpredictable nature of the exchange.
One is left
wondering if Beuys' really managed to prevent the Tennis Courts from being
built or if O'Connell will succeed in his plans to redevelop Penryn. Traces of
change spread into a network of responsibilities. By taking on the role of
change-maker, the artist is setting up situations or happenings for potential
failure. In doing so they reveal the complex nature of the exchange and the
knock on effects of empowering.
Footnotes:
1. DCMS Green
Paper, "Culture and Creativity: The Next Ten Years," (30 March 2001)
2. Taken from Tessa
Jowell on Social Corporate Responsibility. See the weblinks from www.aandb.org.uk
3. For example, the
New Art Gallery Walsall, in the West Midlands opened in 2000, Baltic Centre for
Contemporary Art,
Gateshead, north England is due to open July 2002 and the Turner Centre,
Margate is due to open in 2004. All had extensive pre-opening public
art/education programmes.
4. The Artists
Placement Group (APG 1966-1989, renamed Organisation and Imagination or O+I in
1989)
was initiated by
Barbara Steveni and John Latham.
5. Wallinger, Mark
and Mary Warnock, eds. "Art for all? Their Policies and our Culture,"
(Peer Trust 2000). Art for all? questioned the principles of State support for
the arts, it was compiled of a selection contributions from a nation-wide call
for submissions.
6. DCMS Green
Paper, "Culture and Creativity: The Next Ten Years," (30 March 2001).
7. Team Build was
co-ordinated by Anna Best and B+B and held at the Baltic offices in Gateshead,
in the north of England on October 13+14th 2001. It was supported by Baltic,
[a-n] and Northern Arts.
8. The Year of The
Artist was the culmination of the Arts Council’s Arts 2000 series to promote
1000 artists in 1000 places in 2000/2001. See http://
www.arts.org.uk/directory/art_info/yota/ for more
information.
9. Dan Cameron,
Afterall (Issue 4, 2001)
10. Ann Temkin, in
"Culture in Action," (Washington: Bay Press, 1995), p.30.
11. Buchloch,
Benjamin H.D. and Judith F.Rodenbeck, "Experiments in the Everyday Allan
Kaprow and Robert Watts Events, Objects, Documents" (Columbia University
1999) Schapiro termed the effect of capitalism as the "subjective apathy
and structural separation of people form power." p.41
12. IBID, p. 29
13. IBID, p. 41
14. IBID, p. 56
15. Amy Plant
initiated "Valley Vibes" in 1998. Jeanne van Heeswijk invented the
"Vibe Detector" and the project is in association with Chora.
16. Taken from a
transcript of a conversation between Mary Jane Jacob and Michael Brenson
(February
22 2002).
17. Kosalka, David,
"George Bataille and the Notion of Gift" (December 1999)
18. IBID
19. IBID
© B+B (2002). This article was originally published on groupsandspaces.net.