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Public art practices within the united states have experienced significant
shits over the past thirty years. Three paradigms can be schematically
distinguished:
1)art in public places, typically a modernist abstract sculpture placed
out-doors to "decorate' or 'enrich" urban spaces, especially
plaza areas fronting federal buildings or corporate office towers;
2) art as public spaces, less object-oriented and more site-conscious
art that sought greater integration between art, architecture, and the
landscape through artists' collaboration with members of the urban managerial
class(such as architects, landscape architects, city planners, urban designers,
and city administrators), in the designing of permanent urban (re) development
projects such as parks, plazas, buildings, promenades, neighborhoods,
etc.; and more recently,
3) art in the public interest (or "new genre public art"), often
temporary city-based programs focusing on social issues rather than the
built environment that involve collaborations with marginalised social
groups(rather than design professionals), such as the homeless, battered
women, urban youths, AIDS patients, prisoners, and which strives towards
the development of politically-conscious community events or programs.1
These three paradigms of public art reflect broader shifts in advanced
art practices over the past thirty years: the slide of emphasis from aesthetic
concerns to social issues, from the conception of an art work primarily
as an object to ephemeral processes or events , from prevalence of permanent
installations to temporary interventions, from the primacy of production
as source of meaning to reception as site of interpretation, and from
autonomy of authorship to its multiplicitous expansion in participatory
collaborations. While these shifts represent a greater inclusivity and
democratization of art for many artists , arts administrators, art institutions,
and some of their audience members, there is also the danger of a premature
and uncritical embrace of "progressive" art as an equivalent
of "progressive politics".(Although neglected by the mainstream
art world, artistic practices based in community organizing and political
activism has a been around for a long time. Why is it now that it has
become a favored model in public arts programming and arts funding?) .The
shifts in artistic practice, while challenging the ideological establishment
of art, may at the same time capitulate to the changing modes of capitalist
expansion. What appears to be progressive , even transgressive and radical,
may in fact serve conservative if not reactionary agendas of the dominant
minority.
As a follow-up, I want to address more specifically here the relationship
between art practices and the production of urban identities. Throughout
its recent history , public art has been defined in part against a (discursive)
back-drop of "spectre of placelessness" and the "death
of cities". Initially described in architectural terms in the 1960s
and 70s, the ostensive demise of urban centers and the degradation of
"quality of life "therein are described more and more now in
terms of social problems such as violence, homelessness, poverty, crime,
drugs, pollution, etc. But whether concerned with the character of the
built environment or with the uneven souci-economic relations foundational
to current urban conditions , "place making' remains a central ,
if unarticulated , imperative in public arts programming today. Public
art participates in the production of a site's distinction, often a city's
uniqueness, which in turn is intimately engaged in the process of economic
reorganization of recourses and power as they are played out through the
rehierarchization of space in the social structure of the cities.
I present two seemingly antithetical case studies here to address the
art-city relationship. First is Alexander Calder's 1969 sculpture "La
Grande vitesse" in Grand rapids, Michigan, the first public art work
sponsored by the Art-in-Public -Spaces Program of the National Endowment
for the Arts' Visual Arts program, which was established in 1965. Conceived
as a capping for an urban development program, grand rapids, like so many
other American cities in the late 1960s and 70s, wanted to build a thriving
new downtown business and cultural center. The cultural leaders of the
city wanted to "get on the map" both nationally and internationally,
which is to say , they conceived the city to be siteless. The city solicited
Calder, an artist of international renown, indeed one of the fathers of
modernist abstraction, for a work that could be hailed as a "grand
Rapids' Calder", like "Chicago's Picasso", which had been
commissioned with private funds for the Chicago Civic Center and installed
two years earlier in 1967.
Despite the initial controversy regarding" La grand Vitesse"
over issues of regionalism versus nationalism, the usefulness of an abstract
sculpture versus a properly large fountain, and questions about Alexander
Calder's allegiance to America(he had lived in France for most of his
adult life), "La Grande Vitesse" in subsequent years has apparently
been embraced by the city.Outdoing the Picasso sculpture in its emblematic
function, the sculpture has been incorporated into the city's official
stationery and its image is even stenciled onto the city's garbage trucks.
To the extent that a work of art has become a symbol of the city, "La
Grande Vitesse", as the first public sculpture to be installed under
the auspices of the NEA, is still considered to be one of the most successful
public art project in the United States.
Considering the site as a physical entity, Calder's large red sculpture
was to become a centralizing focal point, a powerful presence that would
visually and spatially organize the space of the plaza, which was modeled
somewhat superficially on European piazzas. In addition to providing a
'humane" reprieve from the surrounding modern glass-steel office
architecture, deemed brutal and inhumane, the sculpture was to function
as a marker of identity for the city at large. On the one hand, the city
thought itself to be lacking in distinctive identity, without unique features,
a city whose site was unspecific. With an itinerant inferiority complex
economically and culturally, grand rapids wanted to find a place for itself
"on the map". On the other hand, Calder had established himself
as a pedigree artist of strong identity and signature style. The function
of "La Grande Vitesse" was to infuse the sense of placelessness
of the plaza with the artist's creative originality, to literally mark
the plaza site as a singular, "specific" location. By extension,
the sculpture was to mark the uniqueness of the city as a whole.
It is important to note that Caller never saw, nor did he feel it necessary
to visit, the plaza before the sculpture's installation. Like a good modernist,
he operated under the assumptions of an art work's autonomy. The site,
in the case of this project , then, was conceived as a kind of abstract
blankness awaiting some marker(i.e., art, sculpture) to give it what could
be claimed an authentic identity, even if that identity was created through
the logic of a logo. The insertion of an art work functioned like an inscription,
giving the site a voice. Calder's "voice" as an artist was joined
together with Grand rapids' perceived lack of one, as "La Grande
Vitesse" gathered up what surrounds it ( the plaza and the city),
to become an emblem for the city, rendering the city into a sign. In a
strange sense, even though the sculpture was not conceived as site specific,
it nevertheless became site specific-site specificity was produced here
as an effect and not engaged as a method of artistic production.
Unlike the
Calder example, the second case begins with the general cultural valorization
of places as the locus of authentic experience and coherent sense of historical
and personal identity .relying on a certain gymnastics of logic in relation
to the site, qualities like originality, authenticity, and singularity
are reworked in recent site-oriented practices -evacuated from the artwork
and attributed to the site. "Places with a Past" , the 1991
site-specific -based arts programs organized by independent curator Mary
Jane Jacob, although not conceived as a public art project per se, serves
as an instructive example in this context. The exhibition , composed of
nineteen site-specific installations by internationally well-known artists,
took the city of Charleston, South Carolina, as not only the backdrop
but a "bridge between the works of art and the audience"2.
In addition to breaking the rules of the art establishment(taking art
to the "street" and to the "people"), "places
with a past" wanted to further a dialogue between art and socio-historical
dimension of places. According to Jacob
" Charleston proved to be fertile ground" for the investigation
of issues concerning "gender, race, cultural identity, considerations
of difference(
) subjects much in the vanguard of criticism and art-making
(
). The actuality of the situation, the fabric of the time and place
of Charleston, offered an incredibly rich and meaningful context for the
making and siting of publicly visible and physically prominent installations
that rang true in [the artists'] approach to these ideas".3
While Site -specific art continues to be described as a refutation of
originality and authenticity as intrinsic qualities of the art project
or the artist, this resistance facilitates the translation and relocation
of these qualities form the art work to the place of its presentation.
But then, these qualities return to the art work now that it has become
integral to the site. Admittedly, according to Jacob, "locations(
)
contribute a specific identity to the shows staged by injecting into the
experience the uniqueness of the place" 4 . Conversely,
if the social, historical, and geographical specificity of Charleston
offered artists a unique opportunity to create unrepeatable works (and
by extension an unrepeatable exhibition) these exhibitions like "Places
with a Past" ultimately utilize art to promote the city of Charleston
as a unique place also. What is prized most of al in site-specific(public)
art is still the singularity and authenticity that the presence of the
artist seems to guarantee , not only in terms of the presumed unrepeatability
of the work but in the ways in which the presence of the artist also endows
places with a "unique" distinction.
As I have written elsewhere 5 , site-specific art can
lead to the unearthing of repressed histories, provide support for greater
visibility of marginalised groups and issues, and initiate the re (dis)covery
of "minor" places so far ignored by the dominant culture. But
inasmuch as the consumption of difference (for difference's sake), the
sitting of art in "real" places can also be a means to extract
the social and historical dimensions out of places to variously serve
the thematic drive of an artist, satisfy institutional demographic profiles
, or fulfill the fiscal needs of a city.
Significantly, the appropriation of site-specific public art for the valorization
of urban identities comes at a time of a fundamental cultural shift in
which architecture and urban planning, formerly the primary media for
expressing a vision of the city, are displaced by other media more intimate
with marketing and advertising. In the words of urban theorist Kevin Robins,
[a]s cities have become ever more equivalent and urban identities increasingly
'thin', (
) it has become necessary to employ advertising and marketing
agencies to manufacture such distinctions. It is a question of distinction
in a world beyond difference". 6.
Site specificity and public art in this context find new importance because
they can supply distinction of place and uniqueness of locational identity,
highly seductive qualities in the promotion of towns and cities within
the competitive restructuring of the global economic hierarchy. Thus,
site-specific art remains inexorably tied to a process that renders particularity
and identity of various cities a matter of product differentiation. Indeed,
the exhibition catalogue for "places with a past" was a tasteful
tourist promotion, pitching the city of Charleston as a unique, "artistic",
and meaningful place (to visit) 7. Under the pretext
of their articulation or resuscitation, site-specific public art can be
mobilized to expedite the erasure of differences via the commodification
and serialization of places.
It is within this framework, in which art is put to the service of generating
a sense of authenticity and uniqueness of place for quasi-promotional
agendas, that I understand the goals of city-based art programs in Europe
as well, such as "Sculpture. Projects in Munster 1997". ( It
should be noted that the 1987 Sculpture project in Munster served as one
of the models for "Places with a Past"). According to co-curator
Klaus Bubmann's press release, "[t]he fundamental idea behind the
exhibitions was to create a dialogue between artists , the town and the
public , in other words, to encourage the artists to create projects that
dealt with conditions in the town , its architecture, urban planning,
its history and the social structure of society in the town.(
) Invitations
to artists from all over the world to come to Munster for the sculpture
project , to enter into a debate with the town, have established a tradition
which will not only be continued in the year 1997 but beyond this will
become something specific to Munster: a town not only as an "open-air
museum from modern art" but also as a place for a natural confrontation
between history and contemporary art. (
) the aim of the exhibition
"Sculpture. Projects in Munster 1997" is to make the town of
Munster comprehensible as a complex, historically formed structure exactly
in those places that make it stand out from other towns and cities".8
Which is to say, the ambitions of programs like "Places with a Past"
and "Sculpture. Projects in Munster 1997". Ultimately do not
seem to veer very far from those of the city officials and cultural leaders
of Grand Rapids, Michigan, thirty years ago. For despite the tremendous
differences in the art of choice among these three events , their investment
in generating a sense of uniqueness and authenticity for their respective
places of presentation remains quite consistent. As such endeavors to
engage art in the nurturing of specificities of locational difference
gather momentum, there is a greater and greater urgency in distinguishing
between the cultivation of art and places and their appropriation for
the promotion of cities as cultural commodities.
NOTES
1 See my article "Im Interesse der Offerntlichkeit
",
in : Springer, December 1996-February 1997, 30-35.
2 See Places with a Past: new Site-specific Art at Charleston's
Spoleto Festival, ex.cat., New York: Rizolli, 1991,19. The exhibition
took place may 24-August 4, 1991, with nineteen "site-specific"
works by artists including |Ann hamilton, Christian Boltanski, Cindy Sherman,
David Hammons, Lorna Simpson and Alva Rogers, Kate Ericson and Mel Ziegler,
and Ronald Jones, among others. The promotional materials, especially
the exhibition catalogue, emphasized the innovative challenge of the exhibition
format over the individual projects, and foregrounded the authorial role
of Mary Jane Jacob over the artists.
3 Ibid.,17.
4
Ibid.,15.
5
My comments here are from a longer assay on this topic. See my "one
place after another: Notes on Site Specificity," October 80, Spring
1997.
6
Kevin Robins, "Prisoners of the city: Whatever Can a Postmodern City
Be?," in : Erica Carter, James Donald, and Judith Squires(eds.),
Space and place: Theories of identity and location, London: Lawrence &
Wishart, 1993, 306.
7 Cultural critic Sharon Zukin has noted, "it seemed to be
official policy [by the 1990s) that making a place for art in the city
went along with establishing a marketable identity for the city as a whole".
See Sharon Zukin, The Culture of Cities, Cambridge, MA: Black-well Publishers,1995,
23.
8
Klaus Bubmann, undated press release for "Sculpture. Projects in
Munster 1997". n.p
The present text was included to the publication of
Christian Philipp Muller "Kunst auf Schritt und Tritt " (Hamburg:Kellner,1997),
referring to Hamburg's "Kunstmeile", a planned association of
several museums located near the central railway station.
Miwon Kwon received her Ph.D. in Architectural History and Theory
at Princeton University in 1998, the same year in which she joined the
faculty at UCLA as Assistant Professor of contemporary art history (post
1945). Her research and writings engage several disciplines including
contemporary art, architecture, public art, and urban studies. She is
a founding editor and publisher of Documents, a journal of art,
culture, and criticism, and serves on the advisory board of October
magazine. Her first book One Place After Another: Site-Specific Art
and Locational Identity is forthcoming from MIT Press in 2002.
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