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Service manual: Pamela M. Lee on Andrea Fraser.


Museum Highlights: The Writings of Andrea Fraser, edited by Alexander Alberro. Cambridge, MA: MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  Press, 320 pages, $40.

WHEN ANDREA FRASER'S VIDEO Untitled was first shown in 2003, the reactions across the media spectrum were all too predictable. A silent, sixty-minute tape shot at New York's Royalton Hotel, it captured a sexual encounter between the artist and an anonymous collector, who paid nearly twenty thousand dollars for the privilege. The real performance, arguably, took place well in advance, when Fraser negotiated a detailed contract of stipulations the collector had to meet. If art-world cognoscenti co·gno·scen·te  
n. pl. co·gno·scen·ti
A person with superior, usually specialized knowledge or highly refined taste; a connoisseur.
 variously claimed they found the taped proceedings boring (which, given the delicate nature of the exchange, lent the work its peculiar critical frisson). New York's Daily News responded with the kind of aesthetic sensitivity one might expect of the tabloid press, calling Fraser's work an outrageous example of "interactive art."

Readers of the Daily News might be forgiven if they fail to identify the Andrea Fraser of videotape infamy Notoriety; condition of being known as possessing a shameful or disgraceful reputation; loss of character or good reputation.

At Common Law, infamy was an individual's legal status that resulted from having been convicted of a particularly reprehensible crime, rendering him
 as the author of Museum Highlights, a collection of her writings from 1985 to 2003 to be published by MIT this summer. Edited by Alexander Alberro, the book attests unequivocally to the artist's critical rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
, depth of engagement, and slyly subversive sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
sense of humour, humor, humour
. Yet the distance traveled between a journalistic dismissal of a contemporary artist and an academic press's vaunted vaunt  
v. vaunt·ed, vaunt·ing, vaunts

v.tr.
To speak boastfully of; brag about.

v.intr.
To speak boastfully; brag. See Synonyms at boast1.

n.
1.
 presentation of the same figure seems very much to the point of Fraser's larger project. Over the last two decades, Fraser has achieved a certain renown for her work in critiquing institutions, bridging site-specific practices, performance (perhaps most famously in the guise of museum docent "Jane Castleton"), and curatorial intervention. Throughout, she has dramatized the relationship between art and its audiences as a function of what Pierre Bourdieu called one's habitus habitus /hab·i·tus/ (hab´i-tus) [L.]
1. attitude (2).

2. physique.


hab·i·tus
n. pl.
: systems of conditioned affects and behaviors operating virtually as individual perception. The reception of Untitled, as such, offers a (perhaps) unintended case study in the terrain that Fraser insistently mines in Museum Highlights.

Allusions to Bourdieu are not made lightly in this context--and not only because a brief essay by the late sociologist serves as a foreword to the volume. Frequent references to his work appear throughout Museum Highlights, underscoring the fact that Fraser (along with Hans Haacke) is among our most "Bourdevin" of artists. Those seeking something like a precis of her methodology might skip to the end of the first section to read her Bourdieu tribute: "'To Quote,' Say the Kabyles, 'Is to Bring Back to Life.'" Fraser is the least sentimental of writers (her prose tends to the pointed and analytic), yet here she narrates in personal terms the centrality of his thought to her practice. She details first how her anxiety about being an autodidact au·to·di·dact  
n.
A self-taught person.



[From Greek autodidaktos, self-taught : auto-, auto- + didaktos, taught; see didactic.
, lacking the imprimatur of an ivory-tower diploma, was relieved by Bourdieu's work on the "symbolic violence" imposed by the legitimating culture of higher education. There's nothing self-aggrandizing about Fraser's insertion of her own story into this homage. Bourdieu's work on the role of culture in the wielding of symbolic power--as a source of domination and social differentiation--meshes seamlessly with the imperatives of institutional critique.

Through this Bourdevin lens one best grasps the diverse contents of Museum Highlights, which include writings on other artists (Louise Lawler, Allan McCollum); project statements; performance transcripts; speculative essays on working method; and a letter to a curator about the Wadsworth Atheneum, detailing her approach to research in that museum. Organized into four sections, the texts are grouped thematically rather than chronologically. Whatever the reader loses in terms of insight into Fraser's intellectual formation, however, one gains in understanding the consistency of her investigations.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Foremost among them is Fraser's thoroughgoing thor·ough·go·ing  
adj.
1. Very thorough; complete: thoroughgoing research.

2. Unmitigated; unqualified: a thoroughgoing villain.
 critique of the autonomy of art, largely articulated through her work on the culture of museums and collecting and an overlapping interest in questions of privacy and publicity. In several texts Fraser proves herself an adroit museologist, betraying a historian's fascination for things archival. "Notes on the Museum's Publicity" untangles the contradictions represented by the modern American museum: how its role as a nonprofit public institution, devoted to, as she puts it, "providing educational experiences for the public," leans heavily on the philanthropic gestures of the private sphere. "The museum's purpose is not only to publicize art, but to publicize art as an emblem of bourgeois privacy," she notes. "Its purpose, in a sense, is to publicize privacy." Distilling the private interests of public museums. Fraser speaks forcefully to their tacit pedagogical ped·a·gog·ic   also ped·a·gog·i·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of pedagogy.

2. Characterized by pedantic formality: a haughty, pedagogic manner.
 agenda: to encourage on the part of their audiences "popular identification with bourgeois privacy."

Though Fraser's language occasionally borders on the notional in this short text, one could hardly accuse her of abstraction. Essays on the Brooklyn Museum's infamous 1999 "Sensation" exhibition and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum: see Guggenheim Museum.  of Art's global misadventures in Bilbao (problematic, given the economically depressed and politically charged reputation of its Basque site) narrate the concrete circumstances giving rise to the controversies associated with each institution. Offering a blow-by-blow report of the Saatchi-driven YBA YBA Banff, Alberta, Canada (Airport Code)
YBA Young British Artist (generation of British artists born between mid-1960s and 1970s)
YBA You'll Be Alright
YBA Youth Buddhist Association (Hawaii) 
 exhibition, Fraser's "A 'Sensation' Chronicle" should stand as the foundation of a canon for anyone marginally interested in the vicissitudes vicissitudes
Noun, pl

changes in circumstance or fortune [Latin vicis change]

vicissitudes nplvicisitudes fpl; peripecias fpl 
 of the culture wars. She describes the events leading to Rudy Giuliani's retraction In the law of Defamation, a formal recanting of the libelous or slanderous material.

Retraction is not a defense to defamation, but under certain circumstances, it is admissible in Mitigation of Damages. Cross-references

Libel and Slander.
 of funding to the Brooklyn Museum, prompted by Chris Ofili's notorious painting of the Virgin replete with elephant dung. But more important, she challenges the received wisdom that understands this row as one pitting a sense of the museum's growing populism populism

Political program or movement that champions the common person, usually by favourable contrast with an elite. Populism usually combines elements of the left and right, opposing large business and financial interests but also frequently being hostile to established
 against its perceived elitism. On the contrary: Attending closely to the rhetoric of both Giuliani and arts professionals, Fraser regards these positions (populism versus elitism) not so much as oppositional but as continuous. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, the opening of the contemporary museum to a wider, that is, popular, audience only supports its larger mission to valorize val·or·ize  
tr.v. val·or·ized, val·or·iz·ing, val·or·iz·es
1. To establish and maintain the price of (a commodity) by governmental action.

2.
 cultural practices and in the process enforce symbolic hierarchies.

The kind of dialectical rigor on display here is brought equally to bear on Fraser's reflections on her practice and that of other artists. The two-part essay "What's Intangible, Transitory, Mediating, Participatory, and Rendered in the Public Sphere?" is one of the most incisive accounts of the explosion of project-driven art, typically site specific or installation based. Both parts of the essay speak to contemporary practice relative to an "amount of labor that is either in excess of, or independent of, any specific material production and which cannot be transacted as ... a product." Part two offers a brilliant genealogy on the notion of art as the provision of service, grounded in the Conceptual art of the 1960s, from Haacke, Daniel Buren, and Marcel Broodthaers to the radical claims of the Art Workers Coalition. Fraser's practice is itself a reflection on this history--as embedded in a critical tradition responding to the pressures and ideology of the service industry.

No matter how instructive these contributions, my guess is that most readers will acquire Museum Highlights primarily for its fascinating transcripts of Fraser's performances. Surely the text for her turn as museum-docent-avatar Jane Castleton, Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk, 1989, injects a good shot of humor into the proceedings, skewering the PR speak and civic boosterism boost·er·ism  
n.
The highly supportive attitudes and activities of boosters: "the civic pride and heady boosterism that often accompany rising property values" New York. 
 that are the standard fare of gallery talks. Still, this performance and others are no mere insider jokes: Fraser's lengthy endnotes reveal that statements casually dispatched in the course of her work draw from a wealth of archival and bibliographic sources, attesting to the conflicted histories of the museum or trafficking in the language of art criticism. The notes to Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk, for instance, chronicle the founding of the Philadelphia Museum of Art Philadelphia Museum of Art, established in 1875, chartered in 1876. When the city of Philadelphia planned to erect a building to house the Centennial Exposition of 1876, provision was made to keep the building permanently occupied; the Pennsylvania Museum and School  and its entanglement with the history of a local poorhouse poor·house  
n.
An establishment maintained at public expense as housing for the homeless.


poorhouse
Noun

same as workhouse

Noun 1.
.

The effect of reading these transcripts (and then imagining them performed by Fraser) is uncanny. It's as if the artist were a medium channeling the collective Geist of the art world, casting forth little-acknowledged voices and attitudes that nonetheless have shaped the contemporary-art habitus. These transcripts, along with the other essays in Museum Highlights, are a testament to Fraser's forcefulness as a writer, one for whom the act of writing--and by necessity reading and researching--is indivisible INDIVISIBLE. That which cannot be separated.
     2. It is important to ascertain when a consideration or a contract, is or is not indivisible. When a consideration is entire and indivisible, and it is against law, the contract is void in toto. 11 Verm. 592; 2 W.
 from her practice as an artist.

Pamela M. Lee is associate professor of art history at Stanford University.
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Title Annotation:BOOKS; Museum Highlights: The Writings of Andrea Fraser
Author:Lee, Pamela M.
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:1364
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