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Subject to debate: Christopher S. Wood on Gabriele Guercio and Joachim Pissarro.


ART AS EXISTENCE: THE ARTIST'S MONOGRAPH AND ITS PROJECT, BY GABRIELE GUERCIO. CAMBRIDGE, MA. MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  PRESS, 2006. 378 PAGES. $50.

CEZANNE/PISSARRO, JOHNS/RAUSCHENBERG: COMPARATIVE STUDIES ON INTERSUBJECTIVITY Intersubjectivity is something which is shared by two or more subjectivites.

The term is used in three ways.
  1. Firstly, in its weakest sense it is used to refer to agreement.
 IN MODERN ART, BY JOACHIM PISSARRO. NEW YORK New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, NY. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). , 2006. 324 PAGES. $95.

IN THE ENCOUNTER with an artwork one cannot escape the sense, as Gabriele Guercio writes, "that someone is there." Orthodox art history and art criticism have no language for such an experience, focused as they are on the what, the how, and the why rather than the who. In his history of the monograph, Art as Existence, Guercio contends that art history has discredited the study of an artist's life and works because it cannot "afford to deal with the instability produced by considerations of someoneness and singularity." In the twentieth century the monographic discourse, "drained of its powerful imaginary and utopian elements," lost its "fluency." According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Joachim Pissarro, the singular artist emerges only out of dialogic interaction with other artists. And yet the prevailing accounts of modern art rule out the possibility that art might be a form of communication between persons, again because communication, if genuinely intersubjective, is open-ended, risky, and difficult to capture in historical or philosophical schemata. Pissarro's examination of such conversations in Cezanne/Pissarro, Johns/Rauschenberg shows how artists communicate simply by "being" and "doing" together, in and through and around their artmaking. The intimacy and sympathy, the presence of the one to the other, are captured in works of art that then become the catalysts for an infinitely ramifying network of communication, from beholder to beholder, subject to subject.

For two such independent-minded, passionate, and unexpected books one can only be grateful. Although both books grew out of dissertations, they are marvelously original, unbeholden to the doxa, unmarred by academic posturing. Guercio's book should not be mistaken for a simple contribution to the history of art history, though it is also that. Nor is the pertinence of Pissarro's book limited to the special fields of late nineteenth-century French and postwar American painting. Both studies develop ambitious arguments about the very nature of art and artmaking. Art in these accounts is neither an ornament to life, nor a token of status, nor a collective dream; art is neither an instrument of critical reason, nor the organizer of space and time, nor the framework for ritual; art is neither gift nor sacrifice, neither diagram nor treatise. Before it is any of these things "These Things" is an EP by She Wants Revenge, released in 2005 by Perfect Kiss, a subsidiary of Geffen Records. Music Video
The music video stars Shirley Manson, lead singer of the band Garbage. Track Listing
1. "These Things [Radio Edit]" - 3:17
2.
, art is a form of living itself, a mode of existence, an event that drives, not merely registers, a process of self-becoming. Not all readers will embrace such openly Romantic axioms. Many, however, will be left with the uneasy sense that academic writing on art, imprisoned im·pris·on  
tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons
To put in or as if in prison; confine.



[Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en-
 as it is within historical thinking, might somehow be missing the point.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Pissarro has written an animated, fast-paced, opinionated o·pin·ion·at·ed  
adj.
Holding stubbornly and often unreasonably to one's own opinions.



[Probably from obsolete opinionate : opinion + -ate1.
, eccentric book that is essentially about freedom. It navigates by a small cluster of philosophical landmarks, not all of them so familiar as they once were: Immanuel Kant's notion that we think (and, by extension, create art) only "in community with others"; his follower Johann Gottlieb Johann Gottlieb (February 15, 1815 in Brünn, Austria (now Brno, Czech Republic– March 4, 1875 in Graz, Austria) was an Austrian chemist who first synthesized Propionic acid. From 1846 he was Professor at the University of Graz.  Fichte's theory of individual subjecthood as a "plural" and "reciprocal" concept; and Jurgen Habermas's hopeful model of a "discourse ethics Discourse ethics, sometimes called "argumentation ethics", refers to a type of argument that attempts to establish normative or ethical truths by examining the presuppositions of discourse. " involving mutual sympathetic comprehension, through social interaction, of expressions of need. For Fichte, the condition of possibility of freedom "is that it be recognized by somebody else." This is not the version of freedom favored by, say, Clement Greenberg Clement Greenberg (January 16, 1909 - May 7, 1994) was an influential American art critic closely associated with the abstract art movement in the United States. In particular, he promoted the Abstract Expressionist movement and had close ties with the painter Jackson Pollock. , who was quite interested in the topic; autonomy, after all, is just a synonym for freedom. For Greenberg, modern painting required freedom in order to carry out its historical program of self-criticism, a program modeled on the rational self-critique of reason envisioned by Kant. Pissarro is obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with showing that Greenberg was a poor Kantian. Over many forceful pages he chips away at the monument, pointing out that Greenberg ignored Kant's insistence that truths are only validated when they are "represented" in such a way that other minds can recognize them. Critique, for Kant but not for Greenberg, was an intersubjective process. Like most modern students of art, Greenberg was little concerned with the puzzles of identity, the boundaries of the self, and interpersonal communication Interpersonal communication is the process of sending and receiving information between two or more people. Types of Interpersonal Communication
This kind of communication is subdivided into dyadic communication, Public speaking, and small-group communication.
.

The first art historians and art theorists to challenge the orthodox modernist indifference to questions of personhood per·son·hood  
n.
The state or condition of being a person, especially having those qualities that confer distinct individuality: "finding her own personhood as a campus activist" 
, as both Pissarro and Guercio acknowledge, were those speaking in the name of a politics of identity. Works of art, such scholars have argued, are the traces of real existences in the world. By performing a subjectivity, the work permits the expression of a self that is socially or politically marginalized or excluded--a self that is then once more silenced by a critical establishment dogmatically skeptical of biographically oriented approaches to art. Pissarro and Guercio, in effect, generalize that position of protest into an affirmative theory of art.

Pissarro's accounts, full of anecdote and warmth, of the affectionate symbiosis symbiosis (sĭmbēō`sĭs), the habitual living together of organisms of different species. The term is usually restricted to a dependent relationship that is beneficial to both participants (also called mutualism) but may be extended to  between Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg in the 1950s, and of the more troubled and unbalanced friendship between Camille Pissarro and Paul Cezanne in the 1870s and 1880s, read like dramatic compressions of what he imagines artmaking is really like all the time, for every artist. In his study of the monograph, Guercio quotes the novelist Emile Zola, writing about Edouard Manet: "What touches me, what delights me in human creation, in works of art, is to find deep within each of them an artist, a brother, who shows me nature under a new aspect.... A work of art tells me the history of a heart and flesh." Pissarro's book reveals that Johns and Rauschenberg are still talking about art, in their own updated idiom, in more or less the same way. Art is love, Pissarro is in effect saying, an open project that demands from creator and recipient alike "a paroxystic degree of mutual trust" and openness to the other.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

It is never quite clear how this erotics of creativity could ever be captured in art-historical discourse. At times Pissarro carries out an anthropomorphized version of a traditional analysis of intertextual in·ter·tex·tu·al  
adj.
Relating to or deriving meaning from the interdependent ways in which texts stand in relation to each other.



in
 or work-to-work links, the repetitions, citations, recombinations, and erasures that make meaning possible. He relates, for example, how Rauschenberg's spontaneous use of a paint-jar lid as a stamp--during one of Allan Kaprow's happenings--led to a proliferation of circle motifs in Johns's works. At other times Pissarro seems to be dreaming of an impossible art history that would recover all the lost conversations, the millions of winged words that envelop en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 the making of artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
.

Sigmund Freud casts no shadow on Pissarro's argument. By leaping back two centuries to recover the basically optimistic model of intersubjectivity of the German Idealists, Pissarro has canceled out a whole baleful tradition of modern thinking about the self. The enthrallment en·thrall  
tr.v. en·thralled, en·thrall·ing, en·thralls
1. To hold spellbound; captivate: The magic show enthralled the audience.

2. To enslave.
 of the rational ego to the drives of the id; the mendacity men·dac·i·ty  
n. pl. men·dac·i·ties
1. The condition of being mendacious; untruthfulness.

2. A lie; a falsehood.
 of memory; the incessant deferral of meaning that foils all real communication; the circular structure of understanding; the futility of identifying any ground at all for selfhood self·hood  
n.
1. The state of having a distinct identity; individuality.

2. The fully developed self; an achieved personality.

3.
 outside of language; the hegemonic authority that compels the self to realize itself in a condition of mimetic mimetic /mi·met·ic/ (mi-met´ik) pertaining to or exhibiting imitation or simulation, as of one disease for another.

mi·met·ic
adj.
1. Of or exhibiting mimicry.

2.
 opposition--none of these possibilities is permitted to interfere with the vital argument that drives the book. Pissarro's amnesia, or ingenuousness, is his strength.

Pissarro is careful to distance himself from the scholarly format of the monograph, calling it "a thing of the past." He is more interested in allowing the artistic subject to split into multiple selves and inhabit such binary mutualisms as teacher and pupil or lover and beloved. Guercio would respond that the split self was always the topic of the monograph. His paradoxical and original thesis is that the monograph, the very emblem of a traditional and unadventurous art history, in fact subverted the idea of the autonomy of art and the "separateness" of artworks "as isolated objects made by isolated subjects." The monograph, for Guercio, was from its inception a kind of laboratory where the complex interplay between art and life could be tested and assessed under controlled conditions. The vanishing point of the monographic project is the total breakdown of any distinction between living and creating, doing and dreaming: a nightmarish loss of bearings for some, perhaps; for Guercio, the condition for a utopian rethinking of self and society.

The book begins with a perceptive chapter on the foundational text of modern art history, Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Artists (1550, 1568). In his biographical essays, Vasari submitted art to a "double articulation," trapping it between "who the artist was and what he did, his genetic fatum and his personal destiny." The model proved robust and flexible, the basis for a tradition of artist's biographies extending to the present. The career of the monograph peaked in the nineteenth century, and the bulk of Guercio's book is dedicated to careful readings of tomes thick and thin, remembered but little read, such as Gustav Friedrich Waagen Gustav Friedrich Waagen (February 11, 1794–July 15, 1868) was a German art historian.

Waagen was born in Hamburg, the son of a painter and nephew of the poet Ludwig Tieck.
 on the Van Eycks (1822), Carl Friedrich von Rumohr on Raphael (1831), Johann David Passavant Johann David Passavant (September 18, 1787—August 17, 1861[1]) was born in 1787 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. He was a curator and artist. His interest in the arts was evidence by an early correspondence with the artist Franz Pforr (1788-1812).  on Raphael (1839), Herman Grimm on Michelangelo (1860), Carl Justi on Velazquez (1888), and Bernard Berenson on Lorenzo Lotto (1895). In Guercio's analyses, the monograph did not stabilize the artistic author as the preexistent pre·ex·ist or pre-ex·ist  
v. pre·ex·ist·ed, pre·ex·ist·ing, pre·ex·ists

v.tr.
To exist before (something); precede: Dinosaurs preexisted humans.

v.intr.
 source of the works, so much as re-create him in the "web of relationships between the [catalogue] entries," a virtual constellation of works spanning space and time and held together by memory, cross-references, and formal rhymes. In this way the nineteenth-century monograph registered the self-production of the subject through art just as Idealist philosophers like Friedrich von Schelling had envisioned it.

Guercio changes gears when he arrives at the twentieth century, cognizant as he is of modern art history's disenchantment dis·en·chant  
tr.v. dis·en·chant·ed, dis·en·chant·ing, dis·en·chants
To free from illusion or false belief; undeceive.



[Obsolete French desenchanter, from Old French,
 with the monographic format. He makes the case that even within the framework of a dominant Kunstwissenschaft, or "scientific study of art," as conceived by (mostly) German art historians contemptuous of the bourgeois cult of genius and the art market's fixation on attribution, the monographic idea has nevertheless persisted, a phantom that cannot be dispelled. He focuses, for example, on the critical literature surrounding the mythmakers Picasso, Duchamp, and Beuys, which has to deal with such statements as this by Picasso: "No doubt there will some day be a science, called 'the science of man,' perhaps, which will seek above all to get a deeper understanding of man via man-the-creator.... That's why I date everything I make."

The monographic idea must persist, in Guercio's view, if not the monograph itself, because the problem of art's relation to life has not been solved. In sketching his own model of that relation, he calls upon a diverse company of theorists, and not always the predictable ones: Hannah Arendt, Charles Taylor, Peter Sloterdijk, D. W. Winnicott, Antonio Negri, Dipesh Chakrabarty, and most important, Jean-Luc Nancy, whose writings on the "plural" manifestation of the subject through a series of attestations and recognitions are in fact equally relevant to Pissarro's concerns. There is a significant difference between these two books, however. For Pissarro, art is a medium of communication permitting subjects to represent themselves to one another. The reality of the self emerges in art so that it can connect with some other self's reality. For Guercio, by contrast, the monographic idea reveals that the very distinction between art and reality is a fallacy. He envisions an art history that no longer considers the work of art "the double of a subjective or objective datum The singular form of data; for example, one datum. It is rarely used, and data, its plural form, is commonly used for both singular and plural.  situated before or after artistic creation," an art history therefore no longer compelled "to translate from art to reality and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. ."

The monograph of the future as Guercio imagines it is indeed a "methodologically threatening" prospect. It grasps the "epiphanies" of the "innumerable advents" of the subject, providing "flashes of recognition and awakenings." One wonders who will write it. His book is in some ways a hymn to an era when art history was still an art, not a science. And yet Guercio's account is anything but nostalgic; on the contrary, it burns, like Pissarro's, with emancipatory e·man·ci·pate  
tr.v. e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing, e·man·ci·pates
1. To free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberate.

2.
 promise. Both books hint at what art and art history might be able to contribute to a new and still-undeveloped philosophy of experience.

CHRISTOPHER S. WOOD IS A PROFESSOR OF ART HISTORY AT YALE UNIVERSITY, NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
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Title Annotation:Art As Existence: The Artist's Monograph and Its Project; Cezanne/Pissarro, Johns/Rauschenberg: Comparative Studies on Intersubjectivity in Modern Art
Author:Wood, Christopher S.
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Book review
Date:Oct 1, 2006
Words:2044
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