Art As Adventure : Going Beyond [1 ed.] 9781527514430, 9781527502970

This volume represents a collection of six essays written by artists and art historians about journeys to places and met

165 76 3MB

English Pages 127 Year 2017

Report DMCA / Copyright

DOWNLOAD PDF FILE

Recommend Papers

Art As Adventure : Going Beyond [1 ed.]
 9781527514430, 9781527502970

  • 0 0 0
  • Like this paper and download? You can publish your own PDF file online for free in a few minutes! Sign Up
File loading please wait...
Citation preview

Art as Adventure

Art as Adventure: Going Beyond Edited by

James P. Werner and Rosemary O’Neill

Art as Adventure: Going Beyond Edited by James P. Werner and Rosemary O’Neill This book first published 2017 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2017 by James P. Werner, Rosemary O’Neill and contributors All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-5275-0297-X ISBN (13): 978-1-5275-0297-0

Table of Contents

Introduction ................................................................................................... 1 Rosemary O’Neill and James P. Werner Christoph Fink’s Atlas of Movements: Between Cartography and Poetry .... 3 Rosemary O’Neill Water Links: Uncovering Authentic Community Narratives through Participatory Media Art ................................................................. 19 James P. Werner Digging Historical Narratives from the Global Surface: Allan Sekula’s Fish Story ........................................................................... 38 Sunhee Jang The Artist Explorer: FormLaboratory—A Model for Geographically Dispersed Artist Exploration....................................................................... 52 Les Joynes Towards an Impossible Summit: The Journey as Decoy in the Work of Pierre Huyghe ......................................................................................... 76 Amelia Barikin Art as Pilgrimage, Journey of Prayer and Sanctuary .................................. 94 Jawshing Arthur Liou

 Contributors .............................................................................................. 115



Introduction Rosemary O’Neill and James P. Werner

The artist-traveler has historically followed political, economic, and cultural expansion. The role of artist as witness, reporter, geographer, collecWRUDQGHGXFDWRUH[HPSOL¿HVWKHVLJQL¿FDQFHRIPRELOLW\JHRJUDSKLFDQG cultural mediation in the productions of art/visual culture, and the critical questions raised as a result. In contemporary art, especially as the result of JOREDOL]DWLRQVRPHDUWLVWVDUHVHHNLQJRXWUHPRWHH[SHULHQFHVDVW\SL¿HG E\3LHUUH+X\JKH¶V$QWDUFWLFMRXUQH\DGDSWHGIRUWKHSURGXFWLRQA Journey that Wasn’t  6LQFHPDQ\DUWLVWVKDYHZRUNHGLQVLWXLQFROODERUDtion with local populations, or translated travel experiences from remote ORFDWLRQV7KHDLPRIWKLVSXEOLFDWLRQLVWRSRVHTXHVWLRQVDERXWWKLVSKHQRPHQRQDQGKRZWKHVHH[SHULHQFHVDUHFRQFHSWXDOL]HGDQGUHFRQVWUXFWed through reproductive mediums, installations, or documentary formats in contemporary art case studies. Moreover, the intention is to question ZKHWKHUDUWLVWV¶DGYHQWXULQJWRUHPRWHVLWHVFDQLQLWVHOIFRQVWLWXWHDIRUP of conceptual art with underlying aspirations for unfamiliar, isolated, and spatial experiences. The artist as traveler has deep historical precedents as contemporary DUWSURGXFWLRQWRGD\7KHH[SDQGHG¿HOGRIDUWRIWKHODWHVKDVJRQH EH\RQG WKH PRQXPHQWDO DQG VSDWLDOO\ DHVWKHWLF LQVLWX ZRUNV RI 5REHUW 6PLWKVRQ:DOWHUGL0DULD1DQF\+ROW-DPHV7XUUHOODQGRWKHUVVKLIWLQJWR DUHFRQFHSWXDOL]DWLRQRIWKHH[SHULHQFHRIPRELOLW\UHPRWHQHVVVSDWLDOH[SHULHQFHVPDQLIHVWLQUHVHDUFKSXEOLFDWLRQVFROODERUDWLYHH[KLELWLRQVDQG WHFKQRORJ\WREULGJHIDUÀXQJSODFHV7RZKDWGRZHDWWULEXWHWKHVHHNLQJ RXWRIUHPRWHORFDWLRQV"$QGKRZGRHVRQHGH¿QHWKHQRWLRQRIDGYHQWXUH DQG UHPRWHQHVV ,Q WKH  H[KLELWLRQ Wish you were here: The Art of Adventure, curator Cathleen Chaffee notes the root of adventure in advenire RU³WRKDSSHQ´DPRWLYDWLRQFRQQHFWHGZLWKFLUFXODWLRQDQGWKHSRVVLELOLW\ RIWUDQVSLULQJHYHQWV:KLOHWKH5RXQGWDEOH³5HPRWH3RVVLELOLWLHV´ DUWLVW 3LHUUH +X\JKH VWDWHV WKDW ³WKH LVVXH RI WKH UHPRWH SODFH LV QRW H[DFWO\WKHSRLQW´5DWKHULWLVD³GLVSODFHPHQW´QRWQHFHVVDULO\LQORFDWLRQ EXWPRUHDERXWWKH³SURGXFWLRQVRIVLWXDWLRQVDQGFRPSOH[KHWHURJHQHRXV

2

Introduction

WHUULWRULHV´2U-DQ%DV$GHU¶VWUDYHOTXHVWVWRH[SORUHWKHUHODWLRQVKLSRI WKHVHOIWRWKHZRUOG7KHVHSHUVSHFWLYHVHDFKUHÀHFWDZLOOLQJQHVVWRSUHVHQWDQH[SHULHQFHRISODFHWRRWKHUVDQGDOORZIRUWKHVHQVHRISODFHWREH SURGXFHGLQQHZDOWHUQDWLYHFRQWH[WVRUHYHQPDQLIHVWDVDUHÀHFWLRQRQWKH self in relation to others and places experienced. ,Q ³0DSSLQJ DQG WKH H[SDQGHG )LHOG RI &RQWHPSRUDU\$UW´ :\VWDQ &XUQRZ DWWULEXWHV WKH SKHQRPHQRQ RI WUDYHO DV D FRQWHPSRUDU\ WKHPH WR VLJQL¿FDQWSROLWLFDOVKLIWV±WKDWLVJOREDOL]DWLRQEXWDOVRWRWKHGHVLUHRI VRPH DUWLVWV WR JLYH D YRLFH WR WKH VLOHQFH RI WKH URDG DWODV$UWLVW 5XWK Watson has written in a special issue of The Cartographic Journal titled, ³$UWDQG&DUWRJUDSK\´WKDW³PDSSLQJLVRXUPRVWFRPPRQSODFHPHWDSKRU WRGD\ZLWKVRPHH[KLELWLRQVRQWKHVXEMHFWEHWZHHQDQG± WKHVHLQFOXGH5REHUW6WRUU¶V0R0$H[KLELWLRQMapping focused on WKHLFRQRJUDSK\WRGD\WR1DWR7KRPSVRQ¶VH[KLELWLRQExperimental Geography which teases out the issue of art as geography and geography as DUWVLWXDWLQJWKLVZRUNDVDVRFLDODQGSROLWLFDOSUDFWLFHWR2NZXL(QZH]RU¶V locating contemporary art “in an age of permanent transition” DFNQRZOHGJLQJYROXQWDU\DQGLQYROXQWDU\PLJUDWLRQV´$VWKHURDGDWODVHYROYHVLQWR HYHU FKDQJLQJ GLJLWDO YLVXDOL]DWLRQV WKHUH LV FRQVLGHUDWLRQ IRU JHRJUDSK\ DQG FDUWRJUDSK\ EH\RQG WKH PDS UHODWLYH WR WKH SHUVSHFWLYHV LQKHUHQW LQ MRXUQH\V IDFLOLWDWHGE\ GLJLWDO PDSSLQJ DQG WKH YLVXDO UHFRUGLQJV WKDW DUH woven into new technological ways of recounting the adventure. 6RZKDWDUHVRPHRIWKHSUDFWLFHVWKDWFRQVWLWXWHJHRJUDSKLFPRELOLW\" +RZGRHVWKHQRWLRQRI³JRLQJEH\RQG´DOORZIRUWKLQJVWRKDSSHQ":KDW DUHWKHKLVWRULHVDQGFRQWH[WVHPHUJHQWZLWKLQWKLVSURFHVV"+RZDUHWKHVH FRPSOH[LWLHVUHSUHVHQWHGZKHQRQHKDVQ¶WH[SHULHQFHGWKHUHPRWHRURXWRI WKHZD\"+RZGRWKHVHH[SHULHQFHVOLQNSODFHDQGPHPRU\"7KHIROORZLQJ FKDSWHUVDGGUHVVWKHVHLVVXHVQRWLQDFKURQRORJLFDOPDQQHUEXWUDWKHULQUHODWLRQWRWKHDUWLVWLFSUDFWLFHWKHUROHRIUHVHDUFKWKHH[SHULHQFHRIPRELOLW\ documentation, and notions of remoteness. The methods and outcomes of HDFKDUWLVWUHSUHVHQWHGKDYHFRPPRQJRDOVWRUHYLVXDOL]HDQGWUDQVSRUWRQH QRWLRQRISODFHWRDQRWKHU$VDJOREDOFRPPXQLW\HPHUJHVLQWKHSUHVHQW HDFK RI WKH SUDFWLFHV GLVFXVVHG LQ WKLV ERRN XWLOL]HV VRPH IRUP RI PHGLD UHOHYDQW WR IUDPLQJ D UHGXFHG EXW SRLJQDQW VHW RI FKDUDFWHULVWLFV DERXW D SDVWMRXUQH\DQGSODFH,QWKLVSURFHVVWKHVHSUDFWLWLRQHUVDUHUHGHVLJQLQJ WKHH[SHULHQFHRIDMRXUQH\DVDWUDQVSODQWHGHYHQWDNLQWRD'LRQ\VLDQUHproduction, merging artist interpretation with a quite physically virtual rendition. This production of situation and sometimes frame of mind, frames WKHVHRXWVLGHUV¶PHPRULHVRIXQIDPLOLDUWKLQJVIRUWKHPVHOYHVDQGWKHDXdience, representing unique and revealing constructions of distant realities.

Christoph Fink’s Atlas of Movements: Between Cartography and Poetry Rosemary O’Neill

4

&KULVWRSK)LQN¶VAtlas of Movements%HWZHHQ&DUWRJUDSK\DQG3RHWU\

&KULVWRSK )LQN¶V Atlas of Movements )LJXUH ±  LV D WKHRUHWLFDOO\ open-ended inventory of what the artist refers to as “travel periods.” Within the Atlas of Movements, WKH DUWLVW KDV FDWHJRUL]HG GLVWLQFW QXPEHUHG “movements,” carefully delineated within a personal notational system that is osWHQVLEO\V\VWHPDWLFEXWRIWHQ cryptic. These movements are charted in advance along a route connecting point $ WR SRLQW % LQ DQG DURXQG LGHQWL¿DEOH FLWLHV VXFK DV Mannheim, Cleveland, 1HZ «@LWLVSRVVLEOHWRVWD\ LQD+\XQGDLRZQHGKRWHOVFKHGXOHDSSRLQWPHQWVE\+\XQGDLFHOOXODUWHOHSKRQHVKRS>«@DWWKH+\XQGDLGHSDUWPHQWVWRUHDQGWUDYHOLQD+\XQGDL DXWRPRELOHWRPHHWLQJZLWKWKHRI¿FLDOVIRUWKHZRUOG¶VODUJHVWVKLS\DUGD GLYLVLRQ RI +\XQGDL +HDY\ ,QGXVWULHV´ These critical descriptions show KRZ+\XQGDLRQHRI6RXWK.RUHD¶Vchaebols²DFFRUGLQJWR6HNXODDQHQWLW\RIK\SHUFDSLWDOLVPDQGIDPLO\G\QDVWLF6WDOLQLVPLQ6RXWK.RUHD— KDVIXHOHGWKHJOREDOLVWV¶SUR¿WVRQRQHKDQGDQGGHYDVWDWHGVRFLRHFRQRPic ecosystems on the other.$FFRUGLQJWR)UHGULF-DPHVRQ³$OORIWKHVH VRFDOOHG µPRGHUQLWLHV¶²WKH NLQVKLS FDSLWDOLVP >VXFK DV@ chaebol LQ .RUHDDOOSUHVXSSRVHVSHFL¿FDQGSUHH[LVWLQJIRUPVRIVRFLDORUJDQL]DWLRQ EDVHGRQWKHRUGHURIWKHIDPLO\²ZKHWKHUDVFODQH[WHQGHGQHWZRUNRULQ WKHPRUHFRQYHQWLRQDOVHQVH,QWKLVUHVSHFWWKHUHVLVWDQFHWRWKHJOREDOIUHH PDUNHWLV¿QDOO\QRWFXOWXUDO>«@EXWXOWLPDWHO\VRFLDOLQQDWXUH´-DPHVRQ DUJXHGWKDWLWLVQHDUO\LPSRVVLEOHWRUHVLVWWKLVSUHH[LVWLQJIRUPRIDJOREDO PDUNHWchaebolEHFDXVHGLIIHUHQWVRFLHWLHVVXIIHUHGGLIIHUHQWPRGHUQL]DWLRQSURFHVVHVWKDWHVWDEOLVKHGDVRFLDOO\LQWULQVLFTXDOLW\LQWKHIUHHPDUNHW DQG LWV JOREDO H[SDQVLRQ ,URQLFDOO\ WKH ZRUG Hyundai, which occupies 8OVDQDQGLQYDGHVWKHFLWL]HQV¶GDLO\OLYHVDQGPHQWDOVWDWHVDSSHDUVPXOWL

$OODQ6HNXODFish Story



$OODQ6HNXODFish Story



$chaebol (the word consists of two parts, chae, which means wealth or property, and bol, which means faction or clan LVD6RXWK.RUHDQIRUPRIDEXVLQHVVFRQJORPHUDWH7KH6RXWK.RUHDQchaebolsDUHW\SLFDOO\JOREDORUPXOWLQDWLRQDORUJDQL]DWLRQV WKDWRZQQXPHURXVLQWHUQDWLRQDOHQWHUSULVHV7KH\DUHIDPLO\UXQRUJDQL]DWLRQVDQG WKH\H[SDQGWKHLUSRZHUE\DGGLQJLWHPVWRWKHLUEXVLQHVVHQWHUSULVH7KHchaebol KDVLQÀXHQFHG6RXWK.RUHDQSROLWLFVVLJQL¿FDQWO\,QDPHPEHURIDchaebol IDPLO\&KXQJ0RQJMXQSUHVLGHQWRI+\XQGDL+HDY\,QGXVWULHVVXFFHVVIXOO\UDQ IRUWKH1DWLRQDO$VVHPEO\RI6RXWK.RUHD$QGRWKHUEXVLQHVVOHDGHUVZHUHFKRVHQ WREHPHPEHUVRIWKH1DWLRQDO$VVHPEO\WKURXJKSURSRUWLRQDOUHSUHVHQWDWLRQ



)UHGULF-DPHVRQ³*OREDOL]DWLRQDQG3ROLWLFDO6WUDWHJ\´New Left Review/RQdon 4  -XO 

6XQKHH-DQJ

45

SOHWLPHVLQWKHSKRWRJUDSKV+RZHYHUWKHWHUPHyundai has two different PHDQLQJVLQ6RXWK.RUHD$VDSURSHUQRXQ+\XQGDLLVZLGHO\NQRZQDV WKH .RUHDQ FRQJORPHUDWH EXW WKH ZRUG¶V RULJLQDO PHDQLQJ DV D QRXQ RU DGMHFWLYHLVmodern.7KHUHLVQRFRPPHQWDERXWKRZWKLVZRUGSDUDOOHOVWKH UDSLGPRGHUQL]DWLRQWKDWSUHRFFXSLHG.RUHDQVRFLHW\DIWHUWKHHQGRIWKH .RUHDQ:DULQ 2QHSKRWRJUDSK )LJXUH± GHSLFWVWKHPRGHORI$GPLUDO«@:KDWZLOOWKHDE\VVRI1RUWK.RUHDZDJHVGRWRWKHPRPHQWDU\ )RUGLVWSURVSHULW\RI6RXWK.RUHD¶Vchaebol employees? The whole affair LVFRDFKHGDQGSURGGHGE\DQ[LRXV$PHULFDQGLSORPDWVDQGPLOLWDU\FRPPDQGHUVDIUDLGRIORVLQJWKHLUJULSRQ$VLDZKRXQGHUVWDQGWKHFRQGLWLRQ RISHUPDQHQWZDUWREHWKHSULPDU\HQJLQHRIHFRQRPLFGHYHORSPHQW´ &RPELQHGZLWK6HNXOD¶VVWURQJFULWLFLVPDQGVDUFDVPRIchaebol in South .RUHDDQG$PHULFDQLQWHUYHQWLRQLVPWKH&KLQHVHDQG(QJOLVKZRUGVSURmote a syntactical relationship that spurs the viewer to question who is NHHSLQJZRUOGSHDFHDQGIRUwhat SXUSRVH,QWKLVFRQWH[WWKHLOOHJLEOHDQG LQGHFLSKHUDEOH &KLQHVH ZRUG KLJKOLJKWV WKH HPSWLQHVV EHKLQG ZKLFK WKH $PHULFDQ IRUFH PDQDJHV WZR RI .RUHD¶V IUDJLOH UHODWLRQVKLSV LQ RUGHU WR maintain world peace or engine economic development. %HFDXVHRI6HNXOD¶VGHVNLOOHGVQDSVKRWOLNHUHSUHVHQWDWLRQDQGLQGLIIHUHQWVWDQFHWRKLVSKRWRJUDSKLFVXEMHFWVWKH.RUHDQZRUGVWKDWDSSHDUVHHP DFFLGHQWDORUEDVHGRQFKDQFHEDVHG5HJDUGOHVVRI6HNXOD¶VLQWHQWLRQDOLW\WRSKRWRJUDSKWKH.RUHDQZRUGVWKHWH[WLQYDULDEO\UHIHUHQFHV.RUHDQ society.9LDLQWHUDFWLRQZLWKWKHFKDSWHU¶VGHVFULSWLRQDQGSKRWRJUDSKHG VLJQVHDFKRIWKHZRUGVIXQFWLRQVDVDQHPSW\VLJQL¿HUWKDWXQYHLOVDVSHFL¿FSRZHUV\VWHPLQ.RUHD7KDWLVWKH.RUHDQVHQWHQFHVVXUURXQGLQJWKH turtle-ship are connected to the nationalistic, patriotic, and ethnocentric propaganda of chaebol LQ.RUHDWKHZRUGgo-choo functions as a synecdoche 

$OODQ6HNXODFish Story%UXFH&XPLQJVFODLPHGWKDW$PHULFDQVKDYHDOZD\V VRXJKW XQLPSHGHG DFFHVV WR WKH (DVW$VLDQ UHJLRQ DQG KDYH VRXJKW QDWLYH JRYHUQPHQWV VWURQJ HQRXJK WR PDLQWDLQ LQGHSHQGHQFH ³EXW QRW VWURQJ HQRXJK WR WKURZRII:HVWHUQFDSLWDO´5HJDUGLQJ6RXWK.RUHDKHIRFXVHGRQWKH86IRUFHV LQ6RXWK.RUHDDQGWKH1DWLRQDO6HFXULW\/DZZKLFKZHUHHVWDEOLVKHGLQWR DVVLVW$PHULFDQVLQWKH&ROG:DU+HDUJXHGWKDW6RXWK.RUHDKDVVSHQWDJUHDWGHDO RI PRQH\ ZKLFK LV H[WUDFWHG IURP WKH .RUHDQ FLWL]HQV LQ RUGHU WR NHHS PDVVLYH DUPLHVLQFOXGLQJ86IRUFHVLQ6RXWK.RUHD$QGJLYHQVXFKLPPHQVHH[SHQVHV RXWVLGHIXQGLQJPRVWO\LQWKHIRUPRI$PHULFDQDLGKDVEHHQQHFHVVDU\&RQVHTXHQWO\6RXWK.RUHDLVVLPXOWDQHRXVO\VWURQJDQGZHDNEHFDXVHLWFDQQRWUHDOL]HLWV QDWLRQDODXWRQRP\FRPSOHWHO\$OVRKHVWDWHG³7KH1DWLRQDO6HFXULW\/DZUHPDLQV RQWKHERRNVDQGLVXVHGWRSXQLVKSHDFHIXOGLVVHQW>«@WKHODZVWLOOHPEUDFHVHYHU\ DVSHFW RI SROLWLFDO VRFLDO DQG DUWLVWLF OLIH´ %UXFH &XPLQJV ³7KH .RUHDQ &ULVLV DQGWKH(QGRIµ/DWH¶'HYHORSPHQW´New Left Review, 6HSWHPEHU±2FWREHU  ±



6HNXODXVHVWKHWHUPunavoidable social referentiality when he explains his idea DERXWWKHSKRWRJUDSKLFPHGLXPDQGKLVUHDOLVWSRVLWLRQ$OODQ6HNXODPhotography against the Grain: Essays and Photoworks, 1973–1983, ix.

50

'LJJLQJ+LVWRULFDO1DUUDWLYHVIURPWKH*OREDO6XUIDFH

IRUD.RUHDQSDWULDUFKDOV\VWHPDQGWKH&KLQHVHZRUGIRUPeace Keeping UHIHUHQFHV$PHULFD¶VLQWHUYHQWLRQLVPLQ.RUHD,QGHHGDOORIWKHVHSRZHU systems—chaebol SDWULDUFK\ DQG$PHULFDQ LQWHUYHQWLRQLVP LQ .RUHD² KDYHEHHQEODPHGIRUWKHSUHVHQWVRFLRSROLWLFDOLVVXHVLQ.RUHDQVRFLHW\ ,Q DGGLWLRQ WKH LOOHJLELOLW\ DQG LQGHFLSKHUDELOLW\ RI WKRVH ZRUGV SRLQW WR WKHREVFXUHGH[HUFLVHVWKDWWKHYDULRXVSRZHUV\VWHPVHQIRUFH$FFRUGLQJ WR -RKQ7RPOLQVRQ GHVSLWH DQ H[FOXVLYH IRFXV RQ WHUULWRULDO FRPSUHVVLRQ LQUHJDUGVWRJOREDOL]DWLRQWKHPDMRULW\RIKXPDQDFWLYLW\UHPDLQVWLHGWR FRQFUHWHJHRJUDSKLFDOORFDWLRQVWKXVJOREDOL]DWLRQGHDOVZLWKWKHZD\VLQ which distant forces impact local endeavors.$VVXFKWKHYLVLEOH.RUHDQ ZRUGVV\PEROL]HGXDOLVWLFIDFHVRIWKHREVFXUHGSRZHUV\VWHPV²FRQFXUUHQWO\HQVXULQJ.RUHD¶VUDSLGHFRQRPLFJURZWKDQGLPSDLULQJLWVVRFLRHFRQRPLFHFRV\VWHPV$QGWKHFRUUHVSRQGLQJGHVFULSWLRQVHQJDJHWKHYLHZHU¶V UHDVRQLQJVRKHRUVKHFDQPDNHVHQVHRIKRZVXFKFRPSOH[SRZHUUHODWLRQV KDYHRSHUDWHGZLWKWKHWHQVLRQEHWZHHQWKHORFDODQGWKHJOREDO $OWKRXJK,GRQRWLQFOXGHWKHSDUWRIHVVD\VLQWKLVSDSHU6HNXOD¶VWZR essays in Fish StoryDUHDOODERXWvisibility, the way that we dismantle the FKDQJHVRISRZHUUHODWLRQVDQGWKRVHWZRHVVD\VWUDLQWKHYLHZHUWRREWDLQ such a critical visibility ,Q WKLV VHQVH D NHHQ ORRN HQDEOHV WKH YLHZHU WR WDNHRQDVWUXFWXUDODSSURDFK²activation (caption), reasoning (description), and historicization (essay)—to the sea through Fish Story$W¿UVWJODQFH WKHSKRWRERRNPD\HOLFLWIUXVWUDWLRQLQWKHYLHZHUQRWRQO\EHFDXVHRIWKH HVRWHULFWH[WVQDSVKRWOLNHSKRWRJUDSKVEXWDOVREHFDXVHRIWKHVWUXFWXUDO FRPSOH[LW\RI WKH ERRN IRUP +RZHYHU WKH IDFWLV 6HNXOD FDOFXODWHVWKH ordering of images and text carefully through the three types of text in Fish Story LQRUGHUWRSUHVHQWWKHFRPSOH[UHDOLWLHVRIJOREDOLQÀXHQFHVRQWKH sea. In conclusion, the visual mechanisms entangled with the multiple power FKDLQVWKDW,IRFXVRQDOLJQZLWK)RXFDXOW¶VFRQFHSWXDOG\DGRISRZHUDQG NQRZOHGJH$FFRUGLQJ WR )RXFDXOW LQVRIDU DV DQ\WKLQJ FDQ EH SURGXFHG RUUHSURGXFHGE\RSHUDWLRQVRISRZHUDOOPRGHVRIWKRXJKWFULWLTXHDQG DFWLRQEHFRPHWKHHIIHFWVRISRZHU,QRWKHUZRUGVDQLQWULFDWHFRQWUROOLQJ mechanism that produces our norms consists of our interests, shapes our EHKDYLRUV DQG FDQ EH PDQXIDFWXUHG²HYHQ UDWLRQDOLW\7KLV PHFKDQLVP LV saturated with power.+HDOVRDUJXHGWKDWNQRZOHGJHDQGSRZHUDUHGHHSO\FRQQHFWHGDQGNQRZOHGJHFRQWLQXRXVO\FUHDWHVVKDSHVDQGIRUPVDUHOD

-RKQ7RPOLQVRQGlobalization and Culture &DPEULGJH3ROLW\3UHVV 



1HYH*RUGRQ³2Q9LVLELOLW\DQG3RZHU$Q$UHQGWLDQ&RUUHFWLYHRI)RXFDXOW´ +XPDQ6WXGLHVYRO1R  

6XQKHH-DQJ



WLRQVKLSDPRQJPXOWLSOHIRUFHVEXWLWLVDOVRDPHDQVWKDWPDQLIHVWVSRZHU FDSDEOHRIH[FOXVLRQDQGUHSUHVVLRQ Moreover, for Foucault, individuals are the vehicles of power, not the points of application.20+RZHYHU6HNXOD¶V text in Fish StoryIXQFWLRQVWRDVNWKHYLHZHUWRREWDLQDQDXWRQRPRXVVXEMHFWLYLW\UDWKHUWKDQEHLQJVXEPHUJHGDVDYHKLFOHRISRZHU$V,KDYHGLVFXVVHGWKHYLHZHU¶VSURFHVVRILGHQWLI\LQJWKHFDSWLRQVSDUDOOHOVWKHSURFHVV RIUHVFXLQJWKHQHJOHFWHGNQRZOHGJHDERXWWKHIXQFWLRQRIORFDOVLQJOREDOL]DWLRQ$OVR ZKHQ WKH YLHZHU HQFRXQWHUV WKH LOOHJLEOH RU LQGHFLSKHUDEOH VLJQL¿HUVDQG¿OOVWKRVHHPSW\SDUWVZLWKWKHGHVFULSWLRQVDERXWDORFDOFLW\ 8OVDQ6RXWK.RUHDKHRUVKHREWDLQVNQRZOHGJHDERXWZKDWWKHREVFXUHG HQWLWLHVWKDWRSHUDWHJOREDOLVWSRZHUDUH².RUHDQchaebol, patriarchy, and $PHULFD¶VLQWHUYHQWLRQLVP $OWKRXJK6HNXODKDVGHPRQVWUDWHGKLVLQWHUHVWVLQ)RXFDXOW¶VFRQFHSWV RISRZHUDQGNQRZOHGJHVLQFHKLVHDUO\FDUHHUIRUH[DPSOHLQKLVHVVD\ The Body and the Archive   he does not mention them in Fish Story. ,QVWHDGKHGLVFXVVHV)RXFDXOW¶VFRQFHSWRIKHWHURWRSLDLQWKHVHFRQGSDUW RI WKH VHFRQG HVVD\ ³3KDQWRP 0XWLQ\´ 2QH RI WKH UHDVRQV WKDW 6HNXOD UHIHUHQFHV)RXFDXOW¶s Of Other Spaces  VWHPVIURPWKHIDFWWKDWKLV writing focuses directly on a ship at the very end of the last sentence: “The VKLSLVKHWHURWRSLDSDUH[FHOOHQFH,QFLYLOL]DWLRQZLWKRXWERDWVGUHDPVGU\ XS HVSLRQDJH WDNHV WKH SODFH RI DGYHQWXUH DQG WKH SROLFH WDNH WKH SODFH of pirates.”22)RU6HNXOD¶VLQWHUSUHWDWLRQRI)RXFDXOWWKHWHUPheterotopia means relations between sites as a revolutionary network,23 DQG 6HNXOD¶V text in Fish StoryDVVLVWVWKHYLHZHUWRWDNHDERDWWRVHHNIRUVXFKKHWHURWRSLDDQGUHVLVWJOREDOLVWSRZHU



0DUN3RVWHU³)RXFDXOWDQG+LVWRU\´

20

Michel Foucault, Power/Knowledge



$OODQ6HNXOD³7KH%RG\DQGWKH$UFKLYH´OctoberYRO :LQWHU ±

22

Michel Foucault, “Of Other Spaces,” DiacriticsYRO1RWUDQV-D\0LVNRZLHF 6SULQJ :KHQ6HNXODWUDQVIHUVWKHTXRWDWLRQWRFish Story, he excludes the sentence, “The ship is heterotopia par excellence.” $OODQ6HNXODFish Story

23

The Artist Explorer: FormLaboratory— A Model for Geographically Dispersed Artist Exploration Les Joynes

³:HPXVWQRWFHDVHIURPH[SORUDWLRQ$QGWKHHQGRIDOORXUH[SORULQJZLOO EHWRDUULYHZKHUHZHEHJDQDQGWRNQRZWKHSODFHIRUWKH¿UVWWLPH´ T.S. Eliot, 1942.

Figure 4–1: Video still of Les Joynes in Shapeshifter 2014. HD video of performance at Mongolian Siberian border region.

/HV-R\QHV

53

,QDZRUOGLQFUHDVLQJO\KRPRJHQL]HGDQGÀDWWHQHGWKURXJKWUDYHODQGPHdia interconnectivity, geographically dispersed art exploration now generDWHVDQHPHUJHQWFRQFHSWXDOIURQWLHU,QWKLVFKDSWHU,LQWURGXFH)RUP/DEoratory, my ongoing studio research and exploration series through which I experiment with new forms of dialogue, unfamiliar sites, cultures, materials and processes. 7KHRXWFRPHVRI)RUP/DERUDWRU\¶VH[SHULPHQWVDQGUHVHDUFKWDNHYDUious forms including video, performance, museum installation and experiPHQWVLQ6mR3DXOR  DQG0RQJROLD  7KLVFKDSWHUVHUYHV DVDJXLGHWRWKHLQWHUGLVFLSOLQDU\ZRUN,KDYHHPEDUNHGRQRYHUWKH\HDUV and illustrates some of my insights from the perspective of artist and explorer. 7KLVFKDSWHULQWURGXFHV)RUP/DERUDWRU\WKURXJKLWVFRQFHSWXDOGHYHORSPHQWDVDPRELOHH[WHQVLRQRIP\VWXGLRDQGJLYHVH[DPSOHVRIUHFHQW LWHUDWLRQV LQ %UD]LO DQG 0RQJROLD $V DQ RQJRLQJ DUWV UHVHDUFK SURMHFW )RUP/DERUDWRU\ EXLOGV XSRQ P\ GRFWRUDO UHVHDUFK DW /HHGV 0HWURSROLWDQ8QLYHUVLW\8. 3K' SRVWGRFWRUDOUHVHDUFK  DWWKH 6FKRRORI&RPPXQLFDWLRQDQG$UWV8QLYHUVLW\RI6mR3DXOR%UD]LODQG DVD9LVLWLQJ)HOORZ  DWWKH5HVHDUFK&HQWUHIRU7UDQVQDWLRQDO$UW ,GHQWLW\DQG1DWLRQ8QLYHUVLW\RIWKH$UWV/RQGRQ Exploring the unfamiliar. Why explore? 76 (OOLRW ZULWHV ³([SORUDWLRQ ZLOO EH WR DUULYH ZKHUH ZH EHJDQ DQG WR NQRZWKHSODFHIRUWKH¿UVWWLPH´([SORUDWLRQFUHDWHVDQRSSRUWXQLW\IRU the artist to encounter the unfamiliar, to learn, and evolve. Through a geographically-dispersed artist practice, I challenge myself in each new location through the adoption of new processes, materials, and XQIDPLOLDU WUDGLWLRQV ([SORUDWLRQ DQG H[SHULPHQWDWLRQ ZLWKLQ XQIDPLOLDU FRQWH[WV IRUFHV PH WR PDNH P\ SUDFWLFH UHDFWLYH FUHDWLQJ QHZ FRPELQDWLRQVDQGDSSURDFKHVWRDUWPDNLQJ $V D 6RXWKHUQ &DOLIRUQLD QDWLYH , EHJDQ LQ WKH V FROOHFWLQJ DQG SKRWRJUDSKLQJIRXQGREMHFWVRIIEHDFKHVIRUHVWVDEDQGRQHGFRQVWUXFWLRQ VLWHVDQGÀHDPDUNHWV7RPHWKH\UHSUHVHQWHG³OLYLQJLQVWDOODWLRQV´XQLQWHQWLRQDO DVVHPEODJHV DQG DUUDQJHPHQWV RI REMHFWV LQ QHLJKERUKRRGV private gardens, two-car garages and constructions sites. With my camera, I captured slices of the small-town topographies that mirrored the community. :LWKDVWLOOFDPHUD,GLVFRYHUHGWKDW,FRXOGIUHH]HPHPRU\LPPRUWDOL]LQJ 

(OLRW76  Little Gidding/RQGRQ)DEHUDQG)DEHU

54

7KH$UWLVW([SORUHU)RUP/DERUDWRU\

REMHFWVIRXQGDVVHPEODJHVLPSURPSWXDQGLQWKHPRPHQW2 Impromptu asVHPEODJHVSRVVHVVDVHQVHRIhistoricity3 DQDOPRVWWDQJLEOHPRPHQWRIEHLQJSODFHGE\KXPDQKDQGVLQDSDUWLFXODUZD\ZLWKLQD sense of ordering. These piles of stuff did not allude to Figure 4–2: FormLabDUWQRUGLGWKHLUXQZLWWLQJVFXOSWRUVWKLQNWKH\ZRXOGEH oratory (lab structure) installed at the Brazilian REVHUYHGE\DQRWKHUDVDUW7KLVODFNRILPSOLHGDHVWKHWMuseum of Sculpture, LFSXUSRVHJLYHVWKHVHDVVHPEODJHVDQGREMHFWVDVHQVH :RRGSODVWLF¿OP RIWKHDXWKHQWLFVLPSO\LQWKHLUEHLQJ4 electric lights, found ob/LYLQJLQ/RQGRQLQWKHV,VWDUWHGmudlarking jects. Height 2.5 m, width FROOHFWLQJRQULYHUEHGVDWORZWLGH ,QWKHEURZQJUD\ 4 meters, length 5 meters. silt and mud I wandered, and discovered an array RIIRXQGREMHFWVLQFOXGLQJ ROG ERQHV ZRUQ EULFNV IUDJPHQWV RI th century 2

“…photographs give people an imaginary possession of a past that is unreal, they also KHOS SHRSOH WR WDNH SRVVHVsion of a space in which they are insecure.” Susan Sontag  On Photography, New H[KLELWLRQFDWDORJXH@ /D'UDJRQQH2FWREHU±3DULV*DOHULH1LQD'DXVVHW 



 )RU PH REVHUYHUV LQFOXGH WKH DUWLVWV SDUWLFLSDQWV DQG WKH VSHFWDWRUV 7KH /$% GLVUXSWVH[SHFWDWLRQVRIWKHSURFHVVHV ZKLFKHQJDJHWKHXQIDPLOLDU DQGGHVWDELOL]HVWKHQRWLRQRIWKHH[KLELWLRQEHLQJDSDVVLYHGLVSOD\RIZRUNVRIDUWVFXOSWXUH GUDZLQJVLQVWDOODWLRQVPRYLQJLPDJHSKRWRJUDSKV±WKHFROOHFWLRQVRIZKLFKPD\ FKDQJHDQGPXWDWHGXULQJWKHH[KLELWLRQ

/HV-R\QHV



7KHUDGLFDOQDWXUHRIVKDUHGDUWPDNLQJFDQOHDGWRXQH[SHFWHGGLVFRYHULHV WKDWDUHXQLTXHWRORFDOVSHFL¿FFRQWH[WVEULQJLQJDERXWQHZZD\VRIHQgaging with art, sites and performances. This has the potential to disrupt WKHVWDWLFYLVXDOHFRQRPLHVDQGQDUUDWLYHVRIWHQUHLQIRUFHGE\PXVHXPVDUW fairs and commercial galleries. 6KDUHGSURFHVVHVZLWKRWKHUVDQGXWLOL]LQJIRXQGREMHFWVWKDWKDYHEHHQ FROOHFWHG RYHU WLPH RIIHUV D VWUXFWXUH ZKHUH , FDQ H[SORUH WKH VSDFHV EHtween the Self and the Other.)RUP/DERUDWRU\EHFRPHVDOHQVLQWRFXOtural traditions through the creation of dynamic interdisciplinary structures ZKDW,UHIHUWRDVVKDUHGDUWPDNLQJ ,WDSSURSULDWHVIRXQGREMHFWVVRXQG music, oral tradition, performance, and emergent technologies and reinterSUHWVWKHPDQHZ6KDUHGSURFHVVHVZLWKORFDOLQKDELWDQWVRIDQXQIDPLOLDU culture creates an othering of self and a resulting parapraxis through the LQYRFDWLRQRIDVXEFRQVFLRXV0LFKHO)RXFDXOWZULWHVRIDQ³«XQYHLOLQJRI the non-conscious.” It is this “othering of the self”WKDWHYRNHVDIHFXQG unfamiliar territory in my practice. ,Q%UD]LO  DQG0RQJROLD  ,H[SORUHGWKHVHGLVUXSWLRQV WKURXJKLQWHUGLVFLSOLQDU\FROODERUDWLRQQRWRQO\ZRUNLQJZLWKRWKHUDUWLVWV EXWDOVRZRUNLQJZLWKLQGLYLGXDOVDQGJURXSVRXWVLGHRIWKHGLVFLSOLQHRI YLVXDODUWVZKLFKOHGPHWRGHYHORSSURMHFWVZLWKDVKDPDQDQGWUDGLWLRQDO 

5REHUW6PLWKVRQLQKLVHVVD\³&XOWXUDO&RQ¿QHPHQW´  ZULWHV³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¿QHPHQW´ 6PLWKVRQ  

2NZXL(QZH]RUZULWHVRIWKHUHFHLYHURIWKHDUWZRUNHQFRXQWHULQJ³DSKHQRPHnological space within which dimensions of temporal and historical, aesthetic and critical methodological and disciplinary models converge so as to produce new UHODWLRQVKLSV RI SUR[LPLW\ (QZH]RU 2 DQG %RXWHORXS 0>HW DO@   Intense Proximity: an Anthology of the Near and the Far3DULV$UWO\V&HQWUH1DWLRQDOGHV $UWV3ODVWLTXHV



)RXFDXOW0  The Order of Things: Archaeology of the Human Sciences. 1HZHWDO@DQGIntense Proximity: an Anthology of the Near and the Far3DULV$UWO\V&HQWUH1DWLRQDOGHV$UWV3ODVWLTXHV 33 )UDQFLV)UDVFLQDLQ³7REHD3LOJULP´Art Monthly2FWREHUZULWHVDERXW WKH DUWLVW¶V HPSKDVLV RQ WKH VHOI WKH XVH RI SULYDWH ODQJXDJHV DV D ZD\ WR QHJDWH WKHFRPPRGL¿FDWLRQRIWKHDUWPDUNHW±WRHPSKDVL]HD³VHFXODUL]HGLQQHUZRUOG´ FUHDWLQJ DQ DUWZRUN WKDW KDV VXEMHFWLYH XVHYDOXH VHSDUDWH IURP H[FKDQJH YDOXH S7KHQRWLRQRIPDNLQJZRUNVRIDUWLQIDUÀXQJSODFHVLVSHUKDSVRQWKHFXVSRI EHLQJDFRQFHSWXDODUW±LILWLVQRWDOUHDG\VXFK7KHQRWLRQRIWKHDUWLVWDVH[SORUHU FDQLQGHHGEHFRPHDWRNHQRIH[FKDQJHDVPXFKDVDOLIHVW\OHDUWLVWFDQEHFRPH VXFKDWRNHQ

%ULRQ*\VLQDQG:LOOLDP%XUURXJKVVSHDNRIVKDUHGSURFHVVLQYRNLQJ³DQXQVHHQ

34



7KH$UWLVW([SORUHU)RUP/DERUDWRU\

7KHUHLVWKHULVNKRZHYHUWKDWDUWPDNLQJLQUHPRWHORFDWLRQVZLOOVLPSO\ fall into the tropes of how we look at the unfamiliar (i.e. in museums of natural KLVWRU\DQGFDELQHWVRIFXULRVLW\ 0XVHXPVSDUWLFXODUO\PXVHXPVRIQDWXUDO history, have often phrased (displayed) nature in a way that stages the moment RIZRQGHURIGLVFRYHU\ GLVFRYHULQJDSULGHRIOLRQVLQWKH$IULFDQVDYDQQDK IRUH[DPSOH 7KHXQNQRZQLVWKHUHE\SUHVHQWHGLQQRFXRXVO\EHKLQGSODWHJODVV ZLWKWD[LGHUPLHGOLRQV±REMHFWVWKDWVWXWWHUEHWZHHQUHDO GDQJHURXV DQGXQreal (safe). ([KLELWLRQVRIWHQSUHVHQWDUWZLWKLQFHUWDLQQRUPV±RIWHQLQZD\VZKLFKWKH DXGLHQFHFDQDFFHVVDQGH[SHULHQFHDVHQVHRIDWWUDFWLRQWRDZRUNRIDUWDVHQVH RIZRQGHUDQGDVHQVHRIVXUSULVHDQGWKHXQH[SHFWHG$VDQDUWLVW,DPXVLQJ exploration and disruptions of the familiar as a way of re-examining how I creDWHDUW,VWKHDUWLVW¶VGHVLUHIRUH[SORUDWLRQDUHVSRQVHWRDJOREDOL]LQJFXOWXUH" %\FHDVHOHVVO\FUHDWLQJQHZFRQQHFWLRQVJOREDOL]DWLRQÀDWWHQVDQGKRPRJHQL]HVWKHZRUOG+RPRJHQL]DWLRQUDLVHVWKHVWDNHVIRUWKHH[SORUHUWRHQFRXQWHU VRPHWKLQJQHZDQGQRYHO(YHU\ERG\QRZFDQEHDQH[SORUHUERRNLQJLQDQ LQVWDQWDSDFNDJHWRXUWR0RXQW(YHUHVWRUKDYLQJWKHFDSDELOLW\WRDFFHVVDQG YLVLWLQGLJHQRXVFXOWXUHVLQ6RXWK$PHULFDIRULQVWDQFH$VGLVFRYHUHUVRIQHZ signs, artists are increasingly travelers constructing new semiotic connections with new materials, processes, and discourses on art. $V&DURO%HFNHUZULWHV  ³$UWLVWVÀRFNWRWKHDPELJXLWLHVDQGPDUJLQDOLWLHVWKDWFDXVHRWKHUVWRÀHH´35$VVXFKWKHVHLQGLYLGXDOVDUHPRUHFRPIRUWDEOHZLWKZRUNLQJZLWKLQDFRQWH[WRIWKHXQIDPLOLDU,QDQHYHUJOREDOL]LQJ world, the act of exploration signals a desire to challenge conventional practice, discovering new forms of creative dialogue to reinterpret the old into the new. Conclusion +RZFDQDUWLVWVXWLOL]HH[SORUDWLRQFROOHFWLRQVDQGVKDUHGSHUIRUPDQFHDV part of an ongoing creative practice? What creates the impulse to travel to UHPRWHORFDWLRQVDQGWKHUHE\FURVVFROODERUDWLRQ":KDWNLQGRIQHZZRUNV does this generate? ,QWKLVFKDSWHU,KDYHLQWURGXFHGP\ZRUNDVDUWLVWH[SORUHUDQGLQWURFROODERUDWRU´³DWKLUGDQGVXSHULRUPLQG´The Third Mind, 1HZ