Brian Holmes on Wed, 12 Dec 2007 12:06:53 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Lin Yilin |
This thread ended a little prematurely (probably because of lack of time for the participants), but some backchannel discussions convinced me that it isn't really over. So here it comes back again. Where the whole thing initially became quite interesting for me was with Lin Yilin's discussion of the situation or predicament of Chinese artists today, in a text I found in the "writing" section of his website. He said that "If Chinese contemporary art cannot develop a particular theory, then ultimately they would only be expensive craftwork for this period of history." So what does it take to develop a particular theory? Of "Chinese" art and society, or of any other? The question immediately raised in response by Dan Wang was: Yes, but who are the Chinese artists and theorists? In what farflung systems of circulation do they exist and signify? And it's a very good question, particularly when we are talking about a figure like Lin Yilin, living out the classic pattern of expatriation that has emerged for so many mainland artists. But then too, variations of that question could be raised for Dan, David or myself - because I believe we are all somehow at a distance from the contexts in which we live, having to do with our own or our parents' emigration, the circuits of communication and exchange in which we live and work, etc. Then there's yet another layer if you want to bring in the distinction between those who are considered "white" (that's my case) and those who are considered "something else" (you name it). In the Anglophone countries starting at least three decades ago, the questions of immigration and the diasporic existence, and of the social norms, cliches and prejudices that attach to such life trajectories, has given rise to lots of discussion about identities, about communities that are "authentic" or not, "exoticized" or "self-exoticized" or not, about the governmental, political and mercantile currency of certain identity labels, and maybe most critically, about who has what rights to speak about these things. So that's definitely another conversation you can have, a real one which always deserves to be brought up to date. However, and for whatever it's worth, I was trying to point in a different direction. The reason I said that if any significant theory of Chinese art and society emerges, it will be written in Chinese, does not have much to do with the great paradoxes of identity in the multicultural Euro-American world. I said it because Chinese is the language of subjectivity, education and communication for the vast percentage of those living on the mainland, and also the language of control and censorship. As with many situations across the world, where there is censorship, the question of what can be said in the national language becomes critically important (generally you can say almost anything in other languages, because then it's not public, it's not taken seriously, and the national government usually puts a great stake in maintaining the pretense that only the national language matters). But the issue is not just censorship either. As anywhere, if the theory is going to be argued out between people and inside their individual heads, and if the art that it concerns is going to be perceived, felt and re-expressed differently by people for whom it matters, then first both the art and the theory has to touch those people quite directly, and not necessarily or not only through a self-reflection on their identity. Rather I would say, in a more general formulation, that it has to intervene somehow in the ways in which people make their lives happen on a day-to-day and long-term basis, and in the relations they maintain to existential problems and potentials (which are also social problems and potentials). It has to help people question their perceptions, their imaginaries, their habits and the obedience to the laws that govern them. For these reasons, I would say that for theory of the kind that Lin calls for to have any effect on the way people negotiate the many complexities of life on the mainland, that theory is going to have to be written in the very language of those complexities, i.e. Chinese. But the point of saying this is not to exclude other possible discussions, intersections, networks and so on. The point is really to say that it is difficult to write significant theory and to make significant art, you have to go deep into daily life, popular cultures, generational and philosophical heritages, laws, everyday rhetorics of manipulation and deceit, class divides, regional and racial differences, etc. etc. My own diasporic existence has taught me to be aware of the limits of widely spoken languages, and of translation: because meaning is always made in a context, a sentence is always completed in the minds and emotions and bodies of those who hear it. And the social contexts in which meaning emerges and becomes useful are very very different between countries and even more, between regions and continents. So that's one thing. But the reason I spoke of "semi-secret languages" of theoretical discussion also needs elucidation. Because not only do I think you have to talk about society in the very language that articulates it, I also think that you have to develop languages within languages. When I look at the avalanche of art-business in China today - quite comparable for sheer volume of meaninglessness to what's happening in America and Europe, but also quite different in the way it's articulated - what I see is a real difficulty to find the time and the conviction and the extended discussions from which significant statements and postures and expressions can emerge. How do you get over that difficulty, especially when it's compounded by political pressures that make it very risky to take a particular stand on any problematic issue? The only way I know is to form relatively small and necessarily marginal groups, that is, to form contexts, where people start speaking about things so specific that the very language they use starts to become semi-secret, full of too much implicit meaning for outsiders to fully understand. This is the only way that I know to cut down the ambient "noise" and get to something original, believable and decisive, something that oneself and other people can act on. Of course this is a paradoxical and dynamic situation, because ultimately one wants to enlarge the circle, to enlarge it vastly, to create important images and ideas and to circulate them very widely. But I think we can all see that the wide circulation of repetitious, prefabricated ideas and images doesn't do much of anything except reinforce the primacy of the circulation media over what is circulated. And even without even knowing Chinese I could see that there is really a lot of that kind of circulation going on in China! As in France or Canada or Australia or the US, by the way. So I suppose if I were living in China, I would try to start this kind of marginal conversation. And if I were living diasporically (I am, as a matter of fact) I would start becoming very interested in the contexts where my expressions resonate, and I would try to engage many singular conversations, including some in the place where I originally came from. I would try to engage with multiple contexts, and then maybe to link them. In fact, a very interesting idea was proposed in the backchannel discussion that led me to write this post, it's the idea of a "speaking network" rather than a speech community. But I would say those two things coexist. There are national (and increasingly, continental and imperial) speech communities, or language blocs, where what is said and what surfaces out of the ambient din is really the normalizing speech of power. And then, fortunately, there are discreet, marginal and sometimes significant "speaking networks," where you still have half a chance to find something original and useful. Keeping those networks alive is worth the effort! best, Brian # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org