29 11 07 A Very Short Critique of Relational Aesthetics
Radical Culture Research Collective (RCRC)
Nicolas Bourriaud’s Relational Aesthetics (Les presses du réel,
1998; English translation 2002) undeniably has been an effective generator of debate. In the wake of critical responses by Claire
Bishop (in October in 2004 and Artforum in 2006) Grant Kester (in
Conversation Pieces, 2004, and in Artforum in 2006), Stewart
Martin (in Third Text in 2007) and Julian Stallabrass (in Art
Incorporated, 2004), the strengths and limits of Bourriaud’s book will be
no secret. Our remarks at this point
will not be new, but we think it may still be helpful to formulate some
critical propositions with a sharper political orientation.
Bourriaud champions art that understands itself as an experimental
production of new social bonds – as “the invention of models of sociability”
and “conviviality.” (“Rirkrit Tiravanija organizes a dinner in a collector’s
home, and leaves him all the ingredients required to make a Thai soup. Philippe Parreno invites a few people to
pursue their favorite hobbies on May Day, on a factory assembly line.”[pp. 7-8]) His case for what he calls the “art of the
1990s” is a great improvement over discourses fixated on more traditional,
object-based artworks. There of course
are risks involved in gathering diverse practices into this new category of
“relational art.” Some differences in
political outlook and position – those between a Philippe Parreno and a Vanessa
Beecroft, for example – are no doubt lost in the reduction. Nor is it self-evident that these practices
and Bourriaud’s characterization of them always correspond as seamlessly as is
usually assumed. That said, Bourriaud has
been an effective advocate for the contemporary tendency to emphasize process,
performativity, openness, social contexts, transitivity and the production of
dialogue over the closure of traditional modernist objecthood, visuality and
hyper-individualism. The fiercest
enemies of relational art, after all, are conservative critics of the “back to
beauty and painting” kind. Bourriaud’s
preemptive defense of Tiravanija, et al. has to be understood in large
part as a blast against Dave Hickey’s influential Invisible Dragon. Forced to choose between Bourriaud and the
new Dave Hickeys, we’ll gladly take the former.
If in the end we can’t take him either, it will be for different
reasons. Bourriaud claims that the new
relational models are principled responses to real social misery and
alienation. But he acknowledges that the
artists he writes about are not concerned with changing the system of social
relations – capitalism, in our language.
Relational artists tend to accept what Bourriaud calls “the existing
real” and are happy to play with “the social bond” within the constraining
frame of the given. Bourriaud tries to
put the best face on this kind of practice, characterizing it as “learning
to inhabit the world in a better way.” (p. 13) But in spite of his approving allusions to
Marx, there is no mistaking that this is a form of artistic interpretation of
the world that does not aim to overcome the system of organized exploitation
and domination. At most, relational
art attempts to model the bandaging of social damage and to “patiently
re-stitch the social fabric”: “Through
little services rendered, the artists fill in the cracks in the social bond.”
(p.36)
It would be one thing if relational art claimed to be no more than a
production of modest alleviative or compensatory gestures. As such, it would reflect the “end of
history” common sense dominant in the 1990s and would exemplify neo-liberal
strategies for outsourcing managerial innovation and “human resources” research
in conditions of post-Fordist production, as well as processes of privatization
with their accompanying rhetoric promoting “community,” voluntarism and the
“third sector.” But Bourriaud goes much
further, positioning relational art as the heir to the twentieth century avant-gardes: “Whatever the fundamentalists clinging to
yesterday’s good taste may say and think, present-day art is roundly
taking on and taking up the legacy of the twentieth-century avant-gardes, while
at the same time challenging their dogmatism and their teleological doctrines.”
(p. 45)
At stake, then, is the whole legacy – and so also the present and
future – of the avant-garde project.
This legacy being one of our passions, we can’t be indifferent to Bourriaud’s
claim. Leaving aside our suspicions that
many relational artists evidently couldn’t care less about the avant-gardes and
would not subscribe to Bourriaud’s use of this term, we’ll address the argument
for what it is: a claim about the
historical importance of relational art as the new cutting edge of politicized cultural
practice. The assumptions behind this
claim are clear enough. In Relational
Aesthetics, we are in the register of post-structuralist commonplaces: Foucault’s “technologies of the self,” Félix Guattari’s
delirious subjectivity machines, Michel de Certeau’s “Practice of Everyday
Life,” micro-bio-politics as an ethic of love and a technic of living – an
orientation rather easily deflected in practice into what Stuart Hall has
called “adaptation” as opposed to “resistance.”
The old avant-gardes, Bourriaud tells us, were oriented toward
conflict and social struggle; relieved of this dogmatic radical antagonism and
macro-focus on the global system, relational-alleviational art “is concerned
with negotiations, bonds, and co-existences.” (p. 45) The new relational avant-gardistes “are not
naïve or cynical enough ‘to go about things as if’ the radical and universalist
utopia were still on the agenda.” (p. 70)
We would put it differently.
Precisely formulated, relational aesthetics represents the liberalization
of the avant-garde project of radical transformation. In 1998, Bourriaud saw this as a virtue. Today, we see it as the main limitation of relational
art – and one that negates any claim it makes to the legacy of the avant-gardes. While we would defend relational art from its
conservative and reactionary critics, we would also insist that it not come to
stand in for the radical project it falls short of – and indeed refuses. Undoubtedly, the avant-garde tradition
continues to be transformed by its own process of self-critique. But it does not give up the radical,
macro-historical aim of a real world beyond capitalist relations. And it doesn’t settle for the experience of
gallery simulations.
It’s not that experiments in forms and models of sociability are not
needed today – they certainly are. But
to be politically relevant and effective, such experiments need to be grounded
in (or at least actively linked to) social movements and struggles. (And there is no social progress without
contestation and struggle: this for us
is a basic materialist truth that makes any blanket refusal of “conflict”
problematic.) As a gallery-based game,
relational practices are cut off by an institutional divide from those who
could use them. Who are the consumers of
relational art? The cultural élite of
the dominant classes, primarily, supplemented by the socially ambitious layers
of a de-classed general public – the “culture vultures” and would-be cultural élite
who form the crowds passing through the big biennials and exhibitions. (And
this is a very different demographic from those marginalized communities whose
members are sometimes enlisted for roles in relational works, such as those by
Superflex or Marjetica Potrc.) In
general, this audience does not tend to overlap with the people actively
attempting to generate pressure for deep social change. There are exceptions, we know. But this is how the disruptive utopian
energies that do exist in relational art are managed and kept within
tolerable limits: the social
separations, stratifications and (self-)selections of the art system enact a
liberalization – that is, a de-radicalization – of social desire.
Meanwhile, the radical processes of social experimentation are taking
place elsewhere: in the streets and
squats and social forums, in the communes, like Oaxaca, that flare up in
struggle, and in the ongoing work of creating counter-publics and
counter-institutions – in short, wherever people are trying to organize
themselves to find a way beyond the system of exploitative
relations. The politically salient site
where non-capitalist social relations are modeled today is not the gallery or
exhibition-based relational art project; it is the activist affinity group –
and the popular assemblies, forum and network processes, activist camps and
mass mobilizations that articulate it with larger social movements and emergent
struggles. We’re sure effective
collaborations between artists and social movements are possible. But we don’t think such collaborations need
the neutralizing institutional mediations implicit in Bourriaud’s relational
art. Although “institutions” in the
sense of organizational infrastructure might be necessary from a pragmatic
perspective, we question the assumption that art institutions are the most productive
or appropriate form of institutionality here.
We put no faith in the trickle down of sociability from the art
world; what we see too much of is the appropriation and displacement of social
desire from the streets into the aesthetic forms and affirmative circuits of
administered art.
Debates about relational
aesthetics were at times heated in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and provided
a focus for those oriented to “progressive” cultural practices, after YBA (“Young
British Artists,” known critically as “High Art Lite”)and before the current
proliferation of art fairs. Now that
these debates are winding down and their shape becomes clearer, we can ask what
was occluded and think about where these discussions could go. The main responses to Bourriaud’s book – and
Claire Bishop’s have certainly been the most visible – somehow managed to leave
the impression that this is as interesting and “political” as it gets in
mainstream art discourse. For us, what
these debates around Relational Aesthetics most of all reveal are the
potentials and limits of art discourse itself, as it is developed in magazines
and journals such as Artforum, October and Art Monthly. The more vital convergences of culture and
social transformation still form a glaring blind-spot of these and other
market-oriented “art world” publications.
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