Juan Mart?n Prada on Mon, 20 Dec 2004 02:01:25 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Teaching Art within the interdisciplinary framework of Visual Studies |
TEACHING ART WITHIN THE INTERSDISCIPLINARY FRAMEWORK OF VISUAL STUDIES By Juan Mart?n Prada http://w3art.es/jluismartinprada/ Today the ontological dimension of an image appears to substitute the realities and intentions for which the image was used as a reference or medium. We might also refer to this process as the progressive independence of the world of representations, towards which meaning and knowledge migrate. To a certain extent the visual has become a thought and is no longer its mere result, medium or language. Its performance, however, can be nothing more than swept along, the maximum outcome of the rashness of illusory plenitude and convulsion, a result of the fascination it produces. All of this undoubtedly activates the social role of artistic creation, making it the key to artistic criticism. Image production, which is inherent to it, would probably be the only thing capable of weakening the fixation of rashness with a world built on images. A kind of reflective production where visual potential opposes the establishment of a relationship of mere instantaneousness; in other words, total coincidence with the world as a consequence of an absence of thinking about this "excess" of meaning on which it is constructed. Hence, priority consideration must be given to establishing a transformation of the principles on which teaching the artistic practices of visual production is regulated, and not so much from the perspective traditionally assigned to the values of the poetic production of art, but as the political and social potential claimed today as its own. Thus, if the compendium of visual operations that conforms the universe of beautification seems to have been constituted as power itself through an imaginary sophistication, as a self-producing system that in turn produces the social entity, it is precisely the task of artistic creation to place albeit momentary restraint on this certain unawareness of the complex fabrication moved and produced by it, from a pretended plenitude of meaning that creates its own logic as the logic of the world, by following the logic of desire from which it originates. Consequently, research into procedural techniques and skills, or phenomenological and operational aspects of visual production experience, maximum effort and priority guidance in many methodological directives in art teaching at universities today is losing the significance enjoyed years ago, the time spent in less essential efforts being reclaimed by the research pretensions of the contextual impurity of artistic performance and its political, semiotic and social impregnations. Contemplating the new teaching of art within the interdisciplinary framework of Visual Studies would especially result in the prior re-localisation of artistic practices by dissolving the difference between cultural and political procedures, strategies and aims. Reforming and modernising the teaching of visual production, a scarcely considered but certainly crucial goal within the constitution of a new framework of higher education in Europe, must aim to promote a centripetal movement against the centrifugal pressure that art has managed to project towards the outward appearance of the social sphere, where the likelihood of a committed action is neutralised. New curricular proposals, therefore, cannot but be contemplated by focussing on the positions most committed to analysing the relationships between power, the linguistic system and cultural practices; in other words, the way in which the controlled systematisation of language and knowledge takes place. This bond alone will facilitate a progressive end to the consideration of art as mere entertainment, an additional or secondary, or even marginal, system of stimulating the logic of spectacle or unsatisfactory symbolic mediation of society's myth-like and Utopian projections. The action of "dismantling existing communication codes by recombining some of their elements in structures that can be used to generate new images of the world", proposed by Victor Burgin as the exclusive artistic activity of today would probably require the most urgent development. Yet, we should not confuse the activity called for here with the practice of unmasking the falsity present in social frameworks, which should certainly be inherent to political actions, but an activity that acts upon the systems of which it is comprised. In the event of a need for any unmasking, it is not the unmasking of a concrete truth after a false concealment, but of the ways in which the latter has been administered and produced. Both criticism of the image systems corresponding to power and meaning and the self-criticism of works of art as a fundamental aspect of a specific tradition, subjected to a concrete set of expectations should be considered as key factors for this pedagogical re-orientation. Doubtless, the weight of new image technologies must be given significant consideration when planning new teaching proposals within the field of visual production practices. Indeed, the new curricular proposals for teaching the visual arts contemplate as an initial premise the acceptance of the fact that artistic practice is the best means to integrating technology into social practice. This would avoid it being exclusively restricted to utilitarianism or consumerism, thereby enabling the confirmation of the true social dimension of a technology or medium, by promoting specific forms of technical and social interaction within it. In any event, we must not forget that this entire set of proposals should be based on the demand for ever increasing efforts to integrate different qualifications and university curricular syllabuses (those that are in any way linked to one or other of the visual production practices), in accordance with a new social context in which there are no longer any impregnable disciplinary distinctions. Surely, the process of European convergence in university matters with the project for the creation of the European Space for Further Education begun by the Declaration of the Sorbonne in 1998 is an ideal and perhaps unrepeatable moment for putting some of these reforms into practice. # 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: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net