Steven Grainger: From Politics to Poetry

Page 1

From
Politics
to
Poetry:
 An
analysis
of
explicitly
and
implicitly
political
artworks.

Steven
Grainger

1


Synopsis;
 
 
 
 This
essay
explores
the
ways
in
which
political
art,
both
oblique
and
explicit,
can
 offer
new
ways
of
thinking
about
our
changing
accepted
social
or
political
 structures.
It
has
been
written
in
response
to
the
global
financial
crisis
and
 subsequent
protests
around
the
world
in
an
attempt
to
define
the
strengths
and
 weaknesses
of
political
art
and
what
this
means
for
creative
practitioners
in
 2011.

2


Contents
 
 List
of
Illustrations

4

Introduction

5

7

15

Chapter
1

Artworks
that
engage
with
politics
obliquely:

 ‘Sometimes
Doing
Something
Leads
to
Nothing’
by
Francis
Alys


 ‘Acid
Action
Painting’
by
Gustav
Metzger

Chapter
2

Artworks
that
bridge
the
gap
between
explicit
and
implicit
political
engagement:

 ‘Infiltration
homogen
für
Konzertflü’
by
Joseph
Beuys

 ‘To
Cease
to
Believe
in
Others
is
an
Impermissible
Luxury’
by

Ian
Hamilton
Findlay

 ‘Sunflower
Seeds’
by
Ai
Weiwei

Chapter
3

24

Artworks
that
act
in
a
directly
political
way:

 ‘Die
Fahne
hoch!’
by
Hans
Haacke
 ‘Untitled’
from
‘Guerrilla
Girls
Talk
Back:
The
First
Five
Years,’
by
The
Guerrilla
Girls

Conclusion

Bibliography

33

30

3


List
of
Illustrations

1.
Francis
Alys’
‘Sometimes
Doing
Something
Leads
to
Nothing’
Mexico
City
1997
Tate
 Modern,
Online
Exhibition
Guide;
(10/10/11)
 www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/francisalys/roomguide3.shtm
 2.
Gustav
Metzger,
‘Acid
Action
Painting’,
Southbank
Centre
London
1961,
Yoko
Ono
Blog
 archive;
(24/10/11)

 www.imaginepeace.com/archives/6415
 3.
‘London
Occupy
Protest’
Personal
photograph
by
Steven
Grainger
(2/11/11)
 4.
Joseph
Beuys,
‘Infiltration
homogen
für
Konzertflügel‘,1966
Pompidou
Centre
Website
 (2/10/11)

 www.centrepompidou.fr/education/ressources/ENS‐Object‐EN/popup11.html
 5.
Ian
Hamilton
Finlay,
Lithograph
on
paper,
‘To
Cease
to
Believe
In
Others
is
an
 Impermissible
Luxury’
1983
Tate
Online
Collection
Website;(1/11/11)
 www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ViewWork?cgroupid=999999961&workid=78487&searchid=9660
 6.
Ai
Weiwei
‘Sunflower
Seeds’
Installation
for
Turbine
Hall
at
Tate
Modern
2010
Art
News
 Website;
(8/11/1)

 www.allartnews.com/tate‐moderns‐sunflower‐seed‐exhibit‐by‐ai‐weiwei‐closed‐to‐ visitors‐as‐health‐risk/
 7.
Hans
Haacke
‘Die
Fahne
hoch!’
1991
Flash
Art
Online
Magazine;
(23/10/11)
 www.flashartonline.com/interno.php?pagina=articolo_det&id_art=493&det=ok&title=HANS ‐HAACKE
 8.
The
Guerrilla
Girls,
‘Untitled’
from
‘Guerrilla
Girls
Talk
Back:
The
First
Five
Years,”
1985– 1990
Artist
website;(7/10/11)

 www.guerrillagirls.com/posters/getnaked.shtml

4


Introduction
 
 In
this
essay
I
will
examine
politically
and
socially
engaged
contemporary
art;
an
 investigation
triggered
by
the
current
global
recession
and
subsequent
protests.
 I
will
analyse
the
approaches
taken
by
a
range
of
artists
who
engage
with
 political
ideas
and
assess
the
impact
of
their
activities.
I
will
attempt
to
evaluate
 the
success
of
art
activism
and
propose
the
most
constructive
way
for
artists
to
 function
within
the
field
of
political
art.
 In
order
to
critically
engage
with
the
vast
and
indistinct
scope
of
politically
 engaged
art,
the
essay
is
split
into
three
chapters;
art
that
engages
with
politics
 obliquely,
art
that
engages
with
politics
directly
and
the
art
that
falls
between
 these
two
extremities.

I
refer
to
contemporary
and
historical
examples,
both
 British
and
international,
aiming
to
get
a
broad
assessment
of
the
topic.
The
 discussion
involves
seven
artworks
from
seven
different
artists:
Francis
Alys,
 Gustav
Metzger,
Joseph
Beuys,
Ian
Hamilton
Finlay,
Ai
Weiwei,
Hans
Haacke
and
 the
Guerrilla
Girls.
I
have
focused
on
individual
case
study
artworks
in
order
to
 provide
a
level
of
depth
on
each
work.
Rather
than
try
to
vaguely
overview
each
 artists
entire
practice,
this
approach
allows
the
potency
of
one
key
work
to
be
 assessed
on
its
own
merits.
The
discussion
of
these
examples
serves
to
illustrate
 the
central
paradigms
of
this
inquiry
and
to
offer
potential
roads
forward
for
 creative
practitioners
currently
engaged
with
social
and
political
subject
matter.

 Beyond
the
artworks
interpreted
and
used
as
sources,
I
have
gathered
various
 research
material,
mainly
from
text
based
sources;
literature
on
political
and
 social
art
practice,
direct
political
theory
as
well
as
articles
and
journals
citing
 the
latest
developments
and
opinions
on
the
subject.
 Although
I
am
primarily
concerned
with
the
circumstances
of
contemporary
 Britain,
globalisation
makes
it
impossible
to
separate
the
British
political
terrain
 from
other
major
powers
and
world
events.
To
see
and
discuss
the
UK
in
a
fair

5


global
context
my
discussion
will
make
reference
to
significant
events
such
the
 ‘Occupy’
protests
while
primarily
focusing
on
British
politics
and
society.
I
will
 analyse
Britain’s
position
in
relation
to
the
global,
commenting
particularly
on
 the
neoliberalisation
process
that
has
persisted
across
the
world
under
both
 right
and
left
wing
administrations.
The
definition
of
neoliberalism
that
I
employ
 is
taken
from
the
English
geographer
and
social
theorist
David
Harvey’s
A
Brief
 History
of
Neoliberalism
in
which
he
deems
that
humanity
is:

 ‘advanced
by
liberating
individual
entrepreneurial
freedoms
and
skills
within
an
 institutional
framework
characterised
by
strong
private
property
rights,
free
 markets,
and
free
trade.’1

In
the
model
neoliberal
state
the
government
must
guarantee
the
integrity
of
 money,
set
up
military,
defence,
police
and
legal
structures
to
support
the
proper
 functioning
of
the
markets.
In
addition
it
must
create
markets
where
they
do
not
 exist,
for
example
in
areas
such
as
land,
water,
education,
health
care,
social
 security,
or
environmental
pollution:
beyond
this
framework
the
state
must
not
 intervene.
I
also
broadly
take
the
English
philosopher
and
cultural
critic
Mark
 Fisher’s
critical
approach
to
capitalism
on
board
as
a
starting
point
for
discussing
 my
own
view.
 Throughout
the
essay
I
will
refer
to
‘artists’,
which
not
only
includes
visual
 artists,
musicians,
writers
and
actors,
but
also
refers
to
any
human
activity
 undertaken
through
a
creative
lens.
This
definition
comes
directly
from
Joseph
 Beuys’
and
his
‘Expanded
Theory
of
Art’.2
Beuys’
revolutionary
perception
of
art
 reframed
the
discussion
on
creative
practice
and
opened
up
the
possibility
of
 thinking
about
art
as
an
approach
rather
than
a
product.

 
 Chapter
One:
Oblique
political
artworks.

1
David
Harvey,
A
Brief
History
of
Neoliberalism
(New
York:
Oxford
Press
2005)
p2

 2
Heiner
Stachelhaus
Joseph
Beuys
(New
York:
Abbeville
Press
Publishers
1987)
p48

6


1.
Francis
Alys’
‘Sometimes
Doing
Something
Leads
to
Nothing’
Mexico
City
1997

2.
Gustav
Metzger,
‘Acid
Action
Painting’,
Southbank
Centre
London
1961

In
order
to
address
artistic
engagement
with
politics
in
its
most
oblique
way,
I
 have
chosen
two
artworks
to
use
as
examples;
‘When
Something
Leads
to
 Nothing’
(1997)
by
Francis
Alys
(b.
1959)
and
Gustav
Metzger’s
(b.
1926)
public

7


demonstration
of
Auto‐destructive
painting
on
the
South
Bank
in
London
(1961).
 Oblique
political
works
are
in
some
ways
the
most
problematic
as
to
define
them
 as
political
can
be
a
challenge,
or
at
least
a
subjective
predicament.
Often,
it
is
up
 to
the
viewer
to
define
the
political
relationship
and
although
this
can
be
a
 complex
opinion
to
form,
it
offers
the
viewer
a
real
depth
of
engagement
with
the
 work
that
can
lead
to
a
sustained
relationship
to
it
and
a
sense
of
ownership
over
 the
content
that
develops
between
the
work
and
the
viewer.
 Francis
Alys’
poetic
undertaking
in
his
performance,
‘Sometimes
Doing
 Something
Leads
to
Nothing’
in
Mexico
City,
1997,
(Fig.
1)
is
undoubtedly
 obliquely
political,
being
formally
ambiguous
but
executed
in
a
charged
context
 with
clear
political
underpinning.
He
does
not
attempt
to
force
the
audience
into
 his
way
of
thinking
or
opt
for
grand
gestures
to
make
his
point.
Instead
he
opens
 up
the
possibility
of
engagement
with
a
wide
audience
through
futile,
poetic
 action.
The
work,
performed
in
Mexico
City,
was
an
‘attempt
to
reflect
on
the
 economies
of
the
South’3
and
consider
the
‘disproportion
between
effort
and
 result
in
much
of
Latin
American
life.’4
If
however,
the
viewer
was
unaware
of
 the
specific
context
of
this
work,
they
could
still
appreciate
its
poetry
as
an
idea
 or
concept
and
by
overlaying
personal
contexts
or
histories,
develop
their
own
 relationship
with
Alys’
action.
 The
significance
of
poetry
in
politics
is
monumental.
We
may
rarely
see
 romanticism
from
the
backbenches
of
the
House
of
Parliament
but
as
the
Black
 Panther,
Emory
Douglas,
tells
us:

 Politics
is
based
on
action,
politics
starts
with
a
hungry
stomach,
with
 dilapidated
housing.
Politics
does
not
start
in
the
political
arena,
it
starts
right
 down
here
in
the
community,
where
the
suffering
is.
5

For
political
action
to
be
meaningful,
its
grassroots
beginnings
cannot
be
 forgotten.
Alys’
incisive
action
of
pushing
the
block
of
ice
around
for
more
than
 nine
hours
encapsulates
this
fundamental
idea
of
futile
action
that
may
lead
to
 























































 3
Mark
Godfrey,
Francis
Alys,
A
Story
of
Deception
(Belgium:
Die
Keure,
2010)
p19
 4
Mark
Godfrey,
Francis
Alys,
A
Story
of
Deception
(Belgium:
Die
Keure,
2010)
p19
 5
Will
Bradley
and
Charles
Esche,
Art
and
Social
Change‐
A
Critical
Reader
(London:
Tate,
Afterall
2007)
p172

8


nothing,
but
the
attempt
gives
enough
weight
for
the
work
to
be
genuinely
 powerful:
the
artist’s
gift
to
the
viewer
is
his
action.
For
the
work
to
really
 resonate
the
viewer
must
reciprocate
with
equal
persistence
and
sincerity;
as
 the
American
author
and
critic
Lewis
Hyde
pertinently
observes,
‘We
are
only
 alive
to
the
degree
that
we
let
ourselves
be
moved.’
6
The
Chinese
political
artist
 Ai
Weiwei
similarly
reflects
on
poetics:
 I
think
poetry
is
for
keeping
out
intellect
in
the
stage
before
rationality…
it
 brings
us
to
the
innocent
stage
in
which
imagination
and
language
can
be
most
 vulnerable
and
at
the
same
time
most
penetrating.7

The
vulnerable
and
penetrating
states
that
Ai
Weiwei
describes,
sum
up
the
 enormity
of
Alys’
work:
in
a
way,
he
is
left
unprotected
by
his
action
yet
he
 carries
on
in
order
to
reveal
new
possibilities
for
himself
and
for
others.

 Although
the
abstract
language
of
this
work
is
dominant,
more
literal
readings
 begin
to
make
themselves
apparent.
The
correlation
between
Alys’
action

 (pushing
the
block
of
ice)
and
the
capitalist
workers’
toil
is
apparent.
There
is
 also
a
valid
argument
that
the
use
of
ice
as
a
material
hints
at
the
melting
polar
 ice
caps
in
relation
to
industrial
manufacturing.
As
the
work’s
nature
is
so
 implicit,
attempting
to
find
an
absolute
answer
as
to
its
meaning
is
almost
as
 futile
as
pushing
the
block
of
ice
itself.
Rather
than
a
particular
message
 delivering
the
potency
of
the
work,
its
intensity
is
derived
largely
from
its
 indeterminate
nature.


 From
the
opposite
angle,
Alys’
actions
could
equally
be
criticised
for
failing
to
 make
any
real
changes
in
the
world.
Mark
Fisher
summarises
the
emancipating
 theory
that,
‘As
long
as
we
believe
(in
our
hearts)
that
capitalism
is
bad,
we
are
 free
to
continue
to
participate
in
capitalist
exchange.’8
Similarly,
as
long
as
Alys
 demonstrates
his
opposition
to
capitalism
through
his
performance,
he
is
free
to
 display
his
work
in
a
gallery
or
museum
to
make
money
to
live
within
the
system
 he
is
criticising.

There
is
an
element
of
self‐redemption,
or
self‐deception
in
this

6
Lewis
Hyde,
The
Gift
(Edinburgh:
Canongate
Books
2007)p21
 7.
Ai
Weiwei
and
Hans
Ulrich
Obrist,
Ai
Weiwei
Speaks
(England:
Penguin
2011)
P51

 8
Mark
Fisher,
Capitalist
Realism‐
Is
There
No
Alternative?
(Wiltshire:
Zero
Books
2009)
p13

9


approach
that
shouldn’t
be
ignored
but
ultimately,
without
changing
the
ideology
 of
the
western
capitalist
system,
it
would
be
impossible
to
talk
about
this
system
 without
some
form
of
contradiction.

 Any
hostility
or
suspicion
toward
Alys
does
not
surprise
me,
as
cynicism
and
 expectations
of
ulterior
motives
resonate
intensely
in
contemporary
Western
 life.
This
attitude
seems
to
come
from
the
consistent
let
downs
from
 governments:
promises
of
jobs
and
growth,
better
public
services,
security
for
 pensions,
investments
and
so
on
which
never
seem
to
come
to
fruition.
David
 Harvey
suggests
that
cynicism
is
more
deep‐seated
than
this:

 [A]
conceptual
apparatus
has
to
be
advanced
that
appeals
to
our
intuitions
and
 instincts,
to
our
values
and
desires…
If
successful,
this
conceptual
apparatus
 becomes
so
embedded
in
common
sense
as
to
be
taken
for
granted
and
not
open
 to
question.9

The
awareness
that
the
way
we
interact
with
the
world
is
changing,
potentially
 deliberately
for
political
or
economic
reasons,
must
be
kept
in
the
forefront
of
 our
minds.
Regardless
of
Alys’
motives
or
intentions,
his
actions
are
precious.
 Lewis
Hyde
aptly
identifies
this
when
he
comments,
‘Some
knowledge
cannot
 survive
abstraction
and
to
preserve
this
knowledge
we
must
have
art.’10

 The
relative
autonomy
of
abstract,
poetic
artworks
makes
it
difficult
to
 categorise
them
in
order
to
discuss
their
characteristics.
However,
the
auto‐ destruction
of
Gustav
Metzger
has
various
conceptual
and
political
similarities
 with
‘When
Doing
Something
Leads
to
Nothing’
by
Francis
Alys.
Most
apparent
of
 these
resemblances
is
that
both
actions
start
with
an
object
that
through
the
 process
of
the
work,
is
destroyed.
Each
of
these
actions
take
place
in
public
 space,
which
places
an
extra
layer
of
responsibility
on
the
artist.
On
being
asked
 about
the
responsibility
of
the
artist,
the
Glaswegian
prisoner
Jimmy
Boyle,
who
 was
interviewed
by
Caroline
Tisdall
about
the
impact
of
Beuys’
‘I
Like
America
 and
America
Likes
Me’
work
responded:

9
David
Harvey,
A
Brief
History
of
Neoliberalism
(New
York:
Oxford
Press
2005)
p5
 10
Lewis
Hyde,
The
Gift
(Edinburgh:
Canongate
Books
2007)
p223

10


If
art
and
the
artist
wishes
to
take
the
statement
to
the
public
then
he
must
 clarify
what
he
is
saying,
otherwise
the
statement
will
make
the
public
feel
 stupid
because
he
cannot
understand.
This
will
cause
the
public
to
withdraw
and
 further
alienate
art
and
society.
11

This
statement,
juxtaposed
with
the
idea
from
Ai
Weiwei
that
the
innocence
of
 poetry
is
vulnerable
and
penetrating,
reinforces
the
idea
that
oblique,
poetic
art
 is
the
most
difficult
to
make,
and
that
to
make
it
in
the
public
sphere
and
still
be
 understood
is
more
difficult
still.

However,
Alys
and
Metzger
were
both
driven
 to
emancipate
themselves
from
the
power
of
the
object
and
to
give
the
gift,
as
 Ross
Birrell
describes
it,
‘that
must
sacrifice
itself
in
order
to
give.’12
 Gustav
Metzger’s
action
of
spraying
acid
onto
three
nylon
‘canvases’,
one
black,
 one
white
and
one
red,
in
the
open
air
at
the
Southbank
centre
in
196113

(Fig.
2)
 could
easily
been
regarded
as
a
ridiculous,
pointless
and
wasteful
action.
 However,
the
action
can
only
be
defined
as
such
when
it
is
viewed
through
the
 lens
of
market
capitalism.
The
reason
it
appears
ridiculous
is
that
it
destroys
 manufactured
objects,
seems
to
have
no
‘final
outcome’,
and
most
of
all
it
defies
 the
definition
and
limitations
of
an
artwork
as
an
object.
It
doesn’t
offer
a
cure
 for
market
capitalism,
but
temporarily
holds
off
what
Mark
Fisher
describes
as
 the
‘monstrous,
infinitely
plastic
entity
[of
capitalism]
capable
of
metabolizing
 and
absorbing
anything
with
which
it
comes
into
contact’.14

Metzger’s
action
is
a
 protest
that,
similar
to
Alys’,
destroys
itself
in
order
for
its
profound
voice
to
be
 heard.
The
act
of
destruction
takes
the
power
away
from
commodity
and
places
 it
back
in
the
hands
of
the
artist,
at
least
for
the
time‐span
of
the
action.
Auto
 destruction
may
not
offer
an
answer
to
our
problems
but
it
does
work
as
a
tool
 to
re‐imagine
possibilities
for
our
future.
 Protest
of
today
owes
a
debt
to
Metzger
and
various
artists
from
the
sixties
and
 seventies
who
used
their
creative
platform
to
further
political
or
economic
 























































 11
Jimmy
Boyle
quoted
in
Caroline
Tisdall,
Joseph
Beuys:
Coyote
(England:
Thames
and
Hudson
2008)

p6

 12
Ross
Birrell,
The
Gift
of
Terror,
Art
in
the
Age
of
Terror
(London:
Paul
Holberton
Press,
2005)
p100
 13
Ross
Birrell
website
‘Introduction
to
Gustav
Metzger’(1996).
Artist
Project
Website
 http://www.autogena.org/Breathing/Gustav/birrell.html
(3/12/11)

14
Mark
Fisher,
Capitalist
Realism‐
Is
There
No
Alternative?
(Wiltshire:
Zero
Books
2009)
P6

11


debate
and
discussion
rather
than
simply
to
further
their
own
individual
agenda.
 Then,
as
with
now
in
2011,
protest
and
change
saturated
the
political
landscape.
 Stuart
Hall
describes
the
context
of
the
May
’68
protests
in
Soundings
Journal:
 ‘1968’
unleashed
an
avalanche
of
protest,
dissident
and
disaffiliation:
student
 occupations,
participatory
democracy,
community
politics,
second‐wave
 feminism,
‘turn
on,
tune
in
and
drop
out’,
an
ambivalent
libertarianism;
but
also
 the
cult
of
‘Che’
Guevara,
Vietnam,
the
IRA,
industrial
unrest,
black
power,
the
 red
brigades…15

Not
only
does
this
description
sound
familiar,
it
is
an
almost
word‐for‐word
 account
of
world
political
protest
over
the
last
year.
The
wars
are
in
different
 countries
and
the
rebel
organisations
have
different
names
but
the
reactions
are
 the
same.
On
one
level,
protest
has
become
a
spectacle:
avant‐garde
leftist
 radicalism
has
become
aesthetic
harking
back
to
May
’68
(Fig.
3).
Mark
Fisher
 comments
on
the
dislocation
between
protest
and
progressive
action:
 Protests
have
formed
a
kind
of
carnivalesque
background
noise
to
capitalist
 realism,
and
the
anti‐capitalist
protests
share
rather
too
much
with
hyper‐ corporate
events
like
2005’s
Live
8,
with
their
exorbitant
demands
that
 politicians
legislate
away
poverty.
16

The
broader
point
that
is
being
made
is
that
protest
has
become
disempowered
 through
its
aestheticisation,
or
that
its
aestheticisation
is
due
to
its
 disempowerment.
Either
way,
the
rehashing
of
rainbow
flags
and
peace
signs
has
 no
positive
impact
on
a
present‐day
political
situation,
and
the
regurgitation
of
 the
visual
language
of
protest
from
the
past
actually
hampers
the
chance
for
 progress.
The
‘Occupy’
protesters’
version
of
protest
is
similar
to
the
difference
 between
a
genuine
Andy
Warhol
screen‐print
and
a
cheap
reproduction;
they
 may
look
similar
but
the
social
and
political
context
they
were
created
within,
 and
in
reaction
to,
endorses
them
and
determines
their
worth.
 The
appropriation
of
romanticised,
idealistic
language
has
not
been
confined
to
 leftist
‘wanna‐be’
radicals.
Even
David
Cameron
is
not
ashamed
to
borrow
 phrases
such
as
‘power
to
the
people’
in
order
to
undermine
the
structures
of

15
Stuart
Hall,
The
Neoliberal
Revolution
(The
Neoliberal
Revolution:
Soundings
Journal
2011)
p17

 16
Mark
Fisher,
Capitalist
Realism‐
Is
There
No
Alternative?
(Wiltshire:
Zero
Books
2009)
P14

12


local
democracy17
within
his
plan
for
the
‘Big
Society’
which
appears
to
be
little
 more
than
a
‘Big’
cover
for
spending
cuts.

3.
Occupy
London
Protest,
Taken
outside
St
Paul’s
Cathedral
on
(2/11/11)
Note
banner
titles:
‘Compost
Capitalism’
and
 ‘Grow
Our
Own
Future’

Regardless
of
the
rhetoric
that
surrounds
any
sort
of
political
conflict,
the
fact
 that
power
has
moved
from
the
hands
of
governments
to
the
largest
 corporations
and
most
wealthy
individuals
is
the
regrettable
truth
that
must
be
 acknowledged.
The
feelings
of
ambivalence
that
this
realisation
incites
are
 extremely
dangerous.
While
auto
destruction
defies
the
power
of
commodity
and
 emancipates
(at
least
temporarily)
the
destructor
from
the
tyranny
of
 ownership,
it
cannot
hold
back
the
tide
of
neoliberalism
that
has
been
washing
 over
the
world
population
–
its
youth
in
particular
–
for
so
long
it
is
hard
to
see
 how
and
when
it
began.
Lewis
Hyde
offers
some
respite
from
this
oppressive
 situation
by
suggesting
that
‘one
of
the
well
springs
of
the
creative
spirit
lies
with
 the
stupid…crazy…uneducated
and
idle’.18
Hopefully
we
have
the
collective
 wisdom
to
ensure
that
these
qualities
are
not
lost
completely
in
the
recalibration
 of
the
UK
economy
and
that
the
approach
of
artists
such
as
Francis
Alys
and
 























































 17
Stuart
Hall,
The
Neoliberal
Revolution
(The
Neoliberal
Revolution:
Soundings
Journal
2011)
p26
 18
Lewis
Hyde,
The
Gift
(Edinburgh:
Canongate
Books
2007)
p228

13


Gustav
Metzger
will
continue
to
be
valued
and
continue
to
inspire
new
artists
to
 revisit
these
ideas
in
relevant
and
stimulating
ways.

14


Chapter
Two:
Artworks
that
bridge
the
gap
between
oblique
and
direct
political
engagement.

4.
Joseph
Beuys,
‘Infiltration
homogen
für
Konzertflü’

(1966)

5.
Ian
Hamilton
Finlay,
‘To
Cease
To
Believe
in
Others
is
an
Impermissible
Luxury’
(1983)

6.
Ai
Weiwei,
‘Sunflower
Seeds’
(2010)

15


Between
the
extremities
of
‘oblique’
and
‘direct’
political
art,
there
is
a
 magnitude
of
work
that
exists
along
the
sliding
scale
connecting
these
opposing
 positions.
I
have
chosen
three
works
by
Joseph
Beuys,
Ian
Hamilton
Finlay
and
Ai
 Weiwei
to
use
as
examples
of
this
continuum
and
to
discuss
the
implications
that
 each
work
has
in
relation
to
the
political
context
it
was
made
within
and
in
 reaction
to.

 Joseph
Beuys
(b.
1921,
d.
1986)
had
very
particular
views
about
the
world,
the
 environment
and
the
ways
in
which
individuals
should
activate
their
position
by
 being
involved
in
the
decisions
that
affect
them
and
the
people
around
them.
He
 delivered
his
political
views
via
lectures,
actions,
and
pedagogy
and
through
his
 silently
powerful
sculptural
works.
As
with
Metzger,
the
works
can
be
enjoyed
 formally
and
they
allude
to
their
makers’
purpose
through
his
use
of
materials
 and
imagery
but,
with
little
or
no
knowledge
of
their
intent,
the
viewer
can
piece
 together
the
possibilities
and
implications
that
the
object
might
offer.
 This
sculptural
work,
‘Infiltration
homogen
für
Konzertflügel’
(Infiltration
 Homogen
for
Grand
Piano),
1966,
(Fig.
4)
is
a
full
size
grand
piano,
which
has
 been
covered
in
felt,
one
of
Beuys’
signature
materials.
Along
with
animal
fat,
 Beuys
use
of
felt
was
consistent
through
his
career
and
related
directly
to
the
 infamous
story
that
Tartars
rescued
him
when
his
plane
crash‐landed.
They
 apparently
wrapped
him
in
felt
and
fat
to
keep
him
warm
and
return
him
to
 health.
The
story
is
very
likely
to
have
been
fabricated
by
Beuys’
to
add
to
the
 myth
of
his
artistic
persona.
It
also
explains
quite
plainly
the
reasons
for
his
use
 of
felt
and
fat‐
they
are
restoring,
revitalizing
materials
that
originally
‘healed’
 Beuys’
wounds.
These
materials
are
then
translated
into
actions
and
sculptures
 while
maintaining
their
‘healing’
qualities.
In
‘Infiltration
homogen
für
 Konzertflügel’,
the
symbolic
meaning
of
fat
and
felt
as
healing
materials
is
 extended
to
the
wounds
of
society.
For
me,
the
piano,
which
remains
silent
and
 unplayable,
represents
the
grand
narrative
of
poetics.
The
piano’s
felt
covering
 metaphorically
rejuvenates
the
idea
of
poetry
and
beauty
in
the
same
way
as
the
 felt
literally
kept
Beuys
alive
after
his
crash‐landing.
Although
Beuys’
lectured
his
 audience
in
other
works,
this
sculpture
does
not
preach,
rather,
it
offers
the

16


viewer
the
space
to
consider
what
the
work
means
to
them
and
the
time
to
 consider
the
idea
of
peaceful
renewal.
 The
idea
of
social
sculpture
which
Beuys
created
and
advocated
paved
the
way
 for
artists
to
free
themselves
from
the
objects
that
they
were
tied
to
in
order
to
 develop
new
ways
of
thinking
and
working.
Many
artists
had
already
begun
to
 think
along
the
same
lines
as
Beuys
but
he
pushed
these
ideas
as
far
as
he
could,
 talking
about
them
in
lectures
and
interviews,
as
well
as
through
his
artwork.
He
 embodied
Gilles
Deluze’s
proposal
that

‘art
is
not
a
notion
but
a
motion.
It’s
not
 important
what
art
is
but
what
it
does.’19
Beuys
has
maintained
his
stature
as
an
 artist
who
instigated
real
political
changes
in
the
way
that
art
is
produced
and
 understood,
and
has
consequently
influenced
generations
of
artists
after
him.
 Hans
Ulrich
Obrist
recently
used
Ai
Weiwei’s
blog
as
an
example
of
social
 sculpture,
and
as
his
work
‘Fairytale’
(2007)20
(when
he
flew
1001
Chinese
 people
to
‘Documenta’
in
Kassel,
Germany)
is
an
equally
valid
social
sculpture
 example,
which
is
particularly
pertinent
having
happened
in
Beuys’
home
 country.
Ai
Weiwei’s
understanding
of
being
an
artist
is
also
clearly
akin
to
 Beuys’
beliefs
that
being
an
artist
is
more
about
a
lifestyle
and
attitude
than
 producing
a
product.21
 One
aspect
of
Beuys’
life
that
is
not
hidden
but
which
is
not
regularly
considered
 in
relation
to
his
work
is
his
upbringing
in
Nazi
Germany.
In
the
late
1930s
Beuys
 defied
his
family
and
joined
Hitler
Youth,
a
decision
he
later
put
down
to
an
 adolescent
rowdiness
although,
tellingly,
he
did
leave
this
period
of
his
life
out
of
 his
biography.22
Being
on
the
side
of
the
Nazis
and
flying
for
the
Luftwaffe,
 regardless
of
his
political
beliefs
during
this
period,
must
have
had
a
vast
impact
 on
the
life
Beuys
would
go
on
to
live.
The
egalitarian
beliefs
that
Beuys
advocates
 through
his
sculptures,
lectures
and
actions
could
be
interpreted
in
two
ways:
 firstly,
that
Beuys’
experiences
under
the
Nazis
gave
him
the
humility
to
be
able
 























































 19
Lab
of
Insurrectionary
Imagination,
A
User’s
Guide
to
The
Impossible
(London:
Minor
Compositions
2010)
p3
 20
Ai
Weiwei
and
Hans
Ulrich
Obrist,
Ai
Weiwei
Speaks
(England:
Penguin
2011)
P98

 21
Ai
Weiwei
and
Hans
Ulrich
Obrist,
Ai
Weiwei
Speaks
(England:
Penguin
2011)

P87
 22

Heiner
Stachelhaus,
Joseph
Beuys,
(New
York:
Abbeville
Press
Publishers
1987)
p13

17


to
make
the
work
that
he
did,
or
secondly
that
by
siding
with
the
Nazis
he
saw,
 but
could
not
fully
absorb,
the
enormity
of
the
situation
from
the
perspective
of
 the
Holocaust
victims.
The
Jewish
critic
Theodore
Adorno
states
that
there
can
 be
no
poetry
after
Auschwitz23
but
Beuys,
through
interpretation
of
his
actions,
 seems
to
disagree.
In
order
to
advocate
his
views,
Beuys
was
either
colossally
 humble
or
enormously
self‐righteous.
There
is
potential
hypocrisy
between
his
 actions
and
opinions,
but
for
me
Beuys’
work
somehow
rises
above
its
 contradictions
and
has
a
value
that
cannot
be
overlooked.

 Similarly
to
Beuys,
Ian
Hamilton
Finlay
(b.
1925,
d.
2006)
had
very
distinct
 political
views
and
fought
in
the
Second
World
War,
albeit
on
the
opposite
side
 from
Beuys.
Finlay’s
powerful
and
explicit
political
beliefs
were
obvious
in
some
 works
and
subtle
in
others.
His
lithographic
print
‘To
Cease
to
Believe
in
Others
 is
an
Impermissible
Luxury’
(1983)
(Fig.
5)
falls
somewhere
in
the
mid‐ground
 between
explicit
and
implicit
political
intentions.
The
statement
could
easily
be
 interpreted
at
face
value
as
a
general
suggestion
of
how
to
treat
other
people;
 however;
if
we
take
the
context
of
the
work
into
account,
in
particular
that
it
was
 made
in
the
UK
in
1983,
a
larger
picture
begins
to
emerge.

 At
the
time
this
work
was
made,
Finlay
was
living
in
a
Britain
under
the
rule
of
 its
first
neoliberal
government.
The
Keynesian
policies
of
the
1970s
were
failing
 and
had
been
replaced
with
‘free
market’
capitalism
by
the
Prime
Minister,
 Margaret
Thatcher,
and
her
cabinet.
Being
the
humble,
placid
man
that
he
was,
I
 believe
in
this
lithograph,
Findlay
is
responding
directly
to
Thatcher
and
her
 infamous
statement
that,
‘[there
is]
no
such
thing
as
society,
only
individual
men
 and
women’.24
 Finlay’s
work
calmly,
proudly
and
succinctly
opposes
Thatcher’s
proclamation
 that
there
is
no
alternative
to
her
political
and
economic
doctrine.
He
is
telling
us
 his
political
opinion
but
does
so
without
forcing
it
on
the
viewer.

The
work
is
 























































 23
Theodor
W.
Adorno,
Prisms,
Samuel
and
Sherry
Weber
(Cambridge:
MIT
Press,
1981)
p34
 24
David
Harvey,
A
Brief
History
of
Neoliberalism
(New
York:
Oxford
Press
2005)
p23

18


specific
whilst
being
subtle
enough
to
allow
the
viewer
space
to
consider
their
 personal
standing
in
relation
to
Finlay’s
ideas.
Unfortunately,
not
everyone
who
 opposed
Thatcher
had
the
opportunity
to
speak
their
truth
without
becoming
 embroiled
in
a
polarised
stand
off.
The
Miners’
strike
of
1984‐1985
exposed
the
 class
antagonisms
that
the
new
political
direction
dictated.
The
defeat
of
the
 Miners’
was
a
key
moment
in
the
development
of
neoliberalism
in
the
UK,
both
 for
its
practical
effects
and
also
for
what
it
symbolised.
25
 The
distrust
and
antagonism
that
took
hold
as
a
result
of
the
changes
to
the
 political
economy
of
the
UK
in
the
1980s
was
cultivated
in
the
friction
between
 the
acceptance
that
the
changes
were
necessary
for
improved
living
conditions,
 and
the
scepticism
that
they
would
degenerate
society
into
a
disbanded,
self‐ serving
labour
apparatus
at
the
mercy
of
the
rich.
David
Harvey
concurs:
 We
can,
therefore,
interpret
neoliberalisation
either
as
a
utopian
project
to
 realise
a
theoretical
design
for
the
reorganisation
of
international
capitalism
or
 as
a
political
project
to
re‐establish
the
conditions
for
capital
accumulation
and
 to
restore
the
power
of
economic
elites.26

This
distrust
and
disempowerment
is
a
problem
that
has
recurred
under
the
 current
coalition
between
the
Conservative
and
Liberal
Democrat
parties.
The
 confusion
that
surrounds
the
budget
deficit,
spending
cuts
and
European
policy
 makes
it
extremely
difficult
for
even
a
knowledgeable
economist
to
propose
a
 route
forward.
Doreen
Massey
would
suggest
that
far
from
this
being
an
 accidental
side‐affect
of
an
unavoidable
situation,
‘the
obscuring
of
the
 ideological
issues
momentarily
laid
bare
by
the
financial
crisis
didn’t
just
happen
 –
it
was
a
political
result.’
27
 She
goes
on
to
ask,
‘How
did
a
crisis
of
banking
turn
into
a
crisis
of
spending?’28
 This
is
a
question
that
I
will
not
attempt
to
comment
on,
never
mind
try
to
 























































 25
Mark
Fisher,
Capitalist
Realism‐
Is
There
No
Alternative?
(Wiltshire:
Zero
Books
2009)
P7

 26
David
Harvey,
A
Brief
History
of
Neoliberalism
(New
York:
Oxford
Press
2005)
p19

27
Doreen
Massey,
Ideology
and
Economics
in
the
Present
Moment
(The
Neoliberal
Revolution:
Soundings
Journal
2011)
 P31

 28
Doreen
Massey,
Ideology
and
Economics
in
the
Present
Moment
(The
Neoliberal
Revolution:
Soundings
Journal
2011)
 p30

19


answer.
Even
if
I
could
suggest
an
explanation,
there
would
always
be
an
angle
 on
which
to
pivot
in
another
direction
completely,
to
gyrate
between
politics,
 economics,
philosophy
and
morality.
I
will
however,
return
to
Finlay’s
original
 point
that
‘To
Cease
to
Believe
in
Others
is
an
Impermissible
Luxury’
and
suggest
 that,
in
the
context
of
today,
it
should
be
seen
as
a
wise
warning
to
be
kept
in
the
 forefront
of
our
minds.
 In
the
last
few
years,
the
Chinese
artist
Ai
Weiwei
(b.
1957)
has
quickly
become
 one
of
the
most
noteworthy
political
artists
in
the
world.
The
son
of
Ai
Qing,
a
 celebrated
Chinese
poet,
Weiwei
moved
to
New
York
in
1981
to
pursue
his
 studies
as
an
artist
but
when
his
father
became
ill
he
decided
to
return
to
China.
 After
his
father’s
death,
Weiwei
chose
to
stay
in
China
to
extend
his
father’s
 critical
voice
against
the
communist
government.

 In
2011,
Ai
Weiwei
was
voted
number
one
on
ArtReview’s
‘Power
100’
list
of
the
 most
powerful
people
in
the
art
world.
Apart
from
Damien
Hirst,
who
has
topped
 the
‘Power
100’
twice
in
the
nine
years
it
has
been
running,29
Ai
Weiwei
is
the
 only
other
artist
who
has
attained
the
authoritative
position
of
number
one.
This
 is
most
likely
due
to
his
detention
in
China,
which
caused
worldwide
outrage
and
 condemnation
of
the
ongoing
human
rights
abuses
by
the
Chinese
government.

 The
Tate
Modern
responded
to
Weiwei’s
detention
with
a
large
vinyl
on
the
glass
 section
of
their
roof
exclaiming
‘Release
Ai
Weiwei’
and
by
posting
a
photograph
 of
the
statement
on
their
Twitter
page.30
The
strength
of
the
Tate’s
sentiments
 were
no
doubt
connected
to
Ai
Weiwei’s
exhibition
in
the
gallery’s
Turbine
Hall
 which
ended
in
May
2011,
while
he
was
being
held
for
alleged
economic
crimes
 by
the
Chinese
government.31
The
‘Sunflower
Seeds’
artwork
by
Ai
Weiwei
(fig.
 6)
that
was
shown
in
the
Turbine
Hall
works
on
a
variety
of
political
and
formal
 levels
and
combines
material,
experiential
and
contextual
aspects
to
become
one
 of
the
most
politically
charged
artworks
of
recent
years.
The
work
comprised
of
 a
vast
number
of
porcelain
seeds
which
were
individually
handmade
and
painted
 























































 29
ArtReview
Magazine
Website,
‘Looking
Back:
Ten
Years
of
Tears’
URL:
www.artreview100.com/features/looking‐ back‐10‐years‐of‐power/
(2/12/2011)
 30
Creative
Review
Magazine
Blog,
URL:
www.creativereview.co.uk/cr‐blog/2011/april/tate‐ai‐weiwei‐sign
 (3/12/2011)
 31
Free
Ai
Weiwei
Website
URL:
www.freeaiweiwei.org/
(2/12/2011)

20


in
the
Chinese
town
of
Jingdezhen,
a
town
which
was
once
famed
for
producing
 porcelain
for
the
imperial
court:
the
town
was
saved
from
bankruptcy
by
income
 produced
from
making
Weiwei’s
seeds.32

 The
various
ways
in
which
the
work
interacts
both
with
its
material
and
context
 are
what
interest
me
most.
Specifically,
the
explicit
and
implict
political
aspects
 of
the
artworks’
reach.
Weiwei
evokes
the
idea
of
Chinese
tradition
with
his
use
 of
porcelain
as
material,
and
in
the
same
breath
provokes
connotations
of
the
 contemporary
Chinese
factory
worker
by
having
such
a
vast
number
of
the
seeds
 on
display.
As
each
of
the
seeds
was
handmade
and
painted
by
an
individual
 worker
in
Jingdezhen,
the
viewer
has
an
immediate
connection
to
the
idea
of
the
 Chinese
factory
worker.
Arguably,
no
more
or
less
than
a
shopping
trip
to
 Primark,
Topshop
or
most
other
high
street
shops
in
the
UK,
however,
Weiwei
 directly
confronts
us
with
this
reality
and
does
not
allow
us
to
shy
away
from
the
 uncomfortable
idea
that
Western
cultures
are
complicit
in
the
thriving
 sweatshop
trade.
For
me,
Weiwei
is
not
trying
to
accuse
his
Western
viewers,
 rather
he
is
highlighting
the
complex
and
unfair
organization
of
global
 capitalism.
The
disjointed
relationships
often
found
in
this
type
of
situation
are
 commented
on
aptly
by
Mark
Fisher,
‘[Anger]
is
aggression
in
a
vacuum,
directed
 at
someone
who
is
a
fellow
victim
of
the
system
but
with
whom
there
is
no
 possibility
of
communality.’33

Weiwei
succinctly
raises
this
frustration
at
the
 inherent
failures
of
capitalism
as
an
ideology
through
his
Turbine
Hall
 installation.

 Weiwei’s
work
highlights
the
freedoms
of
a
neoliberal
economy
and
the
 contradictions
this
holds.
The
artist
was
free
to
employ
a
whole
village
to
make
 the
sunflower
seeds
for
his
exhibition
and
was
free
to
export
his
product
to
 London,
the
financial
capital
of
the
world;
however
while
his
economic
freedoms
 went
unchallenged
his
freedom
of
expression
was
not.
On
the
3rd
of
April
2011,
 Ai
Weiwei
was
detained
by
the
Chinese
authorities
and
held
for
eighty
days,
 during
which
time
his
family
and
supporters
were
not
informed
of
his
location,
 























































 32
Adrian
Searle,
‘Tate
Modern's
sunflower
seeds:
the
world
in
the
palm
of
your
hand’
Guardian
Newspaper
Website,
 URL:www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2010/oct/11/tate‐modern‐sunflower‐seeds‐review
(4/12/2011)
 33
Mark
Fisher,
Capitalist
Realism‐
Is
There
No
Alternative?
(Wiltshire:
Zero
Books
2009)
P64

21


safety
or
even
the
reason
for
his
detainment.
Karl
Polanyi
highlighted
the
friction
 between
different
kinds
of
freedom
in
1944:
 [There
are]
two
kinds
of
freedom,
one
good
and
the
other
bad…the
freedom
to
 exploit
ones
fellows,
or
the
freedom
to
make
inordinate
gains
without
 commensurable
service
to
the
community,
the
freedom
to
keep
technological
 inventions
from
being
used
for
public
benefit,
or
the
freedom
to
profit
from
 public
calamities
secretly
engineered
for
private
advantage.34

The
juxtaposition
of
the
freedom
to
produce
and
the
freedom
to
speak,
in
Ai
 Weiwei’s
work
is
the
crucial
relationship
that
moves
his
work
from
being
 referential
toward
material
or
context,
to
being
supercharged
political
material.
 Using
his
platform
to
antagonise
the
Chinese
government
over
their
brutality,
 corruption
and
contradictory
values,
Weiwei
moves
to
a
level
that
few
artists
 have
managed
to
achieve;
his
work
(including
his
approach
to
his
work
which
is
 an
inherent
part
of
it)
taunts
the
government
until
they
are
forced
to
act,
but
in
 doing
so
they
expose
the
vulnerabilities
of
their
own
contradictory
policies
and
 actions.
The
most
significant
part
of
this
game
of
political
manoeuvring
however,
 is
the
fact
that
it
forces
significant
conversations
and
creates
real
change
for
the
 benefit
of
the
Chinese
people.

 It
is
difficult
to
view
Ai
Weiwei’s
work
without
the
very
particular
context
within
 which
it
is
made,
however,
on
looking
at
the
work
in
a
purely
objective
way
it
 quickly
becomes
evident
that
its
political
nature
lies
in
its
context.
These
 circumstances
are
similar
to
that
of
Alys
and
Beuys,
but
Weiwei’s
platform
is
 arguably
greater
due
to
the
success
of
his
early
career
across
art
and
 architecture,
the
weight
of
his
father’s
legacy
and
the
international
community’s
 interest
in
Chinese
affairs.
Weiwei
himself
recognises
that
by
standing
up
for
 what
he
believes
in,
his
work
becomes
political
almost
automatically.
He
says:
 My
blog
is
not
that
much
different
from
anyone
else’s.
Only
I
am
rather
 continuously
paying
attention
to
certain
issues
that
attract
my
personal
concern,
 these
issues
are
mostly
about
artists’
rights
of
expression,
and
the
ways
personal
 rights
are
expressed.
In
a
society
like
China’s,
any
issue
concerning
the
rights
 and
ways
of
expression
unavoidably
becomes
political.
So
I
naturally
became
a

34
Karl
Polanyi
quoted
in
David
Harvey,
A
Brief
History
of
Neoliberalism
(New
York:
Oxford
Press
2005)
p36

22


political
figure.
I
don’t
think
there’s
anything
wrong
with
it,
because
we
were
 born
in
such
a
time
and
we
need
to
face
our
own
problems
honestly.
35

Weiwei’s
statement
reinforces
the
idea
that
his
work
is
not
necessarily
political,
 but
the
political
context
that
it
is
built
within
leads
to
its
strength.
His
beliefs
 about
freedom
of
expression
and
human
rights
solidly
come
through
without
the
 need
to
directly
affirm
them
through
the
work’s
formal
language.
For
me,
 Weiwei’s
art
strikes
the
balance
between
approaching
politics
with
direct
or
 implicit
tactics,
and
this
bestows
on
him
an
authority
and
capacity
far
 outreaching
what
we
have
come
to
expect
from
politically
engaged
artists.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 























































 35
Ai
Weiwei
and
Hans
Ulrich
Obrist,
Ai
Weiwei
Speaks
(England:
Penguin
2011)

P26

23


Chapter
Three:
Directly
political
artworks.

7.
Hans
Haacke,
‘Die
Fahne
hoch!’
1991

8.
The
Guerrilla
Girls,
‘Untitled’
from
‘Guerrilla
Girls
Talk
Back:
The
First
Five
Years,”
1985–1990

24


Having
looked
at
artworks
that
address
political
ideas
in
both
an
oblique
way
 and
in
a
subtly
suggestive
or
implied
way,
I
will
use
this
final
chapter
to
discuss
 two
artworks
that
directly
confront
political
ideas.
The
first
is
‘Die
Fahne
hoch!’
 (Raise
The
Flag!)
(1991)
(fig.
7)
by
Hans
Haacke
(b.
1936).
Haacke
is
a
German
 artist
who
lives
and
works
in
New
York.
He
works
in
a
wide
variety
of
mediums
 that
often
relate
to
politics.
The
second
work
is
‘Untitled’
(from
the
series
 ‘Guerrilla
Girls
Talk
Back:
The
First
Five
Years,’
1985–1990)
(1986),
by
the
 Guerrilla
Girls
(collective
formed
in
1985).
The
Guerilla
Girls
are
a
female
artist
 collective
who
disguise
their
identity
by
wearing
gorilla
masks
in
a
humorous
 manner.
They
produce
various
objects
and
prints
to
expose
sexism
and
racism
in
 the
art
world,
film
and
culture
at
large.36
Although
the
two
artworks
for
 discussion
address
very
different
agendas,
they
both
do
so
in
a
head‐on,
matter
 of
fact
way.
This
confrontational
approach
is
at
the
opposite
end
of
the
spectrum
 from
the
approach
of
Alys
or
Meztger’s
works,
creating
a
very
different
reaction
 and
interpretation
by
the
viewer.
 In
‘Die
Fahne
hoch!’,
Haacke
uses
Nazi‐style
imagery
to
highlight
companies
who
 profited
from
doing
business
with
Saddam
Hussein.
The
work
was
installed
at
 the
Königsplatz,
where
Hitler
rallied
Nazi
troops
and
made
provocative
 speeches.
The
point
of
the
work
is
clearly
and
simply
to
highlight
companies
 whose
business
dealings
are
corrupt,
and
compare
them
with
totalitarian
 regimes.
To
take
this
a
little
further,
it
could
be
argued
that
Haacke
is
using
the
 examples
of
specific
companies
to
attack
the
more
general
idea
that
the
limited
 capitalist
viewpoint
is
constraining
for
citizens
of
western
countries.
While
this
 work
is
obviously
very
powerful,
its
strength
is
in
its
context,
which
relates
 directly
to
particular
events
and
histories.

 The
motivations
for
making
a
public
work
that
has
such
a
focused
endpoint
may
 become
clearer
in
light
of
Haacke’s
own
feelings
on
art,
discussed
upon
hearing
 of
the
murder
of
Martin
Luther
King:

36
Guerilla
Girls,
Artist
Website,
URL:www.guerrillagirls.com/interview/faq.shtml
(3/12/2011)

25


What
we
are
doing,
the
production
and
the
talk
about
sculpture,
has
no
relation
 to
the
urgent
problems
of
our
society.
Whoever
believes
that
art
can
make
life
 more
humane
is
utterly
naïve…
art
is
utterly
unsuited
as
a
political
tool.37

Although
I
assume
this
statement
was
made
in
haste
and
shock
at
Dr.
King’s
 death,
it
illustrates
Haacke’s
egalitarian
convictions
and
his
clear
frustration
at
 the
inability
of
art
to
effect
society,
while
reflecting
his
hopes
for
a
better
 civilisation.
Although
his
statement
denounces
art’s
abilities
to
instigate
real
 change,
Haacke
continued
to
make
artwork
with
political
motivations
so
it
seems
 fair
to
assume
that
the
artist
did
have
a
real
belief
in
art’s
ability
to
effect
change
 and
that
he
needed
to
do
something
that
made
a
difference
to
the
world.
On
one
 level,
this
could
be
interpreted
as
an
act
of
self‐sacrifice
similar
to
Metzger’s
 auto‐destruction.
Metzger
represents
the
idea
of
sacrifice
through
the
 destruction
of
objects,
while
Haacke
embodies
the
sacrifice
by
using
his
creative
 energies
not
for
himself,
but
for
what
he
perceives
to
be
the
greater
good.

 The
relatively
unquestioned
business
powers
that
Haacke
attacks
in
‘Die
Fahne
 hoch!’
are
in
the
same
category
as
the
pseudo‐omnipotent
powers
that
Wikileaks
 condemned
and
exposed.
They
say
in
their
manifesto:
 Authoritarian
regimes
give
rise
to
forces
which
oppose
them
by
pushing
against
 the
individual
and
collective
will
to
freedom,
truth
and
self
realisation.
Plans
 which
assist
authoritarian
rule,
once
discovered,
induce
resistance.
Hence
these
 plans
are
concealed
by
successful
authoritarian
powers.38

Haacke
is
coming
from
the
same
stance
of
exposing
the
facts,
although
there
is
 always
inevitably
a
level
of
judgement
implied
deliberately
or
inadvertently.
 Haacke
makes
no
bones
about
his
opinion;
companies
who
did
business
deals
 with
Saddam
Hussein
are
criminal
and
must
be
exposed.
It
is
difficult
to
disagree
 with
an
intelligent,
informed
and
fair
opinion,
but
it
is
equally
difficult
to
 recognise
and
respect
an
artwork
with
an
opinion
so
strong
that
it
offers
little
or
 no
opportunity
for
dialogue
or
for
an
alternative.

37
Bradley,
Will
and
Esche,
Charles,
Art
and
Social
Change‐
A
Critical
Reader
(London:
Tate,
Afterall
2007)
P174

 38
Julian
Assange,
‘Wikileaks
Manifesto’
2010,
Online
Manifesto,
http://www.thecommentfactory.com/exclusive‐the‐ wikileaks‐manifesto‐by‐julian‐assange‐3342/
(23/10/2011)

26


For
me,
the
works
strength
is
also
its
downfall.
Giving
such
specific
meaning
to
 the
work
closes
down
opportunity
for
interpretation
and
restricts
the
work
to
a
 one‐dimensional
existence.
A
recent
review
of
a
Thomas
Hirschhorn
work
by
J.J.
 Charlesworth
in
ArtReview
makes
similar
criticisms
remarking:
 I
have
no
idea
whether
I
know
what
Hirschhorn’s
sculpture
is
supposed
to
mean,
 or
what
it
should
do,
other
than
evoke
a
certain
atmospheric
sensation
that,
hey,
 everything
is
really
terrible
right
now.39

Charlesworth
continues:
 This
isn’t
to
argue
that
art
should
be
full
of
positive
messages…
that
would
be
as
 artificial
as
art
that
endlessly
repeats
that
everything
is
going
to
turn
to
shit.40

I
cannot
help
but
feel
that
‘Die
Fahne
hoch!’
falls
into
the
category
of
work
that
 directly
criticises,
but
that
does
not
offer
any
practical
or
conceptual
alternatives.
 The
idea
that
‘raising
awareness’
is
a
meaningful,
legitimate
motive
for
making
 artwork
is,
in
my
opinion,
not
an
acceptable
justification
and
actually
de‐values
 the
idea
of
art.
As
Stefan
Germer
suggested,
‘Duchamp
used
the
concept
of
the
 autonomy
of
art,
Haacke
attacked
it’,41
but
this
attack
may
have
done
more
harm
 than
good.

 The
discrete
hampering
of
discussion
is
a
powerful
but
dangerous
exploit
that
 potentially
translates
artwork
into
propaganda.
Similarly,
in
protest
when
there
 is
a
lack
of
progressive
dialogue,
new
possibilities
become
impossible
missions:
 It
has
often
been
suggested
that
the
relative
defeat
of
the
’68
uprisings
in
Europe
 and
the
US,
and
the
largely
successful
taming
of
the
anti‐colonial
revolutions
 elsewhere
led
to
a
loss
of
faith
in
the
possibility
of
dramatic
social
 transformation.
42

Not
only
are
spirits
trampled
by
previous
failures,
the
visual
experience
of
 protest
too,
becomes
one
of
perpetual
disappointment
and
cynicism.
The
idea
 that
change
is
unachievable
seems
to
have
burrowed
into
the
aura
of
the
West
 and
settled
like
a
dormant
illness.
When,
however,
the
spark
of
protest
reignites
 for
whatever
reason,
it
is
nearly
always
stifled
by
its
own
self‐anticipation.
For
 























































 39
J.J.
Charlesworth,
‘A
Critic
Wonders’
from

Art
Review;
November
2011
p66
 40
J.J.
Charlesworth,
‘A
Critic
Wonders’
from

Art
Review;
November
2011
p66
 41
Stefan
Germer,
‘Beuys,
Haacke,
Broodthaers’
Joseph
Beuys
The
Reader
(London:
I.B
Taurus
2007)
p52
 42
Bradley,
Will
and
Esche,
Charles,
Art
and
Social
Change‐
A
Critical
Reader
(London:
Tate,
Afterall
2007)
P20

27


example,
on
a
visit
to
the
‘Occupy
London’
protest
outside
St
Paul’s
Cathedral
on
 November
2nd
2011,
I
was
struck
immediately
by
the
way
the
aesthetic
of
the
 camp
seemed
to
hark
back
to
the
1960s.
Peace
signs,
rainbow
flags
and
painted
 cardboard
signs
seemed
to
hark
back
to
simpler
times
but
also
seemed
to
forget
 that
by
imitating
the
protests
of
May
’68
they
were
setting
off
immediately
on
the
 wrong
foot
and
almost
admitting
defeat
before
they
had
even
begun.
Mark
Fisher
 sums
up
the
underlying
concern
of
this
situation;
‘How
long
can
a
culture
persist
 without
the
new?
What
happens
if
the
young
are
no
longer
capable
of
producing
 surprises?’
43
 While
Haacke’s
work
verges
toward
didactic,
the
Guerrilla
Girls
nimbly
 appropriate
the
language
of
advertising
and
use
it
against
itself
to
promote
their
 cause.
Their
work,
‘Untitled’
from
the
series
‘Guerrilla
Girls
Talk
Back:
The
First
 Five
Years,’
1985–1990,
(fig.
8)
was
originally
designed
for
the
Public
Art
Fund
in
 New
York
but
it
was
rejected
so
the
group
organized
advertising
space
on
New
 York
buses
and
ran
the
poster
under
their
own
steam.44
The
message
is
very
 simple
and
is
literally
spelled
out
for
the
audience;
Less
than
5%
of
the
artists
in
 the
Modern
Art
section
[of
the
Met.
Museum]
are
woman,
but
85%
of
the
nudes
 are
female.
This
shocking
and
confronting
piece
of
information
is
articulated
 succinctly
and
supported
by
the
brightly
coloured
image,
which
imitates
 promotional
visual
language.
Visually,
the
Guerrilla
Girls’
poster
seems
like
it
 could
easily
be
categorized
as
propaganda
in
a
comparison
with
Haacke’s.
The
 crucial
difference
however,
is
that
Haacke’s
lecturing
style
is
subtle
and
 unintentional
where
the
Guerrilla
Girls’
acerbic
wit
is
skilful
and
deliberate.

 Although
adeptly
executed,
the
Guerrilla
Girls
tread
a
dangerous
path
by
aligning
 themselves
with
the
idea
of
advertising
and
the
media.
This
work
was
originally
 made
in
1995,
long
before
the
phone‐hacking
scandal
engulfing
Rupert
 Murdoch’s
media
empire
was
uncovered,
however,
even
then,
distrust
of
the
 media
was
a
concern
and
an
ongoing
battle
for
trust.
The
hacking
scandal
was
 not
restricted
to
the
media;
it
affected
politicians
as
governmental
policy
was
 questioned
and
scrutinised,
and
various
business
interests
were
investigated
 























































 43
Mark
Fisher,
Capitalist
Realism‐
Is
There
No
Alternative?
(Wiltshire:
Zero
Books
2009)
P3

 44
Guerrilla
Girls
artist
website;
http://www.guerrillagirls.com/posters/getnaked.shtml

28


and
criticised.
I
strongly
doubt
that
the
Guerrilla
Girls
could
be
connected
to
any
 unscrupulous
dealings
but,
for
me,
their
chosen
advertising
and
media
style
 aligns
their
message
with
the
tainted
world
of
media
corruption.

 Despite
my
reservations
over
the
Guerrilla
Girls’
chosen
style,
to
criticise
an
 approach
that
works
seems
obtuse.
The
success
the
collective
clearly
achieve
by
 spreading
their
message
through
irony
and
appropriation,
however,
is
 counterbalanced
by
what
they
lose
in
terms
of
lyricism,
beauty
and
the
chance
to
 take
the
high
ground
above
the
bigotry
they
are
criticising.
At
the
same
time,
it
 seems
better
for
the
artists
to
forfeit
one
aspect
of
an
argument
in
order
to
be
 heard,
rather
than
being
silenced
by
a
potential
unwillingness
to
sacrifice.
When
 asked
for
his
manifesto
for
the
twenty‐first
century,
Ai
Weiwei
replied:

 The
question
is
a
bit
grand.
To
be
frank,
I
can’t
say
too
much
on
this
issue,
since
I
 feel
that
it
is
difficult
for
us
to
get
something
like
the
most
basic
needs
and
most
 fundamental
dignity.
45

There
is
a
parallel
between
his
position
and
that
of
the
Guerilla
Girls.
To
begin
to
 talk
about
poetics
and
beauty
when
lack
of
dignity
or
equality
continues
to
 overshadow
creativity
seems
insular
and
contrived.
If,
however,
we
forget
to
 nurture
lyricism
and
impracticality
at
the
same
time
as
teaching
pragmatism
and
 egalitarianism,
the
artistic
community
risks
neglecting
what
I
consider
to
be
one
 of
its
central
tenets.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 























































 45
Ai
Weiwei
and
Hans
Ulrich
Obrist,
Ai
Weiwei
Speaks
(England:
Penguin
2011)
P36

29


Conclusion

 Between
the
aforementioned
extremities
of
oblique
and
direct
political
art
 practice,
there
are
a
magnitude
of
artworks
that
employ
and
combine
aspects
of
 direct
and
indirect
political
ideas.
To
achieve
a
more
straightforward
 explanation,
I
separated
the
two
extremes
(Alys
and
Metzger’s
works
at
one
end
 and
Haacke
and
the
Guerilla
Girls’
at
the
other)
from
those
artworks
that
are
 positioned
between
these
extremes
(by
Beuys,
Finlay
and
Ai
Weiwei).

It
is
 important
to
note,
however,
that
their
categorisation
was
purely
for
ease
of
 comment,
and
that
the
slippage
between
the
political
definition,
each
of
these
 works
is
intrinsically
fluid
and
subjective.
 From
the
artworks
I
have
investigated,
the
main
differences
I
draw
begin
in
the
 beliefs
and
attitudes
of
the
artists
who
produced
them.
For
example,
Alys
and
 Metzger
have,
what
I
consider,
an
old
world
sensibility
in
relation
to
their
 practice.
They
are
both
profoundly
aware
of
the
futility
of
their
actions
yet
 continue
their
efforts
regardless,
as
this
approach
is
fundamental
to
the
rationale
 behind
their
practice.
Like
captains
of
sinking
ships
they
know
that
ultimately
 their
efforts
are
in
vain,
except
to
continue
to
exist
in
the
future
as
ideas
or
 stories.
I
have
immense
respect
for
this
romantic
approach
and
see
great
value
in
 the
hope
it
instils.
However,
there
is
also
a
danger
that
these
artists
neglect
their
 responsibility
to
engage
with
the
struggle
against
the
very
real
threat
of
disparity
 and
corruption
that
impedes
the
potential
of
innumerable
persons.
 Similarly
to
Alys
and
Metzger,
Ian
Hamilton
Finlay
and
Joseph
Beuys
retain
 romanticism
in
their
work
while
including
a
more
evident
degree
of
social
and
 political
criticism.
In
his
work
‘To
Cease
To
Believe
in
Others
is
an
Impermissible
 Luxury’
(1983),
Finlay
states
his
opinion
on
how
people
should
treat
each
other
 and
it
most
likely
refers
to
the
governmental
policy
of
the
early
1980s.
The
 extent
of
Finlay’s
political
engagement,
however,
is
stifled
as
he
is
stating
a
point,
 rather
than
instigating
a
discussion,
which
closes
down
the
viewers’
prospects
of
 engaging
with
his
work.
Joseph
Beuys
on
the
other
hand,
separates
his
politics
 from
the
powerful
romanticism
of
his
work.
Like
Alys
or
Metzger,
Beuys
remains
 relatively
oblique
in
his
sculpture
‘Infiltration
homogen
für
Konzertflü’,
however,

30


his
lectures
and
pedagogy
stridently
contextualise
the
wide
and
political
scope
of
 his
practice.
The
artworks
that
lie
in
the
mid‐ground
of
the
spectrum
I
analysed
 demonstrated
the
most
fiery
and
divisive
outcomes.
Ai
Weiwei’s
‘Sunflower
 Seeds’,
for
example,
grabbed
global
media
headlines
over
its
criticism
of
the
 Chinese
government
and
Weiwei’s
subsequent
detainment.
The
weight
of
this
 worldwide
attention,
coupled
with
the
formal
and
conceptual
success
of
 ‘Sunflower
Seeds’,
make
Weiwei
the
most
adept,
out
of
the
artists
I
analysed,
at
 balancing
his
responsibilities
both
as
an
artist
and
citizen.
The
capacity
to
 balance
these
duties
exponentially
increases
Weiwei’s
authority
as
an
artist
and
 political
figure,
making
his
place
at
the
top
of
the
ArtReview
‘Power
100’
 absolutely
appropriate
and
deserved.
 At
the
other
end
of
the
spectrum,
Haacke
and
the
Guerilla
Girls’
works
lend
 themselves
to
an
explicitly
stated
end;
their
success
or
failure
can
be
measured
 wholly
in
terms
of
the
response
or
reception
they
receive.
The
quantifiable
 outcomes
of
these
works
have
a
great
appeal,
especially
in
their
succinct
ability
 to
explain
themselves
but
this
didactic
route
closes
down
the
opportunity
for
the
 audience
to
engage
with
the
work
beyond
the
limits
set
by
the
artists.
In
a
 similarly
single‐minded
attitude
to
Alys
and
Metzger,
Haacke
and
the
Guerilla
 Girls
risk
alienating
their
audience,
who
are
crucial
to
the
activation
of
their
 work
through
the
development
of
a
discussion.
Without
subtly
executing
 artwork,
astutely
aware
of
the
complex
audience/artist
relationship,
these
artists
 risk
their
works
becoming
monologue.

 Contemporary
artists
must
have
a
strong
awareness
of
history
and
politics
and
 of
how
artists
before
them
have
approached
their
practice,
in
order
to
learn
from
 earlier
successes
and
failures.
Similarly,
every
individual
has
a
responsibility
to
 be
aware
of
the
politics
of
their
time
and
place
in
order
to
support
the
 progression
of
their
society.
As
our
collective
legacy,
we
are
duty‐bound
to
 protect
the
culture
we
inherit
and
enrich
it
through
progressive
and
critical
 discourse.
Finding the aforementioned balance between the directly political and indirectly political artwork of the past, whilst keeping one eye on the collective aspirations for the future is imperative for artists to continue to fulfil one of their many functions; to shine a light on the world. From

31


cavemen in the ice age to Ai Weiwei in 2011, art and artists have created a discourse about how politics embed themselves in our lives. For future works to be valued as a product of the society from which they were borne, artists must continue to enrich the tradition of established political art practice by finding a comfortable balance between direct and indirect political intentions.

 

32 


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