Theatricalities

Modernism does not eschew theatricality. It is hostile to a certain kind of theatricality, the theatricality of the ancien régime, the theatricality of sentiment and the picturesque. This is at the root of the idea of banishing “illusionism.”

Modernist theatricality is the theatricality of realism.

Realism is deceptive because it poses as something like honesty, as disdain for theatricality. But the real that realism constructs is as much a fiction as the scenic or the picturesque.

So modernist theatricality is a theatricality of honesty, the staging of unstaginess. And yet, it yields very odd, very stilted results. This is already evident in Cezanne, particularly, in his Bathers. Every mark in the painting reveals itself as mark and the surface as remorselessly flat but the bodies and faces of the bathers suffer mutilations prefiguring those that will appear with greater cruelty in Picasso’s Demoiselles.

Postmodernist theatricality is a late-stage inversion of norms. The labored modernist upendings of ancien régime artistic conventions have been academicized to the point where a systemic perversity becomes the deadening norm. So everything formerly bad becomes good in a thoroughly institutionalized way.

Alfred Jarry once observed that an anarchist army could be just as disciplined as any other: The anarchist sergeant just has to bark “Left turn!” and the anarchist soldiers crisply pirouette to the right.

Postmodernist theatricality is the theatricality of a surrender to the imperatives of consumerism staged to look like licentious, anarchic excess, something Deleuze and Guattari in their own frenzied Oedipal effort to bugger Freud failed miserably to understand. The consumer is, indeed, a “desiring machine.” That is what capitalism has reduced him to and like Senatspräsident Schreber this desiring machine can, within the confines of its Matrix-like hallucinatory cocoon, cultivate limitless but inconsequential perversities because its machinic desire is the charge that animates the greater, enclosing machine that is capitalism, of which the hapless schizo consumer is but a dumb cog. In other words, postmodernism is the theatricality of a “counterculture” mesmerized, like the vagabond couple in Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point, by the coyness of disaffection.

No doubt, there are other types of theatricality. I don’t think theatricality in itself has any bearing on the validity of any type of art.

When he wrote “Art and Objecthood,” Michael Fried was grasping at straws. Yes, Judd’s and Morris’ and most of Smithson’s output was vacuous, but it should have been possible to say this without the tortured invoking of theatricality as the reason for its vacuity. Fried , however, wanted to denounce the banality of formalism’s inevitable progression into “literalism” without abandoning the sterile formalist criteria he inherited from Greenberg, criteria that were sterile not because form is unworthy of care but because Greenberg, in his effort to oppose kitsch with his anemic version of modernism, reduced formalism to a mechanistic “entrenchment” of “competence” that solicited nothing but straining after minute technical innovations.

A cogent argument against literalism would have required from Fried a declaration that art is essentially symbolic and cannot be reduced to a dumb thing. Art’s fundamental relationship is with the sacred. Throughout “Art and Objecthood” you can see Fried sidle up to acknowledging that art is spiritual without, however, being able to openly say so.

What stopped him?

I believe it was two things: a formalism fixated on “opticality” that foreclosed any acknowledgment of what in art transcends eye candy, and, related to this, the sheepishness that afflicts any critic who needs to preserve an aura of modern, therefore agnostic, sophistication and eschew vulnerability to “mystical” ideas. And yet we know that at its origin, formalism was expressly formulated by Mallarmé and others as a refuge for what remained of the sacred in a world overwhelmed by crass materialism and the bourgeois instrumentalization (and excrementalization) of everything.

Fried’s problem was that he was trying to stave off the final step in the degeneration of a formalism already desacralized by Greenberg. By the time Fried intervened to arrest its slide into total banality, formalism was beyond redemption, and his only recourse was to propose as alternative to the vacuity of Donald Judd the vacuity of Anthony Caro.

Theatricality is the least of art’s faults. When art loses its once-sacred purpose, it itself becomes an agent of spiritual degradation. This is the truth that Fried could not speak.

Birth of the Cool

One can grant that formalism once served a purpose as a stopgap against the crass instrumentalization of art in the service of adorability. Where formalism failed is where all modern antimodern ideologies fail, in the inability to oppose banality in any but modern terms. Since banality is the product of the desacralization of the world, it cannot be adequately opposed without an affirmation of the sacred. But modernists for the most part preferred a strictly aesthetic opposition lest they come off as reactionaries.

Banality, however, has democratic appeal while aestheticism carries the stigma of elitism. This meant that formalism, understood as an aesthetic rejection of the banal, was tenable only as long as there was self-consciously aristocratic or, at least, pseudo-aristocratic sponsorship of art. Around the mid-twentieth century the fashion-conscious decided to go slumming. Banality packaged as irony, the hot new commodity of the postmodern era, became the thing. At that point, formalism lost its luster, and the aestheticized banal debuted as the birth of the cool.

The Birth of Formalism

Art is useless because its aim is simply to create a mood. It is not meant to instruct, or to influence action in any way. It is superbly sterile, and the note of its pleasure is sterility. If the contemplation of a work of art is followed by activity of any kind, the work is either of a very second-rate order, or the spectator has failed to realise the complete artistic impression.

A work of art is useless as a flower is useless. A flower blossoms for its own joy. We gain a moment of joy by looking at it. That is all that is to be said about our relations to flowers. Of course man may sell the flower, and so make it useful to him, but this has nothing to do with the flower. It is not part of its essence. It is accidental. It is a misuse. All this is I fear very obscure. But the subject is a long one.

—Oscar Wilde, Letter to Bernulf Clegg

What hides under Wilde’s assertion that art is useless and “superbly sterile” ?

Well, for one thing, a hint of his sexual orientation. But that is a trivial thing. 

In the late 19th century, aestheticism and “art for art’s sake” become a means to defend art against its crude bourgeois instrumentalization. The declaration of art’s uselessness flies in the face of the prevailing utilitarianism. But this defense is already a compromise. From service to the sacred, for which no space remained in the modern world, art retreats into “uselessness,” so as to at least resist the grosser demands of middle class taste. Because the sacred has been dispossessed of value, its vestigial presence in art can only be upheld by a fetishization of art’s uselessness, i.e. its material uselessness.

Clive Bell’s theory of significant form was more perspicacious than Wilde’s. Bell understood that form has metaphysical significance:

Significant form stands charged with the power to provoke aesthetic emotion in anyone capable of feeling it. The ideas of men go buzz and die like gnats; men change their institutions and their customs as they change their coats; the intellectual triumphs of one age are the follies of another; only great art remains stable and unobscure. Great art remains stable and unobscure because the feelings that it awakens are independent of time and place, because its kingdom is not of this world. To those who have and hold a sense of the significance of form what does it matter whether the forms that move them were created in Paris the day before yesterday or in Babylon fifty centuries ago? The forms of art are inexhaustible; but all lead by the same road of aesthetic emotion to the same world of aesthetic ecstasy. 

In Bell’s words, there is an indication that in its infancy, formalism was not the sterile thing it became after Clement Greenberg got a hold of it. Greenberg advanced formalism by reformulating it as a technocratic procedure for “entrenching” each art medium in its “area of competency.” Rigorous formal autocritique was supposed to safeguard art from assimilation into kitsch. In actuality, this microscopic narrowing of focus ensured the complete desacralization of abstraction and, inevitably, its banalization.  This is evident in the utter vacuity of Frank Stella’s postminimalist output, the precursor of most contemporary abstraction.

Nothing hastened the transformation of abstraction itself into kitsch than Greenberg’s effort to remove from abstraction any suggestion of something beyond form.

Readymade Form

Duchamp’s readymade brings into view an overlooked implication of the formalist orientation toward pure form: the possibility, henceforth, of apprehending all objects, including the objects of mass production, as pure form. This happened around the same time that the Futurists were proposing that the acme of modern beauty is the machine. For the Futurists this mostly meant the displacement of traditional subject matter by depictions of force and speed. Duchamp took the decisive step of replacing depiction by appropriation. In so doing, he forced upon “fine” art a confrontation with its own redundancy as source of formal invention. The readymade proves to have the same formal capability as anything labored over in an art studio. The nominative authority of the artist displayed by the readymade is in itself of trivial importance. A greater significance of the readymade is its revelation of the unintended consequences of the modernist fixation on form.

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