Dialectical Passions: Negation in Postwar Art Theory
By Gail Day
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About this ebook
Representing a new generation of theorists who reaffirm the radical dimensions of art, Gail Day launches a bold critique of late-twentieth-century art theory and its often reductive analysis of cultural objects. Exploring core debates in discourses on art, from the New Left to theories of "critical postmodernism" and beyond, Day counters the belief that recent tendencies in art fail to be adequately critical and challenges the political inertia that results from these conclusions.
Day organizes her defense around critics who have engaged substantively with emancipatory thought and social process: T. J. Clark, Manfredo Tafuri, Fredric Jameson, Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, and Hal Foster, among others. She maps the tension between radical dialectics and left nihilism and assesses the interpretation and internalization of negation in art theory. Chapters confront the claim that exchange and equivalence have subsumed the use value of cultural objects& mdash;and with it critical distance; the meaning of symbol and allegory in 1980s art and its limited reading of the writings of Walter Benjamin and Paul de Man; and common conceptions of mediation, totality, and the politics of anticipation. A necessary unsettling of received wisdoms, Dialectical Passions sets a new course for emancipatory reflection in aesthetics, art, and architecture.
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Dialectical Passions - Gail Day
Dialectical Passions
COLUMBIA THEMES IN PHILOSOPHY,
SOCIAL CRITICISM, AND THE ARTS
COLUMBIA THEMES IN PHILOSOPHY, SOCIAL CRITICISM, AND THE ARTS
Lydia Goehr and Gregg M. Horowitz, Editors
ADVISORY BOARD
J. M. Bernstein
T. J. Clark
Noël Carroll
Arthur C. Danto
Martin Donougho
David Frisby
Boris Gasparov
Eileen Gillooly
Thomas S. Grey
Miriam Bratu Hansen
Robert Hullot-Kentor
Michael Kelly
Richard Leppert
Janet Wolff
Columbia Themes in Philosophy, Social Criticism, and the Arts presents monographs, essay collections, and short books on philosophy and aesthetic theory. It aims to publish books that show the ability of the arts to stimulate critical reflection on modern and contemporary social, political, and cultural life. Art is not now, if it ever was, a realm of human activity independent of the complex realities of social organization and change, political authority and antagonism, cultural domination and resistance. The possibilities of critical thought embedded in the arts are most fruitfully expressed when addressed to readers across the various fields of social and humanistic inquiry. The idea of philosophy in the series title ought to be understood, therefore, to embrace forms of discussion that begin where mere academic expertise exhausts itself, where the rules of social, political, and cultural practice are both affirmed and challenged, and where new thinking takes place. The series does not privilege any particular art, nor does it ask for the arts to be mutually isolated. The series encourages writing from the many fields of thoughtful and critical inquiry.
Lydia Goehr and Daniel Herwitz, eds., The Don Giovanni Moment: Essays on the Legacy of an Opera
Robert Hullot-Kentor, Things Beyond Resemblance: Collected Essays on Theodor W. Adorno
Gianni Vattimo, Art’s Claim to Truth, edited by Santiago Zabala, translated by Luca D’Isanto
John T. Hamilton, Music, Madness, and the Unworking of Language
Stefan Jonsson, A Brief History of the Masses: Three Revolutions
Richard Eldridge, Life, Literature, and Modernity
Janet Wolff, The Aesthetics of Uncertainty
Lydia Goehr, Elective Affinities: Musical Essays on the History of Aesthetic Theory
Christoph Menke, Tragic Play: Irony and Theater from Sophocles to Beckett, translated by James Phillips
György Lukács, Soul and Form, translated by Anna Bostock and edited by John T. Sanders and Katie Terezakis with an introduction by Judith Butler
Joseph Margolis, The Cultural Space of the Arts and the Infelicities of Reductionism
Herbert Molderings, Art as Experiment: Duchamp and the Aesthetics of Chance, Creativity, and Convention
Whitney Davis, Queer Beauty: Sexuality and Aesthetics from Winckelmann to Freud and Beyond
Dialectical Passions
Negation in Postwar Art Theory Gail Day
Columbia University Press
New York
Columbia University Press
Publishers Since 1893
New York. Chichester, West Sussex
cup.columbia.edu
Copyright © 2011 Columbia University Press
All rights reserved
E-ISBN 978-0-231-52062-1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Day, Gail.
Dialectical passions : negation in postwar art theory / Gail Day.
p. cm.—(Columbia themes in philosophy, social criticism, and the arts)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-231-14938-9 (cloth : alk. paper)—ISBN 978-0-231-52062-1 (electronic)
1. Art, Modern—20th century—Philosophy. 2. Art, Modern—21st century—Philosophy. 3. Negation (Logic) I. Title. II. Series.
N6490.D34 2011
701’.18—dc22
2010004988
A Columbia University Press E-book.
CUP would be pleased to hear about your reading experience with this e-book at cup-ebook@columbia.edu.
References to Internet Web sites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing. Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
T. J. Clark and the Pain of the Unattainable Beyond 1
Looking the Negative in the Face:
Manfredo Tafuri and the Venice School of Architecture 2
Absolute Dialectical Unrest, Or, the Dizziness of a
Perpetually Self-Engendered Disorder 3
The Immobilizations of Social Abstraction 4
Afterword: Abstract and Transitive Possibilities
Notes
Index
Illustrations
0.1 Chris Marker, film still from Sans soleil [Sunless].
1.1 Jackson Pollock (1912–1956), Lavender Mist: Number 1, 1950, oil, enamel, and aluminum paint on canvas, 221 × 299.7 cm.
1.2 Jackson Pollock, The Wooden Horse: Number 10A, 1948, oil, enamel, and wood on brown cotton canvas mounted on board, 90 × 178 cm.
2.1 Office for Metropolitan Architecture, view of the Espace Piranesien, completed 1994, Euralille, Lille, France.
2.2 Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720–1778), Carceri VII, 1760, etching.
2.3 Raoul Hausmann (1886–1971), New Home, 1920, collage, 29.5 × 21.9 cm.
2.4 Gerrit Rietveld (1888–1964), Schroeder House, built in 1923–1924, Utrecht, Netherlands.
2.5 Eliezer (El) Markowich Lissitzky (1890–1941), Illustration to The Story of Two Squares, written by the artist, published in Berlin, 1922.
2.6 Karl Ehn (1884–1957), Karl-Marx-Hof, built in 1927–1930, Heili-genstäer Strasse, Vienna, Austria.
3.1 Belvedere Torso, Greco-Roman, marble, 159 cm high.
3.2 Giotto di Bondone (c. 1266–1337), Charity, c. 1305, fresco, Scrovegni (Arena) Chapel, Padua, Italy.
3.3 Giotto di Bondone (c. 1266–1337), Envy, c. 1305, fresco, Scrovegni (Arena) Chapel, Padua, Italy. Photo: The Bridgeman Art Library.
3.4 Martha Rosler, detail from The Bowery in two inadequate descriptive systems, 1974/1975.
4.1 Daniel Buren, Les couleurs: sculptures, 1977, photographic record of detail of work in situ, MNAM, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.
5.1 Radek Community, Manifestation, 2001, video still of action in Barrikadnaya, Moscow.
Acknowledgments
My most important debt is to Steve Edwards for his unflagging patience, commitment, and engagement. I doubt Dialectical Passions would have been completed without his personal support and his astute readings of its countless drafts. I have also been especially fortunate to have received the inspiration, guidance, and friendship of Fred Orton and wish to take this opportunity to say how thankful I am. Caroline Arscott, John X. Berger, Andrew Hemingway, Alex Potts, Susan Siegfried, and Julia Welbourne have been sustaining presences through the gestation of this book, providing critical insights into my ideas and offering crucial encouragement to persist when stasis prevailed. To the readers of the manuscript, in part or in whole, and at various stages of its development, I owe particular thanks: Caroline (again), Martin Gaughan, Ken Hay, Stewart Martin, Adrian Rifkin, John Roberts, and Fred Schwartz. Their advice and incisive comments have helped clarify and develop my arguments. Along the way I have also benefited from discussion and debate with Joanne Crawford, Tim Hall, Catherine Lupton, David Mabb, April Masten, Stanley Mitchell, Jo Morra, Ben Noys, Peter Osborne, Giles Peaker, Chris Riding, Nick Ridout, Frances Stracey, Nick Till, and Ben Watson. Invitations to present work-in-progress from Tim Clark, David Cunningham, John Goodbun, Tom Hickey, Neil Leech, Colin Mooers, and Julian Stallabrass, and also from Alex and Andrew, have enabled earlier versions of my research to be tested in sympathetic, yet challenging environments.
For their belief in the project, I am grateful to my series editors Lydia Goehr and Gregg Horowitz and to Wendy Lochner at Columbia University Press. My appreciation also goes to Christine Mortlock and Leslie Kriesel for ensuring its realization and particularly to Robert Demke for his essential guidance and his help in improving my manuscript.
Immense gratitude goes to my family—especially to Jean Day, Brian Day, and Edna Colledge—for enduring all the uncertainties and long absences while I worked on this book.
The Arts and Humanities Research Board, Wimbledon School of Art, and the University of Leeds provided generous support to enable me to focus on writing, and, in addition, the University of Leeds has helped toward the costs of images and reproduction rights. Less formally, but no less importantly, the unique combination of peace, sanity, and hospitality at La Touche has been invaluable for securing periods of concentration necessary for writing and thinking. Earlier and shorter versions of chapters have appeared in Oxford Art Journal 22, no.1 (1999): 103–118; Art History 23, no. 1 (2000): 1–18; and Radical Philosophy 133 (2005): 26–38.
Introduction
Amid reflections on the rituals, commodity kitsch, and everyday banalities of modern Japanese life, Chris Marker, in his film Sans Soleil, turns his attention to a Left-wing demonstration. The camera alights briefly on a middle-aged man (see figure 0.1). The scene is shot at a rally to commemorate the birthday of a victim of a protest at the same site in the nineteen-sixties, when peasants fought to prevent an airport being built on their land. The repetitions and echoes between then
and now
make the occasion unreal,
part of the world of appearances.
The man—who we take to be one of the displaced farmers—cuts a solitary figure among his youthful comrades. The airport, of course, was built. With his withering comments on the utopias of the Left, and the descent of so many of its student participants into postures and careerists,
Marker certainly prods his viewers toward the melancholic conclusion that the future is already written in this experience. But the lure—one of many that shape the film—serves to underscore Marker’s recalcitrance: he has in mind neither resignation
nor defeat,
but rather a reminder of how human subjects are fundamentally transformed in and through the processes of resistance. The airport is more besieged than victorious.
He may be on the losing side, but once touched by the awareness and experience that comes through political protest, this man’s outlook could never again be what it was.
I met peasants there who had come to know themselves through the struggle. Concretely it had failed. At the same time, all they had won in their understanding of the world could have been won only through the struggle.¹
0.1 Chris Marker, film still from Sans soleil [Sunless], Argos Films, 1982. Courtesy of the artist.
A century or so earlier, another radical cultural worker reflected on the problem of defeat and agency:
men and women fight and lose the battle, and the thing that they fought for comes about in spite of their defeat, and when it comes turns out not to be what they meant, and other men and women have to fight for what they meant under another name.²
I have taken the liberty of extending the gender reference of William Morris’s echo of Hegel’s ruse of reason. Cited by E. P. Thompson and Perry Anderson, among others, this passage also serves as epigraph to Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri’s Empire.³ The lines are framed by the narrator’s distracted ruminations. Listening to John Ball’s speech, his mind wanders (although not entirely) and—we are twice reminded—he ponders how struggles are recuperated and have to be renewed. Marker too makes an art of this radical rumination, reflective and critical by turns, that the term essayistic
—often used to describe his filmmaking—fails adequately to capture.
My study considers certain radical trajectories from discussions on art and architecture. Taking as its object the field of the history, theory, and criticism of art in the latter half of the twentieth century, Dialectical Passions pursues the critical reflections on the persistence and renewal of resistance. The title calls attention to the heated debates, fractures, and critical legacies emerging from the New Left. More specifically, the chapters that follow attend to arguments staked in and around dialectical thought and, most especially, in and around the dialectics of social process.⁴ This perspective is unusual, not just for its primary focus on art and architecture (literature is more usually treated as the privileged site of cultural theory) but also for its critical perspective on some of the dominant modes of cultural theory that came to prominence over the last forty years or so. Addressing themes such as critical distance, mediation, and totality, and the work of thinkers who engaged substantially with these problems, this book tracks lineages that—while by no means marginal—stand somewhat apart from the main directions taken by most overviews of art theory. An overarching theme here is the varying attitude toward negation, and it is an attention to some of the valences of negative thought in contemporary art theory that gives this book its particular focus. I attempt neither to map the politics of the discipline of art and architectural history, nor specifically to trace politics in it. Addressing debates on symbol and allegory, or those articulated around the concepts of spectacle, metropolis, or avant-garde, this book explores the space between a radicalized approach to dialectics and Left-orientated nihilism. This focus delimits the field primarily to those writers whose work stakes political claims, whose writing engages with varying conceptions of emancipatory thought, or opens historically and methodologically reflexive approaches pertinent to (if not always consonant with) dialectics. I consider the contributions of some leading figures in late-twentieth-century art theory, such as Benjamin Buchloh, Hal Foster, and Fredric Jameson—the latter especially with regards to his writing on architecture. Accounts presented by significant figures in art history, such as Rosalind Krauss, Craig Owens, Douglas Crimp, and Michael Fried, also play a role. The writings of two thinkers—T. J. Clark and Manfredo Tafuri—provide the basis for extended meditations. Their sustained engagements with the politics of dialectics—rooted, in the one instance, in the Left-Hegelian militancy of the Situationist International, and, in the other, the anti-Hegelian vision developed within Italian workerism—represent approaches that have not been readily assimilated into the wider intellectual consensus. Despite occupying a canonical position in the histories of art and architecture respectively, their disciplines have yet to come to terms with this aspect of their interventions. Both Clark and Tafuri pursue issues arising from negative thought, and a process of dialectical unfolding is worked out in their accounts of art—not in the systematic manner of professional philosophers, but in ways that connect (in my view, far more interestingly) with its pulse of freedom.
⁵ In the light of the recent resurgence of radical discourse, and the efforts to reconsider and historicize the projects of the New Left, these projects assume fresh relevance. Their work provides the focus of the first two chapters. In chapter 3, I consider the debate on allegory, starting out from its revival in the nineteen-eighties as a framework for understanding a critical form of postmodernism (advanced, above all, by Craig Owens) and addressing its implications for dialectical thinking. The final chapter is organized around arguments concerning social abstraction,
a theme that underlies the preceding sections. I trace how this idea, developing out of responses to Georg Lukács’s notion of reification (from Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer to Guy Debord), becomes the backbone for socially inclined and critical art theory in the work of Buchloh, Foster, and Jameson.
Proceeding through detailed readings, and attending to the specificity of historical and critical texts, arguments are followed in which the object of study provides the dynamic of critical reflection—an approach that provides a means to negotiate some of the complex terrain of negation in the art theory, but which is also true to its object. This commitment has come at a cost, limiting the number of studies that could be included (I am all too aware, for instance, of the absence of an analysis of Peter Bürger or the German New Left); it also means surrendering some of the sureties of external critique. While I would not go as far as Adorno when he claims that Transcendent criticism sympathizes with authority in its very form, even before expressing any content,
I concur with his riposte to those who would dismiss an alternative model of critique:
The immanent approach need not fear the objection that it is without a perspective, mollusklike and relativistic. Ideas that have confidence in their own objectivity have to surrender va banque, without mental reservations, to the object in which they immerse themselves, even if that object is another idea; this is the insurance premium they pay for not being a system.⁶
I know that I do not fulfil this ambition thoroughly or consistently enough; some material demanded the approach more than others. Still, I did not want Dialectical Passions to become just an overview of positions available in modern theories of art and culture; hopefully, from the very process of trying to keep faith
with the desideratum of immanent criticism
a level of understanding emerges that might not have done so otherwise.⁷
Do you ever come except to criticize? Is nothing ever right for you on earth?
The Lord’s question of Mephistopheles, in the prologue to Goethe’s Faust, raises the charges of pessimism and complaint that are frequently encountered in discussions of negation.⁸ They have been leveled at many of the writers on whom I concentrate, just as they are at the spirit who always negates.
Many of these authors share a suspicion of what may be called easy positions (including those that might be associated with the counterintuitive
moves of theory), and they themselves tend to be regarded as difficult.
A recurrent theme in this study is the suspicion of figures of identity, immediacy, and plenitude, although the authors addressed differ considerably in how far they push their arguments, and in how they frame their contestation in theoretical and philosophical terms. Under the scrutiny of the most rigorously negative of writers, even simple pleasures can be rendered as the face of oppressive power; detecting the latent pure identity of nature, Adorno notes that something frightening lurks in the song of birds precisely because it is not a song but obeys the spell in which it is enmeshed.
⁹ Goethe’s Lord demonstrates considerably more patience with, and accommodation toward, the spirit of negation than do most of today’s proponents of the affirmative outlook. An ideological continuum seems to join the psychotechnics of the neoliberal workplace and the pop psychology peddled by magazines (Sisters! Every morning, look in the mirror and repeat five times: ‘I love my thighs’
). It may be one thing to acknowledge the role of positive thought in a person’s ability to survive serious illness, or to recognize its capacity to help extreme swimmers to survive the challenges of Arctic waters, but quite another to employ it as tool of corporate indoctrination—and still another to find it as a form of life-affirming aestheticism that seeks to ward off all critical engagement.¹⁰ Often, the distinctive registers represented by these examples are simply collapsed together.
Negation
is part of the routine language of art, and arguments about negativity are thoroughly embedded in accounts of culture and the debates on modernity and avant-gardism—and, by implication, those on postmodernity, or on the neo-avant-gardes and post-avant-gardes—frequently serving as vehicles for these discussions. The specific inflections of negation vary considerably. To take a few more or less random examples: the manifestos of Dadaists or Futurists (sometimes referred to as the negative avant-gardes
); Gustav Metzger’s auto-destructive art
; statements such as I would like my work to be a nonwork
(Eva Hesse); lists of denials deployed by artists from Ad Reinhardt to Vija Celmins; or Robert Smithson’s fascination with entropic processes.¹¹ The conditions for a passionate life existed, but I had to destroy them to be able to recuperate them
(Alighiero Boetti).¹² Or, the sculptor Carl Andre: A man climbs a mountain because it is there. A man makes a work of art because it is not there.
¹³ Donald Judd’s canonical definition of specific objects
describes these works as being neither painting nor sculpture
; the critic Barbara Rose described Minimal Art (or, as it is called, ABC Art
) as a negative art of denial and renunciation
; the via negativa provided the focus for an Italian art exhibition in the midsixties.¹⁴ For a period, Terry Atkinson makes disaffirmation
the guiding principle of his work.¹⁵ This brief inventory of negation’s appearance in art could be readily expanded, and the idea of negation continues to animate approaches to contemporary art.¹⁶ Of course, we would be mistaken to imagine that the remit of negation
—a term that can be applied in and to any situation—is restricted to art or that it necessarily carries a radical charge (some of the examples cited here draw as much on Western artists’ fascination with—and imaginative projection of—forms of Taoist or Buddhist mysticism, and Clark points to negation’s aristocratic inheritance).¹⁷ Nevertheless, the unusual prominence of negation in aesthetic discussions is notable, indicative perhaps of the long influence of Left-Hegelian and Nietzschean modes of thinking on the field, but also something of the particular nature, condition, and place of the art object,
of artistic activity, and of representation in modernity. The modalities of art (and what counts as art) may have changed substantially since Adorno drafted his book, but the opening lines of Aesthetic Theory still haunt contemporary art practice.
There is much that could be said here, but a couple of examples may serve to introduce at least some of the complex dimensions of this problem. Reality, the art critic Michael Fried notes, in a very brief and passing aside in his 1965 essay Three American Painters,
has come to outstrip and evade the representational powers of art.¹⁸ Bertolt Brecht, echoing a comment made by the Marxist sociologist Fritz Sternberg, remarks that, since reality has slipped into the functional,
the photograph (the example given is one of a factory) could not capture the social relations of capital. Brecht’s passage is famously cited by Walter Benjamin, and—in what becomes one of the founding theoretical moments for the strategy of aesthetic montage—they conclude that artifice and construction would be necessary to sidestep the inevitable flattening out of social complexity by the matter-of-fact image.¹⁹ Preferring not to pursue his suggestive observation, Fried instead follows the classical high-modernist exploration of painting’s withdrawal from reality.
There is a world of difference, of course, between arguing that art under modernism withdraws from reality (this is, after all, the heroic narrative that many modernists articulate) and saying that it is reality that eludes representation. The suggestion that reality slips into the functional
and abstract
harbors far more troubling implications, a profoundly social difficulty inscribing a situation in which realist ambitions for art seem irretrievable. Similarly, it is one thing to see painting or sculpture through this matrix (after all, the standard argument goes, photography could be left to get on with the routine task of picturing the world, releasing the higher arts to pursue their self-reflexive exploration of formal problems); it was quite another to challenge, as do Sternberg, Brecht, and Benjamin, the very ability of the photographic document to fulfill its designated role. The adequacy of these arguments—the one forged in Weimar Germany, the other in the ascendant hegemon of the postwar period—is not primarily what is at issue here; rather, the point is simply to recognize the extent to which negation,
in one of its guises, is implicated at every level of the problem outlined.
The ubiquity of negative expressions in art theory is matched by the seeming fluidity of reference. As Charles Harrison observes, negation is promiscuous.
²⁰ Taken in general, its meaning seems potentially infinite. Yet, in any one instance it is tied to the specific locus of its denial; the meaning of any practice of negation
depends on what is being negated in the first place and, as Laura Mulvey acknowledges, cannot escape its defining ground.²¹ This limited quality is frequently seen as a major drawback of such practices: they are unable to sustain a life of their own beyond their moment of resistance; if they succeed in their act of negating, they bring themselves down with what they denied. It is an argument employed not only in relation to cultural acts of negation but also to projects of social transformation.²² Indeed, it is the very tension with such political implications that further animates the artistic and cultural discussions. Negation seems to be heavily suggestive by way of both its intellectual heritage—one thinks especially of Hegel, Marx, Bakunin, Nietzsche—and what Harrison refers to as its susceptibility to investment with moral purpose.
²³ A different way of approaching this would be to compare Max Horkheimer’s description of Critical Theory as formulating the negative
precisely in order to develop a critical approach to existing society.
²⁴ In Negations Herbert Marcuse describes the sphere of negation, of contradiction to the established order, of protest, of dissociation, of criticism.
²⁵ Its use is prominent in the writings of Henri Lefebvre, Jean-Paul Sartre; and, as the penultimate section of The Society of the Spectacle shows, negation is the language of choice for adherents of the Situationist International. In cultural and artistic debates, negation’s weight is peculiarly complex: on the one hand, both highly specific and context bound, and, on the other, loose and plural; it is both meaning laden and meaning elusive. Its valence shifts from extremely particularized values, which require their specific determination to make sense, to a sort of reified metaconcept. Moreover, to speak of practices of negation
in art is not the same as discussing negative thought
and neither necessarily implies the more metaphysical, and sometimes theological, implications of deliberations on negativity.
²⁶ Nevertheless, there are some fairly direct connections between artistic practice and Critical Theory itself, with the philosophers—Benjamin being the clearest example—developing some of their most well-known terms from their encounter with avantgarde poetics. The symbiosis between Futurist artists and Russian Formalism’s linguists and literary theorists finds later parallels in the work of Derrida and the authors associated with Tel Quel, which show a similar indebtedness to avant-gardist writing. As we will see in chapter 2, Tafuri argues not only that avant-gardist techniques relate mimetically to capital but that their aesthetic devices could even help propel forward its actual development.
Yet, very often, discussions exploit the slippages between these debates. Ranging across the metaphysical and scatological, idealist and material, the moral charge
invested in discussions draws much of its force from this ambiguous potential, and the inevitable invocation of contentious philosophical-political legacies. This is probably why negation so frequently leads to confusion,
as T. J. Clark complains (in the light of seeing what his own deployment of the term unleashed).²⁷ Like the devil in Thomas Mann’s reworking of the Faust myth, values metamorphose before one’s eyes—and they do so not only in the sense of their constant multiplication but also by shifting qualitatively across the registers of general and particular. A local comment swiftly takes on the dimensions of a major social thesis; a minor act of aesthetic transgression magnifies into existential or world-historical significance. Often, general and particular categories are collapsed into a false identity. Nevertheless, one ignores this mutability and ladenness with social value at one’s peril. So, while Harrison is correct to note that discussions of negation can elicit the worst sort of pietistic posturing—and while pursuing such discussions in the abstract risks seeming both portentous and ludicrous—it is equally futile to bracket out moral purpose
in an effort to immunize oneself from these dangers. Considering negation within the parameters of formal logic does not seem to be helpful here; doing so would miss its characteristic life within cultural debates. By the same token, it would be inappropriate to seek a tighter definition, or, as Harold Rosenberg puts it ironically, to seek to improve one’s success in pursuing speculative butterflies by perfecting the instrument
of capture and weaving a net with smaller holes.
²⁸
My study considers some of the responses in art history to the ideas of the New Left. Broadly, these may be characterized as attempts to draw out the social dimensions of cultural forms. The project is not new. Although not all its early representatives were socialists, determinedly social approaches to art were to become closely identified with Marxist art history,
around or through which the art historians of the New Left reformulated their projects. The sociological approach,
sociology of art,
or social history of art,
as Arnold Hauser variously referred to it, initially coalesced early in the twentieth century alongside efforts to shape an alternative communist culture.²⁹ Under determinate political conditions of international conflict, revolution, and civil war, a number of art historians transformed the neo-Hegelian and neo-Kantian approaches predominant in the field, taking them in a materialist direction. It would be a mistake, however, simply to equate this wave with orthodox Stalinism. Social-historical approaches to the study of art and culture emerged in a complex relation to the communist movement and in a critical relation to its economistic reductivism (and often also in reaction to its official aesthetic preferences). For example, while promulgating an explicit Marxist theory of art in a number of articles on art and architecture, Max Raphael kept his distance from the KPD.³⁰ In the United States, Meyer Schapiro—like Harold Rosenberg and Clement Greenberg—was formed in the intellectual orbit of Trotskyism. Those historians who developed radical approaches to the study of art belonged to the same generations as the major Left-wing intellectuals of the twentieth century: Raphael, Hauser, and Frederick Antal were born around 1890; Schapiro and Klingender were a decade or so younger. The history for some, however, was nonsynchronous. While important Marxist perspectives on art—including work by Raphael, Greenberg, and Schapiro—appeared through the nineteen-thirties, in the case of Hauser and Antal, their displacement as exiles—first from Hungary, later escaping National Socialism—interrupted their work and their major publications did not appear until after the war. Nevertheless, it is fair to say that the social-historical project typically crystallized during the thirties and Antal’s own conception of these developments mentions writing almost entirely from the latter part of that decade.³¹ By 1933–1934 Antal had settled in London, where, supported by Anthony Blunt, he worked occasionally for the Courtauld Institute; Hauser arrived in 1938. In a highly influential article on the intellectual makeup of English culture, Perry Anderson argued that not only did England lack a native Marxist current but that it had drawn its intellectuals from the White emigration; his example in art history is Ernst Gombrich.³² The art-historical émigrés in Britain were in almost every case from Germany or the former Austria-Hungary (Gombrich, Antal, Hauser, Otto Pächt, Helen Rosenau, Gertrud Bing, Fritz Saxl, Edgar Wind, Rudolf Wittkower)—this was a Jewish emigration much more than it was a White one. Anderson also missed the political significance of that emigration. Gombrich was certainly to become the most well-known, but the approaches represented by the other émigrés—the cultural-historical approaches advanced by the Warburg school and the Red wing—were to be central to the later development of art history as a socially critical formation.³³
Short lived it may have been, but the effects of the 1919 Hungarian revolution reverberated through the intellectual life of the twentieth century; both Hauser and Antal were shaped by it, becoming exiles after the counterrevolution. Earlier, both had participated in the Budapest Sonntagskreis, the famous Sunday Circle organized around Lukács and Béla Balázs, which attracted a number of important intellectuals. They were involved with the Free School of the Humanistic Sciences initiated by the group in 1917 and took up positions during the period of the Hungarian Soviet Republic (Antal as Chair of Budapest’s Museum of Fine Arts, Hauser as a literary theory specialist at the Secondary-School Teacher-Training College, working alongside Karl Mannheim, another participant in the Sonntagskreis).³⁴ Lukács believed that of the Circle only Antal had any Marxist leanings,
and early relations with Hauser and Mannheim were often strained (Balázs recording how their commitment to serious action was doubted by others in the group).³⁵ Lukács continued to fault Hauser’s philosophy for giving too much weight to historical contingency, a difference that resurfaced, amicably, in a radio discussion to celebrate the Hungarian translation of Hauser’s Sozialgeschichte der Kunst und Literatur in 1969. By this time Hauser was perceived rather differently, many taking him to be a clear representative of Marxism. His Social History of Art, now in multiple translations and piled high in Maspero’s Paris bookstore, had become a bestseller among radicals, even serving as an educational tool in Marxist history and social theory in countries where Left literature was officially proscribed; censors, it seems, did not wade through long histories of art.³⁶
The social-historical approach to art and culture was also largely a response to the emergence of its polemical other. During the twenties, formalism was developing a more programmatic methodology and was being promoted with greater assertiveness. Explicit objections to interpretations of art due to extrinsic
factors already featured in Heinrich Wölfflin’s Kunstgeschictliche Grundbegriffe (The Principles of Art History) of 1915, synthesizing ideas outlined in his writings over the previous twenty-five years. In the following decade the young radical formalists
of the New
Vienna School—including figures such as Hans Sedlmayr, Guido Kaschnitz von Weinberg, and Otto Pächt—sought to recover elements of Aloïs Riegl’s project for a more rigorous scientific approach to formal questions. Presenting their work through the Berlinbased Kritische Berichte in the late twenties (a journal that Antal coedited with Bruno Fürst between 1926 and 1931), they founded their own journal Kunstwissenschaftliche Forschungen in 1933, a publication that drew the critical attention of Walter Benjamin.³⁷ Meanwhile, in the North American context, the modernist formalism that was to become so influential took shape. Greenberg was to develop his views in sympathy with the traditions of formal analysis, but Schapiro prepared Marxist critiques of the formalisms both of the New Vienna School and of Alfred H. Barr Jr., the first Director of New York’s Museum of Modern Art.³⁸ The early social approaches to art primarily directed their criticism toward the method promoted by Wölfflin.³⁹ It was in response to Wölfflin’s art history without names
—art history as an anonymous process of immanent causation—that Hauser produced one of his most careful and sustained criticisms, the 1959 volume The Philosophy of Art History. Antal had studied with Wölfflin in Berlin (as had Raphael, and Benjamin had also attended his lectures) and subsequently undertook doctoral studies with Max Dvořák in Vienna, and it may be significant that Dvořák’s work—and especially his attempts to relate artistic forms to