Contemporary Art and the Sublime
Julian Bell
Julian Bell, ‘Contemporary Art and the Sublime’, in Nigel
Llewellyn and Christine Riding (eds.), The Art of the Sublime, January
2013,
http://www.tate.org.uk/art/research-publications/the-sublime/julian-bell-contemporary-art-and-the-sublime-r1108499,
accessed 30 May 2014.
More than six decades after the publication of Barnet Newman’s
1948 article ‘The Sublime is Now’, artists are still trying to give the sublime
a contemporary treatment. The sheer range of their attempts makes it harder
than ever to offer a narrow definition. The artist and writer Julian Bell
offers here his own critical reflections on the contemporary sublime, surveying
recent art and considering his own practice.
The
sublime is a term that has been heavily employed in art writing over the past
twenty years. Too heavily, it may be. References to it have come from so many
angles that it is in danger of losing any coherent meaning. We have been
offered everything from ‘the techno-sublime’1 and ‘the eco-sublime’2 to ‘the Gothic sublime’3 and ‘the suburban sublime’4: anything from volcanoes
and vitrines to still lifes and soft toys may be sniffed at for sublimity.5 How did we arrive at this
state of affairs?
From
our current perspective, we can track the term’s usage winding stream-wise
across the landscape of cultural history. On the far mountainsides there is the
glint of the Pseudo-Longinus, circa first-century treatise, our earliest
reference point. Then we catch sight of two well-known waterfalls, Edmund
Burke’s Philosophical Enquiry of 1757 and Immanuel Kant’s Critique of
Judgment of 1790. It is easy to trace the swelling river of references to
the sublime that rolls on down from these two, but as the constructions of
modernism rise up in the later nineteenth century, the river’s course gets
increasingly obscured. Suddenly in 1948 it swings into view again, traversed by
the bridge of Barnett Newman’s rhetoric. But here in the foreground, as of the
2010s, we seem to stand amidst a delta. Channels of discourse about the sublime
meander all around us, but which is the main flow, which the subsidiary, which
the navigation canal or ditch for irrigation has become almost impossible to
tell. Ideally, I should like to draw a map of this muddle; pragmatically, I
hope at least to offer a ground-level topographical sketch.
In
the first section of this essay, I shall offer a directly personal take on the
theme that will open out on to various aspects of current art-world thinking
and practice. Many of the tactics and visual effects discussed here can easily
be related to the tradition of artistic production stimulated by the writings
of Burke. In the second section, I shall consider some reinterpretations of the
theme that are distinctive to the recent past, even if in principle some are
linked to the philosophy of Kant. The period under discussion – the phase of
art history currently designated ‘contemporary’ – effectively begins during the
late 1970s and early 1980s. Finally, I shall offer some brief qualifications,
suggesting what the sublime is not. The sublime has always implied the
over-powering, but once it becomes the all-swallowing, the term eats up its own
meaning.
The sublime as it gets made
A painting by the author
I
approach the sublime not as a philosopher or cultural theorist, but as an
artist. Specifically, as the painter of a canvas to which many viewers have
responded with mentions of ‘the sublime’. They do so, I should add, to describe
the tradition to which they feel the painting relates, rather than to praise
it. I shall try to discuss this canvas quite simply as a symptom of the
mentality of a British painter who was born in 1952, asking how far that
symptom might assist in a broader diagnosis of artistic trends.
The
painting in question is named Darvaza 2010 (fig.1), after a site in
Turkmenistan that I visited as a tourist. The site, in the middle of the
Karakum Desert, was drilled by Soviet engineers reconnoitring for fuel in 1971.
Hitting a cavity, the engineers decided to burn off the gas inside, but the
resulting inferno passed quite beyond their control. They abandoned the site,
which was far from human habitation. At the time I visited, the vast crater was
still burning away, night and day, among the bare compacted sands of the
Karakum.
Julian
Bell
Darvaza 2010
Oil
paint on canvas
1397
x 2438 mm
©
Julian Bell
Fig.1
Julian Bell
Darvaza 2010
© Julian Bell
On
my return home, I represented what I had seen on a canvas eight-foot wide. On
the crater’s far side, I placed a small male figure, just over an inch high,
standing turned towards it, his palms raised to face the upward surge of heat.
The figure functions as an indicator of scale and equally obviously as a
testimonial. This is I, it tells the viewer, I the artist: I witnessed what I
am showing you. I was a tourist who came close to this spectacle and now I wish
to draw you close to it likewise. With that objective in mind, I took two chief
decisions in translating the sketches and photos I had made at the original
site into a picture intended for a British gallery wall. I chose to crop what
could be seen of the crater’s round rim, so that there is no central foreground
and from the picture’s base all is fire. And so as to set that fire ablaze, I took
the white-primed canvas – this was my first act in marking it – leant it at an
angle, and poured down, from what would become its base, a loose turpentine
solution of a very strong yellow, letting the liquid stain and sediment however
it chanced to run.
The
results required editing with a brush in order to arrive at a shaped space, a
crater that would seem to cup and enclose any viewer who drew near the canvas’s
eight-foot span. But this way, inviting a relatively random process into the
making of the image, I could feel that I was reaching out to touch something
other in my studio – something not entirely self-willed and human – even as I
had confronted something powerfully other, standing a previous evening by that
flame lit cliff-edge.
What I was doing conformed, as the critic Jonathan Jones has noted,6 to a pattern of artistic behaviour that is over two centuries old. Joseph Wright of Derby, returning from a visit to Vesuvius in 1774 to create a number of images for British viewers, upended his brush, forsaking its bristles for its butt, or took to a palette knife in order to conjure up the primal force of the geological phenomenon he had observed (Tate T05846, fig.2). These randomising tactics are still more in evidence in the purely imaginary spectaculars created by John Martin in the 1840s: the topographies of his The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah 1852 (Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne) and his Plains of Heaven 1851–3 (Tate T01928, fig.3) coalesce around swooshing force-fields of oil paint, here accreted, there vaporously fine. A more recent interplay between free-flowing washes and controlled image design can be found in the awestruck landscapes Michael Andrews created in the mid-1980s, following a pilgrimage to Australia’s Ayers Rock (Tate T06677).
Joseph
Wright of Derby 1734–1797
Vesuvius
in Eruption, with a View over the Islands in the Bay of Naples c.1776–80
Oil
paint on canvas
support:
1220 x 1764 mm; frame: 1461 x 1941 x 95 mm
Purchased
with assistance from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, the Art Fund, Friends
of the Tate Gallery, and Mr John Ritblat 1990
Tate
T05846
Fig.2
Joseph Wright of Derby
Vesuvius in Eruption, with a View over the Islands in the
Bay of Naples c.1776–80
John
Martin 1789–1854
The
Plains of Heaven 1851–3
Oil
paint on canvas
support:
1988 x 3067 mm; frame: 2415 x 3485 x 175 mm
Bequeathed
by Charlotte Frank in memory of her husband Robert Frank 1974
Tate
T01928
Fig.3
John Martin
The Plains of Heaven 1851–3
Wright
of Derby, an acute barometer of intellectual trends, undoubtedly painted with
an awareness of Burke’s 1757 Enquiry. He takes up a challenge that Burke
doubted painters could meet: for the young Irishman argued that ‘painting, when
we have allowed for the pleasure of imitation, can only affect simply by the
images it presents’7; whereas the words used in poetry can affect us ‘much more
strongly’8
than the things they represent. Poetry, therefore, with its suggestive
obscurity, was the art that could bring us closest to the sublime – ‘the
strongest emotion which the mind is capable of feeling’;9 a state of ‘astonishment’ including
a ‘degree of horror’ that ‘anticipates our reasonings, and hurries us on by an
irresistible force’.10 Burke contended that ‘darkness’ – the darkness of words dying
away into silence – ‘is more productive of sublime ideas than light’, the
condition within which paintings present their static imagery. And yet he
allowed that ‘such a light as that of the sun, immediately exerted on the eye,
as it overpowers the sense, is a very great idea’.11
Wright
of Derby chose to exploit that possibility. Dazzling light is the type of
overpowering optical impact his views of Vesuvius seek to ‘exert’ – an impulse
also followed by John Martin and indeed myself. And the chance-courting studio
tactics in each case are related, at least by natural sympathy, to the temporal
rhetoric Burke employs: ‘immediately’, ‘hurries us on’ – when Burke is talking
about the sublime, he often sounds like a drug user seeking a ‘rush’. Except of
course that his thrill-seeking falls within respectable channels – the
appreciation of nature and of art. Burke’s innovations in aesthetics challenged
visual artists to disrupt the stasis of the two-dimensional image and, by the
same token, the beautiful, which he interpreted as the perfectly
self-contained. But did such tasks lie within their capacity? Their efforts,
after all, generally lie contained within gallery walls: viewers always have
the option to leave by the door. This image, the viewer may say, has no hold
over me.
Going
back to the eighteenth-century formation of an ‘art of the sublime’, I have
been searching for a provisional working grip on this paradoxical concept. Let
us take it for a controlled encounter with power that is beyond our control.
The scale of the sublime
A
space modelled into the likeness of a crater – literally, a bowl-shape – that
is nearly eight feet wide: such a space will invite the viewer to step in
close, and then do its best to engulf him in a fiery embrace. Once you approach
the canvas of my Darvaza, your eyes are going to need to look far to the
left or right to find any rim to clutch at, let alone a stable foothold. So ran
my working idea. And then, affecting it from an early stage, there was an
awareness that I was due to exhibit in a largish public gallery. I needed a
painting that would make a firm, strong impact on anyone who entered the room,
before they turned to other works of mine with other agendas. Showmanship, in
other words, gets inextricably bound up with an artist’s desire to deliver the
sublime. This is hardly novel – think of the legendary attention-seeking of
J.M.W. Turner, not only blasting his Royal Academy competitors into
insignificance with the final varnishing-day touches to his marine spectaculars
but giving them titles that insisted (probably falsely) on their own
eye-witness status.
Richard
Serra
The
Matter of Time
2005
Installation
of seven sculptures, weatherproof steel, Varying dimensions.
©
2012 Richard Serra/DACS
Fig.4
Richard Serra
The Matter of Time 2005
© 2012 Richard Serra/DACS
But
in contemporary art terms, eight foot is minute. ‘What they are are vessels
that you walk into’,12 Richard Serra has said of the looming, labyrinthine corridors
and coils of steel that now fill a gallery at the Guggenheim Bilbao, some 430
by 80 feet wide (fig.4). Walking into those vessels, you submit to the mute yet
muscular cliffs of raw metal as if to geological limitations constraining your
movement. You are brought up close to – right into, in fact – a great and
daunting, continually unfolding otherness. It is a matter of ‘being inside
of a contained space where, if any content is going to be revealed at all, you
have to pay attention to every part of the surface that’s surrounding you’,
says Serra.13
To ask for mere ‘meaning’ when it comes to an experience on this scale seems
almost trivial, but the title of the ensemble – The Matter of Time –
tells us in part what the artist had in mind. This most magisterial of
contemporary sculptors was putting out a hand to apprehend things too big to
catch in a single image: not only physical weight and the experience of
passage, but his own capacious, kingly strength.14 The massive materialist’s
meditation overpowers the viewer self-consciously, intent on its very own
power.
And
yet this permanent exhibit inside the Guggenheim could be seen in terms of
retreat. Produced between 1994 and 1997, it followed a much publicised legal
contest which Serra fought and lost, his struggle to keep Tilted Arc, a
120-foot curved wall of steel originally erected in 1979, in place in a New
York square. Serra’s sculpture presented a neighbourhood public with an
obstruction that not only was daunting and resistant to interpretation but
which they could not avoid as they walked the street: in effect, an
uncontrollable uncontrolled. Their rejection of a challenging, ‘advanced’
sculpture has had repercussions.15 The past twenty years have seen a plethora of outsize
outdoor sculptures (Jeff Koons and Anthony Gormley are familiar field-leaders),
but by one means or another these works mostly seek to ingratiate, modulating
the sublimity their scale proposes.
Instead,
turn-of-the-millennium culture has kennelled the sublime. The Frank Gehry-built
museum in Bilbao – another sort of materialistic masterpiece, as shimmering and
heady as the steel maze that it houses is dun and obdurate – is one such
monster-cage. Dia:Beacon in upstate New York is another, a resource of vast
orthogonal interiors that bracingly complement the most ambitious artworks of
the minimalist movement, the stable out of which Serra emerged. And
Dia:Beacon’s aestheticised reinterpretation of an architectural space designed
for early-twentieth-century industry is of course matched by Tate Modern with
its Turbine Hall.
Anish
Kapoor
Marsyas 2002
Installation
at Tate Modern
©
Tate Photography
Fig.5
Anish Kapoor
Marsyas 2002
© Tate Photography
The
cage, in this case, creates its own monsters. The Tate’s Unilever Series
commission to conjure up some equivalent to the vanished machinery – some
activation of imaginative power – gets annually awarded to artists seen to
possess the requisite megaphonic showmanship. An outstanding example was the
2002 installation Marsyas by Anish Kapoor (fig.5). Addressing himself to
the titanic interior with a knack for topological paradox, Kapoor devised a
design that would seem to turn the space inside out. His magic trick depended
primarily on the psychological suggestiveness of the big circles he had drawn
within that cube. In other words, he proposed giant mouths to swallow all that
surrounded them: and then, in an inspired firming up of the metaphor, he employed
blood-red elastic sheeting to swoop from one steel ring to the next, evoking an
eviscerated throat. The radical disorientation thus effected struck at the
dwarfed viewers by analogising their own bodies with the Turbine Hall and
seeming to empty out both. To what end? To deliver the sublime for the
sublime’s own sake, if we are to go by Kapoor’s comments: the work, he said,
was ‘all about fear and vertigo and being confronted by something which one
immediately has to recognise is bigger than oneself – bigger than one’s
imagined self, even’.16
The content of the sublime: global
Fear
of what? What is that ‘something which one immediately has to recognise
is bigger’? Does the contemporary art of the sublime have some substantive
content in mind? Or do its meanings reside in its very nihilism, its hankerings
after the sheer effect of power? Or is that taking matters too seriously? Why
should we not simply celebrate showmanship, in this our age of spectacle?
Returning
to my own studio, I would like to review various potentially significant
concerns that passed through my mind as I worked on my Darvaza. Some of
these thoughts were about the planet. As we stood by that crater edge in the
Karakum, we could see old pipelines dangling and breaking away into the abyss.
Central Asia is in fact littered with jagged relics of Soviet industrialisation
in all its furious, heedless hubris. On a separate stretch of barren sands, we
got shown a rusting fleet of trawlers: the inland Aral Sea they had once fished
had evaporated after the waters to feed it were rerouted to boost cotton
production yields in another state of the USSR. But anyone with the faintest
interest in what goes on around them will know that the march of ruination goes
far beyond that little lamented twentieth-century political experiment. The
frontline has simply moved on: we might locate it now in the dammed Yangzi
valley, or in the uprooted forests of the Amazon or of Kalimantan.
Edward
Burtynsky
Oil
Spill #2, Discoverer Enterprise, Gulf of Mexico, May 11, 2010
Digital,
colour print on paper
1524
x 2032 mm
Photo
© Edward Burtynsky courtesy: Nicholas Metivier, Toronto / Flowers, London
Fig.6
Edward Burtynsky
Oil Spill #2, Discoverer Enterprise, Gulf of Mexico, May
11, 2010
Photo © Edward Burtynsky courtesy: Nicholas Metivier, Toronto /
Flowers, London
‘We’,
meaning media consumers, art gallery goers. We aspire to an awareness of the
trajectory to which global civilisation seems to be committed. We want, at
least lightly, to run our fingers along the blade that is wounding the planet.
We sense that, since contemporary art culture is a function of urban life, we
may be beneficiaries of the whole process – and that, as of May 2012, BP
continues to sponsor Tate – and yet we can hardly regret that Tate displays
artworks such as Edward Burtynsky’s Oil Spill #2, Discoverer Enterprise,
Gulf of Mexico, May 11, 2010 2011 (Tate L02996, fig.6). Burtynsky,
a Canadian preoccupied with the zones where mass human consumption most
spectacularly impacts on the planet – quarries, refineries, recycling yards –
alternates between high-horizoned panoramas and, as here, delirious plunging
overviews of great processes in action. Again, scale is crucial to Burtynsky’s
‘Industrial Sublime’ (the title he gave to a 2011 exhibition): his
two-metre-high study of the sea’s deathly swirling at once imposes and
mesmerises. ‘A terrible beauty’: a further title for Burtynsky’s projects could
have been taken from the famous closing line of W.B. Yeats’s Easter, 1916.
Beauty,
here, seems to coexist comfortably with sublimity because the image has the
status of reportage. Photography outside the studio, being tethered to
external, real-world processes, has a weighting unlike other art forms: it can
persuade us that it is those processes which beautify, rather than individual
human volition. Since painting has no such grip on factuality, I saw little
point in including those broken pipelines in my picture. (They would merely
have complicated the design.) But if painting cannot stand up in court as
evidence of what is going on physically on this planet, perhaps it could still
tell us something imaginatively about the nature of massed human volition? For
you might argue that the uncontrolled forces welling up to pollute the Gulf of
Mexico are at root consumer avidity and the pursuit of profit. Concluding a
spirited attempt to identify a genuine sublime for our times, the American art
critic Thomas McEvilley declared that ‘the unknown face of global capitalism is
terrifying in its vastness. Art and technology and so on are just role-players
in the grand game.’17 Here, he argued, was an object truly worthy of our fear.
Julie
Mehretu
Dispersion 2002
Ink
and acrylic on canvas
2286
x 3657 mm
©
Julie Mehretu
Collection
Nicolas and Jeanne Greenberg, New York
Fig.7
Julie Mehretu
Dispersion 2002
© Julie Mehretu
‘Capitalism’
is a master-abstraction of massed human processes, never wholly clear to the
view – and yet, just as Burke argued when it came to poetry, that obscurity can
add to its imaginative significance. Think of the alarm that a ‘free-falling’
diagonal on an economics graph can induce. This is the level of abstracted
signification worked by the graphic language of the New York-based artist Julie
Mehretu. Her melodramas of swooping vectors and nested graphemes, with their
bravura, baroque complexity, seem to picture the dynamics of the age on a very
large and general scale. Sometimes a local detail snags the
quasi-infrastructural flowchart into specificity: in Dispersion 2002
(fig.7), a ghost aeroplane provides it. The reference, easy to intuit, is to
events in New York the previous September. Here is visual art attempting
zealously to respond to a moment of global crisis and convulsion. Mehretu’s
work seems to ask for the description ‘tremendous’ – an epithet that closely
tracks ‘sublime’, touching on both Burke’s ‘horror’ and his ‘astonishment’.
The content of the sublime: cosmological
The
sublime may be political in effect – if it ‘hurries on’ our reasonings,
prompting us to this or that response – and yet it cuts across morality: it
‘anticipates’ those reasonings, oblivious of good or evil. The spectacle of
9/11 could at once constitute an imagistic master-stroke (hailed as such by
Damien Hirst and Anselm Kiefer, and anxiously so acknowledged by various
cultural theorists) while at the same time remaining humanly contemptible. Its
sublimity by another light reappears as banality: the mindset involved is one
many male adolescents pass through and a few never leave. Most innocently
computer-game their way through this psychic terrain. On the other side of that
zone, some come out with artworks which give contained poetic shape to schemes
of world-destruction and world-reconstruction.
Matthew
Ritchie
The
Iron City
2007
Still
from video
©
Matthew Ritchie
Fig.8
Matthew Ritchie
The Iron City 2007
© Matthew Ritchie
Titanic
structures tower overhead or tumble into an ocean traversed by some bobbing
boat from which we look out, in a digital animation by the British-born,
USA-based Matthew Ritchie. The Iron City 2002 (fig.8) belongs within a
larger sequence in which, according to the artist,
First
the universe assembles itself into a garden, and it’s sort of like the
beginning of the world. [But here] gradually that world decays and falls apart
and is turned into a kind of ruined city, which is the world we’ve created. And
then that ruined city transforms gradually into The Morning Line [the
work’s overall title], which then dissolves back to the beginning of time and
the whole thing becomes a kind of endless narrative loop.’18
On
one level Ritchie’s project has a direct contemporary agenda, speaking to the
often apocalyptic pessimism with which people conceive the twenty-first
century: ‘The idea is to confront and perhaps even transcend the rhetoric of
fear that has recently come to dominate all discussions of the future.’19 But as in several
installation projects he devised during the 2000s, the immediate means to hand
point his viewers towards a large scale reflection on change and possibility in
general, informed by readings of physics and cybernetic theory.
Anselm
Kiefer born 1945
Lilith 1987–9
Oil,
ash and copper wire on canvas
support:
3815 x 5612 x 500 mm; support, each: 3815 x 2806 x 50 mm
©
Anselm Kiefer
Purchased
1990
Tate
T05742
Fig.9
Anselm Kiefer
Lilith 1987–9
© Anselm Kiefer
Science
comes together in The Iron City with a narrative based on the epic that
also did much to provide Burke with his images of the sublime – Milton’s Paradise
Lost, in which Lucifer and his devils build the city of Pandemonium. Art
that conceives of a cosmological sublime may proceed by way of structural,
rational extrapolations; equally, it may lean primarily on myth. Anselm Kiefer
has had much to do with the latter approach since the 1970s. ‘Science serves
mythology by illustrating it’,20 he likes to claim. Kiefer’s Lilith 1987–89 (fig.9,
Tate T05742)
has a real-world referent of sorts – the streets and roofs of São Paulo, seen
looking down from one of the city’s tallest skyscrapers. But this ash-caked
canvas can hardly be mistaken for photo-reportage of contemporary living
conditions. Copper wires festoon the accreted gunk, rising up in coils. In
analogy they are snakes or winding tresses of hair, attributes of the malign Lilith
who has been mankind’s shadow-companion since before the creation of Eve, a
seductress warping all his purposes so that they head towards systemic
collapse. What there is to fear is not capitalism but a witch from the Kabbala,
as Kiefer peers down into the smog of the megalopolis from the ninety-ninth
floor. Or is there anything to fear at all? Might not the spectacular apparatus
of arcane reference conspire with the superheavy, insistent materiality of
Kiefer’s canvases to deliver yet another demonstration of artistic power for
its own sake? Myth, notoriously, is religion without the responsibility – and
anxiety – of belief.
Andreas
Gursky
Shanghai 2000
C-print
2800
x 2000 x 62 mm
©
Andreas Gursky/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/DACS 2012Courtesy Sprüth Magers Berlin
London
Fig.10
Andreas Gursky
Shanghai 2000
© Andreas Gursky/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn/DACS 2012Courtesy Sprüth
Magers Berlin London
There
is perhaps a comparable abstraction of purpose in another, younger, German
specialist in the spectacular. The large-scale photo-works of Andreas Gursky
often look to be reporting on patterns of contemporary global human activity,
in parallel say to those of Burtynsky, discussed above. A stock exchange, a
supermarket, a beach full of bathers or a block of flats provides the image
material – or, in the case of Shanghai 2000 (fig.10), a hotel lobby.
There are usually small human figures as indicators of scale. But the
organisation of Gursky’s images, since the 1990s effected by PhotoShop
techniques, is not far from that of M.C. Escher, the master of visual paradox,
for the intention, remorselessly repeated, is to generate an endlessly
extending and repeating perspective. ‘The universe (which others call the
Library) is composed of an indefinite and perhaps infinite number of hexagonal
galleries’:21
the other correlative to Gursky’s dread-inducing art is Jorges Luis Borges’s
unforgettably oppressive story The Library of Babel (1941). In fact
Gursky’s photos, as various critics have noted,22 relate as closely as any
artworks can to Kant’s account of a ‘mathematical sublime’ – when ‘the sublime
is that in comparison with which everything else is small’.23
If
we are seeking an adequate object and content for our subjective sensations of
sublimity, then the universe by definition provides an answer, the universe
being absolutely big. But if we are to produce artistic representations, then
we must seek some way to grapple with that totality, and this is where a scheme
of interrelated cosmic states becomes relevant. Kiefer’s mythologies mull over
such schemes continually, often by way of alchemy; Ritchie, using time-based
media or interactive game scenarios, represents states as they develop and
succeed one another.
For
my own part, painting Darvaza, the idea of a succession of states
implicitly governed the progression of the work – from a white-primed canvas to
a liquid yellow staining to the many deeper hues that my brushes eventually
laid down. Running backwards through that sequence, you move away from
solidity, this peculiar local condition in which a few objects in the orbits of
stars happen to find themselves. You move back through gaseous flame towards
plasma – towards the condition in which particles dance about in such a white
heat that they become electrically conductive. For plasma is the state in
which, overall, most matter exists: the condition of the sun from which,
historically, the materials of our planet originated; this universe’s vast and
humanly intolerable normality.
The content of the sublime: theological
But
another theme, far more immediate than the counter-intuitive, science-derived
reflection mentioned above, was much on my mind as I painted Darvaza.
The
title of my painting means ‘gateway’ in Persian. The name was in fact
originally given to a camel halt in the Karakum Desert, but since 1971, when
the Soviet gas probe blew up, locals have understandably taken it to mean ‘gate
of hell’. Hell as a pit of fire is an image that is vivid and potent to any
reader of the Qur’an and which remains verbally alive wherever cultures have
been formed around the Bible. In those scriptures, the pit of fire is the
ultimate threat to those who disobey God. It is how God appears to us at his
most terrible. And yet an interesting thing happens if you start depicting
a pit of fire. You are obliged to visualise light, and light, in the same
scriptures, is a facet of God that draws us towards him. The red and yellow
tints of your flames fade back to the same white ground that supplies your
painting with the radiance of the sky – of heaven, in other words.
Symbolically,
this is in accordance with standard theology. Humans are bound to approach God
in his unity from multiple, circumstance-bound perspectives and these facets in
which he shows himself will at first appear to contrast, but on deeper
inspection will start to dissolve. God’s fearfulness – his sublimity – is for
the Abrahamic religions ultimately subsumed within his radiance and perfection,
his beauty. For European artists informed by a strong sense of this, the task
has typically been to keep their work transparent to that brightness, by one
route or another. What once Gothic stained glass delivered, William Blake and
later Cecil Collins strove for with the translucence of staining inks on paper,
and for that matter pious Victorians such as William Holman Hunt worked to the
same end with the glazing of their oils.
But
we are a long way from Gothic stained glass, and the emergence in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries of a category of taste that came to be
labelled ‘the sublime’ is a marker of that distance. Other papers in this Tate
Research project discuss the historical relations between that emergence and
the process of secularisation. My own extremely simplified formula would be
that art itself as a cultural category had progressively established an
autonomy, vis-à-vis religion, during the Renaissance, and that afterwards this
new sub-category of the sublime arose as a way of sealing the separation, for
it enabled its users to redesignate any impulse that headed towards the
transcendent as an affair of purely human ‘taste’. (Pseudo-Longinus, the
antique writer who for us is the originator of the sublime, describes the ‘Let
there be light’ of the Bible as an effect of authorial good judgment on the
part of Moses.24)
The more a notion of the sublime is entrenched and absorbed, the less it
becomes possible for new artworks, however full of spiritual aspiration, to
pretend to a publically defined, distinct religious function. That is why
whatever thoughts I may have had about Hell while painting Darvaza, my
big canvas for a public art gallery, could only be as it were in play.
There
is nothing to stop an artwork maintaining an indistinct spiritual availability
– witness the popularity of Rothko’s Seagram murals 1958–59 (Tate) and
more recently of Bill Viola’s video triptychs and James Turrell’s presentations
of pure light. Currently ‘the spiritual’ is a category a whole degree more
vague than the sublime – with which to be sure in these cases it overlaps. ‘The
spiritual’, a category contemporary art can more or less share space with,
really just amounts to an ever-latent inflection of consciousness. The
religious, a category it effectively cannot, is about something, or
rather someone, namely God.25
Kazimir
Malevich
Black
Square 1930
Oil
on canvas
The
State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg
©
The State Hermitage Museum. Photo by Vladimir Terebenin, Leonard Kheifets, Yuri
Molodkovets.
Fig.11
Kazimir Malevich
Black Square 1930
The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg © The State Hermitage
Museum. Photo by Vladimir Terebenin, Leonard Kheifets, Yuri Molodkovets.
Nonetheless,
various strands in the intrinsically extra-religious art of the sublime might
correspond to various ways of religiously approaching God. One, the subject of
much exegesis, is the via negativa, the attempt to come to God by way of
what he is not. Interpreters of modern painting have been fond of
characterising any blocked-off vista, or any point at which expression-driven
brushwork collapses into the muteness of ‘mere paint’, as an analogue for a
failure to discover the divine within the visible – or even as an attempt to
jump the viewer into his own spiritual crisis. To come at this critical line
reductively, all that is being reconfirmed here is that painting (in parallel,
famously, with British politics) ‘doesn’t do God’. But painting has a
predisposition to dual effects and paradoxical: at its mutest it is liable to
be at its most eloquent; its darknesses may dazzle. Witness the archetypal
modernist moment of 1915, Kazimir Malevich painting his Black Square (fig.11)while
rhapsodically declaring that, through this ‘zero of form’:
I
have destroyed the ring of the horizon and escaped from the circle of things
...
I
have released all the birds from the eternal cage ...
I
have untied the knots of wisdom and set free the consciousness of colour! ...
I
have overcome the impossible ...26
Mark
Wallinger
Via
Dolorosa
2002
Projected
video installation, continuous loop
©
Mark Wallinger. Courtesy Anthony Reynolds Gallery, London
Fig.12
Mark Wallinger
Via Dolorosa 2002
© Mark Wallinger. Courtesy Anthony Reynolds Gallery, London
Even
if contemporary art cannot be positively and substantively religious, it might
provide a forum in which to consider this very problem. This is what Mark
Wallinger did during the 1990s and 2000s, using a variety of tactics, from
statuary to video. His Via Dolorosa 2002 (fig.12) is by genre a typical
specimen of appropriation art: Wallinger laid claim to sixteen minutes of
footage from Jesus of Nazareth, a reverent and highly popular film for
television made in 1977 by Franco Zeffirelli. His concept was to black out the
centre of the screen, leaving only a fringe of visible image, a picture that is
in effect a frame. In the watching, Via Dolorosa is an experience of
frustration. A salutary frustration? Are we thereby brought to the brink of
sublimity, induced to contemplate the unpicturable pain of the crucifixion? A
supercilious frustration? How dumb of Zeffirelli to translate divine mysteries
into a florid picturesque: how much smarter this latter-day re-edit. The
exercise is almost insufferably poised, not least in its arch nod to the
Malevich modernist icon mentioned above; and yet it somehow obtains the benefit
of the doubt. Wallinger would not have wanted to do it, if he had not wanted to
think about something seriously.
***
We
have looked at various formats in which contemporary art attempts effects that
Edmund Burke might have recognised as sublime, and we have looked at certain
types of content they might involve. The various issues we have touched on bear
on a larger issue – what claims contemporary visual art can make for its own
cultural centrality: why should it be accorded such titanic architecture and
such an exorbitant status as a form of financial investment? Evidence, such as
that assembled above, might be brought out in response, as a way to refute any
allegation that the scene represented by and revolving around the Tates, the
Guggenheims, the MoMAs and all the art fairs and biennales is petty, trivial or
timid in its concerns. On the contrary, as I have tried to show, it is not only
that we have this great big bag called art – this massive cultural kennel, this
monster cage. It is that when we talk about the contemporary sublime, we are
very largely talking about the way that artists have tried to fill that bag
with appropriately huge subjects. (Or at least, very big-looking beasts,
whether or not they really bite.)
The sublime as it gets spoken
That
said, it is doubtful whether any of the artists mentioned above would care one
way or the other whether or not they were described as exponents of the
sublime. They might be willing to adopt the term as a convenient presentational
hook, but most of them would probably regard it as a curatorial device,
incidental to their real working concerns. Speaking for myself, I was
peripherally aware that the label might be invoked when people looked at my
painting Darvaza, but if anything I rather hoped that it could be
avoided. And this was because it might involve me in an ongoing critical
wrangle as to the definition of the sublime – the very thing, in fact, that has
come to pass as I write this. In this second section, I will try to disentangle
the verbal complications I had been holding at bay, approaching the sublime
through those who have consciously given shape to the theme rather than through
those artworks that merely happen to reflect it.
A genealogy of the contemporary sublime: Newman to Lyotard
‘The
sublime’ is a concept, and concepts belong more properly to writers who
theorise than to makers of things to look at. Yet some individuals straddle both
categories. One, notably, was Barnett Newman, a philosophically educated
controversialist who drafted the article ‘The Sublime is Now’ in 1948 in a bid
to position his fellow New York painters in contrast to the European tradition.
The latter had been overwhelmingly fixated on beauty, Newman claimed, whereas
he and his friends pitched their new art at ‘the absolute emotions’. ‘The image
we produce is the self-evident one of revelation, real and concrete’,27 he asserted, bombastically
and paradoxically equating transcendence and physicality. But then a kind of
God-shy spiritual presumptiveness posited on large and simply constructed
artefacts would become Newman’s habitual arena. His activities epitomised the
trait the philosopher James Kirwan ascribes to post-Romantic thought in
general: ‘the aspiration of the self to lift itself up by its own bootlaces.’28 Newman went on two years
after his essay to entitle his vastest canvas to date Vir Heroicus Sublimis
1950–51 (MOMA, New York). His rhetoric echoed the thinking of his sometime
associate Clyfford Still and to some extent that of Mark Rothko; but Newman’s
invocation of the sublime did not, as far as I can trace, result in the term
joining the studio lexicon of 1950s painters.
Instead,
it got reshuffled by the inventively revisionist New York art historian Robert
Rosenblum. Rosenblum published an essay on ‘The Abstract Sublime’ in 1961,
incorporating its arguments into an engaging and widely read book, Modern
Painting and the Northern Romantic Tradition: Friedrich to Rothko, in 1973.
As the title indicates, Rosenblum argued that Newman’s generation did have
European forebears, only they did not come from Italy and France – the
motherlands of beauty, sensuality and good taste, those qualities that Newman
scorned. The art historian’s eye traced a certain vein of sensibility that runs
from early nineteenth-century German landscapes in which the horizon – the
limit of the visible – is forcefully symbolic, through Van Gogh, Munch and Klee
to abstract expressionist canvases in which there is an equally emphatic
reaching out to the ultimate. Rosenblum described a pictorial sublime that had
been a means for two centuries of artists to ‘seek the sacred in a modern world
of the secular’.29 A great deal of landscape-based painting and photography has
been created in awareness of his book from the 1970s onwards, and to that
extent an account of values acknowledging the sublime did re-enter studio
currency.
In
1982, many artistic revolutions onwards from Newman’s invocation of the sublime
in 1948, a totally separate interpretation of his rhetoric appeared.30 Jean-François Lyotard was a
Paris-based philosopher in his late fifties who had participated in the dramas
of the French left over previous decades and who remained intent on igniting
radical, oppositional momentum – as a conceptual possibility, at least. Three
years earlier an analysis of the cultural dynamics of the age, The
Postmodern Condition, had brought him fame. The ‘postmodern’ that Lyotard
presented was marked by a collapse of cohesive ‘grand narratives’ and as such
was a development to embrace, since regimes on every level – political,
cultural, epistemological – needed to be confronted with their own limits, the
borderlines at which they ceased operating. It was a potential to deliver this
sort of confrontation that Lyotard discerned in Newman’s artworks, linking them
to works by Cézanne, Duchamp and Malevich as exemplary moments in the history
of the avant-garde. Lyotard built on the fact that Newman had employed a term
theorised by Kant, the philosopher to whom he himself most often returned.
Lyotard
argued – through a succession of essays and the curation of a 1985 Paris
exhibition – for an art of the sublime that was concerned with ‘presenting the
unpresentable’.31 Certain radical, abrupt, uncompromising artistic acts might
actively refuse to be understood – refuse to fall within known narratives and
schemes of meaning – and might thereby confront viewers with their own
conceptual limitations. Such avant-gardism could deliver the vitalising mental
shock that Kant believed inherent in the experience of natural sublimity – of
‘threatening rocks’, ‘thunder clouds’ and ‘the boundless ocean’.32 It might interrupt the
continual ‘destruction of experience’ in which the homogenising processes of
global capitalism involve us. The stark verticals on which Newman’s artworks
depend – his trademark ‘zips’ – provided Lyotard with one such sudden rush;
Malevich with his irreducible Black Square supplied another.
Lyotard’s
theorisations of the sublime (which ran alongside other French academic work on
the theme, less concerned with contemporary art33) were meant to relate, at
least implicitly, to a positive, proactive politics. If they were of a piece
with his own account of the ‘postmodern’, they stood in declared opposition to
a more common 1980s interpretation of ‘postmodern art’ – the ‘mix it up,
anything goes’ version, one might say. As to ‘the painting that’s now generally
referred to as “postmodern”’, Lyotard stated in a 1985 interview,
I
can only say that it strikes me rather unfavourably. These forms of painterly
expression that one now sees returning, these transavantgardists, or let’s say
neoexpressionists ... seem to me to be a pure and simple forgetfulness of everything
that people have been trying to do for over a century: they’ve lost all sense
of what’s fundamentally at stake in painting. There’s a vague return to a
concern with the enjoyment experienced by the viewer.34
This
is what happens when scratchy ageing philosophers decide to address themselves
to the theme of art: they not only avoid the tiresome business of actually
looking at artworks, they make it their business actively to disparage it. By
the same token, there was no particular form of visual sensibility that Lyotard
appeared to advocate, while he clove to his lineage of verbally articulate
avant-gardists. And thus an intellectually imposing, politically stirring
description of ‘the sublime’ entered into international ‘artspeak’ – its
importation reflecting a widespread 1980s vogue for French theory – as a joker
in the pack: from Black Square to carte blanche.
A genealogy of the contemporary sublime: Kelley to Tuymans
As
of the early 1980s, many a campus beyond Paris was acquainting students with the
concept of the sublime. Emerging from CalArts, the trans-media arts institute
outside Los Angeles, Mike Kelley used the term as the title of a
Longinus-citing performance in 1984. Transgressive performances, erudite texts,
crude drawings, sculptural installations and post-punk amplified noise all came
together in the work of this bricoleur-provocateur, with his focus on the
truths that might be exposed via base materials, ranging from recycled soft
toys to excrement. Kelley’s imaginative world turned around working-class life
in his hometown of Detroit, and as such his sublime was very much an affair of
the street, of youth culture. The limit point to articulate thought did not
come from mountains and oceans. ‘For me,’ Kelley reflected in an interview,
psychedelia
was sublime because in psychedelia, your worldview fell apart. That was a
sublime revelation, that was my youth, and that was my notion of beauty. And
that was a kind of cataclysmic sublime. It was very interiorized, it wasn’t
about a metaphysical outside; it was about your own consciousness. That’s my
starting point of the sublime.35
Kelley
went on to suggest that such a sublime could be produced by ‘image clash, image
resonance, things like that’.36 An instance would be his Silver Ball 1994 (fig.13),
a big unshapely scrunch-up of cooking foil and chicken wire suspended above a
gallery floor and attended by a sound system and baskets of plastic fruit. The
UFO-esque anomaly is desperate to be ‘weird’, is desperate to be worshipped, is
desperate, period; and in this has a kind of sad integrity. Such a bathetic
endpoint of meaning locates the sublime once again in adolescence with its
familiar terrains of science fiction, drug-taking and intensive, abrasive
noise. Another artist emerging from the 1980s LA scene, Fred Tomaselli, offered
a comparable interpretation: ‘In my life I have only ever been able to access
the sublime chemically ... It’s a major subject in the history of art and it
also happens to be the major component around drugs.’37 Tomaselli’s paintings,
however – literally pill-studded variations on the final, ‘Beyond the Infinite’
sequence of Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey – are
defiantly, exultantly (and self-consciously) whimsical in their subscription to
mind-alteration.
They
offer a wilfully naive descant on a scene in which bathos and shamefulness had
come to the fore. The late 1980s and early 1990s were the heyday of the grunge
movement in rock and of its art world equivalent, the vogue for ‘the abject’.
Exhibitions dealing in blood, shit or viscera would habitually reference the
Paris-based theorist Julia Kristeva and her 1982 book Powers of Horror.
Kristeva took her cue (as to a large extent did Kelley) from Freud and his
notion of the unheimlich or uncanny: the object which disturbs because
it brings an individual into contact with matters that he or she has repressed.
The overall shape of such a pattern of repression, for Kristeva, was an
individual’s ‘symbolic order’, the foundation of their own self-definition –
the abject being whatever it excluded. Kristeva found feminist and indeed more
general political implications in this formula, which readily fell in line with
the notion of the sublime as a limit to the comprehensible. It equally spoke to
would-be avantgardists who sensed that their tradition had arrived at a
defensive, dejected, historical low ebb.
Between
Lyotard’s visually unspecified call-to-disorder and Kristeva’s backhanded
picturesque of the repellent, between mass society’s ever-latent groundswells
of spiritual dissatisfaction and articulate artists such as Kelley and
Tomaselli who were finding new ways to emblematise them, there was every reason
why ‘the sublime’ should prove a very convenient curatorial hook for a growing
number of exhibitions from the early 1990s onwards, the tag being archly
extended in many an ingenious direction. For all the thinkers I have just
named, whatever was sublime must inevitably offend against taste – against,
that is, received ideas of aesthetic decorum and discursive etiquette. And yet
such exhibitions spawned their own loosely defined taste zone, proposing what
might be an appropriate sensibility, what type of image-stock to use.
The
catalogue illustrations to The Sublime Void, a show held in Antwerp in
1993, return repeatedly to emptied vessels (for example Rachel Whiteread’s
object casts, or the dangling coats of Juan Muñoz ) and to forlorn, anomalous
vestiges (Robert Gober body parts, Thomas Schütte putty figurines). The
window-picture that is veiled or blurry (as in the paintings of Gerhard
Richter) and the blocked-off receding road (as in the photos of Willie Doherty)
would be co-opted in other exhibitions for the same triste symbolism of
spiritual disappointment – often associated, as I indicated above, with the theologians’
via negativa. Back in Barnett Newman’s day, the sublime had still
bristled with hunky machismo: no longer. It was now reassigned to keep company
with ‘the trace’, that wistful sigh of the intellect so cherished by
poststructuralist theorists.
Luc
Tuymans
Still
Life 2002
Oil
on canvas
3470
x 5000 mm
Image
courtesy of The Saatchi Gallery, London © Luc Tuymans, 2002
Fig.14
Luc Tuymans
Still Life 2002
Image courtesy of The Saatchi Gallery, London © Luc Tuymans,
2002
The
doyen of such dejection was the Belgian painter Luc Tuymans, whose work gained
an international profile during the 1990s. He described his canvases, which
have usually been modest in scale, as outcomes of a trace-on-trace process – of
analysing and redrawing a photographic image until it was ‘entirely dead’ and
then recreating it in paint.38 The ostensible content of the image would itself often be
modest – some fraction of a human figure, some corner of a room. The title (and
accompanying exegesis) might then propose that this small tamped down trace
derived from something ungovernably large and hideous – the Holocaust, the
Belgian exploitation of the Congo or the events of 9/11, as in the case of Still
Life 2002 (fig.14), an unusually large painting of a fruit bowl. An
interpretive text for Still Life issued by the Saatchi Gallery
epitomises the tone of ‘the disappointed sublime’, as Simon Morley has termed
this style in ‘artspeak’:
The
sheer scale makes the contemplation of this painting almost impossible: a vast
canvas representing an absolute nothingness. Luc Tuymans chose the subject of
still life precisely because it was utterly unremarkable; a generic ‘brand’ of
‘object’ rendered to immense scale; it is banality expanded to the extreme. The
simplicity of Luc Tuymans’s composition alludes to a pure and uninterrupted
world order; the ephemeral light, with which the canvas seems to glow, places
it as an epic masterpiece of metaphysical and spiritual contemplation. In
response to unimaginable horror, Luc Tuymans offers the sublime. A gaping
magnitude of impotency, which neither words nor paintings could ever express.39
Tuymans
himself positions his values on another level:
I’m
not so much interested in the spiritual aspects of culture – ‘beauty’ or poetic
descriptions of beauty don’t seem real enough for me. Reality is actually far
more important than any form of spirituality. Realism. It’s much more interesting
to crawl from underneath to the so-called top.40
To
this author, both statements seem deeply misleading. Tuymans’s paintings gained
their reputation owing to the fact that they are, in a melancholic fashion,
extremely beautiful. Like the Belgian Symbolists of an earlier era – Fernand
Khnopff, Léon Spilliaert – he revels in the poetry of cold, November-afternoon
pastel tones and seems incapable of delivering an inelegant brushmark, even on
the rare occasions when he tries. A fine judgment about how far to diminish and
distance his motifs has been crucial to Tuymans in his attempts to conjure a
frisson of menace from such exquisiteness. It deserted him as he worked up his
response to the loud public agenda of 9/11: the result is neither ‘extreme’ nor
‘epic’, merely vapid and inert. In this case the vogue for the sublime
delivered not merely inflated verbiage, but pretentious art.
The limits of the sublime
Burke’s
Philosophical Enquiry and in its wake Kant’s Critique of Judgment
each consistently distinguished the sublime from the beautiful, treating both
categories as forms of ‘taste’, that is to say of aesthetic experience. The
aspects of recent art practice and discourse that I have been reviewing return
me to these distinctions, making me want to reconsider them. Can the sublime in
art, I might ask, also at once be the beautiful? Can the
controlled-uncontrollable, or presented-unpresentable, that which pushes me to
teeter one foot over my mental cliff-edge, somehow bed down comfortably within
the zone that we simply term ‘taste’? – good taste being aesthetic experience
that meets with contemporary social approval.
Or
rather, perhaps I should ask: how can they not? How can any sublime that is
presented through art not get bound up in the take-it-or-leave-it luxury
of spectatorhood, how can it not be complicit in sheer showmanship? Surely Kant
was right to dismiss artworks from consideration in his analysis of the
sublime, instead positing his aesthetic on experiences of nature? By 2001, when
Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe published Beauty and the Contemporary Sublime, the
institutionalisation of a concept that in Lyotard’s hands had been definitively
anti-institutional was already a given. Gilbert-Rolfe contrarily proposed (as
far as I can tell) that nowadays it was the category of ‘beauty’
(idiosyncratically defined) that was truly radical and liberatory. A short
sample of the book’s argumentation may suggest why it failed to resolve the
issue to universal satisfaction:
The
extreme mobility of the contemporary sublime erodes autonomy because it calls
for movement through the heteronomous which is itself heteronomous, provisional
singularity taking the place of the irreducible, movement being the basis of
the indeterminacy of what is erased and represented within it.41
The
book was in fact the occasion for Thomas McEvilley’s riposte, quoted earlier,
that if contemporary art was looking for a genuine challenge to its prevailing
modes of representation, then it needed to peer out of the gallery window at
the vast and fearful unknown of global capitalism: only that way could the
sublime regain ‘its old dignity and danger’.42
My
impressionistic survey has tried to demonstrate, however, that artists
themselves are not to be collectively arraigned for a failure to think
seriously. A truth-seeking instinct seems to be a permanent feature of our
mental equipment, and it reveals itself in any number of contemporary art
initiatives. Axiomatically, we cannot foretell what truths these artworks might
arrive at, or whether in fact they will arrive at any. The whole zone called
‘art’ is in many senses a fictive space, and to push at this limitation is
bound to involve the artist in paradoxes. The critic and curator may in turn
wish to round up any number of those paradoxes – those presentations of the
unpresentable – within the category of the sublime.
It
is just that, as of 2012, the process of rounding up feels to have gone a
little too far. As a painter – a dealer in surfaces, a literally superficial
individual – I need to keep in mind some look that distinguishes what is
sublime from what is not. For me, it does not seem useful to include in the
category art that employs the whole human figure as its central property. Art
that describes the human figure in completed relationships is surely outside
the province also. Individuals in relation to interiors they inhabit and in
their social interrelations make poor candidates for the sublime, and by
extension associated subject-matters – whether we are talking about identity
issues and political contestation, or pastoral landscape and still life – are
not well described in this way. (It is true that any of these prescriptive
guidelines might be overturned as soon as an artist reaches out for extremes of
scale.) Completed relationships on a formal and abstract level are obviously
non-sublime. Donald Judd, Patrick Caulfield, Sophie Calle, Thomas Hirschhorn:
these are all in their differing ways exemplary artists of the non-sublime. How
far to gather them up within the attractive enclosure of the beautiful, I leave
to others.
That
still leaves rather a vast amount of contemporary art stuck in the bracing cold
outside. And I think the point has been reached where a blanket description for
these aesthetic asylum-seekers will no longer do. The critical border police
need to find superior methods of discrimination.
Notes
1
For
example in the 2005 exhibition of that name at the University of Colorado.
2
For
example in Lee Rozelle, Ecosublime: Environmental Awe from New World to
Oddworld, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 2006.
3
For
example in the essay of that name by Vijay Mishra, in Simon Morley (ed.), The
Sublime: Documents of Contemporary Art, London 2010.
4
For
example in the photographer’s website http://www.jeremyhogan.name/portfolio/11/military-industrial-shopping-complex,
accessed 18 September 2012.
5
For
example in the artworks of James Turrell, Damien Hirst, Luc Tuymans and Mike
Kelley respectively.
6
Jonathan
Jones, ‘Julian Bell, Joseph Wright and Britain’s Titian Triumph’, Guardian,
2 March 2012, www.guardian.co.uk/.../2012/.../julian-bell-joseph-wright-art-weekly,
accessed 18 May 2012.
7
Edmund
Burke, A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime
and the Beautiful, 1757, Part 2, Section IV.
8
Ibid.,
Part 5, Section VII: the essay’s closing line.
9
Ibid.,
Part 1, Section VII.
10
Ibid.,
Part 2, Section I.
11
Ibid.,
Part 2, Section XIV.
12
Richard
Serra interviewed in David Sylvester, Interviews with American Artists,
London 2001, p.289.
13
Ibid.,
p.296.
14
‘The
sheer effort to build these things has a lot to do, finally, with what they’ve
become’, Serra acknowledges. Ibid., p.301.
15
My
belief that the opposition to Tilted Arc stemmed from a genuine
groundswell of popular opinion rather than from politicians’ contrivances is
based on conversations with New York residents, including members of the arts
community.
16
Comments
made in the film Anish Kapoor Marsyas 2002 theEYE: Anish Kapoor: www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1Ouyhjx06k,
accessed 19 September 2012.
17
Thomas
McEvilley, in Bill Beckley (ed.), Sticky Sublime, New York 2001.
18
Matthew Ritchie | Apocalypse | Art21 Blog: blog.art21.org/2008/08/21/matthew-ritchie-apocalypse/,
accessed 18 May 2012.
19
Matthew Ritchie: The Iron City – Saint Louis Art Museum www.absolutearts.com/artsnews/2007/07/02/34566.html,
accessed 18 May 2012.
20
Anselm
Kiefer, Art Will Survive its Ruins, Paris 2011, p.204.
21
Jorge
Luis Borges, ‘The Library of Babel’ (1941), opening sentence: this translation
by James E. Irby in Jorge Luis Borges, Labyrinths (1964).
22
For
example Caroline Levine, ‘Gursky’s Sublime’, pmc.iath.virginia.edu/issue.502/12.3levine.html,
accessed 19 September 2012.
23
Immanuel
Kant, Critique of Judgment, Book 2, §26.
24
Longinus,
On the Sublime, ix.9.
25
A
lively, shrewd and deeply informed survey of these issues is available in James
Elkins, On the Strange Place of Religion in Contemporary Art, Routledge,
2004: see in particular pp.95–100 for a discussion of the sublime.
26
Kazimir
Malevich,text to accompany ‘The Last Futurist Exhibition’, 1915: translation as
included in C. Harrison & P. Wood, eds, Art in Theory: 1900–1990,
Oxford 1992, pp.166–176.
27
Quotes
from Barnett Newman, ‘The Sublime is Now’ 1948.
28
James
Kirwan, Sublimity, London 2005, p.155. Kirwan’s book is the sharpest
history of modern concepts of the sublime that I have read, wide-ranging and
written with philosophical wit and discrimination.
29
Robert Rosenblum, Modern Painting and the Northern Romantic Tradition: Friedrich to Rothko, London 1978, p.218.
30
Jean-François
Lyotard, ‘Presenting the Unpresentable: The Sublime’, translated by Lisa
Liebmann, Artforum April 1982, 20(8): pp64–69.
31
Ibid.
32
Immanuel
Kant, Critique of Judgment, Book 1, §28.
33
See
the essays collected in Jean-François Courtine et al, Du Sublime, Paris
1988.
34
Bernard
Blistène, ‘Les Immatériaux: A Conversation with Jean-François Lyotard’, Flash
Art, no.121, March 1985.
35
Mike
Kelley, interview with Art21, 2005: www.art21.org/.../mike-kelley/interview-mike-kelley-language-and- ..., accessed 18 May 2012.
36
Ibid.
37
Fred
Tomaselli and Philip Taaffe in conversation with Raymond Foye and Rani Singh,
2002: www.philiptaaffe.info/Interviews.../Tomaselli-Smith-Taaffe.php,
accessed 18 May 2012.
38
Luc
Tuymans, BBC Radio 3 interview with John Tusa: www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/johntusainterview/tuymans_transcript.shtml,
accessed 18 May 2012.
39
Saatchi
Gallery website: www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/luc_tuymans.htm,
accessed 18 May 2012.
40
Luc
Tuymans interviewed in Gordon Burn, Sex & Violence, Death & Silence:
Encounters with Recent Art, London 2009.
41
Jeremy
Gilbert-Rolfe, Beauty and the Contemporary Sublime, New York 2000, p.55.
42
Thomas
McEvilley in Beckley 2001.
Julian
Bell is a painter and writer.
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