Review of:
Catherine de Zegher and Mark Wigley, eds., The Activist Drawing:
Retracing Situationist Architectures from Constant's New Babylon to
Beyond. New York: The Drawing Center, and Cambridge, Mass.: MIT
P, 2001.
- How can a drawing be activist?
- Can a graphic mark constitute direct, vigorous,
oppositional action? Graffiti, at its gouging best, comes to mind. But
then, that's writing. Drawing, traditionally conceived, withdraws from
the public sphere, a fugitive trace, mute consort to the creative
process. And even considering the historical shifts in drawing's
significance--from its function as ideational armature in the
Renaissance to a model of spontaneity and expression in the early twentieth
century to recent revaluations based in lability, erasure, and
obsolescence--to advance its physical presence as an intervention
capable of effecting political change is to take up the question of the
efficacy of art in general. Specifically, it is to ask the dreadful question,
"Does art matter?" and to consider further the implications of what it
might mean "to matter." This is the daunting project launched
in The Activist Drawing: Retracing Situationist Architectures from
Constant's New Babylon to Beyond, co-edited by Catherine de
Zegher, director of The Drawing Center in New York, and architectural
historian Mark Wigley. While its authors would not claim to have found
conclusive answers (they cannot seem to agree on a common enemy),
opening discussion of the Great Unspoken of art historical discourse
gives the book its contemporary urgency. Through their examination of
architectural drawing as a hinge between the immateriality of
representation and the materiality of lived experience, the authors
probe the outcome of nearly a century's effort toward a positive
breakdown between art and life, and they address the possibilities of drawing
in general as a conduit for revising lived experience. What emerges is a
productive examination of the medium itself: drawing's historical
construction and theoretical participation in the vagaries of artistic
practice, and the suggestion that the very characteristics of banality,
flexibility, and disposability that have produced drawing as marginal to
the arts are the grounds for its historical consideration as a site of
resistance.
- The book is an expanded record of a symposium organized by
Wigley and art historian Thomas McDonough; its title, The Activist
Drawing, reflects a shift in emphasis from the more
monographically named exhibition at the Drawing Center from which it
derived--"Another City for Another Life: Constant's New Babylon"
(2 November to 30 December 1999). Rather than merely documenting the
"visionary architecture" of the Dutch artist Constant Nieuwyenhuys as it
is projected in the drawings and multimedia presentations of his
imagined city New Babylon (1956-1974), the participants--Benjamin
Buchloh, Rosalyn Deutsche, Elizabeth Diller, Martha Rosler, Bernard
Tschumi, and Anthony Vidler, in addition to Wigley and McDonough--subject Constant's project to a scrutiny that takes seriously the
ideological implications of architectural projections, with their
dimensionally driven aura of "realizability," and the historical
imperatives that might call for their revision. The critical dimension
of the book, which stands out in opposition to the laudatory conventions
of the typical exhibition catalogue, is underscored by de Zegher's focus
on New Babylon's own idealism. In her introduction, she draws attention
to the book's emergence "in the context of a citywide celebration of
'utopia'" driven by the New York Public Library's exhibition "Utopia:
The Search for the Ideal Society in the Western World" (14 October 2000 to
27 January 2001). New Babylon, as a fully automated city whose
inhabitants, freed from labor, "play" by endlessly reconfiguring their
environment to suit their individual and collective desires, is recast
in this context as a plan for an experimental lifestyle which in
retrospect seems to land somewhere between Fourier and Disney.
- The Drawing Center's exhibition and symposium took place a year
in advance of the "Utopia" show, so there is no direct reference to the
materials or theories made available there. But founding a theoretical
critical practice such as Constant's, in which the inhabitant of New
Babylon "will not have to make art, for he can be creative in the
practice of his daily life" (qtd. in Constant 9), and
establishing that practice as dependent on yet enacted outside of
technological support, is a utopian notion which in academic circles
today is widely regarded as suspect. The difficulty of attributing an
unqualified materialist activism to Constant's work is first
communicated in Buchloh's introductory conversation with him at the
symposium. After Constant's early assertion regarding his
involvement with the COBRA group--"We didn't consider ourselves
avant-garde. The word is never used in COBRA[1]"(16)--Buchloh leads him, not without resistance,
through a succession of encounters with apparently contradictory models
of vanguard influence: DeStijl, Giacometti, the Soviet avant-garde.
Through an unflinching examination of the problems implied by what de
Zegher calls "the dynamic intersection of drawing, utopianism, and
activism in a multimedia era" (9), this book emerges as an exploration of
the eclipse of avant-garde artistic practice as it is understood from
its original, that is, political definition, as Constant and his project
are interrogated for foreknowledge of the obstacles to such practices
today.
- With irony worthy of the postmodern, Thomas More
named "Utopia" to signify both "good place" and "no place." As the
symposium participants focus on the problem of how to receive both the
virtuality and the technological utopianism of Constant's project as
relevant to the contemporary situation in which, as de Zegher admits,
"the imagined homo ludens . . . has not brought about a daily life
of invention and action but of leisure and consumption," the
faint outlines of a prognosis for goodness materialize (10). Recasting
Constant's utopian project as artistic practice--a mediated, semiotic
intervention rather than a program with ambitions for material
realization--shifts the question into the field of representation, where
drawing, the point of intersection between the materiality of
architecture and the idealism of artistic practice, is advanced as a
space of resistance. Yet in a postmodern culture in which the master of
détournement turns out to be capitalism itself, it is
the "no place" of graphic utopia of which we are made acutely aware: the
disappearance in turn of paper support, the analog mark, practical
accountability, and political activism.
- Mark Wigley takes on the challenge of reconciling the mechanical
and the creative by arguing for their ontological presence in drawing
itself. In his essay, "Paper, Scissors, Blur," Wigley establishes
drawing as the very ground of architecture's acceptance as a fine art in
the Renaissance, and drawing's own emergence as "origin" and site of
authenticity as having been established only through the sacrifice of
paper: a disappearance of the ground in the presence of the graphic
mark. This deconstructive observation alone, of an origin based in
absence, places drawing at the center of the current theoretical fray
over virtuality, simulacra, and digital processes as they relate to
representation. But Wigley goes further, to establish the historical
"rise" of drawing as utterly coextensive with the mass production of
paper and the widespread use of the printing press, that is, as
dependent on early modern technological innovation and the appearance of
a "cult of reproduction." For Wigley, drawing at its inception is at
once essential and dependent, ideational and expressive, somatic index
and symbol of the utterly rational. As he traces drawing historically
through the pressures of modernism to the prevailing ideologies of
Constant's postwar context, what emerges is an image of drawing's inner
plurality, of a medium constituted by complementary differences. He writes,
The project turns on the fragility of the line between originality
and reproduction, unique unpredictable events and mechanization,
spontaneous play and automated machinery. In the very techniques of
drawing, Constant encounters the logic of the project that he is trying
to represent. As the drawings of New Babylon slide from "mechanical" to
"expressive," the relentless smoothness of the slide, the extremely
minor variations from drawing to drawing, and the repetition of the same
images in different media, effectively undermine the standard
oppositions. A sense of reproduction is embedded in a string of
originals and thereby conveys the organizing principle of the project.
The effect of a hundred unique works on paper is that vast mechanical
structures assume an atmospheric immateriality and expressive flashes
assume a structural physical presence. The collapse of the distinction
between mechanization and spontaneous originality that is meant to be
enacted by New Babylon is first enacted on paper. (41-2)
- New Babylon's political potential is here located in an
indeterminacy and play of meaning that finds its ideal medium in
drawing. This ideology of infinite flow is identified as a founding
principle of the Situationists, the overtly political movement of the
1960s with which Constant was associated at New Babylon's inception.
The Situationist critique of commodity-driven spectacle centered on an
idealist revision of urban experience (and the architecture that
determines it) through the practice of experimental counter-behaviors
such as dérive, aimless wandering in a city designed for
productive use. Thomas McDonough's contribution, "Fluid Spaces:
Constant and the Situationist Critique of Architecture," identifies what
he calls a "fundamental misrecognition" at the heart of the project:
that the endless mobility and dynamism of New Babylon, set in opposition
to instrumental reason, could also strike a blow against capitalism--a
movement which is itself dependent on fluidity and incessant change. In
its ambition to set in motion the salutary demise of drawing and art in
general, New Babylon "forgets" the divisiveness and alienation that
results from the vagaries of individual desire (an outcome of which
Constant became convinced after the events of May 1968, resulting in a
protracted autocritique that produced considerably darker versions of the
project in the 1970s). And while Constant's
détournement of architecture--his use of architectural
means to critique its static conventions--is meant as an attack on
functional space, it ends up paradoxically prefiguring the dystopia of
present-day public spaces. This is the theme taken up by Martha Rosler's
untitled presentation of her Airport Series, photographs of
the anonymous spaces that characterize the architecture of postmodern
transit and mobility. Mobility in the grip of commerce, she argues,
relinquishes its activist potential along with its humanist aspirations:
...the closely controlled empty spaces of transit, the terminals and
lounges, promised (and symbolized) safety from the urban transients and
the threats of disorder they represented . . . . The minimalism of such spaces,
which appear to answer to the disjunct needs of modern transit and
commerce, mutely promise the giant empty room that Adorno and others
used as the presiding metaphor of the modern surveillance society--the
society of total administration. (128)
- Rosler's project asserts that global technology and
industrialization, which promise unlimited freedoms and the fulfillment
of every desire, actually subordinate social relations to quantifiable
units of exchange to the extent that they deliver only freedom's effect.
The critique of Constant's project is never made explicit, but it is
clear: New Babylon's premise of infinite traversal, far from presenting
a model for resistance, is the perfect vehicle for the confidence game
of pure exchange. Rosler's position implies that where a century of
political action has failed to refract the trajectory of extreme
regulation, to consider that drawing, with its overtones of ideational
purity and rarefied audience, could possibly succeed in doing so is
laughable. Yet in her unflinching account of the unfolding postmodern
condition, Rosler insists on drawing as a kind of creative humanist
recourse set against the mechanization and homogenization that are
equated with technological rationalism.
- By contrast, Anthony Vidler finds qualified potential for
activism in Constant's project precisely in its generation from the most
mechanical of drawings. In "Diagrams of Utopia," Vidler examines the New
Babylon drawings through the conceit of the "diagram," theorized here as
a drawing with a mandate to action--directions, as it were, for the
achievement of a plan. The diagram's performative, machine-like
function, if administered politically, serves not only to alter the
internal conventions of architecture, but also to galvanize social change.
While Rosler's and Vidler's respective positions could be seen as
representative of the rift between the pragmatic and the theoretical
within intellectual discourse (and consonant with radically divergent
notions of line enclosed in the definition of drawing, that is, line as
bodily expression and as pure abstraction), Vidler's characterization of
the diagram as the trace of process aligns it with action, effectively
breaking down the separation of the practical and the conceptual to
produce a third, transgressive category that is essential to the notion
of any representation's political efficacy. Rosalind Deutsche extends
this abstraction into the material field in her essay "Breaking and
Entering: Drawing, Situationism, Activism" by insisting on the urgency
of critical responsibility in artistic practices. Deutsche invokes the
urban theories of Henri Lefebvre to demonstrate the importance of
critical practices at the formal level in the work of Gordon Matta Clark
(who called his "building cuts" drawings)--an instance in which drawing
broke with its paper ground to physically assert itself against the
homogenization of the city.
- At apparent loggerheads with the material activism of Rosler and
Deutsche, the essays by architects Elizabeth Diller and Bernard Tschumi
present two different facets of theorizing architectural drawing into
the "beyond" of the book's title--the time/space matrix made available
by the advent of digital processes. Diller's "Autobiographical Notes"
step off from the moment in the 1970s when architectural drawing became
freed from practice, and drawing for its own sake was widely pursued.
Diller's own conceptual projects, reproduced in her essay, are the natural
extension of this replacement of the tectonic with the graphic, a
trajectory that inevitably resulted in "the denaturalization of building
to emulate the abstraction of drawing" (131). That this abstraction, in
its withdrawal from material imperatives, would slide easily into the
virtual world of digital processes with consequences for social
relations that might not have been entirely salutary is suggested in her
projects, but never overtly stated. Rather, Diller celebrates the
"uncanny disembodiment" marked by the shift from analog to digital
drawing as a "new [way] of rethinking the relation between drawing and
space" (133). As a result of her neutral delivery, activism seems out of
the question in media in which pragmatic realization is eliminated as
a possibility.
- This is not the case for Tschumi, who also delivers a detached
analysis in "Operative Drawing," yet insists that all of the strategies
described in his overview of drawing are deployed in the service of
function and utility. While his codification of architectural practices
is generated out of a cybernetic matrix that Tschumi seems to take for
granted, it is also made clear that he means to subordinate digital
processes to an end result that will enter, and alter, the built
environment as a functioning structure in the traditional sense. That
is, Tschumi's drawings are ultimately meant to be realized as buildings;
drawing for him is a useful means to a higher end. The question of
whether buildings generated from a digital medium can escape the
imperatives of technological control to the extent that they could
critique, rather than reproduce and reinforce them, is not addressed by
Tschumi, although it seems clear from the premises of the symposium that
it should be. Particularly questionable in this context would be the
last of Tschumi's four drawing strategies, the terrifyingly opaque
"interchangeable scalar drawing" (136), described as a universally
applicable unit of expression that transforms polar opposites (such as
solid and void) into a heterogeneous whole.
- Such transcendent expressions of the sublime skate far afield
from the populist strategies posited by the other contributors, which
tend to preserve difference and happenstance as fields of resistance
against the hegemony of standardization. The advantage of the symposium
form from which The Activist Drawing is derived is that it
stimulates a multivalent, critical dialogue on its subject, generating
spontaneous and unexpected exchanges and responses. This sense of the
fortuitous is the special potential of collaborative work: the "lucky
find," at the intersection of widely divergent, often unconceivable
ranges of experience. Faced with increasing uniformity in the lived
environment, the unknowability of the subject emerges as a last recourse
to human engagement, if humanity is the figure that is to be set against
technology. Likewise, drawing's value to the arts, as well as its value
to activism, lies in its own predisposition to the aleatory, what Henri
Michaux has appraised as drawing's bias toward the unanticipated: "Could
it be that I draw because I see so clearly this thing or that thing? Not
at all. Quite the contrary. I do it to be perplexed again. And I am
delighted that there are traps. I look for surprises."
The aberrant mark, the false start, the doodle or marginalia, the
incomplete erasure, all serve the unpredictable, and all are lost to digital
processes. This revelation is the trouvaille of The
Activist Drawing.
Art History and Archaeology
Columbia University
Sjl16@columbia.edu
COPYRIGHT (c) 2003 BY Susan Laxton.
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Notes
1. COBRA, the expressionist art group
named from the first letters of the three capital cities of the
countries of its founders, Asger Jorn (Copenhagen), Corneille
(Brussels), and Karel Appel (Amsterdam), was founded in 1948 and
disbanded by 1952. Constant was associated with the group in Amsterdam
at around the same time that he began to assimilate the tenets of
architecture through the work of the radically opposite De Stijl
movement.
Works Cited
Michaux, Henri. Henri Michaux. Trans. John Ashbery.
London: Robert Fraser Gallery, 1963.
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