BOOKS: Blanchot and Bourdieu

I received two new books yesterday to add the library, Maurice Blanchot’s Friendship and Pierre Bourdieu and Alain Darbel’s The Love of Art.

The Bourdieu/Darbel book is one which we’ve been reading in relation to the Framing Art course, looking at museums and their relations with their audiences. The Love of Art is a report on a series of what were essentially market research studies of the visitors to various museums in France, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Poland and Greece during 1964–5. They examined the demographic profiles of the visitors to the various targeted sites and their histories in relation to that museum, and to museums and art in general, as well as their perceived needs from the institution, and impressions of it.

Friendship is a collection of essays by Blanchot, a critic and philosopher whose writing cropped up in our readings around the Museums and Photography session for the same course. In particular with reference to André Malraux’s Museum Without Walls. An essay in this collection of Blanchot’s criticism, entitled The Museum, Art, and Time, discusses Malraux’s writings on the museumification of art. I’ve yet to read this essay, but isn’t that the joy of collecting books: The potentialities that they offer for future reading and the sheer impossibility of ever completing them all? Potentialities, by Giorgio Agamben – another book I bought recently and have yet to read.

CREATIVE JOURNAL—Gallery Visit—Cullinan and Richards

I always enjoy visiting studios, there’s obviously a mixture of voyeurism and some envy going on there.

Today we visited the studio of Charlotte Cullinan and Janine Richards, previously known collectively as Art Lab and more recently as The Savage School(?). Charlotte gave an extremely lucid overview of their work, which raises many interesting issues for me regarding the work of the artist as facilitator or ‘platform’ for other workers. This has particular resonance with the text we have just read regarding relational aesthetics by Nicolas Bourriaud, and indeed the one’s we are currently reading about the ‘death of the author’.

From a personal point of view, their earlier work recalled my own degree show where I invited the artist Peter Fend to exhibit his work in my stead. Sorry if I harp on about this – it’s my greatest moment so far, I think, so I feel warranted to flog it until it’s dead.

WRITING—Of Interest?

If you look at the archives section in the sidebar (to the right of the main page), and if you’ve been observant, you may just have noticed that I added a little tally of the total number of posts in each month. Having done so, I was intrigued to see that the busiest month was June 2005, a couple of months after I created the blog.

This could be for a number of reasons: it might have been the point at which I really got into posting on the blog and got a bit over-excited about it; or it may have simply been a high-news month.

Looking at the posts in that month I noticed that a consistent factor was that they were all fairly short, which obviously would make it easier to write many over a short period of time. But what also gave me pause for thought was the subject-matter. At that time I was solely writing about what interested me, with no ulterior motive (as such). Contrast that with today, and the slowing down of posts, and I’m now concentrating on material related to the college course, which—although of interest to me—one could define as outside-led rather than purely my own initiative.

So what does this tell me? It struck me that I should try to be including posts now that should also have the same sort of interest factor, and not just be dry explications of stuff I’ve read.

To do this will require – what? Perhaps re-acquainting myself with artworks, and look for their parallels with the texts. Find the personal connection that prompted the effusion of posts back then and which has been watered down since.

I don’t know exactly what the answer is. I have to think about this.

CREATIVE JOURNAL—Roland Barthes and Pierre Bourdieu—The Death of the Author

In the previous post I said we’d been reading Benjamin and Barthes, but never got to talking about the latter.

In Roland Barthes’ piece, he talks about the text being a product of the reader more than the writer, where the multiple possible meanings float until fixed by the action of someone reading it:

Thus is revealed the total existence of writing: a text is made of multiple writings, drawn from many cultures and entering into mutual relations of dialogue, parody, contestation, but there is one place where this multiplicity is focused and that place is the reader, not, as was hitherto said, the author.. . . a text’s unity lies not in its origin but in its destination. (Barthes, 1977, p. 148)

Following from this, Barthes announces the designation of writing as ‘performative’: “in which the enunciation has no other content (contains no other proposition) than the act by which it is uttered” (Barthes, 1977, pp. 145–6) and the ‘death of the author’.

. . . the modern scriptor is born simultaneously with the text, is in no way equipped with a being preceding or exceeding the writing, is not the subject with the book as predicate; there is no other time than that of the enunciation and every text is eternally written here and now. (Barthes, 1977, p. 145)

[ASIDE: the ‘scriptor’ is Barthes’ reference to the successor to the author under this new regime. The scriptor’s work is not about expression, but the possibility of an “immense dictionary from which he draws a writing that can know no halt.” (Barthes, 1977, p. 147)]

There is an interesting parallel with a text we’ve just looked at for another course that I’m on, the Framing Art course which is concerned with museology. This other text is Pierre Bourdieu’s Cultural Works and Cultivated Disposition (also mentioned in a previous post) where he is analysing the perception of the museum ‘experience’ for audiences, particularly those that feel excluded from this institution:

. . . the history of the instruments of perception of a work of art is the essential complement of the history of the instruments of production of the work, inasmuch as the work of art is in a way created twice over, by the artist and by the spectator, or, rather, by the society to which the spectator belongs. (Bourdieu, 1969, p. 41)

Bourdieu is here discussing issues of attribution and specifically how these affect the “legibility” of a work of art for a particular society.

He is presenting a much more prosaic view of the affect knowledge and education have on the reception of art, but essentially Barthes’ argument is a natural extension of Bourdieu’s comment – that our interpretation of the artwork is as important as the original intention, and the original intention is vague and imprecise.

  • Barthes, R. (1977). The Death of the Author. In Image Music Text. London: Fontana Press. pp. 142–148.
  • Bourdieu, P. and Darbel, A. (1969) Cultural Works and Cultivated Disposition. In The Love of Art: European Art Museums and their public. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp. 36–50.