Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

immersive proximities / critical distances: revitalizing the gesamtkunstwerk and brecht's dialectical theatre in the metaverse


Saturday, 17 April 2021




It should come as no surprise that within any ostensibly unified dream of utopia paradoxically lies the disillusioning realities of fragmentation, contradiction and conflict. After all, one person’s utopia is another’s dystopia. This has long been the predicament plaguing the endeavor of the romantic notion of the Gesamtkunstwerk- the aesthetic aspiration toward borderlessness. From its very outset, the ‘total work of art’ has been marked by unreconciled dialectical tensions. Between its sharp-tongued condemnations of technology and simultaneous reliance on it, its yearning for decentralised mass transcendence and its slippage into totalitarianism, the multifarious incarnations of the Gesamtkunstwerk have not served as actualized visions so much as a recurring dream. That is not to say, however, that these contradictory impulses signal a hopelessly vague lineage, destined for “the trash heap of history” as Lebbeus Wood has proclaimed. Even while its specific taxonomy remains ambiguous, the Gesamtkunstwerk- precisely its dialectical struggles- have proven fruitful as a means to understand critical pedagogies in the new millennium, taking on forms far beyond the term’s geographical and disciplinary locus. When taken to be a loose assembly of aesthetic elements rather than a monolithic, centralised endeavor, the potency of the Gesamtkunstwerk as an aesthetic ideal among interdisciplinary art forms since the nineteenth century becomes undeniable. 


This essay envisages the Gesamtkunstwerk’s internal unity-fragment dialectic as a productive horizon for emergent considerations of cyberspace, notably in virtual reality and augmented reality art experiences. Perhaps more palpably so than any medium, digital art betrays the paradoxical motif all-too-familiar to the Gesamtkunstwerk- the Wagnerian conception as well as its ostensible antithesis, Brecht’s epic/dialectical theatre- of technology as poison and cure. In realising many of the dreams of the total work of art, the meta-medium of cyberspace simultaneously re-entrenches long-standing oppositions of its internal dialectic and poses new predicaments for the tradition as it materialises in the metaverse, bringing forth with it a new set of ideological implications. Jason Farago writes of virtual reality artworks: “Forget contemplative distance, say goodbye to Brechtian alienation. In these works, immersion is all.” Problematizing Farago’s claim, this essay contends that facets of Brecht’s dialectical theatre- more indebted to the Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerk than historians have generally acknowledged- in fact offer a viable framework by which VR artworks may tackle the enduring paradox of technology as poison and cure from within the medium itself. To be precise, I will posit that Brecht’s Verfremdungseffekt or ‘estrangement effect’, coupled with an exposure of the mechanics of production, constitute the beginning steps of a critically empathetic framework by which to mediate digital surrogation or role-playing in VR experiences. As its case study, this essay examines Tamiko Thiel and Zara Houshmand’s VR installation, Beyond Manzanar (2000), which deploys digital surrogation to recreate experiences of Japanese-American internment following the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. Drawing on Matthew Wilson Smith’s The Total Work of Art: From Bayreuth to Cyberspace, Beyond Manzanar will be scrutinized using a dialectical framework that understands the Gesamtkunstwerk to be a cluster of aesthetic elements of dispersed authorship, as opposed to a unified Wagnerian singularity.


Since the German composer Richard Wagner popularized the term in his programmatic treatise of 1849, The Artwork of the Future, the Gesamtkunstwerk and its associated aesthetics have demonstrated profound consequences on interdisciplinary art forms, manifesting in the realms of music, theatre, architecture, art, and most recently, in the metaverse. Yet, even as it emerges nearly two centuries onward in places far beyond its geographical and disciplinary matrix, the heterogenous manifestations of Gesamtkunstwerk continue to be riddled by dialectical struggles and neo-Romantic longings comparable to those from which the vision was initially born. This invokes the necessity of tracing the genealogy of the Gesamtkunstwerk within the wider contextual framing of Wagner’s socio-political aspirations, for his endeavor is “a social and not simply artistic dream, and the social dream is essentially a communitarian one” (Smith, 2007, p. 9). In examining the varied contexts in which elements of the Gesamtkunstwerk have arisen- from Dada performances to Andy Warhol and cyberspace- one is pointed emphatically to the futility of prescribing a stable, unified identity to the total work of art. Further foreclosing the feasibility of a cohesive identity is the fact that Bertolt Brecht- long cast as Wagner’s foil, his dialectical theatre the antithesis of the total work of art- advocated for a critical but segregated mixture of the arts that might still be considered a Gesamtkunstwerk (Smith, 2007). 


Following on from Danielle Follett and Anke Finger, as an initial attempt toward a definition, the Gesamtkunstwerk may be understood as “an aesthetic ambition to borderlessness”, distinguished by, but not limited to, three forms of “organic” synthesis that often operate collectively (2011, p. 3). Firstly, from a formalist standpoint, this synthesis is enacted on the material level as the ‘arbitrary’ boundaries between different artistic genres are dissolved. In his landmark publication, The Artwork of the Future, Wagner asserts that dance, tone and poetry- the three ‘fundamental’ arts- are “so wondrous closely interlaced with one another… that each of the three partners, unlinked from the united chain and bereft thus of her own life and motion, can only carry on an artificially inbreathed and borrowed life” (1895, p. 95). In the aesthetic aspiration toward synthetic, multimedia totalities, the Gesamtkunstwerk runs counter to the modernist impulse which seeks to segregate the arts into discipline-specific objects (Rasula, 2016, p. 15). This segregation, as per Wagner, is epitomised by the lyric opera, a degraded pseudo-synthesis “led by egoism” for which his disdain is laid bare in The Artwork of the Future: “The opera, as the seeming point of reunion of all the three related arts, has become the meeting place of these sisters’ most self-seeking efforts” (1895, p. 152). With this organic trinity dismantled, the “three primeval sisters” must now submit to “despotic rules for mechanical movement” (1895, p. 95). Beneath Wagner’s explicit disdain for the mechanized world, however, lay an utter reliance on it in the realisation of this organic whole, a confusing contradiction which naturally calls forth the second feature of the Gesamtkunstwerk- the political dimension. Inseparable from his broader political aspirations, Wagner underscores that the formal qualities of the Gesamtkunstwerk “cannot arise alone, but only in the fullest harmony with the conditions of our whole life” (1895, p. 155). The endeavor of reuniting the constituent parts of the total work of art indelibly mirrored Wagner’s yearning to restore unity to a fragmented society, to reconcile the self with society and humanity with nature in the face of a deeply felt alienation that plagued the modern condition. As such, this second plane of synthesis involves a transgression of the boundaries between art and life, mobilising techniques of sensory immersion such that its audience, in a suspension of disbelief, undergo a collective transformation that ultimately serves the broader revolutionary purpose. This transformation is not limited to the tangible, however, as a final synthesis is enacted on the metaphysical level: the transcendental synthesis, obliterating the demarcations between the “present, empirical reality with a nonpresent, or not-yet-present envisioned totality, unity, infinity or absolute” (Finger and Follett, 2011, p. 4). It is in this yearning to operate on the metaphysical plane, in this longing for infinity, that the Gesamtkunstwerk would simultaneously attain its ritualistic quality as well as its fear of usurpation and eclipse by the larger totalities of commodity and fascist spectacle. Such concerns were inextricably linked with the looming commodification and industrialization that culture was seemingly bound for in the wake of the Second Industrial Revolution. Conceived as a negative correlation, Wagner saw the emergence of mass media as running concurrently to the decline of the bourgeois public sphere, surrendering its capacity for critical public debate to the state’s cause of imposing ideological coherence (Smith, 2007, p. 21). Inevitably, this bore grave implications for an aesthetic project which sought to mobilise the Volk in a collective pilgrimage to a destination that, in the shadow of the Industrial Revolution, might as well be considered mass indoctrination.


Far from a deadlock, however, the troubled relationship between art and mass media would in fact serve as an immensely fruitful horizon for Wagner’s art. In a repudiation of the cheapened pseudo-synthesis that was the lyric opera, he would reconceive theatre as the very vehicle by which notions of spectatorship, of spectacle and of the relationship between nature and machine would be transformed. The theories conceived in The Artwork of the Future, born from his attempts to grapple with these polarising forces, would find their most emphatic materialisation a quarter of a century later in the opening of his festival theatre in 1876. The unveiling of the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth witnessed the epitomisation of what Matthew Wilson Smith has termed the “iconic” Gesamtkunstwerk, described as a pseudo-organic form that attempts to bury all the “outward signs of mechanical production on which it relies, and and which particularly appeals ‘folk’, myth and intuition” (2007, p. 3). Its counterpart- the “crystalline” Gesamtkunstwerk- undertakes an ostensibly antithetical approach by exposing the mechanics which underlie its essential structure, only to achieve the same result of the “iconic” by simultaneously re-incorporating these signs into a “pseudo-organic totality” (Smith, 2007, p. 3). In their shared urges for organic unity, the Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerk serves as a tangible continuation of the Kantian dichotomy of organism versus mechanism, upholding the teleological conception of the world. Conceiving the various arts as a means to a unified end, the Festspielhaus materialised Wagner’s dream of the “theatrical edifice of the future” (1895, p. 185), yielding a formal composition that served to synthesise all forms of media through theatrical, acoustical and optical innovations. To this end, the Festspielhaus employed immersive technical features including an egalitarian amphitheatrical seating arrangement, borrowed from the ancient Greeks; a deep orchestra pit concealing the musicians from the sight of the audience; a rectangular proscenium arch, which, when juxtaposed with the marble pillars encircling the auditorium, directed the audience’s lines of sight to the focal point of the invisible fourth wall (Packer, 2011, p.157). Its dissolution, engendered by a suspension of disbelief, was indispensable to Wagner’s aim of utterly absorbing the audience into the simulacral stage action, by which the boundaries between spectator and spectated, present reality and the not-yet-present, envisioned unity, would be obliterated.


In The Gesamtkunstwerk and Interactive Multimedia, Randall Packer traces the enduring pertinence of the multisensory, totalizing effects mobilised at Wagner’s Festspielhaus in the impulses that drive the creation of virtual environments in digital art today. The innovations Wagner conceived for the theatre, as it pertains to the transformation of the stage-audience interface, have undoubtedly informed the evolution of the relationship between human and machine, particularly its reciprocality. In the context of VR artworks, this relationship is embodied by the human-computer interface that, by the same token, aspires to produce a hyperreal experience such that the immersant’s perception of reality is reconfigured by the artist’s lifelike reconstruction of it (Packer, 2011, p. 159). VR artworks, the newest iteration in the long lineage of immersive aesthetics, mobilise unprecedented technologies ultimately to fulfill age-old dreams, often characterised by neo-Romantic longings to ‘return’ to nature. Drawn into an embodied relationship with a virtual architecture, one becomes a part of the mise-en-scène, transported to another realm on a perceptual, psychological and sensory level. Within this capacity to extend the body beyond its “habitual and biological modes of embodied perception” (Bartlem, 2005), lies a transcendental potential which hearkens to Wagner’s yearning to not merely recover, but surpass the heights of the Ancient Greeks. Similarly, the questionable technopianism of early cyberspace theorists, such as Roy Ascott, remains intact today in the transhumanist impulse that heralds not merely a restoration of the organic unity of pre-modern times but a transcension into a “post-biological future” (2000, p. 3). What this implies is that, as the technological infrastructure of VR grows ever more complex, so does its ideological implications, and these immersive technologies are by no means neutral. As ideologically-loaded devices, at stake in the discourse surrounding immersive technologies is whether this embodied transcendence facilitates anthropocentric, technofetishistic escapism or holds the potential for critical contemplation. And in the case of digital surrogation experiences, this dilemma is further muddled as the simulacral environment recreates a historically and racially localized experience, potentially birthing voyeurism, objectification and retraumatisation. Locating their ontological roots in the Cartesian philosophical tradition, immersive technologies possess the capacity to tangibly enact the entrenched dualisms of mind/matter, nature/culture and male/female. Then, how might VR artworks forge a sustained critique of the Cartesian philosophical tradition in which their very origins lie, from within the medium itself? Such is the paradox that continually challenges the synthetical project of VR, a paradox which, in the dialectical tension between its message and the technological mechanisms that deliver it, reverberates a story all-too-familiar to Wagner’s Gesamtkunstwerk.


The indispensability of the ‘suspension of disbelief’ to the project of the Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerk manifestly extends to the construction of immersive VR environments today, of which a core consideration is reciprocal interactivity. In attempting to effectively simulate the organic, VR artworks often epitomise the paradox of the Gesamtkunstwerk by their extensive reliance on cutting-edge technology- a reliance which is then either, in the fashion of the ‘iconic’, concealed by ever more sophisticated blinders, or exposed to be merely camouflaged by the larger organic whole like the ‘crystalline’. To be precise, this dialectical tension, in the context of VR technologies, is embodied by the dynamic between the superstructural synthetic reality and the substructural base code and apparatus (such as VR headsets), from which it is respectively generated and hosted. The quest to sophisticate simulacral environments then, often driven by the impetus to be indistinguishable from reality, necessitates a concurrent sophistication in techniques of concealment to hide from the immersant the very technological mechanisms that underlie their lifelikeness. In other words, as Smith puts it succinctly, “strategies of simulation…develop alongside strategies of occultation” (2007, p. 172). 


On one hand, binary code- the fundamental substructure of all artworks in the metaverse- realises, to a degree, the Wagnerian dream of reuniting the “sister arts” by means of universalization, as opposed to totalization. The meta-medium of cyberspace, Smith contends, is fundamentally distinct from live performance in its capacity to translate all data into binary digits or “bits”, which are universally exchangeable with other “bits” (2007, p. 163). In this sense, the substructures of all digital art are identical and as such, universally replicable, rendering the digital landscape of  VR an inherently multimedia medium in its eradication of inherited aesthetic distinctions. In light of this universal exchangeability, the “old sisters” of Wagner’s Gesamtkunstwerk are not reunified in a totality so much as rendered clones- “parentless, replicable, universally-exchangeable, free-floating”- with no centripetal force to bound them toward any predetermined goal (Smith, 2007, p. 163). The apparatuses by which this substructural code is brought to life, however, may be even less sympathetic to the Wagnerian cause. For one, the stereoscopic head-mounted devices used in VR experiences- as a result of their high requirements for latency (the time it takes from the movement of a tracked object to have a corresponding visual effect)- can produce ‘cybersickness’ in immersants, rapidly breaking the simulacral spell (Stauffert et al., 2020, p. 3). The constraints of the technological apparatus manifested tangibly in the ‘stage action’, any dream of Wagnerian totality is shattered; not only is the capacity to suspend disbelief extinguished, but what is elicited in the immersant, far from transcendence, is a response characterised by literal nausea, disorientation and dizziness. In the face of such a reaction to an attempt at totality- one of disoriented revulsion- Wagner might just have settled for a response, or lack thereof, of “dumbfounded passivity” that critics have frequently claimed of the Gesamtkunstwerk’s effects (Koss, 2008). Indeed, Brecht’s dialectic theatre sought precisely to startle audiences out of this alleged state of mass hypnosis as the vehicle for political enlightenment. 


Brecht has typically been cast as Wagner’s foil, and such a delegation is not completely unfounded- the differences between their dramaturgies are indeed legion. Whereas Wagner strove to synthesise all the arts in a pseudo-organic totality, Brecht called for a separation and conflict of elements that exposed the mechanics of production (Smith, 2007, p. 72). Whereas Wagner sought to engross his audience by eliciting an affective, interpellative response, Brecht mobilised estrangement techniques, Verfremdungseffekt, to create a theatre of flux and contradiction. Brecht’s dialectical theatre, in its call for a “radical separation of the elements,'' appears to stem from his antipathy towards the Wagnerian approach to unity (Brecht, 1964, p. 37). In his essay Notes to my Opera Mahoganny (1930), Brecht makes manifest that his exacerbation of contradictions on the stage is inextricably linked to a broader condemnation of the Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerk: “So long as the expression ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’ (or ‘integrated work of art’) means that the integration is a muddle, so long as the arts are supposed to be ‘fused’ together, the various elements will all be equally degraded, and each will act as a mere ‘feed’ to the rest”. This degradative fusion is not limited to the arts, however, “extend[ing] to the spectator, who gets thrown into the melting pot too and becomes a passive (suffering) part of the Gesamtkunstwerk” (1964, p. 37-38). Ridiculing the Gesamtkunstwerk as “witchcraft”, Brecht contended that the phantasmagoric “muddle” birthed by the totalized intermingling of the arts was reproduced in its audiences, the individual spectators now an immobilised body. Such is the recurrent nightmare troubling the Gesamtkunstwerk, echoing its fear of usurpation by the larger totality of fascist spectacle. Considering Wagner’s notorious anti-semitism, coupled with his messianic mission of the total work of art and its utopian evocation of a unified Volk, it is hardly surprising that his conception has been the subject of contentious suspicion. 


These contradictory pulls rouse the broader debate about the nature of the integration that the Gesamtkunstwerk aspires to. Does the synthesis of the arts, in line with the Wagnerian dream, constitute a redemptive transformation by which the masses may be mobilised? Or does it compromise their individual integrity and agency, as well as that of the spectators, conjuring a sort of totalitarian Gleichschaltung, or forced homogenization and participation (Finger and Follett, 2008, p. 6)? Brecht’s claims in Notes to my Opera Mahoganny are largely predicated on an affirmative response to the latter, but his repeated use of the qualifier “so long”- “so long as the expression ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’ means that the integration is a muddle”- reveals that the Brechtian dramaturgy constitutes not a simple attack on the Gesamtkunstwerk so much as a reconception of its notion of unity. Akin to Wagner, Brecht’s vision of unity was borne from a yearning to overcome the profound social fragmentation felt in the rise of industrialized capital (Smith, 2008, p. 78). The form it took on, by contrast, was that of a contrapuntal unity, a collective of juxtaposed disparate elements that mediate the spectacle. In the dialectical theatre, unity is not established through the illusive seamlessness of the organic whole but quite the opposite: the incoherence, interruptions and conflict of independent parts, whose mechanical foundations are exposed. For Brecht, the linear developmental structure of the Wagnerian theatre- wherein the events of the plot are dovetailed in a predetermined narrative arc- signalled a fatalistically deterministic understanding of human nature, a character bound to their destiny by their essential, given self. Such a structure bore grave implications for reception; its audiences, hungry for the instant gratification of catharsis, would be embroiled in “the protagonists’ suspense-laden passage to their pre-given end” (Mumford, 2018, p. 81). In light of this, Brecht would devise an episodic structure, in which “the unified whole consists of independent parts”, of relatively autonomous scenes, juxtaposed in opposition to one another (Brecht, 2018, p. 132). As Matthew Wilson Smith remarks, what Brecht is speaking of here is montage. As an aesthetic principle, montage dissolves the distinctions between “unity and fragmentation, continuity and interruption” such that the disparate elements act not as antitheses, but as mutual aids (Smith, 2007, p. 79). This episodic structure was necessarily coupled with an exhibition of its production mechanics, a Verfremdungseffekt by which to, in an unmistakably Marxist move, place the means of production back in the hands of the labourers, or artists in this case. The Brechtian theatre, as Walter Benjamin understood, sought to bring audiences “in contact with the production process”, placing “an improved apparatus at their disposal”, ultimately transforming spectators into collaborators (1998, p. 98). In so doing, Brecht’s theatre dismantles the Kantian dichotomy of organic versus mechanical; that is, when the unified organic end is achieved by fragmented, mechanic means in discordance with the notion of unity, the teleological claim that the organic whole is both the “cause and effect of itself” (Kant, 1914, p. 199) is put to the test and ultimately refuted. 



Installation view of Tamiko Thiel and Zara Houshmand, Beyond Manzanar (2000).


Tamiko Thiel and Zara Houshmand’s VR installation, Beyond Manzanar, draws from the tradition of the Gesamtkunstwerk, but does so in a way that estranges its utopian dreams by deploying many of the Brechtian strategies outlined above. Created in 2000, Beyond Manzanar is an interactive VR installation that reconstructs the post-Pearl Harbor internment of Japanese-Americans at the historical Manzanar camp, alongside threats made to Iranian-Americans in the wake of the hostage crisis of 1979-80 (Thiel and Houshmand, 2017, p. 3). Erected in the high deserts of Eastern California, Manzanar was one of the ten internment camps in which Japanese-Americans were incarcerated under the premise of a national security measure during the Second World War. The commemoration of these experiences, as Ingrid Gessner notes, was marked by “a long period of silence”; public statements regarding the forced removal and internment were rare, and this representational silence grew even quieter with the spatial erasure of the camps after the war (2016, p. 158). In the face of these infrastructures’ ephemerality, Beyond Manzanar revitalises these experiences through what Marita Sturken refers to as “technologies of memory,” in a virtual recovery of the site (1997, p. 10). As the installation toured the US, Thiel and Houshmand’s life-size projection of their simulated reality allowed visitors to navigate Beyond Manzanar with a simple joystick mounted in the centre of the darkened room. With no other virtual paraphernalia such as headsets or hand-held controllers, Beyond Manzanar makes for a VR artwork of modest proportions but a nonetheless immersive one; as Thiel explains: “if you have a screen that’s big enough to present the material life-sized, then the image is already immersive. You see the image in your peripheral vision, and your body reacts to it not as a picture but as a space” (Thiel in Smith, 2007, p. 181). Encased by three walls, the interactive screen projection is effective in palpably conjuring the alternate environment in its life-size, 3D recreation and use of music and lifelike sounds. In her interview with Matthew Wilson Smith, Thiel notes that Beyond Manzanar was consciously informed by the Gesamtkunstwerk, envisaging VR as the medium by which to fulfill as well as reboot its dreams for the current era, moving “beyond theatre not only by exploiting the irreality of space with no physical laws, but also by use of a first-person viewpoint to bring the user’s own body and personal character into the piece” (2007, p.182). 


Internment camp with newspaper headlines, Beyond Manzanar (2000).


At the outset of Beyond Manzanar, the visitor- or digital surrogate, to be precise- finds themselves in a reproduction of the internment camp, encircled by barbed wire and guard towers. Moving through the identical rows of barracks, the visitor is taken by surprise to come upon ephemeral fragments of text declaring war and anti-Japanese hostilities hovering in the sky above. Almost immediately, Beyond Manzanar estranges its audiences, breaking the spell of the simulation by establishing the historical and political context of what was indeed the reality for internees. Such estrangement effects serve more than to establish critical distance, however; the surprise of encountering the newspaper clippings, and eventually, poems entangled in a barbed wire fence, simultaneously confines the visitor in a sense of imprisonment, a “confinement [that] is not only physical,” but one of “media confinement, a public confinement” (Thiel in Smith, 2007, p. 182). After passing through Manzanar, the visitor eventually encounters a Japanese garden, a site which refers to an actual garden built by internees at the camp. Inspired by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston’s firsthand account of the garden as a place of refuge- a fleeting moment suspended between dream and reality- Thiel and Houshmand recreated the site virtually in a “realization that a garden is an ancient form of Gesamttheatre,… of virtual reality” (Thiel in Smith, 2007, p. 183). Here, Beyond Manzanar evokes the Edenic longings of the Gesamtkunstwerk, yearning to recover a bygone utopian condition- but this totality is necessarily understood to be illusory and transient, maintained only by constant effort. As the visitor is forcefully thrusted out of this paradise, one is reminded of the hubris involved in Wagner’s claim to a totality that does not merely match but surpasses that of the ancient Greeks. Brecht’s criticisms of Wagner’s illusory unity are conjured here, and extended further in the following scene. There is perhaps no clearer instance of the Brechtian influence in Beyond Manzanar than when the visitor, wandering around the Persian garden, is violently jerked out and finds themselves hovering above the camp in a bomber plane. The projection now a replication of a first-person shooter game, the visitor loses control of the joystick and the scene unfolds on its own accord. In this uneasy juxtaposition of oppositional perspectives, Beyond Manzanar culminates in a self-reflexive critique of the entanglements between the very medium through which it is hosted, and the violent Cartesian philosophical tradition in which its origins lie. With a visible participation of the technologies in reinforcing the message, the installation echoes Erika Fischer-Liste’s assertion that “intermediality can only be perceived when the medium does not entirely disappear behind the message it conveys” (2014, p. 156). Once again, Thiel and Houshmand align themselves with Brecht, who claimed that the development of communication technologies demands “a kind of resistance by the listener” (Brecht, 1964), such that a passive spectator is transformed into an active participant. While Beyond Manzanar indeed draws on some of the motifs of the Gesamtkunstwerk- when considering its episodic, morally incoherent structure, loaded with contradictions, and its exposure of the underlying technological mechanisms- it is more so Brecht, than Wagner, who comes to mind. Albeit less immersive than VR technologies today, what Beyond Manzanar demonstrates is that, if conventions are effectively subverted, such technologies can hold the potential to tackle the enduring paradox of the medium and the message. In a response to the Gesamtkunstwerk’s fear of absorption into the “public entertainment machine”, critically distant approaches to VR may in fact serve to unfetter the medium from its reputation as an immobilising, “consensual hallucination”. 



Bomber plane perspective, Beyond Manzanar (2000).


What remains unclear, however, is whether Thiel and Houshmand take into account the implications of the disembodied role-playing in Beyond Manzanar. Eschewing “a character-centered narrative viewpoint”, the artists chose not to include Japanese-American internees as avatars, instead allowing for a first-person experience of the camp (Roxworthy, 2014, p. 95). In Revitalizing Japanese-American Internment, Emily Roxworthy problematizes disembodied surrogation in VR experiences, particularly in its assumption of autoempathy. Digital role-playing, Roxworthy argues, does not automatically incur empathy, but rather reifies the viewer’s self-serving biases- and likewise, many critics do take empathy to be the natural consequence of surrogation, and “that such empathy is directed toward the masculinized perpetrators rather than the feminized victim- the first-person shooter rather than the object shot” (2014, p. 95). What is at stake here, as it pertains to Japanese-American internment reproductions, is the capacity for these surrogative processes, which rely on the “spectacle of Japanese American trauma itself” to substitute the self for the Other, to re-objectify and retraumatise the othered subjects being role-played. This poses yet another troubling dilemma for VR experiences; in the place of critical thought, digital surrogation runs the risk of identity tourism in an uncritical eclipsing of historical understanding. In fact, such an assertion is not far from Brecht’s own rejection of empathy and identification as modes by which to produce critical contemplation, criticising the immobilising role they assumed in the Gesamtkunstwerk- a wariness undoubtedly exacerbated by Hitler’s hypnotic totalities in which “the German public were encouraged to see the world only through the Führer’s eyes” (Mumford, 2018, p. 63). This concern about the passive responses he saw to be a product of empathy prompted him to minimize the potential for identification in the theatre of the Verfremdung. In the place of the usurpative mimesis enacted in the Gesamtkunstwerk, Brecht’s epic theatre would “appeal less to the feelings than to the spectator’s reason. Instead of sharing an experience the spectator must come to grips with things” (Willett, 1977, p. 168). These principles are apposite to the context of digital role-playing experiences that reproduce historically and socially localized events. In fact, Roxworthy’s critically empathetic framework for mediating digital surrogation is derived from Brecht’s ‘critical mimesis’, as she calls it. Critical empathy, Roxworthy explains, “makes the process of identification arduous though necessary (not easy or seamless) both by revealing empathy’s potential failure and by vitalizing objects that are not normally experienced as interlocutors” (2014, p. 99). What this advocates for, in the context of VR role playing experiences, on one hand, is a reciprocal interactivity between the visitor and the objects and more-than-human beings present in the scene, evincing the agency of the original subjects in their environments. And on the other hand, as it pertains to interface- the visitor neither assumes the first-person perspective, whereby the visitor usurps the original subject’s body and renders it invisible, nor the third-person perspective, which renders the virtual avatar a “theatrical prosthesis”; rather, the visitor experiences the simulated world through a mediated “semi-embodiment” of the subject, the back of their head obscuring the visitor’s vision at all times. This semi-immersive and therefore semi-subjective perspective, coupled with the vitalization of the more-than-human world, circumscribes simple identification with the subjects and as such forges, in Brechtian fashion, “an alienating mise-en-scène that is more ponderous than immersive” (Roxworthy, 2014, p. 106). As more-than-human beings enter the equation, a greater consideration of thing-power in VR interactivity would forge a more equitable, horizontal-temporal future for immersive technologies, one that loosens the anthropocentric grip on the ontological centre without forsaking the humans too often left out of the equation. 


Throughout its varied iterations, the Gesamtkunstwerk has always concurrently embodied two sides of the same coin- it is always being buried, is always resurrecting; the poison is always technology, and its remedy is always technology’s fruits. It should come as no surprise that, nearly two centuries onward from Wagner’s landmark publication, this evocatively protean idea continues to entrench its original dialectical tensions and produce new predicaments as it manifests in previously unprecedented contexts. When the aspiration lies in borderlessness, this is a project whose manifestations, at best, will always fall short; that is not to say, however, that the total artwork’s endurance is predicated on its capacity to be ‘fulfilled’, as if it were some simple solution for fragmentation. Rather, it is quite the opposite, as this essay has aimed to illuminate: the total work of art is not a solution so much as a symptom- “a sublime, telling and troubling symptom” (Smith, 2007, p. 188). As it materialises in the metaverse, the age-old discourse of the total work of art collides with the equally contentious one surrounding cyberspace and its immersive technologies. What is forged at their intersection is not a deadlock, but rather a burgeoning proliferation of new meanings, both awe-inspiring and nightmarish. What is not merely preserved, but exacerbated by this cutting edge technology, however, is the Gesamtkunstwerk’s recurrent nightmare of its usurpation by the larger totalities of commodity and fascist spectacle. Digital surrogation in historically localized VR experiences serves to further complicate this debate, invoking postcolonial and ecological considerations. As these interrelated theories necessarily enter the equation, it is in fact Brecht’s dialectical theatre, which, in overcoming Kantian dualisms, serves as the more thoroughgoing response to these emergent totalities. As such, this essay contends that Brecht’s Verfremdungseffekt constitutes the stepping stones for a viable framework by which to mediate critically empathetic experiences of spectatorship, toward a profound reconception of immersive technologies.




Works cited

Ascott, R. (2000). Edge-Life: Technoetic Structures and Moist Media. In: Art, Technology, Consciousness Mind@ large. [online] Bristol: Intellect Books, p.3. Available at: https://www.academia.edu/740571/Edge_Life_technoetic_structures_and_moist_media [Accessed 10 Mar. 2021].

Bartlem, E. (2005). FCJ-045 Reshaping Spectatorship: Immersive and Distributed Aesthetics. The Fibreculture Journal, [online] (7). Available at: https://seven.fibreculturejournal.org/fcj-045-reshaping-spectatorship-immersive-and-distributed-aesthetics/ [Accessed 28 Mar. 2021].

Benjamin, W. (1998). The Author as Producer. In: Understanding Brecht. [online] London: Verso, p.98. Available at: https://edisciplinas.usp.br/pluginfile.php/4127758/mod_resource/content/1/WALTER%20BENJAMIN%20UNDERSTANDING%20BRECHT.pdf [Accessed 13 Mar. 2021].

Brecht, B. (1964). Notes to my Opera Mahoganny. In: Brecht On Theatre. [online] New York: Hill and Wang, pp.37–38. Available at: https://www.worldcat.org/title/brecht-on-theatre-the-development-of-an-aesthetic/oclc/191557 [Accessed 10 Mar. 2021].

Brecht, B. (2018). Plans and Appendices. In: T. Kuhn, S. Giles and M. Silberman, eds., Brecht on Performance: Messingkauf and Modelbooks. [online] London: Bloomsbury Publishing, p.132. Available at: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=XxttDwAAQBAJ&source=gbs_navlinks_s [Accessed 8 Mar. 2021].

Finger, A. and Follett, D. (2011). Dynamiting the Gesamtkunstwerk: An Introduction to the Aesthetics of the Total Artwork. In: The Aesthetics of the Total Artwork: On Borders and Fragments. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, pp.1–5.

Fischer-Lichte, E., Mosse, R. and Arjomand, M. (2014). The Routledge Introduction to Theatre and Performance Studies. [online] London: Routledge, p.156. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ual/reader.action?docID=1664239&query=theatre+and+performance+studies# [Accessed 10 Mar. 2021].

Gessner, I. (2016). Tamiko Thiel’s Virtual Reality Installations as Sites of Learning in and Beyond the Museum. Studies in the Education of Adults, [online] 48(2), p.158. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02660830.2016.1229849 [Accessed 18 Mar. 2021].

Kant, I. and Bernard, J.H. (1914). Kant’s Critique of Judgment. 2nd ed. [online] Macmillan: London, p.199. Available at: https://oll-resources.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/oll3/store/titles/1217/Kant_0318_EBk_v6.0.pdf [Accessed 17 Mar. 2021].

Koss, J. (2008). The Myth of the Gesamtkunstwerk. Der Tagesspiegel. [online] 14 Sep. Available at: https://www.tagesspiegel.de/zeitung/the-myth-of-the-gesamtkunstwerk/1323622.html [Accessed 28 Mar. 2021].

Mumford, M. (2018). Bertolt Brecht. 1st ed. [online] : Taylor & Francis Group, pp.63–81. Available at: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ual/detail.action?docID=5254438 [Accessed 8 Mar. 2021].

Packer, R. (2011). The Gesamtkunstwerk and Interactive Multimedia. In: The Aesthetics of the Total Artwork: On Borders and Fragments. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, pp.156–162.

Rasula, J. (2016). History of a Shiver: The Sublime Impudence of Modernism. [online] Corby: Oxford University Press, p.15. Available at: https://www-vlebooks-com.arts.idm.oclc.org/Vleweb/Product/Index/1149584?page=0 [Accessed 13 Mar. 2021].

Roxworthy, E. (2014). Revitalizing Japanese American Internment: Critical Empathy and Role-Play in the Musical “Allegiance” and the Video Game “Drama in the Delta.” Theatre Journal, [online] 66(1), pp.95–156. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/24580245 [Accessed 4 Mar. 2021].

Smith, M.W. (2007). The Total Work of Art: From Bayreuth to Cyberspace. 1st ed. New York: Routledge, pp.3–188.

Stauffert, J.-P., Niebling, F. and Latoschik, M.E. (2020). Latency and Cybersickness: Impact, Causes, and Measures. A Review. Frontiers in Virtual Reality, [online] 1, pp.3–5. Available at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frvir.2020.582204/full [Accessed 23 Mar. 2021].

Sturken, M. (1997). Tangled Memories the Vietnam War, the AIDS epidemic, and the Politics of Remembering. 1st ed. Berkeley: Berkeley Univ. Of California Press, p.10.

Thiel, T. and Houshmand, Z. (2017). Beyond Manzanar - Background Material. [online] , p.3. Available at: https://mission-base.com/manzanar/background.pdf [Accessed 10 Mar. 2021].

Wagner, R. (1895). The Artwork of the Future. 2nd ed. [online] London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd., pp.95–155. Available at: https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_art_work_of_the_future/y91BAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0&kptab=overview [Accessed 10 Mar. 2021].

Willett, J. (1977). The Theatre of Bertolt Brecht. 2nd ed. London: Methuen Drama, p.168.

the 'cool' in cool britannia: yinka shonibare's counter-normalisation of the subsumed 'other' in the age of hyper-visibility


Wednesday, 27 January 2021

 


JUST IMAGINE BEING A PRIMITIVE, A PROPER PRIMITIVE THAT IS. A PRIMITIVE THAT IS BEYOND CIVILIZATION, A PRIMITIVE IN A STATE OF PERPETUAL INDULGENCE, A PRIMITIVE OF EXCESS. I THINK I WOULD REALLY ENJOY THAT. HERE TOO I CAN BE A KIND OF URBAN PRIMITIVE; A KIND OF BACK TO NATURE CLICHÉ WITH A TWIST. OH HOW I LONG TO BE ETHNIC, NOT JUST ETHNIC. BUT AUTHENTIC ETHNIC. I LOVE PAINT. IT'S REALLY SUMPTUOUS, YUM. WHAT IS THE MEANING OF THE SKIRT? WHAT DID LYCRA REPRESENT? WHAT LANGUAGE DOES DOCTOR MARTIN SPEAK? WHO NEEDS PINSTRIPE? LET'S HAVE A GOATEE INSTEAD; PERHAPS NOT-PASS? DOUBLE DUTCH.

 

YINKA SHONIBARE



Against a lurid pink wall hangs some fifty small canvases coated with dollops of impasto in variegated patterns that play off African fabric designs. At first glance, the exuberant clash of its gaudy patterning and colour- barely offset by the panels’ minimalist arrangement- signals a mimicry of the ‘ethnic’ fabrics one might see donned by black Britons in a show of their solidarity with African culture. But just how authentically ‘ethnic’ are these exoticised emblems of the Other? This is the work of British-Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare, titled Double Dutch (1994)- and it is a closer examination beyond the essentializing seduction of its patterns that unveils the complex interculturation written into them. Shrouded by the visual density of its ‘African’ textiles is the equally dense semiotics of the connotations woven into it; popular in West Africa since the 1960s, the iconographic sources of Double Dutch are in fact batik textiles, originating in Indonesia. Batik techniques were industrialized by Dutch colonizers and later replicated by the British, specifically Mancunian Asians, who produced goods for export to West Africa, which were then re-exported back to Britain to be retailed as traditional ‘African’ crafts (Guha, 1994, p. 88). In a disarmingly simple move, Shonibare deconstructs the ostensibly unambiguous signifier of African national identity, speaking to the larger condition of black cultural production and criticism not only in the British context, but necessarily in a wider discursive terrain that maps the cultural sprawl of “race” globally. 

Relegating black cultural production to neither an inviolable aesthetic space of “art for art’s sake”, nor a purely political endeavor subject to authoritarian moral policing, this essay mobilises a hybridized theoretical framework which contends that the structural rigidity of binarisms circumscribes both black cultural production and the critical dialogue surrounding it by misconceiving culture “as a fixed and final property of different racial groups.” Beyond the seeming deadlock of the essentialist vs anti-essentialist dialectic, this essay draws on Kobena Mercer’s 1990 article, Black Art and the Burden of Representation to examine the shift in the relationship between representation and the politics of cultural identity after the second generation of black British artists, characterised by their highly vocal dissidence toward the lack of visibility within the art world, such that they were burdened with the task of speaking for the ‘totality’ of their cultures. As a point of departure, I follow on from Stuart Hall’s explication that, during the 1980s, the foregrounding of “race” as the determining category- relocating the stereotyped black body in the field of vision- engendered not an inherent ‘truth’ about blackness but rather a burgeoning proliferation of meanings surrounding blackness, marking instead “the end of the essential black subject” (2006, p. 20). My focus here is the liminal stage between the late 1980s and the early 1990s, wherein “the pendulum swung to the opposite extreme” (Mercer, 2016, p. 195) as black British art shifted from the cultural margins to a state of hypervisibility by virtue of its sublation into dominant institutions and multicultural exhibitionism. For Mercer, this integration of the Other was offset by the “mute or evasive positioning” of young black artists who no longer felt responsible for a blackness that was becoming increasingly hypervisible in a climate of multicultural normalisation. Exemplified by the work of Yinka Shonibare, I aim to underscore the possibilities of a counter-normalising artistic practice grounded in a politics which resists the institutional reification of the ‘Other’ by “working within the complexities and ambivalences of representation itself, and tries to contest it from within” (Hall, 1997, p. 274). To this end, the deconstructive strategies of Shonibare, who rose to prominence during the more recent culture of Young British Artists, will be situated within the broader predicament of black cultural production: whether black art may ever be described as just ‘art’. 

Circulated under the ideologically-loaded identifier of “Black British”, the late 1970s and 1980s saw an enormous proliferation and consolidation of black expressive cultures that spanned creative writing, visual and performing arts. Within the postwar genealogy of black British art, this era is identified by Hall as representing the second generation, demarcated distinctively from the first by its separatist, Pan-African diasporic imaginary, whereby “identity” acquired a political dimension and political struggle acquired a cultural dimension (Hall, 2006, p.19).The first generation consisted of visual artists who, born in the 1920s and 1930s, had arrived in Britain as the last ‘colonials’, whereas the second- including Eddie Chambers, Sonia Boyce and Keith Piper- represented the first black generation to be born in the diaspora. The demarcation lies in their attitudes towards Modernism; broadly speaking, the first ‘wave’, propelled by the promise of decolonization, defied their “Otherness” by participating in the modern world as equals, sowing seeds in a universalist terrain to which they felt they already belonged. While deeply critical of the colonial imposition of Western models, this generation deemed the projects of decolonization- which was considered as intrinsic to the modern consciousness- and the ostensibly international creed of “modern art” to be fully consistent with one another. To the contemporary critic, the conundrum is all too apparent: as Richard Iton argues, if modernity, as a reiteration of the Enlightenment, necessitates an alterity- an antonymic “Other”- can those ‘others’ constituted and marginalized through this ideological matrix effectively contest their conditions without deconstructing the language and logic of this exclusion? (2010, p. 13) Such a contradiction raises doubts about the feasibility of a reconciliation of the modern and the black subject; as Hall notes, the Afro-modernist relationship is a “difficult ‘horizon of the future’ for younger contemporaries to imagine or inhabit (2006, p.6). 

The disintegration of this conjuncture in black British art was over-determined from multiple directions: its exclusion from dominant institutions and the cannon; a growing disillusionment towards Modernism’s re-exotifying celebration of ‘Primitivism’ and its universalistic promises derived from the Enlightenment conception of ‘Man’; and perhaps most significantly, the dramatic shift in the “whole fulcrum of the political world” (Hall, 2006, p. 16). These transformative conjunctures in Britain- whereby ‘race’ came to be foregrounded as the determining category in place of anti-colonialism- must necessarily be read within the larger context of racial politics worldwide. Taking into account Paul Gilroy’s rotating three-point indicator of the Black Atlantic, the materialisation of a new black British consciousness must be framed critically at the intersection of British and African-American cultural studies and the latter-day Pan-Africanism which charts the “the landscape of ‘race’ in its cultural sprawl, not in its essentialist homelands” (Chude-Sokei, 1996, p. 740). It was at the convergence of the ideological underpinnings of the post-Civil Rights climate, the formation of the Campaign Against Racial Discrimination (CARD), the separatist notions of Black Power, the imposition of the discriminatory 1968 Commonwealth Immigration Act and other global struggles that the shared discursive conjecture of the second ‘wave’ of black British art was forged, testifying visually to the dramatic watershed in racial politics. Perhaps most notably, its renewed focus on race “as a positive but exclusive identity category” marked conspicuously the departure from the assimilationist “black-and-white-unite-and-fight” desegregation struggles of the Civil Rights era (Hall, 2006, p. 17). 

Corresponding with the formation of the Black Arts Movement on the other side of the Atlantic, the visual imaginary of the second ‘wave’ was charged with a polemical anti-racist politics, often manifested through the immediacy of highly graphic, iconographic art of which “the black body- stretched, threatened, distorted, degraded, imprisoned, beaten, and resisting” served as a recurring motif (Hall, 2006, p. 17). For Hall, the political identifier of “black”, encompassing all minority migrant communities, was conceived as a plural signifier of difference- a transracial difference which points emphatically to the impossibility of a singular, unified movement anchored in a homogeneous “Black” diasporic experience from the Middle Passage to the present. Rather, it is a condensation of deep fissures, from which contradictory forces and diverging trajectories unfold, that the creative practices of these artists are unified in a shared discursive conjecture. Larry Neal, a notable proponent of the essentialist vein, famously described the Black Arts Movement as “the aesthetic and spiritual sister of the Black Power concept”, bound to a Black nationalist struggle founded on the separatist notion of a true nature common to all black people. As such, the interpellative powers of essentializing Afro-centric or Pan-African artworks lie in their projection of an imaginary coherence on the experiences of fragmentation and dispersal endemic to all enforced diasporas. For David Lionel Smith, however, it is precisely this quest for a singular “true” Black Aesthetic that stands as the fundamental theoretical failure of the movement (1991, p. 96); that is, the reading of “black” as a fixed imprint re-entrenches the very logic of race that legitimizes coloniality and continued subjugation by its erasure of difference within the ‘in-group’ of blackness itself, failing to attest to the subtle realities of a hybridized experience, of double consciousness, of a persistent internal tension between two disparate ideals characteristic of diasporic peoples. In terms of cultural production, a “Black Aesthetic” delimits the creative licence of black art in its imposition of an artificial uniformity through a black ‘truth’ disclosed by the work’s biographical associations, a predicament Yinka Shonibare puts succinctly: “What I’ve found, making work in Britain, is that when you make work about your origins, all it can be about is your origins. But if you don’t make work about your origins, people will say you’re an African artist who doesn’t make work about African subjects, so your identity becomes suspect” (Shonibare in Mercer, 2016, p. 148). 

These patterns reveal the urgency in developing critical frames that resist the entrenched dualisms between the West and the ‘rest’, for, a mere reversal of the terms of systems of representation that stereotype the black body- whereby in a singular inversion “black” became “beautiful”- proves inadequate in dismantling such frameworks (Hall, 2006, p. 20). Hall contends that, instead of subverting this system of representation, inversion leaves it intact; as such, it calls for a deconstruction from within, a destabilization of the ostensibly rational logics that uphold such stereotypes. As per Mercer, it is the persistent dualisms integral to such logics that circumscribe the criticality of black cultural production; at the outer boundaries of the antagonistic ideologies of anti-racism and racism is the common denominator of an ‘ethnic absolutism’ which misconceives culture as a “fixed and final property of different ‘racial’ groups” (1990, p. 63). Such an essentialist conception of culture, in conjunction with the institutional exclusion of black British artists during the 1980s, brought into effect the broader problematic- what Mercer termed “the burden of representation” within which the second ‘wave’ of artists had to work. This moral problematic is construed as a function of the hierarchy of access, such that the ostensibly representative practice of largely invisibilized black British artists obliged them to speak on behalf of their heterogeneous communities through a homogeneous lens. Consequently, black British artists of this generation continually found the value of their work gauged exclusively against extra-aesthetic concerns- namely their capacity to encapsulate a broader black “reality”- within a cultural system that revered the creative act on the basis of its individuality. As per Mercer, the agenda of the second ‘wave’- that is, heightening visibility against the exclusionary boundaries that regulated black British artists’ access to dominant institutions- roused an institutional response that has come to characterise the wider multicultural paradigm of the art world as it stands. 

The third ‘wave’ of black British artists, coming to the fore in the 1990s, found themselves facing a drastically different cultural agenda- one of hyper-visible cultural normalisation in the inauguration of the blockbuster model, its key threat being the neutralisation of the political dimension of black cultural production. As such, it created the scenario in which artists of this generation sought distance from the hyper-politicization of a difference which had now, by way of its ‘excess visibility’, become sublated into global multicultural exhibitionism (Mercer, 2016). As the work of black artists came to constitute “the multi in multicultural” and “the cool in Cool Britannia” (Hall, 1999, p. 13), this sublation was met with the emergence of a counternormalisation within the politics of representation. For Hall, an effective counterstrategy necessitates working “within the complexities and ambivalences of representation itself” (1997, p. 274), challenging dominant frameworks through their very own language and logics; this bears an immediate resonance with Yinka Shonibare’s work. Refusing the heavy-handed approach to ethnic authenticity, Shonibare lays bare the psychic and social ambiguities at play in racial representation through techniques of defamiliarization, whereby viewers’ assumptions can be “played with, seduced, and abandoned” (Mercer, 2016, p. 147). In his interview with Mercer, Shonibare asks: “Because I was brought up in Lagos and London- and kept going back and forth- it is extremely difficult for me to have one view of culture....How do I position myself in relation to that multifaceted experience of culture?” This question is answered deftly by his use of batik textiles in Double Dutch, an ostensibly clear-cut signifier of “authentic” African otherness. With some fifty panels of these “African” textiles, arranged precisely in five rows, Double Dutch synthesizes minimalist abstraction with the intercultural complexities of batik textiles in a re-appropriation of modernist primitivism’s appropriations. Unravelling the batik’s spatial circulations- appropriated by the Dutch, then mass-produced in Britain for export to West Africa, and ultimately re-routed back to Britain as a “traditional” African craft- Shonibare betrays the reductive means by which multicultural norms operate in achieving an artificial essential “meaning”, and instead obliges a critical enquiry that understands meaning itself to be unfixed. In each location, the fabric serves to ignite desire- in Africa, it has the allure of imported goods, in Europe, it elicits exotica (Mercer, 2016, p. 150); but what serves as the critical fulcrum in Shonibare’s work is the fabric’s appropriation by black diasporic people as an emblem of cultural nationalism- that is, when ‘ethnics’ appropriate others’ appropriations of ‘ethnicity’. “To show an affinity with Africa, young black British use these fabrics for head wraps, robes, and shirts,” Shonibare notes. “But the essentialism they associate with the fabrics is actually a myth because their origins are already questioned. At the shop in Brixton Market, they are never quite sure of the origins” (Shonibare in Mercer, 2016, p. 150). 


Double Dutch, 1994

Shonibare, Y. (1994). Double Dutch. [Acrylic paint on wall, emulsion, and acrylic on 50 Dutch wax printed cotton canvases] Available at: https://africa.si.edu/exhibits/shonibare/dutch.html [Accessed 2 Jan. 2021].



Using this pliable medium of the batik, Shonibare microcosmically reflects the polyvocal story of Britain, through the lens of what Gilroy calls “transracial syncretism”, “as already cross-cut by new and old lateral connections and reciprocal global influences” (Stilling, 2013, p. 300). In so doing, Shonibare’s employment of the batik, as it pertains to the burden of representation, shifts the focus of the relationship between ethnicity and identity onto matters of “historical processes of mutability” (Tolia-Kelly and Morris, 2004, p. 156). Within the wider dialectic surrounding black cultural production, Shonibare positions himself ambiguously by overriding the antagonism of thesis and antithesis, precisely because of his intimate experience of the intersection of cultures that has made modern African identities as hybridized as they are today (Mercer, 2016, p. 150). Neither sidestepping politics in favour of art for art’s sake, nor ensconcing himself firmly in ‘Otherness’, his work offers a third way of understanding ‘blackness’ in the terrain of a precarious politics of representation: the mapping of the circulation of histories from the past to the present in a spatial/temporal network as an end in itself. In this sense, Shonibare’s work stands as a promiscuous appropriation of earlier generation’s “vernacular” aesthetics borne from the essentialist vein, in order to speak to the non-essentialism of black diasporic experiences. For this third ‘wave’ of black British yBa artists then, many of whom have risen to international prominence since, the burden they bear no longer operates in the project of representation; rather, it lies precariously in the need for a visual vocabulary that dismantles the impartiality of an essentialised yet subsumed “otherness”- an “otherness” that is at the service of re-invisibilizing the particularities of blackness in the name of multiculturalism. 

Instanced by Shonibare, what such counter-strategies offer to the broader predicament of black cultural production is not a clear-cut answer, inevitably so given the ambiguous status of black identity itself- understood in this essay to be shifting, fractured, emergent, and always contingent, such that the very assumption that an objective overarching ‘truth’ may be achieved is irresolvable with the subtle details of blackness. Instead, thinking conjuncturally, Shonibare’s counternormalising practice constitutes a momentary intersection within a larger discursive trajectory, one that engages appositely a current predicament of black diasporic art as it pertains to institutional visibility. Resisting the urge to extrapolate from the contrived continuities presented by linear readings of history, Shonibare situates his work within the gaps of history, those histories untold which serve to ever complicate dogmatic notions of identity. Making manifest the disparities between “history as it is discursively transmitted and meaning as it is publicly enacted by the bodies that bear its consequences” (Roach in Tolia-Kelly and Morris, 2004, p. 155), the critical praxis of the third ‘wave’ infiltrates the story of Britain to illuminate the long erased actors, lateral connections and reciprocal global influences that have made the horizon of black British art as compellingly serpentine as it is today. And as it stands, a horizon of this complexity undoubtedly necessitates a correspondingly dynamic critical framework that transcends the reductive binarisms of ‘us’ and ‘them’, of ‘the West’ and ‘the rest’, and perhaps, even that of ‘essentialist’ and ‘anti-essentialist’. 


Works cited


Chude-Sokei, L. (1996). The Black Atlantic Paradigm: Paul Gilroy and the Fractured Landscape of “Race.” American Quarterly, [online] 48(4), p.740. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/30041559 [Accessed 3 Jan. 2021].

Guha, T. (1994). Yinka Shonibare ‘Double Dutch.’ Third Text, [online] 8(27), p.88. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09528829408576491 [Accessed 5 Jan. 2021].

Hall, S. (1997). The Spectacle of the Other. In: Representation: Cultural Representation and Signifying Practices. London: The Open University/Sage, pp.273–276.

Hall, S. (1999). Un‐settling ‘the Heritage’, Re‐imagining the Post‐Nation: Whose Heritage? Third Text, [online] 13(49), p.13. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09528829908576818 [Accessed 3 Jan. 2021].

Hall, S. (2006). Black Diaspora Artists in Britain: Three “Moments” in Post-war History. History Workshop Journal, [online] 61(1), pp.6–20. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/25472834 [Accessed 2 Jan. 2021].

Iton, R. (2010). In Search of the Black Fantastic: Politics and Popular Culture in the post-civil Rights Era. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p.13.

Mercer, K. (1990). Black art and the Burden of Representation. Third Text, [online] 4(10), p.63. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09528829008576253 [Accessed 3 Jan. 2021].

Mercer, K. (2016). Travel & See: Black Diaspora Art Practices Since the 1980s. Durham: Duke University Press, pp.147–195.

Smith, D.L. (1991). The Black Arts Movement and Its Critics. American Literary History, [online] 3(1), p.96. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/489734 [Accessed 2 Jan. 2021].

Stilling, R. (2013). An Image of Europe: Yinka Shonibare’s Postcolonial Decadence. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, [online] 128(2), p.300. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/23489062 [Accessed 4 Jan. 2021].

Tolia‐Kelly, D. and Morris, A. (2004). Disruptive Aesthetics? Revisiting the Burden of Representation in the Art of Chris Ofili and Yinka Shonibare. Third Text, [online] 18(2), pp.155–156. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0952882032000199678 [Accessed 7 Jan. 2020].