A Concise Companion to Visual Culture. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Группа авторов
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Жанр произведения: Изобразительное искусство, фотография
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119415473
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becomes a way of marking visual culture’s proclivity toward interdisciplinary approaches and its affinity with the logic of the network. In light of this fascinating range of roles, I am interested in reviewing the political, ethical, and aesthetic force of horizontal thinking as a key rhetorical trope in the formation of visual culture as an emerging mode of criticism and as a new discursive field. It is my contention that, rather than appearing out of nowhere, horizontal thinking was articulated as a rupture within art historical thinking and directly against its valorization of fine art as a privileged object of study. This path‐breaking emphasis on horizontality is found in the texts of a few mavericks who moved away from art history either partially or completely. In Great Britain, horizontal thinking was framed in the mid‐1950s, in terms of “the long front of culture,” in the writings of the art critic and curator Lawrence Alloway (1926–1990) and in the context of the Independent Group, of which he was a founding member. About two decades later, it was the neo‐Marxist critic John Berger (1926–2017), with his passion for a radically democratic art practice, who would espouse and circulate many ideas that reflected horizontal thinking (even though he did not use the term per se) in the initial program of his epoch‐shifting TV series and book Ways of Seeing (Berger 1972).

      As for his geometric preferences, Lawrence Alloway never liked triangles. They symbolized hierarchical thinking and a logic of exclusions. His former student Shelley Rice recalls how he started one class at SUNY Stony Brook with a diatribe against the three‐sided figure, stressing its deleterious effects and even its potential for emotional harm.

      Most people organize their life in hierarchies, like this triangle. They decide that certain aspects of culture are good and worthy, and they choose to ignore or deny everything else around them. This is a world view based primarily on exclusion, on willfully rejecting almost everything one experiences, and to me this depressing attitude makes no sense. Let me propose instead that we use this class to reorganize the triangle into a continuum, like this line. (Rice 2009, 78; see also Rice 2011)

      By affirming the horizontal line as the great leveler and by taking a self‐professed “permissive approach to culture,” in praise and recognition of its long front, Alloway (1987, 31) sets himself up against conservative literary critics such as T. S. Eliot, who asserted the “essentially aristocratic nature of culture.” Alloway’s brief but path‐breaking essay therefore begins with an attack on this kind of cultural elitism and snobbery, in a horizontally driven critique that targets tradition and canonical mastery and embraces mass media as sounding their death knell. He begins thus:

      The abundance of twentieth‐century communications is an embarrassment to the traditionally educated custodian of culture. The aesthetics of plenty oppose a very strong tradition which dramatizes the arts as the possession of an elite. These “keepers of the flame” master a central (not too large) body of cultural knowledge, meditate on it, and pass it on intact (possibly a little enlarged) to the children of the elite. (Alloway 1987, 31)

      Instead of reserving the word for the highest artifacts and the noblest thoughts of history’s top ten, it needs to be used more widely as the description of “what a society does.” A reserved cultural elitism gives way to an expansive visual anthropology. Then, unique oil paintings and highly personal poems as well as mass‐distributed films and group‐aimed magazines can be placed within a continuum rather than frozen in layers in a pyramid. (1987, 31)

      By placing the word “frozen” in a context that evokes the treasure tombs of ancient Egyptian kings, Alloway prompts us to read his gesture as a loosening of the art historical tradition, with its rigid hierarchies, to the benefit of a visual cultural liquidity that encompasses a wide range of genres, all equally worthy of analysis and interpretation.

      The concept of horizontal thinking was not confined to this essay alone, but rather served as a recurrent theme for Alloway over the course of his successful career as a cultural critic. For example, Alloway again pitted “horizontal descriptions” against the “pyramid of culture” two years later, in an essay titled “Artists as Consumers.” There he wrote again in an anti‐hierarchical fashion, which affirmed the pop cultural icon Elvis Presley