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Saturday 29 December 2012

The Ladder of Civilization

"by the mere fact that he forms part of an organised crowd, 
a man descends several rungs in the ladder of civilization. 
Isolated, he may be a cultivated individual; in a crowd he is a barbarian - 
that is, a creature acting by instinct."
Gustave Lebon, La Psychologie des Foules, 1895


Enguerrand Quarton - Detail from Le Courronement de la Vierge - 1453-54

L. S. Lowry - Our Town - 1943

Bernard Buffet - L’enterrement - 1949

Saturday 22 December 2012

Ministers of Sound and Volume

Le Temps et l’Espace sont les ministres du Son et du Volume.” 
(Time and Space are the ministers of Sound and Volume)
Reflexions, G. Vantongerloo, in De Stijl, volume 1 issue 9, translation mine

Frank Lloyd Wright - Detail from the Hollyhock House - 1919-1921

Michael Hansmeyer Studio - Cellular Automata - Voxel- 2009

"Time and Space died yesterday. We are already living in the absolute, 
since we have already created eternal, omnipresent speed."
F. T. Marinetti, Futurist Manifesto., 1909

Friday 21 December 2012

All That Is Solid Melts into Air - Marshall Berman

"Suppose, as Marx supposes, that bourgeois forms decompose, 
and that a communist movement surges into power: 
what is to keep this new social form from sharing its predecessors fate 
and melting down in the modern air?"
Marshall Berman, All That Is Solid Melts into Air, 1982

Monolithic, solid, liquid - the ubiquitous and pervasive influence of modernity has inspired an array of metaphors, so many images that reflect the peculiar interpretations of the modern as a supra-historical force. If modernism's spirituality, as I suspect, is a mystique of history, the indefinable and evasive nature of modernity calls for poetic and negative definitions, not unlike the rich paraphrase that fueled two thousand years of Christianity. 

Marshall Berman - All That Is Solid Melts into Air - 1982


Marshall Berman in All That is Solid Melts into Air apply himself at identifying the history and typology of the modern phenomenon, at producing a different theology -and anthropology- of modernity, solidly rooted in his broad knowledge of literary and intellectual history. 

If modernism is religious in character, it asks from it's students a leap of faith: although the sweeping changes to all landscapes that are described artfully in the book are undeniable, many an interpretation can seem at time to read too much in those events, to find groundbreaking novelty were others could find only the insatiable repetition of age-old conflicts. But this is hardly specific to Berman's views, in fact, it is the rule of the game.The identity between modernism and modernity that Berman seems to presuppose made me at times uncomfortable, I will prefer Paul Greenhalgh's understanding of modernism as a self-conscious phase of modernity, but if such broad concept as a monolithic modernity is to be examined, we will have with to acknowledge modernity as a force, be it a "real" historical phenomenon or at least as a cultural one, undeniably reigning over our collective imagination. 

His understanding is, and this seems to be the originality of his work, intrinsically rooted in a geographical, as well as historical, understanding of the process: the book is structured around five cities, which he presents as five types and five epochs of modernity as a process, each with their own idiosyncratic appropriations and reactions to the cultural, political and social upheavals that characterize the new era

Theo Van Doesburg - Arithmetic Composition - 1930


The five sections: first we are guided around the historical phenomenon of modernization by Faust and his various incarnations whom Berman agreeably identifies as the foremost metaphor of the period. The very ambivalence of modernization, offering both unlimited power and insatiable corruption of the established order of things, is highlighted as mephistophelian and, in the process ascribed the fitting role of funding myth in the spirituality he outlines. We then proceed to examine the poetics, and latent spirituality of Marx's thought: beyond the obvious themes of eschatological revolution he identifies what I am tempted to call "gaseous modernity": all that is solid melts into air, and air itself keeps on melting further and further -from air to ether most likely- modernity is here defined as the unstoppable and universal process that brings all things to an end. The process, that is in my eyes, history, is the sole permanence in this world, and therefore the inaccessible source of all transcendence. 

"For dialectical philosophy nothing is final, absolute, sacred. It reveals the transitory character of everything and in everything; nothing can endure before it except the uninterrupted process of becoming and of passing away, of endless ascendancy from the lower to the higher. And dialectical philosophy itself is nothing more than the mere reflection of this process in the thinking brain."
Frederick Engels Ludwig Feuerbach and the End of Classical German Philosophy, 1886

Next comes Baudelaire and Paris, which I found to be probably the most compelling section of book, maybe because it was the subject I was the least familiar with: once again the ambivalence of the poet is found to reflect the inbuilt contradiction of modernization, albeit here one that reflects a very material and physical process rather than spiritual or ideological: urbanization. Berman artfully outlines the new spectacles that radical changes in urban life brought to European culture: the confrontation between bourgeoisie and misery, the objectification of the crowds, their links with material and consumer culture and the blossoming society of spectacle. 

We then proceeds to examine, but with a different lens, the "modernism of underdevelopement" he finds in Saint Petersburg. Here is a world apart for Berman, where the spectacle of modernity he identified in the previous chapter take a life of it's own, split from the modernization process. He proceed to identify a form of surrealism he takes to be characteristic of Petersburgian literature  where everyone, from Dostoevsky to Biely, is an ardent humanist, whose ethical concerns are best expressed not in political statements or an ethical praxis, but in their tackling of the strange and the surreal. 
The shortcomings of the soviet regime are bundled together with the autocratic rule of Tsarist Russia in an attempt at imposing "from above" the appearance of modernity, that is, it's technical apparatus, without allowing the process to bring about social and political shifts that can support it. This of course, is reminiscent of the theories ascribing the rise of fascism to Germany and Italy's late modernization, and whereas the argument certainly hold some truth in economic terms it fits awkwardly in a work that belong clearly to cultural and literary history. This results in a very idealist distinction between modernization "from above" and modernization "from below", but more on this later - for now let me just say that his depiction of Tsarist Russia could well be ascribed to his own category of the "pastorals", of fictious and mono-dimensional representations which here allow for a slightly Manichean representation. Lastly a short chapter takes un around NYC which was a compelling read on a field I have virtually no knowledge of, and on which I will therefore refrain to comment. 

Henri Cartier Bresson - Arbres en Brie - Brie - 1968


As compelling a thesis as Berman's, one is bound to have qualms with anyone's interpretation of a concept as broad as modernity. Mine comes with his notion of "Modernization from below" which emerges towards the end, as the analysis take on a more decidedly political turn. The author largely eclipses his own political views in most of the book, as a genuine "theology of modernity" owes to do, keeping them checked in all of his analyses, but it seems that when acknowledging the failure of the soviet regime he feels the need to characterize the soviet project, so as to protect the ethical viability of modernist politics. 
For him, it seems, state-led modernization such as the soviet project, or other guises of authoritarianism he hinted at earlier in the book (Hausmann's urbanism, the Goethean Faust's pursuit of modernization, etc.) belong to the family of "modernization from above", a claim I would be at a loss to reject, but which he goes on to posit in opposition with what he calls the "modernization from below". 


But the paradox he seems willing to ignore is that modernization, if taken outside of the pure field of scientific history, and as he does throughout the book, in the field of cultural history, is essentially a collective phenomenon: modernizing has been done on smaller scales throughout history, but modernity arise with the awareness of the process, an awareness that propels the phenomenon on a cosmic scale (or at least a "suprahistorical" one) and feed onto the very self-reflexivity he so compellingly outlined.
There can only be a "modernization from below" if the said "below" is taken as a group, as a collective, else none of the crucial awareness brought about by modernization will be allowed to exist. To presuppose that the "below", the undifferentiated mass of individuals undergoing modernization, can do so and reflect on the process, requires a "methodological collectivism" allowing for collective identity, wich in my eyes is bound to bring about the very normative and monolithic modernity he is also so eager to reject:


Berman attaches himself at bringing to light what he understands to be a humanistic modernity - an excruciating task no doubt, given the permanent striving of modernists to surpass the boundaries of what they perceive as an outdated concept - this leads him to focus on the self-reflexivity to be found in many of the thinkers he examines, highlighting their shared anguish and something akin to humility, in their restless criticism of everything that surrounds them, including themselves. 
The problem I perceive is that this emphasis relegates a large section of modernity, and of modernism in particular, to the realm of the pathological or reactionary, from the futurists to the CIAM. One could be tempted to absolve him on the grounds of writing in the era of post-modernism, but his animosity towards what I find to be the most stalwarts, unequivocal proponents of modernism seem to be largely an ethical biais: his fascination for the contrary impulses and the psychology of the modern thinker cannot accomodate those movements that appear to embrace modernity in all it's monolithic and crushing unity, they refuse the fragmentary mindset he set out to explore. Does this mean that he owes to deny those manifestations' fundamental modernity? I think not: if indeed self-reflexivity and dualism are characteristics essential to the radical critique (as Greenhalgh would have it) of modernity, the 'total identification' of modernists with modernity is at the very least worth more attention than he gave them. 


Anthony Gormley - Body and Light - 1990


All in all, this is one of those books, beyond all discussions of it's theoretical analysis, whose sheer culture and depth of thinking amply justifies the reading: the author sweeps across the fascinating multitude of modernisms, battles heroically with their contradictions and parting this blood-red sea leads us not to the inchoate Eden of post-modernity but in the Promised Land of a new modernity, a plural one that rely on self-reflexivity to accommodate it's inner contradictions while retaining those of it's ideals that he finds compatible with his humanistic worldview. 
The question as to whether humanism is to find it's place in modernity is probably what actually separate me from his stand point, and I would be more inclined to see in modernity, and especially in modernism, a striving for the supra-human that is bound to negate humanity as a de-facto community. 
Yet surprisingly Berman also echoes, better than most, my understanding of modernism as a religious point of view: he insists on translating Marx's use of "Geist" as spiritual rather than intellectual, and his grasp of the very self-reflexivity of modernism acknowledges the inherent mythical mechanisms involved in the process. 
My copy is scribbled all over and I can only wish there had been larger margins for me to take notes and I will no doubt both explore further many of the authors he has engaged with, and come back to the book in the future as a reference on a meaningful thinker. 

Monday 17 December 2012

To control and shape the entire social arena - Constant Nieuwenhuys

“Architecture exists only to control and shape the entire social arena. 
It is constituted by this impulse propelling it to erect itself as the center 
and to organize all activities around itself.”
Denis Hollier, Against Architecture: The Writings of George Bataille, 1974

Guy Debord and the Situationist International shared, with others of the sixties characteristic attempts at realizing a Utopian praxis, an interest in reforming the human experience in it's totality. The sheer ambition of the project endowed their sometimes vague ideology with a visionary and sometimes nearly mystique quality, where the re-constructed, post-revolutionary world they prophesied had become so foreign to our contemporary alienated consciousness, that only abstract and poetic descriptions could be achieved.

Žižek famously claims in the 2005 eponymous documentary that is is more difficult to imagine the end of all life, than it is to picture the end of capitalism. This no doubt never stopped several generations of thinkers on the left, before and after Debord, to attempt at picturing what the reformed reality would be like: Adorno and Horkheimer, in The Dialectic of Enlightenment, find the re-enchantment of the world to be a process overlapping with the Marxist struggle but also, historically, straying from the stalwart historical materialist and the dominant modernist narratives that often presided to the leftist politics.

And indeed the sixties would-be revolutionaries learned the Frankfurt School's lesson well: all power was now to be given to the imagination rather than the soviet, a slogan, like many in those days, that made use of concepts and terminology vague enough to accommodate the increasing diversity of an atomized and bourgeois radical milieu. Yet, if preference was given to an inclusive praxis over a perceived dogmatic theory, the alleged leaders of the movement, and among them the situationists, did not loose the opportunity to perpetuate the speculative tradition, albeit with a timely twist.

Guy Debord - The Naked City - 1958

"When man plays he must intermingle with things and people in a similarly uninvolved and light fashion. He must do something which he has chosen to do without being compelled by urgent interests or impelled by strong passion; he must feel entertained and free of any fear or hope of serious consequences. He is on vacation from social and economic reality – or, as is most commonly emphasized: he does not work."
Erik Erikson, Childhood and Society, 1950

Psychogeography and other elements of their philosophy mark a clear rejection of the productivist, disciplined and intrinsically teleological spirit of orthodox Marxist thought, leaving only untouched (alongside with the authority of Debord...) the revolution itself, as an eerie absolute, largely bared from it's economic and class-based mechanics.

One of the models inspiring the situationists for this reconstruction of social relationships was to be found in the work of Johann Huizinga, a cultural historian who penned a landmark work in the field of game studies entitled Homo Ludens (1938) - Huizinga, like other radicals of his generation, attached himself to producing a discreet critique of the rational and mechanized way of life promoted by modernity, but the alternative, the model of social interaction against which he contrasted the alienated condition of the XXth century man was the model of the game.

Much could be said - and has been said - of the mindset fueling this pervasive and virtually indefinable activity that is play: Wittgenstein famously asserted that games, much like words, cannot be defined as such and only hold a "family resemblance" between themselves. An interesting attempt at separating the ludic activity from the quotidian, more recently, is to be found in Michael J. Apter's psychological reversal theory and it's opposition between telic (purpose oriented) and paratelic (process oriented) activities.
From this, inferring how a society based on those principles would function might prove more difficult.

Constant Nieuwenhuys - New Babylon - 1963

"Play is free movement within a more rigid structure."
Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman
Rules of Play : Game Design Fundamentals, 2003

Debord himself, acknowledging the importance of Huizinga and of games in general, will develop in 1977 a game of his own, "The Game of War", a lucky mixture of the long tradition of wargames and simulations, and of the more accessible variations on chess. The tokens could easily accommodate the archetypes of strategy and military theory he had been reading eagerly. And maybe the checkerboard proved a more welcoming support for the war he had been waging not unsuccessfully in the compromised realm of artist, student and worker politics some ten years earlier.

One of Debord's early collaborators, Constant Nieuwenhuys, who was to leave their increasingly politicized situationist milieu in the early sixties, embarked on an ambitious project of creating an alternative reality - a gigantic, all-encompassing project of semi-abstract urbanism, somewhat akin to other sixties, unapologetically utopian, "paper" architecture as presented by Archizoom, Haus-Rucker-Co, or recent Turner Prize nominee Paul Noble.

The New Babylon, as he titled it, he envisioned for all of the fifteen years he spent working on the project as a world-spanning city designed for the new modes of living that were to arise after the downfall of capitalism in the world, and more importantly, in the minds. The city as metaphor for political organization has of course a long ancestry, from Thomas More to St Augustine, but the peculiar approach artists have taken on those questions differentiate it radically from the mere ideological illustration: in the space of fifteen years of work, someone like Nieuwenhuys (or Noble) has not only time to develop individual, self-standing artworks, but also to extend, and enmesh or coordinate their respective mythologies to create a total framework. The choice of the urbanistic model for the construction of a grand-narrative likely reflect a will to evidence, in the inevitable variety of the artist production, a structure and a meaning, that could transcend the limited scope of the particular artwork to reflect the author's life-as-art.

Black Dog Publishing has an excellent book A User's Guide: The Situationist International by Simon Ford if you would like to read more on the situationist ideology

Constant Nieuwenhuys - New Babylon - 1963

"If he had been a great and wise philosopher, like the writer of this book, he would now have comprehended that Work consists of whatever a body is obliged to do, and that Play consists of whatever a body is not obliged to do. And this would help him to understand why constructing artificial flowers or performing on a tread-mill is work, while rolling ten-pins or climbing Mont Blanc is only amusement."
Mark Twain, The Adventures of Tom Swayer, 1876

The principles governing to the organization of New Babylon's modular megastructures and of it's imagined inhabitants reflect the peculiar world-view that was arising from the creative milieu of both Debords and Nieuwhenhuys:
The ludic model they read in Huizinga offered powerful alternative to the mythic one for the blue-print of their utopia. Whereas myths pointed towards a monolithic and ossified future, the game provided the same self-contained narrative, but focused on the individual and affording him the meaningful choices a mythical framework denied. The game, in a way, was the myth for the liquid modernity.

In an interview given to BLDBLOG, architecture theorist Mark Wigley agree with the interviewer that the New Babylon "actually seems to be an example of architectural Stalinism – a world of total control." - agreeably a step or two from what is usually projected on the deconstructed and surreal architecture.
Surely games are not the most current metaphor for totalitarian societies: play, with it's associations of insouciant spontaneity, of creative individualism seems hardly to fit in as the typical activity in a regime where the individual initiative is sacrificed on the altar of the static and monolithic state.
Yet Boris Groys has written at length of the "The total art of Stalinism", as did Ulrich Schmid for fascism, on totalitarism as aesthetic pursuit, and Mussolini wrote in his Popolo d’Italia on the 14 July 1920 that “Lenin is an artist who has worked men, as other artists have worked marble or metals. But men are harder than stone and less malleable than iron. There is no masterpiece. The artist has failed. The task was superior to his capacities.

Huizinga sees poetry and in particular the Vate, like Wittgenstein, as engaging in a form of play -of play with words- that creates myths by accumulating layers of discordant meanings. What Claudia Salaris calls the "lyrical order" (A la fete de la révolution, 2002, p.137) of modernist politics attempt at merging those contradictory meanings, and in the process at anchoring the concrete into the mythical.
Whether art was used as a metaphor for the construction of a coherent political community, or whether it was the political community that was metaphor of a creative endeavor, the relationship between art as a practice and that of politics seems in the case of totalitarian regimes to be more complex than purely instrumental - the sole constraint, for meta-political readings of the totalitarian discourse, be them artistic, literary or tragic, is to keep in mind the compulsory obsession with purity. Purity expresses the homogeneity of the organic whole and justify the movement/regime as Gestalt.

Constant Nieuwenhuys - New Babylon - 1963


"Play is the purest, the most spiritual, product of man at this stage, and it is at once the prefiguration and imitation of the total human life,--of the inner, secret, natural life in man and in all things. It produces, therefore, joy, freedom, satisfaction, repose within and without, peace with the world. The springs of all good rest within it and go out from it."
Freidrich Froebel, The Education of Man, 1888

The game seem a paradoxical activity: although it is intrinsically defined by it's rules, and often only by its rules, it is also a fundamentally free activity, in that it is, in it's purest forms, not compulsory. Beyond the obvious advantages, in terms of ideological construction, to build on a model that accommodate both rules and yet presupposes absolute freedom, it is worth calling on a concept of Huizinga to understand better this duality: what the Dutch writer refer to as the "magic circle" is the conceptual or imaginary frontier that separate world of the game from the real world. Just as the rules of the game do not need applying in the the players lives when they quit playing, the norms and hierarchies of the quotidian are in many ways suspended in the time and space of the game.
Although the "magic circle" is obviously porous (money stakes, relationships building between players, or celebrity for a few examples) it is easy to imagine that the stretching of this circle to englobe the entirety of human life, as Constant Nieuwenhuys was fantasizing, would be a lot less idyllic than might at first appear.
As Wigley inform us, Constant himself acknowledged rapidly that life in his city would probably, if safeguard a sense of individuality, crush any sense of privacy, but, and this is probably the most amazing thing in the New Babylon project, that did not stop him from developing his project further and further for many years, willingly sliding into dystopia, mirroring history.

Was there an acknowledged connection between modernist politics and games, before the Situationists? It is hard to say: Many modernist artists, like Duchamp who apparently gave up on Art for the sake of chess, readily acknowledged their fondness of games - but if dictators were fond of comparing their work with art, I have not yet come across any references to games; The analogy between politics and theatre, where one certainly "plays", has been widely discussed concerning both modernity and modernism, but this is still remote from games as we understand it here.
Roger Griffin defines in his foreword 'Another Face, Another Mazeway' a process of 'Mazeway Resynthesis', where "old and new ideological and ritual elements - some of which would previously have been incongruous or incompatible - are forged through 'ludic recombination' into a totalizing worldview." This, he considers to be the key process that allow the surprising medley of sometimes contradictory elements that characterize fascism.

He borrows the notion from anthropologist Victor Turner, for whom play and ritual are intrinsically related - the notion of liminality with which he refers to the idea of a world separated from the quotidian, is bound to remind us of the kingdom locked inside the magic circle: rituals, to Turner, just like games, have for primary purpose to construct and delimit this liminal space, escaping norms and traditions, yet fundamentally regimented. This, to me, sounds a lot like Carl Schmidt defense of the State of Exception and the marxist Permanent Revolution.

Thursday 13 December 2012

Traffic

"On that 1st of October, 1924, I was assisting in the titanic rebirth of a new phenomenon... traffic."
Le Corbusier, The City of Tomorrow. 1924, quoted in All That is Solid Melts into Air, Marshall Berman, 1982

Cornelis Van Eesteren - Schematic representation of the optimal relationship between skyscrapers and traffic - 1926

Le Corbusier - La Cité Radieuse - 1924

Emilio Ambasz - Cooperative of a Mexican-American grape growers in California - 1979

Wednesday 12 December 2012

Nor the splendor of time - Antony Gormley, Model

"But what is it that I love in loving thee? Not physical beauty, nor the splendor of time, 
nor the radiance of the light -so pleasant to our eyes- nor the sweet melodies of the various 
kinds of songs, nor the fragrant smell of flowers and ointments and spices; not manna and honey, 
not the limbs embraced in physical love -it is not these I love when I love my God. 
Yet it is true that I love a certain kind of light and sound and fragrance 
and food and embrace in loving my God, who is the light and sound and fragrance 
and food and embracement of my inner man"
Saint Augustine, The Confessions, Book X, Chapter 6


The Antony Gormley "Model" exhibition at the White Cube gallery runs from the 28th of November to the 10th of February. Most of the opinions ascribed to the artist where expressed at his discussion with Tim Marlow on the 12th of December 2012. 



Theo Van Doesburg - Study for rhythm of a russian dance - 1918


Antony Gormley's career echoes masterfully many of the concerns I have so far displayed on this blog: his work address what has been described as a return to modernity, but a re-constructed modernity, largely freed from it's inbuilt contradictions, from it's ruthless violence and it's teenage angst, leaving only the poetics of reason and the mystique of abstraction. 
Gormley is not alone in this pursuit, but whether him or the others are genuinely moved by the crushing ideals of high modernism, or whether they are content to re-enact those glory days as an heroic (if futile) last stand against the post-modern wasteland, I cannot tell. In either case they have my sympathy. 


Antony Gormley - Transfuser - 2002


Gormley's sculpture addresses many of the "traditional" themes of monolithic modernity: the multitude, harmony, abstraction, or proportions, but generally through the conceptual lens of the human body, which seems to provide him with a permanent referential around which to build his rational aesthetics. 
His new show continues in this vein, exploring the body as a space we inhabit. 

The entire exhibition is an aggregation of rectangular cuboids, in different materials (from corten to polystyrene  via wood, cast metal and plastic) and in a variety of scale, from the toy soldier to the pavillon. 
We can identify three parts to the exhibition, three main scales of work: the smaller works are all to be found in one room, which seem essentially to document the conceptual and technical process that brought us the larger works. The process in question is essentially one of abstraction, where the human body, it's shapes and it's proportions, is gradually simplified into a combination of angular boxes, much reminiscent, in it's later stages,  of Malevitch' Architekton


Antony Gormley - Mark - 2012


The medium scale is one more or less consistent with actual human proportions: what at first appear like an abstract accumulation of blocks reveal, at closer inspection, human bodies, playfully disposed in natural, and not so natural positions, around the gallery space, like so many dancers frozen into intimate performances, but boxed, reduced to the space they occupy. 

The third scale, and judging from the talk given by the artist, the central work, is a rather gigantic construction of metal sheets which the visitor is first invited to circle, to study as a gigantic sculpture, before being invited, like Job, to enter in a Hobbesian Leviathan. 

Perambulating inside the controlled space proves to be as compelling an experience as promised by the artist: the complex interplay of surfaces, planes and light make for many surprising vistas and interactions, prompting intense experiences mixing claustrophobia, disorientation and exploration; Like a concrete presentation of St Theresa's Interior Castle we visit a space so stripped of signification that we can project our elusive, innermost realities onto it. 


Antony Gormley - Model - 2012


Space and architecture as a metaphor for inner life is itself an important modern concept (as described by Frances Yates)  and Gormley is fond of colliding this subjective, intimate construction of psychological architecture with the harsh, brutal(ist) materiality of the world he constructs - his rhetoric allies the pervasive abstraction of mystique and Platonism with the materiality sculpture as an exploration of space. The modern meet the modernist. But ultimately his work seems to address the power of the metaphor, organic and spatial. 
The exhibition is compelling on more than one ground: for it's stretching of the boundaries of the gallery experience, as one has come to expect from international artists, but also for his very refined take on modernity, whose latent mystic and spirituality will hopefully take part in shaping the supposed revival of modernism. 


Antony Gormley - Model - 2012


Yet this very mystique can also leave one wanting: If Le Corbusier's houses were machines to live in, what is the purpose of Gormley's? The new modernist paradigm seems keen to conciliate art for art sake with pure contemplation, and when Gormley characterizes his work as a tool, as "machine" one is tempted to say, he remains elusive as to its purpose: oceanic feelings, self-exploration, or inverted allegories of the cave all sound very much contemplative in essence. 
Contemplation is an activity essentially solitary, inward and subjective, even leaving little room for the contradictory maelstrom of opinions and ideals the modern culture cater to. The very elusiveness of the absolute the artist seems to invite us to pursue leaves a gaping void in both his work and his theory, which one can only wonder at. If modernism is to be revived in all it's claims of purity and high-mindedness, not only as a style or a facade, but as a genuine, heartfelt ideal, surely tolerance, accessibility and marketability will have to make room for an absolute, transcendent telos that will suffer no contradiction.


Oskar Schlemmer - Illustration for "Man and Art Figure" - in Theater of the Bauhaus - 1925