Week 4 Reading, Critical Theory Seminar

The Aesthetics of Affect: Thinking art beyond representation.

“Art is thus confused with a cultural object and may give rise to any of the discourses to which anthropological data in general lend themselves. One could do a history, sociology, or political economy of it, to mention just those few. One can easily show that its destination, anthropologically speaking, undergoes considerable modification depending on whether the artwork “belongs” to a culture that is tribal, imperial, republican, monarchical, theocratic, mercantile, autocratic, capitalist, and so on, and that it is a determining feature of the contemporary work that it is obviously destined for the museum (collection, conservation, exhibition) and for the museum audience. This approach is implied in any “theory” of art, for the theory is made only of objects, in order to determine them. But the work is not merely a cultural object, although it is that too. It harbours within it an excess, a rapture, a potential of associations that overflows all the determinations of its “reception” and “production.” Jean-Francois Lyotard, “Critical Reflections” 93

30/09/20 4:00 PM start time

Simon O’Sullivan. The Aesthetics of Affect: Thinking art beyond representation, Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities, 6:3, 125-135, 2001.

READING NOTES

  • problem – there is no vocabulary of affect, cannot invent because would bring affect into representation, representation brings deconstruction. this problem has no solution other than to sidestep it.
  • Lyotard – sign works in two+ economies, metonymic and metaphoric, perhaps affect.
  • art historians – “how to attend to the material object behind the ideological veils (the cultural readings/meanings), whilst still attending to the object’s history” problem bc ideology + history are synonyms.
  • Derrida + de Man – “present experience is inaccessible to conciousness”
  • “affect is immanent[within] experience”
  • faith – either deconstruction: event is always constituted, determined by scene of event, or faith: event as something genuinely unexpected
  • virtual – art is a space/zone in which “one might encounter the affect”
  • Bergson – attention – “suspension of normal motor activity which in itself allows other “planes” of reality to be perceivable”
  • spatio-temporal register – art to switch register (new tech ie timelapse)
  • body without organs – Deleuze and Guattari – to access affect, do not read about affect, experience it (to know body without organs, do not read about body without organs, make yourself a body without organs ????)
  • matter in us responding and resonating with matter around us – affect as transhuman aesthetic
  • art as […] an access point to another world,[…] a world of impermanence and interpenetration…
  • “how to sidestep ourselves… we do it all the time…” we are involved in processes that go beyond our subjectivity, we “are” these processes.
  • what are practices and strategies that… imaginatively and pragmatically switch the register
  • “art’s function: to switch our intensive register” art’s MO is to transform selves and perspectives
  • discarding “existent” and “possible” (negative) for Deleuze’s “actual” and “virtual,” (affirmative)
    • possible undergoes process of realization
    • virtual undergoes process of actualization
  • Adorno – art provides critique of instrumental reason and world commoditity. Deleuze and Guttari – art and philosophy are pragamatic active concept creation to solve problems and getting something done. Different kinds of art have different functions.
  • Kristeva – art seeks to “place us in a space at the limits of the sacred, and asked us not to contemplate images but to communicate with beings,” incarnation – to make us feel through abstractions the real experience.
    • making visible the invisible, making perceptible the imperceptible, the harnessing of forces
    • less making sense of the world, more exploring the possibilities of being and of becoming in the world
    • less shielding us from death, more involved in actualizing the possibilities of life
  • “aesthetic function” in this sense (above) makes term “visual culture” useful when detatched from “aesthetic form” (objects) and attached to “immanent aesthetic.” (so, visual culture in relation to general aesthetics rather than semiotics).
    • reconfigure art history as creative writing, something parallel to the work art is already doing rather than interpertation
  • art history as “the thinking[/writing] of specific art works[…] as exploration of art’s creative, aesthetic and ethical function.”

when looking through a lense of affect, what does art do?

INTERESTING CITATIONS AND DEFINITIONS (H3)

Badiou, A. Deleuze: The Clamor of Being. Trans. Louise Burchill. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1999.
Bergson, H. Matter and Memory. Trans. N.M. Paul and W.S. Palmer. New York: Zone, 1991.
Bogue, R. “Gilles Deleuze: The Aesthetics of Force.” Deleuze: A Critical Reader. Ed. Paul Patton. Oxford: Blackwell, 1996.
Bogue, R. “Art and Territory.” A Deleuzian Century. Ed. Ian Buchanan. Durham: Duke UP, 1999.
Derrida, J. The Truth in Painting. Trans. Geoff Bennington and Ian McCleod. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1987.
Lyotard, J.-F. “Philosophy and Painting in the Age of Their Experimentation: Contribution to an Idea of Postmodernity.” Trans. Maria Minich Brewer and Daniel Brewer. The Lyotard Reader. Ed. Andrew Benjamin. Oxford: Blackwell, 1989.
Melville, S. “Notes on the Reemergence of Allegory, the Forgetting of Modernism, the Necessity of Rhetoric, and the Conditions of Publicity in Art and Art Criticism.” October 19 (1981): 55–92.

affect: “moments of intensity, a reaction in/on the body at the level of matter” “the effect another body, [ex art object] has upon my own body and my body’s duration (Spinoza),” “matter in us responding and resonating with the matter around us (Bataille),”

intensity: extreme degree of strength, force, energy, or feeling (Merriam-Webster)

immanent: existing or remaining within (Merriam-Webster). “experience as immanence means that it emerges from the realm of the virtual in and immanent plane from within, always from within.” (From M-B Module)

individuation: mechanism that multiplies and breaks from the national body politic, breaks from the grid system where resistance is primarily concerned with a deconstruction of instrumental reason, via evaluations of discourse significantation and language. (from M-B Module)

duration: the time during which something exists or lasts (Merriam-Webster)

aesthetic: a particular theory or conception of beauty or art a particular taste for or approach to what is pleasing to the senses and especially sight

virtual: the realm of affects

resingularisation: process of reordering ourselves and our relation tot he world (Guattari, Chaosmosis 7)

marxism (The Social History of Art):

deconstruction (derrida, The New Art History): “a kind of expanded ideological critique”

post-medium:

deterritorialism (making visible the invisible, “harnessing of forces” deleuze+guattari):

transformation: exploring the possibility of being/becoming in the world, actualizing the possibilities of life

hermeneutic: Interpretive; explanatory.

heuristic: involving or serving as an aid to learning, discovery, or problem-solving by experimental 

aporia: an expression of real or pretended doubt or uncertainty especially for rhetorical effect

Kurt Foster “Critical History of Art or a Transfiguration of Values,” Derrida “The Parergon,” O’Sullivan “Art as Text: Rethinking Representation,” Craig Owens “The Allegorical Impulse: Towards a Theory of Postmodernism,” Stephen Melville, “Notes on the Reemergence of the Allegory, the Forgetting of Modernism, and the Necessity of Rhetoric, and the Conditions of Publicity in Art and Art Criticism,” Andrew Benjamin “The Plural Event,” Alain Badiou, “Deleuze: The Clamour of Being,”

Notes from Module

  • what do ideas do? what does art do in the first place?
    • manning – national body politic, matter is reduced to identity, ideology, gender, purely human.
    • affimation of life.
    • function – not as utilitarianism or function as capitalism/world market. what art serves is a function that can’t be seen (affect)
  • individuation – a mechanism that multiplies and breaks from the national body politic, breaks from the grid system where resistance is primarily concerned with a deconstruction of instrumental reason, via evaluations of discourse significantation and language.
  • what is the function of theory when what is observed is the impact of forces of affect?
    • transcendence vs immanence – becoming moves in excess of language and critique but not outside it
    • “all we have of the present is its trace” outcome of movment, and art and event.
    • immanence – god is within the physical world
    • transcendance – god is above or beyond the physical world
    • “experience as immanence means that it emerges from the realm of the virtual in and immanent plane from within, always from within.”
    • prothestic limbs, timelapse photography, slow motion film, spatial registers like microscopes and telescopes,
    • body without organs – a body that rejects organisation (organisation is national body politic), possible to connect intensely via body’s potential to become
    • art has potential to take us out of centrality of being human
    • becoming and not arriving, actualizing the virtual, that which we cannot see
  • Ecosophy, 3 ecologies, environment, social relations, human subjectivity
  • consider resingularizing activities in the every day, move into virtual, realm, aesthetic, work within 3 registers of 3 ecologies (environment, social relations, human subjectivity)

POST-READ


I wonder if it means something that I am always rushing off to eat something when I am done reading.

This text aims to put in action a vocabulary of affect, and in it navigates questions of how to side-step marxism, deconstruction, representation, and reconfiguring art-history to detatch it from ideology and semiotics. This text describes the virtual as “a space in which one may encounter affect.” An affect is a force that exceeds experience, it is immanent (a part of) experience. An affect is a transhuman experience because it is the matter in our bodies resonating with the matter of the world around us, it is “interpenetrative.” Art allows us to switch our spacio-temporal register and focus on the resonating with the world around us. It is an event, a fleeting, “an impermenance.” This theory, unlike deconstruction, focuses on affirmation rather than critique. In deconstruction, there is the “possible” that goes through a process of “realization,” and resembles reality. In affect, there is the “virtual” that goes through a process of “actualization.” In Marxism (Adorno,) art functions as a critique to society, in affect (Deleuze,) art functions as a problem solving creative force. Through abstraction, we feel the real experience, and we become aware of the possible that is made invisible by our “subjectivities.” For art historians and those concerned with “visual culture,” their work becomes a co-creative endeavor, working alongside art by performing additional exploration of the art’s creative, aesthetic and ethical function.

30/09/20 6:50 PM end time

Week 2 Reading, Critical Theory Seminar (3)

Deleuze and Massumi – Recording posted by Maria Belen
Ordonez

sound recording under 17 mins, less than 2 minute clip, share connections of deleuze, massumi, manning.

20/09/20 9:00 PM

Notes

  • percepts – sensations that become autonomous, affects – sensations that overwhelm (becomings)
  • ontology – nature of being human
    • affect / percept etc is a non-human ontology of being.
    • ontogeny – alternative to ontology, always emerging organism
  • minelli clip – awful is the affect, aesthetics is a percept
  • “deleuze conceptualizes body via percept concept affect,” make up ideas
  • Massumi – the body of discursive site as occupied much of critical theory… sensing body has not been granted same theoretical focus
  • movement makes body without form (incorporeal)
  • movements, forming what the body feels, results in change, unpredictability.
  • “movement and sensation as a process before signification.”
    • process=change, not essence but modification, not binarisms but passing into
  • ontology = being, ontogeny = development(movement, becoming)
  • sociality (before individual or collective), Erin Manning, no distinction between cultural and natural, natural cultural continuum.
  • critical method – is not enough to critique- productivist approach, affirmative methods, not outside of own debunking and critiques, affect and sensations come with joy.

discursively philosophy marked by a method of resolving complex expressions into simpler or more basic ones marked by analytical reasoning https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/discursive

body as discursive site: location where discourse takes place … position from where discourse is situated

incorporeal: not corporeal having no material body or form https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/incorporeal

corporeal – having, consisting of, or relating to a physical material body https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/corporeal

20/09/20 10:00 PM

Week 2 Reading, Critical Theory Seminar (2)

The Conditions of the Question: What Is Philosophy? Gilles Deleuze

18/09/20 3:40 PM start time

Deleuze, Gilles The Conditions of the Question: What Is Philosophy? In Critical Inquiry; Spring 1991; 17, 3; pg. 471-478

PRE-READ (SCAN)

When does a person ask about philosophy? Question requires trust, vulnerability, between friends. Like us, concepts need friends, and for evolution of philosophy, their friend must be diverse. A philosopher must be a friend to his creations (concepts). “The question of philosophy is […] the single point where the concept and creation are linked together.” The concept is not a representation, or knowledge, but a reality. It is self-positing. Encyclopedia, pedagogy, commercialization, the third age is a disaster of thought regardless of social benefits. (83 words, paraphase).

QUESTIONS

Aiming for a quick(er) read using reading strategies. Check end notes, first+last para, topic sentences, getting gist of it. On second read I want to take notes on the things I am interested in and have questions about, with only the quotes that grip me, the details that jump for me (paraphase), and jots of my own thoughts/questions. (30 mins).

After scan, I am interested in concepts being described as friends and the relationship of community supports impacts this thinking. I am also interested the way philosophy posits itself in relation to other disciplines, especially as a very old discipline in comparison to very new (and insecure) ones like creative research. The ideas I am reading about today are exciting and tap into things I feel like I understand on an intuitive level, I am interested in how these ideas are made accessible, how they are taken out of academia and used in “low-brow” creations.

READING NOTES

  • (Published 1991) Deleuze – prof of philosophy, University of Paris, Capitalism and Schizophrenia / Anti-Oedipus 1983 + A Thousand Plateaus 1987, Cinema / The Movement-Image 1986 + The Time-Image 1989, The Logic of Sense 1990, Expressionism in Spinoza 1990.
  • transitions from friend to enemy, trust to mistrust
  • friend = intimacy, or = potentiality?
  • “infinite sharing and patience” (Blanchot, L’Amitie 1971)
  • “art brings spiritual entities into existance”
  • “….must begin by fabricating and creating [concepts], positing them and making them convincing to those who have recourse to them.” (nietzche).
  • “[philosophy] is neither contemplation, nor reflection, nor communication,” these are tools that are universal in all disciplines.
  • philosophy has a desire to dominate disciplines
  • Aristotle’s substance, Descartes’ cogito, Leibniz’s monad, Kant’s condition, Schelling’s potency, Bergon’s duree
  • philosophy is enduring—sociology, epistemology, linguistics, psychoanalysis, logical analysis, computer science, advertising, marketing—try to use “concept” but faith and trust philosophy endures in creating concepts
  • hegel – concept – figures of creation, moments of self-positing, not related to general or abstract, stretch philosophy into other disciplines because it took on common tools.
  • post kant- encyclopedia, subjectivity – pedagogy, analyse conditions

INTERESTING CITATIONS AND DEFINITIONS

Maurice Blanchot

POST-READ

Talking about a philosopher’s relationship with concepts as friends (either in intimacy or honouring potentialisty) didn’t really include a kind of jovial friendship type relationship but more of a responsibility. When talking about friends on a greater scale, involving others, I don’t know if I got friends of friends as much as rivals, a combating of ownership rather than appreciation of concept from different angles. I guess that there are concepts that go round the world and interact with everybody and are free to, and the philosopher does not feel jealously in this because the philosopher has trust and faith that the relationship that is had (friend/creator) is unshaken although not untested. I guess it’s such a difficult thing to look deeply at ones self (as a discipline) that it comes off as cagey. Compare this to a younger creative research discipline actively bringing in ideas from other disciplines (musemology in artefacts) to give shape to itself. Although I guess much of this writing about disciplines is a defense.

18/09/20 4:46 PM end time

Week 2 Reading, Critical Theory Seminar (1)

Gilles Deleuze’s alphabet book: I for Idea


L’Abécédaire de Gilles Deleuze (“Gilles Deleuze’s alphabet book”) is a French television program produced by Pierre-André Boutang in 1988–1989, consisting of an eight-hour series of interviews between Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCYJea9RaMQ&feature=youtu.be
18/09/20 2:00 PM start time

READING NOTES (H3)

  • Deleuze’s Idea
    • idea over everything – having idea is celebration – different kinds/forms of ideas:
  • concept / percept / affect
    • philosophical concept, pictoral(illustrative) percept, musical affect
    • concept: new way of thought / twists thought
    • percept: web of perceptions+sensations that exist independently of artist / twists nerve
    • affect: becomings that overflow and spill past those that experience them / twists being

INTERESTING CITATIONS AND DEFINITIONS

exegesis (+commentary): critical explanation or interpertation of

POST-READ

Can different areas work with different kinds of ideas? Grasping at affect … I think affect the bit before sensing, like embodied emapthy, there but not known, in motion not in position.
Deleuze is very difficult I am glad to have a cohort to struggle through with, and faculty to lead me around it.

18/09/20 3:12 PM end time