Modernism/Postmodernism/Neomodernism
Victor A. Grauer
Originally published in the Downtown Review, Vol. 3 Nos. 1&2, Fall/ Winter/ Spring 1981/82
The
Myth of Post‑Modernism
I
will say at the outset that I am involved in what I call “neomodernism,” which
may be defined as a return to the most fundamental tenets of "formalist"
modernism. This may seem an odd occupation in an era when we are apparently
escaping from the long hegemony of modernism. Why return to modernism on the
very threshold of a new style period:
post‑modernism? My answer is that there is something very suspicious
about this "postmodernism."
Everyone
who uses the term seems to have a different idea of what "post‑modernism"
is supposed to be. For some, it begins with John Cage, Jasper Johns,
Rauschenberg, "happenings" and concept art. For others it begins with
the minimalist reaction against that sort of thing. Many intellectuals
associate it with reflexive strategies growing out of structuralism. Anti‑intellectuals
welcome it as a relief from strategies of any kind, a return to less
problematic expressive modes which had been popular before modernism became
dominant. Even this group is divided among proponents of straight realism,
narrative, fantasy, decorative abstraction, punk and "new wave."
Until we can agree on when post‑modernism began, it is impossible to
determine whether it is really new. Until we can decide what it actually is,
regarding it as a style period would be premature.
If
post‑modernism can in fact only be defined negatively, as a rejection of
modernism, of this rejection we can be certain. Hardly a month passes when we
are not made aware of yet another brave sally against the modernist goliath in
the form of a book, magazine article or television series. Virtually everyone
writing on the arts seems to be breathlessly celebrating their liberation from
the "pretensions" of artists to whom they had once shamelessly
deferred.
Seen
in this light post‑modernism is certainly real. But new? No artistic
movement has been declared "over" as many times as modernism. Expressionism,
Neo‑Classicism, Dada, Surrealism, Social Realism, Folcorismo, the New Humanism, Pop Art, Earth Art, New Realism,
Concept Art, Punk Art: all were created as reactions against modernism. With
the advent of each, modernism was declared "over."
Now,
of course, no one would dream of declaring Pop Art "over;" we can
look forward to no mea culpas from Artforum confessing that Surrealism is
no longer "valid." No one needs to declare that any of them are
"over" for the simple reason that all of them really are over. The most interesting of these
movements live on only in so far as they have managed to become identified with
modernism through some quirk of history.
It
is true, of course, that the current situation seems new in the extremity of
the attack and the apparent total victory of the opposition. We are, however,
reliving an old and rather trite script, straight out of the Thirties. Exactly
the same things were being said then as now. The same arguments, the same mea culpas, the mistrust of innovation,
the need to look to the past. And the art, in a strange way, was similar too.
A Modernist A B C
In
my opinion we will not get very far regarding modernism as a style period like
the Renaissance, Baroque or Rococo. It is much more fundamental, something that
will be with us for a very long time whether we like it or not.
In
order to understand this, it is necessary to be more precise with our use of
the term. We need, in fact, to think in terms of three "modernisms,"
which we can refer to as "A," "B." and "C."
"A" can also be called "classic" or "formalist"
modernism, which must be defined narrowly in terms of a very specific body of
work: the Cubism of Picasso, Braque, Gris and Leger; Mondrian; much of Schonberg
and Berg; almost all of Webern; certain works of Stravinsky; James Joyce and
possibly Gertrude Stein. Some other, later figures, including Boulez, early
Stockhausen and Brakhage are also important.
To
me, "A" modernism is the true high road of Twentieth Century
expression, a vigorous and profound reaction against the prevailing romantic
idealism of the previous century. It represents something entirely new,
something that will still be new and strange to us many years from now. A
fundamental change of such depth is bound to be deeply threatening and, in
fact, true modernism has been strongly resisted at every stage of its development.
Both “B” and "C" modernism can only be understood
as forms of resistance to authentic modernism, despite the fact that they are
so often associated with it. "B" modernism, often referred to as
"hypermodernism," embraces some of the more obvious surface
characteristics of "A," and, in fact, aggressively carries them to
extremes. While it has usually consciously allied itself with "A," it
is my contention that the masters of “B" modernism (and there have been
some truly great ones) have unconsciously sought to undermine true modernism.
For "B" modernism is really the continuation of late romanticism in
modernist guise. The flamboyantly extremist utopian rhetoric of such groups as
the Futurists and Constructivists is typical of ÒB" modernism at its most aggressively ultra‑romantic.
A
more subdued late romanticism, leaning heavily toward subjective idealism,
pervades the work and thought of Kandinsky, expressionist movements like the Blau Reiter and much of abstract
expressionism.
"C"
modernism is usually more consciously antimodernist,'' so much so that the fact
that it is considered a form of modernism at all is quite interesting and
highly ironic. Its purpose is to subvert what it regards as ''modernism'' by
revealing its contradictions, debunking its "pretentious" and
emphasizing that to which it is opposed. "C" modernism has taken many
forms, some of the most extreme being dada, surrealism, pop art, concept art,
minimalism, systems art, photo realism, etc. Despite the many obvious
differences among these trends, all are fundamentally "reflexive." A
reflexive work represents ("signifies") itself and, in so doing,
promotes further "reflection" on the manner of its coming into
existence and the process through which that existence is perceived and
thought.
Reflexivity and Modernism
A
great deal of confusion has grown from the very mistaken idea that there is
something modern about reflexivity. This strategy is, on the contrary, both
very old and fundamentally reactionary, having cropped up again and again
throughout history as a means of ''demonstrating'' the futility of any new idea
or practice. It is intimately connected with the tradition of skepticism.
Of
course, great thinkers like Socrates have put skepticism to meaningful use in
building thought. What enraged him about the skepticism of the Sophists,
however, was their willingness to rest content with the contradictions they so
cleverly revealed. The smug self‑satisfaction of the Sophists has been
inherited by their Twentieth Century counterparts, the “C" modernists. The
fundamental message has remained the same down through the ages: "All
thought is pointless, all action futile, but aren't I clever?"
The
various reflexive strategies employed by "C" modernists can be
complex, often requiring detailed “deconstructive" analysis of a sort for
which I have neither inclination nor time. Fortunately, a relatively simple
example exists, from the career of the most sophisticated and interesting of
the "C" modernists: Marcel Duchamp.
In
1912, Duchamp was humiliated by the rejection of his Nude Descending a Staircase at the hands of the group of Cubists
with whom he had come to be associated. Within a few years he had left for the
United States and declared war on the modern movement.
The
most notorious of his many attempts to undermine modernism, as he understood
it, was the well known ''readymade'' entitled Fountain: an ordinary urinal placed upside down, signed and
exhibited as a work of art. This "work," a perfect example of the
fundamental equivalence of reflexivity and parody, was intended to debunk what
Duchamp perceived as the essence of modernism: an elitist search for the
"spiritual" as pure form, signifying nothing, with no function other
than disinterested contemplation.
When
seen completely out of context a urinal can
look very much like a ''modernist'' sculpture with the purest of forms. Yet
it does have a function, one which
can hardly be characterized as "spiritual." In the special context
which Duchamp very cleverly created for it, the urinal becomes a powerful
signifier, reflecting back upon itself as both ordinary object and
''modernist'' icon, inviting the thoughtful viewer to equate the uselessness of
abstract sculpture with the uselessness of urine.
Despite
its genuine cleverness, this, like all of Duchamp's barbs at modernism, falls
wide of the mark. What Duchamp has assumed to be the essence of modernism is in
fact characteristic only of “B" modernism, with its typically late
romantic need for pure spirituality as "significant form." This has
nothing to do with "A" modernism which, in fact, begins by disrupting
form. Nor is there anything in "A" modernism that seeks to place
itself above the most ordinary objects and situations: think of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, or a typical
Cubist tabletop, or the use of bits of newspaper and wall paper in early
synthetic Cubism. In its early stages, "A" modernism revels in the ordinary,
the particular, even the debased. Its purpose at this point is in fact very
similar to that of Duchamp.
Beyond the Reflexive
Here we are touching on an issue that is the source of the
greatest confusions. Early "A" modernism is indeed destructive in a
manner very similar to the destructiveness of "C" modernism and in
fact is characterized by the use of reflexive strategies. But there is a
development beyond reflexiveness which
carries the true modernists into completely new territory. By the time we reach
late Cubism, for example, the self‑referential element is no longer
dominant. With Mondrian it is completely absent. "A" modernism uses
reflexive strategies as a lever to open up ambiguities which are then,
eventually, resolved on another
level. More precisely, ambiguities in signification or representation
(referentiality) are resolved in the form of precise perceptual determinations
which no longer signify but can be powerfully expressive nevertheless.
Although
I am reluctant to use a term which has become almost empty through over‑
and mis‑ use, there is something very "dialectical" (in the
Hegelian sense) about the evolution of "A" modernism. Reflexivity is
a circular process in which something calls signification into question by
signifying itself.‑ But it simultaneously asserts signification since it operates by signifying (itself). To understand the real nature of this
"dialectic" (the basis for both "C" modernism and current
"deconstructionist" criticism) let us consider its central issue, what
we may call the "paradox paradox" of thought.
Paradoxes
are "openings" of thought which, according to the skeptics, mark the
limit of what can be thought. Ultimately, so say the skeptics, there is a
fundamental paradox central to thought which in some strange sense makes
thought impossible. But thought is possible, in fact it is thought which has
led us to the paradox. Thus the paradox at the center of thought is itself a
paradox.
Is
this a logical problem or a mystification? I strongly suspect that this
"paradox," far from being the limit of thought, is actually only a
disguised form of the fundamental ambiguity which makes thought possible in the
first place and which, moreover, created the illusion that thought is without
any limit whatsoever. Thus thought is ''limited'' by that which makes it seem
unlimited. Acceptance of the "paradox paradox" as a limit of thought
is, in effect, complicity in the fiction that thought is limitless, all
powerful. (Thus Derridaean deconstructionism "reduces" thought to an
empty play of signification only to have it return "paradoxically.")
"C"
modernism revels in this mystification. "A" modernism puts a halt to
it by completing the dialectical process. Going beyond the reflexive reductio ad absurdum, the true
modernists struggled to resolve signification back into its purely material
elements in such a way that these elements would no longer signify anything,
even themselves, but serve to determine and thus liberate sensory experience,
the repressed "other" of signification.
Thus
"A" modernism, by opening thought (iconographic signification) from outside itself (i.e., from the realm of
the senses), reveals the bad faith of a "paradox" which exists only
to disguise the fact that anything at all can
exist outside of thought. It is the difference between a dream in which one
tells oneself that one is "only dreaming'' yet continues nevertheless to
dream ("C" modernism and deconstructionism) and a situation where one
is shaken awake by someone in the real world outside the dream.
From Irony to an "Order of
Sensuousness"
There
is simply no way to briefly and succinctly illustrate the extraordinarily
subtle and complex process alluded to above without a very real risk of
misunderstanding. One must work through the whole process to understand it
fully. The following, drawn from my own attempts at systematic treatment of the
issue (in a monograph now being revised), must be regarded, therefore, strictly
as a vague and incomplete sketch:
We
may gain some notion of the workings of "A" modernism by considering
the relation of Cubist practice to the traditional treatment of pictorial
space. Basic is the following equation: organization of space = syntax. The
perspective system and related conventions regarding the treatment of "realist"
space are equivalent to pictorial syntax.
In
attacking conventional space the Cubists thus were also attacking the process
of pictorial (iconographic) signification. This is why certain Cubist spatial
devices (such as reverse perspective) have the effect of paradoxes. The
reflexive process generated by such paradoxes is the source of Cubist irony.
In
some sense, Picasso and Braque could thus be regarded in the same light as
Duchamp. But there is a profound difference between a purely conceptual attack
on signification and one involving the treatment of space.
As
is well known, the Cubist attack on perspective depends on the liberation of
what artists call "negative space." The emergence of this space does
more than simply "flatten" the picture a la conventional modernist theory. Negative space disrupts
representation itself by attacking that "positive" space which serves
as its syntax. Thus negative space (or, more precisely, that means of
organization which promotes it) is equivalent to what may be called
"negative syntax," the analytic dismemberment of signification.
While negative space as negative syntax has a good deal in
common with that purely intellectual "negativity" generated by
reflexive thought ("deconstruction"), the former has something which
the latter lacks: the ability to precisely determine a perceptual field. Thus
reverse perspective (for example) in the hands of Picasso or Braque is not
simply a device for the negation of the perspective illusion; it is also a
division of a given surface area into clearly differentiated, thus clearly
perceptible, proportions. These proportions, precisely determined by means of perceptual intuition (not geometry), become the basis for
synthetic Cubism and the mature work of Mondrian. Significantly, that which serves
to disrupt perspective (and, indeed, all forms of conceptually determined
seeing) serves to liberate and establish what is probably best called, in the
words of Herbert Marcuse, the "order of sensuousness" (probably the
best translation of the much abused term, "aesthetic").
Unfortunately, modernist "theory" has become so
encrusted with dogmatic and half‑digested formulations of a kind which,
at best, can serve only as a parody of the process I am trying to describe,
that its real significance can be overlooked or taken for granted. The “order
of sensuousness" must be clearly distinguished from the mere assertion of the sensory (and material)
which is so characteristic of "B" modernism and has received so much
attention in the critical literature. I am really speaking of what might be
termed a sensory analogue of logic. Here again, prevalence of the phrase
"perceptual logic" in various contexts associated more or less
loosely with gestalt psychology can easily lead to a reversal of my meaning.
Negative syntax is the defeat of
gestalt perception, the liberation of exactly those elements repressed by the
gestalt. At the same time, it is also opposed to the ambiguity that arises when
gestalts are simply disrupted in the absence of a negative structure (as in Abstract Expressionism, for example).
If
my analysis is correct, the advent of true modernism must be compared, not to
the inception of a style, trend or period, but to the founding of a new and
profoundly significant discipline on
the order of geometry, logic or mathematics. We may then see, in the rigorous
reductionism of Mondrian (and Webern!), the first steps in the search for a
completely new kind of axiom, an "antimatter" of signification.
The Current Situation
We ought by now to have a
clearer view of what everyone is calling "postmodernism." Despite the
confusing array of styles to which I alluded earlier, it is not difficult to
see that we are now experiencing a full scale revival of "C" modernism.
Almost without exception the fashionable art of the day is an art in quotation
marks. Even that art which seems to be seeking authenticity is really only
seeking "authenticity." Any conceivable image or thing is acceptably
postmodern as long as it carries the sign of reflexivity, as long as it is
clear that the artist doesn't really mean it, that the thing is intended as a
sign for itself as something else.
It
now becomes apparent that the source of the current reaction against
“modernism'' lies in the fundamentally destructive, skeptical and reactionary
nature of reflexivity itself. It is also clear that this sort of "post‑modernism"
can have no future apart from that modernism which it seeks to debunk. Like the
strategies of post‑structuralist "deconstructionism," to which
it is closely allied, "C" modernism lacks (or refuses) that material,
sensory basis on which it could resolve its vicious circle. Ultimately it must
feed on and destroy itself. The only
way beyond the vicious circle is the
path already blazed by the modernist masters.
Of
course, there is another alternative. As I have already pointed out, the
present period is much like the Thirties, which was also preceded by an
explosion of “C” modernism. Most Thirties artists eventually recoiled from
anything remotely reflexive or modernist
to promote a "sincerity" which was in fact the height of bad faith, a
cultivated naivete. This sort of thing is now being revived and, I fear, may be
inspiring those with the "smarts" to take a fling at sincerity
(without quotation marks).
This
is a depressing prospect, because in our time an educated person, certainly one
with a knowledge of history, cannot simply decide to be sincere. Sincerity is
either the result of a true naivete or the fruit of long years of research and
self‑examination.
Neomodernism and The Cult of the New
Long
years of research and self‑examination. This ultimately is the meaning of
neomodernism, engaged as it is in the most difficult of tasks: the search for
the fundamental principles of “A” modernism. Such a search, combining creative
work with the most rigorous approach to theory, is not likely to appeal to
budding post‑modernists. It would, indeed, fly in the face of the
prevalent myth that an enormous body of theory devoted to modernism already
exists, to the point that everyone is now thoroughly “tired of' it. There are
certainly signs of fatigue, but these can hardly be due to overinvolvement with
modernist theory, if by that we mean a body of systematic thought devoted to
central theoretical issues of modern art. Such works are very few and far
between.
A
huge historical and critical literature undoubtedly exists. And this literature
reveals an enormous obsession with issues of a theoretical nature. But if one
reads closely, one finds that each historian and critic usually presents us
with his own theoretical patchwork amplified by references to certain
philosophers and psychologists. The few works of a specifically art theoretical
nature which do exist are rarely cited in subsequent literature as the basis
for a key concept. Significantly, the many current attacks on modernist theory
are usually directed at Clement Greenberg, an influential theory‑minded
critic but hardly the author of a coherent. sustained theoretical work.
There
is undoubtedly a great deal of what passes for theory in the literature on
modern art. Most of this is and always has been tiresome. Of genuine theory
there is still a serious lack.
Modernism
is of course difficult. But the difficulty of the task before us is in fact its
saving grace. Neomodernism takes too much time and effort to be compatible with
the cult of the new, so often mistaken for modernism, which gives rise to an
endless series of mutually destructive trends. The so‑called
"pluralism" of the present time is simply an explosion of this cult
of the new into an uncontrollable frenzy of eccentricities. Behind this
"trend of no trends" is in fact very clearly the trend I have already
described: the revival of the reflexive strategies of ÒCÓ modernism. The next
trend will most likely be the bogus search for
sincerity-without-quotation-marks. There will be no lack of others, equally
superficial and redundant.
The
serious artist has always been the victim of such trends, which leave him or
her maximally vulnerable to the gallery owner, curator, critic and. most
recently, arts administrator. Despite all its difficulties, neomodernism can
give the artist powerful theoretical tools with which to resist.
Victor Grauer