What is a critic supposed to do? If I know anything about
critics, you could put a dozen of them around a café table and at the end of
the evening have at least two dozen opinions, and as many excuses for not
picking up the tab for all those bottles of Pinot Gris that disappeared in the
interim. So let’s skip the big
gathering, and go straight to Barry Schwabsky, who not too terribly long ago
wrote a piece called “A Critic’s Job of Work” for The Nation, where he raises a tremendously important question about
the role of the critic, and the very idea of critical distance.
Schwabsky begins by saying how much he’s always admired
Marcel Duchamp’s dictum about the viewer completing the work of art—“the
creative act is not performed by the artist alone,” declared Duchamp, “the
spectator brings the work in contact with the external world by deciphering and
interpreting its inner qualification and thus adds his contribution to the
creative act.” It merits attention, this
notion of the audience participating in, rather than passively receiving, the
creative act. For one thing, it sets art
apart from something like science. There
are, Schwabsky points out, no science critics.
There’s peer review, of course—that’s central to the whole scientific
enterprise. But scientists review each
other’s work as fellow practitioners.
Although some art critics are also art makers, the relation of the two
activities is accidental, rather than of the essence. The art critic, in his or
her role as critic, doesn’t identify as a fellow art maker, but keeps a certain
distance, and identifies as a spectator.
Indeed, the critic is, according to Schwabsky, “the self-appointed
representative of the audience.” And despite the audience’s creative role, this
means being something other than being an artist.
Schwabsky points to how, back in the 1960s, Allan Kaprow
(godfather of the “happening” as artform) called for an art that had only
participants, and no passive observers—he wanted what he called “the
elimination of the audience,” if what was meant by the audience were people
whose involvement with the artwork was to be nothing more than “empathic
response.” Everyone involved in a Kaprow
happening was to be a co-creator, and the distance between artist and audience
was to be collapsed entirely. This is
not where Schwabsky wants to be. If
Kaprow wants to recruit the spectator as a fellow artist, Schwabsky envisions
the critical spectator as someone who isn’t caught in the binary of creative
artist/passive spectator. Instead, the
critic maintains a degree of distance, but from this perspective adds something
new to the work, in part by virtue of maintaining that sense of distance. “I still prefer Duchamp’s model of the
spectator who, through his or her distance from the artist’s creative act,
nonetheless makes an independent contribution to it,” says Schwabsky, “and my
experience tells me that a great deal of art is still being made with this kind
of viewer in mind.” One could make an
analogy to a good relationship between a baseball catcher and a pitcher—it’s
not that they’re both pitchers, but it’s not that the catcher is entirely
passive, either. He watches what’s going
on and makes a real, if largely invisible and certainly unglamourous,
contribution to the team, largely through analysis of what he sees. He needs a bit of distance to do this—he’s
not preparing a pitch, he’s watching the batter and the pitcher interact, and
communicating what he sees.
I found Schwabsky’s article fascinating because it enters
into a very long conversation about the nature and meaning of spectatorship,
and does a great deal to redeem the conceptual respectability of the
spectator. Western aesthetics, after all,
begins with contempt for the spectator—or perhaps not so much contempt as fear,
specifically fear of the spectator’s passivity.
Plato argues in the “Ion” that the spectator is as easily moved by the
poet as iron filings are moved by a magnet, and in The Republic he condemns the audience of poetry as ignorant,
emotional, and dominated by the worst part of the soul. The history of aesthetic thought largely
continues in this suspicious mode, although sometimes we find someone who is
optimistic about the audience’s presumed passivity. Sir Philip Sidney, for example, thinks of the
audience as every bit as passive as Plato does—he just sees the effects of art
as salutary rather than deleterious. But
by and large the audience is seen as dangerously passive, and many thinkers
seek ways to eliminate it (Kaprow is no innovator here, but a latecomer). Rousseau, in his “Letter to D’Alembert,”
condemned theater, and called for participatory entertainments that looked, for
all the world, like a cross between a North Korean stadium rally and the Iowa
State Fair. Nietzsche, in The Birth of Tragedy, spoke of the
pallid, tepid weakness of the Apollonian observer, who kept distant from that
which he observed, and yearned to bring us closer to the condition of the
Dionysian reveler who lost himself in the revels, becoming not an observer but
part of the art—a gesture repeated at a higher pitch by Antonin Artaud.
It’s been difficult to find defenders of the kind of
spectatorial distance Schwabsky upholds, although there is, of course,
Duchamp—and one thinker of our time, Jacques Ranciere, gives, in The Emancipated Spectator, a powerful case for the spectator as
making, from the position of distance, an interpretation of the work of that is
also a kind of participation, analogous to the creative contribution made by a
translator.
Schwabsky’s article occasioned a fair bit of controversy,
samples of which appear (along with my own short note of appreciation andhistorical context) in a later issue of TheNation. They’re well worth checking
out, and not just for the kind words Schwabsky has for me—which I’m planning on
plucking out of their present context and using on the jacket of my next book
of essays, Inventions of a Barbarous Age:
Poetry from Conceptualism to Rhyme (out this fall! makes a great gift!).
*
In addition to a few humble words in The Nation, I’ve written a few humble words in the May/June issueof The Boston Review about Johannes Göransson’s
collection of poems The Sugar Book. If, in the manner outlined by Schwabsky, I’ve
made any contribution to the thing, I hope it’s been by linking it to a
tradition that runs back through film noir to the novels of An Radcliffe. Göransson’s book is gothic, immoderate, and very
good. The review begins like this:
The Swedish word lagom, meaning something like “just right” or “perfect moderation,” might well describe or even encapsulate Swedish culture. But it is not a word that applies to the poems of Johannes Göransson’s The Sugar Book, which seems to have been cooked up to create antibodies to inoculate us against a creeping case of lagom. Göransson— Swede by birth, a Minnesotan by background, and a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop—writes as if he were on a mission to destroy our preconceptions about all three places.