TONGOLELE on Sun, 26 Jan 2003 02:16:07 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Fwd: Aesthetic Biology, Biological Art (Rifkin, bioart, science) |
Dear Eugene I wish I could respond to all your points in detail, but time limits and workloads prevent it. However, I read your defense of biotech art not just as response to Rivkin's text but as one skirmish in a larger, longer battle that is being played out in various cultural sectors, including the artworld and the terrain of "avant-garde" aesthetic and theoretical practice and I recognize in your defense some very familiar tropes. The "defense of science" position coming from sectors of the new media community I would argue, needs to be interrogated. The frequent accusations that those who critique are essentialists about nature, about identity, neo-Luddites and phobic about science really need to be put aside for a moment if any kind of serious discussion is going to happen. In short, I'd say you and others are stereotyping and fetishizing those who criticize your position and this creates a smokescreen that deters self-reflection on the aesthetics and politics of biotech art. Not all criticism of what biotech art is comes from people who are intellectually naïve or uninformed about science and art. Like any other self proclaimed avant garde of western art history, biotech artists have claimed that they are redefining art practice and therefore the old rules don't apply to them. But that heroic stance and imperviousness to criticism sounds a bit hollow and self-serving after a while, especially when the demand for inclusion in mainstream art institutions, art departments in universities, art curricula, artworld money and art press is so strong. If biotech artists want to be institutionalized as they clearly do, they are inevitably going to be subjected to processes of evaluation by the agents of those institutions. I don't think it makes sense for you to feel that your field is being singled out. Every art fad goes through boom and bust cycles and biotech art is susceptible to such vicissitudes. That said, biotech art is directly implicated in the entrenchment of new scientific discourses as the "total explanation of everything" in the present moment. I agree with Virilio, who argues in Crepuscular Dawn, that science is not just research or discovery -- it is our politics and it is imperial in its exercise of power. It is a technology of social and political control, managed and financed by the military and designed for global domination -- and art that engages with it is impossible to divorce from that nexus. Biotech art then, is not ever disinterested, not is it ever just about art or beauty or about a scientific practice that is pure or objective. Because of this, I find the attempts by many biotech art endorsers to celebrate their endeavor as if it were just about a scientific or aesthetic pursuit to be disingenuous. Its very rhetoric of transcendence of the human is itself an violent act of erasure, a master discourse that entails the creation of "slaves" as others that must be dominated. Even those who claim to be deconstructing biotech in their art practice depend on a rhetoric of transcendence that effectively marginalizes any other form of artistic or political engagement. A few years ago, when hype about the Human Genome Project was plastered across every newspapers on a regular basis , and art institutions began searching for new sources of funding through alliances with science, biotech art was all the rage. I realize that many people who took it up were inspired by Baudrillard's claim that cloning was paradigmatic of the age of simulation and thus to make art about this phenomenon was to be in tune with the zeitgeist. It is also evident that the last wave of art about science has been dominated by a drive to draw parallels between digitalization and molecularization, to find in the mathematical structures of the machinic and the organic a the "beauty" of some kind of transcendent truth. But that utopian vision of this venture ennobles and masks the economic and underpinnings of the artworld's investment in a social issue that appeared at least at one time to be very fundable and politically neutral ("post-identitarian") because it came wrapped in the language of science, and "accessible" to new audiences that art institutions are always looking to develop. Furthermore, none of the promoters of the recent love affair between art and science seem very open to an interrogation of how university art programs are finding ways to link up with science as a fundraising strategy. Many universities have lost large portions of their endowments in the downturn of the stock market and as a result are compelled to seek more income from scientific research grants. In short, there is nothing disinterested or pure about what is happening with art and science, and in the end, money and power are determinant. So biotech art may be presented as innovative because it is fundable, not because the art is that radical or beautiful or interesting. The Genome project is not as newsworthy anymore, and in a post 9/11 world, the fad in new media has shifted to questions of globalization, which to my mind are often posed in very problematic terms. In any case, now that the spotlight has dimmed, it is par for the course that some arbiters would ask, well is the biotech art out there any good? Is it interesting? Is it art? Does it communicate anything that straightforward scientific information does not? Is the art being used to endorse an ideology? It seems to me that these are logical questions to ask when faced with a lot of art that present science as a spectacle that we are to be in awe. It also seems like logical questions to ask the artists themselves, many of whom are very defensive about their motives, about their "love" of science (as if this would make them immune to political and economic investment in championing it), and about questions of quality, which, as old fashioned as they may seem, are asked about any kind of cultural expression, and not always for horrifically conservative reasons. Audiences and critics usually do get their say in these matters, whether artists and their promoters want to hear it or not. The last wave of biotech art does not represent the first time in the history of art that visual artists have engaged with hard science, nor is the first time that artists have engaged with social issues and political issues. Yet no discourse on biotech art and no biotech artwork I've seen acknowledges that this history exists nor is any dialogue with that history attempted in a rigorous manner. The assumption is invariably that biotech art is something new, a claim that quickly turns into a defense against any critical evaluation. Furthermore, in every discussion I have had with the cultural bureaucrats and artists who are touting the current intertwining of art and science as new and radical, no one has wanted to review the history of how and why hard science has been allowed to influence art production and criticism in the past, how myths about the neutrality of science and the superiority of western science have remained intact and have been enforced by the imposition of scientistic vocabulary in art criticism, as was the case in the 1950s, for example. Yet, to my mind, there is a crucial relationship between the retrograde universalism evoked by the "return to beauty" as a organizing principle of visual art in the late 1990s, as represented by powerful critics such as Dave Hickey, and the celebration of the discovery of "master codes" that function as universal truths in the discourse of biotech art. Even the heroic radicalism in much of CAE's writing and their premise that the molecular is everything and no other battles are meaningful sounds alarmingly dismissive and positions science as the only discourse of truth. For all their claims to want to share knowledge about contestational biology I find it quite telling that there is no sustained effort in the work to build alliances with grassroots indigenous groups who elaborate their own tactics against being run over by corporate science, or with activists in poor communities who are developing methods for tackling environmental racism, developing better quality food supplies, or fighting against being turned in lab rats for pharmaceutical research. In other words, there are very important embodied politics of contestation of corporate science that, while buttressed by various modes of identity politics and sometimes couched in language that deifies nature, deserve acknowledgement, respect, and attention, as they are more compelling to the large sectors of the disenfranchised than the posthuman lingo of biotech artists. My own skepticism about biotech has to do with political and ethical questions more than aesthetic ones. I am profoundly disturbed by the systematic suppression of the roots of genetics in eugenics and about the ways that fascination with biotech forecloses analysis of its connection with deeply racist ideas that glorify the engineering of a supra-human order that is leading to the justification of the absolute dehumanization of the majority of the world population. I cannot just sit back as you do and write one sentence to the effect that well yeah biotech and science is doing some pretty creepy things but hey it's exciting and it's the future. It isn't enough for me that for example Fakeshop would just invoke the poor masses of people in the third world who sell their organs and then go on to create ghoulish sci fi spectacles about the "post-human" that make the process appear so dramatic and exciting -- too many details about the global forces of racialized and class oppression get downplayed in that mix. I would also point out that I do think critics who have noted that the visual quality of much biotech art is either predicated on fetishizing scientific process as spectacle (ie, look at the glow in the dark rat or watch your designer baby grown before your eyes); or on the suppression of the optic through the construction of work with texts, graphs and data (biotech conceptualism); or on the staged parody of scientific method as institutional critique. None of the methods are new, radical in themselves or absolute recipes for success. The " biotech as entertainment" approach collapses the distance between art and propaganda and often results in work that looks very much like "feel-good" documentaries about science on public television, albeit with a weird, hipster twist. Crucial questions about the ethics and politics of biotechnology are completely occluded by the fetishizing of new technologies' visualization of heretofore invisible processes. The act of illustrating and foregrounding scientific method becomes a substitute for critical reflection on the politics of science. This kind of approach functions as an implicit endorsement of biotech, regardless of what artists may claim their own personal positions to be. The more conceptual approach, while politically well intentioned as a mapping of the commodification of the organic via science, is very difficult to pull off as compelling visual art. In terms of expediency, I am left wondering in the face of this work why the information is being presented in an art context, since it seems as though I would grasp it better as a book. Unlike early conceptual art, which was quite minimal its use of text and quite humble in its materials, biotech conceptualism is often overloaded and overcoded. It's so busy, so hard to decipher, so hard to read through and so hard to process that the mapping tends to muddle rather than elucidate. There is a long history of system analysis in sculpture and installation, which began in the 60s with the mapping of natural ecosystems and organic cycles and moved through the plotting of social systems onto institutional critique of social and cultural institutions, but none of that rich history appears to be drawn on by biotech artists. Finally, the parody of scientific method are usually limited in their physical situation to art contexts, which deflates the political force of the parody. Sure, many of those artists attend meetings with "real" scientists, but in that contexts they become advisors on how to popularize science, which is hardly what I would call a critical intervention in scientific institutions. Unlike parodies of corporate entities, which "rub shoulders" with real corporations and generate productive tension in doing so, or parodies of ethnographic discourses that are located in natural history museums and dislodge the status of anthropology as science, or parodies of museological language that were strategically located in art museums, and thus forced a certain critical reflection on the politics of each place, the many biotech parodies located in the artworld encourage somewhat problematically self-serving views of artists as "better scientists" or of scientific process as a better way of making art than any other. I don't think that most critics of biotech hoopla are essentializing nature. I think they are more worried about a political culture in which man-made forces are destroying nature, natural resources, and human beings and about people who see that is just fine and dandy. Yes I know I'm already eating transgenic foods and that my life may be saved by biotechnology -- but it may also be terminated by it. Having respect for organic life is not necessarily wacko or naïve. Many of us see the price of living in a world of endless simulation and posthuman engineering as too dear -- too many are shut out, too much is imperiled, and the loss of concern for ethics is more terrifying than liberating for most people in the world . The ability to maintain world peace as a goal is lost when technological innovation is predicated on making war -- that was what Walter Benjamin once said would happen if technology served capitalism. Losing respect for human life is certainly the underbelly of any militaristic adventure, and lies at the root of the racist and classist ideas that have justified the violent use of science for centuries. I don't think there is any reason to believe that suddenly, that kind of science will disappear because some artists find beauty in biotech. Coco Fusco # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]