Krauss 2 Moments From The Post-Medium Condition
Krauss 2 Moments From The Post-Medium Condition
Krauss 2 Moments From The Post-Medium Condition
Post-Medium Condition
ROSALIND KRAUSS
Bruce Naumans video Lip Synch (1969) shows the artists head upside down
and close up, his inverted mouth at the bottom of the screen repeating the words
lip synch, as the sound gradually moves out of synch with the image, this drift
transforming the engorged neck and pulsating mouth into a part object, erotically
charged. The video clearly pays homage to the technical breakthrough in film his-
tory when, in 1929, synch sound did away with silent film and brought a new
dimension to cinema. Video, a later generation of motion-picture technology, had
synchronous sound available to it right from the start. It is to this dimension that
Nauman points in Lip Synch.
Christian Marclays magisterial work Video Quartet (2002) spreads four separate
screens of DVD projection across forty feet of wall, each screen showing the unreel-
ing of a compilation of film clips from well-known works of sound cinema. The four
different tracks compete for attention for the most part, but occasionally they display
the same image, creating synchronicity along the horizontal expanse of the work.
The effect, not unlike Hollis Framptons Zorns Lemma (1970), is a visual grid: the ver-
tical axis becomes the unreeling narrative of the constitutive shotsincluding Janet
Leighs scream in the shower from Psycho (1960), or the meditative humming of
Ingrid Bergmans As Time Goes By from Casablanca (1942)the horizontal one,
the repetition of the visual fields, or the competition among them for dominance.
Repetition is, for the most part, a matter of analogy, as when the full-screen image of
a spinning roulette wheel rhymes visually with a record on a turntable, as well as with
the circles of drumheads seen from above. These turning disks, needless to say, create
the kind of self-referencehere to the reels of film itselffamiliar to us from mod-
ernist art.
But Marclays prey goes deeper into the nature of his own medium by medi-
tating on synch sound itself as the technical support of cinema. I am using the term
technical support here as a way of warding off the unwanted positivism of the term
medium which, in most readers minds, refers to the specific material support for a
traditional aesthetic genre, reducing the idea of medium to what Michael Fried
complains of as the basis of the literalism of the art he rejects. Part of my argument
with Clement Greenbergs reductionist, essentialist reading of the development of
modernist art, Fried writes, was precisely this case history in Minimalism of what
happened if one thought in those terms. It is an objection that Stanley Cavell sec-
onds by dismissing medium specificity as producing the fate of modernist art
generallythat its awareness and responsibility for the physical basis of its art compel
it at once to assert and deny the control of its art by that basis. Both critics reject the
version of modernist medium specificity articulated by Greenberg.
Technical support has the virtue of acknowledging the recent obsolescence
of most traditional aesthetic mediums (such as oil on canvas, fresco, and many
sculptural materials, including cast bronze or welded metal), while it also wel-
comes the layered mechanisms of new technologies that make a simple, unitary
identification of the works physical support impossible (is the support of film
the celluloid strip, the screen, the splices of the edited footage, the projectors
beam of light, the circular reels?). Dziga Vertovs The Man with a Movie Camera
(1929), perhaps the most medium-specific film in the history of cinema, drama-
tizes the act of modernist self-reference that reveals the nature of the medium, as
his own camera tracks the movies cameraman through the city, while, from vari-
ous conveyances such as cars or horse-drawn carriages, the latter films the urban
landscape, an activity of surveillance that provokes the viewer to reflect on the
unseen cameraman who is even then filming the filmer. By dramatizing this nor-
mally invisible actor, Vertov forces into experience that part of the cinematic
Two Moments from the Post-Medium Condition 57
1. See her fundament al essay, The Man wit h t he Mov ie Camera: From Magician to
Epistemologist, Artforum 10, no. 7 (February 1972), pp. 6272.
2. I am referring to artists such as James Coleman, whose technical support is the slide tape, more
currently embodied in the technology that underwrites Microsoft PowerPoint; and William Kentridge,
who exploits (and brilliantly develops) the support of animation.
58 OCTOBER
of looking at the projection on this field winding backwards into the history of the
movies to the onset of sound itself. The sensation is one of actually seeing the silence
as well as the gridlike layering of the cinematic mediums additive condition of the
soundtracks audio edge running along the celluloid strip of the images. A composer,
Marclay has made quasi-sculptural works out of sound materials, such as skeins of
audiotape, an unpleated accordion, or telephone headsets cast in series. None of this
has the originality or focus of Video Quartet, as it unpacks the specificity of synch
sound, making it visible to us and converting films narrative continuum into a funda-
mentally visual simultaneity.
Leviathan
Is it time to puncture the secret about Conceptual art kept so long by its sup-
porters and advocates, who are bent on declaring it the form the avant-garde has
assumed in our time? This secret is the deepest identity of Conceptualism, which
is, at its core, the contemporary avatar of kitsch. Benjamin Buchloh long ago
exposed the formal emptiness of the movement by characterizing its notions of
structure as tautological.3 The calling-card sentiment of this kind of tautology (I
am thinking of Joseph Kosuths work Five Words in Blue Neon [1965]) is enough to
attach it to the most spurious forms of cultural exchange for which kitsch is the
baldest term.
From Avant-Garde and Kitsch we have the definition of the phenomenon
pronounced by Clement Greenberg: Kitsch is vicarious experience and faked sen-
sations. Kitsch changes according to style, but remains always the same. Kitsch is
the epitome of all that is spurious in the life of our times. Against the spurious
condition of kitsch, Greenberg pits an authentic avant-garde that calls for the artist
to imitate the medium of his own craft, making of that re-authenticated medium
the artists subject matter.
A contemporary avant-garde has organized itself to reject Conceptual art,
which it views as the most recent form of kitsch. As it had been in the past, the cul-
tural ambition of such avant-garde artists is vested in making their own medium
into the subject matter of their art.
As I have argued in a series of recent essays on this phenomenon, these artists
do not work with the traditional mediums of painting and sculpture, which they
view as exhausted, but are instead forced to do something as counterintuitive as
inventing a new medium.4 Accordingly, they reach for modern, technological
mechanisms as the supports for their own work. Examples would be the art of Ed
Ruscha, for whom the automobile has served as mediumhis parking lots, gaso-
line stations, and highways, articulated as the secondary supports for the car itself.
James Coleman has fashioned a medium from the commercial vehicle of the slide
tape, a more ubiquitous version of which would be the computer program
PowerPoint. The last three decades have provided us with the development of con-
ceptual photographer Sophie Calle, whose technical support is the investigative
journalists documentary research.
The modernist reflexivity of Calles art is a matter of what Jacques Derrida calls
invagination, by which he means the folding of one story within another through
the invention of a character who exactly repeats the opening of the first story,
thereby setting it off on its narrative course once more.5 Exquisite Pain is Calles
account of her acceptance of a three-month fellowship in Japan, despite her lovers
threat to abandon her should she leave him for so long. Before she leaves, they
make a pact for a reunion in a New Delhi hotel one year hence. But in place of her
lover, she receives a telegram message that an illness will prevent his arrival. The
missed encounter, which Calle names Unhappiness, is then symbolized by a red
telephone atop the sheets on the hotel room bed, while the successive photographs
of it bear numbered stamps that perform the daily countdown to the advent of
Unhappiness. The telephones performance of invagination is written onto its
rotary dial, the numerals of which synthesize the act of counting and thus form an
emblem of the anguished waiting for her lovers call.
In characterizing Calles technical support, we need to watch its journalistic
reports, which take the form of interviews with eyewitnesses in order to discover
the identity of a missing subject-as in The Address Book (1983), when Calle tele-
phones the numbers listed in the little agenda shes found in order to build,
through others descriptions of its owner, a fantasy picture of this missing persona.
As many have observed, Calle herself became a character in the novel by Paul
Auster called Leviathan (1992). But what is not often noted is that Leviathan adopts
Calles own medium, using her interview technique to construct a true picture of
its missing protagonist, Benjamin Sachs. After his narrator and sleuth report that,
at the time of his death in a roadside explosion, Sachs had been writing Leviathan,
his latest novel, invagination makes its appearance when the narrator names his
own investigative dossier, the one we are even then reading, Leviathan.
The documentary report is once again employed in The Shadow (1981), in
which Calle is followed (and photographed) by the detective shes asked her
mother to hire. From the outset, Calle refers to the detective as him, the man
whose intense visual focus on her becomes eroticized as an aphrodisiac, propelling
her to want to seduce him. She leads him into the Louvre to show him her
favorite painting. She calls up former lovers to meet her in order to parade them in
front of him. She spies him looking at her: My eyes meet, on the other side of
the Boulevard Saint-Germain, those of a man about twenty-two years old, five feet
six inches tall, short straight light brown hair, who jumps suddenly and attempts a
hasty and awkward retreat behind a car. Its hima him who then enters the
work as the image captured by a friend of Calles, commandeered to photograph
the sleuth as he follows her to make his report. Two reports thus converge and, in
accord with invaginatory structure, repeat one another. Calles report is the diary
she keeps of her days activity and the way the presence of the detective affects her
emotionally. An example: Nathalie walks with me to a hairdresser on rue
Delambre. It is for him I am getting my hair done. To please him. The detectives
report, on the other hand, as he carries out his professional duty, exactly repeats
Calles itinerary from the distanced and neutral perspective of the stranger.
Many of Calles works are a search for affect, for emotion, as represented by the
Unhappiness that is Exquisite Pain or by the excited exhibitionism of The Shadow.
Having chosen the journalists report as her medium, her work expresses itself as
paradox: her medium not only unable to support, but contrived as well to deaden,
the feelings she is looking for. That these feelings are able to surface, as in The
Shadow, despite the deadpan nature of her chosen support, endows her medium with
the special resonance that propels it into visibility for the audience of her art.