Art in Theory. Группа авторов

Art in Theory - Группа авторов


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the present book is not is a history of world art. Insofar as the anthologized texts do present a narrative, it is a narrative told from a European – and subsequently a ‘Western’ – point of view. It thus includes the ignorance as well as the admiration, the silences and blind spots as well as the praise and emulation, that such a point of view implies. What the book also sets out to demonstrate is that this perspective from the West is not monolithic. Most notably, ideas have changed significantly over time. To state the point again: Art in Theory: The West in the World is an anthology of changing ideas, both ideas about the art of other societies and ideas stimulated by those cultures more generally, ideas that have been influential on the practice of Western art from the Renaissance to the present day.

      At the same time, the situation we represent is not one of an egalitarian dialogue. Firstly, a representative knowledge of Indian art, Chinese art, African art, pre‐Columbian American art, Oceanic art and the many and various ideas subtending them, is simply beyond the competence of the present editors; indeed, we suspect, it would, at the present time at least, be beyond anyone’s competence. More to the point, there is an inequality in the historical record itself. For most of our chosen time‐span – the period of modernity in its broadest sense – Europe, and latterly the ‘West’, has been hegemonic in terms of global power. This means there is an imbalance in the written sources available to us, as well as in our knowledge of them. Although the growing interest in the art of the whole world is bringing to light ideas and arguments which have for centuries been obscured by the European reflex that its own culture was the leading light of world civilization, the fact remains that, because of the very expansiveness of European states in the modern period, European writers have been more preoccupied with learning about and commenting on the cultures they encountered than the other way round.

      To say this is to find ourselves immediately on contested terrain. For one thing, that situation has never been static. As the rest of the world has struggled to emancipate itself from the yoke of Western imperialism, so voices from beyond the core transatlantic regions (as well as dissenting voices within them) have increasingly challenged traditional Eurocentric assumptions. With increasing frequency over the last century and a half at least, voices have talked back to the West – and written back. It has been an important principle in organizing the present book to give space to the representation of those voices. The present collection is a medley of subordinate and hegemonic voices, and part of the point is that which voice is which can change over time.

      Nonetheless, we cannot escape – nor would we want to escape – the fact that the present editors are European, British to be precise, and in the officially demanded language of such things, ‘White British’. In an academic environment dominated by managerially inflected, discipline‐based protocols on the one side and identity politics on the other, it is almost an act of resistance itself to imagine such a chronologically deep and geographically diverse enterprise as the present anthology. We cannot avoid the fact that our broad parameters and our particular choices within those parameters have been formed within a particular heritage. We are the products of that ‘Western canon’ (including the ‘Modernist canon’) which has come under increasing challenge during the last fifty years, after five hundred years of its construction and domination.

      On this issue we should like to adapt a phrase cited by the art historian Thomas Crow, in turn taken from the words of the socialist historian Raphael Samuel who, in his discussion of the seventeenth‐century True Levellers (the ‘Diggers’), had noted their decision to ‘dig where we stand’; in their case, on St George’s Hill in Surrey. Paul Wood previously employed this phrase as a leitmotif for his book Western Art and the Wider World (2014), which is conceptually connected to the present volume. It remains relevant for Art in Theory: The West in the World. We have dug where we stand. And the criss‐crossing roots we have turned up – or, striking a more contemporary note, the rhizomes we have traced – are what the present book is made of. To put it more firmly, as far as art goes, we believe they are what the present situation writ large is made of.


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