01/06
Denise Ferreira da Silva
e-flux journal #65 SUPERCOMMUNITY Ñ mayÐaugust 2015 Ê Denise Ferreira da Silva
Reading Art as Confrontation
Reading Art as
Confrontation
10.06.15 / 13:42:34 EDT
ÒWhat I can say is that there are different
layers of refusal; it begins with this violence
I am responsible for in photographs; I find
myself in a situation of impossibility, of
doing what I have to do with these images.
And then there is another layer over this;
the context of the art world, the
institutional context ÉÊI find it very violent
to be at this point of the program, I think
about [whether] what I am presenting will
offend somebody. It is very difficult to exist
in this and outside of this; it is these
different levels of refusal that come
together and make me unproductive, as
does spending a lot of time with those
photographs and dematerializing them in
many senses. Today was one experiment,
which is a process of trying out things with
these images. Even when talking and
responding I feel like I am unproductive.Ó
Ð Yasmine Eid-Sabbagh
Ê
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊWhat if one approached each and every
work of art as a composition, that is, as an
imaging, an assemblage of bits of
representation: the already said, the already
seen, the already written, the already imaged Ð
or rather, words, images, texts, gestures,
scenes? Would that be a denial of creativity?
Would such a take entail a view of the artistic as
hardly distinct from the economic? Would the
collapsing of these two instances of value, the
aesthetic and the economic, signal a corruption
of art, or has the stuff of life, including economy,
always been artÕs sole raw material? Perhaps the
work of art (the work art does) has never been
anything other than life worked on, through, and
by a certain intention.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊI ask these questions because I am
interested in the possibility of art with an
anticolonial inflection. What sort of compositions
could retain the postcolonial concern with
representation, aiming beyond the limits of
postcolonial critique and its particular rendering
of modern grammar? If it aims to go beyond
denouncing, if it moves to dismantle and/or
counteract the effects of epistemic violence,
what would anticolonial artwork accomplish
through the form of presentation? For now, and
within the limits of this text only, my answer to
this question is: it would corrupt any mode, any
form of presentation, by turning it into a
confrontation Ð that is, a presentation that
refuses representation.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊWith these questions in mind I read Yasmine
Eid-SabbaghÕs On Violence, a twentythreeÊminuteÊevent that was part of the
exhibition ÒIt Makes Us Think of a Dance and a
they devoted time and attention to these
photographs, otherwise barely seen, even
by the people who originally owned or took
them. A process of rethinking visual
representation unleashed, considering how
to make these images ÒvisibleÓ without
making them public, and questioning the
iconography of the Palestinian refugee
created through images mainly produced by
the United Nations Relief and Work Agency
(UNRWA) and the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO).Ê
Key terms and choices in the description signal a
refusal to represent Ð Òcollaboration,Ó Òtogether,Ó
making Òvisible without making public,Ó
ÒquestioningÓ the figure of the Palestinian
refugee from the humanitarian perspective of the
UN and the PLO, and so on.3
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊMy view is that Eid-SabbaghÕs artwork is
exemplary of what can be called postcolonial art,
because of what a postcolonial framing does to
performance as a form of artistic presentation.4
The time and situation in which the performance
takes place Ð a singular performance, any
singular performance, which is the singular
performance that I have in mind Ð does
something that is beyond and that cannot be
comprehended by the conceptual tools and
analytical moves associated with the
ÒpostcolonialÓ as a scholarly practice. This is due
to the fact that something happens, and
becomes part of the performance as it happens,
which the artist herself could not have
anticipated and directed. This occurrence is
contingent upon everything that is then/there:
10.06.15 / 13:42:34 EDT
02/06
e-flux journal #65 SUPERCOMMUNITY Ñ mayÐaugust 2015 Ê Denise Ferreira da Silva
Reading Art as Confrontation
F•te as Much as of War (On Violence),Ó curated by
Doreen Mende as one of the prequel symposium
series ÒArtistic Justice: Positions on the Place of
Justice in ArtÓ at EVA International,ÊIrelandÕs
Biennial in 2013.1 That late March afternoon in
Dublin, for twenty-threeÊminutes, Yasmine EidSabbagh refused to represent.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊIf you read online bios and descriptions of
Eid-SabbaghÕs work and her academic training, it
is not difficult to place her work under a rubric
such as postcolonial art. That rubric also makes
sense if you attend to the content of her work.
Her description of this particular presentation
tells us that she gathered an extensive collection
of family photographs Òmostly in collaborationÓ
with residents of Burj al-Shamali, a Palestinian
refugee camp in Southern Lebanon.2 Everything,
at every step Ð from the sourcing of the
photographs in collaboration with the campÕs
residents through the conceptualization of the
presentation Ð was already framed as a
postcolonial piece. ÒTogether,Ó the description
proceeds,
the audience, the artists, the technical staff
backstage, the curators, the stage, the lighting,
the seats, the space between the stage and the
first row of seats, the in-room temperature, the
outside temperature, what each one of us had for
breakfast, how easy or difficult it was to get to
the venue É it involves everything; it is about
everything. It is about everything because it is
about how each one of us then and there reacted
or responded to the key descriptor of the
performance: Òmaking visible without making
public.Ó This is the turn of critique when it comes
out of books into the world, in this case the art
world, corrupting the form in the process.
Yasmine Eid-Sabaggh presenting her performance lecture On
Violence.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÒMaking visible without making publicÓ is a
key descriptor of corruption, as Eid-Sabbagh
demonstrated in her performance through
staging a confrontation. By not making public
what she displayed, she corrupted the scene of
artistic presentation, exposing how the
performance itself, as a form, follows the rules of
visual presentation she set up to violate. It did so
by violating the presupposition of universality
that gives ethical support to representation
(juridical, symbolic, economic). My point is:
without some assumption of a universal (in terms
of equality and/or transcendence), it is
inconceivable that free (self-determined)
persons or collectives would accept being
represented by somebody or something other
than themselves.5
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊThe very notion of a public, of a public
sphere, of a common sense, and of the related
notion of aesthetic judgment (in the Kantian
articulation) presupposes this universal.6 Today,
it is precisely this presupposition of a universal
(as a common and even ground) that is
challenged by postcolonial critique. At the core
of the critique is the naming, cataloging, and
exposure of colonial and racial violence Ð against
03/06
This derelict movie theater in Mount Sinai, Egypt was allegedly rejected by the local population on its opening night.
10.06.15 / 13:42:34 EDT
10.06.15 / 13:42:34 EDT
04/06
e-flux journal #65 SUPERCOMMUNITY Ñ mayÐaugust 2015 Ê Denise Ferreira da Silva
Reading Art as Confrontation
claims of innocence and apologies for the
failures of universal claims and projects, against
the colonial, juridical, economic, and symbolic
mechanisms and architectures of the past, but
also against their reverberations and
redeployments in the global present.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊRegistering epistemic violence is the staple
of postcolonial critical work Ð the main work
entrusted in the writings of Edward Said, Gayatri
Spivak, and Homi Bhabha, to name three of the
most well-known names. Epistemic violence can
be cataloged without much concern for the risk
of reproducing colonial effects. Most
immediately evident is the fact that, for the most
part, postcolonial critique reads the colonial
texts, the ones produced by the colonizer (Said
and Spivak), in the texts by the subaltern
(Bhabha), and in both (Spivak).
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊIn both the colonizer text and the subaltern
text (I use this dichotomy here for the sake of
simplification), there is a presumed public, which
may or may not be explicitly identified as
everyone, or just some, or just us. For the most
part Ð and the exception here is to be found in
public lectures, talks, political rallies, and so
forth Ð the postcolonial academic does not have
to worry about the ÒpublicÓ when she performs
her critique. Nor does she, as noted above, worry
about the Òmaking public,Ó because what
becomes ÒvisibleÓ in the text is mediated by
pages and pages of conceptual and
methodological declarations that make evident
that what becomes visible is made so only under
these conditions of emergence. None of that
distancing is available to the postcolonial
performance artist. All of it is (to be in) the
performance itself. It is neither enough nor is it
necessary that members of the audience have
read Said, Spivak, or Bhabha (or Derrida, or
Foucault, or Kristeva) before coming to the
presentation. Making visible without making
public, I learned while watching (I should say
witnessing) Eid-SabbaghÕs performance, when
rendered in the aesthetic form, operates at the
level of feelings, both physical and emotional.
This practice elicits reactions, tears, laughs,
nervous coughs, deadly silences ÉÊThe art of
making visible without making public corrupts
the neat web of conceptual methodology that the
postcolonial critic learns during academic
training. It turns presentation into a
confrontation. It is the move that renders one
exposed in the moment of exposure because by
breaking the polite/police rules of engagement, it
also renders the rule-breaker unprotected by
them.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊI sensed thisÊwhen I asked Eid-Sabbagh to
talk about the complications that arise along
with the refusal, along with presenting without
representing. Her answer is quoted at the
opening of this text. What does she mean by
ÒunproductiveÓ? I thought quite a bit Ð I didnÕt
ask what she meant then and there Ð about the
choice of this term. However, I can read it in
juxtaposition with two other statements. First,
the last sentence of the description of the
performance: ÒIt was the convergence of the
responsibility associated with these
photographs, and the antagonism inherent in
them, invisible but striving to release their
agency (and the effect it potentially triggers),
that was at the core of her intervention.Ó7
Without a doubt, Eid-Sabbagh had already
thought about the aesthetic effect of her
postcolonial method. She later spoke on Òthe
question of responsibility and how it comes
together in the network of the art industry. Who
do we speak for? Who are we to speak about the
political? [Is] part of the violence [in] the
institutional context? How could art exist outside
of this context?Ó She asks whether Òthere would
be a possibility for addressing something like
violence in a different way.Ó
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊIn Eid-SabbaghÕs performance that day,
confrontation was imaged as a refusal to give the
audience access to anything Ð images, her own
facial expressions, sounds, body language Ð that
could become pieces of evidence, that could
introduce the position of a spectator. Unable to
manifest the violence of spectatorship, that is, to
occupy the position of the Òobjective observerÓ
before the artwork, we learned of but did not
access the intimacy the artist enjoyed, because
it was described rather than exhibited. Her
performance corrupted the trust between the
performer and the audience. Instead of meeting
Kantian expectations Ð the beautiful and the
sublime, but also the horrifying and repugnant Ð
the performance exposed them, refusing the
possibility of enjoyment at all. Beyond
postcolonial critique as an intellectual exercise,
the art of confrontation is an anticolonial
intervention precisely because it turns the space
between the performer and the audience into the
trenches. By staging a confrontation, it forges an
aesthetic experience that recalls and exposes
artÕs own performance of the violence that is
modern thought, precisely because of the
in/difference between the stage and the museum
as exhibition sites. Both offer precisely that
which Yasmine Eid-SabbaghÕs performance
refused (its corruptive move), which is the
Òethical closureÓ effected by a reassurance of
difference, namely, of a given distance between
ÒIÓ (spectator/colonizer/Human Rights enforcer)
and the ÒOtherÓ (exhibit/colonized/victim). For
that is precisely what has justified (as
explanation, cause, or meaning) the violence
done in the first place.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ×
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊMy thanks to Natasha Ginwala and David
Lloyd for their generous and helpful comments.
e-flux journal #65 SUPERCOMMUNITY Ñ mayÐaugust 2015 Ê Denise Ferreira da Silva
Reading Art as Confrontation
05/06
Denise Ferreira da Silva isÊProfessor of Ethics at
Queen Mary, University of London.
10.06.15 / 13:42:34 EDT
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ3
Eid-SabbaghÕs bioÊfor that event:
ÒYasmine Eid-Sabbagh studied
history, photography, and visual
anthropology in Paris. From 2006
to 2011Êshe lived in Burj alShamali, a refugee camp next to
Sour, Lebanon, where she
carried out photographic
research that includedÊa
dialogical project with a group of
young Palestinians, as well as
archival work on family and
studio photographs. Since 2008,
Yasmine Eid-Sabbagh has
beenÊa member of theÊArab
Image Foundation. Since 2011
she has beenÊa doctoral
candidate at the Academy of
Fine Arts in Vienna.Ó
SeeÊhttps://www.academia.edu/657
0188/IT_MAKES_US_THINK_OF_A_
DANCE_AND_A_F%C3%8ATE_AS_MUC
H_AS_OF_WAR_ON_VIOLENCE_._A_
conference_event_for_Limeric
k_Biennale_eva_international
_22nd_of_MARCH_2014_DUBLIN
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ4
I elaborate this reading of art as
confrontation in a forthcoming
piece entitled ÒSeven Notes on
Violence,Ó which consists ofÊmy
final comments on all pieces
presented at the EVA
symposium. It will be appear in
Doreen MendeÕs edited volume
on the symposium,
publishedÊbyÊthe Dutch Art
Institute andÊentitledÊIt Makes
Me Think of a Dance and a F•te
as Much as of War (On Violence).
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ5
For a critique of universality and
representation, seeÊDenise
Ferreira da Silva,ÊToward a
Global Idea of
RaceÊ(Minneapolis:ÊUniversity of
Minnesota Press, 2007).
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ6
For a discussion of KantÕs
formulation of the aesthetic and
the public, seeÊDavid Lloyd,
ÒRace Under
Representation,ÓÊOxford Literary
Review, 1991: 62Ð94.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ7
SeeÊhttp://www.eva.ie/alf-dublin
-yasmine-eid-sabaggh
10.06.15 / 13:42:34 EDT
e-flux journal #65 SUPERCOMMUNITY Ñ mayÐaugust 2015 Ê Denise Ferreira da Silva
Reading Art as Confrontation
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ2
SeeÊhttp://www.eva.ie/alf-dublin
-yasmine-eid-sabaggh
06/06
ÊÊÊÊÊÊ1
SeeÊhttps://www.academia.edu/657
0188/IT_MAKES_US_THINK_OF_A_
DANCE_AND_A_F%C3%8ATE_AS_MUC
H_AS_OF_WAR_ON_VIOLENCE_._A_
conference_event_for_Limeric
k_Biennale_eva_international
_22nd_of_MARCH_2014_DUBLIN