28
Reconfiguring Place: Art and the
Global Imaginary
Linda Williams
IMAGINING PLACE
When the image is new, the world is new …
The Poetics of Space (Bachelard, 1958)
The familiar dwelling places of our lives
such as houses, apartments, or even the most
rudimentary shelters not only have the power
to leave indelible traces in our thoughts and
feelings, but as Bachelard once observed, are
also subtly inscribed in the ways the body
responds to the experience of space
(Bachelard, 1969).1 Similarly, most of us
have – in some shape or form – a world, and
cities, of the imagination that shape our perceptions of place, and how we view the lives
of others. That is to say, along with the rise
of a socio-political global imaginary (Steger,
2008) most of us conceive an imaginary
world picture. It is the kind of picture entailing some form of what Benedict Anderson
called an ‘imaginative community’ beyond
the prescriptions of nationalism (Anderson
2006). Such imaginary pictures also include
the spatial contours of cities of memory and
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ideas, drawn both from the actual experience
of particular places, along with the affects of
various cultural images of urban identity and
persuasions of electronic media. The escalating processes of socio-economic globalization, moreover, have led to the sprawling
expansion of existing cities along with the
rapid development of new ones. And hence
to increasingly common experiences of
urban place that often differ quite markedly
from the prevailing imagery of cities with the
kind of glamorous global profiles that attract
international tourism.
Most people across the globe now live in
cities, where a sense of physical presence in
the world is made, and remade, on a daily
basis; not only by how well the urban environment has adapted to the pressures of growth
and brisk social change, but also from the
aesthetics of place. As Scott McQuire has
explained so lucidly, the contemporary
experience of urban space is also constituted
by the technologies of the media city
(McQuire, 2008). Hence the perpetual flow
of information, images and capital that form
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the virtual architecture of contemporary cities (Castells, 2000), are integral to the social
processes of globalization, and provide
many of the visual sources that continue to
reshape the global imaginary. They are,
however, not the only sources through which
the image of the global is configured, and
my focus here is to consider some of the
other ways cultural conceptions of space are
socially constructed.
The aesthetic experience of urban place is
also shaped by the ways in which the fabric
of the city itself is becoming increasingly
homogenous, and this, in turn, has conferred
a relatively new, shared perspective on
how we might perceive the lives of many
millions of others in cities across the world.2
Globalization, then, is in many ways synonymous with new forms of urbanization, though
the question of how both rural spaces, and the
places commonly referred to as wilderness
have been largely elided in contemporary
debates on the aesthetics of globalization and
cosmopolitanism, is an underlying concern of
this chapter to which I will later return.
In the nineteenth century, writers such as
Dickens could provide an indelible image of
urban decay in a ‘Little Britain’ that bore all
the characteristics of an idiosyncratically
English urban character, and Dostoevsky could
create a ‘St Petersburg of the mind’ firmly
rooted in a specific time and place (Fanger,
1965). The twenty-first century city, by comparison, must adapt to the demands of consumerist cultures common to all contemporary
urban societies. Hence the differentiation of
place still evident in those semi-industrial
nineteenth century cities aspiring to join an
increasingly deregulated global economy, for
example, is now gradually superseded by
widely duplicated urban ‘brand’ sites that are
outlets for identical consumer goods. Or,
conversely, by the proliferation of privatized
shopping malls that effectively erode the
traditional role of the street or market square
as public space (Sorkin, 1992). Further, all
large cities now bear some similarity in appearance provided by the anonymous facades of
corporate style modernist architecture, along
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with buildings bearing the ubiquitous global
logos and brand names that are the familiar
signs of international late capitalism. Such
buildings are derived from the early twentieth century Western architectural movement
known as the ‘international style’, rather than
the stylistic eclecticism of art deco architecture that was also influential in the early
twentieth century. The international style is a
functionalist aesthetic that has certainly lived
up to its name in the ubiquitous towers of
steel and glass evident in most cities across
the world. It is an aesthetic blueprint that is
particularly notable in the economically
influential urban centres Saskia Sassen first
described as ‘global cities’ (Sassen,1991)
including the vast new megacities of Asia.
Global cities, or at least large, central areas
within them, often lack the intimacy of lowrise buildings on a more human scale, or
references to local history and the slower
pace of street markets and cafes, along with
urban market gardens advocated by the
recent development of CittaSlow, or slow
city movement.3 On the other hand, global
cities offer the social energy of a rapid daily
pace, and sustain major cultural institutions
such as substantial public museums and arts
festivals in which the cultural imagery of
space can be re-imagined and refashioned.
Global cities also support less populist art
forms represented by substantial companies
for the performance of music, dance and
opera that might otherwise collapse in
smaller towns, or markets dominated by
popular taste.
Such major cultural institutions in big cities are typically housed in ‘landmark’ buildings of considerable architectural distinction,
notable either for their neo-classical elegance
or for the dramatically contemporary urban
profiles seen, for example, in the international work of architects such as Frank Gehry
or Daniel Libeskind. Libeskind has designed
many museums, along with buildings in
major cities that are intended to engage public memory such as the Jewish museum in
Berlin or his winning design for the reconstruction of ‘ground zero’ at the 16-acre
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world trade centre site in Manhattan. Before
Libeskind won the commission for ground
zero, David Harvey speculated on how
designs for the site might respond to the public memory of those who died at the site, and
was not sanguine about the role of capitalist
developers who would
not be averse to combining their mundane
commercial concerns with inspiring symbolic
statements (emphasizing the power and
indestructability of the political-economic system
of global capitalism that received such a body
blow on 9/11) by erecting, say, a towering phallic
symbol that spells defiance. (Harvey, 2006: 137)
In place of the twin towers, Libeskind’s master plan features two rectangular pools with
the names of the victims inscribed on their
bronze perimeters along with waterfalls that
appear to cascade deep into the earth. These
are surrounded, or one might say ‘guarded’
by four new towers that form a spiral around
the site. One of these, Freedom Tower, will
be the tallest building in New York City, it is
designed as a visual and symbolic counterpoint to the Statue of Liberty, and is now
nearing completion. The pools of Liebskind’s
design certainly respond effectively to the
human losses of 9/11, especially in the use of
water as a sign of cleansing and healing of
public grief. The towers too are unequivocally successful signs of defiance and assertions of a neo-liberal economy, especially in
connection with the image of liberty as the
enduring national icon.
The sweeping fluidity of Gehry’s designs
for museums are widely celebrated for their
sculptural qualities, yet it has also been
remarked that these are buildings standing out
from the city as architectural spectacle rather
than integrated with it (Foster, 2001). Hence
for all their sculptural eloquence, Gehry’s
buildings can also be seen as prestigious local
examples of a sophisticated architectural
global brand rather than something that
responds to specific urban identity as such. On
the street, however, notwithstanding the way
historical urban ‘features’ may be developed
by urban planners or the heritage industry as
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465
public or tourist spectacle, more consistently
formulaic architecture involves the gradual
erosion of local historical distinctions of place
that may generate a more general erasure of
public memory.
The concrete indications of such erasures
of social memory and history are especially
evident in the abundance of the so-called
‘non-places’ of supermodernity: the airports,
supermarkets, corporate foyers or generic
media spaces common to all big cities (Augé,
1995). These may seem to be places of bland
neutrality, yet they are very likely the spatial
correlatives of a model of globalization as a
callous, unilateral process in which resources
and agency play gradually, but surely, into
the hands of a multinational capitalist elite
(Bauman, 2000; Harvey, 2006). This reference to ‘spatial correlatives’, however, is not
to suggest that the material forms of the city
are simply manifestations of global imaginaries, but rather that the social production of
space arises from complex forms of interdependence between the social imaginary and
the concrete environment. And as Marc Augé
suggests, the individual interpellated by such
non-places is called to a form of anonymity
only relieved by the digits of a personal
credit card or identity document.
Despite the complex signs of local history
in the layers of cultural representation from
which given urban aesthetics arise then,
such places nonetheless represent an unmistakable global tendency towards a generic
aesthetics of late modernity in the contemporary urban fabric. And if it is the case that
this tendency towards a generic aesthetics of
place is the result of a geo-political hegemony that has been seen as a new imperialist
form of socio-economic global ‘Empire’
(Hardt and Negri, 2000), then this raises the
question of to what extent cultural resistance
to this aesthetic monotony has been effective. In this context, I propose that the two
most significant countervailing narratives
that have arisen in contemporary art are artworks derived from new forms of the cosmopolitan imagination, and those that have
developed in environmental art.
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Given that the cities of late modernity are
constantly growing and shifting with the way
local histories combine with influxes of people of diverse nationalities, there is a countervailing view of the contemporary city which
suggests that the flux and heterogeneity of
its populations facilitated by the rapid communications of electronic networks are precisely what is needed to undermine what has
been aptly described as the McDonaldization
of culture (Smart, 1999). On this view, the
capacity for cultural resistance is said to lie
above all in the cosmopolitanism that enables
a shared recognition of differences in the
experience of the world, and to the grassroots
social shifts that reshape urban neighbourhoods – especially those adapted by people
who have migrated from foreign cultures. As
Gerard Delanty is surely correct to observe,
moreover, the recognition and translation of
the values of foreign, and particularly nonWestern cultures, also requires a measure of
comparative self-reflective evaluation on the
part of the host culture (Delanty, 2009).
Insofar as cosmopolitanism is sufficiently
robust to avoid complicity with the standardized forms of globalized modernity, it also has
correspondences with the more differentiated
model of global interdependencies that
Shmuel Eisenstadt refers to as the global multiple modernities forged by differences in
economics, social history and culture
(Eisenstadt, 2000).
Yet opinion remains divided on the cultural value of cosmopolitan hybridity, which
is derided by some as a new cultural logic of
late capitalism (Zizek, 1997) while by others
is regarded as a complex, yet nonetheless
plausible conduit to social transformation
(Papastergiadis, 2012). And the question of
whether the aesthetics of cosmopolitan and
migratory cultures can provide meaningful
alternatives to the socio-economic imperatives of globalization has in fact emerged as
one of the central critical problems of contemporary art (Bal et al., 2011; Belting et al.,
2011; Harris, 2011; Philipsen, 2010). These
aesthetic issues pivot on the lack of cultural
consensus over whether globalization is a
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progressive or reactionary process. Though
widely discussed, however, the issue of cosmopolitanism, as I will go on to argue, is not
necessarily now the most significant question redefining the global politics and aesthetics of place in contemporary art since
environmental art is focused increasingly on
the much more serious issue of global climate change.
Further to Bourdieu’s discussions on the
social and institutional capital associated
with art (Bourdieu, 1986, 1990), Lotte
Philipsen has remarked that despite the
claims of new internationalism in art, contemporary art itself has a conceptual framework that is essentially a product of Western
processes of modernity (Philipsen, 2010:
80–3). Though it clearly does not follow that
Western culture therefore in some way
‘owns’ the discourses of contemporary art, it
is important to remember that such art seeks
to distance itself from the symbolic orders of
the pre-modern regardless of whether those
symbolic imaginaries are Western or not.
Furthermore, despite the preference for the
discourses of the postmodern in art criticism,
neither does contemporary art, in my view at
least, participate in a world-view that has
made a profound epistemological break with
the claims of modernity. In other words,
rather than something that arises with a putative condition of postmodernity and a general
rupture with Western metanarratives
(Lyotard, 1984) contemporary art, it seems to
me, is formed by the longue durée of modernity which includes the crucial modern
capacity to engage in innate critique. This is
not to suggest a simple continuity between
early and late modernity, but simply to say
that in accord with certain positions on
modernity in social theory (Bauman, 2000;
Giddens, 1990) modernism as the cultural
logic of modernity is now heightened and has
accelerated into a reflective phase of late or
liquid modernity.
The innate critique of modernity is coeval
with its origins in early modernity. And this
extends to how the spatial arts of nineteenth
and twentieth century modernism engaged
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intensively, though certainly not exclusively,
with the codes and practices of representation itself. In the twenty-first century, this
process has shifted and has extended to substantial critiques of the socio-spatial representations of modernity and globalization,
especially recently in the revaluation of paradigmatically Western ways of knowing the
world. Before focusing on the revaluation of
conventional aesthetics of place in contemporary art, however, I want to turn to consider how older constructions of global space
also recur in contemporary culture.
IMAGES OF WORLDS AND CITIES
In the future, faster-growing economies will
account for an increasing share of the total of
world trade. A significant proportion of this new
commerce will be ‘South–South’ trade among
faster-growing regions – a modern resurgence of
the old Silk Road. As this shift gathers pace, HSBC
is well placed to help businesses and individuals
seize the opportunities. (Stuart Gulliver, CEO,
HSBC)5
In May 2012, the website of fine art auctioneers Bonhams of London carried the news
that ‘Bonhams strike gold with glittering El
Anatsui tapestry’.6 This referred to a world
record price of £541,250 (US$ 850,544) for a
work by the Ghanaian artist El Anatsui: a
glittering large scale tapestry woven from
flattened used bottle caps called New World
Map (2010). Bonhams, like most other
European and American art dealers have long
traded in the kind of traditional non-Western
art that was largely categorized as ‘ethnographic’. Subsequently, the focus on investment in contemporary art from non-Western
cultures, from China, India, and most recently,
Africa, has been more or less coeval with the
heightened processes of neo-liberal economic
globalization of the late twentieth and early
twenty-first centuries. At the level of the production of art, this is a cultural climate in
which many artists are aware of the extent to
which artworks exploring questions of locality will be critically assessed in the context of
globalism and the complex intersections of
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467
international cultural exchange. Such questions are also aligned with the territorial terms
of global art markets, and the alacrity with
which post-colonial assertions of cultural
difference are sucked up by the voracious
thirst of cultural investment in the ‘next
thing’, and hence absorbed into the global
processes of neo-liberal economics.
For Bonhams, the fact that El Anatsui himself acknowledged the processes of economic and cultural exchange underpinning
histories of colonialism and globalization did
not go unnoticed, and was something they
decided was of interest for buyers perusing
their pre-auction website so they could follow the artist’s view on how he conceived his
image of the world:
I thought of the objects as links between my
continent, Africa, and the rest of Europe. Objects
such as these were introduced to Africa by
Europeans when they came as traders. Alcohol
was one of the commodities brought with them
to exchange for goods in Africa … I thought that
the bottle caps had a strong reference to the
history of Africa.7
If El Anatsui has been well paid for his vision
of global processes of exchange in a way that
would not have been possible in the colonial
period he refers to, it does not of course
imply a shift in the more fundamental processes of economic exchange between
Europe and Africa.
Another contemporary image of the world
map was presented at the 15th Biennale of
Sydney in 2006, in an installation called
World Map by the Chinese contemporary artist Ai Wei Wei.8 Ai Wei Wei’s installation
required a deliberately labour intensive process of cutting 2,000 layers of cotton cloth
into the contours of the world map: an
approach to art making the local press understood as hinting at China’s status as a source
of cheap workers for the fabric industry,
whilst the artist himself commented on how
the technical problem of holding the layers of
the map together represented difficulties in
national and international unity (Creagh,
2006). Ai Wei Wei was the art consultant on
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the national stadium constructed for the
Beijing Olympic Games in 2008: now known
as the ‘Bird’s Nest’ and widely celebrated as
a global icon. He has also gained international recognition for installations and webbased artworks including those criticizing
the Chinese government’s position on
democracy and human rights. Ai Wei Wei
was arrested in Beijing in 2011, then held in
solitary confinement for 81 days and subsequently remains under intense state surveillance. The ways in which the state authorities
sought to silence Ai Wei Wei have only
served to reinforce the international esteem
with which he is regarded as an artist committed to the courageous critique of political
oppression in China, though there is notably
less widespread discussion of the critique of
international forms of political oppression
which are also suggested by his work. With
his World Map in the Sydney Biennale for
example, there were no responses from the
Australian press questioning Western dependency on the inexpensive products of exploitative labour relations in China, or with
Australia’s general reluctance to comment on
other forms of Chinese political exploitation,
such as those in the violent transgression of
the national borders of Tibet.9
Indeed, with the exception of a relatively
small number of cultural cognoscenti, many
people visiting any of the many global biennales of contemporary art are very likely
mainly trying to come to terms with what ‘art’
is supposed to be in the first place. This is,
however, how art speaks to the wider public
since it appeals to the viewer through the
processes of art itself, rather than using art as
a means of proselytizing political messages.
Furthermore, as I have argued elsewhere,
contrasts between the innate poetics of art and
the desire to make it widely intelligible are
tensions faced by many contemporary artist
wanting to address a public beyond the art
world (Williams 2013). Ai Wei Wei’s stacks
of cloth posed an innovative challenge to
aesthetic preconceptions in ways that might
at least have frayed the edges of an imaginary cartography of a world with clearly
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 468
demarcated boundaries. It is likely most of
the spectators of his installation would have
been wearing clothing bearing the label
‘Made in China’ (that is, clothing often made
in sweatshop conditions), though the question
of whether any viewers drew such inferences
largely depends on the affective potential of
the artwork itself. The Spanish artist Santiago
Sierra also invites viewers to reflect on the
ways international labour relations are
approached in his installations. Though his
work is more confrontational in the way he
expects viewers to think about the immigrant
workers to whom he has paid the minimum
wage to be ‘enclosed’ in the installation in
sealed boxes or bricked in behind walls for
days. In either case, however, the realization of
the human costs of neo-liberal globalization is
still an essentially secondary reflection on the
initial aesthetic experience of the artwork
itself, which is to say on its immediate capacity to reconfigure the meaning of images and
spatial experience.
The ways the stability of national borders
could be questioned through reconstructed
images of the world was also explored by the
Swedish artist Öyvind Fahlström, whose
World Map (1972) bore some resemblances
to the earliest version of a navigational
global map by Mercator in the sixteenth century age of European global expansion and
colonialism. Mercator’s cartographic projection of 1569 enabled the oceanic trade routes
that established Europe as a global power,
yet in Fahlström’s twentieth century map the
oceans have shrunk and the lands closest to
the equator (which were given a symbolically small scale by Mercator) are now much
enlarged by the artist and are saturated by the
imagery of poverty, oppression and geopolitical struggle based on four centuries of
western capitalist monopoly. If Mercator’s
perspective exaggerated the size of countries
furthest from the equator, later attempts to
correct these inaccuracies such as the GallPeters projection of 1973 also included distortions that nevertheless prompted further
debate about the political dimensions of
modern cartography.
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The iconographic traditions of the map of the
world are salutary reminders that all maps,
images and models of the globe are essentially
heuristic abstractions. If the cultural and political imaginaries evinced by such abstractions
are made obvious in imaginative artworks such
as the ‘marvellous’ map of the world made by
the French surrealists in 1929, for example, it is
nevertheless an image of the world seen from
the perspective of the global north. This is a
semiotic preference that is also seen in scientific maps and even in the popular photographic
images of the world seen from space. And up
until relatively recently the scientific project to
provide reliably objective representations of
geographical space also shows other ways in
which global maps have been shaped quite
significantly by specific social and cultural
conventions. Imaginary or metaphoric abstractions of space, moreover, are not limited to
global imagery, since cities too, with their varied architectures and conventions of urban
design, their gardens, and even the extended
rural spaces upon which all cities are dependent, are also formed by the long, often contested, histories of cultural representation.
In distinction from the ways architecture
and some public art projects are bound by the
imperatives of function and budgets, the
poetics of art can instantly refashion globally
contested places in ways that can influence a
more general spatial imaginary. This is
clearly the case in the surrealists’ map of the
world where the imperialist nations of 1929
are simply banished by the stroke of a pen,
whereas places rich in the realms of the surrealist imagination such as Ireland, or Mexico
appear as large landmasses. Russia too,
looms large over the top of the world perhaps
as a subversive surrealist gesture towards
Trotsky’s exile in Mexico, and his rejection
of the Stalinist view of art as the servant of
the nation state. Similarly, when from 1971–9
Alighiero Boetti asked the skilled Afghani
embroiderers of Kabul to make his Mappa
series of global maps in tapestries, he was
interested to find the women embroidering
them simply left Israel off the map because it
was not recognized by the Taliban regime.
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469
In 1967 the American artist Jasper Johns
based his global Map painting on Buckminster
Fuller’s radical Dymaxion air-ocean image of
the globe. Based on an icosahedron, it was a
global image that resisted distortions of scale
or domination by hemispherical perspective
and opened up a view of the world in which
it was possible, for example, to trace the long
history of human migrations across connected land masses.
As Fuller’s work indicates, strikingly
imaginative configurations of the world have
not always been confined to the domain of
art, and this was also the case in pre-modern
times. The European picture of the world, for
example, was often imagined as a diskshaped image surrounded by sea that extended
to a peripheral zone where civilization ended
and the unknown realms of barbarians, mythological beasts and monsters began.
For the Greeks the world was centred in
the omphales, or navel of the world in Delphi,
and extended beyond the Mediterranean into
the three continents of Europe, Asia and
Africa. These were the strange lands of the
barbarians, or barbarous: the Scythians,
Africans, Persians or Celts who had not experienced Greek language and culture. Similarly,
the Roman conception of the Orbis Terrarum
was configured as a disk with Rome at its
heart and the barbarian lands at its outer
edges. And later, as can be seen in the largest
extant late medieval map of the world – the
English Mappa Mundi of c. 1285, the worldview is again circular. This map, however,
was painted after the violent Christian crusades of the eleventh and twelfth centuries
when Europeans sought to conquer the holy
lands, and hence Jerusalem was then placed
at the centre of the world. There is also a
place in the east, at the top of this map, and
at the very edge of the world for the Garden
of Eden, which is surrounded by a ring of fire
and is hence as separate from an unredeemed
world as the land of mutant beings which lies
on another periphery beyond the Nile. If the
imagery of a ‘new world’ in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries held considerable
exotic appeal for the European imagination
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of place, it was, as is well known, by then
also quickly adapted, and subsumed into the
European maps that became primary images
of world domination.
The images of the world in pre-modern
maps bear certain basic semiotic resemblances to pre-modern representations of the
city in classical antiquity, the medieval
period and the modern city-states of the
renaissance, insofar as they also depict a circular format in which the city is enclosed,
and fortified by walls that protect it from the
world beyond. The Greek city in particular
provided the key to the European image of
the world beyond, as Henri Lefebvre
explained so eloquently:
Around the Greek city, above it, there is the
cosmos, luminous and ordered spaces, the apogee
of place. The city has as centre a hole which is
sacred and damned, inhabited by the forces of
death and life, times dark with effort and ordeals,
the world. (1996: 88)
It has been pointed out that the Greek stoic
philosophers resisted the authority of the
polis and in this sense were the first cosmopolitans (Papastergiadis, 2012: 81). It is also
the case that in pre-modern European culture
in general, tales of wonder about exotic
places and strange cultures continually
reshaped the Western imagination. The silk
road especially was an ancient pathway for
many fables of strange places, and it is
thought that the book retelling the story of
Marco Polo’s journey to the distant East in
the late thirteenth century greatly inspired
Columbus in his voyage to the ‘new’ world
(Landström, 1967).
The contemporary nostalgia for an era
when freedom of movements across various
countries was still possible sometimes takes
on ‘blue sky’ moments as in the utopian turn
in Rasheed Araeen’s long-term project for
the creation of Mediterranea. Araeen, a leading writer of the influential journal Third
Text, is also a respected artist who first began
to plan Mediterranea in dialogue with the
French philosopher Etienne Balibar in 2006
to reconfigure the modern cartographies that
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have restricted migration and inhibited
transcultural dialogue. Araeens’s colourful
map shows how the coastal counties of
Africa, Asia and Europe could be joined by
their shared proximity to the sea rather than
nation states, then reconnected to the old silk
road as a path to the far East. It is difficult
now to imagine the social consequences if
the boundaries of the European Union and
other national frontiers were dissolved in this
way, especially given the long genealogies of
the conflicts between Christian and Islamic
states, and the hard won separation of church
and state in the West. But Araeen’s image is
an invitation to imagine the social possibilities engendered by reconstituting some of the
more liberal spatial conditions before such
differences became entrenched.
The nostalgic figurations of an earlier
world without national borders and the cultural appeal of lands beyond Europe, however, should also be considered in the context
of colonization as it first arose in the premodern era. After all, Europeans witnessed
imperialist missions at least from the time of
Alexander the Great, the massive Roman
empire, the Ottoman Muslim empire, and
various other kinds of colonialism that developed with the rise of Western imperialism.
Though as Bauman has observed, these early
forms of colonial expansion in turn bear a
very different image of the global than one
derived from the transnational corporations
that are now eroding the power of the nation
state (Bauman, 1990: 176).
The long traditions of how the Western
imaginary was shaped by ideas of lands and
peoples beyond Europe is too complex to go
into here, though like the histories of cosmopolitanism itself, curiosity about the margins
of the world provided a minor, though significant countervailing vision to the dominant
view of Europe as the centre of the world.
Nonetheless, the early European pictures of
the world have clear semiotic correspondences with coeval images of European cities.
And the spatial contours of the city as an
insular, usually fortified structure, despite the
countervailing traditions of cosmopolitanism,
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was without doubt the one that prevailed in
Europe for many centuries.
The walled, circular city, as Foucault made
clear, was the means by which pre-modern
and early modern societies were defined by a
form of binary spatial logic against certain
conditions of exclusion (Foucault, 1975,
1982, 1986). For Foucault, the regulation of
disease and sovereign monopoly of violence
were the means by which the city defined the
conditions from which citizens were required
to distance themselves. Weber shows how
pre-modern oriental cultures in India and
China too shared this image of the fortified
city united under a sovereign military with
mixed social classes, though he argues that
the relative inflexibility of the hieratic socioreligious order of oriental cultures restricted
the development of civic collaboration in the
East (Weber, 1958: 91–104). Lefebvre contends that Islamic cities did not provide the
same potential for class struggle that developed from the way the Western cities were
aligned with the monarchic state (1996: 119).
But in any case, the Western model of the
city is the one which has now gained global
dominance.
From classical antiquity the Western spatial logic of exclusion extended to the strange
territories at the edge of the world, and from
the city interior to its rural periphery, and
hence to the wilder places beyond regarded
as inferior to the civilized regimes of the city.
This was also a cultural tradition that
largely perpetuated the idea that the nonhuman world beyond the city walls was not
only inferior, but also something separate
from the everyday life of the city. Hence the
roots of the notion that the bio-political
regimes of the city are now somehow more
or less independent of the world outside were
very likely formed at a time when the actual
walls of the city were emblems of the protection against the uncivilized world beyond. It
was a fundamentally instrumentalist way of
thinking about nature in particular that was
consistent with theological conventions in
ontological dualism. And this corresponded
well enough with the cultural imagery of a
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 471
471
civilized, Christian world surrounded by the
barbarian monsters of the European imagination commensurate with the colonial expansion of the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries. It also furthered a view of civilized
human subjectivity as something somehow
distinct from nature that, as Norbert Elias
explained, was reinforced both by the internalization of emotional restraints required of
individuals in the city and the new Cartesian
logic of the early European Enlightenment
(Elias, 2000).
Even when the rural was hailed as a noble
alternative to the potential corruptibility
of life in the city, as Raymond Williams
observed of images of nature from the perspective of English cities, writers (like
artists) often reinscribed the distinctions
between the city and the country in ways that
significantly shaped ‘structures of feeling’
which reinforced the traditionally binary
logic between the human and nonhuman
worlds (Williams, 1973).
In many ways the enduring binary spatial
logic of the early city has parallels in the
exclusionary processes of globalization
itself, since just as within every city the
wealthy are able to open many doors that are
not available to the masses,10 there is still a
sense in which the West, before the rest, has
different means of access to the world in
general. Having acknowledged this, however, it is crucial to recognize that these conditions remain unstable, as Lefebvre
observes:
The dialectic of the urban cannot be limited to
the opposition centre-periphery, although it
implies and contains it … Thinking the city moves
towards thinking the world (thought as a
relationship to the world) … (and) globality as
totality. (1996: 52)
The circular spatial contours of early and
pre-modern cities, along with early cellular
images of the world, though dominant, were
not the only semiotic codes that informed the
early aesthetics of globalization. They were
to some extent offset by a countervailing
cultural logic of cosmopolitanism that has
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become a major theme of contemporary art.
The cultural traditions that offered a countervailing imagery of nature also provided a less
anthropocentric approach to the world than
those that prevailed, and this has now
extended to new models of global space in
environmental art. The old images of the city
have obviously shifted considerably in the
contemporary world, though the shadow of
the old binary spatial logic still falls across
new ways of imagining global spatial boundaries in contemporary art. This produces
tensions in the ways contemporary art comes
to terms with globalization that will be the
focus of the following discussion.
TRAVERSING BOUNDARIES
What interests me more than politics or art is the
way the boundaries defining certain practices as
artistic or political are drawn and redrawn.
(Jacques Rancière, 2007: 256)
As we have seen, El Anatsui, Ai Wei Wei and
Fahlström extended the standard semiotic
code of the world map to reveal processes of
economic globalization. Yet their artworks
are also part of the institutional framework of
the global art ‘industry’ which in its celebration of novelty and transnational cultural
currency is virtually indistinguishable from
other forms of global commodity capitalism.
El Anatsui is now a much sought after ‘name’
by investors, and Fahlström’s anti-capitalist
maps are also coveted collectors’ items. Ai
Wei Wei’s work was not for sale, but could
still be framed as part of the required international cultural capital of biennales: the kind
of ‘art scenes’ which along with a ‘creative’
class, are now regarded as essential to the
public images of economically successful
cities (Florida, 2005). And as is often pointed
out, art groups with alternative, or independent views are soon adopted by the mainstream, and international ‘art scenes’ such as
those in Shanghai, New York, London or
Sydney share the same discursive frames of
reference and very similar fashions in taste
(Gielen: 2011: 85). It has even been suggested
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 472
that art in the context of ‘biennalism’ is not in
many cases all that different from other
forms of general spectator amusements like
football (Roelstraete, 2011: 95). And whilst
this seems to me to underestimate the affective power of art as a means of potentially
transformative experience, it suggests a
familiar enough dilemma to warrant a general shift in contemporary art over the last ten
years or so towards so called ‘relational’ art.
The term relational art is derived from
Nicolas Bourriaud’s much quoted essay on
relational aesthetics (Bourriaud, 2002) and is
now sometimes used almost interchangeably
with a number of other contemporary art
genres that refer to globalization, including
post-colonial migratory culture, art as urban
political activism, or art in public space. It
could be argued, of course, that for a number
of social theorists art and aesthetics have
always been socially relational, and Bourriaud
has been criticized for a simple model of
social relations that ignore the complexity of
the conflicted, sometimes violent relations
of actual social practices (Bishop, 2004).
Further, as Stewart Martin’s insightful critique makes clear, relational aesthetics aspire
to subordinate the capitalist relations to
objects by a dynamics of relations between
people. A laudable aim perhaps, but one that
naively avoids the more fundamental problem that ‘Capitalist exchange value is not
constituted at the level of objects, but of
social labour, as a measure of abstract labour’
(Martin, 2007: 378). So, effectively, by shifting the focus of art away from objects to
relations between people, there can be no
guarantees that relational art has moved forward in addressing the social-relational
structures of neo-liberal globalization.
Art-critical fashions aside, however, there
are numerous examples of art that question
capitalist values of exchange quite deftly in
ways that explore the less visible boundaries
of global space. As early as 1970, for example, the Brazilian artist Cildo Meireles took
advantage of a local bottle recycling scheme
to make a work called Insertions into
Ideological Circuits in which he inscribed
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Coca-Cola bottles with messages like
‘Yankees go home’ next to statements of his
aim ‘To register informations and critical
opinions on bottles and return them to circulation’ and then re-circulated these bottles for
people to purchase. At a time of political
dictatorship and repression in Brazil, Meireles
took his deliberately anonymous strategy further with The Currency Project (1970) where
he also stamped written appeals for democracy onto banknotes before re-circulating
them. Miereles’ project effectively traced the
shifting boundaries of globalization as they
emerged in social space by entering the city
through its processes of exchange, yet it was
also a process that extended to everyday
material objects such as the bottles or banknotes people could hold in their hands. More
recently the international arts collective Superflex made a video work called The Financial
Crisis (2009) in which the viewer’s understanding of the global financial crisis is
approached through a 12-minute narrative
session with an imaginary hypnotist. By calling viewers to imagine themselves as invisible hands, powerful financial brokers, and
contented workers the artists attempt to provide a ‘therapeutic’ guide through financial
disaster. It is a theatrical form of deception
that is at once amusing and disturbing, especially in the ways it appeals to the feelings of
fear and vulnerability that arise with the individual’s inability to control how fluctuations
in global financial transactions can destroy
basic forms of human security.
Other artists have also commented on the
less visible boundaries of global space such
as the way time and space are compressed
and segmented by the rationalist regimes of
late modernity. In a work called Escapement
(2009), for example, the Raqs Media arts
collective in New Delhi focused on the contemporary compression of time and space
heightened by global digital technology.
Their installation comprised 27 wall clocks
set to the differing time zones of various
cities, accompanied by a sound loop containing temporal references such as alarms
or the electronic sounds of dial-up Internet
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 473
473
connections. Rather than the clock hands
pointing to numbers, however, they point to
words on the clock faces describing various
emotional responses to time such as
‘fatigue’, ‘anxiety’, ‘nostalgia’ or ‘duty’ –
common responses to clocks experienced
by people across the world, especially in the
workplace. The measurement of labour as
time also has local implications in this
work, since New Delhi is an urban hub for
the round-the-clock call centres developed
by multinational companies. New Delhi’s
industrial satellite town, Gurgaon, in particular has recently been developed to
include several big new call centres, their
walls lined with clocks, where poorly paid
employees work long shifts to call people
across the world. Some of the clocks in
Escapement that are set at the same time
zones also call attention to the different cultural attitudes to time in cities sharing zones
of longitude like London and Lagos for
example, while other clocks point to entirely
imaginary spaces such as the fabled cities of
Shangri-La or Babel, home to all global
languages. Nevertheless, the clocks of
Escapement largely convey the impression
that the global turn to a rationalization of
time is commonly felt as a form of temporal
commodification and a Taylorist imposition
on the rhythms of everyday life. We have
seen how artists such as Ai Wei Wei and
Santiago Sierra have explored the exploitative conditions of labour exacerbated by
globalized cost-efficiency and the rationalization of time, and the Chinese artist Ni
Haifeng invited a more interactive approach
to this problem with a work called ParaProduction (2008). In this work the artist
brought the waste products of Chinese manufacturing back to Europe instead of the
usual finished products. These were amassed
in a huge pile, and viewers were then
invited to make them into a tapestry, a public gesture in accord with the deliberately
open-ended approach to the geo-political
turn in art exhibited at ZKM in Karlsruhe
where the exhibition was seen to assume
‘the form of an essay and, much like an
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essay, raise(s) themes and problems for
debate’ (Zijlmans, 2011: 9)
One of the most consistent themes of globalization and culture has been a concern
with the impermeable spatial barriers of
national borders and the politics of global
mobility and displacement, recently
described as the geo-aesthetic dimension of
contemporary art. (Barriendos Rodrĩguez,
2011). Though sceptical of the capacity of
the contemporary art system to enable a disinterested politics of transcultural representation, Barriendos Rodrĩguez still sees the new
openness to difference as an aesthetic field in
which artists can work strategically across
conceptual borders (2011: 328). Video art in
particular has been used extensively to invite
audience participation in the narratives of
people, sometimes refugees, who have
passed through many national borders often
to find even more insuperable cultural barriers on arrival.
The actual physical sites of national borders are often chosen for performative artworks by the Belgian artist Francis Alÿs. In a
work called The Green Line (2004), for
example as Israeli soldiers were constructing
a separation fence, Alÿs dribbled a Green
Line of paint along the armistice border of
Jerusalem following an older geo-political
line that had been inscribed on a regional
map in green pen by Moshe Dayan in 1948.
In another work of 2006 called Bridge/
Puente Alÿs attempted a ‘rehearsal’ of transnational collaboration by working with local
fishermen on both sides of the dangerous
90-mile stretch of sea between Havana, Cuba
and the shore of Key West in Florida. Alÿs
filmed their attempts to connect 150 boats
across the sea, which if not quite a bridge, at
least acted as a rehearsal for an imaginary
bridge. This was followed by a later collaborative work with local teenagers in an attempt
to traverse the straits of Gibraltar in 2009
with toy boats.
Involuntary voyages of migration, on the
one hand, as is widely known from the history of the European slave trade have also
been pathways to human misery. The long
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 474
European colonial voyages to Australia on
the other hand, may have had a different purpose, but also resulted in human suffering
that continues into the present. The contemporary Australian artist Gordon Bennett does
not flinch from exploring the legacies of this
earlier phase of global colonization in artworks that ‘adapt’ various Western styles of
representation to confront the primary historical moments of European invasion: its
most overtly violent periods, and the way it
continues to shape the present. Though
Bennett’s works have been justifiably well
received critically, however, Australian
Aboriginal ‘desert’ paintings have a much
stronger international market despite their
participation in the kind of pre-modern symbolic imaginary that though visually compelling, probably very few understand.
The cultural conflicts that arise with global
borders are a complex and difficult imaginary terrain in which different cultural perceptions of gender play a significant role,
especially in relation to the question of the
status of women. This has been explored by
a number of artists, including the Iranian
expatriate artist Sherin Neshat whose photographs and videos trace how women have
experienced the charged encounters between
the cultural codes of dress and behaviour
common to Western cities and those prescribed by Islam. The heightened black and
white contrasts of her photographic series
Women of Allah (1993–7) especially, included
intensely poetic images exploring the ways
Eastern textual traditions impact on women.11
Neshat herself is often the subject of these
works and is dressed in traditional black
chador which signifies both a sign of resistance to Western imperialism and an instrument of female disempowerment. Her bare
hands, feet and face are often inscribed by
Persian script and are combined with images
of modern weapons, not only as icons of
resistance to the West, but also as a sign of
the violent contestations of gender in which
she sees the bodies of women as the primary
battleground (Sheybani, 1999). Neshat’s
video installations such as Turbulent (1998),
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RECONFIGURING PLACE: ART AND THE GLOBAL IMAGINARY
Soliloquy: West/East (1999) typically contrast images of cities in the East and West on
opposite walls and have a similarly subdued
use of colour that heightens their poetic
intensity. Neshat enacts the ways women
have restricted access to the public spaces of
both Eastern and Western cities: in the alienating crowds of the West, and in the claustrophobic enclosures for women in Eastern
cities dominated by minarets.12
The utopian impulse in art gives further
shape and meaning to the possibilities that lie
beyond the social injustices of both repressive
nation states and the callous processes of neoliberal economic globalization. The realist
elements in art, however, can simply amplify
visions of human suffering that are not in any
sense redemptive, and the tragic vision sits
somewhere precariously between darkness
and hope. Hence the outcomes of many stories
of how people approach encounters between
East and West, or the transitions between the
old ways and new, are unknown in ways that
are thrown into sharp relief by the ways contemporary art is adapting to how globalization
reconfigures both local space and the cultural
possibilities of cosmopolitanism.
Nikos Papastergiadis has made the insightful point that Enlightenment models of cosmopolitanism presume ‘the necessary
triumph of reason over the faulty, fleeting
and flighty genius of the imagination’ (2012:
88) yet as he observes, the cosmopolitan
vision is also at its most vivid when the shifts
between the local and the world are in transition. The problem of globalization requires
the reconfiguration of the concept of an
entire world, and this requires both reason
and imagination. And although it is true that
contemporary art works most powerfully
through affect and feeling, it is also shaped
by the legacy of the western Enlightenment,
and not only at the level of innate critique.
The ‘relational’ turn in contemporary art,
or to reconfigurations of the cultural imaginary, are based on an essentially humanist
sense of global interdependence. But these
humanist visions also bear the signs of an
older way of thinking about the world which
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 475
475
I have suggested have their basis in the spatial model in which the core of the city is
privileged over its periphery, and the nonhuman world is relegated to the margins of
civilization. This social construction of
space, however, must now contend with the
imperatives of reason and scientific consensus on the problem of global climate change.
And I would now like to turn to a discussion
of how the spatial imaginaries of contemporary art have begun to respond to this historically unprecedented shift in the perception of
global space.
OUTSIDE THE BOUNDARIES
Once there were brook trout in the streams in the
mountains. You could see them standing in the
amber current where the white edges of their fins
wimpled softly in the flow. They smelled of moss
in your hand. Polished and muscular and torsional.
On their backs were vermiculate patterns that
were maps of the world in its becoming. Maps
and mazes. Of a thing which could not be put
back. Not be made right again. In the deep glens
where they lived all things were older than man
and they hummed of mystery. (Cormac McCarthy,
The Road (2006)
Climate change will impact on the global
poor in more immediate and profound ways
than on those of us in wealthy countries since
‘those who contribute least to global warming are both facing the most severe consequences and have the least capacity to cope’
(Burgmann and Baer, 2012: 3). And as we
have seen, contemporary art is concerned
with issues of social injustice that often focus
on actual national borders and other impermeable barriers to social equality, so it is
likely that it will also respond to migrations
caused by climate change. The added complication of how the viability of such national
borders might shift in relation to climate
change is suggested by Robyn Eckersley’s
view that ‘only the state can tackle the ecological myopia of the market’ (2004: 82). Yet
Eckersley also acknowledges that all nation
states are committed to growth in ways that
are bound up with international capital, and
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these are the crucial ‘contradictory imperatives’ that prevent decisive action in the mitigation of climate change (2004: 102). Such
difficult contradictions, moreover, may well
be intensified by the grass-roots activism that
has undoubtedly influenced national policies
on climate change, particularly if they gain
momentum by consolidating global networks
of communication and solidarity (Burgmann
and Baer, 2012). So whilst it is clear that
climate change will heighten global injustice,
it also has potential as a catalyst of change.
Hence the prospect of what Ulrich Beck
described as a ‘world risk society’ (Beck,
1999) threatened by global climate change
has the potential to galvanize a global imaginary that enables us to think beyond the
exigencies of time and place
Art collectives such as the British based
Cape Farewell project (Buckland et al. 2006)
and individual artists have begun to support
global grass-roots activism in response to
climate change. A case in point was when the
British artist John Quigley travelled to the
Arctic with a team from Greenpeace to make
Melting Vitruvian Man (2011): a copy of
Leonardo da Vinci’s iconic humanist image
of Vitruvian Man (c.1487) which Quigley
copied and inscribed on a massive scale on
the surface of the icecap. The giant figure
gradually began to melt, and this process was
documented in aerial photographs. Hence,
this definitively humanist figure that represents the concept of man as the measure of
all things gradually melted and lost definition
on the polar icecap. Quigley’s figure of man
deteriorated in a way that called into question
the contemporary status of the image of the
human as something separate from the nonhuman world, whilst also dramatizing the
anthropogenic causes of global warming.
In a further example, the issue of how the
use of carbon-based fuels exacerbates global
warming was a process highlighted quite literally by the French art duo HeHe in their
effective urban environmental art work
Nuage Vert in Helsinki during February
2008. The artists took advantage of the fact
that the coal-fuelled Salmisaari power station
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 476
is located in the centre of Helsinki, which
meant that when they used laser tracking to
project a green light onto the toxic vapour
coming from the chimneys of the plant, this
could be seen by everyone in the city. During
the event, the public responded by decreasing their electricity consumption and participated in ‘growing’ the green cloud.13 Nuage
Vert is a good example of what could be
called fast track environmental art, or the
kind of art that makes a simple point very
effectively to a wide public without becoming didactic. Public art, however, like architecture, is often compromised by function
and urban policies or simply by financial
restraints, and artists must also respond to
contextual histories of local space. These are
issues that a complex international environmental artwork such as the Australian-based
Spatial Dialogues (2012–14) project has
encountered in dialogues between artists in
Melbourne, Shanghai and Tokyo about the
important role of water in these cities.
Like artists addressing themes of cosmopolitanism in art, environmental artists face
the problem of how the poetic qualities of art
may be compromised by art that insists it is
‘about’ environmental issues and hence
instructs the viewer rather than offering the
spatial correlatives of new imaginaries.
Contemporary art has, on occasions, the
capacity to effectively deconstruct and
replace spatial correlatives of how multinational companies cross national borders to
impose their global brands on the city. Artists
in Ho Chi Minh City, for example, collaborated with the Superflex international art
collaborative to produce an exemplary work
of this genre with Flooded McDonald’s
(2009). These artists reconstructed a perfect
replica of a generic McDonald’s ‘non-place’
in a swimming pool, which they then slowly
flooded with water and filmed. The film can
be seen on You Tube, but is also often projected onto gallery walls.14 Whilst the connections between multi-national agribusiness,
global climate change and rising sea levels
are clear enough in this work (Williams,
2011: 13), its 20-minute projected video loop
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RECONFIGURING PLACE: ART AND THE GLOBAL IMAGINARY
is particularly effective because it is actually
quite amusing to watch Ronald McDonald
waving involuntarily before slowly sinking
beneath the deluge of water as the burgers,
shakes and fries are reduced to mush.
Humour is generally under-valued by artists
dealing with processes of globalization, which
is not to imply, of course, that environmental
degradation should in any way be seen as a bad
joke, but rather that humour is an effective way
of condensing a great deal of serious critical
reflection on human folly into an entertaining
artwork. There are no aesthetic rules, moreover, insisting that serious art and political
critique cannot be entertaining. The culturejamming activists The Yes Men are a good
example of how humour and entertainment
can be used to great political effect, particularly in the way they set up fake websites for
multinational companies with exploitative
practices they dislike.15 These websites have
led to them receiving invitations to present at
conferences as the official ‘representatives’ of
multinational companies or to address mainstream media (such as CNN or the BBC). They
are quite convincing in their performances and
this infuriates the global companies they send
up, as is clear from the preamble to their latest
film The Yes Men Save The World.
Further to the contradictions in global systems of profit when markets expand to the
point where production outstrips demand,
James O’Connor identified a second contradiction of capitalism as the over-exploitation
of resources exacerbated by a consumerbased economy that leads to the destruction
of the environment (1998: 317). That such a
contradiction presents the possibility of a
potentially irredeemable demise for the current global financial system is a difficult
enough problem, given that the ones who will
suffer most immediately will be the world’s
poor. But it also presents a much more profound problem in the context of the emerging
global extinction events which could completely transform our current understanding
of what it means to be impoverished.
In the last twenty years or so contemporary
artists have followed shifts in philosophy and
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 477
477
critical theory reassessing the status of our
relationship with animals (Baker, 2000; Wolfe,
2003), and this is aligned with a new field of
scholarship in human-animal relations.17 This
turn to the animal has recently extended to the
issue of global species extinction, a dark new
aesthetic of loss and profound nostalgia. If the
prevailing global view of non-human others is
summed up well enough by Mary Mellor’s
phrase ‘parasitical transcendence’ (1997:191),
the spatial correlatives of this view are similarly bound by the conventional urban spatial
logic of inclusion and exclusion in which the
spaces of industrialized animal production
and slaughter, for example, are relegated to
the margins of the city, and hence to the
periphery of the social imaginary.
It is true that many companion animals live
in cities, along with those in zoos or global
media networks conveying a perpetual stream
of images of the non-human world beyond the
city. It is also the case that gardens, market
gardens and other green places exist in the
contemporary cities, especially in cities like
Stuttgart with its green roofs, or in other cities
with urban forests. But just as urban taps supply water, or supermarket shelves provide
food, these are basically the products of an
instrumentalist approach to nature, or the idea
of nature as a ‘resource’ which is generally
imagined, in Tim Morton’s phrase, in a place
somewhere ‘over there’ (Morton, 2007). This
is a form of categorization that somehow
elides the scientific case for the human body
as a part of nature, as well as separating nature
from its relations with the social, and hence
one that avoids the recognition of unforeseen
consequences of those relations in ecological
degradation and loss of biodiversity.
Perhaps in some ways it could be said that
this model of nature is analogous to Henri
Lefebvre’s concept of an ‘absolute space’ of
nature, or ‘first nature’ before it is transformed by socio-historical production.
Particularly since Lefebvre wrote at a point
in the mid twentieth century when nature and
culture still remained distinct enough categories for him to remark on how little of this
kind of primary space was left:
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Natural Space is disappearing […it] has not
vanished purely and simply from the scene …
everyone wants to protect and save nature … at
the same time everything conspires to harm it. The
fact is that nature will soon be lost to view … lost
to thought … True nature is resistant, and infinite
in its depths, but it has been defeated, and now
waits only for its ultimate violence and destruction.
(1991: 30–1)
And as David Harvey has observed more
recently, there is now nowhere in global space
that is not subject to regimes of late capitalism.
Yet as Lefebvre reminds us ‘space is not a
thing but rather a set of relationships between
things’ (Lefebvre, 1991: 83). And though from
certain contemporary eco-theoretical positions
his model of nature pays too little attention to
the ontological status of a non-human world
independent of human discursivity, it is
through his emphasis on the relational and
social production of space that Lefebvre makes
his most valuable observations on the city, and
to the human capacity to transform concepts of
nature. On this view, space is not an essence
but rather active, operational and instrumental,
it is anything but neutral, and hence very little
else is more profoundly contested.
I suggested earlier that the roots of the
notion of a bio-political regime of the city as
somehow more or less independent of the
world outside were very likely formed at a
time when the actual walls of the city were
emblems of the protection against the uncivilized world beyond. These relations arose in
classical antiquity in the disparities of power
evident in how provincial economies were
regarded as entirely subsidiary to the economic requirements and political will of the
city. If the medieval monasteries to some
extent ameliorated the idea of the inferiority
of rural life, the subsidiary status of rural
economies was nonetheless sustained in
medieval principalities with their exacting
tithe systems and serfdom, and consolidated
in the early modern model of the city where
what lay beyond the city walls was not only
uncivilized, but essentially marginal to the
life of the city. These were the dominant spatial correlatives of a Western social imaginary
28_Steger et al_Ch-28.indd 478
in which cultural cosmopolitanism provided
a countervailing tradition.
An even more fundamental social imaginary
defined the human as an ontologically distinct
category from the rest of the non-human world.
The counter-narratives that critiqued this image
of the human were evident by the time of
Montaigne in the sixteenth century, and continued in later cultural movements. This was especially the case with romanticism, which despite
Morton’s view of its complicity with modern
instrumentalism, formed important countervailing cultural images. The contemporary development of such traditions in environmental art
effectively participates in an innate critique of
the dominant spatial logic of modernity, and
arises in the nascent cultural formations of environmentalism in response to global climate
change. More than any other cultural formation,
the development of the arts and critical theory in
response to global climate change will require
new ontological models, and are likely to be the
most crucial cultural signs of a reconfigured
global imaginary, and hence of a possible reconfiguration of global space.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1 In what ways are human processes of globalization constituted by the non-human world?
2 From the perspective of global cities, how do we
view the ways in which the life of the city is dependent on the non-urban spaces beyond the city fringe?
3 In what ways does environmental art communicate the findings of science and the problem of
global climate change more effectively than the
publication of scientific data?
NOTES
1
2
Lefebvre too, developed a theory of ‘Rhythmanalysis’ in response to how bodies respond to
urban space. (Lefebvre, 1996: 219–40)
It should be noted that there have been several
major art exhibitions on the theme of the global
city including the large travelling exhibition
Cities on the Move (1997–9) and others at the
Tate Modern such as Century City (2001) and
Global Cities (2007).
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RECONFIGURING PLACE: ART AND THE GLOBAL IMAGINARY
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
CittaSlow developed out of the slow food
movement that emerged in resistance to the
McDonaldization of food culture. A city population of fewer than 50,000 is required for full
membership, though larger cities are admitted
as CittaSlow supporters.
http://www.hsbc.com/news-and-insight/2012/
connecting-customers-to-opportunities
(Accessed December 11, 2012).
http://www.bonhams.com/press_release/10510/
(Accessed January 5, 2013). The privately owned
Bonhams is one of the world’s oldest and most
prestigious auctioneers of fine art and antiques.
Based in London, it has offices throughout the
world.
http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/19513/
lot/167/ (Accessed January 5, 2013).
http://www.flickr.com/photos/biennalesydney/
6398372297/ (Accessed January 10, 2013). In
response to a meeting of heads of state in
2011, the Australian press did remark that
China was in a position to laugh off Australian
concerns with China’s record on human rights.
Available at: <http://www.smh.com.au/world/
china-laughs-off-human-rights-concerns20110426-1dv4k.html.> http://www.theage.
com.au/national/beijing-officials-laughed-offaustralian-concerns-20110426-1dv7a.html
(Accessed January 12, 2013).
This is the central question of Lefebvre’s Right
to the City (Lefebvre, 1996).
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BseB8EL01_
A> (Accessed January 5, 2013).
Neshat’s first feature film, the award winning
Women without Men (2009) in many ways
extends the narrative themes of her artworks.
Helsingin Energia is now at the forefront of
energy companies responding to environmental
concerns by providing updates about energy
consumption on-line.
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V62898
zojKU> (Accessed January 7,2013).
The website <http://theyesmen.org/ > (Accessed
January 5, 2013).
http://blip.tv/visionontv/the-yes-men-fix-the-worldfull-film-3940882> (Accessed January 5, 2013).
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