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While the notion of theory has its own complex genealogy, one
rooted in the critical rejection of philosophys disciplinary autonomy,
the American term French Theory bears its own particular connotations. Whatever critical purchase theory may once have had as a counter
to the perceived exclusions or biases of Anglo-American academic philosophy, its generality erased differences between figures with varying
degrees of allegiance to philosophy as a discipline. In this sense, theory
was liable to function as a rather empty negative category, not unlike
the qualifier French, which may have amounted to little more than a
sign of otherness, a type of luxury import. Ultimately, the philosophical
implications of French Theoryhowever these may have been construedwere in many ways overshadowed by its transformation into a
battlefield during the so-called theory wars: the De Man affair, the
Sokal hoax, the tenure battles, the diatribes in liberal journals like the
New York Review of Books.7
Theory was embracedand resistedwith similar intensity
across the various precincts of the US art world. Nowhere was this
more evident than in the reception of Jean Baudrillards work during
the mid-1980s. In 1983, Baudrillard toured American universities to
promote a new translation of Simulations under the Semiotext(e)
imprint. After meager turnout, his editor Sylvre Lotringer suggested
they target an art audience instead. The book soon went viral; as one
curator would later tell Lotringer, within two years, everyone had read
Simulations.8 In part due to persistent misinterpretation, Baudrillards
readership crossed parochial borders. He was cited by curators exhibiting appropriation art; he was cited by painters promoting themselves as
simulationists; he was cited by critics of spectacle and neo-fascism.
Baudrillards 1987 lectures in New York City attracted thousands, but
also inspired a polemical counterexhibition by the artists collective
Group Material, titled Resistance (Anti-Baudrillard).9
7 Franois Cusset provides a useful intellectual history of this reception in French Theory:
How Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze, & Co. Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States,
trans. Jeff Fort (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008). For a contemporary
perspective on one of these episodes, see Jacques Derrida, The Work of Intellectuals
and the Press (The Bad Example: How The New York Review of Books and Company Do
Business), in Points . . . : Interviews 19741994, ed. Elisabeth Weber, trans. Peggy Kamuf
(Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1995), 42254.
8 As cited by Cusset, French Theory, 235.
9 For documentation of this exhibition, see Julie Ault, ed., Show and Tell: A Chronicle of
Group Material (London: Four Corners Books, 2010), 11819.
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10 Recent Anglophone scholarship on the exhibition can be found in a special issue of Tate
Papers devoted to Landmark Exhibitions, Tate Papers 12 (Autumn 2009), accessed
December 6, 2012, http://www.tate.org.uk/research/publications/tate-papers/issue-12.
Lyotards most explicit account of the thinking behind the exhibition can be found in his
interview with Bernard Blistne, Les Immatriaux: A Conversation with Jean-Franois
Lyotard, Flash Art 121 (March 1985): 32-35.
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Such reformulations need to account for the considerable differences that separate conditions of reception, but also for the fact that
Art Theory has itself been taken up by the culture industry, most
famously in the various product placements and cameos featured in
the trilogy of Matrix films, whose basic premise is overtly Baudrillardian. Interestingly, some of the most provocative responses to this conjuncture have come not from theorists, but from artists like Thomas
Hirschhorn, who has constructed shrine-like monuments to philosophers as a self-described fan of theory. We can hope that such an
approach might succeed in identifying and resisting the manifold risks
of Art Theory celebrity (a lure that Hirschhorn himself cannot be said
to have avoided entirely). Many of these dangers are posed by the structural position that Art Theory occupies, irrespective of its content, at
the unstable intersection among experimental art, critical philosophy,
pop culture, the academy, and the art publicity apparatus. Some pertain
to what De Man famously diagnosed as the resistance to theory;
others to the seemingly ever-shortening cycles of hype and backlash,
which often track the vicissitudes of the market, rather than the more
gradual, deliberative tempos of judgment.
This overdetermined conjuncture suggests that we proceed carefully in evaluating Badious recent success in the American art world,
which must be understood within this context but nevertheless cannot
fully be explained by it. While there might well be a quasi-structural
need for a new French Theorist to emerge every so often in the United
States, such conditions obviously do not prevail in the same way elsewhere. And however we might schematize the forces driving the market for Art Theory, these tell us little about Badious own qualifications
for the position.
In fact, there is very little about this particular philosophers output that makes his popularization seem to have been in any way predictable, let alone preordained. It is commonly noted that a central
feature of Badious philosophical output is its formidable level of technicality. Unlike the work of virtually all other celebrated exponents of
French Theory, Badious systematic philosophy is largely restricted to
those conversant in advanced mathematics. This is paradigmatically so
for his major work, Being and Event; one neednt have read Heidegger to
comprehend this text, but one must understand Cantorian set theory.
As critics like Peter Osborne have argued, both the content and form
of Being and Event forsake the transdisciplinary tendencies of much
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11 See Peter Osborne, Neo-classic: Alain Badious Being and Event, Radical Philosophy 142
(March/April 2007): 19-29.
12 As cited by Cusset, French Theory, xiv.
theory in order to stage a return to what is in many ways a deeply traditional model of philosophy.11
If such concerns would seem altogether remote from questions of
art, this is even more so of the texts central objectiveto refound
ontology through a mathematical analysis of multiplicity. It is of course
true that Badiou has published texts on art apart from the Fifteen
Theses, most notably the collection Handbook of Inaesthetics (2004).
However, such works would also appear to have relatively little pertinence to many of the key debates around contemporary art. Like Being
and Event, the Handbook is motivated by a strong investment in
Platonism, such that the aesthetic is understood primarily as the vehicle for the apprehension of truths. While Badious definition of truth is
not what it might first appear, it is still unclear why art might need to
align itself with truth seekingas opposed to persuasion, inquiry, or
negation. Any confusion over the potential relevance of this approach
is only amplified by Badious choice of objects, which are exclusively
European and almost classically modernist: Mallarm, Malevich,
Beckett.
These problems would seem to admit two possible explanations,
the first of which is that the inaccessibility of Badious thought is in
some sense its attraction. It is not just that difficulty is often taken as
proof of the writers credibility or the readers prowess. Rather, a certain
degree of opacity can enable the sorts of productive misreadingsor
structural misunderstandings, to use Pierre Bourdieus termthat
have characterized the reception of French Theory.12 Such dynamics
might well be amplified by the legend of Badious militancy, given his
well-documented involvement with the militant left in post-1968
France. On this view, Badious actual philosophy matters less than his
image, which functions as a screen upon which readers might imagine
some potential union between theory and radical praxis.
A less skeptical explanation is that certain of Badious commitments do in fact intersect current debates but do so from an oblique
angle, thus appealing to those who might wish to signal their dissatisfaction with what they take to be prevailing critical orthodoxy. On this
view, Badious overtly idealist model of nonimperial art might appeal to
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those who wish to break from the position avowed by Hardt and Negri,
with its fusion of post-Marxist and Spinozan materialisms. His unapologetic universalism could appeal to those who wish to contest the conflicted legacies of 1980s multiculturalism or 1990s identity politics,
whether from the right or from the left. His advocacy of formalism
could push back against ostensibly didactic art, while also proving
timely at a moment when abstract painting is enjoying yet another
resurgence.
Though it is altogether unclear what sort of cogent critical program such impulses might add up to, if any, they would seem largely
incompatible with many of the current debates on critical art given
their persistent disavowal of context. It is hard to imagine what
Badious aesthetic positions might contribute to the theorization of
social practice, artistic research, or new documentary forms. Of the
many contradictions that characterize Badious reception in the
American art world, perhaps the strangest is that an unapologetically
Maoist philosopher would be celebrated for an aesthetics that conspicuously avoids any encounter with Marx, while skirting nearly all of the
issues associated with neo-Marxian criticism.
Given these circumstances, one can imagine numerous reasons why
contemporary Middle Eastern artists would want to leave Badiou, or
simply disregard him. While many of these concern his specific philosophical positions, a more immediate problem is the array of power
relations that his proper name represents, and even enacts. In other
words, we first need to recognize that the name Badiou carries a certain force prior to any specific philosophical utterance made by the
person Alain Badiou, solely by virtue of its position within certain discursive fieldsa considerable irony, given Badious own critique of
naming.13 If this operation exemplifies what Foucault termed the
author function, its ultimate implications are not hermeneutic but
geopolitical, extending well beyond whatever we might be able to
extrapolate from the example of Badious American reception.14
In order to gauge these effects, we therefore have to account for a
third displacement. This Badiou is neither a philosopher working in
13 As, for example, in chapter 2 of Badious Metapolitics, trans. Jason Barker (London: Verso,
2005), 2657. Thanks to Anthony Gardner for this observation.
14 Michel Foucault, What Is an Author?, in The Foucault Reader, ed. Paul Rabinow, trans.
Josu V. Harari (New York: Pantheon, 1984), 11819.
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15 Overviews of these developments can be found in the following texts: Liam Gillick,
Maybe It Would Be Better If We Worked in Groups of Three? Part 1 of 2: The Discursive, e-flux journal 2 (January 2009), accessed December 6, 2012, http://www.e-flux
.com/journal/maybe-it-would-be-better-if-we-worked-in-groups-of-three-part-1-of-2-thediscursive/; and Curating and the Educational Turn, ed. Paul ONeill and Mick Wilson
(London: Open Editions, 2010).
16 For a thorough account of the Havana Biennial as an exhibition model, see Rachel Weiss
et al., Making Art Global (Part 1): The Third Havana Biennial 1989 (London: Afterall
Books, 2011).
17 A similar bias can be said to inflect another currently dominant trend, namely, the reception of autonomist theorists like Paolo Virno and Maurizio Lazzarato. Despite the indisputable timeliness of their work on precaritization, discussion of this topic often centers
on developments in advanced capitalist economies, thereby ignoring the sharply different
standards of precarity that prevail in the Global South.
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cultural difference: while not all fifteen of the participating artists were
Egyptian, all were from the Arab world.
The point was not that this group would somehow speak back to
Badiou as Arabs, as if their ethnicity guaranteed solidarity, or as if they
needed numbers to do so. Rather, it was to insist on the irreducibility of
particularity and historical context, thereby deflating the blithe generality with which Badiou claims that the primary role of art should be to
develop a new sort of universality for humanity in general.18 In fairness, Badious assertion reflects a sense of the dangers posed by the
empty but ubiquitous universals of global capitalism, the greatest of
which is of course the universality of capital itself. However, in calling
for a new universalism, one founded in the presumed mathematical
universality of truth procedures, the philosopher would seem to overlook the possibility that universality might not in fact mean the same
thing everywhere, or that it might always be shadowed by its specific
conditions of articulation.19 (In contrast to Badiou, El Baroni has spoken recently of the need to develop forms of universality that diverge
from the precedents of European modernism and more recent multiculturalism, beset as they are by latent essentialisms.)20
This critical delimitation of the universal resembled the scenario
proposed by the second work in Fifteen Ways, Mahmoud Khaleds
Detailed Studies for Crying Boy, which was paired with Badious second thesis, calling for art to be the impersonal production of a truth
that is addressed to everyone.21 The point of departure for Khaleds
piece was a group of paintings that typically go under the title of Crying
Boy, said to be the work of the Italian postwar painter Bragolin. Some
sixty-odd versions of this sentimental motif were produced for tourists,
many of which were mass-reproduced and distributed worldwide.
Khaleds intervention was to commission new sketches of Crying Boy,
18 Badiou, Fifteen Theses, 13.
19 Such conditions are arguably better explained in the concept of contingent universality,
as developed by theorists like Ernesto Laclau and Judith Butler; see their respective
contributions to Butler, Laclau, and Slavoj Zizek, Contingency, Hegemony, Universality:
Contemporary Dialogues on the Left (London: Verso, 2000).
20 El Baroni elaborates this view in a conversation with Hassan Khan. See Interview With
Bassam El Baroni by Hassan Khan, Art Territories 005, no. 02 (April 2011), accessed
December 6, 2012, http://www.artterritories.net/?page_id=2063. Thanks to Angela
Harutyunyan for this reference.
21 The full version of the thesis is as follows: Art cannot merely be the expression of a particularity (be it ethnic or personal). Art is the impersonal production of a truth that is
addressed to everyone.
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22 The real of art is ideal impurity conceived through the immanent process of its purification. In other words, the raw material of art is determined by the contingent inception of
a form. Art is the secondary formalization of the advent of a hitherto formless form.
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27 There is necessarily a plurality of arts, and however we may imagine the ways in which
the arts might intersect there is no imaginable way of totalizing this plurality. Ibid., 8.
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Taken together, such artworks forcefully rebutted several chronic misconceptions regarding art and philosophy, beginning with the notion
that these fields are somehow incompatible. If they showed that art can
declaration of revolutionary solidarity, the piece instead offers something quite distinct: the visual decomposition of these signs into their
components, accompanied by Issas claim not to understand their differential effects. The end result is a paradoxically rigorous ambiguity,
one quite at odds with the militant self-certainty of vanguardism.
In a textual montage titled On the Plurality of Consciousnesses, Doa
Aly revealed that similar tendencies are at work even in seemingly
opposed moments of the Fifteen Theses. The title directly refers
to the fourth thesis, which holds that the arts are necessarily plural,
and thus cant be assimilated into the totality associated with the
Gesamtkunstwerk.27 Mixing unattributed quotations from nine sources,
which ranged from early anthropology and psychology to French fiction
and Russian folklore, Aly produced a compound text whose narrative
instability seemed at times to mimic the symptoms of the female
hysterics described within. If this gesture highlighted the near-total
absence of gender within Badious aesthetics, it further suggested the
consequences of the philosophers general indifference to questions of
subjectivity.
This line of questioning was pursued further by Hassan Khan in
The Knot, which consisted solely of a reprinted diagram of a knot, used
by the radical psychiatrist R. D. Laing to describe intersubjective relationality. In the accompanying text, Khan argues persuasively that
Badious opposition to expressionistic models of art fails to account for
the highly ambivalent processes by which viewers recognize, respond
to, and interpret artworks. Art both does and does not need us, and
something like the reverse is true as well, at least insofar as art objects
are always also objects in the psychoanalytic sense. As an image of
such entanglement, Khans knot suggested that arts vocation is necessarily more conflicted than Badious twelfth thesis suggests. Art does
not dazzle a classroom, rout the enemy, or twinkle like a star. Rather, it
is in some key way intransigent; it is where antitheses are not sublated
dialectically, but stay stubbornly stuck together.
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30 See, for example, Jasper Bernes and Joshua Clover, History and the Sphinx: Of Riots and
Uprisings, Los Angeles Review of Books (September 2012), accessed November 13, 2012,
http://lareviewof books.org/article.php?id=949&fulltext=1.
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31 Mona Abaza analyzes the functions of street art near Tahrir Square in her article Walls,
Segregating Downtown Cairo and the Mohammed Mahmud Street Graffiti, Theory,
Culture & Society 30, no. 1 (2013): 12239.
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activist projects like Radio Ta7rir and Tahrir Cinema.31 If such forms
received little attention from Western journalists, neither have they
been recognized within art institutions, whether in Egypt or outside.
This was also true of ACAFthe Badiou project basically failed to
incorporate art that aimed to intervene more directly outside the realm
of art, containing few if any examples of (or even references to) activist
art, site-specific public art, or other more openly heteronomous modes.
While this oversight might be traced back to El Baronis decision
to curate the project in the form of a book, that would only beg the
question of why other, more accommodating platforms were not also
integrated. However, before raising such objections we would do well
to consider that the opposition between autonomy and heteronomy
which extends at least as far back as German romanticism, and continues to inform much current thinking on critical artdoes not
automatically translate to contemporary Egypt. Given that the existence
of a largely secular aesthetic sphere could be threatened, one can imagine why El Baroni may have wished to make a qualified case for autonomy, if that was indeed his intention.
All the same, readers of Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou might be
left wondering how this commendable book might have nevertheless
advanced its argument further. It is not that we need more ways to
leave Badiou, however we might define this, or more reasons to be
skeptical of his appealthe book supplies these in abundance, even as
it allows that some modified version of a Badiouian aesthetics might
still deserve our fidelity. What we need instead is a sustained, rigorous
exploration of the ways in which arts singular intransigence might yet
be knotted together with its capacities for theoretical speculation, critical immanence, and decisive action.
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