[spectre] re: art from islamic countries at MoMart
Geert Lovink
geert at xs4all.nl
Thu Mar 30 13:18:21 CEST 2006
> http://www.counterpunch.org/farhat03252006.html
MoMA's Without Boundary Exhibit
Contemporary "Islamic" Art in Context
By MAYMANAH FARHAT
In the current wave of heightened interest in Islam and the Middle
East, the Museum of Modern Art in New York presents Without Boundary:
Seventeen Ways of Looking.
The exhibition opened February 26, 2006. The work of fifteen artists
born in the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia is featured in an
attempt to shed light on the classification, production and discourse
of contemporary "Islamic" art. The artists of Without Boundary live and
work in Europe or the United States but remain connected to their
native countries in varying degrees.
According to the exhibition's curator, Fereshteh Daftari, in a catalog
essay titled "Islamic or Not," "The application of a term without clear
definition to artists exhibiting in the global mainstream needs closer
scrutiny." She articulates that the term "Islamic" is, "loaded with
political and religious subtexts, and yet it has been applied to
artists who would not necessarily use it to describe their own work,
who do not live permanently in Islamic areas, and who produce art for
European and American art spaces in which Muslim visitors are only a
fraction of their audience."
Daftari attempts to test the validity of the term "Islamic" and the
shortcomings of such classification by exhibiting and examining the
work of artists considered at the forefront of contemporary art. The
exhibition features the work of Jananne Al-Ani, Ghada Amer, Kutlug
Ataman, the Atlas Group/Walid Raad, Mona Hatoum, Shirazeh Houshiary,
Pip Horne, Emily Jacir, Y.Z. Kami, Rachid Koraïchi, Shirin Neshat,
Marjane Satrapi, Shirana Shahbazi, and Raqib Shaw and Shahzia Sikander.
In addition, the works of American artists Bill Viola and Mike Kelley
are included to "further provoke" the question, what is contemporary
Islamic art?
The exhibition is divided into three subtopics through which Daftari
aims to address the definition of contemporary Islamic art. She does so
through the artistic examinations of formal attributes, questions of
identity, and explorations of faith. Such attributes, Daftari argues,
are recognized by the West as characteristically "Islamic."
Daftari outlines the artistic parallels that connect the seventeen
artists as being based on a tie, "not in ethnicity or religion, but in
their way of revising, subverting, and challenging the aesthetic
traditions they deal with and of bringing preconceived notions of
cultural homogeneity to ruin." She is correct in her assessment of the
term and current art historical discourse and while the work of Without
Boundary does revise and challenge conceptions of "Islamic" aesthetic
traditions, the exhibition as a whole fails to bring preconceived
notions of cultural homogeneity to ruin.
Art in all societies is not produced under isolated circumstances. A
more acute observation revels that art is in fact often a direct
reflection of society. This connection is highly visible in the works
of Without Boundary, which possess underlying themes of social
commentary. The society which the artists comment on is the "Islamic"
world. This aspect of the exhibition is perplexing in the sense that
the artists are presented as living and working in the West and
impacting Western culture and society. Daftari aims to expose the
drawbacks of classifying these artists and their work under the one
dimensional term "Islamic," yet through the exhibition the artists are
only allotted the opportunity to comment on "Islamic" society. If the
artists of Without Boundary do in fact represent an emerging trend in
the mainstream Western art scene where they are no longer seen as
"other" and their ideas are able to move freely across national,
cultural and societal borders, then why aren't they provided the forum
to comment on this society in which they live?
In order to deconstruct the Western classification of contemporary
"Islamic" art, as Daftari first suggested, one must begin by answering
several questions regarding issues that affect the West and its
subsequent shaping of the mainstream art world and art history. What
definitions characterize the term "Islamic" when it is used by
academia, institutions and galleries of the mainstream art world? How
have such definitions influenced the type of reception contemporary
"Islamic" artists receive? As social agents of culture, how do the
actions of academia, institutions and galleries reflect Western
conceptions of the "Islamic" world and the greater political and
economic policies of the West towards "Islamic" nations?
Such questions remain unaddressed by Without Boundary. Instead, the
work in the exhibition is positioned within an explicit agenda, one
determined by Western-centric tendencies and American political
rhetoric. Unable to discard the influence of such framework, Without
Boundary and the discourse accompanying it, provide little evidence of
having transcended preconceived notions of "Islamic" cultural
homogeneity.
Despite the fact that Daftari initially outlines in the catalog essay
the need for reexamination of the term "Islamic," the most significant
and obvious pitfall of the exhibition is the fact that the origins of
prevailing preconceived notions are left unexplored. She deliberately
avoids addressing American and European influence and activity in the
Middle East and Central Asia over the past century and the direct link
between such sociopolitical issues and the definition of the term.
In regards to immediate history, Bush's "War on Terror," the violent
occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the subsequent political and
economic consequences that have affected several "Islamic" nations and
their expatriates are completely ignored. Such consequences are
directly tied to current and past perceptions of the "Islamic" world by
academia and the American public. In spite of this context, Without
Boundary presents its audience with an exhibition that refuses to
acknowledge that its conception reflects an increasing interest in the
Middle East and Islam that is tied to American military and economic
dominance.
The discourse surrounding the exhibition not only avoids these
realities but actually propagates the exact notions of the "Islamic"
world Daftari initially set out to combat.
Two prime examples of this discourse are a catalog essay, "Another
Country" written by Homi Bhabha, and the editorial, "Gained in
Translation" written by Glenn D. Lowry, the director of the Museum of
Modern Art, for ARTnews Online.
Although Lowry and Bhabha intended to place the work of Without
Boundary within discussions of profound contemporary visual art, broad
generalizations are made that obscure fact and reality, subsequently
supporting the idea that the "East" or "Islamic" world is characterized
by nothing more than dictatorships, backwardness, religious
conservatism and homogeneity. Through such characterization, the
"multidimensional" nature of the art work in Without Boundary is then
attributed to the mere fact that the artists have lived and worked in
the United States and Europe, insinuating notions of Western cultural,
academic, political and economic supremacy.
These notions work to maintain art of the "Islamic" world as secondary
to its Western counterpart. In "Gained in Translation" Lowry includes a
discussion of the individual pedigrees of each artist, emphasizing that
the artists of Without Boundary are "part of a sophisticated and
growing population of émigrés from the Islamic world who live in the
West." He affirms that they are, "well educated and come from mostly
solidly middle- or upper-class families." What are the intentions of
his discussion of class and education? Must the director of MOMA
justify exhibiting "Islamic" artists through such standards? He then
enunciates that the artists discussed "form a counterpoint to the
disenfranchised, often poorly educated, and marginalized Muslims living
in France, Germany, and England." By doing so, he assures readers that
MOMA and the mainstream art world are not straying from bourgeois
qualifications that equate "sophistication" and intelligence with high
economic standing.
Lowry's statements beg several questions. Why are there
disenfranchised, poorly educated, and marginalized Muslims in France,
Germany and England? What historical and political events have taken
place affecting such a large demographic that is scattered from its
native countries? To have a counterpoint to such populations is to
imply an imbalance in educational and economic standing. Who or what is
responsible for such imbalance?
Lowry leaves these statements unqualified. Instead, September 11th is
evoked to detract from dealing with these pertinent issues, despite the
fact that they are instrumental in how "Islamic" cultures and
communities are perceived. Lowry writes, "the problem of defining
oneself in this world is extremely difficult, especially in the wake of
the terrorist attacks first in New York City and Washington, D.C., and
later in Madrid and London, and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq."
Lowry's evocation parallels the distraction tactics of the American
media via the condemnation of "Islam." Fueled by the "War on Terror,"
the entire "Islamic" world is held accountable for recent attacks on
Western targets, which then justifies American military action in the
Middle East and Central Asia.
Lowry continues his analysis through the archetypical Orientalist lens
that uses broad generalizations to distinguish the "Islamic" world as
completely "other" in contrast to the West; "given the conservative
nature of many Islamic countries-with their restrictive policies
concerning freedom of expression, political activism, nudity, sex,
religious debate, and homosexuality, among other social and cultural
issues-they offer difficult, even impossible environments for artists
who make challenging artIt is largely for this reason that all of the
artists under discussion live and practice primarily outside their
countries of birth." Ironically, the "restrictive policies" Lowry
attributes as being specifically "Islamic" are the exact topics in
question in the continuing battle concerning American civil liberties.
No mention is made of the fact that artists in America are living and
working under the Bush administration's deliberate political attack on
freedom of expression, political activism, and freedom of sexuality.
With such statements, Lowry places Western societies, religions and
governments as superior to "Islamic" counterparts. He even goes as far
to state that some Muslims, "acknowledge the democratic systems of the
West but struggle to balance that appreciation against a religion that
they feel leaves little room for liberal values." What are the "liberal
values" Lowry is referring to? Are they the exact American "liberal
values" currently in question in the U.S.?
Like Lowry, Bhabha's analysis of the exhibition is also determined by
prevailing notions. He begins his catalog essay by affirming that a
discussion of Islam today invokes "the age of terror," what he
describes as, "the calling up of the Abu Ghraib album, the televised
beheading of an American businessman, and many other entries in the
musee macabre of war and terror." With such a statement, the "Islamic"
world is portrayed as the perpetrator of mass violence that has made
its way into the global psyche. The events associated with current
invocations of Islam are described as though they occurred in isolated
circumstances; "war and terror" are not contextualized in the greater
scheme of contemporary history.
The "musee macabre of war and terror" images Bhabha speaks of are
directly tied to the American invasion and occupation of Iraq, yet
there is no discussion of this. Bhabha stresses that the artists of the
exhibition, "offer us a way out of the prison house of the culture of
torture and 'security'." One can argue that without discussion or
exploration of the origins and affiliations of such preconceived
notions of "Islam today" the work showcased in Without Boundary offers
not a way out for viewers but an escape from the reality of American
presence in the "Islamic" world. In order to shed what Bhabha calls
"the prison house of the culture of torture and 'security'," viewers
must be engaged within a discussion of the current state of affairs we
face in the polarized "West vs. East" global society, which is directly
responsible for such a "prison house."
Bhabha's analysis of Mona Hatoum's Keffieh, 1993-1999, continues to
support Western predominant notions of Middle Eastern and "Islamic"
cultures. "The keffieh--the cotton headscarf worn by Middle Eastern
men--has developed a macho aura in the Palestine culture of political
resistance." He goes on to state, "the macho style is an externalized
response to the powers of oppression and domination; but it is also a
form of domination turned inward, within the community, poised against
the presence and participation of women, whose voices are repressed or
sublimated in the cause of the struggle." Bhabha's statement completely
obscures the reality of the Palestinian struggle in which women are
active, if not central, participants of the self-determined political
movement of their people. Additionally, within Palestinian visual art,
literature, and culture in general, the female figure often lends way
to allegorical representations of homeland, equating women as the most
revered embodiment of the struggle.
To associate the keffieh with oppression and male dominance is to
dispel the need for an examination of the larger sociopolitical
picture. Bhabha's analysis steers the discussion of the violation of an
entire people towards an internal issue of gender. Such an analysis is
similar to examples of Western discourse which focus on the oppression
of women in the Middle East and the "Islamic" world, while ignoring the
need for an examination of the broader political and economic
oppression that has resulted from the actions of regional, American and
European governments.
Without Boundary and the discourse surrounding the exhibition
demonstrate the desperate need for an extensive and critical
examination of the mainstream art world. Art historical definitions
used by academia, institutions and galleries remain imbedded in the
cultural and social hierarchies that have resulted from the colonial
and imperial geopolitical policies and activities of Western nations in
Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, Africa and the Pacific Islands.
These policies have been primary factors in the denigrated
classification, documentation and representation of art and visual
culture created by non-Western populations. The political, theological,
ethnic and class biases of institutionalized art activity today must be
held accountable for defining non-Western cultures as inferior.
Maymanah Farhat writes about Modern and Contemporary Arab art for
ArtEast. She can be contacted at sccheeto at yahoo.com
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