Here I share different readings I do or videos I watch, and that inspire me. The page will constantly be updated. Further down you find three texts written by me.
source:
https://www.onlineopen.org/what-is-wrong-with-the-vienna-declaration-on-artistic-research
WhatIsWrongwiththeViennaDeclarationonArtisticResearch?
January 21, 2021Essay,2.939 words
In June 2020, theVienna Declaration on Artistic Researchwas published by seven European umbrella organizations for higher art education (representing art schools, conservatories, architecture, and film schools), two art school accreditation bodies, the public arts sector organization Culture Action Europe and the Society for Artistic Research (SAR). TheVienna Declarationis the first international policy document on artistic research, meant to provide concepts and definitions for integrating artistic research into European higher education. According to its authors, it addresses “political decision-makers, funding bodies, higher education and research institutions as well as other organisations and individuals catering for and undertakingAR”. Although theVienna Declarationwill likely become a future constitution and framework for artistic research in European art schools, no public debates of its content seem to have taken place in the six months after its publication. Florian Cramer and Nienke Terpsma think that it is time to speak up– and fundamentally disagree with its concept and framing of artistic research.
‘Artistic Research (AR) is practice-based, practice-led research in the arts which has developed rapidly in the last twenty years globally and is a key knowledge base for art education in Higher Arts Education Institutions (HAEIs).’
‘ARis well suited to inspire creative and innovative developments in sectors such as health and wellbeing, the environment and technology, thus contributing to fulfilling theHEIS’ “third mission”.ARmust be seen as having a unique potential in the development of the “knowledge triangle.”’
‘Within this frame,ARis aligned in all aspects with the five main criteria that constitute Research & Development in the Frascati Manual.’
‘HAEIs operate predominately within a research context and have a responsibility to conductAR. It is also common forHAEIs to interact with related enterprise Research & Development, and to contribute directly to the creation of intellectual property in arts, entertainment and media through research practice.’
‘This environment requires funding for: educating the next generation of researchers through doctoral programmes; ensuring appropriate physical and virtual infrastructures as well as archiving and disseminating means; building links with business and enterprise in order to stimulate the impact of research.’
‘ARis validated through peer review covering the range of disciplinary competences addressed by the work. Quality assurance is undertaken by recognised independent, internationalQAbodies and assures the standards described in the European Standards and Guidelines (ESG2015) for Quality Assurance in the European Higher Education Area.’
‘[T]he establishment ofARas an independent category within the Frascati Manual, establishing the opportunity for harvesting research data and statistics from theARfield.’
This is not conceptual poetry; these are quotes from theVienna Declaration on Artistic Researchsigned on 20 June 2020 by all major organisations of European art schools. Of the many things that rub one the wrong way, two stand out: next to the grotesque neoliberal-bureaucratic language, art schools’ land-grabbing claim to own and define artistic research. Both, of course, done with the best intentions to emancipate artistic research.
TheVienna Declarationdoesn’t mention artists at all; they literally don’t exist in its text.
From Artistic Research to AR; from Descriptions to Prescriptions
For future art education in Europe, theVienna Declarationmay become as influential as theBologna Declarationof 1999 (on whose basis continental European higher education was reorganised into the Anglo-American Bachelor and Master system). It dwells on the same shaky grounds of not actually being a legal text or governmental policy document. Factually, it is a manifesto for institutionalising artistic research at European art schools, by intrinsically linking what in most cases used to be two separatethings:artisticresearchanddoctoralstudyprogrammes.1Written in a language that reads like its own parody, with its abundance of tacky logos reminiscent of spam messages, theVienna Declarationdoesn’t pretend any semblance to a manifesto written by artists in support of artistic research. It is of course (and, for its intended purpose, needs to be) a bureaucratic policy document; but beyond that, it is a constructed foundation myth and institutional power grab.
With theresearch project job openingsassociated with it, theVienna Declarationreframes artistic research as a top-down practice where projects, subjects and research questions formulated by academic institutions and artists need to fit into pre-definedprojectsandcalls,forms,formatsandmethods.2Artists ultimately won’t have the freedom of refusing to participate, because these programmes will be among the few remaining opportunities to be paid for their practice. But what is wrong with new openings for precarious practitioners?
TheVienna Declarationclaims that artistic research is ‘still a relatively young field’, thereby ignoring the long history of artistic research as artists’ self-initiated and self-organised practices.Explicitly– that is, literally under the name ‘artistic research’ – research as an artistic practice has existed for more than sixty years; implicitly for centuries if not millennia.
To give only a few examples, with no pretensions of completeness or lack of bias:
By calling artistic research a ‘young field’, theVienna Declarationmakes us worry that its authors weren’t even aware of the history sketched above, and unfamiliar with many if not most of the artists and artistic research practices mentioned. At least, theVienna Declarationdoesn’t speak their language. We couldn’t phrase it better than the Swiss art researcher Michael Hiltbrunner who, reflecting on Serge Stauffer, wrote in 2019:
Academic priorities and the requirements of thePhDprogramme force current artistic research into an unproductive formalism. Now, studying art means conforming to a system with rules that are not defined in the spirit of art. Moreover, problems lie in the fact that a language of art pedagogy and curatorship is used. [In theVienna Declaration, we should add to Hiltbrunner, not even that.] What is needed is a vocabulary founded in the researching practices of artists themselves.
On top of burdening artistic research with ‘an unproductive formalism’,PhDdegrees as a new focus or centre of artistic research could, in the worst case, mean a regression, since academic standards and accreditation criteria require PhD research to be individually identifiable and gradable, which is structurally incompatible to collective (let alone anonymous-collective) artistic research (such as that of Acéphale,GRM, the Black Audio Film Collective, the Cyberfeminist International, Laboria Cuboniks, ruangrupa and many more). The standard academic requirement for PhD research – independent individual development of original research and original contributions to knowledge – could even create a reactionary rollback within the arts, back to the model of the hyper-individualist, heroic artist-genius. Even without this extreme, we already know examples of artist research collectives that disintegrated after their members went on to pursue individualPhDdegrees.
TheVienna Declaration’spre-emptive obedience to established academic norms (such as peer review and validation) conversely wastes a larger opportunity – namely that of bringing artistic research into academia as a critical trojan horse in order to rethink and revise the standards and research culture of all academic disciplines.
For these and other reasons, we are not against the institutionalisation of artistic research. To quote Hiltbrunner: ‘It is important that artists can conduct research with institutional protection and public payment. Viewed in this light, doctoral study is important for the autonomy of the arts and should therefore be designedinsuchawaythatitisintheinterestoftheartists.’6
The Emperor Is Naked
In its characterisation of artistic ‘research practice’, theVienna Declaration, however, does not refer to the interests of artists, but to the task of ‘HAEIs to interact with related enterprise Research & Development, and to contribute directly to the creation of intellectual property in arts, entertainment and media’. Firstly, this squarely contradicts artistic research practices – such as those of the Situationists – that questioned and even undermined intellectual property.
Secondly, it positions the task of artistic research institutions in neoliberal-technocratic terms as ‘building links with business and enterprise in order to stimulate the impact of research’.
Which artistic research projects then would still have a place in the framework created by theVienna Declaration? Would even widely recognised, canonical examples of fairly scholarly artistic research be admitted? What has been the ‘validation’ of Martha Rosler’sSemiotics of the Kitchen(1975)? Would Adrian Piper’sFunk Lessons(1983) or Hito Steyerl’sLiquidity Inc.(2014) have passed peer reviews? Or built links with business and enterprise? We shouldn’t even mention the experiments of the Surrealists, which in their time were attacked as irresponsible by clinical psychologists – or the use of time travel as a critical artistic research method in Black Quantum Futurism.
When Siegfried Zielinski – former director of the art schoolHfGKarlsruhe and thus experienced in the managerial side of art education – sketched the departments of a future academy, he demonstrated the possibility of alternative visions:
Faculties for an Academy of the 21st Century:
Dignity
Hospitality
Unconditioned dialogue
Unusual activities
Paleofuturism
Phataphysik
Cultura experimentalis
Chaos pilots – Kairos-poets
Critical engineering
Non-censurable systems
Knowledge of the winds/Navigations
Scale/Skalierung
Sustainability
Projections
Variantology
– Siegfried Zielinski, Shanghai Nov 26, 2019
In other words, policy documents, executive language and institutional formatting do not need to be as impoverished and limiting as in theVienna Declaration. Just as any material, they can be tools of self-critique, inspiring and imaginative, food for thought, starting points for artistic imaginations and practices, broadening rather than confining.
‘AR’ as a New (Institutional) Art System
When an innovation develops a network of people who can cooperate nationwide, perhaps even internationally, all that is left to do to create an art world is to convince the rest of the world that what is being done is art, and deserves the rights and privileges associated with that status. At any particular time and place, certain ways of displaying work connote ‘art,’ while others do not. Work that aspires to be accepted as art usually must display a developed aesthetic apparatus and media through which critical discussions can take place. Likewise, aspirants to the status of art have to dissociate themselves from related crafts or commercial enterprises. Finally, aspirants construct histories which tie the work their world produces to already accepted arts, and emphasize those elements of their pasts which are most clearly artistic, while suppressing less desirable ancestors.
–Howard S. Becker,Art Worlds, 2008 [1982]
What are the characteristics of the new system of institutional ‘AR’ as opposed to previous practices of artist-run research?
With theVienna Declarationfocussing on art schools, universities and doctoral degree programmes, its concept of ‘AR’ closely resembles institutional research lab art, or what has been known since the late 1960s under the name ‘Art-Science’. Its origins lie in the journalLeonardo, in electronic music composition at research studios such asIRCAMor the State University of New York at Buffalo, new media and bio art/bio design labs at ars electronica,MITand elsewhere. Only in such environments, ‘AR’ can deliver what is being promised in theVienna Declaration: ‘ARis validated through peer review covering the range of disciplinary competences addressed by the work’, among others after having been published in one of the ‘international peer reviewed scholarly journals in the discipline’.
While such an ‘AR’ system is already in place – and makes sense among others for art school tutors who take temporary leaves from teaching to deepen their research interests and research skills, or for artists who want to pursue a particular research project in an academic environment, with institutional support – it to date has made no monopoly or ownership claims on artistic research. Instead, artistic research in institutional projects has been defined as the individual research contributions of participating artists; in other words, as their way of working, not as something initiated or defined by the institution.
The focus of ‘AR’ on the PhD as an individual, validated degree is doomed to boil down to the exclusion of collective and do-it-yourself practices – and hence the most contemporary forms of artistic research – unless these issues are being addressed from the beginning (which theVienna Declarationdoesn’t).
With educational institutions now claiming ownership of artistic research, and introducing their own quality and validation standards, they factually create their own art system, as described above by Howard Becker. As a result, artistic research will be split into two forms and systems: ‘AR’ in art schools as opposed to artistic research in art practice and art worlds at large.
Is this desirable? We don’t think so. Instead of creating hospitable spaces, infrastructures and institutional recognition for artist-run research initiatives (from theBureau de recherches surréalistesto theCommunity Futures Labof the Afrofuturist Affair in Philadelphia orLifepatchin Indonesia), ‘AR’ is in danger of ending up as its own self-referential system, with artistic researchers and projects that are recognised only within that system, and thesystemservingtheultimatepurposeofpreservingitself7; in other words, a land-grab for an ivory tower.
In its well-meaning attempt to achieve academic and governmental recognition of, and budgets for artistic research, the Vienna Declaration rehashes the worst of technocratic higher education jargon and business rhetoric. Not only does this do, for the sake of short-term political gains, a long-term disservice to artistic research, it also amounts to the very opposite of what traditional scholars and academia expect and hope to gain from artistic research – namely, a different concept and imagination of research than ‘the standards described in the European Standards and Guidelines’.
So What? Now What? Some Loose Ends & Dubious Ideas
Florian Crameris a reader at Willem de Kooning Academy/Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam and volunteer for the Rotterdam-based arts initiatives PrintRoom, De Player and Awak(e). ‘When I worked in university humanities, people were romanticizing the arts – as a realm of unrestrained experimentation, freeing them from the constraints of academic research. When I went on working in an art school, people were romanticizing research – as the last resort of artistic autonomy.’He is author of the bookAnti-Media Ephemera on Speculative Arts(2013) and co-author ofPattern Discrimination(2018).
Nienke Terpsmais an artist and book designer, co-founder and -editor ofFucking Good Art.From the beginning,Fucking Good Artwas learning-by-doing, we founded our ownMAand PhD degrees, and at the same time we are the director, editor in chief, the assistant, coffee lady/man, and toilet cleaner all rolled into one.Prof. Leszek Brogowski, in a symposium on artistic research, stated: “In this joking vein, Robert Hamelijnck and Nienke Terpsma are saying something quite serious, which is that – at root – the form of their art is that of research, a thesis to which I wholeheartedly subscribe. In consequence, I myself, Leszek Brogowski, Professor at the University of Rennes 2, [with this paper] am beginning the process of academic validation of the knowledge produced byFucking Good Art, by considering their work as part of the history and sociology of contemporary art.” (Leszek Brogowski, in “Art and Knowledge: a scientific sharing of meaning. Understanding art worlds throughFucking Good Art”, SymposiumArtcand Research, Shared Methodologies in Artistic Practice, Universitat decBarcelona, Spain, 4-5 december 2014.)
With thanks to:Kristoffer Gansing, Clara Balaguer, Rob Hamelijnck, Michael Hiltbrunner, Renée Turner and Danny Giles for their comments, agreements and disagreements.
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Dear O. or:Towards Aiming of Stopping Choreographing or:tempoarlity, perception, composition or: what?, published August 31st 2018,
Lektio-Letter of the defense of my D.A. (dance), Theater Academy Helsinki