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Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship - autonomous ...

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former west<br />

(building, residents, artist residencies, installations) was more important<br />

than a fi nal exhibition <strong>of</strong> ‘works’. It carries connotations (which would<br />

accelerate in <strong>the</strong> 1990s) <strong>of</strong> art overlapping <strong>and</strong> engaging with <strong>the</strong> social<br />

sphere, ra<strong>the</strong>r than being at one remove from it – more akin to an architectural<br />

project, a particularly apt point <strong>of</strong> reference for Firminy. Secondly,<br />

art was put into direct confrontation with an ‘au<strong>the</strong>ntic’ everyday audience.<br />

This encounter, however, was accompanied by manifold anxieties about<br />

<strong>the</strong> artists’ au<strong>the</strong>nticity <strong>of</strong> response. 16 The confrontation between artists<br />

<strong>and</strong> locals made <strong>the</strong> question <strong>of</strong> patronage <strong>and</strong> intervention particularly<br />

acute. Renée Green recalled that <strong>the</strong> opening was awkward: artists <strong>and</strong><br />

residents were all invited to a party on <strong>the</strong> top fl oor <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> building, but<br />

‘<strong>the</strong>re was a palpable tension in <strong>the</strong> air. The artists stayed in groups with<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r artists <strong>and</strong> art world infrastructural personnel, <strong>the</strong> tenants stayed in<br />

groups with <strong>the</strong>ir friends <strong>and</strong> neighbours. No speech was made. What<br />

could have been said?’ A fi ght broke out as an inebriated male tenant began<br />

punching in all directions. 17 This tension became one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> central arguments<br />

in Hal Foster’s infl uential essay ‘The <strong>Art</strong>ist as Ethnographer’, in<br />

which he argued that inviting artists to work site- specifi cally, particularly<br />

in areas with lower- income residents, shifted <strong>the</strong> discursive frame from<br />

class to cultural alterity, from an economic discrepancy to questions <strong>of</strong><br />

cultural identity. 18 Alluding to Walter Benjamin’s essay ‘The Author as<br />

Producer’ – in which Benjamin criticised an artistic attitude <strong>of</strong> benevolent<br />

‘patronage’ towards <strong>the</strong> working class by merely representing <strong>the</strong> latter in<br />

art <strong>and</strong> literature – Foster argues that contemporary artists <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> kind<br />

exhibiting at Firminy operated on a similar basis <strong>of</strong> ‘sociological condescension’.<br />

19 In <strong>the</strong> light <strong>of</strong> Benjamin’s article, which famously advocates<br />

collaborative authorship <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> an ‘apparatus’ that allows<br />

as many people to collaborate as possible, it seems striking that Foster<br />

never<strong>the</strong>less dismisses as ‘facilitated self- representation’ those artists who<br />

tried to produce a participatory apparatus (such as Clegg & Guttmann).<br />

Foster’s argument highlights <strong>the</strong> widening gap between North American<br />

criteria for social engagement <strong>and</strong> European approaches to this problem<br />

in <strong>the</strong> 1990s. It is telling, for example, that ‘Project Unité’ included French<br />

artists who would later be associated with relational aes<strong>the</strong>tics (Dominique<br />

Gonzalez- Foerster <strong>and</strong> Philippe Parreno) who produced works that have<br />

only an oblique engagement with context; ra<strong>the</strong>r than addressing <strong>the</strong> environment<br />

with a <strong>the</strong>oretical or critical framework, <strong>the</strong>y created a fi ctional,<br />

literary, imaginative correlate within <strong>the</strong> space <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> exhibition. 20 The<br />

German/ US artists, by contrast, have a more pragmatic <strong>and</strong> critical<br />

approach (exemplifi ed in Rosler’s sociological documentary, or Müller’s<br />

investigation into <strong>the</strong> building’s acoustics). This separation between <strong>the</strong><br />

French ‘relationality’ <strong>and</strong> German/ North American ‘criticality’ becomes<br />

more marked as <strong>the</strong> 1990s progress; ‘Project Unité’ is one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> last<br />

moments when this generation <strong>of</strong> artists appear alongside each o<strong>the</strong>r. The<br />

199

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