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

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pedagogic projects<br />

into which <strong>the</strong> project was integrated, <strong>and</strong> local residents who ran <strong>and</strong><br />

used <strong>the</strong> site. Like Chan in his account <strong>of</strong> Godot, Hirschhorn gives an<br />

impressively polished lecture about <strong>the</strong> project, articulating its four<br />

phases (preparation, set up, exhibition, dismantling) <strong>and</strong> sixteen ‘beams’<br />

<strong>of</strong> activity, but this structural overview fails to convey <strong>the</strong> unpredictable<br />

social mix that was magnetised by his idiosyncratic celebration <strong>of</strong><br />

Spinoza. In <strong>the</strong> past, Hirschhorn has produced documentation <strong>of</strong> his<br />

‘monuments’ in <strong>the</strong> form <strong>of</strong> a book ga<strong>the</strong>ring toge<strong>the</strong>r all <strong>the</strong> correspondence,<br />

images, press coverage <strong>and</strong> audience feedback into one<br />

overwhelmingly dense publication that serves as a textual analogue for<br />

<strong>the</strong> event’s social <strong>and</strong> organisational complexity. Unlike Chan’s clearly<br />

structured rationale, however, <strong>the</strong>re is an overt contradiction between<br />

Hirschhorn’s words <strong>and</strong> his methods: he makes claims for art as a powerful,<br />

<strong>autonomous</strong>, almost transcendent force <strong>of</strong> non- alienation, but<br />

through projects that spill into <strong>the</strong> complexity <strong>of</strong> social antagonisms <strong>and</strong><br />

deluge us with extra- artistic questions. Underlining this is a montage<br />

principle <strong>of</strong> co- existing incompatibilities: if Hirschhorn’s gallery- based<br />

installations juxtapose horrifi c images <strong>of</strong> violence with high culture <strong>and</strong><br />

philosophy (e.g. Concretion- Re, 2007), <strong>and</strong> (at <strong>the</strong>ir best) throb with<br />

social pessimism <strong>and</strong> anger, his public projects juxtapose different social<br />

classes, races <strong>and</strong> ages with a fearless defence <strong>of</strong> art <strong>and</strong> philosophy, <strong>and</strong><br />

pulsate with eccentric optimism. It has become fashionable for contemporary<br />

artists to adopt <strong>the</strong> role <strong>of</strong> programming lectures <strong>and</strong> seminars,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten as a substitute for research; in Hirschhorn’s case, <strong>the</strong>se events st<strong>and</strong><br />

in toto as a form <strong>of</strong> artistic research <strong>and</strong> social experimentation. The<br />

Bijlmer- Spinoza Festival brought toge<strong>the</strong>r a series <strong>of</strong> supposedly incompatible<br />

montage elements to prompt unforeseen collective <strong>and</strong> durational<br />

encounters; <strong>the</strong>se experiences can in part be submitted to artistic criteria<br />

we have inherited from performance art, even while <strong>the</strong>y also dem<strong>and</strong><br />

that we stretch <strong>the</strong>se criteria in new directions.<br />

V. Education, in Theory<br />

Hirschhorn is a tricky character to end this chapter on, since he unabashedly<br />

maintains that art is <strong>the</strong> central motivation <strong>of</strong> his work, <strong>and</strong> that he<br />

is more interested in viewers than in students. 47 His contemporaries have<br />

tended to engage with this question by combining <strong>the</strong> production <strong>of</strong><br />

students <strong>and</strong> viewers in different ways: Bruguera’s <strong>Art</strong>e de Conducta, <strong>and</strong><br />

Anton Vidokle’s unitednationsplaza (2007– 8) <strong>and</strong> Night School (2008– 9)<br />

all unite an application procedure <strong>and</strong> an openness to all comers. 48 But in<br />

all <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se contemporary examples, <strong>the</strong> artist operates from a position <strong>of</strong><br />

amateur enthusiast ra<strong>the</strong>r than informed expert, <strong>and</strong> delegates <strong>the</strong> work<br />

<strong>of</strong> lecturing to o<strong>the</strong>rs. It is as if <strong>the</strong> artist wants to be a student once more,<br />

but does this by setting up <strong>the</strong>ir own school from which to learn,<br />

265

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