Systems Esthetics: Jack Burnham
Systems Esthetics: Jack Burnham
Systems Esthetics
Reprinted from Artforum (September, 1968). Copyright 1968 by
Jack Burnham.
The specific function of modern didactic art has been to show that
art does not reside in material entities, but in relations between
people and between people and the components of their
environment. This accounts for the radicality of Duchamp and his
enduring influence. It throws light on Picasso's lesser position as a
seminal force. As with all succeeding formalist art, cubism followed
the tradition of circumscribing art value wholly within finite objects.
In the 1966 "68th American Show" at the Chicago Art Institute, the
sculptor, Robert Morris, was represented by two large, L-shaped
forms which were shown the previous year in New York. Morris
sent plans of the pieces to the carpenters at the Chicago museum
where they were assembled for less than the cost of shipping the
originals from New York. In the context of a systems esthetic,
possession of a privately fabricated work is no longer important.
Accurate information takes priority over history and geographical
location.
More radical for the gallery are the constructions of Carl Andre. His
assemblies of modular, unattached forms stand out from the works of
artists who have comprised unit assembly with the totality of fixed
objects. The mundane origins of Andre's units are not "hidden"
within the art work as in he technique of collage. Andre's floor reliefs
are architectural modifications -though they are not subliminal since
they visually disengage from their surroundings. One of Andre's
subtler shows took place in New York last year. 8 The viewer was
encouraged to walk stocking-footed across three areas. each 12 by
12 feet and composed by 144 one-foot-square metal plates. One was
not only invited to see each of these "rugs" as a grid arrangement in
various | metals, but each metal grid's thermal conductivity was
registered through the [ soles of the feet. Sight analysis diminishes in
importance for some of the best new work; the other senses and
especially kinesthesis makes "viewing" a more integrated
experience. The scope of a systems esthetic presumes that problems
cannot be solved by a single technical solution, but must be attacked
on a multileveled, interdisciplinary basis. Consequently some of the
more aware sculptors no longer think like sculptors, but they assume
a span of problems more natural to architects, urban planners, civil
engineers, electronic technicians, and cultural anthropologists. This is
not as pretentious as some critics have insisted. It is a legitimate
extension of McLuhan's remark about Pop Art when he said that it
was an announcement that the entire environment was ready to
become a work of art.
Flavin's work has progressed in the past six years from light sources
mounted on flat reliefs, to compositions in fluorescent fixtures
mounted directly on walls and floors, and recently to totalities such
as his Chicago "walk-in" environment. While the majority of other
light artists have continued to fabricate "light sculpture"-as if
sculpture were the primary concern-Flavin has pioneered articulated
illumination systems for given spaces.
By the fact that most systems move or are in some way dynamic,
kinetic art should be one of the more radical alternatives to the
prevailing formalist esthetic. Yet this has hardly been the case. The
best publicized kinetic sculpture is mainly a modification of static
formalist sculpture composition. In most instances these have only
the added bonus of motion, as in the case of Tinguely, Calder, Bury,
and Rickey. Only Duchamp's kinetic output managed to reach
beyond formalism. Rather than visual appearance there is an entirely
different concern which makes kinetic art unique. This is the
peripheral perception of sound and movement in space filled with
activity. All too often gallery kinetic art has trivialized the more
graspable aspect of motion: - this is motion internalized and
experienced kinesthetically.
For some readers these pages will echo feelings of the past. It may
be remembered that in the fall of 1920 an ideological schism
ruptured two factions of the Moscow Constructivists. The radical
Marxists, led by Vladimir Tatlin, proclaimed their rejection of art's
false idealisms. Establishing ourselves as "Productivists," one of their
slogans became: "Down with guarding the traditions of art. Long live
the constructivist technician." As a group dedicated to historical
materialism and the scientific ethos, most of its members were
quickly subsumed by the technological needs of Soviet Russia. As
artists they ceased to exist. While the program might have d some
basis as a utilitarian esthetic, it was crushed amid the Stalinist anti-
intellectualism that followed.
But for our time the emerging major paradigm in art is neither an
ism nor a collection of styles. Rather than a novel way of rearranging
surfaces and spaces, it is fundamentally concerned with the
implementation of the art impulse in an advanced technological
society. As a culture producer, man has traditionally claimed the
title, Homo Faber: man the maker (of tools and images). With
continued advances in the industrial revolution, he assumes a new
and more critical function. As Homo Arbiter Formae his prime role
becomes that of man the maker of esthetic decisions. These
decisions- whether they are made concertedly or not-control the
quality of all future life on the earth. Moreover these are value
judgments dictating the direction of technological endeavor. Quite
plainly such a vision extends beyond politlcal realities of the present.
This cannot remain the case for long.