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The Anthropology of Art and the Art of Anthropology a Complex relationship

by

Rika Allen

Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree

Master of Philosophy

in the
Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology
at the
University of Stellenbosch

Supervisor: Prof. Steven Robins


March 2008

Copyright 2008 Stellenbosch University


All rights reserved

ii

DECLARATION

I, the undersigned, hereby declare that the work contained in this assignment is my
own original work and that I have not previously in its entirety or past submitted it at
any university for a degree.

Date: 28 February 2008

Signature: _______________________

iii

Abstract

It has been said that anthropology operates in liminal spaces which can be defined as
spaces between disciplines. This study will explore the space where the fields of art and
anthropology meet in order to discover the epistemological and representational challenges
that arise from this encounter. The common ground on which art and anthropology engage
can be defined in terms of their observational and knowledge producing practices. Both art
and anthropology rely on observational skills and varying forms of visual literacy to collect
and represent data. Anthropologists represent their data mostly in written form by means of
ethnographic accounts, and artists represent their findings by means of imaginative artistic
mediums such as painting, sculpture, filmmaking and music. Following the so-called
ethnographic turn, contemporary artists have adopted an anthropological gaze, including
methodologies, such as fieldwork, in their appropriation of other cultures. Anthropologists,
on the other hand, in the wake of the writing culture critique of the 1980s, are starting to
explore new forms of visual research and representational practices that go beyond written
texts.

The thesis will argue that by combining observational and knowledge procuding practices,
both anthropology and art can overcome the limits that are inherent present in their
representational practices. By drawing on the implications that complexity theory has to
offer, anthropology and art can work together in order to offer solutions to problems of
presentation that emerge when dealing with complex issues. As an example of such a
complex situation, the representational practices of artists engaging in art activism vis vis
the onslaught of the HIV/Aids epidemic in South African will be examined.

By combining the methodologies and knowlegde generating practices of art and


anthropology, a space is opened in which we can attempt to represent the complex realities
of peoples struggle to give meaning to their lives in ways that do not reduce them to
scientific statistics or documented reports. Acting from such a position allows us to see
besides the taken for granted and challenge us to explore the field of possibilities in new
ways. And, as will be argued, therein lies the invitation to reform and to revolutionize our
ways of knowing and seeing the world.

iv

Opsomming
Daar word ges dat antropologie in die spasie tussen grense (liminal spaces) funksioneer.
Hierdie ruimte kan definieer word as die ruimte tussen vakgebiede. Hierdie studie sal die
ruimte bestudeer waar die vakgebiede van kuns en antropologie mekaar ontmoet ten einde
te ontdek watter epistemologiese en representatiewe uitdagings deur hierdie ontmoeting tot
stand kom. Die gemeenskaplike gebied waarin antropologie en kuns met mekaar in gesprek
tree, kan omskryf word in terme van die waarnemingspraktyke en die praktyke wat kennis
produseer. Beide kuns en antropologie vertrou op waarnemingsvaardighede en verskeie
vorme van visuele geletterdheid ten einde data te versamel en voor te stel. Antropolo
publiseer hul data meesal in geskrewe vorm deur middel van etnografiese verslae, en
kunstenaars stel hulle bevindinge voor deur middel van kreatiewe en artistieke mediums
soos byvoorbeeld deur skilderye, beeldhouwerk, die vervaardiging van films en musiek.

Na die sogenaamde ethnographic turn in die vakgebied van kuns, het kontemporre
kunstenaars begin om antropologiese navorsingsmetodes soos veldwerk, te implementeer.
Anthropolo is op hul beurt benvloed deur die writing culture beweging van die 1980s en
het begin om visuele navorsingsmetodes aan te wend wat die geskrewe tekste aangevul en
oorskry het.

Die argument in hierdie tesis suggereer dat wanneer waarnemingspraktyke en kennis


produserende praktyke van die vakgebiede van kuns en antropologie gekombineer word,
sekere beperkings wat inherent teenwoordig is in die onderskeie vakgebiede se praktyke,
oorkom kan word. Deur te steun op die aannames wat kompleksiteitsteorie bied, kan kuns
en antropologie saamwerk ten einde oplossings te verskaf vir representatiewe probleme wat
ontstaan wanneer mens met komplekse situasies te doen het. As voorbeeld van n
komplekse situasie word die representatiewe praktyke van kunstenaars in onskou geneem
wat in kunsaktivisme deelneem ten einde weerstand te bied teen die oorweldigende gevolge
van die HIV/Vigs epidemie in Suid-Afrika.

Deur die metodologie en kennis produserende praktyke van kuns en antropologie te


kombineer, ontstaan n ruimte waarin dit moontlik is om die realiteit van mense se soeke na
betekenisvolle lewens daar te stel sonder om die kompleksiteit daarvan te reduseer tot
wetenskaplike statistieke of bloot navorsingsverslae. Die tesis suggereer dat dit juis in
hierdie nuwe ruimte is, waar die moontlikheid ontstaan om ou maniere van dink en doen te
hervorm ten einde die wreld nuut te sien en te ken.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank the following people who have contributed to the completion of this
assignment:

My supervisor, Prof. Steven Robins, for his interest, practical guidance and patience.
Your commitment to engage with the new struggles South Africa is facing reflects how
artfully Anthropology can and should be practiced.

Prof. Kees van der Waal, for his reserved but persistent and positive way of convincing
one that the goal can be reached.

Prof. Paul Cilliers, for his encouragement and for allowing me to take the time I needed
to complete this in time.

The National Research Foundation, for financial assistance.

My parents, for their encouragement and love.

Wolfgang Preiser for finding me when I did not expect it. Without his support and
encouragement, this project would certainly never have seen the light.

vi

Anthropologists should not stop writing. But perhaps some problems we face when we write linear
texts with words as our only tool can be resolved by thinking of anthropology and its representattions
as not solely verbal, but also visual and not simply linear but multilinear.
- Sarah Pink, 2004

vii

Table of Contents
Page

Introduction

Subject of inquiry and methodology

Structure of study

Chapter 1
The Anthropology of Art

Seeing as knowing

10

Three dimensions of culture

14

Art as part of a social struggle

15

(i) Anthropological art theory

16

Alfred Gell: Art and Agency

16

Clifford Geertz: Art as Cultural system

18

(ii) Social theories of art

21

Theodor Adorno: negative dialectic and autonomous art

22

Niklas Luhmann: Art as a social system

25

Chapter 2
The Art of Anthropology

28

Anthropos + logos: Knowledge of human beings

28

More than what meets the eye

31

New perceptions and prescriptions

32

Ethnography after Writing Culture

35

Proceeding beyond prescription

37

(De)limiting the field from postmodernism to postmodernity

38

The Art of Anthropology: Seeing as not-knowing

40

viii

Chapter 3
Complexity Theory: weaving together ways of seeing

43

The birth of systems theory

43

Sketching complexity theory

45

Complex Thinking

47

Thinking art and anthropology simultaneously

49

Gazing into the future of art and anthropology

53

Chapter 4
Case study: Art Activism in a time of ARVs

57

Situating the case study

58

Methodology

60

SANG and Iziko Museums in Cape Town

61

AIDS ART at the SANG

62

Positive Lives: Responses to HIV

64

A Broken Landscape, HIV & AIDS in Africa

65

AIDSART/South Africa

66

Embracing HIV/AIDS

68

Art and the struggle against HIV/Aids

70

Chapter 5
Conclusion

77

Limitations of theory and analysis

80

Further research & Recommendations

80

Bibliography

82

ix

Introduction
More recently, in contemporary cultural life, art has come to occupy a space long
associated with anthropology, becoming one of the main sites for tracking,
representing, and performing the effects of difference in contemporary life. From
this perspective, the two arenas are in a more complex and overlapping
relationship to one another than ever before. (Marcus and Myers 1995: 1)

Linked to Marcus and Myers notion of the overlapping relationship between art and
anthropology, is the suggestion that not only does the overlap contain issues of
gathering and disseminating knowledge, but commonalities can also be found in the fact
that both contemporary art and anthropology have culture as [their] object (Morphy
and Perkins 2006: 11).
Based on these common grounds shared by art and anthropology, the thesis will explore
how the knowledge producing methods and representational pratices of both fields can
influence each other and be woven together in order to represent the contingencies of a
complex world more authentically. By examining the relationship between art and
anthropology, this study will try to show that both anthropologists and artists need to be
more aware of the possibilities there are to learn from each other in order to have a
more effective impact when trying to make sense of the complex fields in which both
operate.
The thesis will take the form of a transdisciplinary theoretical exploration. Here the term
transdisciplinary refers to Montuoris (2005:154) description thereof. The following
areas are central and distinguish transdisciplinary inquiry from inter-disciplinary and
disciplinary approaches. In summary, transdisciplinarity is

Inquiry-driven rather than exclusively discipline-driven

Meta-paradigmatic rather than exclusively intra-paradigmatic

Informed by a kind of thinking that is creative, contextualising, and connective


(Morins complex thought)

Inquiry as a creative process that combines rigor and imagination (Montuori


2005: 154).

Taking its point of departure from the understanding that there are different ways of
gathering knowledge about the world, the thesis will suggest by combining different
strategies and methods of collecting and interpreting knowledge, disciplines could be

enriched by these differences in ways that could change and enrich the knowledge
claims that they make. Such a process would involve the recognition of a plurality of
epistemologies or positions, each expressing knowledge in different times and space,
each in different ways (Montuori 1998: 22). The dialogue between art and anthropology
could inform a kind of anthropology that is not hesitant to use visual strategies in the
production of ethnographic records. Text-based ethnographic models would benefit from
a critical engagement with a range of material and sensual practices in the
contemporary arts (Schneider and Wright 2006: 4).
The study therefore promotes an approach that is not wholly of art or anthropology but
instead operates around the edges and borders. This study can thus be read as an
endeavour to destabilise from the margins by evoking and re-imagining social, cultural
and aesthetic practices not through systematic, social-scientific fieldwork and research
but through the capacity of art, anthropology and our common corporeality to reveal
things

in

social

life

that

would

otherwise

remain

unseen.

(Irving

2006:

www.anthropologymatters.com).
The anthropological study of art is in the process of moving from a place where it has
been viewed as a minority interest, towards a more central role in the discipline
(Morphy and Perkins 2006: 1). In explaining why art was situated at the margins of
anthropological studies, Morphy and Perkins suggest that disengagement from art as a
subject of study reflected attitudes of anthropologists to material culture (2006: 1).
Difficulties in defining art also contributed to this dilemma. Traditionally art was seen as
something that could be defined in terms of Western standards of aesthetic values. As
Morphy and Perkins explain, the conception of art in the mid-nineteenth century was
very different to what it subsequently became under the influence of modernism (2006:
3). Caught up in the process of classifying humanity into civilised European societies
and exotic Others, mid-nineteenth century anthropology included art with other material
cultural objects in the evolutionary schema developed by anthropologists such as Pitt
Rivers (1906), Tylor (1871, 1878) and Frazer (1925) (Morphy and Perkins 2006: 3).
From Rivers, Tylor and Frazers understanding of art, art objects were defined in terms
of their similarity or difference vis vis art forms as found in contemporary Western art
practice (Morphy and Perkins 2006: 3). This view of art objects has changed over the
years and from the 1970s on (a)rt, broadly defined, provided a major source of
information and offered insights into systems of representation, the aesthetics of the

body, value creating processes, social memory, the demarcation of space and so on
(Morphy and Perkins 2006: 10).
The tendency of art to move towards the centre of the discipline can be ascribed to the
fact that art has become associated almost equally with the two senses of the word
culture (Morphy and Perkins 2006:1). The two understandings of culture are explained
as culture as a way of life or body of ideas and knowledge, and culture as the
metaphysical essence of society, incorporating standards by which the finest products of
society are judged (Morphy and Perkins 2006:1). Similarly changes in the Western art
world also resulted in a more serious engagement with anthropology. The artefacts that
they saw in museums inspired modernist artists work in the early 1900s. The encounter
between modernist artists like Pablo Picasso and African sculpture in Parisian museums
and collectors houses frequently figures as the prototypical encounter between art and
anthropology (Schneider and Wright 2006: 29). The encounter with artefacts that
anthropologists brought back from so-called primitive societies offered artists the
possibility of new ways of seeing (Schneider and Wright 2006: 32). The encounter with
the primitive was instrumental in bringing about changes in our understanding of what
art is and what it does; how it appeals to us, how it affects us, and what we expect from
it (Schneider and Wright 2006: 33). Morphy and Perkins (2006: 11) agree with
Schneider and Wright when they argue that the rise of anthropology and the
development of modernism in art were related, even though anthropologists neglected
to study art either in their own society or in the non-European societies that were the
primary focus of their research.

Subject of inquiry and methodology


The thesis will aim to bring together art theory and anthropological theory by
investigating current theoretical trends and representational practices within art and
anthropology. Art and anthropology are both made up of a range of diverse practices
that operate within the context of an equally complex range of expectations and
contrasts (Schneider and Wright 2006: 2).
It will be argued that when looking at the relationship between art and anthropology, one
should adopt a view from complexity theory as proposed by Cilliers (1998) and Morin
(2007) in order to analyse and interpret the possible connections. The possibility of a
transdisciplinary engagement between the two fields might shed new light upon how to
(re)present what has been observed or learned in order to more effectively engage in

processes of knowing and being known. The contention is that the ways in which
anthropologists and artists produce knowledge about the world and how they represent
the world, should be explored for their productive possibilities in developing new
strategies of representation (Schneider and Wright 2006: 25).
For anthropologists this would mean opening themselves to the process of engaging
with art practices that analyse ways of seeing in a critical manner. Anthropologists will
be challenged to embrace new ways of seeing and new ways of working with visual
materials (Schneider and Wright 2006: 25). The focus on finding new ways of seeing
and knowing the world has contributed to a reconnection with art to a broader realm of
culture. Art is no longer seen as an autonomous aesthetic realm, but is firmly
embedded in cultural and historical specifics (Schneider and Wright 2006: 18). This
development will be discussed in more detail in Chapters one and two.
Similarly, artists engaging with the methodologies and observational practices of
anthropology could learn to observe from a position that does away with the comfortable
distance that is offered by their artist studios and traditional exhibition spaces. As
Schneider and Wright (2006: 16) insist, (b)oth artists and anthropologists play with
distance and intimacy an intimacy that is the currency of fieldwork and both now
overtly place themselves between their audiences and the world. By engaging in the
logic of complex thought as will be suggested in Chapter three, the dynamic interaction
between the fields of art and anthropology could lead to new discoveries in how to
proceed when expected to represent a world that is by definition characterised by
complexity and paradoxes.
The theoretical outcomes of the study will be tested against a short case study that will
investigate what representational practices and knowledge producing methods are being
used when artists engage in artistic ways to express the effects of the HIV/Aids
epidemic on society. The thesis will argue that our representational practices are
informed and connected to what we know about reality and how we know reality.
Furthermore, the process of knowing is in return informed by how reality is represented
(whether by works of art or ethnographies). The acts of knowing and representing are
dialogically connected to one another. How artists thus represent the issues surrounding
the struggle against HIV/Aids and how reality is influenced by this struggle, influences
the viewers knowledge of reality. The epistemological framework on which artists thus
rely when engaging in producing artworks, influence not only the work they produce, but

also the reality and knowledge of the viewers when they engage with the artworks.
Arguing from the logic of complex theory, it could be suggested that artists, curators and
sponsors would benefit greatly by engaging with anthropologists who are working in the
field of studying the impact of the HIV/Aids epidemic in South Africa. It will be suggested
that art activism could utilise and integrate the knowledge that is gained from
ethnographic practices when engaging with complex social issues such the fight against
HIV/Aids in order to produce representations of reality that does not reduce the
complexity of the issues involved.
The study will reflect on the epistemological status of theory (art theory and
anthropological theory) and how by combining perspectives, knowledge production and
representational practices could be enriched. The insights from complexity theory will
support the notion that an approach to work transdisciplinary could deliver results for
both fields of study that might contribute to reaching results that might be more accurate
in presenting material (research and artworks for example) more authentically. A short
case study involving an art exhibition on HIV/Aids in the South African National Gallery
in Cape Town will be discussed in terms of the theoretical discoveries made in the
study. In some sense one could say that the main focus of the study will be directed
toward exploring the politics of knowing and being known (Lather 2001: 483) and the
politics of seeing and being seen.

Structure of Study
The five chapters of the thesis are arranged as follows:
1. The first chapter explores the notion of arts role in society. In art theory this is an
issue that has been discussed since ancient times and volumes could be written about
this theme. By briefly looking at four theories of the social functions of art, I hope to offer
a better understanding of what one should understand under the term anthropology of
art. The chapter will highlight how developments in anthropological theory changed the
ways in which art works should be understood and studied by anthropologists. By briefly
examining two theories of art from an anthropological perspective (as proposed by Gell
and Geertz) and two theories of art from a critical social theory perspective (Adorno and
Luhmann), the chapter aims at extracting from these four theories important elements
that should be part of a contemporary understanding of an anthropology of art. From the
point of view that art helps to inform our knowledge and representational practices, an
anthropology of art should not have the material object and its form or function of

exchange or its social life (Appadurai 1986) as focus of study. Rather, an anthropology
of art that focuses on arts capacity to assist us to know the world and to see it in a new
way, challenges us to examine the artistic practices themselves (the ideas behind the
artwork, its relationship to the ideas it is trying to present and the visual techniques and
genres used).
By analysing how the artwork brings across knowledge of the world by means of its
representational practice (how the word is being made visible), we can detect what
ideology is informing the artists gaze. Chapter one will thus argue that not even the
gaze of the artist is a neutral one, but informed by what he or she knows. In the same
way the gaze is influenced by what is known, knowledge is also influenced by how one
sees the world.
2. The second chapter will reflect on the representational practices of anthropology and
how changes in theory dealing with the notion of observation brought about changes in
anthropological practices of knowledge production. By developing from a position of
being inspired by positivistic scientific practices to a social research approach that has
grown self-conscious about its practices of representation (Atkinson 2001: 2),
anthropology has a lot to offer other fields of study that produce knowledge by means of
observation. Here the connection with the field of art can be established. The chapter
uses the connection between art and anthropology to explore the relationship between
knowledge (knowing) and seeing (observing). The chapter will also examine the
influence of postmodernism on anthropology and will discuss the consequences that the
interpretative turn (after Geertz 1973) had on knowledge producing practices. The
limitations and insights from a post-structural theory of meaning and its capability to
inform knowledge claims and representational practices will also be discussed. The
chapter will conclude that in order for anthropology to be able to offer radical critique, it
would need to regain its position as critical research method. By adopting a modest form
of postmodernism as proposed by Cilliers (2005) which is mindful of the status of its
knowledge claims, anthropology as scientific research method could offer valuable
contributions in revealing the world. By acknowledging the limits of ethnographic
practices, anthropology regains a position from which it offers us a way to focus on the
differences and diversity of a complex world, without falling into the trap of relativism. In
giving up the urge to control knowledge and by accepting the fact that our knowledge
producing practices are limited, the ethnographic enterprise becomes a method by
which the limits of representative practices can be overcome.

3. Chapter three will provide a brief introduction to complexity theory. Following the
arguments in Chapter one and two that observational and representational practices
influence

knowledge

producing

practices

and

vice

versa,

observational

and

representational practices are influenced by what we know of the world, Chapter three
will explore how knowledge production and representational practices can be enriched
when drawing on the logic of complex theory.
Based on the work of Cilliers (1998, 2005) and Morin (2007), complexity theory offers us
the possibility to weave together knowledge producing practices from art and
anthropology in order to produce representational and observational practices that do
not reduce humanity to scientific formulas and mediocre documentaries. By combining
the different kinds of knowledge as produced by art and anthropology, new ways of
seeing and knowing the world will be made possible.
Suggestions will be made how artists and anthropologists could learn from one another
in order to produce a description of the world that challenges artists and anthropologists
alike to dare to leave their epistemological and methodological comfort zones. The
chapter will demonstrate how the implications of understanding the world and
relationships between people as a complex system influence the politics of knowing
and being known (Lather 2001: 483) as well as and the politics of seeing and being
seen.
4. The fourth chapter introduces a brief case study of an art exhibition of the South
African National Gallery in Cape Town. The history and context of the exhibition will be
described as well as the intention the exhibition has to be activist in nature as attempted
intervention within the larger context of the HIV/Aids epidemic in the Western Cape. The
results of the theoretical outcomes as suggested in chapters 1-3 will then be tested
against the case study in order to evaluate its legitimacy.
Contrary to traditional theses in the field of anthropology, this thesis will not be an
ethnographic study. The case study, however, does not attempt to be an ethnography
either. It stands for itself as a brief application of the theoretical argument.
The chapter will argue that the activistic drive behind artistic representational practices
of South African artists who were formerly involved in resistance art during the time of

apartheid, have not adapted itself to the new struggle against the onslaught of HIV/Aids
on the South African society. By using old ways of seeing and knowing and
representing, artists are not equipped to deal with the complexities of the new struggle.
Nguyens notion of therapeutic citizenship (2005: 143) refers to the way in which
treatment options change biology, representations of the disease and the subjectivity of
those who are able to access (treatment). The chapter addresses the fact that it does
not seem that artists take these changes into consideration. It seems as if artists are
stuck in their studios and old ideologies of resistance art and that they have not found
new ways of being effective in offering people affected a substantial vehicle with which
to engage in activism. The real struggle, in which the artists are entangled however, is
not the fight against HIV/Aids, but the struggle of how to express that which one cannot
see with the naked eye (i.e. the effects the virus has emotionally and socially). The
chapter concludes that by engaging in observational methods and knowledge producing
practices offered by anthropology, and by experimenting with new forms of visual
comprehension that take the contingencies of people who are living with HIV/Aids into
consideration, more effective activist art could be produced.
5. Chapter five is the concluding chapter and will summarise the study in terms of
whether it succeeded in its aims or not. Limitations and shortcomings will also be
discussed in order to make suitable recommendations and suggestions for further
research to be undertaken in future.

Chapter 1: The Anthropology of Art


Art is notoriously hard to talk about (Geertz 1983:94).

Starting to write about arts place and role in society and more specifically its relation to
anthropology is as hard as it is to talk about art. Harrington (2004: 1) addresses the
huge task that one sets up for oneself in venturing into this territory. Questions such as
the following need to be addressed in order to offer a comprehensive study of the role of
art in society: What is art? Can art be defined? How do we know whether or not
something is art? Does art consist in universally recognisable qualities, or is art simply
what different cultural institutions declare about art? Can art bring about a better
society? (Harrington 2004: 1).
Morphy and Perkins (2006:11) suggest that in order to start the venture on examining
what an anthropology of art could look like, two important issues are central to consider:
the definition of art and what characterises an anthropological approach to art. The two
are related an anthropological definition of art is going to be influenced by the nature
of anthropology itself. By tackling the first issue the study will subscribe to the following
working definition of art offered by Degenaar (1993: 53):
The term art refers both to the imaginative skill applied to design and to the
object in which skill is exercised. Art designates a range of aesthetic objects
which have been given a special status according to certain criteria within a
particular convention. An aesthetic object refers to material structured in such a
way that it moved a human being by involving especially the imagination.

The definition is not intended to be exclusive; rather, it indicates the kind of objects that
anthropologists are usually referring to when they focus on art objects. Components of
the definition are likely to be found in most anthropologists writing about art. For the
purpose of this study, the term art will be limited to refer to visual art specifically.
The second issue concerning what characterises an anthropological approach to art will
subscribe to the explanation of Harrington (2004: 1), who suggests that art must be
interrogated in the context of the much wider social domain known as culture (2004:
2). By situating art within culture, the focus of the study shifts from analysing arts form
and contents or even notions of how to judge whether something is art or not, to the
lived experience of the individuals whose engagements with art are in question
(Harrington 2004: 3). By placing art in its ethnographic context, the anthropological study

of art is one that approaches art in the context of its producing society (Morphy and
Perkins 2006: 15).
By mentioning art in the same sentence as anthropology, or putting it in a title such as
with which this chapter starts, art and anthropology, is to support the idea that art and
anthropology form equal partners in a joint-venture of cognition of the world
(Harrington 2004: 3). Such a statement in turn suggests that art represents a source of
existential social knowledge that is of its own worth and is not inferior to the knowledge
of social science (Harrington 2004:3). As part of a cultural system, art therefore can
convey knowledge about certain things in life in a better way than for instance scientific
methods of producing knowledge. This does not mean that art is better in producing
knowledge, but that its knowledge claims are different and should be taken seriously as
equally legitimate and as not being inferior to so-called scientifically generated methods.

Seeing as knowing
An anthropology of art should thereby not just deal with art as an object for observation
or as material object, but it should rather be able to tell us more about the kind of
knowledge art produce when people engage with art. The politics of knowing and
seeing are thus here important aspects of observation. An anthropology of art should
thus show how aesthetic frames of perception enter into textual aspects of metaphor,
analogy and vignette, into sensuous media of data analysis such as visual images and
life-story narratives; and into conceptions of theatrical qualities in social action
(Harrington 2004: 6).
Knowing thus becomes conditional upon seeing (perception). What we know and how
we interpret it, is influenced by how we see and vice versa, our observational practices
are influenced by what we know. The connection between art and anthropology (whose
main form of enquiry is the production of an ethnography by means of participant
observation) is then established by the notion of seeing / perceiving / observing. The
connection is furthermore strengthened by the shared notion of representation.
Schneider and Wright (2006: 26) support these arguments by claiming that (a)rtists and
anthropologists are practitioners who appropriate form, and represent others. Although
their representational practices have been different, both books and artworks are
creative additions to the world; both are complex translations of other realities. At this
point one could mention that one of the aspirations of especially visual art is to solve the

10

puzzle of how to represent the world. Kieran (2005: 99) suggests that (l)ooking at art
tests us, stretches us, deepens our inner lives and cultivates insight into both ourselves
and the world. The capacity that visual art has to convey knowledge about the world
and how we make sense of the world is also explored in the novel by Paul Auster called
Moon Palace (1989). One of the characters in the novel is a painter and whilst
contemplating how he fits into the world, he stumbles onto the following insight
concerning the role of art (Auster 1989: 170):
The true purpose of art was not to create beautiful objects, he discovered. It was
a method of understanding, a way of penetrating the world and finding ones
place in it, and whatever aesthetic qualities an individual canvas might have
were almost an accidental by-product of the effort to engage oneself in this
struggle, to enter into the thick of things.

Austers description of the purpose of art as explored by the character in his novel, is a
very good description of how the act of engaging with art can produce knowledge about
the world and how to understand ourselves. As Kieran (2005: 100) explains, art works
can cultivate insight, understanding and ways of seeing the world. The ways in which
the artist expresses his or her imagination by means of the how the physical materials,
conventions, genres, styles and forms which vivify are applied in the art work thus
guide and prescribe our responses (Kieran 2005: 102) to understanding the world.
Hence, the specific knowledge we gain by engaging with works of art contributes not
only to an expansion of the horizons of our minds (Kieran 2005: 102), but works of art
also challenge our pre-existing beliefs, attitudes and values (Kieran 2005: 108) that we
have of the world. In order to explain how our engagement with art could bring about
new knowledge in the ways that Kieran proposes, the following example might help to
illustrate the argument.
When one explores the development of certain technical explorations in the history of
art, one learns that many artists became famous for the new ways in which they could
present the world and how we see ourselves in the world. This was made possible by
either applying new techniques in textual structure or the way in which depth, light or
movement could be presented, the ways in which colours were produced. Another way
of presenting new visions of the world can be made possible by introducing new
conceptual techniques. Kieran (2005: 16 17) uses the example of the Italian artist
Caravaggio (1573 1610) who was banned from Rome because his paintings depicted
the saints of the church as ordinary human beings and not as heavenly saints: Biblical
characters had more traditionally been represented in highly conventionalised, ethereal

11

ways, marking them out as distinct in kind from those gazing upon the scene. But
Caravaggio rejected convention and strove for radical naturalism. By presenting them
as being of the same flesh, the same blood; they are part of the very same world of the
viewer, not set apart from it (Kieran 2005: 16). This assertion of the basic humanity of
the churchs central figures offered lay people a different perspective on how to interpret
the Bible and it also changed the way they saw themselves in relation to religious
figures. Religion was seen as not only accessible by holy figures, but also by ordinary
human beings who go about their lives in unspectacular ways. Coinciding with Kierans
notion that art can influence a persons understanding of reality is Gadamers claim that
art and aesthetic experience are forms of knowledge (Warnke 1987: 59). Such a
cognitive understanding of arts function suggests that the experience of looking at the
work of art can be one in which we recognise the truth of the representation, discard
our

previous

understanding

of

the

subject-matter

and

incorporate

our

new

understanding into our lives (Warnke 1987: 60).


At this stage it is important to qualify that knowing by seeing is not an argument for
what is in philosophy known as the metaphysics of presence. This is a term used in
post-structural theories of meaning and especially by Jacques Derrida who criticised
Saussures description of the sign. Saussure insisted the sign has two components, the
signifier and the signified, of which one, the signified, is mental or psychological. This
would imply that the meaning of a sign is present to the speaker when he uses it, in
defiance of the fact that meaning is constituted by a system of differences (Cilliers
1998: 42). This notion assumes that one can determine the meaning of the sign (a visual
sign for example) or have full knowledge of it, if the speaker or observer is present to the
sign. Saussures understanding of how meaning arises (and the rest of Western
philosophy and the tradition of structuralism) rests on the premise that meaning
becomes fixed when it is written down (or captured in a picture for example). Derrida,
however, insists that meaning can never be fixed, seeing that the meaning of the sign is
always unanchored (Cilliers 1998: 42). From this point of view, meaning is never
present on the basis that what we see is what we get. By just seeing (or hearing) a
word (or for that matter a picture or a person) we can never assume that we know it.
Meaning is derived by actively looking for it in the signs relationship with other signs,
how it has been framed, who is acting, in which context it appears. We thus cannot
separate what we see (as scientists, artists, and people viewing art) from the world it
describes (Cilliers 1998: 43). In this study, the understanding of how meaning is

12

generated and terms such as knowing by seeing will be informed by a post-structuralist


understanding thereof.
The following (somewhat lengthy) quote will establish the thesis argument that the
politics of knowing, are strongly related to how the subject sees and is being seen in
terms of a post-structuralist understanding of these terms:
It is seeing which establishes our place in the surrounding world; we explain that
world with words, but words can never undo the fact that we are surrounded by
it. The relation between what we see and what we know is never settled.
Yet this seeing which comes before words, and can never quite be covered by
them, is not a question of mechanically reacting to stimuli. We only see what we
look at. To look is an act of choice. As a result of this act, what we see is brought
within our reach though not necessarily in arms reach. We never look at
just one thing; we are always looking at the relation between things and
ourselves. Our vision is continually active, continually moving, continually holding
things in a circle around itself, constituting what is present to us as we are. Soon
after we can see, we are aware that we can also be seen. The eye of the other
combines with our own eye to make it fully credible that we are part of this
invisible world (Berger 1972: 7-9).

From Bergers quote it can be argued that the relation between knowing and seeing is a
dialectical relation. Knowing influences seeing and vice versa. The way in which
knowledge is produced is thus relational and the meaning that emerges out of the
relationship seeing-knowing is not fixed, but always already inscribed and changing
according to the context, according to who is looking, according to who is being looked
at and according to what the effect of the action is. Seeing and knowing is mediated by
the artwork and by the process of the effects of the relationship between seeing and
knowing. By establishing the relationship seeing-knowing as dialectical, a possibility is
opened for an argument that suggests that the relationship takes place in a complex and
dynamic exchange of systems of meaning. Bergers assumptions also imply that our
observational practices (the way we see) are constructed and complex. From this
perspective, an anthropology of art should thus examine the relationship between
observational practices and knowledge generating practices. Such an examination
should go beyond the mantra of the social construction of facts and should start
analysing in depth the ecological dynamics by which communities of practitioners come
to share a perception of what they deem as reality (Pink et al 2004: 29).

13

At this stage the argument is pointing to an affiliation with postmodern positions, for
example the deconstruction tradition established by Jacques Derrida. Deconstruction
argues for the irreducibility of meaning. Meaning and knowledge cannot be fixed in a
representational way, but is always contingent and contextual. Derrida explicitly links the
problem of meaning and context to the fact that these things are complex. The critical
understanding of complexity theory presented here, and deconstruction, therefore, make
a very similar claim: knowledge is provisional (Cilliers 2005: 259). Later in Chapter four
the characteristics and implications of a complex system will be discussed in more
detail.

Three dimensions of culture


By returning to Harringtons remark as mentioned earlier, that art must be interrogated
in the context of the much wider social domain known as culture (2004: 2), the study
will continue to investigate the implications of arts situatedness within culture. In order
to support the connection between art and anthropology, and furthermore why the study
focuses on art to compare with anthropology and not, say, rituals or citizenship rights or
the forming of specific kinds of subjectivities, the role of art within a cultural and social
system will now be explored.
In his book Cultural Complexity studies in the social organisation of meaning, Ulf
Hannerz (1992: 6) qualifies why he uses the term complex cultures to describe
contemporary society. He insists that it is because of the three dimensions in
contemporary culture that it can be explained as being complex. These three
dimensions are described as follows:
1) ideas and modes of thought as entities and processes of the mind the entire
array of concepts, propositions, values and the like which people within some
social unit carry together, as well as their various ways of handling their ideas
and characteristic modes of mental operation;
2) forms of externalisation, the different ways in which meaning is made accessible
to the senses, made public, and
3) social distribution, the ways in which the collective cultural inventory of meanings
and meaningful external forms that is (1) and (2) together is spread over a
population and its social relationships (Hannerz 1992: 7).

14

Art resides in the second dimension of culture, the forms of externalisation. From this
perspective art (as one of many forms of externalisation) is a mediator of culture.
Hannerz furthermore suggests that the three dimensions are interrelated and that the
complexity along the first dimension, in contemporary culture, is in large part a
consequence of complexity along the latter two (1992:9). This suggests interaction
between what one sees displayed (dimension 2) and what is known or thought mentally
(dimension 1), which correlates with the view as mentioned earlier, that there is a
dynamic dialectical relationship between seeing and knowing.
Hannerz also mentions that anthropological inquiry is mostly concerned with studying
the first dimension of culture: understanding structures of knowledge, belief,
experience, and feeling in all their subtlety, and in their entire range of variations at
home and abroad, is reasonably enough the core of cultural analysis (1992: 10). The
relationship between the first and second dimensions are also researched secondarily,
but the relationship between the second and third dimension, which he refers to as
distribution, has received the least attention.

Art as part of a social struggle


To look at the symbolic dimensions of social action art, religion, ideology,
science, law, morality, common sense is not to turn away from the existential
dilemmas of life for some empyrean realm of de-emotionalized forms; it is to
plunge into the midst of them (Geertz 1973: 30).

Drawing on Hannerzs augment that art is located within a complex cultural system, the
role of art within contemporary society will be explored in the following section. Here the
focus will be more on the social function of art than on the aesthetic functions thereof
such as pleasure, beauty, taste or form. The latter are topics that are very well
researched in theories that focus on art history and the fine arts. By briefly looking at
four theories of the social functions of art, I hope to offer a better understanding of what
one should understand under the term anthropology of art. The following section will
highlight how developments in anthropological theory changed the ways in which art
works should be understood and studied by anthropologists. By examining the ideas of
Alfred Gell and Clifford Geertz in section (i), it will be shown that they tried to break away
from the traditional theory that supported the idea that there is a difference between socalled primitive art and Western art as informed by anthropologists such as Pitt Rivers
(1906), Tylor (1871), and Frazer (1925) (Morphy and Perkins 2006: 3).

15

In section (ii) I will discuss two social theories of art as proposed by Theodor Adorno and
Niklas Luhmann in order to compare how the understanding of the role art is defined
from a socio-critical point of view. Both Adorno and Luhmanns theories also marked a
change in direction vis vis traditional theories explaining arts role in society. The
comparison of Gell and Geertzs theories with Adorno and Luhmanns theories is
important, seeing that there are ongoing discussions between disciplines regarding how
to interpret the importance and relevance of art in society. Anthropological views are not
excluded from these discussions. Morphy and Perkins (2006: 5) stress the importance of
such a discussion when they explain how anthropological theories changed and
developed over time:
This tension between the modernist avant-garde approach to the arts of other
cultures and the anthropological approach remains a continuing theme of
debates over the interpretation and exhibition if art. While the emphasis of
anthropology has long moved away from evolutionism, the tension remains
between the avant-garde view that art speaks for itself and is open to
universalistic interpretation, and an anthropological perspective, which requires
an indigenous interpretative context.

The ideas of Gell, Geertz, Adorno and Luhmann will be used and combined later in the
thesis to suggest how an anthropology of art should look like when informed by theories
that support the idea that knowledge is generated by presentational practices that
acknowledge the contingencies and complexities of the world we live in.

(i) Anthropological art theory


Art and material culture were an integral part of nineteenth century anthropology. As a
discipline, anthropology developed hand in hand with the cabinets of curiosity, with
antiquarianism,

and

with

the

widening

of

European

horizons

following

the

Enlightenment (Morphy and Perkins 2006:11). The following section will explore the
theoretical ideas of two contemporary anthropologists who tried to place the study of art
within the field of anthropology in a wider context than the traditional theories that looked
at art as the material objects of primitive societies.
Alfred Gell: Art and Agency
Any study on the anthropology of art will be incomplete without mentioning the work of
Alfred Gell, whose book Art and Agency an anthropological theory (1998) was
published posthumously. He begins his discussion on art by arguing that from an
anthropological point of view, art works are mainly described in terms of a theory

16

dealing with the art production in the colonial and post-colonial societies, plus the socalled Primitive art now usually called ethnographic art in museum collections
(Gell 1998: 1).
Gell continues by arguing that the anthropological theory of art equals the theory of
art applied to anthropological art (Gell 1998: 1). This is a very important point to make,
seeing that this view is still very popular in general as encountered in anthropological
journals and works on arts place within anthropological theory. Anthropological art is
classified as non-Western art and somehow constitutes different forms of classification
than those found in classical western art. Speaking as a Westerner, Gell is clear about
the fact that (t)here is no sense in developing one theory of art for our own art, and
another, distinctively different theory, for the art of those cultures who happened, once
upon a time, to fall under the sway of colonialism (Gell 1998:1). Gell asserts that the
aesthetic conditions of classification that are valid for Western art should also be valid
and applicable to everybodys art (Gell 1998: 1).
In order to reach the point where art from different cultural groups is to be valued on
equal terms, it should be appreciated and interpreted by recapturing the way of seeing
which artists of the period implicitly assumed their public would bring to their work (Gell
1998: 2). Accordingly, the anthropology of art should have an approximately similar
objective, except that it is the way of seeing of a cultural system which has to be
elucidated (Gell 1998:2). Hence Gells view on an anthropology of art can be viewed as
a combination of Berger (ways of seeing) and Hannerzs (art as embedded within
cultural systems). Gell elaborates on his argument by suggesting that an anthropology
of art should not just focus on illuminating the cultural systems within which art operates,
but the social systems should also be considered not to make it an exclusive project.
The main argument in Gells work, however, is that he views artworks to be mediators of
social agency (Gell: 1998: 22-23).
The concept of agency utilised by Gell is relational and context-dependent, not
classificatory and context free (Gell: 1998: 22). He seems to be drawing strongly on the
premises of post-structural theory in which the meaning of signs and subjects emerge
due to their relations to other signs and subjects. The artists intention of why a work of
art is produced is of great importance in Gells theory. He also shifts the location of
agency in such a way, that it is not just attached to the artists intentions, but also to the
artwork itself and furthermore to the network of social and cultural interaction in which

17

the artist and the art works takes part. The agency thus moves between the artist, the
artwork and the social networks. The agent to which agency is attached is connected to
the different contexts. In one context the artists intentions could possess agency, in
another context it is the artwork itself that possesses the agency (Gell 1998: 22- 23).
How the agency is distributed is worked out by very intricate formulas as Gell indicates
in his book, but the details thereof are not important for this study.
Drawing from Gells ideas, an anthropology of art should thus focus on the social
context of art production, circulation, and reception, rather than the evaluation of
particular works of art which, to Gells mind, is the function of a critic (Gell 1998: 3). In
constructing an anthropology of art theory, Gell does not place the art object at the
centre of his attention, but rather the production and circulation of art objects as a
function of agency. He does this in order to explain why people behave as they do
(Gell 1998: 11). Gell thus argues that an anthropology of art should not be exclusive, but
should include a wide variety of cultural and social factors. His argument supports the
notion that art is situated in a network of relationships that are more complex than what
meets the eye. This thesis supports such an argument.
When reading critiques on Gells views, it seems that there is a lot of ambivalence
around this subject of the anthropology of art. It is also apparent that there is not really
a coherent contemporary theory on the subject. Bowden (2007: 319 320) welcomes
Gells view that artworks frequently serve as mediators of social agency, but not that this
could be the primary role of art cross-culturally. Bowden further comments that
restricting anthropological analyses of art to the way objects mediate agency has the
effect of radically impoverishing both art as a cultural phenomenon and the anthropology
of art as an intellectual discipline. It impoverishes the anthropology of art as an
intellectual discipline since it prevents anthropologists from exploring a whole range of
other issues relating to the social role of art (2004: 320). Bowden surely has a point, but
the views of Gell are not only negative and when, integrated into a more holistic
description of cultural and social systems, they have the potential to form a good basis
for exploring forms of resistance art that are part of social struggles.
Clifford Geertz: Art as Cultural system
The realization that to study an art form is to explore a sensibility, that such a
sensibility is essentially a collective formation, and that the foundations of such a
formation are as wide as social existence and as deep, leads away not only from
the view that aesthetic power is a grandiloquence for the pleasures of craft. It

18

leads away also from the so-called functionalist view that has most often been
opposed to it: that is, that works of art are elaborate mechanisms for defining
social relationships, sustaining social rules, and strengthening social values
(Geertz 1983: 99).

The quote above stems from Geertzs book called Local Knowledge (1983). In The
Interpretation of Cultures (1973) Geertz introduces the notions of thick description
which advocates for a more interpretative approach to ethnographic research. Following
on the influence structuralism had on anthropology, which claimed that all knowledge
could be assimilated if one tried hard enough and looked at all the relations, Geertz
argues that data should be presented in a more meaningful way. Analysis, then, is
sorting out the structures of signification (t)he point now is only that ethnography is
thick description. What the ethnographer is in fact faced with except when he is
pursuing the more automatized forms of data collection is a multiplicity of complex
conceptual structures, many of them superimposed upon or knotted into one another,
which are at once strange, irregular, and inexplicit, and which he must contrive
somehow to first grasp and then to render (1973: 9 10).
The importance (and critique) of the interpretative turn, which Geertz introduced with his
notion of thick description, will be discussed in more detail in chapter two. What is
valuable from this new insight is that Geertz added new theoretical insights informing the
way in which ethnographic research should be tackled. He argued that human behaviour
should not just be analysed in terms of their contingencies, but instead interpreted and
explained in order to establish structures of meaning in terms of which people do such
things as signal conspiracies and join them (Geertz 1973: 12 13). In order to describe
how the ethnographer should go about when in the act of observing human behaviour,
which he qualifies as being symbolic action (the human behaviour that is), he uses the
following metaphors action, which, like phonation in speech, pigment in painting, line
in writing, or sonance in music (Geertz 1973: 10). The act of observing as ethnographer
becomes an act of looking for the fine nuances in how people act.
In his attempt to illustrate how the webs of meaning in which people organise their
existence are connected, Geertz extends his gaze to all these webs. One of the webs
(systems of meaning), which he specifically investigates in Local Knowledge, is that of
art as cultural system (1983: 94). Just like Gell, he also addresses the fact that
anthropology traditionally looked at so-called primitive art as something exotic and not
being in the same category as the fine art of Western civilisations. Geertz also argues

19

that although the aesthetic framework in which the so-called primitive societies work are
not the same as the aesthetic framework of Western art, the meanings certain
techniques or forms and objects have, are the same. Artworks in primitive art are not
just random contingent objects, but follow strict rules and aesthetic standards in the
same way that Western art submits to certain standards and rules in order to fit into
certain genres. Geertz, like Gell, contends that the work of art should be studied from
within the local knowledge of the cultural system from which it emerges (Geertz 1983:
97). Geertz agrees with Henri Matisse, that the means of art and the feeling for life that
animates it are inseparable (Geertz 1983: 98).
By placing art within the local knowledge system, the collective ways in which a certain
group of people define social relationships, [sustain] social rules and [strengthen] social
values (Geertz 1983: 99) are made visible. Hence, for Geertz the connection between
art and collective life is not situated on an instrumental level, but on a semiotic level:
Matisses colour jottings and the Yorubas line arrangements do not differ, save
glancingly, and celebrate social structure or forward useful doctrines. They materialize a
way of experiencing; bring a particular cast of mind out into the world of objects, where
men (sic) can look at it (Geertz 1983: 99). From this point of view it becomes apparent
then, that artistic expressions and aesthetic forms, whether it is Matisses yellow or the
Yorubas slash (Geertz 1983: 99), and the way it is understood within the context of the
specific culture, are ideationally connected to the society in which they are found. This is
not simply a mechanical process (Geertz 1983: 99).
To conclude, Geertzs understanding of an anthropology of art suggests that there is not
an objective way in which one can interpret art works. Art does not stand for itself or for
arts sake as is sometimes believed. According to Geertz, art forms part of a specific
societys cultural system and express the collective ideas of how the people of that
society ascribe symbolic meaning to their actions. Aesthetics thus become semiotics
(Geertz 1993: 118). In order to decipher the semiotics embodied by art works, it is the
task of the ethnographer to learn how to see in order to know (referring here to the
notion of seeing as knowing mentioned earlier). An anthropology of art should be
equipped with a new diagnostics, a science that can determine the meaning of things
for the life that surrounds them (Geertz 1983: 120).

20

(ii) Social theories of art


In the process of building an understanding of what an anthropology of art should look
like one should not forget how other disciplines deal with the same questions. From the
theories of Gell and Geertz this thesis takes a position that supports the notion that art is
situated within a complex cultural context that is not disconnectable from the social
relations in which it is embedded. Based on such an understanding of art, an
anthropology of art should therefore also consider social theories of art in order to be
comprehensive or meaningfully adequate to the lived experience of the individuals
whose engagements with art are in question (Harrington 2004: 3).
As defined by Harrington (2004: 4), social theory is understood to be that agency of
reflection that refers valuations of works of art to social facts about different changing
contexts of social institutions, social conventions, social perception and social power.
Explaining why it is important to study the role of art in society, Harrington (2004: 6)
argues that not only is it important to know how works of art influence political values,
processes of cultural production and valuation, but in the process of finding out how
society is influenced, the researcher herself is influenced by studying the frames of
perception. Harrington argues that studying arts situatedness in culture is not only a
fertile thematic subject of enquiry, but that by in the process of studying ways of
seeing, the researcher is equipped with ways of seeing (he calls it frames of
perception (Harrington 2004: 6)) which offers important contributions in the practice of
academic writing and reasoning. The significance has already been demonstrated for
(other) disciplines such as history, ethnography and anthropology, by scholars such as
Paul Ricoeur (1985-8), Clifford Geertz (1973) and it has always been a central
consideration for classical figures in sociology and social theory such as George
Simmel, Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer and Theodor Adorno (Harrington 2004:
6). According to Harrington all these figures show how aesthetic frames of perception
enter into textual aspects of metaphor, analogy and vignette; into sensuous media of
data analysis such as visual images and life-story narratives; and into conceptions of
theatrical qualities in social action (2004: 6). The link between how the study of art not
only tells us more about art, but also about how we perceive the world, is the link
between how an anthropology of art (knowledge about art) can contribute to a better
way of practising anthropology (the art of anthropology).
In order to supplement the notion of what an anthropology of art could or should look
like, the following section will explore the ideas of two social theories that influenced

21

ideas in art production and perception (especially in the field of resistance art and
conceptual art) particularly after the Second World War. The theories of Niklas Luhmann
and Theodor Adorno will be discussed briefly. By combining their insights on arts role in
society with the views of Gell and Geertz, a comprehensive anthropology of art will be
established.
Theodor Adorno: negative dialectic and autonomous art
Adornos uncompromising critique of mass culture as product of a culture industry
should be viewed on the background of the cultural landscape of his time. Adornos
critique of the blinding domination of instrumental rationalism should be understood in
the context of post World War II Germany. The ideals of the Enlightenment - freedom
from nature and emancipation of myth due to knowledge by means of rational thought resulted in the objectification of man and as a result the atrocities of the Holocaust
(which was the rational extermination of Jews based on scientific knowledge and
advancement in technology) could be legitimised by means of rationality. This kind of
rationality which Adorno and Horkheimer call instrumental rationality, is an instrument
that devices the self-destruction of Enlightenment. Rationality becomes a means to an
end and through its inherent character, this reversal is accounted for.
The role of art in a time of blind domination caused by mass produced cultural goods, is
a focus point throughout Adornos critique of Enlightenment reason. Adorno conceives
of art as the emphatic assertion of what is excluded from Enlightenments instrumental
rationality (Bernstein 1991: 6).
Adornos engagement with aesthetics and the role of art can be traced back to his
Habilitationsschrift which was titled Kierkegaard: The Construction of the Aesthetic
(1933). Being a trained music composer and accomplished musician himself probably
also contributed to stimulating his concerns with art and aesthetics.
Adornos first criticism of the culture industry was published in his essay titled On the
Fetish-Character in Music and the Regression of Listening (1938) where he responded
to the ideas of his friend, Walter Benjamin who argued in favour of the culture industrys
transformative potential of film and radio to radicalise the masses (Emerling 2005:43).
In The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (1936) Benjamin suggested
that film, sports, and other forms of mass entertainment were creating a new kind of

22

spectator, able to critically dissect cultural forms and to render intelligent judgement on
them (Kellner and Durham 2006: xviii).
Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno were two influential members of the Frankfurt
School of Critical Theory. Together with Max Horkheimer, Adorno developed a critique
of the culture industry in their book The Dialectic of Enlightenment (1947). The central
argument suggests that the culture industry brings about a change in the commodity
character of art. The cultural commodities of the industry are governed by the
principle of their realisation as value, and not by their own specific content and
harmonious formation (Bernstein 1991: 99). Cultural entities are thus not produced as
being a labour of desire, as Marx would suggest (Emerling 2005: 21), but as a
commodity that can be promoted and sold to consumers who have also been objectified
under capitalism. Once art and cultural products are being marketed, standardised and
institutionalised, the internal economic structure of cultural commodities shifts. In Marxist
terms this means that the mass-produced object loses its use value. Products produced
in the culture industry have their use value replaced by their exchange value.
In The Dialectic of Enlightenment Adornos position on aesthetics and the role and
nature of art are closely linked to his critique of instrumental reason. Under the influence
of instrumental reason (viewed as the objective form of action which treats the object
simply as a means and not as an end in itself) capitalism is rationalised to the extent that
it affects all of lifes spheres. The production and consumption of cultural goods are
driven by economic and political motives. The pleasures offered by the culture industry
are only an illusion and the real motive behind production and consumption is the quest
for making more profit and the further exploitation of the masses (Emerling 2005: 43).
The culture industry becomes integrated into the capitalist society. Under the domination
of capitalism and the uniformity of cultural consumption, everything becomes identical,
stereotypical and standardised. Adorno and Horkheimers immanent critique of culture
exposes the fact that it does not live up to its inherent promises to society. Instead of
offering quality entertainment, liberation of the unconscious, diversity, spiritual
nourishment and emancipation from institutionalised conformity, as promised, the
culture industry becomes another form of economic and structural domination.
For Adorno the only hope of a radical emancipation lies in the notion of what he calls
autonomous art. To counter his somewhat pessimistic diagnosis of the mass deception
of the Enlightenment, Adorno puts forward the notion of true art as the diametric
opposite of popular media and culture (Emerling 2005: 43).

23

When keeping in mind that Adorno rejects any form of art that affirms the evil world of
capitalism, it is not surprising that Adorno argues that:
(i)n a radically evil society one task of art must be to make people more
consciously unhappy and dissatisfied with their lives, and especially to make
them as keenly aware as possible of the dangers of instrumental rationality and
of the discrepancy between their world as potential paradise and their world as
actual catastrophe (Guess 1998: 300).
Adornos argument thus supports a Hegelian view of art which suggests that art has a
higher vocation and amounts to more than just providing entertainment. Adorno goes
even further than Hegel (who suggests a very positive view of the world) and argues that
arts vocation lies in the fact that it should be radically critical, negative not affirmative
(Guess 1998: 300). With the term negative, Adorno means that the criticism should be
an internal form of criticism, meaning that it should direct its criticism towards the
internal principles of society. The concept of negative criticism does not equate to the
notion of art as being a form of propaganda directed to influencing or mobilising people
towards political action. The efficiency of propaganda could be measured in terms of
whether the propaganda worked or not, and standardised forms of what is good forms of
propaganda could be set up. Strictly speaking, this would reduce arts autonomy and
subject it to the categories of instrumental thinking (Guess 1998: 301). Adornos notion
of a radical criticism and negative art suggests that works of art should innately be
useless. A negative art should present an image (Bild) of a kind of meaningfulness and
freedom which society promises its members, but does not provide (Guess 1998: 301).
When art has no meaningful, rational function, it internally violates the principles of the
Enlightenment project. Adorno thus ascribes to art a kind of dialectic characteristic. It is
as if art should open up the possibility of freedom by offering immanent critique in
cultural and social matters. Autonomous art engages in a critique of society by means of
its uselessness which is committed to itself, for itself. In aiming not to promote political
ideals and change, it has the possibility to actually do so.
Although Adornos ideas on the redemptive capability of autonomous art is often
criticised for being too utopian and idealistic, one should not criticise his work too onesidedly. His criticism of instrumental rationalism and the kind of (mass) culture it
produces is often seen as the catalyst for postmodern strains of thought whose point of
departure helped launch critiques on the totalising, grand theories of modernism.
Adornos challenge to bring the hidden forms of domination of mass produced culture to

24

the surface, and to expose how it fails to fulfil the promises it makes in terms of its own
character, remains a very important insight into the dialectical contradictions inherent in
grand designs and totalising theories.
Niklas Luhmann: Art as a social system
Another theorist who ascribes an autonomous type of art, and who also argues against
totalising theories, is Niklas Luhmann. Published originally in German in 1995,
Luhmanns book Art as a Social System appears to contain similar ideas to those Geertz
conveys in a chapter in Local Knowledge entitled Art as a cultural system (1983: 94).
Although Luhmann and Geertz both draw their understanding of the notion of social
systems from Max Webers interpretative sociology, these are the only similarities that
they appear to share. Drawing on Luhmanns theoretical understanding of what a social
system is1, one learns that humans are, for instance, not part of a social system.
Humans are categorised into a system called psychic systems, and they form part of the
environment of the social system. Social systems are made up of communicative
processes. Communication refers however not only to linguistic communication (as
found between human individuals), but also to global information circulation between
complex societal configurations, such as between the market and the state, civil law and
public policy, and so on (Harrington: 2004: 199). Art systems form a sub-system in
relation to social systems that are functional systems the law or economics are also
similar sub-systems. How Luhmann qualifies the differences between certain types of
systems, and how they communicate and operate, will not be explained here. What is
important is his view that art has no function in society as such. This understanding has
important consequences for how art is approached and this understanding will be used
later in this study to complement the argument that the relationship between art and
anthropology is not as ambiguous as often thought to be the case.
Luhmann (2000: 2) describes social systems as being self-creating or autopoietic
(also understood as self-organisation). Autopoiesis is understood as a characteristic of
a complex system due to the nature of the internal structure of the system (Cilliers 1998:
19). In order for an autopoietic system to function, it has to be operationally closed.
Luhmann (2000: 134) argues that art participates in society by differentiating itself as a
system, which subjects art to a logic of operative closure just like any other functional
system. This leads to the reason why Luhmann is not primarily concerned with

Luhmanns elaborate theory of social systems is explained in his seminal work: Social Systems.
(1995). Stanford University Press, Stanford.
25

problems of causality, of societys influence on art and of art on society (Harrington


2004: 200). Hence, modern art is autonomous, but not in the sense that Adorno
describes its autonomy, which boils down to art for arts sake. Luhmann (2000: 149)
suggests that (o)nce art becomes autonomous, the emphasis shifts from heteroreference to self-reference which is not the same as self-isolation, not lart pour lart.
Art has no ambition to redeem society by exercising aesthetic control over an expanded
realm of possibility The function of art is to make the world appear within the world.
Harrington (2004: 200) explains Luhmann by saying that Luhmanns understanding of
autonomous art implies that arts main function is to assist in the construction of a
distinction

in

social

consciousness

between

reality

and

imagination.

This

understanding of art illuminates the development of art movements such as twentieth


century avant-garde art and conceptual art. Art becomes self-referential and
incorporates what is traditionally seen as opposed to art, namely ordinary objects, junk
material, trash (Harrington 2004: 200). Luhmann argues that proposing art as a selforganising, self-referential system, it remains autonomic. To Luhmann this new social
system of art communicates the limits of communication; that is, in communicating the
breakdown of stable representation systems (Harrington 2004: 200).
The breakdown of the system of representation (semiotics) lies in the fact that every
time something is made available for observation something else withdraws, that, in
other words, the activity of distinguishing and indicating that goes on in the world
conceals the world (Luhmann 2000: 149). This is the paradox of seeing and
observation that exposes the human possibilities of perception and argues for a view
that striving for completeness or restricting oneself to the essential world would be
absurd (Luhmann 2000: 149). This view is closely related to Bergers view of the
dialectical nature of how we see and that our vision is continually active, continually
moving, continually holding things in a circle around itself, constituting what is present to
us as we are (Berger 1972 :7). Luhmanns understanding that meaning is never fixed
by the act of seeing (also an argument against the metaphysics of presence) is closely
related to a post-structuralist theory of meaning.
As mentioned by Harrington (2004: 201), Luhmanns theory has its flaws, seeing that it
does not say anything about art institutions, galleries, dealers and publishers (the
network that Gell focussed on) and even less about important cross-penetrations of art
by other social systems, such as commerce, politics and the media. Luhmanns

26

argument that art no longer has the function to offer a critique of society such as
highlighted by Adorno is also contestable. Nonetheless, the important contribution
Luhmanns theory makes, is the fact that the act of seeing or observing is paradoxical.
The notion that the world is made visible in the world by means of artistic expression,
is a very valuable contribution that suggests that arts role can be described as a way of
witnessing (observing). Art as witness of what is visible and invisible in this world is a
notion that will be explored further in Chapters four and five.
The politics of knowing and being known and the politics of seeing and being seen are
thus central when looking at arts role in a complex contemporary society. As Morphy
and Perkins (2006: 22) argue, art is an integral part of most, if not all, human societies
and that by failing to study it anthropologists deny themselves access to a significant
body of information. It can provide insights into human cognitive systems how people
conceptualise components of their everyday life and how they construct representations
of their world. An anthropology of art should thus include how the practices of
observation, representation and interpretation, which point to the dialectical relationship
seeing-knowing

as

discussed

in

this

chapter,

could

inform

anthropological

methodologies.
The elucidating properties inherent to art, its power to propose a new vision of the world,
and the way in which it teaches us to see and direct the gaze, are important
contributions for any fieldworker who is aiming at translating the realities of her subjects
of study. From the perspective that art is part of our cultural and social practices, an
anthropology of art should include studying how pictures are put together and make
statements about this world (Pink et al 2004: 3). By understanding that the
representational practices in art are not value-free, an anthropology of art should be able
to offer an implicit critique of the approaches used when applying visual and
representational methods. An anthropology of art should thus consider the processes of
research and representation in order to invite new ways of working with people, words
and images (Pink et al 2004:3).
The next chapter will explore how ethnographic methods have changed over the past
years and how the awareness that visual information could be valuable in the process of
generating anthropological knowledge has been incorporated into ethnographic
practices.

27

Chapter 2: The Art of Anthropology


In chapter one the connection between art and anthropology was established based on
the shared notion of their representational practices (Schneider and Wright 2006: 26).
This chapter will focus on the representational practices found in anthropology and
especially how changes were brought about due to the fact that our understanding of
observational practices was influenced by changes in theory. The focus of the study will
be to address these changes in terms of the dialectical relationship between knowledge
and practice. Examples mentioned are thus chosen for their relevance in this relational
framework. This chapter will not attempt to map out a concise history of ideas found in
the development of anthropology, but will look at moments in which change took place.
A complete history of all the different trends in anthropology (both in social and cultural
anthropology) would amount to a task which would need much more space to address.
The author therefore acknowledges that what follows does not mention important
developments in the building of anthropological theory (for example the movement from
evolutionism to cognitive approaches or from transactionalism to functionalism). This
chapter will start by looking how anthropology emerged as part of a positivistic project
and how it changed to internalise anti-positivistic understandings of culture and
knowledge production.

Anthropos + logos: Knowledge of human beings


In social and cultural anthropology, a distinction is usually made between
ethnography and theory. Ethnography is literally the practice of writing about
peoples. Often it is understood to mean our way of making sense of other
peoples modes of thought, since anthropologists usually study cultures other
than their own. Theory is also, in part anyway, our way of making sense of our
own, anthropological mode of thought (Barnard 2000: 4).

One might be tempted to think that in a field like anthropology whose main method of
inquiry is participant observation, there would be no need for theory. In his discussion
about the relationship between theory and ethnography, Barnard (2000: 4) mentions that
theory and ethnography inevitably merge into one. This understanding of the
relationship between theory and ethnography could serve as an analogy for the
discussion that started in chapter one, regarding the relationship between seeing and
knowing. Here it becomes important to qualify, that by using the term seeing, its
synonyms are also implied: the faculty of seeing, sight, vision as well as the act of

28

acquiring insight, observing (whether by the act of seeing or by using all other senses).
The following chapter will explore how the politics of knowing and being known (Lather
2001: 483) is at work within the observational techniques and practices of the
ethnographer who is concerned about the politics of seeing and being seen.
In chapter one it was contended that what we know and how we interpret it, is influenced
by how we see. A synonym for seeing is of course, observing. When speaking of
observing in anthropological terms, the notion of participant observation is not far away
in ones mind, which can be described as the empirical resources used to construct an
ethnography of what was observed. On answering the question why participant
observation is important, Dewalt and Dewalt (1998: 265) argue that the apprenticeship
experience results in ways of knowing and learning to see that are distinct from less
participatory approaches. The anecdote of anthropologist Ivor Kopytoff who met several
Suku intellectuals in Belgium who were children forty years ago when he did fieldwork in
their village in the Republic of Congo, helps to further establish the connection between
ethnography and visual representation. For the modern Suku, the importance of
Kopytoffs work in their village lay in his preservation of a picture of their society as it
had been several decades ago ... in an way that rang true to them in terms of what they
themselves knew (Kopytoff quoted in Climo and Cattell 2002: 10). In a sense it can be
said that Kopytoffs ethnographic work constituted a mental picture of their past which
contained important meaning for their lives. Hence from this example one could derive
that written down ethnographic accounts resemble pictures or visual images (Bilder, in
German, is a better word that also refers to mental images) of what has been observed.
To linger a while longer on the idea of connecting anthropological practices and modes
of representation with ways of seeing and the notion of seeing as knowing as
mentioned in Chapter one, a short excursion to the roots of anthropological knowledge
production is undertaken.
When one thinks of the fact that the observations (field notes) of the ethnographer
become the raw empirical material and resources of the ethnography, one realises that
the birth of anthropology correlates with the Enlightenment project of modernity and its
positivistic practices of measuring the world and putting things into nameable categories.
As a discipline, anthropology developed hand in hand with the cabinets of curiosity, with
antiquarianism and with the widening of European horizons following the Enlightenment
(Morphy and Perkins 2006: 3).

29

In trying to render a history of vision, Crary (1992) investigates the role of the observer
as well as technological developments in optical devices (such as moving cameras,
microscopes, stereoscopes etc.) that influenced the production of knowledge during the
past two centuries. His very interesting study however also tries to relate how the study
of the development of mechanical devices cannot only be reduced to studying the
technical and mechanical practices. The role of the observer and how the notion of
subject vision, which he explains as the role played by the mind (1992: 9), influences
what we see, and should also be analysed. The notion that there is a dialectical
relationship between seeing and knowing pervaded not only areas of art and literature
but (is) present in philosophical, scientific, and technological discourses (Crary 1992:
9).
The implications that this has for knowledge production within the sciences and
elsewhere is stressed when Crary (1992: 9) remarks that rather than stressing the
separation between art and science it is important to see how they were both part of
a single interlocking field of knowledge and practice. When looking back at the history
of ideas that led to the Enlightenment, Crary (1992: 9) argues that (t)he same
knowledge that allowed the increasing rationalization and control of the human subject
in terms of new institutional and economic requirements was also a condition for new
experiments in visual representation. The very important conclusion Crary makes on
this point (which is also of importance for establishing a relationship between artistic and
anthropological representational practices), is the fact that he suggests that an
observing subject was both a product of and at the same time constitutive of
modernity in the nineteenth century. Very generally, what happens to the observer in the
nineteenth century is a process of modernization (Crary 1992: 9).
In many disciplines, the notion of a positivist quest for knowledge was assisted by the
practice of filing and categorising images. The Mnemosyne Atlas created by Aby
Warburg (1866 1929) is a good example of such a practice. Warburg went on many
extended fieldtrips to collect images of the people he was studying. In his library,
Warburg collected all kinds of images and sorted them according to certain themes
(Belting 2001: 51). What was important in his cataloguing venture was not the artistic
quality of the image or the aesthetic excellence, but the motive and meaning of the
image (Mller and Knieper 2001: 15). This form of clustering images together changed
the characteristic of the source of the image. In Warburgs atlas the images became

30

sources of bygone realities (Mller and Knieper 2001: 15). Such modernistic
formalization and standardization of knowledge of the observer led to forms of power
that depended on the abstraction and formalization of vision (Crary 1992: 150).
In its quest to generate order and categorise what humans know about nature,
positivism created subjects that also wanted to categorise their own kind. Crary remarks
that (v)ision, rather than a privileged form of knowing, becomes itself an object of
knowledge, of observation. From the beginning of the nineteenth century a science of
vision will tend to mean increasingly an interrogation of the physiological makeup of the
human subject, rather than the mechanics of light transmission (Crary 1990: 70). The
science of vision thus becomes anthropological knowledge of mankind.

More than what meets the eye


As the eye, such the object (Crary 1992: 70)

The dialectical relationship between seeing and knowing can thus be traced back to the
roots of anthropology. How mankind has observed (and developed techniques and
devices to see better) and consequently asked different questions about what was seen,
has had a direct influence on the generation of knowledge. Barnard (2000: 13) argues
that much of the history of anthropology can be characterised by a history of changing
questions. Anthropology has always been sensitive to developments and changes in
terms of the status of knowledge, due to the fact that anthropology is based on a
practice that has to stand its ground amidst the messiness of real life. Anthropological
theory underwent many chances since the crisis of representation in the 1980s as
asserted by Marcus and Fischer (1986), which followed the interpretative turn
introduced by Geertz (1973). Having survived the representative and interpretative
turns, anthropology also had to withstand the onslaught of post-structuralist and
postmodernist theory on anthropological thinking and practice. Climo and Cattell (2002:
10) discuss how ethnography has endured these and many other transformations
because ethnographers are open to the surprise of fieldwork, to the discovery of other
cultural worlds and other perspectives that we can use in our comparative framework.
Somehow anthropology is proof of the fact that there is a dialectical power at work in
the relationship seeing-knowing. Whilst observing and interpreting, not only the
knowledge about the subject changes in a dynamic way, but also the understanding of
the self (as scientist and the science in which it operates) changes to become aware of

31

the politics of seeing and knowing that influence the process of knowledge production
(Dewalt and Dewalt 1998: 291).
The power of this dialectic is also apparent to artists who are open to how their work is
seen and what influence the act of seeing their work would have on its audiences. South
African artist, William Kentridge is someone who uses this dialectic when producing his
works of art, which usually challenges viewers to see in new ways. His extensive use of
moving images, mirror stereoscopes, cylinder anamorphoses and multi-dimensional
sketches are set up in such a way that they work as puzzles on the viewer. For
Kentridge (2007: 39) seeing is always a process of meeting the world halfway, in which
we counteract the reports of the world onto our eyes with the pressure of the existing
knowledge, understandings, prejudices and fixed ideas streaming out of us... . Whilst
reading this quote from Kentridge, the image of the eye as interface between what is
seen and our inner ideas and knowledge meet each other, comes to mind. Here the
quote at the beginning of this section can now be invoked again: As the eye, such the
object (Crary 1992: 70)

New perceptions and prescriptions


If the gaze is turned on anthropology, one will see how changes in viewing the object of
study, changed anthropology itself. By following the changes that the concept of culture
underwent in the history of anthropology, one learns that theoretical frameworks and
research concerns have led to differing views on culture, research methods and
ethnography (Climo and Cattell 2002: 9).
The new perceptions (here referring to the word in its etymological depth: knowledge
that arises from seeing, observation, but also the state of being aware, understanding)
that developed in literature and art were translated into anthropological practice and
epistemology. Climo and Cattell (2002: 8-10) give an account of how anthropology
operates in liminal spaces which can be defined as spaces between disciplines, and is
carried out in liminal practices or hybridized methods. The notion of liminality is also
supported by Victor Turner who explains it as embracing the idea that being in
interstitial spaces, betwixt and between, promotes creativity (Climo and Cattell 2002: 7).
This analogy is used to describe the influence other theories from different disciplines
had (and have) on anthropology. The basic method of participant observation has

32

come to embrace a wide range of methods, many borrowed from other fields, especially
history and sociology (Climo and Cattell 2002: 7).
The work of Clifford Geertz (Interpreting Culture, 1973) and Victor Turner (The Forest of
Symbols, 1967) had their roots in structuralist and linguistic theories of meaning and
were important catalysts for understanding how concepts of culture changed. There is
general agreement that (t)hese interpretative and symbolic approaches foreshadowed
postmodern anthropology, which abandoned earlier views of culture as homogenous,
well bounded units, and proposed a view of culture as ambiguous, filled with
inconsistencies, only partially shared, and often contested (Climo and Cattell 2002: 9).
As in literary and art theory from which the postmodern way of viewing the world
originated, the authority of the person who produced the text, work of art, and in the
instance of anthropology, the ethnography, was questioned. Ethnographies were
subjected to the same scrutiny as texts and images meaning could only be derived
upon after working through all the layers of interpretation that the text produced. Issues
such as that of voice and representation, power and hegemony (Climo and Cattell
2002: 9), as well as issues such as self-presentation and reflexivity, were relevant
aspects to consider when extracting meaning.
Moore and Sanders (2006) offer a critical view of how the changes in understanding the
concept of culture were received within the different strains of Anthropology. The view of
culture that is expressed by Geertz highlights the notion that social groups are tied
together by expressions of shared values, meanings and symbols (Moore and Sanders
2006: 10). This understanding of culture is problematic, because it neglects the fact that
culture is also power. Geertz (1973: 14) clearly states that culture is not a power, it is
a context, something within which social events, behaviours, institutions and processes
can be intelligently (thickly) described.
By neglecting the power-principle from the equation, Geertz does not offer
anthropologists a way of seeing that deems questions such as why some ideologies
become powerful and persuasive and how they come to serve the interests of some
groups over others (Moore and Sanders 2006: 10) as being important and necessary
questions to ask. Geertzs argument points toward an understanding of culture that is
coherent and in which there is a sense of consensus, when in fact there exists social
difference and even discrimination (Moore and Sanders 2006:10).

33

The theories of by Pierre Bourdieu2 and Michel Foucault3 uncovered power relations that
could be located within the movement and experience of the body (Moore and Sanders
2006:11). They contributed in important ways to shape understandings of lived
experience (Bourdieu) and how power is traced in the structures of social action on both
interpersonal levels and at institutional levels (Foucault). The contributions to
anthropology from Bourdieu and Foucault will not be the focus of this study, but it is
important to note that their theories had a huge impact on expanding the concept of
culture to be not just the values and modes of expressions that people use, but to
include the ways in which they use it.
Following the work of Foucault and Bourdieu, post-structuralist and postmodern
theorists contested totalising theories, dominant ideologies and the assumption that
meaning can be fully known. Postmodern theory acknowledges the fragmentary,
ambiguous and uncertain quality of how individuals experience the world in which they
live. These feelings are also projected in the cultural texts the postmodern subject
produces. According to Barker (2000: 22) texts are typified by self-consciousness,
bricolage and intertextuality and produce the blurring of cultural boundaries. Cultures
are thus not whole, unifying entities, but fragmented and scattered and meaning is
contested. The differences internal to one culture, its individuals and meaning making
practices are also highlighted.
The post-structuralist way of seeing was also inspired by the understanding that
knowledge can never be complete. The presence of the observer in relation to what is
being viewed, can never be interpreted as an innocent act and that the gaze does not
take us into more enlightened realms of radiant knowledge, as Descartes still assumed
(Kentridge 2007: 45). This understanding of the relationship of seeing-knowing
correlates with what was mentioned in Chapter one, that the relationship should not be
interpreted as an argument in favour of a metaphysics of presence. As mentioned
earlier, William Kentridges work shows us, meaning is never fixed, constantly in a
change of flux and reinterpreted each time, just as his images disintegrate into dust so
that another can emerge from it (Kentridge 2007: 47).
The usual critiques against post-structuralist and postmodernist theories are that they
are relativistic and dismiss any grounded position for producing any form of scientific
2

Notably Pierre Bourdieu (1990). The Logic of Practice. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Notably Michel Foucault (1991). The Bodies of the condemned, in Sheridan, A. Discipline and
Punish: The Birth of the Prison. London: Penguin Books.
3

34

knowledge. As will be argued in Chapter three, this is not the understanding of a


rigorous kind of postmodernism (Cilliers 2005: 257). In the following section, the
influences on anthropology after postmodernism will be discussed.

Ethnography after Writing Culture


In order to start with how postmodern theories could have and influence on
anthropology, it is important to qualify how the term postmodern will be understood in
this study. In the scope of this study the term postmodern refers to the style of thinking
that accepts the fact that we can no longer provide a single description of the world
and its domination by a common morality known to all rational beings. When discussing
postmodernity from a socio-philosophical point of view, the disbelief and disillusionment
in such a position is not based on a chronological understanding of the prefix post.
Here the definition of Anderson (1995:6) refers to the term as a world that does not
know how to define itself by what it is, but only by what it has just ceased to be.
This notion of ceasing to be can be linked to how Cilliers (1998 and 2005) claims that
arguing for a postmodernist position is not the same as taking up a relativist position.
There are certain understandings of the term postmodern that works with a lot of excess
and the notion that anything goes. Cilliers however proposes a more rigorous sort of
postmodernism that makes certain knowledge claims, but is willing to see the limits of
these claims:
We can make strong claims, but since these claims are limited, we have to be
modest about them. This does not imply that they should be relative, vague or
self-contradictory, nor does it imply a reason to cringe in false modesty. We can
increase the knowledge we have of a certain system, but this knowledge is
limited and we have to acknowledge these limits. The fact that our knowledge is
limited is not a disaster; it is a condition for knowledge. Limits enable knowledge
(Cilliers 2005: 263).

To translate the above into anthropological terms, means that postmodernism would be
sceptical and critical towards positivist ventures that claim that truth is objective and out
there, and that science should just work hard enough in order to discover it. A
postmodern approach in anthropology would also imply the rejection of both grand
theory and the notion of completeness in ethnographic description. On the latter
score they oppose the presumption of the ethnological authority on the part of the

35

anthropologist (Barnard 2000: 168). Consequently approaches that include an attitude


of reflexivity would also be characterised as postmodern.
Barnard (2000: 169) argues that anthropologys premier postmodernist text is Writing
Culture (Clifford and Marcus, 1986). In the introduction, James Clifford attacks the
notion of ethnography as a representation of the wholeness of culture and stresses the
incompleteness of ethnographic expression (Barnard 2000: 170). In this manner Clifford
argues that the act of writing up the ethnography should be tackled in the same way as
one would approach writing a literary text in which the focus would be the narrative
character of cultural representations (Barnard 2000: 170).
In his essay which explores the influences Cliffords Writing Culture had on ethnography,
Spencer (2001: 450) remarks that surprisingly a formularized version of postmodern
ethnography, alternating between stock passages of ethnographic self-consciousness
and (carefully edited and positioned) voices, is in danger of becoming the disciplinary
norm. This is the result of students who are being trained to read the canon of classical
theorists with huge amounts of critique and also because the stereotype of the colonial
ethnographer has become as familiar a figure as the caricature armchair
anthropologists invoked by Malinowski and his successors (Spencer 2001: 450).
By inserting postmodern approaches to ethnography as a mainstream position, it loses
the initial critical edge and conviction it had as it did in the mid-1980s. Having made the
postmodern method of doing things a mainstream way of approaching ethnography, it
is not surprising that genuinely radical experiments with the mode of ethnographic
representation remain as rare as ever (Barnard 2000: 450).
Another feature of this mainstream position is that after Writing Culture, the notion of
culture itself changed. As Barnard remarks, it has become problematic for
ethnographers to write about their subjects as if they lived in sealed, often timeless,
bubbles called cultures (2000: 450). This notion itself is problematic, seeing that from a
modest kind of postmodernism as mentioned above, the notion of making culture a
boundary-less open field of who-knows-what, destroys the notion of culture. In order for
something to have meaning, it must differentiate itself from something else. The limits
(or boundaries) enable meaning. Moore and Sanders (2006: 18) are also critical of the
notion of culture being indistinct, and suggest a more nuanced view thereof: Culture as
a concept is both stabilizing and negotiable, both about long-run cultural values and

36

systems and about lived daily practice and the determinations of the moment. This
dialectical and contested nature of culture is congruent with a modest understanding of
the term postmodernism.
In light of the fact that the postmodern approach has lost its initial critical moment and
power of conviction, Spencer suggests that in order for anthropology to remain relevant
and effective in the world, one should engage in a modest kind of critical ethnography
that not only internalises the contested nature of culture, but that is also grounded on a
strong reflexivity which recognizes that the ethnographer and his or her language are
inevitable a part of the phenomenon that is being investigated (Spencer 2001: 450).
Spencer furthermore suggests a kind of ethics of representational practices that is
sensitive towards the responsibility to recognize complexity and difference (Spencer
2001: 450) rather than hide them behind excessive notions of being overly and blindly
politically correct. Spencer (2001: 450) remarks that with this sense of responsibility
comes a liberty that enables the ethnographer to write extraordinarily rich, and even
sometimes extraordinarily readable, ethnographies that are quite open about their
limitations and partiality, and which manage to acknowledge the complexity of the
world. This view of a postmodern approach to anthropology coincides with the notion
supported by Cilliers (2005: 263) who claims that (t)he fact that our knowledge is limited
is not a disaster, it is a condition for knowledge. Limits enable knowledge.

Proceeding beyond prescription


Is it possible for anthropology to be different, that is, to forget itself and to
become something else or must it remain as a partner in domination and
hegemony? (Lather 2001: 482).

The direction of the argument up to now in the study followed a slow journey to map out
the development of epistemological changes in anthropology. The changes can be
traced from the point where anthropology started out as a part of a positivistic process to
gather all there is to know, to a postmodern understanding of knowledge that reflects on
the actual process of gathering knowledge that claims loss of authority and coherent
wholes. As mentioned in the foregoing section, even this politically correct postmodern
way of approaching the act of gathering data and writing up results is not unproblematic.
The fact that this newly found position has now settled into an historical occasion
(Lather 2001: 477) and becomes the new prescriptive authority, consequently leaves
postmodernism in a place where it has lost its critical and transformative energy due to

37

its own containment (Lather 2001: 477). The following section will deal with this loss of
innocence (Lather 2001: 485) and will look at finding ways forward to get beyond this
predicament.
Lather (2001: 477) addresses the above mentioned issue at length and the discussion
will now proceed to unpack what she writes about the predicament of this current order
of knowledge. Drawing strongly on Derridas logic of deconstruction, Lather suggests
that the ruins of postmodernism, science and, finally ethnography itself (2001: 477)
could be turned into something hopeful and useful to get beyond the stuck places (or
liminal spaces as mentioned earlier) in which practices of knowing (2001: 477) are in at
present.
Building on her analogy of ruins, Lather suggests that the failures of ethnography
(Lather 2001: 478) are not retraceable to being failures of method, but of epistemology
(2001: 478). By this she implies that the whole discussion that was driven by the
reflective turn was based on criticising ethnography as the method for gathering and
writing up knowledge. Consequently the self-conscious postmodern ways in which
ethnographies are being produced in fear of misrepresenting the subject, loose sight of
the fact that textual experimentation will not be the silver bullet that slays the dragon of
misrepresentation (Lather 2001: 485). This point resonates with Spencers argument
that unreadable texts and evasive and self-abjecting and self-estranged styles of writing
do not do enough to represent the complexities of the world (Spencer 2001: 450). By
exposing the constraints the mainstream postmodern prescriptions put on the
ethnographer and conscience of the researcher, Lather suggests a way in which one
could break free and proceed beyond these restraints.

(De)limiting the field from postmodernism to postmodernity


The way that Lather sees out of the aporia4 of practice (2001: 482), is to deconstruct
the logic of postmodernism and its consequences for anthropology and to use it against
itself. Lather starts by making a distinction between deconstruction and ideological
critique (which reaches its peak in postmodernism). To Lather (2001: 479), ideology
critique as founded in Marxs writings and its different versions thereof is about
uncovering hidden forces and material structures and salvaging determinism and conflict
4

Aporia is a term Derrida uses and defines it as being an undecidability, a double bind (Lather
2001: 482). The notion of aporia can be connected to the notion of liminality as used by Turner,
explained earlier, who calls it the betwixt and between (Climo and Cattell 2002: 7).
38

theory. It endorses foundational criteria for science and a binary of textual/material in its
calls for grounding our knowing in some real assumed knowable outside of the
rhetoricity of language. Operating in a different logic and not as critique, (t)he
deconstructive sense of task is to move to some place interrupted, out of balance,
extreme, against the levelling processes of the dialectic and for the excesses, the nonrecuperable remainder, the difference, in excess of the logic of non-contradiction
(Lather 2001: 479 480). To Lathers mind, the logic of deconstruction is another logic
to that of dialectical opposition (2001: 480). Caputos effort to explain deconstruction as
being post-critical, aims at proposing an attitude that is a continued commitment to
critique and demystification of truth but with a meta layer of being critical of
demystification itself (Caputo quoted in Lather 2001: 480). By deconstructing the
normalizing effect of postmodernisms logic and for exposing it as being constraining for
the last word it has on things, Lather demystifies it. She suggests that the term
postmodern modernity (2001: 480) would not be a bad word to describe a
deconstructed postmodernism. This term can be connected to Cilliers notion of a
modest form of postmodernism mentioned earlier. This is an approach that does not so
much focus on the failures of the methods, but more so, on the failures of epistemology.
Lather (2001: 480) explains this in the following manner:
Past the post of epistemological wrestling with representation, blurred genres
and the ethics of the gaze, such a sense of crisis asks how we come to think of
things this way and what would be made possible if we were to think
ethnography otherwise, as a space surprised by difference into the performance
of practices of not-knowing.

The fact that the reflective turn started questioning the very space of ethnographic
knowing (Lather 2001: 482) resulted in the notion that the ethnographic texts
themselves became the site of the failure of representation (Lather 2001: 481). For
Lather, redemption lies not in producing textual experiments (as practised by
postmodern writers) to counter the knowledge of unequal power that lies in the
researcher vis vis the researched, but in acknowledging the limits of the ways in which
knowledge can be obtained. Attempting to be accountable to complexity, thinking the
limit becomes our task and much opens up in terms of ways to proceed for those who
know both too much and too little (Lather 2001: 482). This understanding of the
epistemological status of knowledge claims once again resonates with Cilliers' notion of
limits that are enabling as mentioned earlier. For Lather the answer of moving beyond
the postmodern constraints, lies within (de)limiting epistemological knowledge claims.

39

Locked up in what seems the failure of ethnography lays the key to unlock new
possibilities of dealing with the politics of knowing and seeing.

The Art of Anthropology: Seeing as not-knowing


How might we think ethnography as an art of being in between, of finding ways
of using the constraining order, of drawing unexpected results from ones abject
situation, of making the dominant function in another register, of diverting it
without leaving it? (Lather 2001: 481).

The study took a long detour to come to this point not because of a postmodernist
streak of the author behind it, but in order to work through the logic of how deeply
entrenched research practices and the production of knowledge are with constraining
and politically loaded devices even if it claims to be free of it and giving voices to the
voiceless.
Lather suggests that the inherent capacity of ethnography to be open to the surprise of
fieldwork (Climo and Cattell 2002: 10), situates it as an ideal place to present itself as
limited practice of representation. What has seemed the failure of ethnography now
becomes an enabling characteristic. By situating ethnography as an experience of
impossibility (Lather 2001: 482), it becomes the ideal liminal space to work through the
aporias of representation. It becomes the way of gathering and presenting knowledge in
a way that exposes a practice that is about ontological stammering, a praxis without
guaranteed subjects or objects, orientated toward the as yet incompletely thinkable
conditions and potentials of given arrangements (Lather 2001: 482). What Lather is
trying to express, is that even the effort to want to show how politically correct we are
in our efforts to represent others, we fail deeply. What we learn from ethnography is the
fact that we can NEVER know the other or his or her conditions (arrangements) fully
no matter how objectively we go about the process. Even in our attempts to show our
concern for the power relations and frames of references, we utterly fail to represent the
picture of how it is to be X living in this specific location dealing with this specific
problem. By admitting that our knowledge of the reality of the others life is not complete,
we come clean of the prescriptions of the postmodern constraints. Lather (2001: 486)
argues that even in our attempts to be practising reflexive/interpretative ethnography,
ethnography authorizes itself by confronting its own processes of interpretation as
some sort of cure toward better knowing, while deconstruction approaches knowing
through not knowing.

40

At this stage the whole discussion of the relationship seeing-knowing takes on a logic
that connects with the art work of William Kentridge, which explicitly aims at giving the
viewer the experience that what is happening in front of him or her is so complex, that
one can not see everything (this is especially apparent in his production of Mozarts The
Magic Flute)5. As mentioned in Chapter one, the seeing referred not to a logic that is
equated with the metaphysics of presence, but refers to seeing that supports the
notion of a deconstructive logic. Thus, the understanding of the notion of the limit of
communication supported by Luhmann in Chapter one comes into play now when he
mentions that this new social system of art communicates the limits of communication;
that is, in communicating the breakdown of stable representation systems (Harrington
2004: 200). He explains that the breakdown of the system of representation lies in the
fact that every time something is made available for observation something else
withdraws, that, in other words, the activity of distinguishing and indicating what goes on
in the world conceals the world (Luhmann 2000: 149). This is the paradox of seeing,
which exposes the human possibilities of perception and representation. And as
Luhmann says a view that strives for completeness or restricting oneself to the
essential world would be absurd (Luhmann 2000: 149). From this perspective, seeing
thus becomes not-knowing.
The contribution that art thus offers to anthropology is the opportunity to express this
aporia. To offer new and other ways of seeing and knowing to be internalised in an
ethnography that does not strive to control knowledge, but one that marks the limit of
the saturated humanist logics of knowledge as cure that determines the protocols
through which we know (Lather 2001: 487).
The art of anthropology thus lies in actively looking for ways to undo the aporias marked
by the loss of innocence of ethnography and the crisis of representation. Such efforts
work the ruins of ethnography as the very ground from which new practices of
ethnographic representation might take shape (Lather 2001: 485).

In the concert program for the production of Mozarts The Magic Flute, Kentridge writes even in
(operas) most reduced and minimalist form, it is an overload. In this production we ask you to
listen to the orchestra, the singers, the spoken text, to watch the singers, to read the subtitles
above the stage, and also to watch the projections behind and around all of this. It is clear that
this is too much. The best advice I can give is to let your eyes and ears follow as they will, and
accept that a part of the production will be missed. This acceptance is better than any anxiety
about not taking everything in (2007).
41

The next chapter will look at how, when situated in the awareness of the limitations of
our representational practices which manage to acknowledge the complexity of the
world, art and anthropology have a lot to offer when their deconstructive capacities are
combined.

42

Chapter 3: Complexity theory: weaving together ways of seeing


Complexity is a problem word and not a solution word (Edgar Morin, 1993)

Chapter one started with a confession about the near impossibility to talk and write
about art. Setting out to speak about complexity in itself is also characterised by
overcoming some difficulty in speaking about it at all, due to the fact that one might fall
prey to committing the performative contradiction (i.e. doing exactly that which one
claims is impossible to do). Speaking about complexity effectively in a limited framework
such as that which this thesis allows, asks for reducing the concept, its history and
development, its inner workings and implications to a huge extent. And reducing
complexity is precisely what cannot be done. In other words, the complex cannot be
summarized in a single word that which cannot be brought under a law of complexity,
reduced to the idea of complexity (Nicolaus 2007: 333).
The aim of this chapter is to build on the main concepts with regards to ways of
knowing as mentioned in chapter one and two. Seeing that the first meaning of the
word (complexity) comes from the Latin complexus, which means what is woven
together (Morin 2007: 6), this chapter hopes to weave together the notions of Chapters
one and two. This approach is based on the understanding of knowledge that is
supported by complexity theory as an attempt to move beyond the postmodern
predicament as mentioned in Chapter two. In order to map out a way through the
predicament, it would be important to offer some general understanding of complexity
and the characteristics of a theory that is informed by it. Once a clear description of what
complexity theory has to offer has been sketched, the chapter will explore how an
anthropology of art and the art of anthropology combined, can give us directions for
more authentic (mis)representational practices and knowledge production in our
scientific endeavours.

The birth of systems theory


In an attempt to describe how systems theory became an interesting and valuable tool in
dealing with epistemological issues, Rasch and Wolfe (2000:1) start with Adorno and
Horkheimers discontent with the Enlightenment project. Their contribution of negative
dialectics as form of immanent critique against the onslaught of positivism and the
reforms in theoretical thinking that took place after that up to postmodernism, suggests
an interesting point of departure for understanding the birth of a systems theory

43

approach. The fact that the workings of the negative dialectic left us with a legacy of the
so-called loss of reference with its dislocation of epistemological security (Rasch and
Wolfe 2000: 8) presents us with a puzzle to solve. To Rasch and Wolfe (similarly as by
Lather) this aporetic position should not be viewed as a dead end but rather as an
opening and an invitation to a philosophical and political pluralism, one whose
commitment to democratic difference may be gauged precisely by the extent to which it
squarely faces the loss of the referent and the contingency and materiality of
knowledge (2000: 8).
It is suggested that a general systems theory as posed by Luhmann, possesses the
necessary tools to think through the breakdown of the representationalist world (Rasch
and Wolf 2000: 14). Systems theory offers the possibility of a theory of knowledge that
can count with greater range and power for the complex interactions of human beings in
what Bruno Latour calls the hybrid networks of social systems in which we will find
ourselves enmeshed in the coming years (Rasch and Wolf 2000: 17). By studying the
work of Niklas Luhmann as posed in his epic work, Social Systems (1984), it is shown
that his notion of defining society in terms of system-environment differentiations places
systems theory in a good position to deal with general epistemological problems of
description, observation, and interpretation (Rasch and Wolfe 2000: 10).
The change in thought about the importance of systems theory came from Luhmann's
investigations into how the natural sciences dealt with the problem of objective
observation. The breakthroughs in quantum physics and its epistemological implications
for the nature of observation led to a new understanding of how systems function and
how differences in transferring information could be qualified in terms of the laws of
thermodynamics (Rasch and Wolfe 2001: 10 13 explores this in more detail). The
intricacies of all of these developments will not be discussed within the context of this
study. Cilliers (1998) also goes to great length to explain the factors that contributed to
the results that led to how systems theory is understood today. More important than the
exact details for this study, is the fact that the epistemological problems that emerged
within the social sciences, were not unique to the social sciences, but that the natural
sciences also struggled with problems of representation and observation when it came
to knowledge production. What is remarkable is the fact that the social sciences
recognised this similarity and internalised the solutions which came out of the natural
sciences explanations and suggestions about the value of adopting a systems theory
approach. The next section will explore what a general theory of complex systems looks

44

like and what the implications thereof are for fields like anthropology and art that deal
with knowledge production based on observational and interpretative practices.

Sketching complexity theory


In explaining why it is not easy to talk about the notion of complexity, Cilliers (1998: 2)
refers to Luhmanns description thereof which states that complexity entails that, in a
system, there are more possibilities than can be actualized. Literature on complexity
theory in general does not give a well-packed and trimmed word for word definition of
complexity. Instead, characteristics of what complex systems comprise of are offered as
attempts to describe what one can expect. Morin states that within the emerging science
of complexity there are two different understandings of the notions of complexity. A
distinction is made between a restricted form of complexity and a general complexity.
The first understanding of complexity argues that one can recognize complexity by decomplexifying it (Morin 2007: 10). This kind of approach supports the notion that even
though things are complex, it is possible to still find order in it, by measuring it in terms
of mathematical models (Ingham 2007: 7-8). From this perspective, one is confronted
with highly technical jargon that relates to the milieu of chaos theory6.
Both Cilliers (1998) and Morin (2007) argue against a restricted form of complexity by
saying that due to the structural nature of a complex system, it cannot be reduced or
quantified. This might become clearer after elaborating on how Cilliers characterises
general complex systems. According to Cilliers understanding of what comprises a
complex system7, he suggests that a postmodern society (seen as a complex system)
would be summarised in terms of the following characteristics (1998: 119 - 120):
1. Complex systems are open systems.
2. They operate under conditions far from equilibrium.
3. Complex systems consist of a large number of elements.
4. The elements in a complex system interact dynamically.
5. The level of interaction is fairly rich.
6. Interactions are non-linear (this is a pre-condition for complexity, especially
where self-organisation, dynamic adaptation and evolution are at stake.
7. The interactions have a fairly short range.
6

For more on this type of thinking, see for example Johnson, N. 2007. Two's Company, Three's
Complexity. Oxford: Oneworld Publications.
7
See Cilliers, P. 1998. Postmodernism and Complexity: understanding complex systems.
London: Routledge: p. 3-5.
45

8. There are loops in the interconnections.


9. Complex systems have histories.
10. Individual elements are ignorant of the behaviour of the whole system in which
they are embedded.
On first glance it might seem that the description of the characteristics of complex
systems might not have much to do with what has been discussed so far. Contemporary
human society exhibits many of these characteristics. It can be understood as a system
with individuals and groups of individuals as the elements. There is a high level of
interaction during which information is constantly exchanged between subjects. One
cannot conceive of an individual as being in isolation; the isolated self has very little
meaning. Each element or self is constituted in a system of differences and is moreover
in itself a complex heterogeneous system. Each person finds himself fragmented into
various contextual sub-elements created by the variety of his potentially conflicting
contextual interests, resulting in internal uncertainty and conflict. There is a dynamic
competition for the attention of each agent. This dilemma contributes to the
tentativeness, provisional nature and moral uncertainty characteristic of our times
(Cilliers. 1998: 6).
Cilliers thus draws from what looks like technical descriptions from a textbook on
thermodynamics, and translates this into the frame of social sciences. He argues that
(t)hese insights have important implications for the knowledge-claims we make when
dealing with complex systems. To fully understand a complex system, we need to
understand it in all its complexity (Cilliers 2005: 258). Seeing that complex systems are
characterized as open systems that interact with their environment in a dynamic way,
and due to the fact that this interaction is non-linear, we would also need to understand
the systems complete environment before we can understand the system, and, of
course, the environment is complex in itself (Cilliers 2005: 258). As Cilliers points out
rightly, this is an impossible task to do for any human.
So in order to extract meaning, and to have any understanding of the system, one has to
construct a model in order to have knowledge of the system. A model can be explained
as the way in which we frame the system in order to gather knowledge. The term
model thus refers to the knowledge generating practices such as observation and
interpretation.

46

Cilliers (2005: 258), however, argues that in order to function as models and not
merely as repetition of the system they have to reduce the complexity of the system.
This means that some aspects of the system are always left out of consideration. What
is left out of the description is not unproblematic, seeing that according to the
characteristics of a complex system, what is not included, could interact with the rest of
the system in a non-linear way and we can therefore not predict what the effects of our
reduction of the complexity will be (Cilliers 2005: 258). This implies that it is impossible
to have complete knowledge of a complex system and that we can only know the
system in terms of the models that are used to frame it. The dilemma lies in the fact that
the frameworks are chosen by us, the researchers, and coincides here with the notion of
self-reflectivity that we are aware of the constructedness of the frameworks and
models as mentioned in chapter two. Thus, when making any knowledge claims, it
would only be ethical to acknowledge that our models have limits.
By now it becomes apparent that what the implication for the status of knowledge claims
coincides with

deconstructionist

understanding

of the

incompleteness

and

provisionality of knowledge and meaning as proposed in chapter two. Derrida (quoted in


Cilliers 2005: 259) explicitly links the problem of meaning and context to the fact that
these things are complex. The critical understanding of complexity theory presented
here, and deconstruction, therefore, make a very similar claim: knowledge is
provisional. (Cilliers 2005: 5). This notion of Cilliers that knowledge is always
incomplete and only provisional resonates with Lathers argument that by (a)ttempting
to be accountable to complexity, thinking the limit becomes our task and much opens up
in terms of ways to proceed for those who know both too much and too little (Lather
2001: 482).

Complex thinking
Whether we are happy with calling the times we live in postmodern, there is no
denying that the world we live in is complex and that we have to confront this
complexity if we are to survive, and, perhaps, even prosper (Cilliers 1998: 112).

As we have learned from the previous section, trying to reduce complexity is not a way
to confront the complexity in the world. By acknowledging the limits of the models we
are using, new possibilities are opened up in which to approach a way of doing scientific
research without invoking metaphysical truth claims. In spite of the new space that
opens up, a number of between and betwixt places still remain to be explored.

47

The concrete question at this stage of the study still remains, why art and anthropology?
And why complexity theory? In the next section, the connection between these three
terms will be established based on what Morin terms complex thinking (2007: 28). This
type of thinking can be connected to what Derrida calls a double movement (Culler
1983: 150) which suggests that one thinks the concept and its counterpart (the yes and
the no) simultaneously. Morin (2007: 20) calls this the logical core of complexity which
is dialogical of nature: separability-inseparability, whole-parts, effect-cause, productproducer, life-death, homo sapio-homo demens, etc. However, the complexity lies not
in thinking one in terms of the other in binary motion, but in terms of how the one is
dependent and determined by the other. The art lies not in describing opposites when
making knowledge claims, but in thinking both at the same time. It is in this way of
thinking that the dialogic is not the response to these paradoxes, but the means of
facing them, by considering the complementarities of antagonisms and the productive
play, sometimes of complementary antagonisms (2007: 20). It challenges a type of
thinking that does not disconnect opposites, but thinks of them as part of a unity. In
order to be able to reach this style of thinking, Morin calls for us to deeply reform all our
ways of knowing and thinking (2007: 25).
An example of what the notion of truth would mean, when explained dialogically, is what
Morin calls a (d)ialogical truth: a truth continuously in transit that one reaches only in
the sense of having to still look for it (Maldonato 2007: 282). Such an understanding of
truth implies an understanding of knowledge as also being dialogical. This is explained
by playing a word game with the word encyclopaedia. Regarding the incompleteness
of scientific knowledge, Morin defines "en-cyclo-peding" as to place knowledge in
cycles (Rogerro 2007: 130). This dialogical notion of Morin connects with the notion of
Derridas understanding that everything is interpreted, so there is no original arche
knowledge. Meaning is always already derived from past interpretations and will change
as it moves into the future (Culler 1983: 103).
This dialogical logic of complex thought, and the understanding that epistemological
certainty can not be guaranteed, links up with what Lather calls difficult knowledge
2001: 486): Asking hard questions about necessary complicities, inadequate
categories, dispersing rather than capturing meanings, and producing bafflement rather
than solutions, I put deconstruction to work as difficult knowledge, knowledge that
works against security and certainty by inducing breakdowns in representing
experience. Here accepting loss becomes the very force of learning and the promise of

48

thinking and doing otherwise. It is also in stating with the logic as deconstruction that
Lather suggests knowing by not-knowing (refer to Chapter two).
At this stage it is important to qualify that the uncertainty of not-knowing is not a license
to invoke a relativist position. By rejecting the totality of knowledge or truth or possibility
to represent something fully, does not mean that one rejects knowledge or truth or the
possibility to represent. It just means that even if we work as hard as we can (and we
must) to collect all there is to know about a system with the best possible models and
methods that we have at our disposal; there will always be something that we can not
know. The dialogical nature of the complex thought allows us to have our truths, our
knowledge, our way of seeing and the art of representation, but it challenges us to know
the limits thereof and to re-evaluate it every time we use it and to re-invent it if
necessary.
This crisis of knowledge is not the result of our politically correct ways of postmodern
thinking, but it is a direct result of the complexity of our postmodern society (Cilliers
1998: 121). Thus the challenge to reform our ways of thinking and knowing is a direct
challenge to move on beyond the postmodern predicament. Morin suggests that
complexity does not put us only in the distress of the uncertain; it allows us to see
besides the probable, the possibilities of the improbable, because of those which have
been in the past and those that can be found again in the future (2007: 29). And lastly,
complex thought is a fundamental preparation for any truly transdisciplinary project
(Rogerro 2007: 130).
Thinking art and anthropology simultaneously
Artists and anthropologists are practitioners who appropriate form, and represent
others. Although their representational practices have been different, both books
and artworks are creative additions to the world; both are complex translations of
other realities (Schneider and Wright 2006: 26).

Based on the connections that have been discovered up until now in the study, it can be
argued that the relationship between art and anthropology should be reviewed in terms
of what both fields of study can offer each other in terms of their representational and
knowledge generating practices. Having situated art and anthropology on the same level
of enquiry, this study will argue that the crossing of the borders between the two would
entail more than just artists engaging in fieldwork and anthropologists discussing
aesthetic interpretations of art works as objects of study.
49

As Marcus and Myers (1995: 35) state, (i)n the past, the anthropological study of art
has been essentially a marginal occupation. This should no longer be the case. In
contemporary cultural life, art is becoming one of the main sites of cultural production for
transforming difference into discourse, for making it meaningful for action and thought.
Especially because anthropology has also seen this as its role in the production of
cultural knowledge, we argue that critical understanding and a new relationship between
art and anthropology are required. Morphy and Perkins (2006: 11) are also convinced
about the possibilities of collaboration between the two fields of study and suggest that
(t)he future of anthropology of art must re-engage with those methods and problems
that led a different generation of anthropologists to reject the study of art in the first
place.
When looking at the development of anthropology and the role visual material played in
it, Schneider and Wright (2006: 23) recall that during the early 1900s visual material
used in ethnographic accounts was cut short by anthropologys attempts to establish
itself as scientific discipline and the visual was largely abandoned because of its
positivistic colonial associations. It is only in the 1960s that the interest in using visual
modes of representation got more attention. The influence of anthropologist-filmmaker
Jean Rouch on ethnographic filmmaking should not be underestimated when looking at
the development of visual representations in anthropology. Together with Edgar Morin,
Rouch produced the first cinema vrit film combining the ideas of Flaherty with those
of Soviet film theorist and practitioner Dziga Vertov (Ruby 2006: 395). In these films the
process of filmmaking was part of the film and the filmed subjects became collaborators
in the process of deciding what will be represented and how it will be represented. Jean
Rouch wanted to produce a shared anthropology in which those in front of the camera
shared power with the director (Ruby 2006: 396). Not only had Rouch inspired artists
such as French New Wave directors Chris Marker and Jean-Luc Goddard, but his work
also inspired collaborators, such as Edgar Morin to develop the notion of a complex
anthropology which supports the notion that knowledge producing activities should not
be reductive of nature, but it should expand the understanding of what it is to be human.
When thinking about both art and anthropology, the argument stresses that artistic
visual representations should not take the place of just having auxiliary functions to the
ethnographic monograph (Schneider and Wright 2006: 23), but that through its own
inherent properties, it should be used to create a system of meaning parallel to, but

50

different from that of written ethnographies (Schneider and Wright 2006: 23). Thus, the
contribution that art could play in anthropology is in terms of the difference of its
representational practice and mode of knowledge production, which means much more
than just using films and photos as supportive material. McDougall argues that the
substantial challenge to anthropological thought comes not simply from broadening its
purview but from it's entering into communicative systems different to the anthropology
of words (McDougall quoted in Schneider and Wright 2006: 23).
When anthropologists venture into using more visual representations in their work, the
visual representations should be able to speak for themselves. This could lead to the
effect that it would be necessary for anthropologists to study ways of seeing more
closely in order to offer material that could translate finer tones and nuances in the
visual representations. For anthropologists who are engaging with ethnographic film as
a medium of representation, the objective capability of the camera (Harper 2006: 83)
that implies the use of single-device recording and projection could be supplemented by
the use of more than one camera, or multiple projection devices, such as artists use in
installations (Schneider and Wright 2006: 8).
There are a number of studies where anthropologists give cameras to, for example,
street children to take pictures of their environments. The object of study then becomes
how the children see and look at their environment. Projects like these could also assist
anthropologists to explore a wider range of visual strategies in gathering, producing,
and exhibiting work (Schneider and Wright 2006: 23).
Artists on the other hand who dare to learn more from the anthropological methods of
systematic fieldwork and participant observation could address the context of their
subjects in more authentic ways. After the reflexive turn in the art world, artists
became more aware that their work should be more self-conscious and should comment
on what is happening in society. Art as a form of resistance and space in which
struggles could be voiced grew especially after the Second World War. Artists who are
embedded in real life situations by means of participant observation could render
stronger comment if they are more familiar with the particularities of the situation. The
famous documentary photographer Robert Capa is well-known for saying "if your
pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough.

51

The closeness that ethnographic fieldwork methods offer is ideal for producing material
that captures the ambivalences and private struggles people go through. As example
one could use the work of the South African photographer Gideon Mendel8 who is now
famous for his photographic exhibitions of people who are living with HIV/Aids. When he
started this project, he was commissioned by his agency, Network Photographers, to
photograph people living with HIV/Aids in England. After the success of the exhibition in
the United Kingdom, the exhibition was moved to South Africa with the condition that a
section of photographs taken of the African HIV/Aids epidemic should be added (Godby
2003: 17). As he started spending more time with people, it became clear that he had to
change the ways in which he would photograph his subjects. Mendel became aware of
the fact that he was a first world photographer with the power to represent his Third
World subjects in any way that he chooses, and the subjects have little control over the
creation of their images (Godby 2003: 17). In the exhibition that became known as A
Broken Landscape: HIV and AIDS in Africa, the relationship between photographer and
the photographed is also presented. The images do not stand for themselves, but with
text added next to them, the context was made explicit. Even Mendels relationship to
the funding agencies was revealed in the exhibition. True to this spirit, Mendels
photographs are arranged in short essays that represent the same people the patient
and his or her family over a period of time, thereby showing the people involved in
different situations and relationships that obviously suggest more complex identities that
single photographs could ever show (Godby 2003: 18). The complexities of the lived
experiences of the people involved are depicted in Mendels work.
The depth and sophistication with which he depicts the devastation of AIDS also contain
activist impulses that call on the viewers to start acting and become involved in the
struggle against HIV/Aids. Mendels closeness to his subjects is the ingredient for the
success of his powerful and striking photos, of which one picture truly says more than
the proverbial thousand words. Mendel was criticised by art critics (Godby 2003:20) for
adding the context in which the subjects were photographed and by revealing his
relationship to the subjects (as sponsored photographer). Godby, (2003: 20), however
argues that the critics were short sighted not to recognise, for example, that the images
and the texts are in fact part of the same project, and that the photographer, in radically
changing his methods of photography, is actively engaging with both his medium of
representation and the institutional frameworks within which he is working: at the same

For more information on Gideon Mendels work see: http://www.gideonmendel.com/


52

time, he may be seen to be actually transforming the institutional space of the gallery or
museum from a repository of relics to an active political platform.
Gazing into the future of art and anthropology
For both artists and anthropologists to learn how to enter into that space where their
representational practices keep up with the complex world in which we live, Morin urges
that it is necessary to learn to go beyond disciplinary frameworks whenever
necessary to re-link different types of knowledge (Ruggeri 2007: 130). Morin also
argues that the artist and scientist should never lose sight of what it is to be human and
that the work we produce should reflect our humanity more than the politically correct
ways of being self-reflexive about objects and subjects. Our representational practices
should expand the notion of what it is to be human and not reduce it. Morin states that
science does not cover the entirety of human experience. This is why man who is
also a being with desires, beliefs, passions and with the ability to create, can not be
reduced, except in a way that is very abusive (Rogerro 2007: 130).
At this stage it might seem that artists have the monopoly when it comes to dealing with
the means of visual representation. Hans Belting (2001: 18-19) however moves into the
direction that Morin points out, by arguing that images do not only belong to those who
produce them, and that images only come into being when in the presence of humans.
The argument suggests that human agency brings the image to life and human agency
also has the power to transform images. Belting (2001: 30) uses the ideas of Regis
Debray which he developed concerning the gaze, according by which the gaze is seen
as the mechanism by which images of mental nature are transmitted. Debray focuses on
the dissemination of the image not only in its material form, but also in terms of the
mental images that originate in our minds and imaginations. According to Debray, it is
due to the force of the gaze that pictures are turned into images (Belting 2001: 30). It is
argued that any fabricated image is dated by its fabrication as well is by its following
reception. But (this) also allows for an equal discussion of all those images which only
live in our thinking and in our imagination (Belting 2001: 18). The image draws its
meaning from the gaze, much as the text lives from reading. The gaze, for him, is not
just a social technique close to violence such as the one between the sexes, but implies
the living body as a whole. Drawing from Debary's theory of how and where images
originate and how they are transmitted and received, Belting suggests that the human
body can be described as the place where images come into being (Belting 2001: 32).
As we interact with other people, the way we go about in our daily routines of life and in

53

our lived experience, these images interact with other images to form the mental picture
we have of the world. Belting also mentions that the mental images we carry around with
us, form part of our individual and collective memory. These images differ to the images
or pictures we consume and forget everyday (here referring to pictures and images seen
on television, magazines, newspapers, advertisements) (Belting 2001: 32). The mental
images that we carry in our minds are attached to the symbolic meaning that arises from
our lived experiences.
Beltings notion of the image as not only being a perceivable object, but also as
something that we carry around in our memories and mental faculties gives another
meaning to the concept of visual anthropology. The visual is not only what is out
there but also what is in here. The image is thus more than just a product of
observation, but rather the outcome of a personal or collective symbolization. Human
beings are not seen as being in control of images in the way that they interpret and
allocate meaning to them, but by being the place (Ort der Bilder) in which they exist,
human beings are possessed of images (Belting 2006:12).
Beltings understanding of the image links the study of images (visual experience and
perception) not only to the material, but also to the corporeal. An anthropology of art
thus would also need to locate the way in which humans make sense of the mental
images they carry with them. The art of anthropology will then lie in finding creative and
authentic ways of expressing these corporeal images by bringing them to life with
ethnographic practices that will elucidate them in a way that would enable others to also
see these hidden images. Here both anthropologists and artists have a shared task in
re-thinking their representational practices. Each would have to delve deep into the
resources that they have in order to achieve the task. By combining efforts and by
exchanging knowledge producing practices, our lived experiences could stand a chance
of being represented in ways that do not reduce our humanity to scientific formulas and
mediocre documentaries. For anthropology this implies that anthropologists need to
develop an approach to images that is aware of what they want, that acknowledges and
productively makes use of their affective powers, and develops new ways of using them
(Schneider and Wright 2006: 8). For artists this imply that they should be able to leave
the safe space of their studios and to get closer to their objects of study so that the
distance between them can be breached with intimacy this intimacy which is the
currency of fieldwork (Schneider and Wright 2006: 8).

54

By engaging in the weaving together of art and anthropology and by acknowledging


that as artists and anthropologists we are always in the aporetic position in which our
knowledge and forms of representing that knowledge will always be limited, we are truly
moving beyond the predicament of the postmodern. In such a way our limits are not
reasons for not trying to move beyond the betwixt and the between, but they become
enabling when we are open to learn from other disciplines and other ways of seeing and
knowing (or not-knowing).
By attempting to artfully represent that which is both seen and hidden, "(t)he field of
perception must be broadened, because knowledge is not nourished solely by scientific
truths. Knowledge is everywhere and can be found in various forms, including common
sense. We must have the courage to confront the dogmas of scientism to open the
universe of thought to all forms of thought that populate our existence. Dreams, religion,
art, love, illusion, all these make up what we call real (Da Silva 2007: 308).
In conclusion, the weaving together of art and anthropology leads to the position where
both art and anthropology can operate from a common ground. This common ground is
found in the way in which human beings as complex systems in themselves operate and
how their ways of making meaning will never be predictable and fully knowable for
scientists or artists. The claim that our understanding of complex systems cannot be
reduced to calculation means that there will always be some form of creativity involved
when dealing with complexity. The role that the imagination and intuition play in bringing
forth creativity, should not (only) be understood in terms of flights of fancy or wild
(postmodern) abandon, but also in terms of a careful and responsible development of
the imagination (Cilliers 2005: 264).
In order to imagine the future of art and anthropology, one would need to be willing to
take some risks and the nature of this risk will be a function of the quality of our
imagination (Cilliers 2005: 264). Hence it is therefore important that we start imagining
better futures, and for that we need better imaginations. The role that an engagement
with (r)eading books, listening to music, appreciating art and film play in our lives,
should not be viewed from the perspective that it just forms part of entertainment to be
indulged in after we have done our serious work (Cilliers 2005: 264). These creative
activities have an influence on the imagination and thereby transform the politics of
knowing and being known by means of its power to change and constitute the
frameworks we apply when apprehending the world (Cilliers 2005: 264).

55

As Morin thus says, the view from complexity not only puts us in the distress of the
uncertain, it allows us to see besides the probable, the possibilities of the improbable,
because of those which have been in the past and those that can be found again in the
future (2007: 29). By thinking art and anthropology simultaneously, the deep reform of
our mental functioning, of our being (Morin 2007: 29) is put into action which offers both
artists and anthropologists the potential to renew and revitalise petrified ways of knowing
and representing the world. Hence, the logic of complexity opens up opportunities to
explore the possibility of hope within the field of art and anthropology. The concluding
remark belongs to Morin who encourages us in this venture that we can always hope
and act in the direction of this hope (2007:29).

56

Chapter 4: Case study - Art Activism in a time of ARVs


In this chapter the theoretical arguments made thus far will be tested against the
outcomes of a case study. The case study will explore how the exhibitions of the South
African National Gallery (SANG), located in Cape Town, engage with the issue of
HIV/Aids.
The point of departure is the understanding that works of art evoke ways of seeing,
ways of making sense out of the experience we already have (Harrington 2004: 198) as
mentioned in the foregoing chapters. In the thesis the notion has been established that
visual representations are two-directional, meaning that works of art not only present
ways of seeing and knowing, but also ways of being seen and known. By investigating
the knowledge producing practices behind the works of art exhibited by the SANG, I will
attempt to show that artists and curators are still using cognitive concepts (knowledge
structures) that are inherited from the fight against apartheid. By transferring these
concepts and strategies to the production of activist art in a time of HIV/Aids, works of
art are being produced by using outdated knowledge producing practices. Drawing on
the theoretical conclusions of the thesis, I will suggest that by combining the visual
strategies and representational practices of art with the observational and knowledge
producing practices found in anthropological methods of fieldwork and ethnographic
accounts, new possibilities could arise to more effectively portray the complexities of a
society struggling against the devastating effects that HIV/Aids has on its people.
As the thesis did not engage with theories and questions concerning how works of art
should be interpreted and judged, the case study will not include discussions and
interpretations of the works of art as they appeared in the SANGs exhibitions. The
thesis main focus was concerned with the issues of knowledge production and
observational and representational practices. I have compared the ways in which the
fields of art and anthropology produce knowledge respectively and how these
knowledge producing methods influence the observational and representational
practices in both fields of study. It has been suggested that when operating from a
paradigm incorporating the contributions of complexity theory, the weaving together of
the methods of knowledge production and observational and representational practices
offers both artists and anthropologists opportunities to know and see the world more
authentically. Therefore the case study includes the protocol and quotes from the
interview and paper of Mrs. Marilyn Martin and the artists, because what they say and
explain about the context in which the works of art was viewed and framed, reveals the

57

knowledge producing practices upon which the artists and curators draw when engaging
with the subject of HIV/Aids. In this context, an anthropology of art thus means (as
suggested also in Chapter one) an analysis of the knowledge producing methods and
representational practices implemented by the artists (and curators). By focussing on
the politics of knowing and being known and the politics of seeing and making visible,
the case study will not engage with the material in order to produce a theory of art
activism. Neither is it the aim of the case study to come up with suggestions as to how to
read certain works of art. In simple terms, the importance of the case study lies in the
manner in which it will expose the fact that works of art are informed by what is known
and how that knowledge is produced. This in turns is connected with how the subject is
presented (made visible) and how it can be known by viewers. Thus, the image and
knowledge that people carry around with them regarding the subject (in this case the
struggle against HIV/Aids) are affected by the way in which the artist knows and sees
and portrays the subject.
In light of the above, the aim of the case study will be to answer the question do the
artists see and know correctly in order to present works of art that allows the viewer to
see and know in ways that correlate with the reality of a society affected by the HIV/Aids
epidemic? The importance of the case study lies in exploring how by drawing on
knowledge producing practices used in anthropology, activist artists can look at and
portray complex issues (such as found in the struggle against HIV/Aids) in such a
manner that the works of art offer us new ways of seeing (looking at) and knowing the
realities of a society grappling with a devastating epidemic.
The following case study will be situated against the backdrop of the above-mentioned
theoretical framework.

Situating the case study


The idea for this study developed whilst being part of a post-graduate course entitled
AIDS, Activism and Social Capital. The main focus of the study aims at exploring how
people who are HIV positive, the health care system, activist groups and related
organisations cope with the onslaught of the epidemic in the Western Cape. My original
intention was to look at how the media is developing intervention strategies and how
people who are HIV positive use the media in order to make sense of the devastating
effects of the epidemic.

58

After having visited numerous events relating to the fight against HIV/AIDS (academic
conferences, non-governmental organisations meetings, media releases, concerts,
workshops and exhibitions) it became apparent that the fight against HIV/AIDS
developed its own sphere of life. Whether at meetings or conferences or concerts, the
people who gathered there were always the same people. Seldom the actual people
about and around who the events were staged were present, but the people doing
research on the topic and who at the same time saw it their role and duty to support
these events always pitched.
In a way I became one of these people. Attending book launches on the theme of
HIV/AIDS, concerts, film screenings, conferences, art exhibitions and lectures became
my way of taking part in the struggle whilst at the same time looking for an
unresearched topic in the field, which in itself is a daunting quest. International
universities with budgets much larger that any university in South Africa could offer are
flooding the field with students to undertake studies in every aspect of how the HIV/Aids
epidemic is impacting on the South African society.
One observation I made during these past four years is that it seems that the people
who are involved in mobilising the new struggle are mostly people who were also part
of the struggle against apartheid before 1994. Many of the former liberal left academics
and activists are now engaged in researching the effects of the pandemic and actively
looking for new and innovative ways to make sense of how the epidemic affects
peoples lives. My personal background is slightly different than those of the people I
encountered at the gatherings. I stem from a white middleclass Afrikaans speaking
community and mostly found myself amidst a crowd that is predominantly English
speaking and stemming from an academic and or politically engaged background. As a
side remark, it seems that being involved in the new struggle is part of a longer cultural
tradition of historically being involved in activist actions. It seems that the white Afrikaans
speaking academics and society leaders are still struggling to find their place in the new
South Africa and that participation in the new struggle against HIV/Aids takes place on
a different level. Fighting for the right of the Afrikaans language to remain recognised,
and whether or not old Boer generals could be invoked to lead a lost generation in new
territory or not, makes up the public discussions within the mainstream Afrikaans
speaking community. The struggle against HIV/Aids does not feature in the public

59

domain of the Afrikaans speaking civil society in the way that it does in the
predominantly English speaking non-governmental and civil society environment.
After having attended another exhibition, and after again having experienced that the
exhibition coordinators motivation for choosing to engage the gallery with the thematic
of HIV/Aids is part of an ongoing ethic that stems from her work in resistance art during
the time of Apartheid, I decided that I would like to look into the role of art as vehicle for
resistance as a case study. The fact that the curators motivation to get involved in the
new struggle was not totally new in itself was interesting for me.
By being confronted with this new type of resistance art that aims at responding to the
effects of the epidemic, and thus fulfilling one of the social functions of art, I became
interested in how art can contribute to the production of knowledge about the HIV/Aids
epidemic. The notion of how knowledge is produced and presented led me to the
connection

with

anthropology

and

how

ethnographic

accounts

(which

are

representations of observations seen and heard) and artworks (which are also
representations of the artists impressions, observations and outcomes from speaking to
others about the topic) can be related. Both art and ethnography are thus interpretative
exercise(s) in thick descriptions (Spencer 2001: 445).

Methodology
It might be important to note that the case study cannot be compared with an
ethnographic study. No fieldwork was undertaken in the traditional sense. One could say
that this is a multi-sited study, seeing that empirical data was collected on site at the
SANG on two occasions, via the internet, by consulting art exhibition catalogues and via
email messages and one telephonic interview with the director of the SANG, Marilyn
Martin. Getting access to Ms. Martin was not very easy and most correspondence took
place via email. I had one telephone interview with her and during that interview it
became clear that there would not be any further opportunities to speak with her due to
a busy schedule. As promised, she sent me an unpublished article that she wrote. The
paper is a summary of SANGs engagement with HIV/Aids and discusses the motivation
behind SANGs involvement in the new struggle against HIV/Aids.
The idea behind using a case study is thus mainly to link the theoretical discussion with
a practical example. Having been involved in a project that investigated what

60

interventions followed the roll-out of antiretrovirals in the Western Cape after 2004, I
became aware of the fact that organisations on all levels of civil society were getting
involved in the fight against HIV/Aids. I was interested in how the South African National
Gallery (SANG), which is in fact a state organisation (as part of the Iziko Museums in
Cape Town), engaged with the topic, seeing that it fits in the framework of using art as a
vehicle to engage in social issues.

SANG and Iziko Museums in Cape Town


The way in which official cultural institutions such as museums contribute to issues of
representation, knowledge production, and public participation, is not unimportant in a
transitional society like South Africa. These issues relate closely to the challenges of
enhancing democracy and citizenship as part of the creation of a new society. This
understanding of the role of museums in society has been supported by researchers9
who suggest that the ethical role of museums should not just be as sites that preserve
memories and artefacts, but also as actors engaged in protest and mobilizing new social
movements (Coombes as discussed by Levine 2004: 907).
The Iziko Museums in Cape Town is an organisation that makes these issues their
central concern in their exhibitions and policies regarding social responsibility. The
SANG covers the art collection division of the museums. As mentioned on the Iziko
website, the word Iziko is an isiXhosa word, meaning "a hearth". Since the hearth of a
typical African hut usually occupies the central space, Iziko symbolises both a hub of
cultural activity, and a central place for gathering together South Africas diverse
heritage (http://www.iziko.org.za/iziko/ourname.html). Iziko is a national heritage
institution established under the Cultural Institutions Act. It is governed by a Council
appointed by the Minister of Arts and Culture.
The SANG is South Africa's premier art museum and houses valuable collections of
South African, African, British, French, Dutch and Flemish art. Selections from the
Permanent Collection change regularly to enable the museum to have a full programme

Important literature in the field of studying museums, is the work of Bennett and Karp:
Bennett, T. 2006. Civic seeing: museums and the organisation of vision, in S. MacDonald (ed)
Companion to Museum Studies, Oxford: Blackwell, 263-281;
Bennett, T. 1995. The Birth of the Museum : History, Theory, Politics. London and New York:
Routledge.
Karp, I. (ed). 1992. Museums and Communities: The Politics of Public Culture. Washington:
Smithsonian Institution Press
61

of temporary exhibitions of paintings, works on paper, photography, sculpture,


beadwork, textiles and architecture. They provide insight into the extraordinary range of
aesthetic production in this country, the African continent and further a field
(http://www.iziko.org.za/sang/about.html). The exhibition program is complemented and
by a range of alternating temporary visiting exhibitions as chosen by the director of the
SANG.

AIDS ART at the SANG


The Iziko South African National Gallery has a proud history of curating
exhibitions and acquiring works of art dealing with HIV/Aids, going back to 1994.
In the early days, and for many years to come, few South African artists engaged
with the pandemic and our holdings increased slowly. This has changed
dramatically as HIV/Aids has spread and touched more and more lives (Marilyn
Martin on www.iziko.co.za).

Under the directorship of Marilyn Martin the SANGs engagement with the topic of
HIV/Aids has produced several ground breaking exhibitions. In her unpublished paper
titled Curating HIV/Aids at the Iziko South African National Gallery (2007), Martin
discusses why she feels it important to engage with the thematic of HIV/Aids by stating
that she is a firm and committed believer in the potential of art as a transformative
power. In South Africa we have not assessed the worth of our society by the quality of
art produced, but rather the quality of the art in relation to society and in particular the
extent to which art is a reflection of, and a catalyst within, society (Martin 2007).
During the apartheid years in South Africa Martin utilised the SANG as space in which
artists could express their resistance against the apartheid system of the time: We
know that art played a role both inside and outside South Africa in the struggle for
political liberation, beginning with Dumile Feni (1939-91) in the 1960s. The 1980s saw
the production of an extraordinary body of work stimulated by opposition to apartheid
and made in the face of adversity. Artists found technical, formal and expressive ways to
engage political and social questions, affirming that art and culture can interrogate
centralised processes and developing ideas and metaphors that can influence and
change society. It made the world sit up and take notice (Martin 2007).
By continuing in this spirit of resistance, Martin supports and mobilises exhibitions that
lives off the energy and impetus of the resistance art during the apartheid regime. Many

62

of the artists who engaged in the struggle against apartheid, have also been
commissioned to produce work that would express resistance against governments lack
of involvement in preventing adequate health services and access to antiretroviral
treatment. Artists like Sue Williamson, Penny Siopsis and Clive van den Berg have
taken part in the most recent exhibition, to name but a few.
In the book based on the collaborative work with Kyle Kauffman, Martin and Kauffman
explain how arts engagement as activist activity changed during the years that followed
the end of the apartheid regime:
Before 1994, much of the art produced in South Africa was confrontational and
political in nature. For the politically engaged artists under apartheid there was
no doubt about the identity of the target. After 1994, both the challenges and the
possibilities have become more complex, ambivalent, and unpredictable. The
course of South African art changed from confrontation to reconciliation and
during the honeymoon years of the new democracy there were calls for artists to
put aside political considerations and to find new themes and images (Kauffman
and Martin 2003: 5).

The importance of the production and exhibition of resistance art during the apartheid
years should not be under estimated. Art became one of the sights where people could
express resistance in a non-violent way. Today art plays an important role in the
creation of an open, democratic culture within which freedom is possible. This is not a
simple process, but one full of tension, embedded within the civil society of our daily
existence. In this it is however still positioned over and against violence. Violence entails
the denial of the political dimension.
There is however some point of concern for Martin when it comes to getting artists
involved in the process of producing work commenting on the political and personal
issues that surround the HIV/Aids epidemic. Kauffman and Martin (2003: 5) write that
(f)ew confronted the Aids crisis. Why? There is a range of possible answers. Perhaps,
many artists do not feel the deep personal connection to the issue of Aids that they did
to apartheid. Whatever the reasons, the production of art works on the subject of
HIV/Aids is surprising low, given the importance and impact on society.
One should also not loose sight of the fact that many important artists lost their lives to
the HI virus in the early years of the 1980s. It also seems that there is a change in how

63

people view art that was produced before the availability of antiretrovirals vis vis work
produced thereafter.
A short discussion on the conceptualisation and impact of the exhibitions that was held
at the SANG follows below.
Positive Lives: Responses to HIV
1 December 2001 - 31 March 2002
In collaboration with the Terrence Higgins Trust and Network Photographers.

The first international photographic exhibition Positive Lives: Responses to HIV was
hosted at the SANG in 1995. Initiated by Network Photographers in 1993, it explored
the complex individual and social responses to HIV/Aids in Britain, with a special section
by Gideon Mendel.
POSITIVE LIVES collection of photographs focused on the human stories of those at
the heart of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. It opened at the South African National Gallery on
International AIDS Day. The images and text present the personal experiences of
different people, reflecting the issues and emotions that confront them in living and
working with HIV/AIDS.

source: (www.iziko.co.za)

On International Aids Day, 1 December 2001, Zackie Achmat, Chairperson of the


Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) opened a different Positive Lives exhibition at the
SANG. In a powerful, emotional speech he added his voice to the struggle of the Gallery
to convince the South African public and the authorities that a work of art not only has
the power and capacity to speak for itself, but also to speak to and for individuals and
society. Martin adds that (e)ducation is the key to building and changing attitudes and
perceptions and to alleviating ignorance. Far-reaching education programmes,
workshops, film screenings, an excellent brochure and the presence of HIV positive
people as volunteer guides at the Gallery formed part of the exhibition (Martin 2007).
This exhibition also prepared the way for Gideon Mendels project. The heart of

64

Positive Lives was occupied by A Broken Landscape (Martin 2007). Mendels


photographic essays were added in the Liberman room of the SANG.
A Broken Landscape, HIV & AIDS in Africa by Gideon Mendel
1 December 2001 14 April 2002
In association with ActionAid and Positive Lives

(Book cover of
the images
exhibited at the
SANG)

source: http://www.iziko.org.za/sang/exhib/poslives/broken/frameLMbook.html

The importance of Mendels work was discussed earlier in Chapter 3. For Martin, the
exhibition of Mendel proved to be more than just an exhibition of static images. The key
concept of Mendels installation was that people living with HIV or Aids could be
intimately involved in the creation of an exhibition rather than being passively depicted
as victims. As macro events moved in court and in the public domain, he included them.
The end result was an unorthodox and groundbreaking social art project. The artist
created a positive activist environment in the national art museum on the doorstep of
parliament. The launch of the project on 16 February 2002 was an exciting and moving
experience. Together we broke new ground in our shared vision and commitment to
making a difference, to offering solutions in a crisis (Martin 2007).
For Mendel the status of the national art museum and its location near the South African
parliament offered a remarkable opportunity to create a radical, stimulating and
newsworthy project. In Mendels words, the exhibition became a live documentary
space (quoted by Martin 2007)
When listening to Martin, one clearly recognises her involvement in activist activities
during the apartheid years and that the culture of activism as I will call it, remains very

65

strong in her drive to be involved in the new struggle against HIV/Aids. The following is a
quote from Martins account on the closing ceremony of the exhibition on Saturday, 13
April 2001 that double acted as the launch of the book A Broken Landscape: HIV and
Aids in Africa by Mendel:
Organised by the Mail & Guardian newspaper and the Treatment Action
Campaign (TAC), it had all the energy and power of a political rally during the
apartheid years (indeed the TAC has its roots in the anti-apartheid movement
and the organisers are accustomed to mass mobilisation and strategies that
strike chords in society). There were songs, announcements and testimonies
interspersed with Viva! and Amandla! Awethu! (Martin 2007).

From this example it is clear that the activist impulse behind the event was drawn from
the performative energy and same form of engagement that could be found in similar
activist events that took place during the apartheid years.
AIDSART/South Africa
29 November 16 February 2004
In collaboration with Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts

Left, a photograph of Victoria


Cobokana, housekeeper, with her
son, Sifiso, and daughter, Onica, in
June 1999. Victoria died of AIDS on
Dec. 13, 1999. Sifiso died of AIDS on
Jan. 12. Onica also has AIDS.
Photo by David Goldblatt
Source: Kauffman and Martin (2003: 15)

After having met Kyle Kauffman at the Boston auction in 2000, Martin was invited to
collaborate on Artists for Aids with him and Jeremy Fowler of the Davis Museum and

66

Cultural Centre at Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts, USA. Martin explains


that she accepted the invitation to collaborate with enthusiasm. I was enormously
grateful to have another opportunity of engaging some of South Africas foremost visual
artists to identify with and focus on the subject of HIV/Aids. Informed by the BristolMyers Squibb and Harvard AIDS Institute project, we selected the artists ten from
South Africa and one from Botswana (Martin 2007). The guidelines for the project were
simple: each artist would receive an amount of money for a two-dimensional work, no
larger than one meter by one meter and would provide biographical information as well
as a brief statement on the work. All the artists accepted the invitation and David
Goldblatt generously donated his photograph (depicted above).
Although the guidelines for the commissioned work may have been straightforward, the
demands were not. The artists were asked to aestheticise and present a complicated,
and increasingly political and controversial, public issue. Martin (2007) argues that the
challenges remain greater and more penetrating than the immediate situation in South
Africa. HIV/Aids have forced a wider discussion of varied sexual practices. It has
detonated and compelled changes in sexual behaviour and conventions (e.g. condom
use and male privilege in demanding sex), as well as a re-assessment of our private and
public views, consciousness and taboos.
Kauffman and Martin were pleased with what came back from the artists and argue that
the diverse use of material and methods (photography, painting, drawing, collage,
embroidery, silicon sand, carboniferous material, lead, salt, and latex) became a
metaphor for the diversity of views and voices in the struggle against HIV/Aids
(Kauffman and Martin 2003: 6). In concluding their review of the exhibition, Kauffman
and Martin suggest that the project, which was the first to not only work with
photographic material, offered a platform that served as a space in which those who are
caring for people living with HIV/Aids could engage with different perspectives of how
the epidemic influences lived experiences. More importantly, Kauffman and Martin
(2003: 9) believe that the project succeeded in harnessing the creative energies of
some prodigious talents for HIV/Aids and has revealed a new face of artistic activism.

67

Embracing HIV/AIDS
1 December 2006 31 January 2007

Virus i (2005) lambda print by Churchill Madikida

The Embracing HIV/AIDS exhibition was the most recent exhibition and also the first
exhibition that took place after the formal rollout of antiretroviral medication in the
Western Cape in 2004. Embracing HIV/Aids was conceptualised as being a point of
departure for education programmes and special walkabouts. It drew NGOs into the
work and vision of SANG and aimed at sensitising visitors to the challenges faced in
South Africa.
Once again the artists represented in Embracing HIV/Aids used many different media
photography, sculpture, drawing, painting, new media to concretise their conceptions.
Martin (2007) explains that the works revealed a great variety of ideas and approaches:
some are hard-hitting, didactic and powerful, while others are abstract, subtle,
thoughtful, poignant, personal, intimate and enigmatic. In this collection, art once again
merged private and public experiences and embraced the social and activist domains,
while transcending perceived and constructed boundaries with regard to race, class,
creed, gender and sexual orientation (Martin 2007).
An important contribution to the collection by Churchill Madikida, explored a personal
journey, yet it reflected on millions of other peoples experiences: I have watched the
annihilation from the sidelines. My sister lived with HIV for more than nine years her
death made me realise the extent of the despair the virus is causing to millions of people
both infected and affected by it (Madikida quoted by Martin 2007). The central image in
Madikidas Virus series (image depicted above) is the microstructure of the HIV virus
itself and alludes to the spread of HIV within the body and throughout communities. The
human figure (the artist) morphs, multiplies, integrates with and is ultimately consumed

68

by the treacherous surrounding structure. The morphing and multiplication signify the
mutation of the virus that is a key element in the HIV/Aids catastrophe. The human
being cannot escape the virus once it enters the body; the viewer cannot escape the
horror and trauma of the pandemic (Martin 2007).
Also Madikidas work is informed by activist intentions as practiced during the apartheid
years. He believes that his work can play a role in breaking the silence about HIV/Aids
and creating a climate of greater tolerance: Art played a critical role in the fight against
apartheid and I feel that it can play an even bigger role in the war against HIV/Aids
(Madikida quoted by Martin 2007).
The work has impacted far beyond the confines of the Gallery and South Africa. Status
by Churchill Madikida was requested for loan to the documenta 12 exhibition in Kassel,
Germany as part of a bigger installation by the artist, after which it will travel to Spain.
The exhibition included other artists such as Berni Searle, Clive van den Berg, Diane
Victor and cartoonists Zapiro. Works ranged from photography to sculpture, paintings
and drawings. Works by David Goldblatt, Gideon Mendel, Penny Siopsis and Hentie van
der Merwe that were acquired previously were also included.

69

Art and the struggle against HIV/Aids

source: http://www.cartoonist.co.za/zapiro.htm

The cartoon by Zapiro above (of which the original can be seen at the SANG) is actually
commenting on the fact that former president Nelson Mandelas works of art became
very popular after his term as president and that many of his artworks were sold in the
cause to raise money to support projects engaging with HIV/Aids. It also comments on
the fact president Mbeki is not doing much in this respect and that he was criticised for
his lack of insight in the whole situation by former president Mandela. Much more can be
said about Mbekis role in the whole misrepresentation and confusion of facts in the
public debate, but there is no scope in this study to look into this complex issue. The
cartoon also comments on a different level a level related more closely to the thematic
of this study, to the role that art plays in the struggle against HIV/Aids.
In order to link the case study up with the theoretical background against which it is
situated, it is important to look at how representational practices changed over the
years. The argument that I would like to put forward is the fact that representational
practices had changed after the rollout of ARVs.
It is suggested that it is possible to argue that the way in which the art works are viewed
and produced since the rollout of ARVs have changed in comparison to the works
produced and viewed before the rollout. The impact that the images have on the viewer
might also have changed after the rollout. As Robins states, South Africa now has an

70

ARV program as well as a national HIV/AIDS social movement, which offers the
prospect of a more optimistic script, one in which HIV-positive people are able to access
life-enhancing drugs that can return the patient to health and the possibility of
reintegration into the social world (Robins 2006: 312). The emotional impact that
images had on viewers of suffering and dying people prior to the rollout of antiretrovirals
made a strong connection with the knowledge that being infected with the HI virus
implied a certain death sentence. As seen also in first world countries after the effective
implementation of ARVs the understanding changed to the view that being infected with
the HI virus is no longer an immediate death sentence, but viewed as being a treatable
disease (although not curable) with good prospects of living a fairly normal life for a
good number of years if the infected person is compliant to treatment possibilities. This
understanding of the epidemic somehow takes away the immediate emotional urgency
from people and the tragedy of the matter is deferred.
Nguyen (2005: 143) supports this notion and argues that (t)reatments influence biology,
and through these embodied effects representations of the disease, and in turn the
subjectivity of those who are able to access them. Nguyen (2005: 143) expands this
notion further and states that (i)ncreasing drug availability will have a multiplier effect,
as the voices of people with HIV are no longer extinguished by illness but grow louder
as their bodies respond to the treatments. The relationship of the biological effects of
the drugs with the social relations with which it is connected brings forth what Nguyen
(2005: 143) calls an example of biosocial change.
The biosocial changes brought about by the epidemic have begun to express itself in a
notion of therapeutic citizenship. Nguyens notion of therapeutic citizenship focuses
on how people who have access to treatment use their social networks to campaign for
people who do not have access to treatment (2005: 143). The notion of therapeutic
citizenship serves here as analogue for how biosocial changes also influenced the
public image, as well as the images people carry around in their minds of the epidemic.
Treatment options also opened up new possibilities of understanding and representing
the epidemic. Artists are challenged to express the complexities of the living and not the
dying. This change of attitude is even visible in the name of the most recent exhibition
(2006/2007) at SANG entitled Embracing HIV/Aids. During the apartheid years there
would never have been an exhibition called Embracing apartheid. The activist intention
behind the works, as I deduct, has changed from being confrontational to suggesting

71

how we are going to live with this condition almost more in line with the art that came
out after the 1994 elections which focused on reconciliation and nation building.
When looking at the works produced in the Embracing AIDS exhibition, it can be
argued that artists are caught in an aporetic space (as mentioned in Chapter two
earlier). There is a tension in terms of which side of the struggle one should reside on.
On the one hand, there is still the urge and intention to want to shock and provoke and
on the other hand, to reconcile viewers with the idea that one should embrace the
epidemic and also those who are affected by it. This last position would also advocate a
message of abolishing ideas concerning stigma and social taboo. It seems that the
biosocial changes also infiltrated the domain of the artist and that artists are challenged
by the complexities of these changes.
The conclusion that this study would like to make is the fact that the activistic drive
behind artistic representational practices can no longer be informed by the same
knowledge producing methods and inspiration that fuelled the anti-apartheid activist
culture. If artists and curators would only base the representational practices from these
former ways of representation, they might end up in a place where the work and
activities are reducing the complexities of the new struggle. Activistic arts fight against
HIV/Aids is not about bringing down repressive systems of governance, but more about
how the representational practices also emerged as a rallying point for transnational
activism in a neo-liberal world in which illness claims carry more weight than those
based on poverty, injustice, or structural violence (Nguyen 2005: 143).
Arguing from a complexity point of view that supports the logic of complex thought as
mentioned earlier in Chapter three, art activism in the time of antiretrovirals, should be
watchful that the artworks and exhibitions do not fall prey of petrified ways of thinking.
The artworks of some of the old apartheid artists lack the sense of complexity that
accompanies the HIV/Aids pandemic. It seems that these artists are producing works
representing the struggle against HIV/Aids that draw their inspiration from the same
energy and conceptual struggles that inspired their anti-apartheid engagement. Instead
of changing their ways of looking at the contingent issues in this new struggle and
coming close to them, artists seem to be trapped in the old ways of seeing and knowing.
The issues at hand are not represented in new ways, seeing that the artists are not
being close enough to the realities and complexities of people who live and deal with
the epidemic on a daily basis. Somehow the more conceptual works come over as if

72

they are art for arts sake (following Adornos strategy). The real struggle, in which the
artists are entangled however, is not the fight against HIV/Aids, but the struggle of how
to express that which one cannot see in a way that does not reduce the complexity of
that which is hard to represent visibly.
At this stage one could even go into the discussion about asking the question
concerning who are the people who have access to these exhibitions? One learns from
Martins reports that a lot is being done to bring the work to people who do not usually
visit art galleries and also to engage policymakers, sponsors, teachers and volunteers
with the exhibitions. This is very commendable and I think that the strength of artworks
lie especially in the fact that they serve as a place of departure for further discussions
and engagement.
It is not the intention of the study to engage with the issue of agency and access now,
although these are very important issues. In research done on how visual
anthropological methods as practiced by means of documentary films could inform
people about finding ways in which to deal with the complexity of how to engage with
processes of finding a range of resolutions to grappling with HIV/AIDS in the everyday
(Levine 2007: 3-4), special care should be taken when applying these methods.
According to Levine, one should not assume that people would engage in the same
ways. When having activist motives behind making and screening the films (for
example), producers and educators should engage in the logic of complex thought
(Morin 2007) in order to make sure that (d)ocumentary films (that) offer respect to their
audiences interpretive abilities because only then will (we) begin to break the silence,
and move people beyond current denialist tendencies (Levine 2007: 4).
Arguing from the logic of complex thought, it seems that artists, curators and sponsors
would benefit greatly by engaging with anthropologists who are working in the field of
studying the impact of the HIV/Aids epidemic in South Africa. The intimate knowledge
that is gained from ethnographic practices would remove the distance between the
artists concepts of the new struggle and the actual complexities of the struggle where
peoples lived experiences are very real and sometimes very invisible.
The importance of art as mediator of images and knowledge (as discussed in Chapter
one) plays an important role in how people relate to and know the world. When the
works of artists do not translate ideas and lived experiences in a way that does justice to

73

it, one could state that their representational practice is in a crisis. Arts power lies in the
fact that it can afford experience which may convey to me what having an experience
of an expressed emotion, feeling or attitude is really like even though I may not myself
have felt it before (Kieran 2005: 117). For artists engaging in representing the
ambiguities of what it might be to live with HIV/Aids, the act of conveying real feelings,
experiences and attitudes becomes a huge challenge. Just because the struggle against
HIV/Aids has been politicised, one cannot assume that it is the same political struggle
that took place during the apartheid regime. The process of engagement via activist
forms might be an appropriate response, but the representational practices and
knowledge producing practices are different. Kieran (2005: 120) stresses the importance
of good representational practices when he argues that (art)works can get us to grasp
certain truths, insights or possibilities, and make us realise their import in psychologically
immediate ways, in ways pure reason rarely does. The deduction one can make from
Kierans claim, is that if the artistic means utilised are poor, clumsy or impoverished,
then a work has failed to realise the affective understanding we value in much great art
(Kieran 2005: 120).
When looking at the artworks in the past exhibitions of SANG, one recognises that many
of the works are conceptual pieces (see the works of Andries Botha, Lien Botha,
Senzeni Marasela, Jacki Mcinnes, Karen Nel, Penelope Siopsis, Clive van den Berg in
Kauffman and Martin (2003: 11 30)). The characteristics of conceptual art is the
concern with ready-made or mundane objects, the primacy of ideas, the foregrounding
of language, the use of non-conventional artistic media, reflexivity and the rejection of
traditional conceptions of sensory aesthetic experience (Kieran 2005: 131). By using
eminently disposable materials, conceptual art highlights the way in which seemingly
harmless and personal objects may be highly politicised (Kieran 2005: 133). Thus,
conceptual art draws on established forms of representation in order to subvert them to
make a political statement. Kieran explains that conceptual art requires the standard
assumption about artistic value to be in a place in order to have any value at all (2005:
133).
It is my view that in order to produce activist artwork when engaging with the theme of
HIV/Aids, artists should make sure that they know what the values are that they are
trying to subvert. When activist art is still informed by anti-apartheid ideals and modes of
representation, it is clear that these ideals will not address the issues at stake as found
in the struggle against HIV/Aids. Artists should learn to observe again. By getting closer

74

to the lived experiences of people living with HIV/Aids, who have to deal with getting
access to treatment and social grants, and struggling to hide their status, artists could
develop new concepts that would represent the realities of the struggle in more
authentic ways. Some artists such as Gideon Mendel did manage to change the ways in
which he observes and presents his observations. In doing so he managed to cross the
boundary of old ways of thinking and entered into the space where knowing someones
reality is equated with being where that person is and taking time to know his/her world.
By patiently looking at the reality and contingencies of the world of people living with
HIV/Aids, an artist like Gideon Mendel succeeds in giving the viewers of his work the
opportunity to look at and respond to (such) pictures (which) make us more discerning
perceivers (Kieran 2005: 147). If the conceptual artworks could manage to engage
more intimately with the lives of people who are living with HIV/Aids, their work would
offer us the opportunity to cultivate perceptual capacities that would help us know the
world in a new way.
By finding new sources of inspiration for artistic activism, the old modes of expression
and symbolic imagery, allegory and mental images could be turned into practices that
draw on different knowledges. The fact that one can actually never really represent the
truth of the person living with HIV/Aids, is closely related to the understanding that
knowledge can never be complete. Here the understanding that Luhmann offers about
art becomes very applicable. Depicting the aporia artists are faced when engaging with
HIV/Aids points to the paradox of seeing, which exposes the human possibilities of
perception and representation (Luhmann 2000: 149). From Luhmanns point of view,
seeing (and making visible) thus becomes the act of not-knowing and not being able
to represent the situation correctly.
Earlier it was argued that the contribution that art offers to anthropology is the
opportunity to express this aporia. To offer new and other ways of seeing and knowing
to be internalised in an ethnography that does not strive to control knowledge, but one
that marks the limit of the saturated humanist logics of knowledge as cure that
determines the protocols through which we know (Lather 2001: 487). Through this case
study, it becomes clear that the representational and observational practices of
anthropology would be able to influence and direct artists practices in exactly the same:
activist art would be given an opportunity to express and work through its aporetic
position.

75

By thinking art and anthropology simultaneously, artworks and ethnographies enter into
a new space. Their role as social activism or scientific report transcends the level of
wanting to represent reality. By drawing on Lathers deconstructive theory that
supports

the

understanding

that

even

in

our

attempts

to

be

practising

reflexive/interpretative ethnography and or art, our representational efforts authorize


themselves by confronting its own processes of interpretation as some sort of cure
toward better knowing, while deconstruction approaches knowing through not knowing
(Lather 2001: 486).
Framed from the theoretical perspectives that this study has offered, art and
anthropology practised by means of the logic of complex thought, become the vehicles
by which the invisible are made visible and by which the visible are made invisible. Thus
by admitting that our knowledge is not complete, that we are stuck in the place of not
being able to ever know fully, we become free to say that any attempt to offer a
representation of any situation will at some level misrepresent it. Lather argues that this
is the more responsible position to act from, seeing that misrepresentation is part of
telling stories about peoples lives, our own included (2001: 485). By negotiating this
tension and by refusing to play the expert and by assuming a modest position as
Cilliers suggests, the knowledge claim and representational practice do not become
more important than the reality of the persons real life contingencies that are at work.

76

Chapter 5: Conclusion
As mentioned in the introduction, this thesis used a transdisciplinary approach in order
to explore how by combining insights from art and anthropology, research practices
could be influenced to overcome their limits of producing representations and knowledge
of the world. In Chapter one and two the thesis argued that developments in
observational practices in both art and anthropology changed from being positivist in
nature to a position where they adopted the understanding that the process of seeing
and knowing is dialectical in nature. The process of observing influences the ways in
which we know the world. Vice versa, our knowledge of the world influences how we
observe the world. This study thus attempted to destabilise traditional notions of
knowledge and representational practices as found in both fields of art and
anthropology, and argued that by learning from each other, their own methodologies can
be enriched and rethought in order to engage in representational practices that offer a
more authentic picture of the world.
By having explored the relationship between art and anthropology based on the
perspective from complexity theory, this study attempted to argue that there is a direct
and dialectical relationship between knowledge generating practices and observational
and representational practices. In Chapter two the dialectical relationship between
seeing and knowing was traced back to the roots of anthropology. How mankind
observed (and developed techniques and devices to see better) and consequently
asked different questions about what was seen has had a direct influence on the
generation of knowledge.
It was argued that an anthropology of art should not just deal with art as a material
object under observation, but it should investigate what kind of knowledge art produces
when people engage with art. A move away from traditional notions of art anthropology
that studies how primitive cultures produce works of art was suggested. By having
situated art within the cultural system of a society, an anthropology of art should
investigate the lived experience of the individuals in terms of their engagement with art
and the ideologies that are communicated via the work of art.
Similarly the observational and representational practices of artists, could inform
anthropological observational and representational practices. This understanding was
informed by Schneider and Wright (2006: 26) who claim that (a)rtists and

77

anthropologists are practitioners who appropriate form, and represent others. Although
their representational practices have been different, both books and artworks are
creative additions to the world; both are complex translations of other realities.
The argument was made that anthropology has always been sensitive to developments
and changes in terms of the status of knowledge, due to the fact that its knowledge
producing practices are rooted and informed by the changes that take place at the sites
of observation. The intimate knowledge that is gained by fieldwork experiences informs
the knowledge we gather in ways that are valuable for artists who have the possibility to
provoke thoughts and show us possible ways of perceiving or conceiving of their
subject matter (Kieran 2005: 107).
Based on the insights gained in chapters one and two, chapter three suggested that
complexity theory provides a basis from which a transdisciplinary approach opens up
the possibility to combine the lessons learned from art and anthropology. The weaving
together of anthropological and social theories of art with a modest kind of postmodern
approach (as advocated by Cilliers (1998, 2005) and Morin (2007)) to anthropological
theory offers one the possibility to make knowledge claims that acknowledge the limits
scientific inquiry are up against. By acknowledging the limits of the models we are using,
new possibilities are opened up in which to approach a way of doing scientific research
without invoking metaphysical truth claims. Understanding and approaching the world
from a kind of thinking that does not disconnect opposites, but thinks them as part of a
dynamic unity, informs a style of thinking that challenges old models of representing the
world. The notion of complex thought as proposed by Morin (2007) challenges the
artist and anthropologist to reform their ways of thinking and to consider different ways
of getting to know the world. The weaving together of art and anthropology opens up a
space where both art and anthropology can operate from a common ground founded in
the complexities of the lived experiences of their subjects of study. The claim that our
understanding of complex systems cannot be reduced to calculation means that there
will always be some form of creativity involved when engaging in the politics of knowing
and being known.
By re-linking different types of knowledge (knowledge gained from artistic practices and
knowledge gained from anthropological practice) artists and anthropologists are
challenged to enter into a space where their representational practices keep up with the
complex world in which we live. Informed by the characteristics of complexity theory

78

artists and scientists can engage with representational practices and knowledge claims
that have the capacity to expand the understanding of what it is to be human.
The brief case study provided a test site on which the theoretical arguments could be
applied. It was argued that current activist art dealing with the issues of HIV/Aids are still
being produced by ideological paradigms that were inherited from the time in which
artists and curators engaged with resistance art during the time of apartheid. It was
suggested that a thought reform is necessary when engaging with the complexities of
peoples lived experiences vis vis the HIV/Aids epidemic in South Africa. Old ways of
thinking and knowing do not represent the issues poignantly enough in the new struggle
against HIV/Aids, seeing that the subjectivities of the lives being represented have
changed. Although the fight against HIV/Aids has been termed the new struggle, one
cannot translate the methods of intervention and resistance of the old struggle (against
apartheid) to the new struggle. In order to produce work that would effectively address
the issues people living with HIV/Aids are dealing and struggling with, artists need to reinvent the ways that they gather knowledge about these issues, as well as re-invent their
representational practices
Arguing from the logic of complex thought, the study suggested that artists, curators
and sponsors would benefit greatly by engaging with anthropologists who are working in
the field of studying the impact of the HIV/Aids epidemic in South Africa. Art activism
could utilise the knowledge that is gained from ethnographic practices and it would
remove the distance between the artists concepts of the new struggle and the actual
complexities of the struggle where peoples lived experiences are very real and
sometimes very invisible.
By thinking art and anthropology simultaneously, new sources of inspiration could be
uncovered to inform artistic activism. Old modes of expression and action could be
transformed into practices that draw from the intelligence of complexity. As Morin
(2007: 29) insists, acting from such a position would allow us to see besides the
probable, because the intelligence of complexity compels us to explore the field of
possibilities, without restricting it with what is formally probable. And therein lies the
invitation to reform, even to revolutionise (Morin 2007: 29).

79

Limitations of the study


True to the claims made by a theoretical perspective informed by an understanding of
complexity, it would be necessary to acknowledge the limits of the claims made in this
study. Seen from a typical traditional view of anthropologic inquiry, this study is not
informed by any formal fieldwork activities. The study would have been able to give a
more detailed account of how the theoretical concepts could be applied to the processes
of production and circulation of art objects and the ways in which people engage with
art, were it possible to undertake a formal field study over a longer period of time.
Interviews with artists, museum visitors and staff members and people living with
HIV/Aids would have enriched the outcomes of the study and it would have been able to
ground the concepts more effectively. It might therefore be said that the validity of the
theoretical suggestions could be questioned seeing that the study does not explore the
implementation thereof in much detail.
The study does not include a comprehensive overview of how an iconography of
HIV/Aids has developed since the start of the epidemic. Important work has been done
on this issue by Deborah Lupton10, Douglas Crimp11 and Sander Gilman12, and it would
have been valuable to have incorporated their findings, although that would have given
the study a different focus. The study also did not engage in a discussion with current
theories and trends in visual anthropology directly, but it is hoped that the studys
outcomes could contribute to that body of knowledge. More could also have been said
about the political and social implications of applying the arguments of the study, seeing
that arguing from a view informed by complexity theory always involve an ethical
dimension by which political and social (and activist) action should be informed.

Further research & Recommendations


This study could be seen to act as a starting point from which the theoretical orientations
could be explored in more detail. It is strongly suggested that an extended fieldwork
project should be undertaken to enrich and ground the arguments in the study.

10

Lupton, D. 1994. Medicine as Culture: Illness, Disease and the Body in Western Societies.
London: Sage Publications.
11
Crimp, D. 1991. Portraits of People with AIDS, in Grossberg, L., Nelson, C., Treichler, P.
(eds.). Cultural Studies. London: Routledge.
12
Gilman, S. 1987. AIDS and Syphilis: The Iconography of Disease, in AIDS: Cultural
Analysis/Cultural Activism, Vol. 43, pp. 87 107.
80

A comparative study could also be undertaken to explore how artistic and activistic
practices in other African countries cope with the demands of representing issues
surrounding HIV/Aids. South Africas artwork is informed by a specific context that does
not draw on religious values and judgements, but rather on reducing stigma and
mobilising people towards taking action. This is very different in other African countries
where works of art are still informed by deeply seated religious norms and values.
Further research could also be undertaken to analyse the role that formal and informal
social networks, which are structured around works of art, play in informing knowledge
and representational practices. The notion of social change has not been discussed in
this study and it would be very interesting to explore whether changed ways of seeing
and knowing contribute to processes of social change or not. It would also be valuable
to know whether new subjectivities are formed or not and whether or not people engage
with art in order to access certain rights or not.
It would also be important to investigate whether by combining anthropological methods
with other scientific research practices, different fields of transdisciplinary approaches
could be developed or not. By collaborating with different academic disciplines
anthropology could be more accessible and applicable in different fields of study. By
recognising that anthropology can provide methodologies, insights and understandings
that are not available from other disciplines, anthropology would surely increase its
academic and public profile as being an indispensable partner when embarking on the
journey of learning and understanding how to know and the see the world.

81

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