29. Juni 2007
The Venice Biennale is more than 100 years old, but still has lots to say. Since its first edition in 1895 (scheduled to celebrate the 25th wedding anniversary of the Italian royal couple, Umberto I and Margherita di Savoia), the international art exposition has always been the occasion for heated debate.
In 1964, when Robert Rauschenberg became the first American artist to win the Biennale’s Golden Lion, it seemed to herald an era of U.S. dominance of the international art scene. But we had to wait until 2007 and the 52nd edition of the biennale’s international art exhibition to witness the appointment of the first U.S. curator Robert Storr. Yet Storr himself is the first to downplay the importance of this turning point.
After viewing Storr’s exhibition, entitled "Think with the Senses - Feel with the Mind," we met with the curator at the Arsenale to ask him a few questions about his experience in Venice.
Lavinia Filippi: What did you try to say with this biennale?
Robert Storr: I am not trying to say a single thing. I am trying to present a certain approach to art, an attitude towards how to think about it. Essentially, I am trying to say that certain divisions that are common in art criticism, in particular those found among academic writers, are an impediment to understanding and experiencing art. Mainly, that prevalent notions of a division between the conceptual and the perceptual, an idea that had its origin in Marcel Duchamp and was then reinforced by certain avant-garde practices in the ‘70s, and then reinforced further in the ‘80s by the reaction against painting, is a misunderstanding. Because there is no such thing as a good painting without an idea, and there is no such thing as a good idea without a form.
LP:
Do you personally "think with the senses, feel with the mind"?
RS:
You use your senses to have ideas. Ideas don’t come only from one corner of
your brain that is strictly logical, they come from your way of apprehending
the world, which includes the five senses and also the emotions. And you also
have to understand that an idea has an effect, ideas are not neutral. People
are passionate about ideas, and therefore there is no such thing as illogical,
strict, cold, detached ideas. All ideas are charged with emotional and sensual
experiences. All I am saying is that since that mixture of thought and feeling
is the norm in any case, the thing to do is to actively consider that process.
LP:
You are the first American to curate the Venice Biennale. Were you under a lot
of pressure? Do you think that your approach has provided something new?
RS:
No, the pressure wasn’t too bad. I think that people have made more of this
than probably is appropriate. When Rauschenberg became the first American to win the Golden Lion, that meant something, because it was the first time that
American avant-garde culture was making art at the level that had been
established by the European avant-garde. It was a big deal! To be the first
American curator is not really an issue. There are a lot of American curators
around, and so to have an American curator at Venice is not a symbolic thing
nor very important.
I do bring a different perspective to the job, I think, in
two senses. One, as an American, I have lived abroad in France, Mexico, Holland.
I am not a provincial American! I am not a New Yorker, either. I live in New
York now but I didn’t come from there. So what I bring to this is quite a
cosmopolitan experience. The other thing is that my definition of America is
not necessarily a mainstream definition. America is not only one thing. My America
includes more of Allen Ginsberg, Walt Whitman and John Cage than it does John
Wayne.
LP:
You’ve lived in different places around the globe, and for the biennale you
also went to Africa. What is the origin of this passion?
RS:
Yes, I am the first biennale curator who went specifically to Africa to look
for work and to think about how to integrate African art.
My passion has several sources. First, America’s history
includes the history of European conquest, European immigration, indigenous
people and slaves. Our culture was from the very beginning a mixture of
cultures and a mixture of races. I personally grew up in South Chicago, right
by the ghetto, and I had a lot of friends there. I lived in a mixed
neighborhood in Brooklyn for many years, and was one of the very few whites in
the street. The African Diaspora is part of my life. My interest in African American
art and the African origins of African-American art has been a constant.
And second, in recent years we’ve seen some interesting
curatorial work being done in Africa by a variety of curators, including one of
the co-curators of the African pavilion at Venice, Fernando Alvim.
All of us have learned a lot from this. This biennale gave us the chance to
acknowledge that there are specialists in the field, and to make this knowledge
available to the general public. That’s really what it is about. It’s the time
to say we already know more that we knew, we should have known it sooner, but
we now know it. The next thing is that more people should know it.
LP:
There has been some criticism about selecting works from the African collector
Sindika Dokolo.
RS:
I instituted the procedure that selected the African pavilion, but I didn’t
make the selection myself. Basically, I said it’s not for me to decide who an
African curator should be or even if he should come from Africa, because many
of the curators actually don’t live in Africa, they live elsewhere. It
shouldn’t be up to me as a white American to say, "Okay, you are the voice of
Africa!" Rather, I thought there should be an open discussion about the
different possibilities. When I was at the Museum of Modern Art, I attended a
seminar of African curators and critics, and one complaint was that only two or
three people ever get to do shows in big venues in America or Europe. So I said
let’s change this, let’s have an open call, and we will take all the proposals
and judge them according to the quality of the exhibition and also the
practicability, since it is about that too. We received 37 exhibition proposals
Next, I put together a jury of specialists in African art. I
did not vote on the jury, I was simply a consulting member, and the jury chose
the Dokolo collection. More than that, the jury chose the artworks and the
artists and the curator, and the collection itself was simply a vehicle for
showing the art and it was the medium for the curator. The controversy is about
the father and father-in-law of the man who owns a lot of this art it is
actually not about him. It’s striking to me that those questions are not asked
about the financial resources of François Pinault, who also has an exhibition
in Venice. Which is not to say that he is in fault and not to say that Sindika
Dokolo is innocent, it is simply to say, why don’t we talk about the art first
and if there are significant and provable things about the background we must
discuss them secondarily.
LP:
Many of the artworks you selected for the biennale are socially and politically
inspired. Is this because artists today are more engaged, or was it your
decision to emphasize political art?
RS:
Many of the works have what you could call a political background or subject
matter, but there is no work in here that is ideological. There are works in
which the political dimension is made visible, put in the plate, given to the
viewer to consider, but the works don’t tell you what to think they provide only
an occasion to think. I think politics are important, I think it’s
irresponsible not to think about the political dimension of the world, but I
also think it is bad politics to make bad political art. When I find art where
the artist is able to put together a sophisticated understanding of politics
and a sophisticated understanding of the medium, then I think I have an
obligation to show it.
LP:
One recurring criticism of the biennale in Italy, at least is that Italy
is not properly represented. Did you feel obliged to do change this? Was it
hard to find six Italian artists for the exhibition?
RS:
No. In fact, the show includes more Americans than I had planned. My course was
the reverse one. I didn’t want to have too many Americans, but in the end I
included artists who I thought belonged in the show. One of the benefits of
having a national system of representation is that countries represent
themselves. As a result I could go anywhere and look for art that appropriate
to my show, and take it from wherever I found it. For the Italians it was the
same thing. Last time there was no pavilion devoted to Italian artists, and
there was no pavilion for Venice itself. It’s good that both are included this
time around, but it didn’t affect me very much. Angelo Filomeno, for instance,
is an Italian artist that I know and met in the studio of Louise Bourgeois when
he was showing his work to Louise.
We established a relation and I have been following what he
does. I’ve also known Luca Buvoli for a long time. I collected his work for the
Museum of Modern Art ten years ago. I wasn’t thinking about him for the show,
because I didn’t think what he was doing was relevant to it. Then he said,
"Listen, please come and see what I am doing now." And what he was doing turned
out to be very relevant. So now he has the front position here. There is
another artist, Tatiana Trouvé. Her father is Senegalese, she has as an Italian
mother and was born in Italy, but she is counted as a French artist. So that’s another
consideration. Is a French artist a French artist because he or she lives and works
in France? In that case, Adel Abdessemed and Philippe Parreno are French,
except both of them are born in Algeria. Nationality is not a wholly
satisfactory way to judge exhibitions.
LP:
Do you think it still makes sense to talk about national art and national
pavilions?
RS:
To the extent that individual artists may have chosen to take nationality as a
subject matter, it is interesting, and also of course many of the artists that
take national identities as a subject matter also contest them. Last year,
Santiago Sierra did it in the Spanish pavilion by bricking up the entrance and
making a work about immigration and citizenship, for instance. Having a
nationality doesn’t mean you are promoting a nationality. Nationalism in art is
almost invariably a bad thing and historically is usually associated with
reactionary tendencies
LP:
Do you think there still is a hot spot for contemporary art? Is New York still
the center for it?
RS:
No. New York is the center of the market, but even there, its position has been
challenged by London. It’s the center of many of the information systems, but
there too the number of magazines and the nature of internet make the
information much more dispersed worldwide. From my point of view, New York is
actually not as interesting as it has been. There are many centers now London, Berlin, Beijing. . . . All of them are centers and there are many other
places. I’ve spent a lot of time in Latin America and there is quite a lot of
Latin American art in this exhibition. Latin American art is very straight-out
and very interesting, but the central gathering point for Latin American art is
either São Paolo Bienal or the ARCO art fair in Madrid, because that is where
you can see a lot of it together.
LP:
What is the most interesting discovery you made during your researches around
the world?
RS:
Probably the most interesting thing that I found and it really was simply a
tip from a friend from Brazil, rather than some "discovery" that I made is Project
Morrinho, the toy model of a Brazilian favela, or slum. The project has a
central position in the middle of the Giardini and consists of two things: a
large, scale-model of a hillside Brazilian shantytown made of painted and
unpainted bricks and other discarded items, and an organization that helps
children in need in Rio.
Originally, real kids in Rio de Janeiro made the morrinho as
a model of their world, and they used it as a play-site to work out the traumas
of their lives and the fantasies of their lives, the way children play with a
dollhouse. It is an enormous urban dollhouse. In that sense, it’s also a social
sculpture.
When I saw it I immediately knew that I want it in the biennale,
but I had reservations. The kids were very skeptical about building a version
of their project in Venice. In the end, we sited it in a central position in
the Giardini, in a kind of neutral space near a snack bar that is behind the
bookstore and separate from the official national pavilions. Their piece, like
the favelas themselves, is invasive. Favelas are built between
housing blocks, they are spontaneous architecture, spontaneous communities of
poor people. Now there an enormous one in the middle of the Giardini. There is
also one right opposite the Brazilian pavilion that looks over it. And there is
one right next the American pavilion.
LP:
Which are the issues and the problems of today’s world that you tried to
underline in this exhibition?
RS:
I’m trying to look at the way artists respond to violence, cultural violence,
physical violence. The way they respond to precisely these questions of
nationality and the fact that nationality doesn’t say very much about most
people. We have a nationality that is imposed as a political structure, is
accepted as a political structure and it embraces a political structure, but it
is a political structure, is not written in the land that this belongs to this
and that belongs to that. In fact if you look at Yugoslavia, people have shed
blood over a piece of land. It has been a disaster.
A few works in the show precisely address this breakup of
conglomerate countries into smaller regions defined by so-called national
identities. So nationality is a subtext in these works. Another issue is the
relationship between pleasure and knowledge. The fact that you think about important
political and social issues doesn’t mean that you have to deny yourself other
things. The idea that the only way to make legitimate political art is to shut
out any other aspect of your identity until such time as the world is made good
again is nonsense and actually is very destructive.
LP:
The art market is very strong today, and the world is full of art fairs and
festivals. Do you believe that the Venice Biennale should have more importance in
this context?
RS:
Yes, I do. The biennale is a democratic forum. It is a place where people can
come and have a direct experience of art, and have an experience of each other
in the presence of that art. It is a rare experience. Very few cities that have
great museums, and fewer cities still have active exhibition programs of
contemporary art. Many people don’t feel invited or welcomed in galleries; the
social threshold is too high to cross. But the biennale they go to. Here they
can become part of visual culture. Going to movies and reading books is easy, but
in contemporary visual culture the social and economic barriers
are very high. The biennale is the one place where the barriers come down.
LAVINIA FILIPPI is an art critic based in Rome.