Last month I attended a virtual conference entitled “The Temperature of Art Book Criticism and Scholarship,” the term “art book” referring to books which are art works in their own right. The instructor of an online course in which my wife participated last year made books out of meat. At a 2019 NYC exhibition of works inspired by Whitman, a remarkable homage to one of his poems hung from the ceiling like drapery, text imprinted in a very calculated way (which I won’t attempt to describe or explain) in blues and greens, iirc. Conference practitioners lamented the art book’s lack of standing in art, literary and academic institutions. Two young individuals without specialized programs to enter trained themselves. One obtained a BA in visual arts and an MFA in literature. The other earned an English Lit. BA and a visual arts MFA. One publishes art book reviews in a Brooklyn-based arts journal. There is no art book Ph.D.
The audience for even the best GCA criticism—as written—is small and will remain small because there is no money in it and the focus is too narrow. A multi-disciplinary approach would reach some new people, albeit still a small niche—and perhaps retain some of the present company. My hypothetical “serious” GCA critic would resemble the aspiring book art critics in having a passion for something without its neat place in the hierarchy (hire-archy). Here’s the resume of someone whom I would love to see supplement his existing gifts by boning up on our favorite land art and its history, taking up the game and then letting fly:
“Allen S. Weiss is committed to both interdisciplinary research and experimental performance across the media. Among his theoretical works are
The Aesthetics of Excess (SUNY);
Phantasmic Radio (Duke);
Breathless: Sound Recording, Disembodiment, and the Transformation of Lyrical Nostalgia (Wesleyan);
Feast and Folly: Cuisine, Intoxication, and the Poetics of the Sublime (SUNY);
Varieties of Audio Mimesis: Musical Evocations of Landscape (Errant Bodies); and most recently
Zen Landscapes: Perspectives on Japanese Gardens and Ceramics (Reaktion). He has also written two gastronomic autobiographies,
Autobiographie dans un chou farci (Mercure de France) and
Métaphysique de la miette (Argol). His creative work includes
Theater of the Ears (a play for electronic marionette and taped voice based on the writings of Valère Novarina), which premiered at CalArts and ended its tour at the Avignon Off Festival;
Danse Macabre (a marionette theater for the dolls of Michel Nedjar), which premiered as part of the
Poupées exhibition that ASW curated at the Halle Saint Pierre in Paris, and subsequently showed at the
In Transit festival at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin; and a novel,
Le livre bouffon (Le Seuil). His radio productions include
L’Indomptable (with Gregory Whitehead) for France Culture; the Hörspiel
Glissando as well as
Radio Gidayū (a soundscape of Kyoto), both for the Klangkunst program of Deutschlandradio Kultur; and
Carmignano, an audio essay on wine for Radio Papesse in Florence. He most recently produced and directed
Poupées des ténèbres /
Dolls of Darkness, a documentary film about the dolls of Michel Nedjar and the Holocaust. He created the photographic illustrations to Chantal Thomas' latest book,
East Village Blues (Le Seuil), which won the Prix Le Vaudeville (2019). His most recent book is
Unpacking My Library, or, The Autobiography of Teddy (K. Verlag, 2020), co-authored with his Teddy bear.”
If Weiss or similar can’t be hired, then why not a DG commission? Start a kitty, solicit proposals, and then select a winner to compose something really “out there.”
Disclaimer: I have thought vaguely about such an essay (or art book
) before, am unqualifed to write one. This proposal was a “free write,” a term Jason, Peter and others will know. No doubt many holes can be shot in it. I also did not read every post before me. Hey, it’s my hypothetical full-time career critic who will read every DG thread and post.