Where Should Art Go During This Pandemic Situation?

OPINION

 

Where Should Art Go During This Pandemic Situation?

By Abel Cervantes 

There are two contemporary events that have changed the world. 9/11 led to an extreme vigilance that made disappear the line between the public and the private. Suddenly, foreign people (the unknown Other) became a danger to society and it was necessary to know their location to stop their “terrorist plans”. Cell phones began to have sophisticated cameras, that not only served to photograph unforgettable moments, but were also used to capture –in flagrante- their own owners.

(Batman. The Dark Knight summarizes these concerns in an enlightening way: Lucios Fox – Morgan Freeman – is the tech genius who helps Batman achieve his objectives: adapt a war vehicle to arrest thugs, use a plane to capture a Chinese thief or chase the Joker throughout Gotham City using the citizens’ cell phones as an underwater radar.) Nowadays, cell phones have endless functions. However, each of them work as a detector that records all human activities: from where we are to what we eat, what we wear and what we desire (Facebook and Google listen to even the most intimate conversations, even if cell phones are several meters away). Our life is exposed as it was not thirty years ago.

The Covid-19 has announced a new change. However, this change does not necessarily mean a 180 degree turn to a different scenario for humanity, but a complementary one to 9/11. Due to Coronavirus, the fear of the Other has changed: it is no longer the foreigner who threatens our security (social, economic, political, etc.), it is one of us. The distance in between is essential because his figure is a threat to our health. In technological matters, we will soon repeat the scheme implemented in China: governments will need our exact location (through an app) to know if we were in contact with someone infected. And once we have been exposed, we will be forced to stay in one place (our home or a hospital). Our movements will be watched as we are the carriers of a life-threatening virus. Now we are the Other.

In the art world the situation has produced dramatic changes, some of which have been announced for several years. Many galleries and museums have chosen to present exhibitions and performances through digital platforms. Those interested in art are divided into two groups: the ones who will return to the museums and the ones who won’t. The first group will attend the museums with all sanitary protocols; for them, the experience of live art cannot be replaced by a screen. The second one prefers to observe from the comfort of their mobile phones images that can be swiped with the movement of a finger. If you ask me, both formats have their own pros and cons.

For those who exclaim with raised eyebrows that the experience of seeing live art cannot be substituted, you could ask the following questions: Is it the same experience for every observer in front of the work of art? Are experiences unified once we are in the presence of a piece of art within a museum? Then one could also claim: Whoever does not see this work of art after reading this or that book, will never understand it (as I have understood it)! Whoever does not see this work of art from this perspective will never have access to its meaning (as I have had it)! It is true that witnessing a work of art implies an interesting bodily sensation. It is impossible to reduce an art interpretation to a physical experience, because presence is a perceptual sensation in which memories and the subconscious fantasies are fused. a¿After all, seeing a work of art is just one of the many tools to interpret it.

On the contrary, subordinating art to a screen can have many benefits. The first one is practical: I don’t need to be rich or have all the time in the world to know the works that are exhibited in Russia or in the United States. The second one, allows us to relate art to linguistic dimensions, as Roland Barthes might propose: every time I look at a painting, a sculpture, a photograph, an installation, etc., through the Internet, I synthesize its attributes with linguistic concepts. These linguistic concepts potentiate my experience. I don’t need to see the outline of the painting, because I can access it through its Double. That Double is writing. However, as Franco Berardi Bifo mentions in Post-Alpha Generation, mediation through a screen fosters concepts that diminish experiences: the absent perception of corporality stimulates distractions, lack of observation and, finally, disinterest. This only accentuates if we receive other stimuli (simultaneously) contents on the same device! Cell phone dynamics are fragmentary and random. The observation time we dedicate to a work can change whether we are in the museum or in our living room scrolling through our phone.  

During this pandemic, museums have entered an unknown sphere. The digital era (in which hackers, surveillance, algorithms, data tracking, among others, play a crucial role) have proved that data must be handled with extreme care, otherwise, it would fall into the hands of commercial companies, only to take advantage in an unethical way, such as Google, Facebook or Instagram currently do. Society will change again, but the role of art cannot be reduced to a representation of the events that take place in it. Art cannot participate only by making or exhibiting works on digital platforms or by following health recommendations. The role of curators, artists, museums and galleries must critically consider concepts such as surveillance, hacking, economic reactivation…, not only as the subject of an exhibition but as an evolution of the very position and the practices implied. As never before, the key people involved in the art world, must look at the position they are in and reflect which is the first movement they are going to make.