Globalisation, Cultural Baggage
and the Critical Direction of Irish Art Practice
Has the cultural
sector in the Republic of Ireland jettisoned the past in favour
of an uneasy foothold in the present? Lucy Cotter looks here
at the conflicts and contradictions that may lurk beneath the
surface.
Contemporary
Irish identity has...been sanitised and made remarkably accommodating
to the dominant elitist project of subservient assimilation
into multinational capitalism; robbed of reference points
from a rich and subversive history...[1]
Celtic Tiger Ireland openly invites
the population to cast off the weight of Ireland's historical
and economic past and (aspire to) embrace the lightness of new
money and a kind of global 'cool'. Geraldine Moane likens this
expectation, that Ireland transform culturally because of a
decade of improved economics, to the unrealistic expectation
that the establishment of the Irish Free State could wipe out
a history of hundreds of years.[2] This schism between identification
with economic development and the everyday lived experience
and personal memories of Irish culture is not a new one. As
far back as the post-Famine era, a certain pattern was created
of 'forgetting' the difficult past to facilitate the pursuit
of economic improvement. When modernisation in the Republic
of Ireland forged ahead in the 1950s, the unresolved relationship
between historical heritage and the construction of a national
cultural identity was lost sight of among more pressing agendas.
Public authorities in the 1960s promoted industrial development
(economic modernisation) but showed no commitment to social,
political or cultural modernisation.[3]
The nationalist movement and the Catholic
Church together could be seen to have set most of the cultural
agenda until quite recently. It is hardly surprising then that
the socio-economic dynamic (in keeping with the requirements
of industrial development being pursued by the major economic
forces) did not coincide with the cultural dynamic, which was
pushing Irish society in different directions. Although the
contradiction between these two dynamics was not resolved, it
was diffused so that they were able to coexist through the state.[4]
The result has formed the basis for the relationship between
culture and economy in the Celtic Tiger.
The place of culture in society is never
static. In the post-industrial economy, which the Republic of
Ireland is currently in the process of creating, it has shifted
considerably, aligning goals for state activity, business activity
and cultural activity closer and closer towards an eventual
collapse of boundaries between culture, society and the economy.
Many of the recent government decisions regarding culture have
been indicative of this direction. Consider for example the
goal of The Arts Council's Arts Plan 2002-2006 (which was created
and subsequently adopted by Government as part of the Programme
for Government) to "extend the international impact and
success of Irish art and artists." Its resemblance to government's
current drive towards ensuring the best opportunities for Irish
business on the world market warrants careful consideration.
Patricia Carr detects an ongoing "political shaping of
culture into an ingredient of the [Irish] economy," which
mirrors developments in other globalising economies worldwide.
Public authorities engage in the production of a 'culture of
enterprise', which aims to produce a particular type of individual
who should show the appropriate qualities of a successful entrepreneur
in the new economy of Ireland.[5]
This echoes the former Arts Council's Arts Plan's aims of "enhancing
the ability of artists and arts organisations to build an international
profile"; "ensuring the availability of market intelligence";
and "influencing public policy providers to rationalise
international approaches." I also recall Brian Hand's
view of the primacy of audience development as being synonymous
with potential consumers (in current market jargon 'target
audience' now substitutes for 'customer'). He observed the self-evidence
of the economic imperatives behind this development in
the increasing use of such terms as "the culture industry,
the arts industry and the leisure industry."[6]
The prestige of Irish national culture
- such as art in the international context - projects
a 'cultured' national identity imbued with the qualities of
the work itself (innovative, traditional, dynamic, etc.). Ideally,
a government's accumulation of high 'cultural capital' and high
economic capital generates a high status in the international
arena. Hans Abbing suggests that, in return for this role for
culture, governments provide a national art budget which supports
artists and art institutions.[7] This relationship is usually veiled by the apparent
disinterestedness of 'national interest'.[8] As globalisation aligns cultural
production more and more closely with economic agendas, Irish
culture is likely to be asked to contribute more and more to
national interest. 'Sacrifices' such as the 'setting aside'
of The Arts Council's Arts Plan, following reduction in funding
in 2003 by almost 9m euro relative to the amount sought
in the Plan, indicate the extent to which economic direction
will determine cultural goals. In her resignation letter in
2004, former Director of the Arts Council, Patricia Quinn, said
she felt honour-bound to step down, given that "the council's
precipitate action [in setting aside the Arts Plan] overturns
government policy and is contrary to the considered advice of
its own executive." Quinn's implication of the increasing
lack of autonomy of the post of Director of the Arts Council
should not be overlooked. Early signs of this could be seen
already in the Arts Act 2003's reduction of Arts Council members,
consequent increase of the control of the Minister, and accompanying
reduction of the independence of the Arts Council.
The separation of arts from heritage
in the renamed government departments and grouping of the arts
alongside sport and tourism also indicate the extent to which
new roles for art are being determined 'from above'. Newly appointed
Mary Cloake's intention to remodel the Arts Council into an
agency which responds to the "extraordinary work
ongoing in the arts in Ireland" contradicts what recent
events suggest - that arts practice will be forced to respond
to economic imperatives and not vice versa. Nevertheless, the
Arts Council's most recent information on Revenue Funding in
2005 clearly acknowledges that "the extent to which these
ambitions can be effectively achieved will depend on the level
of funding for 2005 from Government."
An old Chinese saying
states that in every crisis there lies an opportunity. The scrapping
of the Plan and subsequent call for a major consultation process
in preparation for a new Plan allows a re-examination of the
conflicts underlying the current situation and possible renegotiation
of Ireland's cultural agenda. Rather than building upon the
contradictions underlying the Arts Plan 2002-6 and limiting
the nature of the new Plan to mere upgrading, I would like to
suggest that a larger cultural opportunity is at hand - in short,
the chance to address the long-standing incompatibility
between Ireland's economic and cultural agendas, which may in
turn re-establish the foundations of Irish artistic and cultural
development. The establishment of new consultative mechanisms
to ensure a two-way flow of information and dialogue in the
Arts Council's new Guiding Principles for 2005 offers a new
level of agency to the public and to artistic practitioners
alike in informing the agenda for Irish arts development. The
aim of the mechanisms, in setting a context for a more fundamental
re-examination of the Arts Council's vision, mission and values,
also encourages active and ongoing renegotiation. However, this
significant opportunity may be somewhat misplaced if assumptions
are made that an open and engaged discussion will naturally
follow.
The difficulty in establishing an active
debate about the issues surrounding the recent Arts Plan controversy
highlights long-standing communication barriers between political
and artistic spheres in Ireland. In a catalogue essay for A
Sense of Ireland, a cultural festival held in Britain
in 1980, Seamus Deane suggested that Irish artists have been
very directly exposed to the congruence of political and artistic
problems due to the lack of critical or theoretical support
by any source which could be called an intelligentsia. They
"have been compelled to find a rationale for their art,
they have been forced to engage in a frontal way with political
crisis to such an extent that the practice of art itself becomes
problematic and even, on occasion, impossible."[9]
In the interim, much has been done at an academic level to extend
the theoretical basis of Irish cultural criticism, leading to
such publications as Ireland and Cultural Theory (1999)
and Theorizing Ireland: A Reader in Cultural Criticism (2003).
Nevertheless, this has not yet translated into critical practices
at other levels of the cultural sector. Joseph Lee observes
that in fact Irish intellectual activity has contributed little
to Irish public life in general, thanks to an ongoing preference
for adopted models from the Anglo-American world, regardless
of their inappropriateness to the Irish context.[10]
Nearly twenty-five years after Deane's comment, the continuing
weak state of critical debate is symptomatic of the avoidance
of direct engagement with these kinds of contradictions at the
base of Irish culture. While the brief outline of the Arts Council's
Policy, Priorities and Partnership in the Arts(pending
publication in summer 2005) provides a welcome acknowledgment
of the important consultative role to be played by research
and 'key informants', including art critics and cultural commentators,
the absence of strategic support for critical practices in the
Guiding Principles is thus disappointing.
I would like to challenge the notion
that Irish art can somehow march ahead unaffected while critical
debate (as well as art criticism per se) lags behind indefinitely.
I believe the development of their shared agenda as critical
practices needs to be prioritised on the national cultural agenda.
Individual attempts have been made to redress the situation.
The New Voices in Irish Criticism series was published
by Four Courts Press. Valerie Connor posed some important questions
to Hilary Robinson in CIRCAthe year before last,
with the aim of promoting a more active role for criticism in
Ireland.[11]
In May of this year, a one-day Symposium for Contemporary Art
Criticism was held at the Temple Bar Gallery and Studioswith the aim of providing a forum for questioning the condition,
role and value of contemporary art criticism. However, much
as these undertakings are valuable in their own right, I feel
that the issues at hand are more fundamental than self-contained
discourse within the art world and therefore cannot effectively
be dealt with in isolation. They are essentially cultural questions
which demand an interdepartmental and interdisciplinary approach
which has been made distinctly unavailable by the recent divorce
of art from heritage.
Little has changed at a fundamental
level since Mary Stinson Cosgrove concluded in 1990 that "Irishness
as an art critical construct in some sense seems to imply an
art that is above politics, that transcends history culminating
in the notion that Irishness is the very absence of tangibility
and therefore not specific historically."[12] David Lloyd has highlighted
a continuing self-censorship as a symptom of post-coloniality
beneath the surface of Irish contemporary culture.[13] In fact, the hidden status of this historical
/ political narrative in Irish art and culture is a typical
indication of a 'colonised' mindset, in which the subject is
wary of enunciating an agenda which would challenge colonial
power - albeit now defunct. Without reducing a complex situation
to a cause-and-effect scenario, it is worth considering how
this mindset might be seen to manifest itself within the Irish
art world. Consider how Irish artists have predominantly bypassed
socio-political issues, avoiding 'problem areas', typically
by taking a philosophical (apolitical) approach, emphasizing
high finish rather than critical content or adopting postmodern
aesthetics without consideration of the applicability of postmodernism
in the Irish context. Furthermore, consider how this ambivalence
is reflected curatorially by the consistency with which Irish
art museums and galleries present solo exhibitions or curatorial
themes evolving from individual artworks rather than addressing
specific critical concerns. The Irish Museum of Modern Art's
main curatorial agenda, for example, has predominantly avoided
difficult subjects pertinent to Irish culture, despite its function
as a national cultural institution. Even 'exceptional'exhibitions
such as Irish Art Now: From the Poetic to the Political(1995)
demonstrated a marked ambivalence towards addressing the politics
in its title, both in its selection of artists and in its catalogue
essay. These artistic and curatorial approaches are inherently
limited by what Frederic Jameson calls "the return of the
repressed," the hidden agendas of Irish culture historically
and currently, thus limiting the development of Irish art. A
critical engagement with these tendencies may lead to significant
development within Irish art practice.
While the idea of Ireland as a colony
remains highly contested, the recent publication of Ireland
and Postcolonial Theory (2003) has done much to unpack the
complexities behind the subject, presenting a self-critical
analysis of historical and cultural discourses. In itself, this
publication provides invaluable theoretical support in approaching
national cultural questions, yet its value in the critical field
is only beginning to be explored, leaving its potential for
Irish art practice largely untapped.
The ghost of colonialism in Irish cultural
identity suggests that the 'postcolonial' tag is premature
for Ireland. As Luke Gibbons has asserted, it is precisely the
absence of a historical closure (which would facilitate a 'post'
status) which has characterised the national narratives of Irish
history.[14] Much as the Celtic Tiger invites
us to forget, it must be remembered that globalisation is in
fact a continuation of inter-national relationships, complete
with legacies of wars and colonial imposition. Deflected by
expectations of assuming a European identity in the 1970s and
1980s and a global identity in the 1990s and 2000s, the Republic
of Ireland has yet to develop a national cultural identity which
is not in contradiction with its colonial past. A critical engagement
with the notion of Ireland as a former colony could lead to
a renegotiation of Irish art's critical position within international
art discourse - both historically and currently - and give new
critical direction to contemporary Irish art practice. Now is
a good time to put it on the cultural agenda.
Lucy Cotter is an Irish art critic
based in Amsterdam. Her current research projects, 'The Migrant's
Perspective: Irish Artists in Mainland Europe' and 'Auto-destruction
in the Age of Globalisation', were commissioned by the Arts
Council / An Chomhairle Ealaíon in association with the
Critical Reflection Award 2004.
This essay is the first of a multi-part
project entitled Globalisation + Irish Art = ?, commissioned
in association with the Critical Reflection / Critical
Voices Award 2003, awarded by The Arts Council / An Comhairle
Ealaíon. This essay was completed in December 2003 and
revised in July 2004. Two further essays will be published together
in Third Text, a London-based journal providing critical
perspectives on contemporary art and culture, in January 2005.
[1]Peadar Kirby, Contested pedigrees of the Celtic Tiger,
in Re-Inventing Ireland: Culture, Society and the Global
Economy, eds. Peadar Kirby, Luke Gibbons and Michael Cronin,
Pluto Press, 2002, pp. 21-37, p. 27
[2]Geraldine Moane, Colonialism and the Celtic Tiger: legacies
of history and the quest for vision, in Re-Inventing
Ireland, op. cit., pp. 109-123, p. 113-114
[3]Luke Gibbons, quoted by Michel Peillon, Culture and state in
Ireland's new economy, in Re-Inventing Ireland, op.
cit., pp. 38-53, p. 40
[5]Patricia Carr, quoted by Michel Peillon, op. cit., p. 51
[6]Brian Hand, Public misrecognition, in CIRCA 91,
Spring 2000, pp 25-30, p 26
[7]Hans Abbing, Why are Artists Poor?: The Exceptional Economy
of the Arts,University of Amsterdam, 2002, p. 232.
[8]See Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on
the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, Verso, 1991, p. 143,
for a discussion of this concept.
[9]Seamus Deane, The artist in Ireland, in A Sense of Ireland,
1980, pp. 35-38, p. 37
[10]Joseph Lee, quoted by Peadar Kirby, Luke Gibbons
and Michael Cronin, Introduction: the reinvention of Ireland:
a critical perspective, pp. 1-18, pp. 14-15 in Reinventing
Ireland, op. cit. I examine the inappropriateness of foreign
art-historical models in a subsequent essay of this project,
to be published in Third Text in January 2005.
[11]Valerie Connor, CIRCA 99, Spring 2002, pp.
24-27
[12]Mary Stinson Cosgrove, Irishness and art criticism,
CIRCA 52, July / August 1990, pp. 14-19
[13]David Lloyd, After history: historicism and
postcolonial studies, in Ireland and Postcolonial Theory,
ed. Clare Carroll and Patricia King, Cork University Press,
2003, pp. 46-62, p. 49.
[14]Luke Gibbons, Unapproved roads: post-colonialism
and Irish identity, in Distant Relations: Chicano, Irish,
Mexican Art and Critical Writing; Cercanias Distantes/ Clann
i gCéin, ed. Trisha Ziff, Small Art Press, 1996,
pp. 56-57
Do
you have an opinion on this article? If so, please click here for our comments form.