Objests for Objoys:
the attraction of the unforeseen
by: Stephen Wright
“The moment the object jubilates
gush forth its qualities”
---Francis Ponge
Objests
The various works of Michel de Broin complement one another
like the components of a constantly expanding visual vocabulary.
As if the existent vocabulary were never sufficient to express
the here-and-now; as if life somehow eluded it. In this visual
language game, governed by unpredictable rules that can be codified
only retrospectively, like those governing the grammar of dreams,
the different pieces resemble one another like words in a language.
The often playful objects that Michel de Broin injects into the
real evoke marvellously what poet Francis Ponge referred to as “objests”:
playful, jesting objects, glorifying the referent on the one
hand while upstaging it on the other. In De Broin’s work,
in other words, art’s poetics lie in the breach between
words and things, in the play between the object and its frame.
Piece after piece, Michel de Broin’s vocabulary asserts
itself and softens up at the same time, for though the objects
he stages are universally recognisable, and immediately intelligible,
they invariably turn out to be more mysterious upon reflection – in
much the same way as Ponge’s neologism.
Objoys
Language is needed to create language, words to convoke more
words, objects to engender still others. Yet if De Broin’s
visual vocabulary is to that degree sui generis, it
also draws upon its environment. The artist combines materials
laden with an irrepressible yet disquieting social, emotional
and erotic charge; a charge that can be bracketed off but never
evacuated; a charge that links elements together until the new
object becomes “jubilant” and communicative. The
fleeting and vacillating moment of jubilation that the artist
experiences when he manages both to express the object and himself
might be referred to – once again following Francis Ponge
(clustering lexical fragments together the way De Broin does
with objects from his everyday) – as one of utter “objoy”.
Michel de Broin thus juxtaposes incongruous elements, or inserts
them into unexpected contexts. The art of juxtaposition is also
a game, a joy, where the frivolous yields to the serious, and
vice versa, in the spontaneity of adaptation to circumstances.
Art, like conversation, if it is to escape from tedium, feeds
constantly on the new; we have become accustomed to expecting
the unheard-of. But the unforeseen – that which one will
neither capture nor master, but in the face of which one has
the sensation of truly experiencing something – is
what is most rewarding but also most puzzling about art as experience.
Each objest, each objoy, in short each work
is the unforeseen affirmation of its own occasion. This raises
the question of where art is specifically to be found. For though
Michel de Broin certainly produces artworks, is the artwork embodied
in the gadgets and devices he produces, in objects whose coefficient
of artistic visibility is so low as to almost certainly trigger
discussions with customs officers and police inspectors as to
their true ontological status? Or do Michel de Broin’s
works manifest themselves rather in the videos which show the
deployment of his ambivalent objects in public spaces? What exactly
is the status of these strange objects, which appear as at once
anxious, jubilant and ejaculatory?
Anxious objests
It was the American art critic Harold Rosenberg who coined the
term “anxious objects” to designate those objects
that today fill our galleries, museums and public spaces, whose
status appears so decidedly unstable that they seem to be waiting
for some gesture or decision on our part to cease existing as
mere objects and to change status, to shift from one ontological
landscape to another, in order to become artworks. Yet why, and
under what conditions, does some object or other become “anxious”?
It is not anxious in its capacity as an object, but becomes so
only once its objecthood has been potentially embellished by
a further status as art. An artwork is anxious when its coefficient
of specifically artistic visibility is reduced, either by the
absence of artistic intentionality or by the absence of an artistic
framework. An object is anxious when there is play between it
and its frame. And Michel de Broin’s objects are all the
more anxious in that they are intrinsically unstable, of a playful
but nevertheless disquieting strangeness.
Ejaculatory objoys
I recall on one occasion talking about the video Reparations
(voluntary participation in a waste reenhancement program) to
a friend, adding that Michel de Broin was obviously an ejaculatory
artist. She asked if we – that is, the artist and I – had
ever ejaculated together. I gave the question some serious
thought, anxious to avoid a premature comeback to such a fundamental
(and slightly unexpected) question, before answering that ejaculation
being what is most difficult to achieve, we had not yet managed
it, in spite of our efforts – and that that was why we
had art. In the words of Russian Formalist V. Chklovski:
“To render the sensation of life, to feel objects, to
experience that stone is stone, there exists what is called art.
Art’s goal is to give a sensation to the object as vision
and not as recognition; art’s device is the device of singularising
objects and the device that involves obscuring the form, increasing
the difficulty and duration of perception. The act of perception
in art is an end in itself and must be prolonged; art is a means
of experiencing the becoming of the object, what has already ‘become’ is
of no consequence for art.” 1
Michel de Broin explicitly acknowledges his elective affinity
for Russian Formalism; and it seems to me that it is explained
above all by his concern with perception, which also constitutes
the back bone of Chklovski’s aesthetic theory. According
to Chklovski, artistic language is a sort of ostentatious visual
dialect whose vocation it is to trigger the awakening of renewed
perception. The object’s artistic use can be observed and
measured by the strangeness of its form – “difficult,
obscure, rife with obstacles” he asserts 2 – which
is perceived as unusual by comparison with an ordinary object:
form is thus the distinctive feature aesthetic perception. At
the core of Chklovski’s system, one encounters the opposition
between perception in the most emphatic sense and acquired habit – an
opposition that is determinant in Michel de Broin’s work
as well. Habit is the depleted form of perception that has become
mechanical, almost algebraic. The stultifying of perception leads
to myopia with regard to the object; instead of “seeing” it,
one merely “recognises” it, perceiving it in a habitual
way. The function of art, by contrast, is to revitalise perception
of the object, to wrest it from habit in order to bring conscious
experience back to life. The artwork must unleash a sudden awareness
of the surfaces and shapes of the object and the world that has
been recharged with all its freshness and existential horror.
The work only rises to the status of aesthetic experience once
it manages to provoke a renewal of perception in the viewer;
the work succeeds if and when it “creates a particular
perception of the object, creating its vision rather than its
recognition.”3 Art
is a device that is “consciously created to free perception
from automatism; its vision represents the goal of the creator
and it is constructed artificially, in such a way that it arrests
perception upon itself…”4 De
Broin lashes out playfully at the force of habit, his art deploying
all its force to abrogate the deadening pact of mediocrity that
the real is forever sealing with the possible.
V. Chklovski, “Art
as Device”, cited from the French edition translated
by T. Todorov, in Théorie de la littérature (Paris:
Seuil, 1965), p.83. Chklovski was the forefront theorist
of Russian formalism and the group Opoïaz (Society
for the investigation of poetic language). Two aspects of
his aesthetic system are of relevance with regard to the
work of Michel de Broin: his theory of estrangement (ostranenie),
and his conviction that the art’s role is constantly
to renew perception by disclosing its own devices (obnazhenie
priema).
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