No medium just a shell: how works of art configure their medium

JVAP: A Journal funded by NAFAE.

Subscribe

Subscribe to JVAP by joining NAFAE.

Buy

To buy only this issue you can buy JVAP 6.1 from intellect.

Intellect

JVAP is published by Intellect books.

Keywords:
medium, postmedium, end of art, Luhmann
Available in:
JVAP 6.1 - about JVAP
Funded by:
NAFAE - about NAFAE
Pulished:
May 2007

Article abstract

In this article, I argue that the question of what works of art do is inextricably bound up with an ontological question of what it is that is doing the doing. In others words, the question of what is being done by the artwork cannot be answered without answering what the agency for that action is. First, I introduce the problem of medium in art after modernism. I argue that the terms ‘end of art’, ‘postmodern’ and ‘postmedium’ are commensurate, and that all require a rethinking of concept of medium in art practice. I then argue that Niklas Luhmann's account of medium (in his sociologically grounded systems theory) provides an answer to the question: What Work Does the Work of Art Do? My argument is that the work of art gives the medium form, configures it and thus actively constitutes it as a medium. As a concluding example, I turn to Pierre Huyghe and Phillipe Parreno's collaborative project No Ghost Just a Shell (1999–2002) and demonstrate how Luhmann's account of medium/form can be used to explain the work.

Written by: Francis Halsall

Other articles in: JVAP Volume 6 Issue 1. Journal Visual Art Practice,