Guerrilla Art and the Politics of Punitive Literacy

Speaker: Faye Gleisser - Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art History, and Faculty Director of the Emerging Artist in Residency Program, Indiana University

Today, 鈥済uerrilla art鈥 is a loosely applied catchall used to describe artwork that appears unannounced beyond art-sanctioned spaces, such as street corners, billboards, TV shows, and radio waves. Most commonly, it conjures images of graffiti tagged on city walls, political听theater听staged in parks, and agitprop wheat-pasted posters. It is referenced in exhibition catalogues and scholarly texts as art that surprises its viewers, catching them unawares with words, pictures, and performances that disrupt the regular or mundane flow of things, temporarily jolting interlocutors into a different experience of the space, people, and infrastructure surrounding them. But 鈥済uerrilla art鈥 also applies to works that remain imperceptible, lingering or slowly unfolding without documentation, confrontation, or aggression for weeks or years; as well as befitting artworks that never delineate a clear political position or message but instead aim to cultivate urban survival techniques. As such, guerrilla art is an elusive, vague classification within contemporary art, applied to many different actions, mediums, and aims, and typically presented as discrete, idiosyncratic instances of redirection or resistance.听

In this talk, I aim to provide an alternative historical narrative for guerrilla art in the U.S. that emerged in the late 1960s and gained legibility throughout the 1970s. Crucial historical context for understanding the stakes of artists鈥 use of low-tech tactics, such as media hijacking, sabotage of public space, deception, and misinformation in conceptual and performance-based art has yet to be adequately听analyzed: namely, the expansion of police discretion, surveillance technologies, and carceral debt, and its conditioning of artists鈥 tactical decisions in art. Guerrilla art can be revisited, I argue, as a manifestation of artists鈥 punitive literacy: an听attunement听to changing sentencing protocol, anti-riot laws, zoning logics, 迟丑别听relationship between law enforcement and medical doctors, the injunctive power invoked by museum to silence artists, and the advent of computerized predictive policing. Rather than听center听the moment of confrontation so often fetishized in discussions of guerrilla art, I look instead to the 鈥渂efore鈥 and 鈥渁fter鈥濃攖o artists鈥 anticipation of arrest and punitive consequence鈥攖o challenge the common narrative that these artworks are merely ephemeral, momentary disruptions of institutional power. Through cross-analysis of works created in the 鈥70s by Adrian Piper, Asco, Chris Burden, and others, I contend that artists鈥 punitive literacy exposes a shadow-structure linking the work, one that reveals the racialized and gendered politics of risk-taking and its wide-ranging impact on American canon formation.听

Faye听Gleisser听is an interdisciplinary art historian, curator, arts writer, and museum educator based in Bloomington, Indiana, where she is Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art History, and the Faculty Director of the Emerging Artist in Residency Program at Indiana University. In her research and teaching,听Gleisser听applies question-based inquiry and critical race and feminist theory to examine the socio-political conditions shaping 20th and 21st century art, archival silences, and histories of photographic surveillance. Her scholarship has appeared in Art Journal, Journal of Visual Culture, Artforum, and ASAP/J, as well as in exhibition听catalogs听for Out of Easy Reach, The Propeller Group, and the Prospect.5 Triennial. In 2020, she was awarded a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in support of her book, forthcoming with University of听Chicago Press, which examines the entangled relationship of policing, risk management, and conceptual and performance-based guerrilla art in the United States.听

Organised by Professor David Peters Corbett (The Courtauld) and Dr Tom Day (The Courtauld).听

This event has passed.

15 Nov 2021

Monday 15th November, 5.00pm - 6.30pm GMT

Online 

Registration closes 30 minutes before the event start time. If you do not receive log in details on the day of the event, please contact听researchforum@courtauld.ac.uk

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