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Exerpt
Rosa Olivares
When forms become concepts
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BILL VIOLA, The Messenger, 1996
As installed in the Durham Cathedral, England
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Miss Peal is really saying that
anything imaginative, anything unfamiliar, or simply anything she
does not like, is dangerous.
Arts Magazine, March 1956
In the evolution of culture, some things have not changed at all
since the origin of humanity. While we go to the moon and mars,
and we discover the origin of life, we clone sheep and even children
of the future, we still cannot cure a common cold. While the media
has revolutionized the very way of waging war -one of the most habitual
sports of man throughout history- and art is rediscovered in a thousand
continually transforming facets, censorship, fear of freedom and
the need to limit the imagination, are still as timely and contemporary
as they were during the Middle Ages. In fact, we could state that
the infamous historical Inquisition is still in force not only in
the methods of torture and humiliation of individuals, but also
in that absurd need to silence those who wish to say things in different
ways, those who search beyond what is permitted, what is habitual,
what is correct. Technological development, along with the evolution
of all types of languages, have significantly broadened the possibilities
of causing pain and also of hushing and prohibiting, eliminating
dissenters in one way or another.
The problem of censorship is that almost no one wants to call
it by this, its most simple and authentic name. Nowadays, the forms
of censorship are transformed -dressed up- into economic problems,
self-censorship, aesthetic re-definitions, or other problems are
cited to prevent specific works from being exhibited, or even produced,
measures that make artists change their minds, leave their countries,
cease to be artists and become mere civil servants. Although in
some places, censorship takes the form of imprisonment or the most
public and direct prohibition, in the countries known as advanced,
democratic, and other synonymous terms, the official budgets, the
granting or withdrawing of financial support for creation is often
censorship enough. Or, more directly, the market will take care
of smoothing out what deviates too far from the correct channel.
Although that correct channel may not always appear to be so, because
it is a verifiable truth that, nowadays, the most adequate channel,
that most distinguished by the market and the critics, focuses on
a sort of provocation that, almost always hidden behind the genius
and brilliance of young artists, a conformity and a desire to enter
the star system of art and the most select show business club, which
annuls any real criticism. Once again, we must recall that excellent
show When attitudes become Form. Live in Your Head (Kunsthalle Bern,
1969).
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PHILIP GRIFFITH JONES, Sensation,
New York, December 1999
© Philip Griffith Jones / Magnum / Contacto
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When forms become concepts, ideas, we are before a situation which
requires intelligence and imagination. Neither is it admissible
that one image alone be considered an intellectual salvation, nor
can we avoid the fact that forms are the embodiment, the physical
transmitters, of ideas and of feelings, of all those things that
can hardly be expressed and that we sometimes do not even know how
to explain. What is censored is what is not understood, what unravels
power. Difference, variety, that which strays from the habitual
is censored. Hence all that is new, that implies changes and produces
a certain insecurity is susceptible to censorship if it runs into
someone fearful and powerful enough to exercise that control. Although
first, if he is intelligent enough, he will generate a means for
that fear and insecurity to penetrate society to the extent that
individuals willingly censor themselves and can thus affirm that
official censorship does not exist.
The varied strategies of censorship are present on all levels
of human communication. Naturally, they are more strictly regulated
in public arenas than in private ones, although in private spheres,
from the family to the couple itself, self-censorship, obedience
to rules that often lead us to lies, deceit or double standards,
are the seeds of latent censorship. In the same light, the authoritarian,
intransigent and even despotic character exercising his power over
some people closest to him makes us think that censorship is, in
the last analysis, nothing more than a way of wielding power, a
power that in many cases needs not be understood or even accepted
by those it is imposed on. In fact, we shall see, little by little,
that real censorship is applied only in those regimes or societies
in which power is practically absolute or, for whatever reasons,
unquestionable.
Censorship is applied, it has always been applied, in those fields
in which intelligence, imagination and creativity can be used to
criticize or deconstruct the social, cultural, economic and any
other type of situation that is erected by the established power.
We are thus witnessing a fight between two opposing forces: real
power, force, laws, money, on the one hand and the imagination,
ingenious, and also innocence and obstinacy on the other. Once again,
forevermore, we have the struggle between David and Goliath. It
is in the press, in education and in mass media and in social relations
where censorship is applied most forcefully and assuredness. The
same arenas in which a regressive or progressive education is formulated,
where citizen opinion-making is done. Sometimes, censorship is unnecessary.
When there is a way to pass laws or erect social structures that
are sufficiently strict and inviolable, certain aspects of censorship
become unnecessary. If clitoral ablation of millions of women is
practised, it is unnecessary to censor the sexual pleasure of these
women already impeded from experiencing it. If there are laws prohibiting
private property, censorship of corporate conglomerations, in sales
and purchases, cannot be applied. If television is outlawed and
the right to literacy denied, if newspapers and books are banned
(as in the regime of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia) censorship of
the press becomes absurd, almost a sophistication.
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IAN BERRY, Sharpeville, South
Africa, March 21, 1960
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Obviously, these extreme measures are
taken only in countries that are underdeveloped socially and economically,
or in those ruled by cruel dictatorial regimes. More frequently,
laws convey an appearance of justice and equality while the reality
is something quite different and behind those laws, applications,
forms and situations are created wherein the very laws are used
to defend other things, for example, through specific committees
and systems of control. We are not surprised if we are made aware
of censorship in Pakistan, but the Pakistan people are not surprised
that in the United States the press is asked not to
circulate Islamic press releases, or that its articles are subject
to review prior to their publication. These are two kinds of censorship,
different in form yet similar in their moral base and in their results:
ignorance and fanaticism, oppression and lack of freedom.
Here, it is unknown what is censored in Arabian countries, but we
are astounded by the fact that in U.S. radio stations songs by the
Beatles are censored because they mention a ticket to ride
or scenes are changed in movies such as Spiderman in which the Twin
Towers appear repeatedly. If the Taliban force women to cover themselves
with burkas, we are all appalled by what we believe to be symptom
of inconceivable cultural backwardness; but that a Spanish, Italian,
Romanian, Portuguese women, as well as those from dozens of democratic
and supposedly advanced countries, ought to mourn a husband or a
father and wear black for years, without going outside when not
absolutely necessary, is acceptable. The fact that, according to
the latest official statistics, one out of every four women is battered
in Great Britain, does not seem to be alarming or a cause for protest
of any kind. Nobody discusses the fact that, in Anglo-Saxon countries,
young people are kicked out of their homes en masse right after
their high school graduation. Nobody reflects upon the fact that
there is always a double standard at the heart of the acceptance
or rejection of the rules and regulations of other cultures.
In the United States the well known First Amendment presupposes
the absolute protection of freedom to express and disseminate ideas,
to publish any type of publication (including instructions how to
murder, chemical formulas for explosives, etc.), however, Senator
MacCarthy set in motion the greatest witch hunt in the history of
cinema, ruining the careers and lives of actors, script-writers
and technicians; another senator, Jesse Helms, censored and discredited
some of the most important contemporary artists. The once acclaimed
ex-mayor of New York City, Rudolf Giuliani, personally discredited,
prohibited and penalized contemporary art during his term as mayor
of the Big Apple, to extremes heretofore unheard of in the art world
of the foremost city of artistic avant-garde. Nevertheless, the
current mayor of the same city sees his presence amicably
suspended in the Little Italy festival parade for appearing with
two actors from a TV series about a Mafia family. Censorship for
all tastes. And more. These are some of the incredible contradictions
we experience daily in contemporary society.

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