Douglasism
is a set of words exchanged for works it wants to become without
being indiscernible from them. A becoming not before or less than
work but a specific kind of work. Work without work. This would be
the schism in the ism Douglas. To have ismated a name lacking a
proper body, to have mated that name with an impossible ism, to have
founded a practice on a subject as much subject to work as subject of
it, is to have created a headless figure whose words emerge wayward
everywhere allover ordered by no hierarchies structured by no
oppositions. With the cul-de-sacing of the avant-garde there are no
longer any isms in art. We all know that. Even those who can reach to
the bottom of the bag. Especially them. Especially those who reach to
the bottom of the bag by pulling the sack over their own heads. The
ones who pull the sack over their own heads to reach right to the
bottom of the sack with their own heads know more than anyone about
the end of the avant-garde. Douglasism knows this. Douglasism knows
that it is not about there being nothing but a no through road, but
that all roads are through roads, all more or less temporary, heading
not to a final destination but away from the head, heading away from
the head to specific or differential fermata and stopovers.
There
is but one democracy. But democracy is doubled. Because there is a
schism at the heart of democracy. That schism is the constant threat
to democracy of being reduced to democratism. It is a necessary
threat, and the threat is also the chance. The threat to democracy
which is at the same time its chance is its own principle: that
everyone in a democracy has the right to criticise it. Criticise
everything about it, including this principle and the law on which it
is founded but which in truth it founds. And if it seems to us that
art is the space in which such criticism is carried out to more
effect than in the political system called democracy it is because
politics is the reduction of democracy to democratism. For this
reason we must be wary when face-to-face with political art and
vigilant not to allow art to claim the political for itself. Because
art then loses the right to say anything. Democracy is the most open
political paradigm, but it is not simply open. Its openness is
doubled. It is doubled because art takes something away from
democracy and in taking away gives it a space it would not otherwise
have. Art withdraws something of democracy’s openness and opens it
elsewhere. Art’s democraticness is thus not coextensive with the
democracy it is drawn from. Nor Democracy’s self-critical
questioning with the self questioned.
Jonathan
Lahey Dronsfield, ‘Douglasistic Democracy’, Kim Kim Gallery,
art:gwangju:12.
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