Monday, 23 February 2009

Jeremy Deller


The Battle Of Orgreave (2001)
Here's where I regurgitate what I learned from my Intertextuality essay.
Deller's work rarely (if ever) goes in galleries. Documentation does, but not the work itself (like much of Richard Long's work, Sarah!). A lot of his work is so collaborative that his collaboration makes up most of the work, and it is often temporary/performative so it defies exhibition. The Battle of Orgreave is a good example - a massive re-enactment of one of the most violent clashes between miners and police in the 1984/5 miners' strike. It's actually easy to miss that he's an artist at all, and his work still stands up if you forget that it's art.

ESSAY QUOTE!
For Deller, the ‘art’ side of his work takes a back seat to his sense of social responsibility. Or to look at it another way, the art is so closely entwined with the social or political in his work that if you negate the art it doesn’t leave a gaping hole in your experience or interpretation. The participants in Orgreave didn’t need it to be an art event for it to be significant, although as Deller states, it wouldn’t have happened without him [he says that being an artist puts you in an interesting position where you get to do things that wouldn't happen normally]. It takes little effort to conceive of any of Deller’s works removed from the art sphere and for them to retain all credibility as socially involved, dialogical, if sometimes a little wacky, public endeavours.

So I reckon Deller's work is so far outside the white cube (as a concept) that it's only just art. Or you could argue that it's more like art than any other gallerised stuff. It's definitely constructive, which I fucking love.

1 comment:

  1. i totally agree with things that are hardly recognisable as art being way more art than most things considered art are. or actually, i think we might just need to think of a new term. art can be kept for decorative, happy-making, pretty things (which definately have their place) but then we need a new word for art which gets so relevant to and integrated into normal life that it loses its definition.

    and artists being people who get to do things that wouldn't normally happen is also a very good thing. that might be the best definition i've come across so far.

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