Public Things in the Modern City: Belated Notes on "Tilted Arc" and
Transcription
Public Things in the Modern City: Belated Notes on "Tilted Arc" and
Public Things in the Modern City: Belated Notes on "Tilted Arc" and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Author(s): D. S. Friedman Source: Journal of Architectural Education (1984-), Vol. 49, No. 2 (Nov., 1995), pp. 62-78 Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. on behalf of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, Inc. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1425398 . Accessed: 05/02/2014 20:36 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Taylor & Francis, Ltd. and Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, Inc. are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of Architectural Education (1984-). http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions PublicThingsin theModernCity: Memorial BelatedNoteson TiltedArc andtheVietnamVeterans D.S. FRIEDMAN,Universityof Cincinnati Sitelessnessandloss of place suggestthe instabilityof boundariesthatotherwisesustainthe legSuchconditions ibilityof publicinstitutions. affinitiesbetweenarchitecnegateconventional ture,ceremonialurbanspace, monuments,and monumental sculpture.Nowadays,the theoretical betweenthese actorsis in basisfor a relationship flux.Thisarticletakes up severaldifferentcontemporaryconceptionsof publicspace andthe publicthingandemploysthemin an interpretationof tworecentprojects:MayaLin'sVietnam andRichardSerra'sill-fated VeteransMemorial TiltedArc.Theseprojectsembodychangingconditionsin the dialoguebetweenart,architecture, andthe city. dividual and independent self-expression about public art than Rosalind Krauss's"ex- with "the community, the social order, panded field."' In 1979, Krauss modified a [and] self-negation."' My aim here is to use Klein Group diagram to extend binary cat- Krauss's "little motor of double negatives'"6 egories of art practice beyond canonic sculp- to further agitate this contradiction. In respect of public art, this article ture (Figure 1).2 The Klein Group is a three schematic accounts of publicexercises that Krauss describes simple-looking square as a kind of structuralistcartography, "away ity, roughly following Seyla Benhabib.7 The of picturing the whole of a cultural universe first draws from Hannah Arendt's analysis of "the social occlusion of the political," in the grip of two opposing choices."3 which renders public space on the basis of sets Klein Krauss's variation on the Group that out discrete, artistic objects transgress agonistic and associational distinctions; conventional sculptural production: Out Arendt situates public experience in a "space and away from sculpture,the starting point of appearance": being and acting in open " in the rooted in absence Only ofplace. "Being in her "logically expanded [quaternary] view of strangers and acting "together in this way ... is itpossible "tograsp, like all the field," she arrayslandscape,architecture,not- concert.8 The second account draws from saints, what is length, breadth, height and landscape, not-architecture,site-construction, Jiirgen Habermas's critical theory, which is what absence The ofplace therefore depth." axiomatic structures, and marked sites.4To renders the public world as a discursive all in us to allows "space '"grasp paradoxically the margins of Krauss's diagram this article "sphere," neither spatial nor agonistic, but its extensions,to captureits specific "reality."It brings two controversial public works: communicative and democratic, arising out is necessary,then, to removefrom the '"lace" of participation and practice: reasoned, Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial that which rendersit such.... and Richard Serra's Tilted Arc. These two open, plural discourse. The third account of The "de-situated"-and therefore projects demonstrate what attorney Barbara public experience is more tenuous; it follows atopic-space is not boundless, however. It Hoffman calls the paradox of public art, the attempts to locate the frontier of the public contains the limit in itself which no longer way in which public art couples fiercely in- in the subjective interior. This account, passes to its exterior,like a line ofdefense, but to its interior.In this sense "atopic"is the truth site-construction theorized by Florenskijas the space that comprises everythingthat can erase it.... The modern city has no confines but is ........... architecture ...........complex traversedby a plurality of limits. The modern landscape~ because is an which, precisely atopic space city of its bewildering character, has always been 00 perceivedas a labyrinthine space. TheItalian \ structures axiomatic Smarked sites because cities celebrated structures precisely sculptureaxiomatic poet Leopardi markedsites \ a thousand limits break up the habitual view, thegaze ofreason which orderseverythinginto hierarchiesand categories.One is thusforced toproceed beyondtheselimits with the imagi0, neuter -4 not-architecture not-landscape nation. Franco Rella / \ WHAT BETTER PLACE TO OPEN A QUESTION . ..................... sculpture Journal ofArchitectural Education, pp. 62-78 ? 1995 ACSA, Inc. 1. Rosalind Krauss's expanded field. (From Hal Foster, ed., The Anti-Aesthetic:Essays on Postmodern Culture[Seattle: Bay Press, 19831, p. 38.) November1995 JAE49/2 62 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions which proceeds from phenomenological inquiry, indicates the psychological magnitude of the "public" body and the unconscious transactions between self and Other that comprise contemporary metropolitan life. Each of these accounts implies a different relation between figure and ground, which determines the contours of the public object and affects the valuation of public art. and authoritative attempt to pair the two works occurs in W.J.T. Mitchell's Art and the Public Sphere, an anthology of essays culled from the journal Critical Inquiry, which Mitchell edits.1"Many of the essays in Mitchell's anthology were originally written for curator John Hallmark Neff's symposium, "Art and Public Spaces: Daring to Dream," which he convened to address in part "issues raised by [ TiltedArc and] by the very different response now accorded the once-controversial Vietnam Veterans Me"We know very well what sculpture is," morial.""5 Mitchell and Neff twin these Rosalind Krauss says. It is a "historically projects as equally demonstrative construcbounded category" no longer characterized tions, one successful in overcoming its deby the "commemorative representation" of tractors despite its "cunning violation and the classical monument.9 Released from its inversion of monumental conventions,"''6 the other "failed-failed as art and as art for pedestal and the duties of commemoration, sculpture crosses "the threshold of the logic a civic site."" Mitchell and Neff would of the monument" and enters modern probably agree that what couples the Vietkind of nam Veterans Memorial and Tilted Arc is space, its "negative condition-a sitelessness, or homelessness, an absolute not form, but controversy. Other critics, loss of place."'o The nomadism and au- however, speak directly to the question of tonomy that developed in modern sculpture Lin's "minimalism" and to the influence of in the sixties and seventies give rise to Serra and others on her design.'"Such comKrauss's "expanded field." Sculpture ceases parisons warrant a closer look. to be a "positivity" and becomes instead As artifacts, these two works would "the category that result[s] from the addi- occupy different positions in Krauss's extion of the not-landscapeto the not-architec- panded field. Tilted Arc is not architecture, ture"; sculpture, no longer privileged, is not landscape, not site-construction, not an "only one term on the periphery of a field in axiomatic structure. It defies sculptural conwhich there are other, differently structured vention, yet by Krauss's definition (and possibilities [that] can no longer be de- Serra's), it is not "modern" in the sense that scribed as modernist."" Krausscredits Rob- it is not siteless. "Sculptures by Noguchi ert Morris, Robert Smithson, Michael and Calder ... have nothing to do with the Heizer, Walter De Maria, Robert Irwin, contexts in which they're placed," Serra Saul LeWitt, Bruce Nauman, and Richard states, echoing Krauss. "At best, they are Serra with a "historical rupture and struc- studio made and site adjusted. They are distural transformation of the cultural field," placed, homeless, overblown objects that say which she names "postmodern."'2 'We represent modern art.""' TiltedArc, It is tempting to see the Vietnam Vet- like most of Serra's later work, is specific, erans Memorial as a product of this rupture, though not deferential, to its site: "In my part of the same brisure that yields Serra's work, I analyze the site and determine to Tilted Arc." Not a few critics take such a redefine it in terms of sculpture, not in position, but perhaps the most conspicuous terms of the existing physiognomy. I have 63 no need to augment existing contextual languages. I'm not interested in affirmation.... Sculpture ... has the potential to create its own place and space, and to work in contradiction to the places and spaces where it is created. I am interested in work where the artist is a maker of 'anti-environment' which takes its own place or makes its own situation, or divides or declares its own area."20Serra's comment is concentric with Robert Morris's earlier declaration, in "Notes on Sculpture," that "minimalism realizes 'the autonomous and literal nature of sculpture . .. that it have its own equally literal space.'"21For Morris, minimalism provisionally resolves the apparent contradiction between autonomy and specificity. As Hal Foster observes, the "paradoxicality of this argument" leads to a simultaneous contraction and expansion of sculpture: "Here a new space of 'object/subject terms' opens up; . . . It is a 'death of the author' (as Roland Barthes would call it two years later) that is at the same time a birth of the reader: 'The object is but one of the terms of the newer aesthetic [Morris writes] .... One is more aware than before that he himself is establishing relationships as he apprehends the object from various positions under varying conditions of light and spatial context.' Here we are at the edge of 'sculpture in the expanded field."22 Tilted Arc strikes Federal Plaza like a slash or deletion, "effacing it even as it presents its legibility."23Serra'ssculpture is not concerned merely with intensification of perception, but with the critical transformation of the physical and institutional context of the site. This critique and the material and formal properties of the work are indissoluble, part of a single thought, a dialectical opposition of memory and anticipation that "prevents 'good form,' [or] a Gestalt image, or a pattern of identity from taking over."24Serra'swork sublates Gestalt, Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions not through figural or allegorical devices-"no work by Serra seeks to create a picture"25--but through the motor reality of the subject, through the interruption and displacement of the body's perceptual trajectories. This encounter is always transitive, never static. The "paradoxicality"of Tilted Arc consists in the way it presupposes a passerby, as Yve-Alain Bois notes: It ceaselessly jolts the pedestrian who crosses its site, ceaselesslyinterrupting his or her perception of the whole. TiltedArc "has no full-stop."326 The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is also obviously neither siteless, autonomous, nor homeless, although it is almost universally acknowledgedas "modern."Where does it belong on Krauss'sdiagram?It marks the site (as a form it depends on manipulated contours); it is a site-construction; its structure is axiomatic (it is a fairlysimple, graniteclad, concrete retaining wall); it commemorates. It is embedded in its landscape. Its form is figural, narrative: "a Vshaped gash or scar, a trace of violence suffered," as Mitchell sees it: "Does Vstand for Vietnam? For a Pyrrhic 'Victory'?For the Veterans themselves? For the Violence they suffered?... Is it possible to avoid seeing it as a quite literal antitype to the 'public sphere' signified in the traditional phallic monument, that is, as the Vagina of Mother Earth opened to receiveher sons, as if the American soil were opening its legs to show the scars inscribed on her private parts?"27In figure and fact, Lin's memorial is a wall (the Wall, for many Vietnam Veterans). It holds back earth, it holds up names, writing on the wall.28Its structure and form belong both to architectureand landscape, although it oscillates between the two, tempting us to attach Krauss'snegative prefix to our categorization. However, the black granite cladding of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial is a positive element, polished to a mirror finish; it reflects light. TiltedArc, on the other hand, has a dull, nonreflective, absorptive surface. Unlike Lin's memorial, it has no utilitarian or functional value: "Any use is a misuse," says Serra, who rejects monumentality: "When we look at [my work], are we asked to give any credence to the notion of a monument? [These pieces] do not relate to the history of monuments. They do not memorialize anything. They relate to sculpture and nothing more. They do not cry out to be called monuments. A steel curve is not a monument."29Contrariwise, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial is immersedin historical references: to the Mall; to the war; to the individuals who died in the war; to the other monuments and figures of visitors it reflects in its mirror finish; not least to its self-conscious appropriation of "minimalist syntax."0' TiltedArc, on the other hand, resists any sort of narrativeor representational figuration. Like Rotary Arc, "its form remains ambiguous, indeterminable, unknowable as an entity";31 "all [Serra's] work," Bois tells us, "is based on the destruction of notions of identity and causality."32 For Serra, history weakens lived experience: "The weight of history . . dissolves weight and erodes meaning to a calculated construction of palpable lightness. ... It is the distinction between the prefabricated weight of history and direct experience which evokes in me the need to make things that have not been made before. I continually attempt to confront the contradictions of memory and to wipe the slate clean, to rely on my own experience and my own materials even if faced with a situation which is beyond hope of achievement. To invent methods about which I know nothing, to utilize the content of experience so that it becomes known to me, to then challenge the authority of that experience and thereby challenge myself."33 Although both projects are long, black, abstract, and planar, the Vietnam November1995 JAE49/2 Veterans Memorial and Tilted Arc suggest binary differences: figure, not-figure; wall, not-wall; historical, not-historical; monument, not-monument. Lin's memorial operates on the surface of the mirror; Tilted Arc operates on the tain.34 Yale undergraduate Maya Ying Lin submitted her third required project from a senior studio on funerary architecture to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial design competition and won, first out of 1,421 entries (Figure 2).35 Lin's design is indebted to the eighteenth-century French theorist and "revolutionary" architect Etienne-Louis Boullke (1728-1799): "An idea, as new as it was daring, came to me. . ... I would create buildings that gave the illusion of being buried. ... As I considered the problem, I realized that only low and sunken lines would be appropriate. After pondering on the rule that the first element of architectureis a wall totally bare and unadorned, I decided that my sunken architecture would be exemplified in a building that was satisfactory as a whole yet gave the appearancethat part of it was below ground."'36 This excerpt, a passage from Boullke's treatise, Architecture, essai sur l'art, was published beneath a haunting ink and wash drawing in the 1968 exhibition catalog, Visionary Architects: Boullde,Ledoux, Lequeu (Figure 3). The image typifies Boullee's architecturedes ombres. Its elevation depicts a huge, obtusely shaped pyramid, "MONUMENT FUNERAIRE ... CaractdrisantLe Genre D'Une Architecture Ensevelie," one of three such images to be included in the catalog. Note the similarity between the profiles of these funerary monuments and the V-shape of Lin's plan.37 The Vietnam Veterans Memorial occupies a clearing in Constitution Gardens, in the northwest corner of the capital Mall (Figure 4). Its well-known V is composed of 64 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions two identical walls, each 247 feet long, open to an angle of 125 degrees. The walls begin at grade; the ground in front slopes toward the vertex, where the height of the wall reaches ten feet. In plan, the composition's two horizontal axes intersect the of the Monument centerpoints Washington and the Lincoln Memorial, so that visitors walking east or west along the wall with their backs to its vertex find themselves trained on an obelisk and a classical temple (Figures 5 and 6). The form of the memorial engages the surrounding perspective of neoclassical Washington. Standing in front of the wall, visitors are "surrounded by America, by the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. I don't design pure objects like those [declaresLin]. I work with the landscape."38The Vietnam Veterans Memorial works with Pierre Charles L'Enfant's plan of 1791, to which the 1901 Senate Park Commission, in its restoration of the Mall, remained assiduously loyal.39 Several critics have commented on the memorial's relationship to the Lincoln and Washington monuments. Philosopher Charles Griswold notes that Lin's composition "points to, indeed cites, the two earlier [monuments]."40 Griswold observes that "one's eye is naturally drawn to the Washington Monument" and that "one's reading of the VVM ... is interrupted halfway through by the sight of the two other symbols," which "on a bright day one also sees [in the surface of VVM] . . . along with one's own reflection."4' He adds that Lin's memorial "invites one to pause midway and consider the names in light of our own memories of Washington and Lincoln."42 He further observes that "the Washington and Lincoln Memorials are continually present as one enters [the] region [of the VVM]" and that "they help give shape and direction to our questions."43Not all critics are as appreciative: 2. MayaLin,diagram,VietnamVeteransMemorial with competitionentrysite plan.(Reprinted PentonPublishing.) permissionof ProgressiveArchitecture, 3. Etienne-Louis (Fromthe Monument, typicalof sunkenarchitecture." Boullee,"Funerary exhibition Architects:Boullde,Ledoux,Lequeuby M.J.-C.Lemagny[Houston: catalogVisionary of St. Thomas,1968] plate 18, p. 38.) University 4. Lin,VietnamVeteransMemorial, aerialview.(Photograph by RichardHofmeister,Smithsonian Officeof Printing andPhotographic Services.FromReflectionson the Wall:The Institution's PA:.1987]). VietnamVeteransMemorial [Harrisburg, 85 Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 5. Lin,VietnamVeteransMemorial, lookingwest towardthe LincolnMemorial. by StephenS. Griswold. Courtesy (Photograph of CharlesL.Griswold.) Despite the reflections of the Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument that play across the names, Maya Lin's beautiful wall transcends the possibility that the war is yet another element of our common lifelike those structures of gleaming white marble with their affirmation of hope and healing-precisely by deciding that thousands upon thousands of deaths of soldiers names Willie J. Washington, Gary Lincoln, and Jose Antonio Castro should remain 'a personal and private matter.' Her scheme included no mention of Vietnam, no hint that America had sent the men and women listed on the Wall to meet their fate, no clueexcept the odd reflection of official someone, all of Washington-that us, might bear responsibility. Instead, she proposed to list the names in the order of death, to chart the dying that made up the unnamed war, and, as she told Art in America, "to return the vets to the time frame of the war." 6. Lin,VietnamVeteransMemorial, lookingeast towardthe Monument. (Photograph by StephenS. Griswold. Washington L. Courtesyof Charles Griswold.) "The mode of listing the names ality in which the chiasmic reflection of visimakes them individual deaths, not tors is "blurred into spectres of the dead deaths in a cause," the National Re- standing behind their names"48-these deview rightly concluded; "they might vices dramatize the primary operation of the as well have been traffic accidents."44 memorial, which is to symbolize the Vietnam War before the public so that the pubThe listing of the names, not its form, lic can decipher its message and move on. is the essence of the memorial. Like all Lin explains that the point of using polished monuments, the Vietnam Veterans Memogranite "is to see yourself reflected in the rial derives from ancient species of architec- names."49Its mirror finish does not absorb the reflection of the living, as death does; it ture such as termini, flagpoles, obelisks, hands it back: "Forever empty, the mirror gravestones, and boundary stones-vertical elements often distinguished by the pres- receives everything but retains nothing."5o ence of writing on their surfaces.45MonuThrough inscription and reflection, ments have no interior in the domestic or the inarticulability of death is deferred: Mepsychological sense; they are positive and morials are legible substitutes for the illegsolid. They appear "in the place of death, to ibility of the Void. Lin faces the wall with point out its presence and to cover it up.'"46 names, not granite. Visitors come to face the Monuments "point out," guide, guard the names, which delimit the immeasurability way. They function not to aid memory, but of death and reestablish its boundaries. "Into restore mindfulness.47 People who visit scriptions on herms are the consequence monuments are travelers, pilgrims, and and index of their exposure to movement tourists: they live someplace else; they don't and exchange," Xavier Costa Guix writes. "The resulting friction, however, does not stay long; they read; they move on. The memorial's V-shape, its funereal destroy the monument, but preserves it as descent, its mirror finish, its ethereal virtu- an event rather than an object."" Reading November1995 JAE49/2 66 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Serra's early projects, when he was rolling and splashing lead. Like other minimalists, Serra extended the limits of his art until it appeared to many observers as "not art at all."56In 1969, he began to arrange thick steel plates and other heavy materials into precisely, often precariously balanced constructions, such as One Ton Prop (House of Cards)(1969) and SkullcrackerSeries(1969). These constructions dilate "the boundary of Serra'sart "is [their] tendency to overturn.""57 not an art of punctuation [Bois writes], it is an art of montage, an art that is not satisfied to interrupt the continuity of temporality, Richard Wollheim's early definition of but produces continuity by double negation, minimalist objects is worth repeating here: by destroying the pictorial recoveryof conti"They have a minimal art content: in that nuity through discontinuity, dissociation, either they are to an extreme degree undif- and the loss of identity within the fragferentiated in themselves and therefore pos- ment."58Serracarrieshis project further into sess very low content of any kind, or else the this dilation of time in later works, which Bois interprets on the basis of their paralax differentiation that they do exhibit, which effect, the "displacementof the apparent pomay in some cases be very considerable, comes not from the artist but from a non- sition of a body, due to a change in position artistic source, like nature or the factory.""53 of the observer."59 Bois deftly overturns Minimalism rejects abstract expressionism Michael Fried's rejection of minimalism, and the privilege of interior emotion over which Fried reduces to "theatricality."Bois external fact; it rejects idealism, the a priori, directs us to Kant's "Analytique of the Suband illusion. The rhetoric of minimalism is lime," book II of Critique of udgment, "the phenomenological. It repudiates classical only passagein the whole [work] where Kant notions of prior space and ground and calls speaks in temporal terms ... of the mechafor practice that takes art back to things.54 nism of the aesthetic imagination." Art like Minimalist materialism externalizes mean- Serra'sbelongs not to the province of beauty, ing and declares that "there need be no con- but to sublimity: "'The sublime [Kant nection between a final art object and the writes, cited by Bois] can be found in the psychological matrix from which it is- formless object, so far as in it or by occasion is representedin it, and yet sued."" This expurgation of ideality and in- of it boundlessness terior intention extinguishes the mythology its totality is also present to thought."'60 of the "artist."The subjectivity of the artist is displaced by the viewer-as-subject. Minimalist ideology abjurescommodTiltedArc was a curved Cor-Ten steel plate, ification, scandalizes art "capital,"and seeks 12 feet high, 2.5 inches thick, and 120 feet to expose the institutional control of galler- long (Figure 7). The sculpture nearly biies and museums. Wollheim's definition of sected the small, undistinguished, semicirthe minimal object especially applies to cular, granite-paved Federal Plaza, which is supersedes formal and stylistic considerations. "White marble may be very beautiful," Maya Lin said, "but you can't read anything on it."52Reflection is secondary: black granite is betterfor reading. One sees oneself reflected in the (reading of the) names. This concern for legibility-and its participation in the "scopic regime" of the Washington Mall-is precisely the thing that sets the Vietnam Veterans Memorial apart from minimalist sculpture. Lin's project lists names. TiltedArc lists. 67 7. RichardSerra,TiltedArc.(Photograph by KimSteele, New York,NY.Courtesyof RichardSerra.) located on Foley Square in lower Manhattan. The curved plane of Tilted Arc listed one foot off perpendicular concave-wise, in the direction of the Jacob Javits Federal Office Building and the U.S. Court of International Trade, which bound the north and west sides of the plaza. TiltedArc stood for seven years, four months, and fifteen days. The dismantling of TiltedArc on the ides of March in 1989 ended Serra's battle to enjoin the General Services Administration Regional Administrator from removing the sculpture. Edward D. Re, Chief Judge of the U.S. International Court of Trade, issued the first official objections to the work. Re soon found an ally in the Reagan Administration's newly appointed Regional Administrator, William Diamond, who built a case against TiltedArc based on several facts and claims: There had been no Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions public review of the proposed work prior to its installation; the sculpture incommoded the plaza; it obstructed concerts and other public events; it rendered the plaza uninhabitable; it attracted graffiti, trash, and homeless loiterers; it created a security hazard, made surveillance of the plaza impossible, and could have been used to direct the force of a terrorist bomb toward the opposing federal office buildings. In his defense, Serra argued that Tilted Arc was permanent and site-specific: To remove it is to destroy it. In the brief he presented before the U.S. Court of Appeals, Serrasought to reversethe unfavorable findings of the U.S. District Court, where he had filed a complaint "for violation of [his rights under] the First and Fifth Amendments, for breach of contract, and for violation of the trademark and copyright laws and the Moral Rights Law of the State of New York."'' He claimed that he was protected under the original contract and denied due process. The courts agreed with the government: The GSA owned the work and could move it if it wanted to. The debate and litigation surrounding Tilted Arc and the coverage of the case in the press and in journals62suggest that contemporary representations of the "public" component of public art are protean. Like the favor of God, "public good" always authorizes the cause of both sides in a conflict.63 ways structured, always space between things and between extrafamilial actors, who by gathering in it constitute it. According to Arendt, this plurality enjoys a public world only insofar as it endeavors to immortalize that world beyond its own transience, as distinct from a world in which life and its accumulations are elevated as the highest good.65 Who is disinterested in the immortality of the world (the modern, principally) privileges bodily happiness (a short-lived, private matter) at the expense of political excellence. Excellent works and courage are characteristics of a kind of action undertaken in the space of appearance on behalf of the durability of the public world, the decline of which propels Arendt's political and philosophical inquiry. In her elaboration of the vita activa, Arendt still finds life in Greek space. Habermas shares this emphasis on civic, republican virtue. He aims toward "public participation and the widest-reaching democratization of decision-making processes,"66but he shifts the question from the space of appearance to the house of language. For Habermas, the durability of public life depends on communicative reason. Richard Rorty notes, however, that Habermas prefers its problem-solving to its "world-disclosing" function.67 Habermas argues for a democratic society that fulfills "the universalism, and some form of the rationalism, of the Enlightenment," which he wants to "update."'68Rorty's alternative is a Hannah Arendt finds two meanings for the "poeticized culture" that accommodates word public: the first concrete, the second "reasonand its other.""69 According to Rorty, abstract. Publicness in its first sense is a the "contingency of language" renders form of appearance that presupposes the Habermas's transcendent universality imwidest possible exposure, "the implacable, plausible. "Imagination [Dewey writes, bright light of the constant presence of oth- cited by Rorty] is the chief instrument of ers": "Appearance.. . constitutes reality."'64 the good .... Art is more moral than moIn its second sense, public means "the world ralities. . . . The moral prophets of humanitself," not the natural, but the artificial ity have always been poets."'70 world. Arendt's "space of appearance"is alFoucault, less optimistic, might argue November1995 JAE49/2 that the social and political transformations of late capitalism preclude a democratic public sphere. In his account, of course, modern space incorporates a panoptical "physics" that lightens and economizes the administration of power through a technology of "generalized surveillance.'"71 Techaccelerates and intensifies nology that all relations within a such supervision, or institutional "body" can be depolitical termined as disciplinary relations between observer and observed.72Harvard art historian Anna C. Chave argues that this view "admits no possibility of a radical dismantling of systems of power and undertakes no theorizing or imagining of a society or world without domination";73 Habermas considers it to be a "blind alley."74 To the political and poetic we might add a psychoanalytic interpretation of public experience. The potential for domination suggested by Foucault's institutional archaeology is a well-researched conflict of the primal scene. Can we redraw the panoptical schema as the diagram of the gaze?75In this diagram, watcher and watched are central to descriptions of visuality developed at the level of the subject, whose self-enclosure and spatial command are menaced and decentered by the appearance of an/other in the same visual field; in the gaze of this other (this "irruption of alterity") the subject becomes a spectacle, becomes abject.76 Such a thing as "postmodern appearance" necessarily involves an analysis of the dynamics between subject and other, within which power relations correspond to plural "visualities"inscribed by class, age, gender, capital, race, and so on. TiltedArc is more than a speck in the tissue of Judge Re's eye. His complaint that Tilted Arc is not art-that whatever art is is not that "['awkward,bullying'], rusted steel bar- 68 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions rier"77--conceals a likelier possibility: Art is precisely what he and Diamond want out of sight: "Punctuality, calculability, exactness," writes Georg Simmel, "are forced upon life by the complexity and extension of metropolitan existence and are not only most intimately connected with its money economy and intellectualistic character. These traits must also color the contents of life and favor the exclusion of those irrational, instinctive, sovereign traits and impulses which aim at determining the mode of life from within, instead of receiving the general and precisely schematized form of life from without."78 Imagine Tilted Arc standing in front of the Javits Building and the U.S. Court of International Trade. "What do you see? What is this strange suspended, oblique object in the foreground in front of these two figures? ... What, then, before this display of the domain of appearance in all its most fascinating forms, is this object, which from some angles appears to be flying through the air, at others to be tilted?"79TiltedArc (Figures 8 and 9) crowds the camera; it cuts a phallic, umbral swath across the orderly, articulate, mathematized surface of the site; and in the same way it cuts a slash across the surface of the eye. 8. Serra,TiltedArc.(Courtesyof RichardSerra.) What does Judge Re see?80"My sculptures are not meant for the viewer to stop, look, and stare at," Serra says .... TiltedArc was built for the people who walk and cross the plaza, for the moving observer [Figure 10]. . . Space becomes the sum of successive perceptions of the place. The viewer becomes the subject. One's identity as a person is closely connected with the experience of space and place. When a known space changes through the inclusion of a site-specific sculpture, one is called upon to relate to the space differently.... This experience may startle some people."81 9. Serra,TiltedArc.(Courtesyof RichardSerra.) 89 Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 10. Serra,TiltedArc.(Reprinted withpermissionof the Museumof ModernArt.Photograph by SusanSwider. Courtesyof RichardSerra.) The motor trajectory Serra wants long enough and it will look back. "The gaze TiltedArc to interrupt is driven by a more or in its formal structure," Dolar writes, "is less indeterminate psychological interior. rather a device to open a 'non-place,' the Serra's "startled" subject encounters some- pure oscillation between an emptiness and a thing "uncanny" in the work. The blurred fullness.""' Neither the phenomenological line dividing subject from object is the anchorage of minimalism nor Serra's determination to wipe the slate clean can elide the threshold of an unwelcome uncanny intercorporeity "neither interior nor exte- fact that "there is no direct apprehension of rior."82Serra draws the viewer into the flesh the real, no possible liberation from imagoes, of the work (what the work "is")at precisely no unmediated reading of a text."87"Vision the same moment he or she is awash in the is socialized," Norman Bryson tells us.88"Viabsence of figuration (what the work sion ... is not just 'seeing,' but expresses a "isn't"). Tilted Arc enlarges "the circum- prior relation to the object.""89"You never scribed territory in which the Being and the look at mefrom theplacefrom which I see No-longer-being of the thing are one and you," Lacan says. "Conversely, what I look at Ellie Raglandthe same," to borrow Simmel's terms.83 is neverwhatI wishto see."90 Mladen Dolar argues that what distin- Sullivan elaborates: guishes postmodern experience is "a new In consciousness the intersubjective consciousness about the uncanny as a fundaelement involved in "seeing oneself mental dimension of modernity."84Essential seen" has to do with knowing that the to the question of the uncanny is the probother knows that one is being looked lem of the eye itself, the primal organ in at. The intersubjective element apwhich the image of TiltedArc lodges like an pears mysteriously to consciousness anamorphotic sliver:85Look into Tilted Arc November1995 JAE49/2 when a person experiences self as an object of an-other's gaze-whether present or absent-and the gaze catalyzes a phenomenology of judgment in the form of shame, modesty, blushing, fear, prestige, rage, and so on.... The Other's gaze triumphs over the eye, subjectivizing the relationship between gaze and eye, or seeing and knowing. Such a radical subversion of consciousness by the unconscious is the antithesis of the transparencyand continuity between self and world that phenomenology assumes."9 Provisionally, at least, we might conclude about TiltedArcwhat Lacanconcludes about TheAmbassadors,that "[Holbein] makes visible . . . the subject as annihilated."92 Where would we draw the line between Lin's "minimalism" and Serra's? Looking particularly at Serra's Shift, it is possible to argue that Lin's project is a po- 70 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions etic misreading(whatHaroldBloomwould of minimalistart call "misprisionproper"93) practice.Even CharlesGriswoldconcedes that the "modern"form of Lin'sdesign "is no more [controversial]than many other monumentsin the same area."4Its plan is so conspicuouslycontrivedfromthe centerpoints of the WashingtonMonument and the Lincoln Memorial that its own space and form become adjunctive,not disruptive. In this sense, it reciprocatesthe visual dominionof the Mall. Its sleek,black,halfburiedV-gash, book, polyvalentinitial-inscribesan ichnographicalsymbolismon the surfaceof the site, but this mark does not transgressor subvert;rather,it is appropriatedecoration.Its phenomenologicaleffect reducesto severalbinary,compositional devices, including its reflectivesurface.It does not recodethe Mall; it schematizesit and sustainsit. Hereagainperhapswe shouldtakeup the questionof the memorial'smirrorfinish. SarahRogerswrites:"Thevisitor'sown reflection in the highly polishedgranite,and the reflectionsof the adjacentLincoln and WashingtonMemorials,alsopulleachviewer dramatically into the experience. These simple but powerfulconnections helped a nationhealitself.""' Againstthe chaosof absolute loss (the reality behind the list of backto names),Lin'smirrorfinish"[reflects] of and order . .. the the subject organization in the good Gestalt alwaysthere potentia, and, by meansof its reflection,alwaysassuring theviewingsubjecta concomitantlogical and visual control."''96 Comparethis effect with TiltedArc.In its faceand listingcurve, Serraconfrontsthe viewingsubjectwith "a kind of amorphousness,the threat that a body 'that suffersin being organizedin no Serraefwayat all'lies behindthe surface.""' facesthe mirrorLinwantsto polish. The VietnamVeteransMemorialis no Shift, no Skullcracker.Of course, Chave would not hold that againstit. She criticizes case can be made as well that what is most the patternsof violence,domination,aggres- badly needed are, at least for a start, visions siveness, and negation that characterize of something different, something else."102 minimalist "rhetoric," notwithstanding Mitchell'sargumentthat"violencemaybe in some sense 'encoded' in the concept and In the contemporary West, in Friedrich practiceof public art."'"Chave notes that Nietzsche's "evening land,"'103 even "minimalism dismaysviewersby its obdurate Habermas agrees that the chances for a blankness,by the extremelimitationsof its democratically driven cultural modernism means,by its harshor antisepticsurfacesand are "not very good."'04 All the Mall's inquotidianmaterials,and by its pretentions, scriptions glisten on the surface of Lin's sedecorous in spite of all of this, to being fine art.""99pulchral roster, though BlumtracesLin'scompositionbackto work unintelligible obsequies chiseled in the spirit by CarlAndre,DonaldJudd,David Smith, of progress and overcoming. All its memoRichardSerra,and RobertMorris,the same rials are engulfed by "disproportion and ingroupChaveindicts.Certainly,the approval commensurability," by an "accidental, of Washington's Fine Arts Commission heterogeneous space [in which] parts and confirmsthat Lin'sdesignquietsthis rheto- fractions become essential."1"' Detractors who argue that TiltedArc ric of minimalism;Mitchell and Elizabeth it. The sur- was disproportionate and incommensurable Hess arguethat she "feminizes" vival of her design againstsuch formidable are correct. The site-specificity of TiltedArc opposition as Ross Perot and a phalanxof consists in its fractious occupation of a congressmenwould suggestthat her project trivial urban space, which Serra intended to of alter: "I'm not interested in augmenting the ameliorateswhatChavecallsthe "dismay" the public. As Hess notes (contrary to site or in decorating the site, I'm not interBlum), the Vietnam VeteransMemorialis ested in the work being subservient to the In its own right,it site. I'm interested in declaring my own "totallynonaggressive.""'0 has become "a place of pilgrimageand an place and space, which is specific to sculpture and nothing else. I'm interested in icon of nationalhealing.""' Lin's domestication of minimalist sculptural conditions, in sculptural spaces rhetoricanticipatesChave'scriticism.Lin's and places, and in making those conditions "minimalism"is didactic:It minimizesthe possible. I'm not interested in doing monudisturbanceof the landscape;it minimizes ments, because monuments usually memothe heroizingof war;it minimizesthe glori- rialize a person, a place or an event, and I ficationof violence;it minimizesthe valori- don't attribute any descriptive symbolism to zation of war's infernal commerce. These my works. People call my works monumenareperhapsthe memorial'sgreatestachieve- tal because they're large, but in no way do ments.Lin'sprojectsatisfiesChave'scallfor they have anything to do with the history of resistanceto "theunyieldingface of the fa- monuments."106 Serra declared, "After ther":"Apersuasivecasecan be made,after [ TiltedArc] is created, the space will be unall, that the patriarchalovervaluation of derstood as a function of the sculpture."107 power-at the expenseof mutuality,tolera- Tilted Arc negates the sense of "belonging" tion, or nurturance-can be held to account that persists in the notion of space and place for almostall thatis politicallyreprehensible as sanctuary, home, or genius loci; it opens and morallylamentablein the world. The "a hole in reality which is immediately also 71 Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions I /? P '* C?u ??I ar ~~ :" I~BE~n F: : ? ' :: "'' ?*:::. .::.i~~i:f~?~~;18lil'iiiii~iiZl.ii;l.C: ";: II'~? i i;.r ????? 11. "Thedestructionof TiltedArc,15 March1989."(Photograph by JenniferKotter.) No-places atomize traditional contours,enclosures,and boundaries,which in turnacquirean increasinglyoneiricpresence in contemporaryurbanculture.PaulVirilio warns of an "unnoticed pollution of distancesthat [not only] organizeour relationship to others but equally to the world of sensibleexperience."He calls this degradation of time anddistance"graypollution."112 Teletechnologyabolishesdirection within both a geographicand psychologicalcompass:"I know that the centresof the polis, those of power,religion,knowledge,for the very reasonthat they becomeplural,are no longer conceivable in the same terms," GianniVattimohasnoted."Transformation into a metropoliscannot constitutea pure and simple loss of the centre, but a of the veryideaof a centre,in requalification a conditionof multi-centrality;not only of the externalspaces,but firstandforemost,of the interior space of the 'subject."'"ll3 that which comes to fill it with an unbearable presence, with a being more being than being, vacuum and plenitudo all in one, the plenitude as the direct consequence of emptiness."'108As art, it anticipates and even provokes the reformulation of public/private distinctions (Figure 11). Downtown, in the suburbs, along the strip, in my house, spectral projections obviate "heavy" representation: monuments, memorials, architecture. Material durability is nowadays crossed off by "images whose only duration is one of retinal persistence."'09The rise and fall of TiltedArc-the prosecution of its case within the interconnected structures of law and publicityoffers an especially instructive episode in the epochal shift from the modern to the "overmodern" city. Overmodernity (surmodernite) is what anthropologist Marc Auge calls the general overabundance of cultural phenom- ena. One critical featureof this surplusis "theacceleratedtransformation of space,the 'excessof space' . . . [and] of topographies and spatialrelations.""oXavierCosta,after Aug,, notes that "partof such an 'excessof "Unspace'is the emergenceof no-places": like traditionalplaces which were inseparable from the social structures that Durkheim and Mauss describe in their ethno-topologies-foundation rites, festivals,liturgiesthatperiodicallyrenewand reenactthe veryexistenceand perceptionof a place as public, common space-the overmodernno-placeproposesan individual relationshipwith the subjectandwith modern dynamicsof ownership,possession,the resultingdialecticsof lack and satisfaction, and the erringsearchfor an alwaysinsufficient reificationof desireembodied in the well-known Baudelairean figure of the flaneur,the urbanwanderer.""'' November1995 JAE49/2 The VietnamVeteransMemorialis the first telegenic monument commemoratingthe first telegenic war. It is black, reflective, ocularcentric,glossy, like the surfaceof a picturetube. Its form embodies"theorigin of coordinates,"yet positionsthe eye "atthe privilegedviewing point of an optico-geometric masteryof space.""' TiltedArc, on the other hand, haunts the lens. It dismantlesthe "projectivepoint of Renaissance perspective,which suspendsa disembodied single 'eye' before the visual array.""5Its phenomenologyis not benign:At the same time it "thickens the world for the perit turnsout the "phantasmagoria ceiver,"''116 of commodities"and power relationsthat animate Manhattan."'At the level of the subject,it denudesits site, turnsplace into not-place. The VietnamVeteransMemorialand TiltedArc reside in the breachof Krauss's 72 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions "historicalrupture,"a roily middle ground."8 Franco Rella (quoting Jean-Frangois Lyotard) arguesthat "the postmodern 'decidedly forms part of the modern' and that 'a work cannot become modern if in the first place it is not postmodern.' Postmodernism understood in this way is not... 'modernism at its end,' but modernism in its nascent state.""' Dolar antes in: "[Postmodernism] doesn't imply a going beyond the modern, but rather an awarenessof its internal limit, its split, which was there from the outset."'20 Lin's memorial ends at, and TiltedArcopens to, overmodern, plural, mongrel time. bridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993), pp. 13-27, where she examines it in relation to Jacques Lacan's L schema;see also pp. 104, 220, 320, and 189-92, where she plots the oppositional structure of "value" using A.J. Greimas's semiotic square, which is extrapolated from the Klein Group. For a discussion of the Klein Group diagram, see (at Krauss's recommendation) Marc Barbut, "On the Meaning of the Word 'Structure' in Mathematics," in Michael Lane, ed., Introductionto Structuralism(New York: Basic Books, 1970), pp. 367-88. 3. Krauss, Optical Unconscious, p. 21. 4. Krauss, "Sculpture in the Expanded Field," pp. 36-38. 5. Barbara Hoffman, "Law for Art's Sake in the Public Realm," in W.J.T. Mitchell, ed., Art and the Public Sphere (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), p. 113. 6. Krauss,OpticalUnconscious, p. 104. We live in a period [Rella writes] in which what in the past was unthinkable, owing either to distance or to its dimensions, is today rendered visible on a mass level. After centuries of interrogating the value of the image in relation to its referent,we are now confronted by images that have no objectreferent whatever. Traversing the modern reallyleads us to go beyond its limits, even if these limits are not external but rather an internal frontier. More than ever, to think the modern is to thinkthelimit:it is liminalthought. ... Liminal thought, precisely because it is poised on the point at which the visible and invisible touch each other, where place and nonplace are tangents, is atopic thought. Atopy is perhaps the fundamental word of contemporary modernity.121 Notes 1. Rosalind E. Krauss, "Sculpture in the Expanded Field," in Hal Foster, ed., The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture (Seattle: Bay Press, 1983), pp. 31-42. 2. Krauss returns to the Klein Group in Rosalind E. Krauss, The Optical Unconscious (Cam- 7. My discussion of the first two of these is indebted to Seyla Benhabib, "Models of Public Space: Hannah Arendt, the Liberal Tradition, and Jiirgen Habermas," in Craig Calhoun, ed., Habermas and the Public Sphere (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1992), pp. 73-98. 8. Ibid., pp. 75, 78. 9. Krauss, "Sculpture in the Expanded Field," p. 33. 10. Ibid., p. 35. 11. Ibid., p. 39. 12. Ibid. 13. Hal Foster,"TheCruxof Minimalism,"in Howard Singerman, ed., Individuals: A Selected His- tory of ContemporaryArt, 1945-986 (New York: Abbeville Press, 1986), p. 162: "Minimalism . . . figure[s] not as a distant dead end but as a brisure of (post)modern art, an in-between moment of a paradigm shift." 14. These two projects are discussed at length, often jointly, in Art and the Public Sphere, which contains essays from past issues of Critical Inquiry, including material originally presented at the August 1989 symposium sponsored by Chicago Sculpture called "Art and Public Spaces: Daring to Dream." In addition to numerous references to both the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Tilted Arc, Mitchell's anthology contains an article by Richard Serra called "Art and Censorship" (also published in Richard Serra: Writings, Interviews [Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994]) and an often-cited essay by Charles L. Griswold entitled "The Vietnam Veteran's Memorial and the Washington Mall: Philosophical Thoughts on Political Iconography," which I discuss below. 15. John Hallmark Neff, "Daring to Dream," in Mitchell, ed., Art and the Public Sphere, pp. 6-7. 73 16. W.J.T. Mitchell, "The Violence of Public Art," in Mitchell, ed., Art and the Public Sphere, pp. 36-37. 17. Neff, "Daring to Dream," p. 6. 18. Testifying against relocation at the March 1985 public hearings convened to debate the future of TiltedArc, art critic Roberta Smith pointed to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial as evidence of Richard Serra's stature: "[ TiltedArc] is an excellent example of Minimalism, which has already been watched by the influential. The Vietnam Veterans' Monument [sic], which has been such a hit in Washington, is a result of someone working with Serra's ideas. So now we have the real thing, the original, genuine article right in our midst." (Clara Weyergraf-Serra and Martha Buskirk, The Destructionof TiltedArc: Documents [Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1991] p. 103.) Art critic Robert Storr seems to concur. In his essay on the hearings, published several months later, he noted that the Vietnam Veterans Memorial "not incidentally . . . owes its sculptural syntax to Serra." (Robert Storr, "'Tilted Arc': Enemy of the People?" Art in America [Sept. 1985] 93.) In the extensive commentary on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, art magazines especially resort to the adjective minimalist to locate Lin's design. Elizabeth Hess calls Lin's design "a combination Minimalist sculpture-earthwork." Later in the same article, she notes that "Tom Wolfe, who published a well-timed article in the Washington Post, . .. [called] Lin's memorial 'non-bourgeois art,' or art 'that baffled the general public.' Wolfe compared Lin's experience to that of Carl Andre in Hartford and Richard Serra in downtown Manhattan. He concluded that her memorial, too, was abstract and elitist. Yet no one, including Wolfe, has actually been baffled by the memorial." (Elizabeth Hess, "A Tale of Two Memorials," Art in America [Apr. 1983]: 122, 126.) Critic Shirley Neilsen Blum, writing in Arts Magazine, goes further, putting Lin squarely into the Minimalist school. She identifies the influence of Carl Andre, Donald Judd, David Smith, and Robert Morris (also, I must add, Camille Corot, Claude Monet, Alfred Stieglitz, the Wailing Wall, and most of funerary antiquity-see note 36): "The highly charged message of the Vietnam War Memorial [sic]," Blum writes, "is contained within the cool spare language of minimal art. . . . As in works by Richard Serra or Robert Smithson, the viewer must actively participate within the space defined by the work." (Shirley Neilsen Blum, "The National Vietnam War Memorial," Arts Magazine [Dec. 1984]:125, 128.) Storr and Smith are obviously not suggesting that this construction derives its form from TiltedArc, Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions a 12-by-120-foot curved steel plate. No doubt they are thinking about a concrete sculpture by Serra called Shift, constructed between 1970 and 1972 on a farming field in King City, Ontario. Shift consists of six 5foot-high, 8-inch-thick concrete sections that Serra calls "stepped elevations," which span 815 feet end on end. (Rosalind Krauss, "Richard Serra, a Translation," in TheOriginalityof theAvant-Gardeand OtherModernist Myths [Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1985], p. 264.) Serra's theme in Shift is transitivity, action that is carried from the subject to the object." In the making of the piece, the locations of the walls are established through the bodies of Serra and an associate, who by walking the field configure and then map the boundaries of contact between their two lines of sight within the existing topography. The walls register this mapping and therefore delimit a set of transitive, internal horizons that change and "shift" in relation to a lived engagement between viewer and artwork. Thus inscribed, Shift operates to supplant the "machinery of renaissance space," which depends on fixed and immutable measurements. (Krauss, "Richard Serra, a Translation," p. 267.) In Shift, this idea of measurement as something external to the body is negated. The sculpture is not representational in any conventional sense, not an illusion, not a picture of anything that exists prior to bodily engagement. It is rather an armature for perception, purged of any figurative or symbolic baggage. Its content is precisely the "beingnear-to" or "being-far-from" that knots body, wall, and field into a sort of temporal suspense, a vivid presence or "continuing" that Krauss calls an "erotics of process." (Rosalind E. Krauss, "Richard Serra Sculpture," in Laura Rosenstock, ed., Richard Serra/Sculpture[New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1986], p. 21.) In this process, the body's motor project displaces vision as the singularly dominant mode of contact; no "conic vice" holds the wall in an idealized, anterior space. (Amelia Jones, "The Absence of Body/The Fantasy of Representation," M/E/A/N/I/N/G 9 [May 1991]: 12.) The wall "appears" only in its internal, ever-changing aspect, only in its proximity to the body, which activates the dialectic between made and found horizons. Both sculpture and field take place "as walked," permitting the viewer/subject to measure herself or himself "against the indeterminacy of the land." (Krauss, "Richard Serra, a Translation," p. 264.) 19. Richard Serra, "Richard Serra's Urban Sculpture: An Interview by Douglas Crimp," in Richard Serra: Writings, Interviews, p. 126. This interview was first published in Arts Magazine (Nov. 1980); Krauss's "Sculpture in the Expanded Field" was first published in October 8 (Spring 1979). seum, 1980), p. 161, quotedin Krauss,"RichardSerra Sculpture,"p. 7. 32. Bois, "PicturesqueStroll around ClaraClara,"pp. 344, 346. 33. Richard Serra, RichardSerra:Sculpture Battcock,ed., MinimalArt:A CriticalAnthology (New (New York:Pace Gallery, 1989), p. 67. The passage York: Dutton, 1968), p. 224. leadingup to this thoughtis importantto repeathere: 22. Foster, "Crux of Minimalism," pp. 172"It'shardto conveyideasof weightfromthe objectsof 73; Morris, "Notes on Sculpture," p. 232. everydaylife, for the taskwould be infinite;thereis an 23. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, "Translator's imponderable vastness to weight. However, I can Introduction," in Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology, recordthe historyof artas a historyof the particularization of weight.... I havemoreto sayaboutthe history trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns of sculptureas a historyof weight, more to say about Hopkins University Press, 1976), p. xviii. With rethe monumentsof death,moreto sayaboutthe weight spect to Serra's antipathy toward architecture, see, for and density and concretenessof countlesssarcophagi, example, "Interview: Peter Eisenman," pp. 132, 146, moreto sayaboutburialtombs,.. . moreto say about 163, 188; and, in the same volume, also see "Richard Serra and Alan Colquhoun," p. 235. Yve-Alain Bois Mycenaeanand Incanarchitecture,moreto say about the weight of the Olmec heads. . . . Everythingwe writes that "the relationship between architecture and choose in life for its lightnesssoon revealsits unbearSerra's work is one of conflict: he says of his Berlin ableweight.We facethe fearof unbearableweight:the Block for Charlie Chaplin, placed in Mies van der Rohe's National Galerie in Berlin, that it was all done weight of repression,the weight of constriction, the so that it would contradict the architecture." (Yveweight of government, the weight of tolerance, the Alain Bois, "A Picturesque Stroll around Clara-Clara," weight of resolution,the weight of responsibility,the trans. John Shepley, in Annette Michelson, et al., eds., weightof destruction,the weightof suicide,the weight of historywhich dissolvesweight and erodesmeaning October: The First Decade, 1976-1986 [Cambridge, to a calculatedconstructionof palpablelightness." MA: MIT Press, 1987], p. 349.) 24. Bois, "Picturesque Stroll around Clara34. RodolpheGasche, The Tainof theMirror: Derridaand the Philosophyof Reflection(Cambridge, Clara," p. 363. MA: HarvardUniversityPress,1986), p. 238. 25. Ibid., p. 346. 26. "Elsewhere described by Walter Benjamin 35. Robert Campbell, "An Emotive Place as the experience par excellence of modernism ..." Apart," AIA Journal (May 1983): 151. Campbell writes,"Thestoryof how this unlikelyand wonderful Ibid., pp. 362-63. 27. Mitchell, "The Violence of Public Art," in design cameinto existenceis one of the classiccompetition stories, too familiar to need much detailing. Mitchell, ed., Art in the Public Sphere, p. 37. Elizabeth Hess has also acknowledged the genital metaphor: "To MayaYingLinwas 21 and a seniorat Yale,planninga careeras an architect,when some students(she wasn't add insult to injury, the eight male jurors had chosen a memorial with a distinctly female character, placing one) persuadedan instructor,AndrewBurr,to offer a at the base of Washington's giant phallus a wide Vdesign studio on funeraryarchitecture.Lin enrolled. "Tale of The Vietnamcompetitionwas ProblemNumber 3 in a mound." surrounded (Hess, by grassy shape the Burr studio." Burr'sstudents visited the site in Two Memorials," p. 126.) 28. It holds up 57,939 names, to be exact. For Washington.Accordingto Campbell,Lin concluded that "alandscapesolution seemedbetter"than "some the seminal discussion on the distinction between writThe see on and walls, Vidler, Anthony Writing big monument.... The notion of makingthe angle ofthe ing Theoryin theLateEnlighten- and aimingthe wall at Washingtonand Lincolncame of the Walls:Architectural ment (Princeton: Princeton Architectural Press, 1987). later, backin the studio ... 'Andysaid, you have to makethe angle mean something[Lin recalled].And I My copy of this book was a gift from Nadir Lahiji, to wanted the names in chronologicalorder becauseto whom I also owe the suggestion of this note. honor the living as well as the dead it had to be a se29. Serra, "Extended Notes from Sight Point Road," in Richard Serra: Writings, Interviews, p. 171; quence in time."' Campbell notes that "these were also Serra, "Interview: Peter Eisenman," p. 135. powerfulintuitions,and theyled directlyto a powerful 30. See note 18. design.The briefesttalkwith its creatormakesit clear that nothing about the memorial is either casual or 31. Richard Serra, Richard Serra: Interviews, mentionof Boull"e. Etc., 1970-1989 (Yonkers, NY: Hudson River Mulucky."He makesno 20. Richard Serra, "Interview: Peter Eisenman," in Richard Serra:Writings, Interviews, pp. 147, 171. 21. Foster, "Crux of Minimalism," p. 172; see also Robert Morris, "Notes on Sculpture," in Gregory November1995 JAE49/2 74 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 36. Helen Rosenau, ed., Boullie's Treatise on Architecture: A Complete Presentation of the "Architecture, essai sur l'art, "which forms part of the Boullee papers (MS 9153) in the Biblioteque Nationale, Paris (London: A. Tiranti, 1953), pp. 80-81, quoted in M. J.-C. Lemagny, Visionary Architects: Boullie, Ledoux, Lequeu (Houston: University of St. Thomas, 1968), plate 18, "Funerary Monument, typical of sunken architecture," p. 38. See also plates 15, "Entrance to a Cemetery," and 17, "Chapel of the Dead." I have double-checked: I am convinced that in my review of nearly a dozen articles on Lin's memorial I have overlooked some reference to Boullke that is lying before me plain as day. Blum, for instance, fails to mention Boullke in "The National Vietnam War Memorial," which unrolls a long list of historical precedents for Lin's design (see note 18). Blum is careful to mention that "Lin [had] taken a course in funerary architecture at Yale and surely was not unaware that the Wall evokes a whole history of funerary monuments." She proceeds to connect Lin's scheme to Mother Earth; to ancient Egyptian and Greek antecedents (pyramid, tholos, dromos, tumulus); to the graves of the Kings of Lydia in Sardis; to the nine royal tombs at Mycenae and specifically to the tombs ofAgamemnon, Alyattes, and Cephren; and to modern architecture and sculpture; but not, strangely enough, to Boullke. The writer's generosity and her great enthusiasm for Lin's project may help account for these attributions and oversights. Not the source of this discussion but worth mentioning is a parenthetical insert offered by Bois in "Picturesque Stroll around Clara-Clara." At the beginning of his discussion about Serra and the sublime, Bois writes, "(I might add that a whole parallel could be traced between the idea formulated by Boullke of a buried architecture and Serra's sculptures that are sunk in the ground)" (p. 366). Bois does not support his reference to "buried architecture" with a citation; it is commonly enough known. 37. Notwithstanding its ingeniously simple composition and elegant interpretation of historical precedents, a widely publicized war of opinion quickly exploded around Lin's proposal: Talk show hosts and politicians took positions; the Commission of Fine Arts held hearings. In a compromise engineered to placate powerful lobbyists (including H. Ross Perot, who doubtless never heard of Boullke), a sculpture group depicting three "battle weary GIs," rendered with a sort of Saturday Evening Post realism, was added to the memorial site, along with a flagpole, both placed seventy feet from Lin's composition, a distance satisfactory to both parties. 38. Hess, "Tale of Two Memorials," p. 123. 39. Few if any American architects could claim greater authority in matters of classical composition than two of the commission's members, Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909) and Daniel Hudson Burnham (1846-1912), still glowing from their triumph at the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition; the third member of the commission, of course, was Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., son of the Chicago Exposition's landscape architect. Their proposal was "the first expression of the City Beautiful movement inspired by the [Chicago] fair and. . . 'the country's first modern city planning report."' (Leland Roth, McKim, Mead & WhiteArchitects [New York: Harper & Row, 1983], p. 251.) They strengthened their loyalty to L'Enfant through assiduous research and travel-to Virginia, to inspect cities that had served as models for the capital; and to Europe, where they immersed themselves in monumental antecedents: "The group toured Paris, turned to Rome where they studied the great Piazza of St. Peter's, then, to Hadrian's Villa at Tivoli, and from there, to Venice, a plan of which had been among the papers Jefferson lent L'Enfant. In Vienna they toured the Schoenbrunn and the Ringstrasse. Some time was spent in Budapest before the group returned to Paris, where they measured the grounds at Fountainbleau and Vaux-le-Vicomte. The gardens and grand allees and the great basin at Versailles one of L'Enfant's primary sources, were also carefully studied." (Roth, McKim, Mead & WhiteArchitects,p. 253.) In 1900, the younger Olmsted "pleaded for an understanding of L'Enfant's original plan," although, according to McKim's biographer, Charles Moore, who accompanied the commissioners on their European junket, "the problem in Washington [would have to] be worked out along Roman rather than Parisian lines." (Richard Guy Wilson, "Architecture, Landscape, and City Planning," in The American Renaissance, 1876-1917 [New York: Brooklyn Museum, 1979], pp. 84-85.) The commission aimed to restore "visual reciprocity" between the major monumental elements of the Mall. Visual reciprocity accurately describes the manner in which Lin's memorial incorporates the diagonalization of L'Enfant's scheme. For a thorough discussion of the Senate Park Commission's activities, see Roth, McKim, Mead 6& White Architects, pp. 251, 251-59, especially his conclusion: "In surveying the gradual development of Washington over half a century following [Theodore Roosevelt's] establishment of the Fine Arts Commission, one discovers that, except for the clearing and planting of the Mall, few of the Park Commission's specific proposals have been carried out literally, yet 75 their basic scheme (and L'Enfant'soriginal design) havebeen consistentlyreinforced.The essentialqualities of space, order, and harmony among the parts have been maintained and 'reciprocityof sight' restored. Even the exigenciesof two majorworld wars have not materiallyaltered the pursuit of this plan. Fortunately,before the chance to reclaimthis legacy had passed altogether, Burnham, Olmsted, and McKim rekindledL'Enfant'svision"(p. 258). 40. CharlesL. Griswold,"TheVietnamVeterans Memorialand the WashingtonMall: Philosophical Thoughts on PoliticalIconography,"in Mitchell, ed., Art and thePublicSphere,p. 92. 41. Ibid., pp. 102-3 42. Ibid., pp. 103, 108. 43. Ibid. 44. Marlingand Silberman,"TheStatueNear the Wall: The Vietnam VeteransMemorial and the Art of Remembering," SmithsonianStudiesin American Art One(Spring 1987) p. 11. 45. XavierCosta Guix, "MercurialMarkers" (Ph.D. diss., Universityof Pennsylvania,1990), pp. 1-7. 46. Denis Holier, AgainstArchitecture:The Writingsof GeorgeBataille,trans. BetsyWing (Cambridge,MA: MIT Press, 1989), p. 6. 47. Costa Guix, "MercurialMarkers,"p. 4; Griswoldnotes that monumentderivesfrom the Latin monere,to remind-to admonish,warn,advise,and instruct.(Griswold,"VietnamVeteransMemorial," p. 83.) 48. Donald Kunze, "Architectureas Reading; Virtuality,Secrecy,Monstrosity,"JAE41/4 (Summer 1988): 28. 49. Hess, "Taleof Two Memorials,"p. 123. Lin adds, "Alsothe mirrorimage doubles and triples the space." 50. MarkC. Taylor,Disfiguring:Art,Architecture, Religion(Chicago:Universityof Chicago Press, 1992), p. 281. 51. Costa Guix, "MercurialMarkers,"p. 4. 52. Hess, "Taleof Two Memorials,"p. 123. 53. Richard Wollheim, "Minimal Art," in Gregory Battcock, ed., MinimalArt (New York: Dutton, 1968), p. 387, quoted in RosalindE. Krauss, "Tanktotem: Welded Images,"in RosalindE. Krauss, Passagesin Modern Sculpture(New York: Viking, 1977), p. 198. 54. RosalindE. Krauss,"The Fountainhead," 2 (Jan. 1974): 64. Oppositions 55. Rosalind E. Krauss,"The Double Negative:A New Syntaxfor Sculpture,"in Passagesin ModernSculpture(New York:Viking, 1977), pp. 259, 266. 56. Francis Colpitt, MinimalArt: The Critical Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Perspective(Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1990), p. 101. 57. Serra, "Richard Serra's Urban Sculpture: An Interview with Douglas Crimp," in Richard Serra: Writings, Interviews, p. 129. On transitivity and the temporal dimension of Serra's work, see Krauss, "Richard Serra Sculpture." 58. Bois, "Picturesque Stroll around ClaraClara," p. 350. 59. Ibid., p. 364. 60. Ibid., p. 370. 61. "Appeal Filed by Richard Serra in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, December 15, 1987," in Weyergraf-Serra and, Buskirk, eds., Destruction of TiltedArc, p. 232. Serra's personal account of the TiltedArc case serves as the introduction to the Weyergraf-Serra and Buskirk documentation; it is also published as Richard Serra, " TiltedArc Destroyed," in Richard Serra: Writings, Interviews, pp. 192-214 (first published in Art in America 77 [May 1989], pp. 3447); also see, following in the same volume, Richard Serra, "Art and Censorship" (reprinted from Critical Inquiry 17 [Spring 1991], also reprinted in Mitchell, ed., Art and the Public Sphere, pp. 226-33). 62. Serra, "Introduction," in Weyergraf-Serra and Buskirk, eds., Destruction of Tilted Arc, p. 9. Weyergraf-Serra and Buskirk report that 3,791 people signed petitions for relocation of the sculpture, 3,763 against. Over 350 articles in local and national publications took up the case. 63. The transcripts of selected testimonies before Diamond's panel published in Weyergraf-Serra and Buskirk, eds., Destruction of Tilted Arc, suggest multiple interpretations of public. Speaking in defense of TiltedArc, Richard Serra testified before the hearing that Tilted Arc was "constructed so as to engage the public in a dialogue" (p. 65); Gustave Harrow, Serra's attorney, argued that the acts of the hearings "disregard the responsibilities of public office and violate the terms of its trust" (p. 71); Douglas Crimp testified at the hearing "not as a professional but simply as a member of the public" director of the (p. 73); Suzanne Delehanty, Neuberger Museum of the State University of New York at Purchase and a member of the original National Endowment for the Arts nominating panel, testified that their decisions were informed by "a principle that has guided public art since antiquity-the spirit of place" (p. 83); Benjamin Buchloch, professor of art history, testified that he did not "feel confident to judge the public's taste [or] the public's dislike of and discomfort with [ Tilted Arc]" (p. 91); Annette Michelson, professor of Cinema Studies, ad- dressed"the notion of public interest as it relatesto the situationat hand,"arguingthat "Serra'swork has alwaysbeen public"and that it was constructedin a tradition that "redefinedsculpturalpracticeand its theorization [through]large-scale,publicly oriented and publiclychallengingworks"(p. 95); artistFrank Stella addressed"theextension of visual culture into public spaces," concerned that "no public dispute should force the gratuitous destruction of any ... civilizing effort"(p. 100); William Rubin, Director of the Departmentof Painting and Sculptureat the Museum of Modern Art, testified that Tilted Arc "obligesus to questionreceivedvaluesin general,and the nature of art and art's relation to the public in particular"(p. 101); Roberta Smith declared that TiltedArcwas "one of the two best public sculptures in New YorkCity"(p. 103); Betty St. Clair,an attorney, noted that "in the public sphere the privacyissue doesn't exist. Once a piece of sculptureis erected in the public spherethereis no longerany privacyinterest"(p. 106). SpeakingagainstTiltedArc,JessieGray,an artist, complainedthat "ourpublicmoneyis beingsquandered"(p. 121); Peter Hirsch, an attorney,declared that "thepublic has not been given [the choice to buy artthat it likes] .... The publicis saying,we don't like [TiltedArc]"(p. 123);MargoJacobs,a physicalanthropologist,spoketo the panel"asa memberof the public" and addressed"the sculpture'seffect . . . on the public and the plaza, the public's space,"which was "designed... as a placefor . . . publicassembly,"the effectiveness of which, she argued, was reduced by TiltedArc(p. 124);ShirleyParis,an areaemployeewho decriedTiltedArcas "theBerlinWall of FoleySquare," demandedthat FederalPlazabe returnedto its "original state:that of a publicamenity"(p. 126). Afterthe hearings,in his letterto the chief GeneralServicesAdministrationadministratoraccountingfor his decision to remove TiltedArc,William Diamond invoked the "public"nineteentimes (pp. 142-49). 64. Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958), pp. 50-51. 65. Ibid., p. 319. 66. Benhabib,"Modelsof PublicSpace,"p. 86. 67. Jiirgen Habermas, "Modernity-An Inp. completeProject,"in Hal Foster,ed., Anti-Aesthetic, 113; and RichardRorty, Contingency, Irony,and Solidarity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), p. 67. 68. Rorty, Contingency,Irony,and Solidarity, p. 67. 69. Ibid., p. 68. Reason's "other," Rorty November1995 JAE49/2 writes, includes "the passions, Nietzsche's will to power, [and] Heidegger's Being." 70. Ibid., pp. 68-69. 71. See Michael J. Shapiro, "Language and Power: The Spaces of Critical Interpretation" and "Spatiality and Policy Discourse: Reading the Global City," in Michael J. Shapiro, Reading the Postmodern Polity: Political Theoryas Textual Practice (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1992), pp. 1-17 and 86-103, respectively. 72. For the seminal discussion of panopticism, see Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: Vintage, 1979), pp. 195-228. 73. Anna C. Chave, "Minimalism and the Rhetoric of Power," Arts Magazine 64 (June 1990): 56. 74. J. Habermas, "Concluding Remarks," in Calhoun, ed., Habermas and the Public Sphere, pp. 477-78. 75. Take, for example, Alfred Hitchcock's film Rear Window. Slavoj Zizek notes that "the fascinating object that drives the interpretive movement"-Jeff's (James Stewart's) obsessive voyeurism, his rejection of Lisa (Grace Kelly), his determination to expose the murder he believes has taken place in the apartment across the courtyard-"is ultimately the gaze itself." (Slavoj Zizek, LookingAwry: An Introduction toJacques Lacan through Popular Culture [Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1991], p. 91.) Stewart plays a middle-aged, action photographer confined to his New York apartment by a work-related accident that leaves him in a cast up to his waist. "Rear Window," Zizek continues, "is ultimately the story of a subject who eludes a sexual relation by transforming his effective impotence into power by means of the gaze, by means of secret observation. ... What we encounter here is . .. one of Hitchcock's fundamental 'complexes,' the interconnection of the gaze and the couple power/impotence. In this respect, Rear Window reads like an ironic reversal of Bentham's 'Panopticon' as exploited by Foucault. For Bentham, the horrifying efficacy of the Panopticon is due to the fact that the subjects (prisoners, patients, schoolboys, factory workers) can never know for sure if they are actually observed from the all-seeing control tower-this very uncertainty intensifies the feeling of menace, of the impossibility of escape from the gaze of the Other. In Rear Window, the inhabitants of the apartments across the yard are actually observed all the time by Stewart's watchful eye, but far from being terrorized, they simply ignore it and go on with their daily business. On the contrary, it is Stewart himself, the center of the Panopticon, its all-pervasive eye, who is terrorized, constantly looking out the window, anxious 76 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions not to miss some crucialdetail"(p. 92). Thereis more to be said about this relationship,to be sure.Not unimportantis Stewart'suse of optical technology(first binoculars,then a huge telephotolens) to furtherpenetratethe rearwindowsacrossfrom his. Referencesin note 85 addressthe psychoanalyticdimensionsof optical instrumentswith respectto the uncanny.Also see Krauss,OpticalUnconscious. 76. Norman Bryson, "The Gaze in the ExpandedField,"in Hal Foster,ed., Visionand Visuality (Seattle:Bay Press, 1988), pp. 88-92, 95. 77. EdwardD. Re, ChiefJudge,U.S. Courtof InternationalTrade) in a letter to GeraldP. Carmen, Administrator,GeneralServicesAdministration,Aug. and Buskirk,Destruction 18, 1981, in Weyergraf-Serra of TiltedArc,p. 26. 78. Georg Simmel, "The Metropolis and MentalLife,"in RichardSennett,ed., ClassicEssayson the Cultureof Cities(EnglewoodCliffs, NJ: PrenticeHall, 1969), p. 51. 79. JacquesLacan,TheFourFundamentalConed. Jacques-AlainMiller,trans. ceptsofPsycho-Analysis, Alan Sheridan(New York:Norton, 1978), p. 88. 80. Do we count Judge Re-or any of the nearlyfour thousandsignatureson the petition for its relocation-among the passersbyTiltedArc presupposes? See Bois, "PicturesqueStroll around ClaraClara," p. 346. 81. RichardSerra,in "SelectedStatementArguing in Supportof Tilted Arc,"in Weyergraf-Serra and Buskirk,eds., Destructionof TiltedArc,pp. 65-66. 82. Mladen Dolar, "'I Shall Be with You on YourWedding-Night':Lacanand the Uncanny,"October58 (Fall 1991): 6. 83. G. Simmel, "Metaphysicaof Death," in Essayson Interpretationand Social Science(Totowa, 1980), from an epigraph above Part 1 of David Leatherbarrow,TheRootsofArchitecturalConvention: Site, Enclosure,Materials (Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress, 1993), p. 7. 84. Dolar, "Lacanand the Uncanny,"p. 10. RichardSennett would not sufferthis readingof the work:"I disagreewith the idea that thereis an unconscious to artand architecturewhich unleashesthe uncannyor the unexpectedin the city when it is analyzed by people like myself. I think preciselythat the problem for artistswho aremakingpublicart,publicsculpture,public architectureis that the repressiveactivities that are alwaysbound up in making form have now been marshaled,mobilizedand become functionalin society. The repressionsthat a sculptorwould engage with-or more particularlythat an architectwould engagewith-are things that areunderstoodby other people as the way buildingsshould look, the way they should function."(RichardSennett,"RichardSennett with BruceFergusen,"interviewby BruceFergusen,in JamesLingwood,ed., New Worksfor DifferentPlaces: TWSAFour CitiesProject[Bristol,England:TWSA, 1990], pp. 143-45.) 85. See Sigmund Freud, "The Uncanny," in Works TheStandard EditionoftheComplete Psychological trans.anded. JamesStrachey,vol. 17 ofSigmundFreud, (London:HogarthPress, 1955), pp. 219-56; E.T.A. Hoffman,"TheSandman,"in TalesofHoffinann,trans. R. J. Hollingdale(New York:PenguinBooks, 1982), pp. 85-125; and,generally,AnthonyVidler, TheArchitecturalUncanny:Essaysin theModernUnhomely (Cambridge,MA:MIT Press,1992). 86. Dolar, "Lacanand the Uncanny,"p. 20. The paragraphcontinues:"Frankenstein's storyagain reveals this simply and efficiently. The principal source of the uncanninessof the monster, for Frankenstein, is preciselythe gaze. It is the being of the gaze. The point that Frankenstein cannot endure, during the creation of the monster, is the moment when the creatureopens its eyes,when the Thing renders the gaze-it is this opening that makes it the Thing. When seeing 'those wateryeyes, that seemed almost the same color as the dun-white sockets in which they were set,' Frankensteinruns awayin horror. But the gaze comes to pursue him in his bedroom; the monstercomes to his bedside-'his eyes, if eyes they may be called, were set on me.' The emergence of this impossible subject is the emergenceof the gaze-the opening of a hole in reality which is immediatelyalso that which comes to fill it with an unbearablepresence, with a being more being then being, vacuumandplenitudoall in one, the plenitude the directresultof the emptiness." 87. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell UniversityPress, 1985), p. 70. 88. Bryson,"Gazein the ExpandedField,"pp. 88-92, 95. 89. Ellie Ragland-Sullivan, JacquesLacanand thePhilosophyofPsychoanalysis (Urbana:Universityof Illinois Press, 1986), p. 158. 90. Lacan, "The Line and Light," in Lacan, FourFundamentalConceptsof Psycho-Analysis, p. 103. 91. Ragland-Sullivan, JacquesLacan,p. 95. 92. Lacan,"The Line and Light,"p. 89. 93. Harold Bloom, "Six RevisionaryRatios," in Harold Bloom, Poeticsof Influence,ed. John Hollander (New Haven, CT: Henry R. Schwab, 1988), pp. 101-3. 94. Griswold,"VietnamVeteransMemorial," p. 81. 77 The Poetry 95. SarahJ. Rogers,"Public/Private: and Proseof Maya Lin,"in MayaLin:Public/Private, catalogof the exhibition,Oct. 17, 1993-Jan.23, 1994 (Columbus:WexnerCenterfor the Arts, 1994), p. 12. 96. Krauss,OpticalUnconscious, p. 319. 97. Ibid., p. 320. 98. Mitchell, "Violenceof PublicArt,"p. 37. 99. Chave, "Minimalismand the Rhetoricof Power,"p. 54. 100. Hess, "Taleof Two Memorials,"p. 126. 101. Mark Alden Branch, "MayaLin: After Architecture the Wall,"Progressive (Aug. 1994): 63. 102. Chave,"Minimalismand the Rhetoricof Power,"pp. 55-56. 103. Jon R. Snyder, "Translator'sIntroduction," in Gianni Vattimo, TheEnd ofModernity:Niin PostmodernCulture,trans. hilismand Hermeneutics J.R. Snyder (Baltimore:Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988), p. Iv. 104. The ability of the life-world"to become able to developinstitutionsout of itselfwhich set limits to the internaldynamicsand imperativesof an almost autonomous economic system and its administrativecomplements . . ." (Habermas,"Modernity-An IncompleteProject,"p. 13.) 105. Paul Virilio, "The OverexposedCity," trans. Astrid Hustved, from L'espacecritique(Paris: Christian Bourgois, 1984), reprinted in Zone 1/2 (n.d.): 29. 106. Richard Serra, interview, in "Conversazione con Richard Serra a Milano," in Domus662 (June 1985): 77. 107. Storr, "'Tilted Arc': Enemy of the People?"p. 92. 108. Dolar, "Lacanand the Uncanny,"p. 20. 109. Virilio, "OverexposedCity,"p. 29. 110. XavierCosta,"Large-Scale Barcelona:The City and Its Architectureafterthe Olympics,"in Practices3/4 (Spring 1995): 56-63. See also MarcAuge, Non-lieux: Introduction a une anthropologiede la surmodernite (Paris:Seuil, 1992), to which Costarefers in this discussion.This assessmentcorroboratesGeorg Simmel'sdescriptionof overabundancein his 1896 essay, "TheBerlinTradeExhibition":"'Theclose proximity within which the most heterogeneousindustrial productsareconfinedproducesa paralysisin the capacity for perception,a truehypnosis.... In its fragmentation of weak impressions there remains in the memorythe notion that one should be amusedhere.' Any sensitiveperson'will be overpoweredand feel disorientedby the masseffectof what is offeredhere.'Yet 'preciselythis wealth and colourfulnessof over-hastenedimpressionsis appropriate to over-excitedandex- Friedman This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions hausted nerves' need for stimulation."' (Quoted in DavidFrisby,"GeorgSimmel:FirstSociologistof Modernity,"in Theory,Culture,and Society2 [1985]: 61.) 111. Costa, "Large-Scale Barcelona." 112. PaulVirilio, "GrayEcology,"in Cynthia C. Davidson, ed., Anywhere(New York: Rizzoli, 1992), p. 189. 113. Gianni Vattimo, "Philosophy of the City,"Epaulinos6 (1986): 4-5. 114. Krauss,OpticalUnconscious, 119. Franco Rella, "The Atopy of the Modp. 320. 115. Ibid. ern,"in GiovannaBorradori,ed., RecodingMetaphys116. Krauss,"RichardSerraSculpture,"p. 28. ics: The New Italian Philosophy (Evanston, IL: 117. Frisby,"GeorgSimmel,"p. 61. See also NorthwesternUniversityPress,1988), pp. 141-142. Rem Koolhaas, Delirious New York:A Retroactive 120. Dolar, "Lacanand the Uncanny,"p. 23. 121. Rella,p. 142. Manifestofor Manhattan(New York:Oxford University Press,1978). 118. Krauss, "Sculpture in the Expanded Field,"p. 39. November1995 JAE49/2 78 This content downloaded from 206.192.68.71 on Wed, 5 Feb 2014 20:36:34 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions