The Configurational Encounter and the problematic of Beholding

In Malcolm Quinn, David Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch & Stephen Wilson (eds.), The persistence of taste : art, museums and everyday life after Bourdieu. New York: Routledge (2018)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

This is a peer reviewed chapter in the book The Persistence of Taste: Art, Museums and Everyday Life After Bourdieu, an interdisciplinary analysis of taste in the wake of Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology. The chapter, ‘The configurational encounter and the problematic of beholding’, is in Part I of the book, entitled ‘Taste and Art’. Engaging the aesthetics of reception as its field of inquiry, the chapter draws upon the literary theorist Wolfgang Iser’s notion of the ‘blank’ as a staged suspension of connectivity, arguing for a reassignment of the aesthetic in terms of a ‘configurational encounter’ that problematizes the work/beholder relation. This constitutes a rare attempt to apply reception aesthetics to contemporary art, a ‘gap’ first highlighted by the art historian Michael Ann Holly in her 2002 article ‘Reciprocity and Reception Theory’, published in A Companion to Art Theory. Utilising concrete examples of practice, the chapter asks whether the shift towards inter- or transmedia art practices, characterising postconceptual art, renders Bourdieu’s characterisation of the ‘autonomous’ artwork superfluous to the contemporary situation, and whether the kinds of judgments of taste associated with the acquisition of cultural capital are no longer relevant. The chapter argues that in revealing material processes, rules, instructions or appropriations – and/or its situated reception and apparatus of display – the configurational encounter problematizes the beholder’s bodily and ideological orientation toward an artwork, revealing our embodied dispositions or ‘habitus’. This counters philosopher Peter Osborne’s suggestion that a change in art’s ‘ontology’ post 1960s renders questions of aesthetics obsolete and reconceives the aesthetic as emerging from the oscillation of spatial and ideational perspective switches resulting from a calculated problematizing of the beholder’s position-taking.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 93,867

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Dialectics of taste and non-taste : archive as afterlife and life of art.Peter Osborne - 2018 - In Malcolm Quinn, David Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch & Stephen Wilson (eds.), The persistence of taste : art, museums and everyday life after Bourdieu. New York: Routledge. pp. 49-62.
Introduction: Taste, Hierarchy and Social Value after Bourdieu.Malcolm Quinn - 2018 - In Malcolm Quinn, David Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch & Stephen Wilson (eds.), The persistence of taste : art, museums and everyday life after Bourdieu. New York: Routledge.
Art rules: Pierre Bourdieu and the visual arts.Michael Grenfell - 2007 - New York: Berg. Edited by Cheryl Hardy.
The Tastemaker and the Algorithm.Malcolm Quinn - 2018 - In Malcolm Quinn, David Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch & Stephen Wilson (eds.), The persistence of taste : art, museums and everyday life after Bourdieu. New York: Routledge. pp. 345-350.
The wake of art: essays: criticism, philosophy and the ends of taste.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1998 - Australia: G+B Arts Int'l. Edited by Gregg Horowitz & Tom Huhn.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-02-26

Downloads
10 (#1,204,939)

6 months
5 (#836,928)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references