Читать книгу A Companion to Arthur C. Danto - Группа авторов - Страница 20
1 Times Square
ОглавлениеThere is a pedestrian island in front of the Marriott Marquis Hotel, in Times Square, between 45th and 46th streets. After recent design upgrades and the elimination of vehicle traffic, it is a far more welcoming place than it was in the late summer of 1988, when I arrived in Manhattan from Budapest to pursue a PhD in sociology. It so happened that my first accommodations in New York, provided by the City University’s Graduate School and University Center, were in a single-room-occupancy building a stone’s throw from the square, on West 44th Street. Some of my neighbors were former prostitutes. The neon signs in Times Square – still made of neon back then – would paint red spirals on my white walls at night.
The overpowering visual and cultural landscape of Times Square fascinated me. A whole universe of sinister and sublime surprises awaited me steps from my front door. The aforementioned pedestrian island, I soon learned, was not just any island. It was part of a site-specific artwork. A mysterious drone emanated from underneath the metal grille covering its triangular surface. The sound arose from somewhere deep below, like an invisible sonic tower, comingling with the cacophony of taxi honks, subway screeches, and all the human clamor of the “Crossroads of the World.” Once you caught on, it was impossible to tune out its mood and mind-altering presence.
The installation, titled Times Square, had been designed for that spot by an experimental composer and percussionist named Max Neuhaus (1939–2009). The sound sculpture, as the artist called it, had been running more or less continuously since 1977, under the care of the Dia Art Foundation. Together with a fellow student, I set about documenting it. We interviewed a homeless man who lived on top of the work, seemingly oblivious to its presence. We met a woman who came there often to meditate. We asked tourists what they thought about the sound as a form of public art. We filmed pedestrians from rooftops. When we were done, we presented our work at a visual-anthropology conference in Amsterdam, in a documentary film titled Sound from the Ground.1
It was armed with a videocassette copy of Sound from the Ground that I entered Arthur Danto’s office for the first time, in 1991. I had since transferred to Columbia University, where I was working on a dissertation about art galleries and the transformation of the visual-art world into a modern cultural industry. The only hitch was, few of my professors in the sociology department knew much about art or its institutions and markets. It made sense to walk over to Philosophy Hall to seek out the advice of Arthur C. Danto. He was, after all, the man who coined the term artworld. And he was part of that world. At the peak of his powers as a teacher, theoretician, and critic, Danto was an intellectual rock star. A frequent presence in Manhattan’s glittering art scene, he had achieved an aura of public fame that is rarely attached to academics. As a 27-year-old student at the time, it took some nerve to knock on his door.
Arthur had just published an essay about Neuhaus in The Nation, where he famously held the art-critic post formerly occupied by Clement Greenberg. In a characteristic switching of gears from “mere” criticism to something deeper and more profound, he described Neuhaus’s sound sculpture as “a portable tabernacle, a bubble of sacral space encapsulated in midtown life, which flows unheedingly around it, save for those attracted as a momentary congregation” (Danto 1991). I was confident that my documentary would claim his interest. Not only was it about an artist he cared about, but it directly probed the categorical distinction between art and the ordinary world – Arthur’s driving preoccupation in the field of aesthetics. What better example of his “transfiguration of the commonplace” could one find than an artistic intervention that elevated Times Square, in all its grime and decrepitude, to a sacramental shrine?
Times Square was precisely the kind of art Arthur relished thinking about. It was about boundaries: between the traditional and the modern, the familiar and the transcendent, the aesthetic and the everyday. Such boundaries were for him always both philosophical and political, and he demonstrated exceptional skill in pinpointing them and explaining why they were relevant. He was, in this sense, a virtuoso of scrutinizing boundaries. As a person, he was fond of stepping over them.