2015-09-08

This commentary is something of a non-review written around an exhibition and catalogue I can only endorse -- Doubleworld, the New Museum's installment of Sarah Charlesworth's deconstructive photo-collages ending September 20, 2015. While the show provided me occasion to include an account of Charlesworth's radically deconstructive imagery in my 2015 Huffington Post series profiling art that redefines spirituality as a necessarily-political assertion of human rights and individual freedoms, the exhibition is rightfully concerned with surveying numerous other of Charlesworth's concerns beyond the scope of this article. I am here concerned with work and ideas that Charlesworth discussed with me in conversations preparing for her inclusion in exhibitions and articles I arranged in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and again for her inclusion in the 2012 Huffington Post Series, XX Chromosocial: Women Artists Cross the Homosocial Divide. In each of our conversations, Charlesworth talked at length about her efforts to heighten the signage of art that could only truly be deemed 'spiritual' -- a term she used only when it was clear what she intend by it -- when one's individual and subjective relationship to nature are coupled with a criticality of the cultural systems, including institutionalized spiritual systems, that we inherit yet shut down personal channels of inquiry, growth and empowerment.

The prior articles and links in this series are, Feminism Awakens In Himalayan Buddhist Art and Meditation; Same-Sex Marriage Is a Religious Institution Deserving Lawful Protection; and in answer to the terror of Al-Qaeda and ISIS, Egyptian Artist Wael Shawky Is Pulling the Strings of Crusade and Jihad at MoMA PS1.



Left: Detail of Assumption, 1999, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame. Right: Detail of Denial, 1999, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame, both by Sarah Charlesworth. A blackening or erasure of the central iconic figures of Christianity -- Christ and his mother Mary -- both literally cut out and voided in a symbolic deconstruction of all inherited and institutionalized faith.

New York has long been overdo for a Sarah Charlesworth retrospective. Throughout the summer of 2015, the New Museum filled the void with Doubleword a partial-survey of Charlesworth's work curated by Massimiliano Gioni and Margot Norton, a most welcome arrival despite that keys works -- some might dare call them among Charlesworth's masterpieces -- were curiously and conspicuously unavailable or omitted from the show. While the New Museum can be applauded for honoring an artist who both contributed among the most critically substantive and culturally capacious work of the so-called Pictures Artists emerging in the late 1970s and early 1980s -- an artist who prematurely succumbed to a cerebral hemorrhage in 2013 -- the show is incomplete in a way that suggests a larger institution with a more generous expanse of space, as well as a more culturally capacious collection with which to surround, vitalize and debate her pictorial systemizations of culture, while yielding a richer and more summary experience of the broader relationships implied and questioned in Charlesworth's art.



Wisdom Through Initiation, 1989, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, triptych, by Sarah Charlesworth.

Imagine if Charlesworth's work were exhibited more capaciously at the Metropiltan Museum in New York, where her feminist, poststructuralist and anthropological deconstructions of world cultural iconography could be immersed within, greeted by and made to rival the art made within that society, whether it be a tribe, nation or civilization. The delight of seeing and feeling her expanse of heterogeneously-deconstructive appropriations absorbed by or rebounding off indigenous art in the Met's galleries could feasibly make us see both Charlesworth's work and the iconography of the culture and period being appropriated responding one to the other in an intriguing morphogenetic interchange that alters our view of both the original art and the appropriated representation. Imagine entering a Charlesworth retrospective immediately upon having just left, say, the Met's Renaissance galleries or before entering the Asian or Egyptian wings, and having the cultural layering effect an ecstatic epiphany or provoke a critical confrontation, depending on whichever one's background and ideological leanings are prepared for. Would we, as a result of encountering Charlesworth's pictorial fields of visual metaphors summon to mind contextual fields of metaphorical meaning and functions when we move on to the museum's other exhibitions and collections? Might we find the original, period painting or mask to be in agreement with Charlesworth's extraction and isolation of similarly-produced images? Could the appropriated images augment or deflate the iconic power of similarly, indigenously-charged cultural objects? Or might other comparisons make us more critical of Charlesworth's appropriation of the signage of art and imagery, especially when the comparisons are of objects and images made outside Modernism and the West?

Obviously until a more complete and summary exhibition and integration of Charlesworth's work materializes, the New Museum's impressively judicious if austere exhibition fills the void with ample provocation. It also supplies viewers with the first complete New York compilation of the 1980 series, Stills, the fourteen large-scale works Charlesworth rephotographed from press images depicting people falling or jumping off of buildings on loan from The Art Institute of Chicago. And as the curators remark, with 9/11 still in vivid memory, we look at the bodies caught in mid air and personally recontextualize the work with a recollective irony that Charlesworth couldn't have personally foreseen, yet which all great art unconsciously anticipates.



Stills, 1980, five of fourteen black and white enlargements by Sarah Charlesworth made from newspaper photos, installed in the exhibition,
Doubleworld at the New Museum in New York City, 2015. Collection of The Art Institute of Chicago.

What could be more existentially confrontational to our imaginative reaching for an exalting human continuity than a series of images that not only depict the forces of physics and nature at work in a person's violent demise, yet whose serial replication defies our expectation of such imagery to cheapen the tragedy portrayed by magnifying the tragedy for the viewer. Charlesworth in fact has methodically produced a typology of tragedy and death that can be quantified, however terrifyingly, as both repeatable at will and numerously enacted. Yet, because Charlesworth's prints are second-generation to journalistic sources, like the Death and Disasters silkscreen prints by Andy Warhol to which Charlesworth's Stills are heavily indebted, her versions represent rather than enact the journalistic function of recording an event. She has purposely selected photos of tragedy that free the journalist who shot them from Susan Sontag's indictment of the photographer for making a choice between saving the victim or photographing them. The falling bodies compel us to understand that the victim is beyond saving and the choice to photograph is the only moral dignity left for the photographer witness. In this Charlesworth has countered whatever moral disparagement accompanies the picture of a suicide with the moral rectitude of the photographer.

Three of the fourteen black and white enlargements by Sarah Charlesworth from the series, Stills, 1980, made from newspaper photos
and installed in the exhibition, Doubleworld, at the New Museum in New York City, 2015. Collection of The Art Institute of Chicago.

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Charlesworth's typology of imagery here also heightens the serial effect of contrasting the despairing solitude of the suicide with the unforeseen companionship of a group of jumpers in spirit. The group display of Stills acts as a solace of the spiritual company they had in death, what for us makes them comrades who chose to face Camus' "only one really serious philosophical problem" with what may have been their life's only courage. The jumpers of the World Trade Center terrorism taught us this, though of course they were not suicides. We can imagine that as a group the 9/11 jumpers likely reinforced one another to choose the more courageous action left them over the end that rendered them as abject victims -- thereby exemplifying the only real choice humankind has against the absurd indifference of the world.

Perhaps the largest significance of the frozen-but-plummeting subjects is what they imply about us as a culture riveted to such gratuitous displays of tragedy. I don't mean that we are reduced to gratuitous gawkers. In fact it is the opposite that occurs in that our compulsion for such imagery again renders us as a collective in the shared feeling of impotence in the presence of the tradic display. IFor this reason, in raising the cultural status of such documents in their re-contextualization from media imagery to art by Charlesworth and Warhol, the picturing of tragic death expands both the composition's power over the viewer and our justification for seeing in the tragic picture something about our own fascination with yet fear of calamity. But is this spiritual?

The ubiquitous 1980s team of curators, Collins and Mollazo, summed up a greater collective phenomenology at work in Charlesworth's work, when they included her, along with several artists with similar pictorial concerns, in their 1986 exhibition, Spiritual America, at Editions Irene Kurtz, New York -- a title that was only in part ironic for implying that the movement away from conventional spirituality by the 1980s generation was no more nor less than a movement that sought to renew spirituality by being brutally frank about the fallacy of any spirituality prescribed by a hierarchy or text rather than the derived from a life in concert with the animating force of natural selection and conservation. And in the case of Stills, that spirituality is circumscribed in the fleeting yet rarest of moments that a viewer not only recognizes to be the precise moment of a human death , but which preserves for the duration of its existence the memory and implications of that death -- and in the serial composite, their accumulation of deaths forming an unforeseen if unrepentant communal summation of either 1) the human spirit in the moment of its physical severance and conversion or 2) the cessation of the human spirit altogether.

Buddha of Immeasurable Light, 1987, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, diptych, by Sarah Charlesworth.
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA, Cleveland Museum of Art, OH, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY

We are here reminded that spirituality can be reconciled with both atheism and denial of an afterlife. But then from the standpoint of the photographic arts, the spiritual does not reside in an imagination of the afterlife, as it might in a more phenomenologically-fanciful artistic process such as painting, music, or literature. If there is a spirituality to be represented by the photograph it can only be the spirituality derived from an empirical evidence of life, which is the spirituality that should matter to the living more than any figment of an afterlife, given that the acts of the here and now are what compose that living spirit, and as only photography innately "embodies' them with, in the case of the suicides, a conscious will to desist. But the photographic evidence of the will to desist is a spiritual document despite that knowledge of the factuality of a subject's demise is final is forever denied the lens of documentation.

But before we consider Charlesworth's spirituality doubt, we must first recognize (1) that there is a materialist and/or a positivist bias among some critics and pedagogues (which may or may not be at work in the New Museum 's curation) to deny or neglect Charlesworth's consideration and weighing of spiritual systems and (2) Charlesworth's own wavering deferral and investigation of a definitive stance on spirituality in general and a spirituality of doubt in particular.

As to the materialist and positivist bias that would impose an unmerited closure on the subject of spirituality, we may point out that just as Charlesworth's deconstruction of the metaphors and metonyms of sexuality and gender require her to immerse herself in the field of the dominant ideology of the authorities legislating contemporary sexual attitudes, myths and conditions, the same immersion into that field is by necessity required for her to deconstruct the dominant and authorial metaphors and metonyms of spirituality. And though Charlesworth can be seen as ambivalent on the subject of spirituality, that ambivalence itself becomes for her a purposeful ambiguity that itself becomes, a kind of spirituality by default in her activist negation against authoritarian constraints.

Left: Lotus Bowl, 1986. Right: Goat, 1985. Two works, both Cibachrome, laminated prints with lacquered wood frames by Sarah Charlesworth.

In a sense, Charlesworth's art was a Personal Religion in which she had considerable Faith in Doubt, and where the Spirit resides in The SIgn. That may strike some as an obvious non sequiturs or self-negations, but in an age in which 'Truth' has in many enclaves become at best a relativity and at worst entirely suspect for the closure of thought it invariably imposes. And for an artist such as Sarah Charlesworth 'Personal Religion' and 'Faith in Doubt' were tangible indexes to an undercurrent zeitgeist ascending to the surface of mainstream discourse.

Charlesworth never uttered the word 'religion' in my presence. And she only reticently let the word 'spiritual' slip from her lips. But that reticence is what conferred those moments that she did sound the word with a measured power as it informed her logic, just as those decomposed-compositions she allowed 'the spiritual' to empty out, erase and then refill, recompose and recharge the obvious and cliched pictures enough to make us stop and allow them to gratify our attention despite that we recognize them to be second-, even third-hand references.

Many of us know that moment when a professional and scholastic personality known for their positivism. materialism, logic or hard science becomes quiet and allows a brevity of tone and wayward glance to delay things important and consequential while reflecting on the unknown sub-qauntums of experience that have no pragmatic, theoretical or economic value to be derived yet leave us feeling some vague gestalt of otherness. For some of us, that gestalt sense is the kind of moment that certain of Charlesworth's rephotographed, chromatically saturated and collages evocative for conveying try have survived severe purge of the trivial and trope to tell us something, perhaps inconsequential to our business yet essential to our lives.

Although Charlesworth gave me indication in our discussions that she was open to the idea of spirituality in the larger sense of it being integral with nature, I failed to record or put her remarks on record while she was alive. But Betsy Sussler, editor of BOMB, was more conscientious in 1988 when she recorded Charlesworth's acknowledgment of her own contradictory stance. When Sussler cites the ancient source of power informing Charlesworth's imagery, and which is in fact an authorial/authorizing identification of her position in the world, Charlesworth counters: "What I'm saying is frequently these loaded images or objects are used by me without my attaching a particular significance to them. In other words, what I'm doing is letting whatever power, whatever affect they have, work on its own."

Left: Mask, 1983. Right: Bird Woman, 1986. Both Cibachrome with lacquered wood frames by Sarah Charlesworth.

Yet within minutes Charlesworth seemingly contradicts herself, though really she is expressing the ambivalence and attraction to ambiguity that fills the space of an ideological deferral, an ambiguity that is especially attractive when concerning established spiritual systems that are a product of conditioning within a secular and democratic society marked by the mediation of ideological and cultural difference amid an imperative individualism. Sussler has implied that Charlesworth wouldn't feel such ambivalence were she to connect to the account of a feminism that had been historically empowering to ancient women ministering, say, an oracular and healing mysticism that though absent in the present has a parallel feminism being expanded by women's roles in the development of science. But Charlesworth's retort to Sussler is also an open acknowledgement of the structuralist tradition that puts such a diachronic paradigm as history well beneath the synchronic system to which Charlesworth subscribes to in her schematic depiction of an art informed by a theory of the sign systems at work in a culture. That Charlesworth began her career a structuralist who values systems at work in the present over accounts for a spiritually empowering feminism or matriarchy in the remote past indicates why she is self-consciously hesitant to cite her subjectivity as a mode of spirituality at work in her methodology despite that her methodology is an open interpretive process.

"I use images drawn from the culture because I'm interested in each piece being an interface between my personal subjectivity and a given world. A kind of langue and parole situation where I am speaking of the world through things of the world but via my own particular arrangement, construction of the world ... I'm confronting a given world and trying to discover its architecture, its formal and political nature. Whereas in more recent work, I'm constructing a consciousness within the world. In a piece like the Self-Portrait, I'm literally projecting a visual image or psychic image of myself into the world. ... I see myself as casting my world back into the given world. It's like a reformulation of language, a recreation of a new metaphor."

Yet the BOMB interview goes on to clarify not only Charlesworth's acknowledgment of her ambivalence toward spiritual systems and their signage, but also her admission of having an attraction to the power such potentially mystifying signage wields. Even the materialist and positivist must admit that what many regard to be spiritual about images and ideas is the power that they appear to wield both in the mind and in the world. In such a case the argument over whether or not we call power 'spiritual' may be more than semantic as the recognition that the idea of spirt and spirituality holds considerable sway over people's actions. Such sway requires recognition beyond the field of sociology so that those people's valuation of the spiritual is substantiated in their description of a deeply felt power within them despite it not being material or verifiable.

It becomes clear in the context of there being "an interface between my personal subjectivity and a given world" and in her project of "constructing a consciousness within the world" that Charlesworth didn't see an incongruence between the material and the spiritual constructions of the world. If they are different yet continuous it is because one is subjective to the individual and the other is objectively shared by the collective. In this Charlesworth perceived the world in a way akin to a physicist who differentiates between matter and energy while understanding that one can be converted into the other because a continuity exists between them despite their different properties. Life and death is one such conversion. Thought and action another. If spirit and material are different then they are likely continuous. The difference yet continuity of spirit and material in this way are akin to the difference yet continuity between languages or signs and the things in the world they refer to. Charlesworth enacts such a continuity of opposites in her art of signs and metaphors, but in doing so she is summing up the equation of all artists who craft an art of representation, for that matter all visual sign systems from mathematics to advertising, and all languages, visual and aural. It may seem too simplistic to be possible but the difference and similarity between spirit/mind/sign and material/object/signified are equal if not the same. And we see this play out in Charlesworth's work.

In this sense, all of Charlesworth's work is in some function a commentary on the spirituality that is empirically derived from a culture that is in alignment with nature. Yet Charlesworth implies in her conversations and art that she believed all culture must be revised to be made personal to each generation--a phrasing that I cannot but be reminded of Sontag's famous aphorism for and redefinition of spirituality, that "Every era has to reinvent the project of "spirituality" for itself. (Spirituality = plans, terminologies, ideas of deportment aimed at the resolution of painful structural contradictions inherent in the human situation, at the completion of human consciousness, at transcendence.)"

Snake Girl, 1985, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame by Sarah Charlesworth.

It is this necessary personalization of the resolution of structural conditions that impelled Charlesworth to chose not photography of the world as it appears to us as her medium and image resource, but rather the rephotographing and the redefining of prior and recognizable iconographies that became her springboard for an art about the inner, natural and structural workings of civilization knowable through the signage of its culture. In this narrowing of the field of her inquiry, Charlesworth implies that visual history and visual literacy is more self-reflexive and thereby more reliable as an index to human proclivities sexually and spiritually empowering than is writing.

Visual history, in Charlesworth's work, is to be the premiere source of education and enculturation. In this she inherits Derrida's deconstruction of the historically perpetuated 'logocentrism' of the text -- the innate belief that words convey the well-sounded truths. For unlike artists, writers often mistake their words to be recordings of some larger and distant historical past or truth rather than the marking or recording of thought-in-the-present that it is. Ny contrast, visual artists don't by and large presume to represent history because artists generally acknowledge their art to be records of no more than the subjective and phenomenological moment at hand. This is why Charlesworth devotes all her visual resources to locating and rephotographing prior images. For in recalling and appropriating prior images, Charlesworth acknowledges that the artists of bygone eras ironically made more reliable records of their present -- our history -- than the texts which presume to record histories not their own.

In the same way, Charlesworth taps into the spirituality of the image makers, often of image makers responsible for disseminating the iconography of spiritual systems that today dominate the cultures to which they are indigenous or adopted. Although spirituality and faith were not defining principles or ends to be attained in Charlesworth's visual and critical efforts, spirituality and faith-based systems count among the premiere metaphysical systems whose signage Charlesworth sought to deconstruct -- 'deconstruction' being the zeitgeist term we shared throughout the 1980s and 1990s, thanks to Derrida and his numerous advocates. Yet deconstruction remains vital for offering a shared predilection among the more relativistic artists and critics of a Liberal and Left ideological character, especially those concerned with ensuring that our inquiries into the bases of cultural activism and art are marked by the reflexive acknowledgment that whatever system of analysis is being edified in the process of deconstruction, we understand that edification will as well be deconstructed by some present or future antagonist, if not first by ourselves.

Here the authors of any system (as authorities of systems by virtue of their authoring) are reminded of their demise and replacement, something that numerous historical spiritualities failed to acknowledged. For all attempts to climb outside and understand the larger society, culture and language that we inhabit are but vain attempts to define a composition of humankind so much larger than we can contain, control and define. This is the fallacy of composition through which the composition of all that is human and natural is magnified to a scale that composes, controls and defines us, and therefore is a thing we can only approximate in part and by inference, and never in totality as some in science and religion futilely try, yet only fail to do. In the absence of absolute truth, the resultant crisis of faith in the modern world requires that the enlightened spiritualist accept that the only irrefutable thing about the spirit is that it is unverifiable. Therefore spiritual propositions can only be irrefutable when admitting they are unverifiable.

As this realization coursed through rational society in modern cosmopolitan centers, and certainly by the late 1970s, when Charlesworth began her deconstructions, secular society had successfully implemented the interaction of diverse peoples regardless of their conflicting faiths, however temporarily joined together for public and pragmatic exchanges of skills, material and information.

Left: Detail of Denial, 1989, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame, by Sarah Charlesworth. Center: The full framed view of Denial, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame, by Sarah Charlesworth. The two views clearly show the blackening or erasure of the limp figure of Christ after his death -- literally cut out and voided in a symbolic deconstruction of institutional Christianity. Right: Raphael, The Entombment, 1507, oil on panel, Borghese Gallery, Rome, the source painting for the reproduction used by Charlesworth in Denial by Sarah Charlesworth.

Interestingly, the work missing from the New Museum show--and that which may be most provocative--is that in which Charlesworth most explicitly reflects on the modern crisis facing faith based-systems. With Judaism, Islam, Buddhism and all other faiths being in minority status in the West, Christianity is naturally the domineering institution blocking liberal freedoms. Christianity thus by its own hegemonic tendencies invited deconstruction in Europe and America, and Charlesworth saw to it that her own deconstructions were wielded in one bold visual stroke--a kind of blackening of the temple lights or eclipse of a heavenly body--or the refutation of the authoritarianism of Christianity still extant. In this regard two works from Charlesworth's Renaissance Paintings series stand out for counting among Charleworth's most intent and potent deconstructions of the signage of the authoritarian religious ideology that historically dictated the valuation, codification, perpetuation and legislation of social relations at all levels of society.

Both works are comprised of a blackening or erasure of the central iconic figures of Christianity -- Christ and his mother Mary, both literally cut out and voided in a symbolic deconstruction of all inherited and institutionalized faith. While the defensive Christian might take offense, an understanding of Charlesworth's aim in detaching both images from their customary social contexts enables the more open observer to understand that the intent is not to defame or outrage but to invite analysis of the power both personages-as-signs wield in the centralizing and defining locus of power for the faithful. Yet it has been a signage historically attached to, if not responsible for imperial and hierarchical persecution and repression through its enforced ideological valuation, codification, and cultural perpetuation of Christian patriarchal moral and sexual imperatives. In a less emotionally charged context, the context in which Charlesworth works and the art cognoscenti observes, the artist clarifies the status of the Christ and Virgin Mother signage as object-metaphors and metonymies in the codification of ideological, sexual and political systems that inspired entire cosmologies, histories, legislations and governments.

Left: Detail of Assumption, 1991, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame, by Sarah Charlesworth. Center: The full framed view of Assumption, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame, by Sarah Charlesworth. The two views clearly show the blackening or erasure of the upright figure of Mary surrounded by angels in death and taken up to heaven. Mary is literally cut out and voided in a symbolic deconstruction of institutional Christianity. Right: The Master of the Saint Lucy Legend, Mary, Queen of Heaven, c. 1485-1500, oil on panel, painted surface, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC., the source painting for the reproduction used by Charlesworth in Assumption by Sarah Charlesworth.

Of course Charlesworth was never interested in censoring a faith. But she was interested in removing the Christian ideology from the legislation of the language and law of the democratic society she inhabited --again, turning off the temple lights within the secular space and discourse.Here is where Herbert Marcuse's impact on Charlesworth is most evident. In response to Freud's 1908 Theory of Sublimation, by which he sought to explain the psychological mechanism of transforming pleasurable-yet-socially-unacceptable impulses, obsessions and ideals into socially acceptable actions and behaviors, Marcuse countered Freud in naming Repressive Desublimation as the modern Capitalist social mechanism elaborated to counter religion's socialized Sublimation. Desublimation, according to Marcuse, is the means by which Capitalism facilitates the maximum capitalization (profits). Desublimation does this by valorizing the Pleasure Principle that sublimation counters, and thereby slackens the culture of morality or ethics through its arts and entertainments. If this historical realignment of psycho-sexual principles is important to an understanding of Charlesworth's work, it is because she knowingly slipped between these rival moral/pleasurable processes to depict them at work even as they were deconstructed by their own constructions--the signage of sublimation and desublimation at work in the valuation, codification, perpetuation and legislation of social relations at all levels of society.

For Charlesworth the next step is to effect a sublimation of the power which spirit/mind/sign harness in the material/object/signified to counter the repressive desublimation of modern civilization. And the domain she saw most requiring a renewed sublimation was politics, particularly sex and gender politics, and we see her work out new configurations of power relations among the signs and metaphors of sexuality and gender is such series as Academy of Secrets, Objects of Desire and Renaissance Painting. In these three series, Charlesworth demonstrates that the world's living languages are so thoroughly stratified with fossils of male dominance that even as patriarchies erode, textual, oral, and visual systems are generations away from being purged of mythic and metaphorical gender. It is this kind of essentialism at large in civilization that made Charlesworth revalue doubt and ambivalence as a source for an anti-essentialist culture in alignment with nature--the very definition of spirituality for the naturalist--to the extent that she accepted the subtle knowledge that nature imbues as a potent anti-essentialist antidote to the ancient notion of spirituality as an essence of human creation conferred by the divine.

In Academy of Secrets, which the New Museum show largely neglected, Charlesworth ferreted out the metaphors and metonyms deposited in language by past and present civilizations. We know well today that the history of relations between humans and objects was for millennia dominated by the male sexual imagination, one which predicated the world through language--literal and visual--projecting mythic gender onto inanimate objects and the metaphors and metonyms they inspired. men assumed hegemony over the naming of things and, thereby, of the engendering of metaphor. But as late as the 1980s, when Charlesworth was making Academy of Secrets, even intellectual and left-liberal social enclaves had still not assimilated the feminist revaluation and activism against patriarchal language.

In Temple of My Father, Charlesworth elucidated the signage that was consequential of this hegemony, as the structure of language and myth revealed the array of male-dominated conscious and unconscious male differentiation and integration of values that came to bear on all political, legal, religious, economic, and domestic codes. The patriarchal biases continue to infiltrate every level of human operation through language with some languages, such as the romance languages of Europe, assign nouns and their modifying adjective with gender. The world's living languages are so thoroughly stratified with fossils of male dominance that even as patriarchies erode, textual, oral, and visual systems are generations away from being purged of mythic gender.

Left: Temple of My Father, 1989, Cibachrome with laquered wood frame. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA;
High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA; Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver BC. Right: Of Myself, 1989, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA. Both by Sarah Charlesworth.

Charlesworth here refigured a series of protean and amorphous signs -- what she enjoyed calling "mental bodies" -- from textual, oral, and visual languages composing the oceanic medium of the unconscious. Once fashioned, Charlesworth then saturated these mental bodies in what we then delighted in calling multicultural, feminist, and anti-imperialist plenums. But before she could cast herself effectively in language, Charlesworth had to first "disembody" the languages she inherited and filter out all atrophied and despotic speech elements inhibiting personal growth. Only then could she edify a new model of the unconscious -- one freed from its former paternal circumscriptions. Charlesworth begins this process by first extracting and isolating the object-metaphors from the world's ideologies, myths, cosmologies, history, and arts. Once done, she suspends the object-metaphors in evocative, monochromatic fields which substitute for historic and personal contexts. The color fields encourage hermeneutic readings of the object-metaphors' general emotional values (the blue of tranquility, white of purity, black of domination, magenta of sensuality, yellow of celebration) while the groupings suggest common metaphoric significations (gender, status, morality, spirituality, power). Once the viewer becomes cogent of the false historic and mythic tropes (patriarchal, ethnocentric, religiocentric) targeted by Charlesworth's visual classifications, the deconstruction begins automatically (even if latently) in the mind of the viewer.

A feminist theorist such as Alice Jardine would have maintained such a process to be within the activism of what she and other 20th-century feminists called 'gynesis', the process by which the `feminine' signifies, not woman herself, but those `spaces' which can be said to conceptualize the master narrative's own `non-knowledge', that area over which the narrative has lost control. This is the unknown, the terrifying, the monstrous -- everything which is not held in place by concepts such as 'Man', 'Truth', 'Meaning'. But even before Judith Butler presented her formidable anti-essentialist critique of feminism in the early 1990s, Charlesworth sought to dismantle all stereotypical gender, political, and ethnic myths that assigned culturally sanctioned "masculinity" to one general set of metaphors and those assigning "femininity" to another. Thus, instead of interpreting Temple of My Father as designating "masculine" metaphors in general, Charlesworth acknowledges how each object-metaphor can be deciphered according to an individual's personal code for masculinity, particularly as that code reflects one's inheritance from the father. Although Temple of My Father does indeed yield a classical reading of patriarchal metaphors, their identification and suspension are only the first steps in exorcising patriarchal influence and the onerous myths it spawns.

Of course Charlesworth doesn't leave the "phallic" temple uncontested; it is, rather, shrouded in a problematic, doubtful, and sinister uncertainty -- with the law and the temple of the father not representing absolute authority, but an order viewed as disturbing and disturbed. In place of the patriarchal, Charlesworth establishes a person-centered ontology and morality of subject-object relations - a method designed to slowly eliminate the atrophied and dysfunctional values through an inventory of cultural inheritance - which replaces the absolute orders with the specific centers of our own experience. To do this, Charlesworth employs a shifting, multi-functional and experimental technique in which de-centered political and metaphysical maneuvers presume a world in which no one conceptual system can account for the full range of human experience. Once false gender myths are deconstructed and thereby eliminated, any suitable metaphor is made available for the specific requirements of the subject and the context at hand, regardless of the subject's sex. Metaphors such as the column, the snake, and the sword are thus made as readily available to women as to men, an acknowledgement that their phallic resemblance and organization of space is not the object's only significant attribute; after all, women can support like the column, shed personas as the snake sheds its skin, and be as precise as the finely sharpened blade of the sword.

Bowl and Column,, 1986, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, 2 panels by Sarah Charlesworth, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY.

Likewise, the vessel, the fruit, and the egg can be applied to men, for these objects do more than contain space or resemble the vulva and the ovaries. Men can contain space in orifices or with an embrace, nurture like the fruit, and be as emotionally and physically fragile as eggs. The concept of gender is evoked by Charlesworth only when an object resembles a specific subject's sex, or is the same as some other quality of that subject, and even then the signification of gender is only secondary to the signification of the quality shared or compared. The metaphor, therefore, remains genderless in its universal sense even though it has been associated with gender in a specific application.

This is exemplified best in Self-Portrait, an image of a round, iron cauldron surrounded by an eye, an ear, a hand, a foot and a breast carved from stone. When Charlesworth conceived the work, she was pregnant and knew intuitively how to cast herself in the iconography of somatic and psychic pregnancy. Although Charlesworth selects the round volume of the cauldron to impart the parturient condition, she does not associate the cauldron itself with a universal signification of pregnancy, as this would proscribe its use to men. Charlesworth simply equates the cauldron with roundness, and it is this roundness, in turn, that is associated with pregnancy. In both Self-Portrait and Of Myself, Charlesworth employs images of vessels - traditional object-analogies for femininity -- to convey a message of empathy with that object. Charlesworth considers it vitally important to take a symbol traditionally representing devalued femininity and turn its interpretation around to depict the symbol's strengths and utilities. In this way, Charlesworth suggests that women need not fear the employment of traditional metaphors in their art if those metaphors have propinquity to their lives.

On the other hand, should a man express affinity with the vessel as metaphor, it is as accessible to him as to any woman. By contrast, in the patriarchies of the past, though men were the privileged share holders and legislators in language, they were nonetheless, in a more limited sense than women, prisoners of the same aesthetic and moral codes established by their forbears. The total deconstruction of inherited gender prescription/proscription is Charlesworth's aim. But Charlesworth insists that she not impose her gender deconstruction on others, as this is each individual's personal, spiritual task. This is what can be called Charlesworth's Personal Religion.

Left: Self Portrait. Right: Animation, 1989. Two works, both Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame by Sarah Charlesworth.

In this respect, Academy of Secrets emphasizes the viability of exchange between the personal-spiritual and the cultural-historic representation. In doing so, Charlesworth effects a new visual paradigm for assigning metaphors to a subject - one based on the linguistic and semiotic manifold of language and speech (la langue et la parole). In this paradigm, language is regarded as a social institution comprised of a system of values. But it cannot exist without its flip side, that practice known as speech, defined as the individual selection and use of language. Academy of Secrets thoroughly embodies this dialectic in its visual models, in which personal contents (an individual selection and use of speech) are conscientiously selected and projected onto fields of collectively predicated object-metaphors (a cultural institution and system of values generated by language). This superimposition effects a model in which a metaphor assigned to a specific object pertains to that object alone and presumes no set pattern of relationship to other objects of the same type. This is a remarkable break from the conventional practice of habitually assigning an historically sanctioned metaphor to an object or, conversely, of projecting a new metaphor onto an object and then falsely elevating that metaphor-object relationship as a universal model.

Two examples of world-pervasive systems blocking the free distribution of metaphors and treated by Charlesworth may clarify the need for a revised, epicene vocabulary. Both propagate myths of gender that -- in their classic forms -- are overly general and historically empowered by false bias and systematic repression. One of these systems originated in ancient India and influenced all subsequent religious and philosophical thought developing in the subcontinent. It is the philosophy of Tantra, the cult seeking enlightenment through ecstasy. The other system is modern, European in origin, and laid the foundation for most contemporary Western thought. It is the practice and theory of psychoanalysis, which, ironically, has become a kind of therapeutic pursuit of ecstasy through enlightenment. The two systems have more in common than one might presume, and both are significantly recalled by Charlesworth in Academy of Secrets.

Sex generates and activates the chief metaphors of Tantra. It's primal drive is modeled as the unremitting creation of nature, the perpetual parturition of life by the yoni (vulva), the "female" principle, resulting from an equally perpetual infusion of the seed by the lingam (phallus), the "male" principle, in a union of sexual delight. The sexes, in Tantra, are not seen as merely different, but opposite, and are thought to be ever striving for a unity attainable only through copulation. Here is one of the central myths of Tantra, and perhaps the one most destructive, for an understanding between the sexes is encouraged only through erotic encounters. Furthermore, gender is upheld as the incarnation of the world's polarity, thought to be transmitted through all things. All objects are, therefore, similarly thought to possess either male or female essence. This philosophy alone induced waves of repression and male dominance in Indian culture for untold millennia.

Left: Animation, 1989. Right: Subtle Body, 1989. Two works, both Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame by Sarah Charlesworth.

If the premiere Tantric model - the coitus of the world - and all its gender metaphors were ever dismantled, Tantra's remaining spiritual and moral teachings - particularly those of Kundalini Yoga - would still afford profound beauty and inner peace. And as Tantra regards asceticism to be absurd and encourages the arousal and amplification of the senses to their highest pitch, it provides spiritually inclined individuals, even today, with an alternative to more prohibitive religions of the world. As there are benign aspects to Tantra that may be appealing and even liberating to the contemporary spiritualist, Charlesworth explores what Tantra might offer once its negative metaphors are diffused. This helps to explain why Chalersworth relayed in her BOMB interview that, "In Subtle Body, I borrowed from Tantric meditation, the progression of ascendent symbols along the body center, equaling seven centers in the body. Then I turned around and replaced them with symbols that are personally significant to me, that reflect my understanding of a physical, psychic elevation."

Charlesworth refers to Tantra's schemes in Subtle Body, with a vertical organization of seven objects delineated against a pure white field. "That's what the secrets in the title refers to," Charlesworth continued. "The secrets of higher, esoteric knowledge that are hidden beneath the common level of organized religion and mass culture. I'm talking about very esoteric knowledge which could come from any society or historical period in regard to alchemy. I view each art work, in a sense, as the alchemist might understand the transformation of matter, into something animate with psychic essence. Making an art work involves the transformation of matter, paper and materials into a process of animation or psychic elevation of material stuff."

From here Charlesworth proceeds to a direct reference to one of the most esoteric spiritualisms conceptualized and practiced: the signage of the subtle body, which refers to the "psychosomatic" or "spiritual" alignment of energy. The description is reminiscent of Kandinsky and Malevich who both claimed their pursuit of form as a spiritual catalyst that began with their introduction to modernized versions of the introspective wisdom described in the metaphysics of The Vedas of India.

Garden of Delight, 1988, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, diptych, by Sarah Charlesworth, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England.

"Animation, like Subtle Body, suggests a human body through the placement of different elements, in this case eight rather than seven because I give you two choices of brains--the right and left. Ascending from the most base matter, the clay pot at the bottom and then the fish, the sperm, the heart, the river. The two brains are the Indian magic wand in the shape of the crane and the clock, the logical, right brain. And then scarf at the top for the opening and the psyche. In a sense, the matter becomes more ethereal as you move up the swirling column. You're confronted with a pure abstraction and you realize on a certain level where the symbolism begins and ends. A great deal of it's brought to the piece by the viewer."

The techniques Charlesworth describes to reconfigure a metaphysic like Tantra for a disengendering of essentialist language and signage are the same as those that can be used in the disengendering of psychoanalysis. Yet in psychoanalysis the disengendering of embedded metaphors is more complex. Whether validly invoked or not, the engendered myths applied in psychoanalytic theory have a more powerful hold over the convictions of current generations in the West than does a five thousand-year-old Indian ecstasy cult. But the Western sexual biases incorporated within psychoanalytic theory originate in systems of Mediterranean knowledge nearly as antiquated, and which recent investigations have suggested also derive at least in part from continued contact between Mediterranean civilization and the civilization of the Indus Valley.

But as Charlesworth never inhabits one fixed conceptual or spiritual model for very long, in Animation, Charlesworth switches methodological gears to confront the gender metaphors of psychoanalytic theory. While Subtle Body, and Animation both depict an aquatic body that courts sexual interpretation by combining traditional male and female signifiers, they simultaneously deny closure and ultimately provides an epicene subjectivity. In such an analogy, the fallacies that undermine knowledge are shown by Charlesworth to stem from an over-reliance on inherited speech. For the personal speech of our forebears is embedded throughout our shared language. It is this speech that Charlesworth intended us to examine, for it has been formed by political, moral, spiritual, and economic interests that have not only become insolvent with the erosions of time but are in large part offensive to the greater population of the world. Charlesworth therefore demonstrates that it is only through the seizure of speech itself that we establish the ascendancy of the open metaphor and assert our autonomy over both the mind and the spirit.

Half Bowl, 2012, Fuji Crystal Archive Print, mounted and laminated with lacquer frame by Sarah Charlesworth.

Parts of this article were conceptualized for the articles, "The New Metaphysical Art,' that appeared in the July-October, 1990 publication of the Italian art journal, Tema Celeste; "What's In A Word: The Deconstructions of Sarah Charlesworth", that appeared in the October 1990 publication of the Italian art journal, Contemporanea and reprinted as the cover feature for the Japanese art journal, Bijutsu Techo, in April 1991. Other sections were conceptualized for the Huffington Post article, "Gender As Performance & Script: Reading the Art of Yvonne Rainer, Cindy Sherman, Sarah Charlesworth & Lorna Simpson After Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick & Judith Butler" (Part 2 of "XX Chromosocial: Women Cross the Homosocial Divide"). Charlesworth's work is also included in relationship to The Pictures Artists in the Huffington Post article, "PostPictures: A New Generation of Pictorial Structuralists is Introduced by New York's bitforms gallery."

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