后现代及其后? | Postmoderns and After?

后现代及其后? | Postmoderns and After?

后现代及其后?——

暨《后现代状况》出版四十周年

学术研讨会

时间:

2019年 11月9日-10日(周六、日)

地点:

中国美术学院南苑会议室

(浙江省杭州市上城区南山路218号)

主办:

中国美术学院

中国美术学院视觉中国协同创新中心

中国美术学院文化创新与视觉传播研究院

中国美术学院跨媒体艺术学院

器道哲学与技术研究网络

学术支持:

高士明教授,余旭红教授,管怀宾教授

会议召集:

许煜

会议统筹:

周净

会务组:

方紫昕,蒋斐然,冯均桥,黄利红,焕尼克

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本次研讨会以让-弗朗索瓦•利奥塔的著作《后现代状况:一份关于知识的报告》出版四十周年为契机,重新审视后现代的概念及其留给今天的遗产。1979年至今,《后现代状况》和利奥塔的其他作品仍然是我们这个时代的预言:人工智能,机器学习和技术奇点统辖了这个时代的主导话语,面对如此局面,利奥塔对知识生产和社会组织所作的新技术转换的判断不仅依然有效,而且承担越发重要的关键性评估作用。

利奥塔著作《后现代状况:一份关于知识的报告》

从历史上看,如果后现代主义被认为是与欧洲现代性的一次决裂,是对我们批判性理解社会转型的一次邀约,那么这种话语在很大程度上仍然是基于一种欧洲的立场的。欧洲以外的现代化意味着什么?如果像一些欧洲知识分子所声称的那样,非欧洲国家,比如中国,只有现代化而没有现代性,那么在利奥塔的话语中,后现代对于那些没有现代性的文化意味着什么?后现代主义在非欧洲文化中的广泛接受,难道是他们自身知识反思的盲点?从时间轴上来看,这一广泛接受表明的是从前现代-现代-后现代这一过程的进步,还是一种必须被质疑的虚构?鉴于我们今天所拥有的技术性融合,世界历史的问题可以用什么方式重新进行表述呢?除了技术发展的同步之外,还有可能对技术的未来有不同的阐述吗?

在这个重新开放的过程中,无论是后现代主义还是后现代主义之后,艺术的贡献是什么?这也是利奥塔不断在提出的问题。他在1985年于蓬皮杜艺术中心所做题为“非物质”的展览中,以及他在1988年出版的书籍《非人》中,都试图揭露数字技术的潜在变革力量及其局限性,与此同时他还反复诘问艺术的作用。如今“非物质”仍然是20世纪最重要的展览之一。同时令人吃惊的是,他竟想从13世纪日本和尚道元希玄禅师那里寻找启发。那么,我们该如何评价利奥塔自1979年以来的这些反思和努力?这次研讨会希望聚集一直致力于利奥塔研究的学者们一起对这些问题进行批判性的反思,而且超越利奥塔和他所处的时代。

利奥塔
由利奥塔策展,
1985年在巴黎蓬皮杜艺术中心举办的“非物质”展览
《”非物质“展览后的三十年:艺术、科学和理论》
由许煜、安德里亚·布罗克曼主编

会议议程

高士明(中国美术学院副院长)

“后现代及其后”研讨会学术支持
许煜
“后现代及其后”研讨会召集人
贝尔纳•斯蒂格勒
萨拉•威尔森
菲利普•帕雷诺
李洋
艾什利•伍德沃德
东浩纪

Postmoderns and After?

40 years after 

The Postmodern Condition

Date:

November 9th and 10th, 2019

Venue:

Nanyuan Conference Room, 

China Academy of Art

(Nanshan Campus)

(No. 218 Nanshan Road, Shangcheng District, Hangzhou, 310002)

Organizers:

China Academy of Art

The Institute for Collaborative Innovation in Chinese Visual Studies, CAA

The Institute of Cultural Innovation and Visual Communication, CAA

School of Intermedia Art, CAA

Research Network for Philosophy and Technology

Academic Support: 

Prof.Gao Shiming, Prof. Yu Xuhong 

and Prof. Guan Huaibin

Convener:

Yuk Hui

Co-Ordinator/Contact:

Zhou Jing

Committee:

Fang Zixin, Jiang Feiran, Huang Lihong, 

Feng Junqiao, Juaniko Moreno

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This conference takes the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the publication of Jean-François Lyotard’s The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge appeared in 1979, to readdress the concept of the postmodern and its legacytoday. The Postmodern conditionand Lyotard’s other writings after 1979 remain a prophecy of our epoch: the judgment that Lyotard made on the transformation of the production of knowledge and the social organization by the new technology is not only valid but also bears increasing importance for a critical reassessment of an epoch dominated by discourses on AI, Machine Learning, and technological singularity.

The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge
by Jean-François Lyotard’s 

Historically speaking, if the postmodern is considered a rupture from the European modernity and an invitation to critically understand the transformation of our society, this discourse remains very much a European one. Because what does it mean by modernity outside of Europe? If it is true, as claimed by some European intellectuals, that non-European countries, for example China, only have modernization but not modernity, then what does postmodern mean to cultures that didn’t have that kind of modernity which was target of Lyotard’s discourse? Or the embracement of the postmodern in non-European cultures ingeneral remains nothing but a blind spot of their own intellectual reflections?  Or the axis of time, which indicates a progress from premodern—modern—postmodern is nothing but a fabrication that has to be put into question? And if so, in what way can the question of world history be rearticulated in view of the technologicalconvergence that we have today? Is it still possible to articulate different technological futures beyond this synchronization?

What would be the contribution of art in this process of re-opening, both the postmodern and after? This is a question that concerns the later Lyotard. In his 1985 Exhibition at the Centre Georges Pompidou titled Les Immatériaux, and his 1988 publication The Inhuman, Lyotard attempted to expose the potential transformative power of digital technology and its limit, by appealing to art and, and somewhat astonishingly, the teaching of the 13th century Japanese monk Dōgen Kigen. Les Immatériaux remains one of the most significant exhibitions in the 20th century. How can we evaluate these reflections and efforts of the late Lyotard since 1979? This symposium would like to gather scholars who have been working on Lyotard to critically reflect together on these questions, but also beyond Lyotard and his time.

Jean-François Lyotard
The Exhibition at the Centre Georges Pompidou titled Les Immatériaux in 1985 
curated by Jean-François Lyotard
30 Years After Les Immatériaux: 
Art, Science and Theory

Edited by Yuk Hui and Andreas Broeckmann

Agenda

Gao Shiming 
(The Vice-president of China Academy of Art)

Academic Support and Speaker for Opening Speech

Gao Shiming is currently the vice president of China Academy of Art. As a scholar, he is professor of contemporary art theory, social thought and curatorial studies. He is also curator of many exhibitions and intellectual projects which including Farewell to Post-colonialism: the Third Guangzhou Triennial, 2008; Rehearsal: the 8th Shanghai Biennale, 2010;West Heavens: Dialogues between Indian and Chinese Social Thoughts, 2010-2011; and Worldin Transition, Imagination in Flux: Asian Circle of Thought Shanghai Summit, 2012; West Bund 2013: A Biennale of Architecture and Contemporary ArtInter-Asia Biennial Forum (Taipei, Shanghai, Kochi), 2014; Renjian Thoughts Forum: Reports of Asian Social Thought Movements, 2014; Forums in Motion: BANDUNG/Third World 60 Years (Hangzhou, Kochi, Beijing, Tokyo, HongKong, Bandung), 2015, etc.

He published many books and catalogs include Visual Thinking: Intangible Dialogue between Art and Phenomenology, 2002; A Visual Report: Migration of Contemporary Art and Geo-politics in Asia, 2003; Farewell to Post-colonialism, 2009; Rehearsal, and Ho Chi Minh Trail, 2010; All things Lethal Remain Unutterable, 2011; Book in Action: On Curatorial Writing, 2012; Post/Colonial Condition of Knowledge: A Contemporary Asian Thought Reader, 2012; West Heavens: India China Summit on Social Thought, 2014; Three Parallel Artworlds: 100 Art Things from Chinese Modern History, 2015.

Opening Speech

Yuk Hui
The Initiator of “Postmoderns and After?” symposium

Yuk Hui currently teaches at the Bauhaus University in Weimar, Germany. Between 2012 to 2018, he taught philosophy at the Leuphana University Lüneburg; he is also researcher at the Centre international des études Simondonienne in Paris, visiting professor at the China Academy of Art, and was visiting associate professor at the School of Creative Media at the City University of Hong Kong and visiting faculty at the Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design in Moscow. Between 2013-2015 he carried out a research project on Lyotard’s 1985 exhibition Les Immatériaux and co-edited an anthology 30 Years after Les Immatériaux: Art, Science and Theory (2015), and author of On the Existence of Digital Objects (prefaced by Bernard Stiegler, University of Minnesota Press, March 2016), The Question Concerning Technology in China. An Essay in Cosmotechnics (Urbanomic, December 2016), Recursivity and Contingency (prefaced by Howard Caygill, Rowman and Littlefield International, March 2019).

Opening Speech:

Postmoderns and After?

Speech Title:

Exhibiting and Sensibilizing: Recontextualizing “Les Immatériaux” 

From The Postmodern Condition (1979) to Inhuman (1988), Lyotard described the technological transformation of our society towards the end of the 20th century, and ceaselessly articulated a new sensibility already in formation but yet to be awaken. This sensibility is what we may call the postmodern epistemein the sense of Michel Foucault’s use of the term, though Lyotard didn’t employ the same term. In 1985, in the form of an exhibition titled Les Immatériaux, Lyotard with his team construct a scene in which this postmodern episteme is elaborated through various scenarios, industrial objects and art works. The reason for which Lyotard preferred calling it a manifestation instead of exhibition, is because the center of discourse and the object of the show is sensibility. However, how can sensibility be an object of exhibition? It is in this exhibition, I propose, that Lyotard returned to the fundamental question and the task of art in the technological age, which remains an important inspiration and will demand our recontextualization in light of our current technological condition.

Bernard Stiegler

Bernard Stiegler (1952) is a French philosopher, visiting professor of the China Academy of Art. He is president of the Institut de recherche et d’innovation(IRI), which he founded in 2006 at the Centre Georges-Pompidou. He is also a professor at the University of Technology of Compiègne where he teaches philosophy. Before taking up the post at the Pompidou Center, he was program director at the International College of Philosophy, Deputy Director General of the Institut National de l’Audiovisuel, then Director General at the Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique (IRCAM, 2002-2005).

Professor Stiegler has published numerous books and articles on philosophy, technology, digitization, capitalism, consumer culture, etc. Among his writings, his three volumes of La technique et le temps (in English as Technics and Time), two volumes of De la misère symbolique, three volumes of Mécréance et discrédit and two volumes Constituer l’Europe are particularly well known. Professor Stiegler has a long-term engagement with the relation between technology and philosophy, not only in a theoretical sense, but also situating them in industry and society aspractices. He is one of the founders of the political group Ars Industrialisbased in Paris, which calls for an industrial politics of spirit, by exploring the possibilities of the technology of spirit, to bring forth a new “life of the mind”. He published extensively on the problem of individuation inconsumer capitalism, and he is working on the new possibility of an economy of contribution.

He led several research programmes in the domain of digital technologies applied to text, image, and sound, and he conceived and organized the Mémoires du Futur exhibition, presented at the Centre Pompidou in 1987.

Speech Title:

From the “postmodern fable” to the fabulous Negantropocene Era — 

Reading Lyotard in the 21st Century

To take care of the anthropy, neguanthropy and anti-anthropie with Lyotard and beyond (it is also to say: beyond the West, its perimeter and its temporality): such will be the object of my communication, which will propose – after having clarified the main concepts of what I call a neguanthropology – a reading of this fable coming from Postmodern Moralities in the context that the Anthropocene era constitutes for us, and of which Lyotard does not envisage the limits.

We will of course also draw on the sources of The Postmodern Conditionand the Inhuman. We maintain that the stake of the fable is undoubtedly less to know what the humanity will be when confronting the death of the Sun, like what Lyotard has reminded us in the fable, than to ask: in the light of a such fable, and of what is called the fabularity—such as the “fabulative function” that Bergson confronted with in The two sources of morality and religion and the Fable of Francis Ponge to Derrida—what can noesis become (de-venir), or what can come (ad-venir) from it?

Sarah Wilson

Sarah Wilson is Professor of the History of Modern and Contemporary art at the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London.  At the Courtauld she teaches an MA course, ‘Global Conceptualism’ generated in 2011 with Professor Boris Groys, She has published The Visual World of French Theory: Figurations 2010 (French 2018), spurredby work on the Lyotard-Jacques Monory encounter, and Picasso/Marx and Socialist realism in France, 2013. She is working on Photography, Body, Material, Concept: The Visual World of French Theory, vol. 2, again involving the texts of Jean-François Lyotard on Daniel Buren and Ruth Francken. She was principal curator of Paris, Capital of the Arts, 1900-1968  (Royal Academy London, Guggenheim Bilbao, 2002-3) and Pierre Klossowski, Whitechapel Art Gallery, 2006, touring to Cologne and Paris. A close relationship with the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, has extended throughout her career.  Sarah Wilson was appointed Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres awarded by the French government for services to French culture in 1997. In 2015 she was a curator of the Ist Asian Biennale / 5th Guangzhou Triennale at the Guangdong Museum of Art and was awarded the AICA (International Association of Art Critics) prize for her distinguished contribution to art criticism.

Sarah Wilson’s former students hold prestigious posts in many museums and galleries worldwide; they teach at the universities of Cambridge, Bristol, Liverpool, Amsterdam among others; she taught Jeremy Deller who represented Great Britain at the Venice Biennale, 2013 and is proud of the Courtauld’s worldwide network. More is available on her personal website www.sarah-wilson.net including the full range of published work and research supervision.

Speech Title:

Philosophy as vanitas: Lyotard’s exploded Sublime

This paper investigates two artists and their paintings within the 1970s French context of Jean-François Lyotard’s Postmodern Condition: Gérard Fromanger’s history painting of a microprocessor ironically titled And you my love, my heart, my life, 1978, and Jacques Monory’s later paintings of stars, nebulae and galaxies following his trip with Lyotard to Silicon Valley, California. These ‘artwork-events’ were screened out by Lyotard’s better-known text around Barnett Newman in ‘The Sublime and the Avant-garde’ (Artforum, New York, 1984).

René Descartes’ disembodied cogito, (‘I think, therefore I am’, 1637), preceded Blaise Pascal’s indictment of painting perceived as an imitative ‘vanity’ (1670). The French Enlightenment ratified self-assurance of the philosophising, male Cartesian subject. This was irrevocably decentered, however, by the post-1945 communications explosion and circulation of images across different culture, ideologies, time zones and space itself. Marshal McCluhan described the new TV-connected ‘global village’; Fromanger documented the simultaneous existence of a French poet within the palatial kitsch of a Versailles party, and a Chinese peasant painter at work. Both time zones and star maps figure in the presentation of his microprocessor painting in 1980.

Lyotard experienced a double decentering: notonly space and time zones within the ‘otherness’ of Cold War America, but painting’s potential to explode philosophy’s logocentrism. He was fascinated by Monory’s star paintings which continued the vanitas tradition: a reflection not upon representation (Pascal) but upon human mortality. Based on computer-generated star maps, they rendered the Kantian sublime obsolete: a philosophical concept itself exploded in the context of time-space explorationand binary number-based computer codes. That huge Californian satellite dishesand military technologies could generate personal writing and thinking tools (the personal computer), that ‘star banks’ could become personal image banks, that metanarratives themselves could dissolve in the ‘behind-the-screendigital’, were lived and thought experiences for Lyotard, as he imagined the giant spectacle-compendiumof Les Immatériaux, 1985. Despite the revered philosophical genealogies which thread his text, ‘The Sublime and the Avant-garde’, Kant becomes a deadstar, displaced in his last works by Galileo and Saint Augustine. As art becomes ‘Art after Philosophy’ (Joseph Kosuth’s proposition), as the boundaries between art and the new reproductive technologies start to blur, as Lyotard himself experiments with film and art films, philosophy as a discipline in itself becomes, I argue, a vanitas.

Philippe Parreno

Philippe Parreno is a contemporary French artist whose multidisciplinary practice includes collaborations with Pierre Huyghe, Liam Gillick, and Rirkrit Tiravanija. As part of his practice, Parreno examines how systems of representation as well as memories produce meaning. The artist’s incomplete film script L’Histoire d’unsentiment (1996), is gesture that calls attention to the narrative of producing through imagining a fictional creative project which will never be made. “What I would say is that without people like Daniel Buren or Larry Weiner I would have been really ashamed to proclaim myself a Conceptual artist,” he explained.

Born in 1964 in Oran, Algeria, he grew up in Grenoble, France, attending the city’s École des Beaux-Arts before moving to Paris to study at the Institut des Hautes Études en Arts Plastiques at the Palais de Tokyo. First rising to prominence in the 1990s, his early works include video-conference lectures which incorporate footage from popular television shows and movies. In the years that followed, the artist has produced both visual works and written texts analyzing a number of topics. He continues to live and work in Paris, France. Today, Parreno’s work are held in the collections of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Tate Modern in London, and the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, among others.

Speech Title:

A Sequel to Les Immatériaux?

Les Immatériaux is one of the first exhibitions to imagine our digital future avant la lettre. The exhibition’s title may be translated as “The Immaterials” or “The Non-Materials.” For Lyotard it not only reflects a shift in the materials we use, but also in the very meaning of the term “material.” For the exhibition design, Lyotard conceived an open, labyrinthine parcours with one entrance and one exit but multiple possible pathways through the space. Walls were not solid structures but rather gray webs that stretched from floor to ceiling. Visitors wore headphones and listened to radio transmissions that faded in and out as they moved through the exhibition.

As Lyotard explained in the exhibition catalogue: “We wanted to awaken a sensibility, certainly not to indoctrinate minds. The exhibition is a postmodern dramaturgy. No heroes, no myths. A labyrinth of situations organized by questions: our sites. The visitor, in his solitude, is summoned to choose his way at the crossings of the webs that hold him and voices that call him. If we had answers, a ‘doctrine,’ why all this trouble? We would have raised our creed.”   

What could we invent as a sequel to this

Li Yang

Li Yang is the vice-dean of the School of Arts of the Peking University, professor, doctoral supervisor as well as film producer. His main research interest is history of European film, film theory and western contemporary art theory. He graduated from the Université de Lille III with a doctorate in film studies. He is the senior visiting scholar of the ERASMUS program of the European Community of Colleges. He has hosted and participated in 7 projects supported by the national social science fund and has published more than 40 academic papers in journals such as WenYi YanJiu,Theoretical Studies in Literature and ArtFilm Art and etc. He has published numerous books including Les gestes du western de Sergio Leone: pour une introductionà l’analyse gestuelle des filmsThe Ethics of ViewCinephilia:The History of Culture, etc. He is the chief editor of “Cinephilia Series”collection and has translated Cinema (written by Alain Badiou), Conversations avec Sergio Leone and Abbas Kiarostami: Cahiers du Cinema Livres into Chinese.

Speech Title:

Lyotard and the Genealogy of Cinema-alien

Jean-François Lyotard put forward the theory of “acinema” and its two possibilities based on “Libidinal Economy”. There are two forms of film movement as anti-libido devices which namely experimental film and underground film individually represent extremestatic and extreme movement. That provides theoretical narrative for genealogy of experimental film in French contemporary philosophy in earliest time. He developed the discussion of “Anti-cinema” in his late film paper which provided research method for the form of Genealogy of “Cinema-alien”.

Ashley Woodward

Dr Ashley Woodward is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Dundee, Scotland. He was born in Australia, where he obtained a PhD and taught in philosophy and creative arts programmes at a number of universities. He is a founding member of the Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy and an editor of Parrhesia: A Journal of Critical Philosophy. His research interests revolve around existential meaning, philosophy of art, and philosophy of information. Much of his work has focused on and been inspired by Friedrich Nietzsche and Jean-François Lyotard. His published books include Nihilism in Postmodernity: Lyotard, Baudrillard, Vattimo (Davies Group 2009), Lyotard and the Inhuman Condition: Reflections on NihilismInformation, and Art (Edinburgh UP 2016), and, with Graham Jones, the edited book Acinemas: Lyotard’s Philosophy of Film (Edinburgh UP 2017). His book Lyotard’s Philosophy of Art is forthcoming.

Speech Title:

System Failure (?)

In considering the legacy of The Postmodern Condition 40 years after its publication, it is prudent to begin with Lyotard’s own later reflections. He took the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe in 1989 as confirmation of his famous earlier thesis of widespread ‘incredulity toward metanarratives.’ For him, this signaled the end of what he called ‘tragic politics’ – a struggle on the world stage in which the stake was which system would govern human life. For him, Marxism was now confirmed as a defunct metanarrative, and the system which had won out was liberal democratic capitalism, governed by a technological-economic principle of ‘performativity.’ Lyotard’s pessimistic view until his death in 1998 was that there was now no alternative to this system, and politics was reduced to its fine-tuning on the one hand, and resistance to it in the form of individual acts such as ‘writing,’ on the other. Lyotard’s later view of ‘the postmodern condition,’ then, was that of a hegemonic global system which was stable and self-regulating, having defeated all competitors and proven itself the most efficient.

Lyotard did not believe that a ‘political science’ was possible, and his views were based in a methodology derived from a reading of Kant, in which judgements may be made on the basis of feelings attached to significant historical events. The events which led to his diagnosis of ‘the postmodern condition’ were ones which he took to replace enthusiasm about progress with disappointment and melancholy (above all, the Shoah). Considering Lyotard’s thesis in the light of his own methodology, I argue that it is no longer possible to view the world in the way that he did in the nineteen-eighties and -nineties. While for Lyotard the direst prospect was the hegemony of a hyper-rationalized, stable system, threatened only by the death of the sun in 5 billion years, only a few decades later it is no longer possible to view the world this way. A number of key historical events point to massive fault-lines that have appeared in this system, such as September 11, 2001, the global economic crisis of 2007-8, or the election of Trump and the Brexit vote in 2016. Harder to date but more dire is the growing awareness of impending environmental catastrophe. The result, I argue, is that it is no longer plausible to see the world as a well-regulated, highly performative system, but rather, it appears to be one which is facing various forms of ‘system failure.’ At the same time, much of what Lyotard wrote in The Postmodern Condition has only been confirmed: the idea of progress embodied in old metanarratives remains doubtful, and the logic of ‘performativity,’ in its various economic, technological, and cultural forms, pervades social institutions and practices more than ever. The result, I suggest, is a system which continues to fine-tune itself even as it fails.

Hiroki Azuma

Hiroki Azuma is a philosopher and critic. He was born in Tokyo in 1971 and obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo. After many years in the academic world, Azuma founded his own institute Genron Co.,Ltd, which curates dialogues, events and publishes the magazine Genron. Azuma is one of the most renowned critics in Japan and has published numerous award-winning books including Ontological, Postal: On Jacques Derrida(1998, Suntory Prize), On Animalizing Postmodernity(2001, English translation in 2009 under the title of Otaku: Japan’s Database Animals), General Will 2.0(2011, English translation in 2014), and A Philosophy of the Tourist (2017, Mainichi Publishing Culture Award). He is also the author of the Mishima Prize winning novel Quantum Families (2009).

Speech Title:

How Can Database Animals Be Political Animals?

In my book On Animalizing Postmodernity (2001), published in English under the title of Otaku: Japan’s Database Animals, I argued that today’s consumers should be described as “database animals” who are living their social lives apart from any idea of the grand narrative, which Lyotard defined as the basis of modernity in his book The Postmodern Condition, published in 1979. My argument was founded on my observation of young Japanese fans of anime called otakus. However, the idea of human beings as database animals is becoming increasingly relevant as we are now watching public spaces being rapidly replaced by social networks, and a new kind of governmentality based on the so-called “big data” is emerging all over the world. Hegel’s (and Marx’s) grand narrative historically connected humans and politics as the principle of nation state and civil society. How can the relationship between human beings and politics be transformed after the collapse of the grand narrative? How can we reestablish a political space based on the database instead of the narrative? How can database animals be political animals?