Jean Baudrillard
and a Counter-Mannerist Art of Latent Excess
Joseph Nechvatal
(Professor
of Theory of Art at The School of Visual Arts in New York
City and The Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, New
Jersey, USA).
Something
lies hidden behind the orgy of images.1
Reversibility, challenge, and seduction are indestructible.2
Instead of
bravely acknowledging its own obsolescence and questioning
its own status, [art] is basking in its own self importance.
The only legitimate reason art would have to exist nowadays
would be to reinvent itself as art. But this may be
asking too much. It may not be capable of doing that,
because it has been doing everything it could to prove that
it is still art. In that sense Baudrillard may be one of the
last people who really cares about art.3
Art has
always denied itself. But once it did so through excess,
thrilling to the play of its disappearance. Today it denies
itself by default – worse, it denies its own death. …a large
part of current art participates in an enterprise of
deterrence, a work of mourning for the image and the
imaginary, a – mostly failed – work of aesthetic mourning
that leads to a general melancholia of the artistic sphere,
which seems to survive in its own demise by recycling its
history and its relics.4
I.
Challenging Baudrillard
Criticism is
only possible with distance, but Jean Baudrillard proclaims
that there is no possibility of distance anymore in techno-mediacratic
society.5
In this paper I explore this proclamation in terms of art
and propose a challenge to it through what I will call an
art of latent excess.6
This art of latent excess will be demonstrated primarily by
the “art” found in the Abside (Apse) of the Grotte
de Lascaux.7
Later in the paper I will introduce my own art in this
context. I shall therefore theorize issues of ancient art
and its relationship to covert excess in the Baudrillardian
context of a world culture where information now controls
the flow and speed of consciousness.

The Baudrillardian position is that we live inside an
increasingly global simulation where the dominance of
media-forms engender, homogenize, hallucinate and drive
communications via a rigidly methodical interactive network:
what Baudrillard calls the hyper-reality of simulation.
Observations concerning the sense of dissolving borders that
once helped to separate the "true" from the "false" and the
"real" from the "imaginary" were established in The
Ecstasy of Communication.8 In
this, and other books, Baudrillard theorizes the media's
effect on society and argues that we have entered an era
where the production of images and information, and not the
production of material goods, determines who holds power. In
the post-modern mediascape, according to Baudrillard, the
private sphere of human intimacy is exteriorized and made
categorical and thus diaphanous. In The Ecstasy of
Communication Baudrillard described this diaphanous
media effect as an instrument of obscenity, transparency
and ecstasy.9
Artists and art critics influenced by Baudrillard, and I
include myself among them to some extent, have tended to
elucidate a concern with images in the circulation system,
occupied with their recoding and perverse reuse, now
recycled into a commentarial neo-conceptual art. Thus the
Baudrillardian post-modern/neo-conceptual artist worked with
cultural givens, trying to manipulate them in various ways,
such as through pastiche, collage, and/or jarring
juxtapositions. One ideal aim of the Baudrillardian artist
was to appropriate (select and manipulate) circulating media
signs in such a way as to elude being utterly dominated by
them – even while Baudrillard was claiming that in art there
were “no more criteria of judgment”.10
Concerning
contemporary art, in his infamous 1996 essay “The Conspiracy
of Art” Baudrillard maintains, “that there is no
longer any possible critical judgment” pertaining to art,
only a “genial sharing of nullity”,11
even while admitting that art is not central to his
concerns. That indeed he doesn’t “really identify with it”
(while mourning its “loss of transcendence”).12
But even while stating that art is not his problem, he went
ahead and invented a concept to address this supposed state
of non-judgmental affairs in art: transaesthetics.13
Baudrillard anticipated this position toward art as it
described post-modern society of the 1970s and 1980s in
terms of the presupposition that social immersion in media
simulation (what is called cyberblitz) adds up to a
new zone of experience. Baudrillard started rethinking media
consumer theory in the light of what he saw as the excesses
of the technological information society. Baudrillard's
previous works had emphasized the shaping of the consumer
society and how it provided a new world of significance and
value. In so doing he addressed issues of Marxism and the
general political economy. However, between the books The
Mirror of Production and Simulation and Simulacra,
Baudrillard broke with Marxism and moved away from his
previous critique of political economy towards a more
systematic development of a theory of simulation – a
radical semiurgy based on what he saw as the persistent
uninterrupted proliferation and dissemination of signs.
Thereafter he addressed media simulacra and the new
information technologies which produced what he called both
implosion and hyper-reality. These hyper-real
implosive circumstances developed for Baudrillard into what
constitutes a new post-modern world which obliterated the
boundaries, categories and values of the previous
non-hyper-real forms of industrial society while
establishing new forms of social organisation and new forms
of experiences. He viewed virtual reality as a simple
extenuation and perfection of this implosive hyper-reality
while claiming that “the image can no longer imagine the
real because it is the real” and that “images are virtual
reality”.14
We are,
Baudrillard claimed, in a new hyper-real era in which the
new technologies of media, cybernetic models, virtual
systems, computer networks, and information processing
supplant industrial production and the political economy as
the organising synthesis/principle of society. Such a
self-producing, self-regulating and self-referencing
principle of total-hyper-reality (and its feeling of
closure) was the essence of Baudrillard's philosophical
propositions; propositions which I see as totalizing terms
and to which I remain somewhat indifferent. Indeed, for me,
Baudrillard's philosophy seems to proclaim an almost
romantic gesamt resolution which is all-embracing in
its use of the philosophical notion of a cyberblitz
zeitgeist which envelopes (supposedly) all aspects of
our lives. This assertion is deeply problematized by a
“counter-mannerist art of latent excess”.
Baudrillard
submits, among other things, that the intrinsic objective of
simulacra is to bring forward a malleable (but controllable)
universal modus operandi bent on world domination
through electronic media totalization (the feedback-looped
totality of computer terminals and television screens). For
Baudrillard the computer and television screen are both
depthless and infinite, a superficial abyss and a hypnotic
transparency which simulates and denies space at the same
time. As he wrote in Simulations, the screen offers
"an aesthetics of the hyper-real, a thrill of vertiginous
and phony exactitude, a thrill of alienation and
magnification, of distortion in scale, of excessive
transparency...".15
Of course, for
Baudrillard the simulacra-screen-world (which is part of the
perfect crime) is never perfect and the artist is the one
who leaves traces of imperfection.16
So when Baudrillard described the hyper-real condition as a
transformation in which the code of production becomes the
primary social determinant, he makes an important
provocative point for art as he focused artist’s
concentration on media, simulation, new technologies, and
cybernetics. Among Baudrillard's most provocative assertions
for art are his reflections on the role of the media in
forming the post-modern world and our place in it.
Baudrillard therefore puts forth a paradigmatic model of the
media as an all-over, engulfing, omni-present, totalizing
agent. He theorizes that such a process leads to both a
collapse of meaning and the destruction of distinctions
between media and reality. In a society presumably saturated
with media messages; information and meaning implode
into pure effect without content
or meaning.17
This, if true,
would set the conditions for the production of exclusively,
in his terms, “null” (worthless) art. Happily this is only
partly true, as sweeping generalizations of what
contemporary artists do and mean do not hold. Artists vary
greatly. There is a gradational scale here of which Baudrillard either is unaware or ignores for the purposes of
his hyperbole. At the root of Baudrillard’s generalizations
lay his highly respectful estimation of the work of Andy
Warhol (1928-1987), who he claims “freed us from aesthetics
and art…”.18
To a certain
extent Baudrillard is correct in his belief that
contemporary art has become “null” through derivative
repetition – most notably with the reception of kitsch into
the serious art world best exemplified by the work of Jeff
Koons, of whom Baudrillard writes that it is “impossible to
know whether he is stupid or not, whether he can distinguish
the kitsch from the original, the true from the false”
(implying that there is such a thing as a true original – if
he was not being merely ironic here). It is impossible to
tell.19
Such hyperbole
serves Baudrillard poorly however, when he generalizes
nullity
as a general state of affairs in contemporary art.
There is still a worthwhile – even critical – possibility to
art (both ancient and contemporary). Such a hyperbolical
error is understandable however because Baudrillard himself
tends to use a model of the media
as a black-hole that
absorbs all information contents into a situation which no
longer communicates purposeful messages. As content implodes
into appearance, presumably the medium and the real are now
seen in an indistinct totalized pattern, from which
there is no critical distance from which to oppose
(or even surmise one would
think) it. Dada-Surrealist
techniques of uncertainty, irony, mockery and humour, all of
which downplay grandiloquent reason – and particularly Max
Ernst's (1891-1976) Dada concept of "systematic
displacement" – a technique which is concerned with the
liberation of individual signs from their utilitarian
purpose – are discounted as prototypes here. This is not as
one might have hoped and expected after reading Baudrillard
in The Transparency of Evil say that "...so long as
there is a dysfunction in a system, a departure from known
laws governing its operation, there is always the prospect
of transcending the problem”.20
Indeed in
asserting the ascendancy of Andy Warhol’s work over that of
Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) and the
Dadaists,21
Baudrillard either forgets or underestimates the authentic,
original (first-generation) Dada-Surrealist impulse of
opposition to unmitigated representation.22
For example, Walter Benjamin (1892-1940), in his essay on
the Surrealists, notes how their emphasis on excess and
ecstatic encounters creates an opposition to the domain of
purpose through an ecstatic excess which dissolves away the
idea of the self as determined by controlling utilitarian
purpose.23
This is all-important to Benjamin for, writing in 1929, the
aspect of the Surrealist movement which he saw as embodying
its principal worth, was Surrealism's place in the political
awareness and the struggle of socialist resistance against
the rising threat of the irrational ideology of fascism. The
dialectical step beyond intoxication (which is reached first
by entering into it)24
is the beginning of a new realm of purposes, now directed
toward the revolutionary transformation of an irrational
social reality which insists on calling itself rational.
By undervaluing
such basic Dadaist dysfunctional strategies (and
over-valuating Warhol’s own appropriation of them via
Duchamp), Baudrillard is able to claim rather that the
masses can only incorporate media content, thereby
neutralizing meaning by demanding and obtaining more and
more irrational self-contradictory spectacle/entertainment,
thus further eroding the boundary between the media and the
real. All modes of representation collapse into a
realm neither real nor imaginary, but simulatory.
Perhaps for the
masses this is an accurate analysis (and a stopping point),
but for an artist interested in excess this is where things
only start to become active. By under valuing the potential
impact of the Dada-Surrealist metaphoric procedures of
juxtaposition and overlapping which pertain to the
liberation of the meaning of signs, Baudrillard, in my view,
misses the precision with which they remove from the
image-world the closed familiarity of his absolute
and leave information suspended in a plenum (vacuum state)
of consciousness. The Les Transparence series
of transparency paintings from the late 1920s of Dada
painter Francis
Picabia (1879-1953), with their extensive use of
simultaneity, are a good example of this visual vacuum
state; and an important precedent to a contemporary décadent
art of latent excess. When visual
information is frustratingly
suspended, there is only the
slightest difference between an intentional and an
involuntary transcendence of reality. Such a
collapse of
utilitarian consciousness (combined with the pursuit of
inexactitude)
may create the effect of a unique post-representational excess in
our mental-perceptual circuitry.
Baudrillard's
concerns follow Walter Benjamin's examination of photography
and film in his famous essay “The Work of Art in the Age of
Mechanical Reproduction” – particularly Benjamin's exposé of
art's plight in relationship to mechanical reproduction.25
According to Benjamin, art lost its original aura and
thus became obliged to relinquish its claims to
exceptionality as a form of human endeavour capable of
offering alternative (and ostensibly superior) experiences
and models for better being. Benjamin brought into critical
discourse an awareness that widespread integrated changes in
technological conditions can affect the accumulated
consciousness and trigger prevalent changes in cultural
norms as he specifically analysed how photo-mechanical
technology intervenes in delineating existence. He
understood that through the mediation of machines, the
inherent realm can be contorted and prejudiced, thus
changing our awareness of it. However in post-modern
society, with its electronic and digital simulacra, there is
no longer a spent nostalgia for natural semblance as
Warholian reproducibility becomes the fundamental logic and
code of the information society.
I agree with
Baudrillard when he reiterates that (in general) most visual
information is accepted by society rather passively. In my
view, however, his way of conceiving of life as passive
homogeneity is itself a form of totalist idealization,
however supposedly critical or negative its ubiquitous
aggregates propound to be.26
This is evident early on in Baudrillard, in his For a
Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign he says
that "...the whole environment becomes a signifier...".27
Following on, he evinces the conquest of functionalization
and portrays post-modern society as one of "total control"
and "total organisation" in which functionalized aesthetics
are incorporated in the very cybernetic organisation of
society.28
All dichotomies between appearance and reality, surface and
depth, life and art, collapse into a functionalized,
integrated, and self-reproducing gesamt universe of
passé simulacra models and codes.
In contrast, I
wish to hypothesize and demonstrate here a counter-mannerist
art of latent excess which attempts to re-establish a
critical distance
– but an ambiguous private
critical distance: a distance achieved through the
challenge of (and disparity between) pleasurable
frustration. This is an art that
demands of society an active visualizing participation in
private interpretations – and thus is a legitimate metaphor
for contemporary art as a form of simulation-shattering
engagement. But this is not an anti-Baudrillard art (well it
is only so if you take seriously his end-of-art
implications, which I do not) but rather a
post-Baudrillardian one. This is because I accept his point
that numerous people today dwell (but not totally) in the
expanse of infotainment, with its potential instantaneous
non-separability and ubiquity. But I want then to ask just
what can art's contribution be to the enlargement of
understanding of our conspicuously excessive Western
society? I am certain that it need not be confined to what
Baudrillard says its role is now; asserting the
“insignificance” and “meaninglessness” of a society already
null and void.29
I argue the
contrary: that a post-pop art is indispensable as I
demonstrate how an art of counter-mannerist latent excess
(produced in the Baudrillardian milieu of image
superabundance and information proliferation), is an art
that can still problematize the pop simulacra. Hence it can
enliven us to the privateness – and unique separateness – of
the human condition in lieu of the fabulously constructed
social spectacle which engulfs and attempts to control us.
This private separateness offers us a personal critical
distance (a gap), and thus another perspective on (and from)
the given social simulacra.30
An art of latent
excess, of the kind which I produce, provides us with two
essential aspects relevant to our lives. First, it offers a
private context in which to suitably understand our
simulacral situation. Secondly (but more importantly), it
may then undermine this understanding of the simulacra by
overwhelming our immersion in the customary simulacra –
along with our own prudent pose as observer and judge.
Through the destructive-creative bacchanalia at the root of
an art of latent excess we are prodded to lose our
position of detached observer as such an art demands our
engaged intellectual and perceptual production.31
For me, post-pop
art, when latently excessive in its own right, is capable of
functioning, paradoxically, by nurturing in us a sense of
polysemic uniqueness and of individuality brought about
through a counter-mannerist style of reproducibility
(ever more circuitous, excessive and
décadent);
a style which takes us from the state of the social to the
state of the secret distinguishable I, by overloading
ideological representation to a point where it becomes
non-representational. It is this non-representational
counter-mannerist representation which breaks us out of
the fascination and complicity with pop art and the mass
media mode of communication. Thus the repartie to
Baudrillard's view of media-bathed society is an aesthetic
élan constituted through private superabundance.
Perhaps it is relevant here to remember that Mannerism
(generally the art of the period of Late-Renaissance
circa 1530-1600) was an aesthetic movement that valued
highly refined gracefulness and elegance; a beautiful
maniera (style) from which Mannerism takes its name. The
term usually means an art in which lavish attention is paid
to stylization and to the superficialities of semblance.
This is, ironically, a very Baudrillardian state.
An example of the counter-mannerist style from the period is
the Grotesque, which is deliberately anti-actual,
often including elaborate depictions of multiple figures
bound in tendrils. The G
rotesque (in Italian
Grottosesco) became an arabesque style of all-over
decoration based on a linked mêlée of fantastic, diminutive
figures deriving from Roman mural and vault decoration which
had been unearthed during the Renaissance (such as at the
Golden House of Nero); mural decorations which themselves
suggested ancient expressions of religio-sexual
inter-penetrability. This
fanciful imagery involved mixing
animal, human, and plant forms together. First revived in
the Renaissance by the school of Raphaël Sanzio (1483-1520)
in Rome, the Grotesque quickly came into fashion in 16th-century Italy and subsequently
became popular throughout Europe.
Interior decorators at the time esteemed the style inasmuch
as it was suitably hoary in derivation, whimsical and
playfully erotic, and, most importantly capable, due to its
all-over field approach, of fitting any required expanse
because it had
no solitary subject-matter and hence no
central focus.
Counter-mannerist style represented the reversal of
mannerist rationality by introducing into the order of the
simulation an art dedicated to the irrational realm of the
de-simulated orb in which rationalist rules need not apply.
It uses the excessive all-over field typical of the classic
work of Jackson Pollock (1912-1956).

II. An Art of
Latent Excess
Art of latent
excess is an art that puts forth an aesthetic élan of
superabundance and which reconceptualizes art in terms of
simulation so as to grant art an unbridled zone – free of
the good manners of simple simulations. However, this
character of de-simulated openness, which an inception of
the art of latent excess assumes, demands that we seek a
liberation from custom, doctrine and influence, and that we
grasp again the autonomy and priority of art as a special
type of excessive ideological activity.
The acknowledged
probing at the outer limits of recognizable representation,
the excited all-over fullness and fervour of this
syncretistic probe, isn't a failing of communications within
excessive terms – it is its subject. Such a copious
realisation is insinuated through overloaded/excessive
stimulus inasmuch as latent excess can represent every
integrated meaning conceivable, for in the art of excess,
the focal point is never circumscribed. The fusion of
elements within latent excess are not, by definition,
passively received and accepted. By nature of its
conflicting excessive presentation, information is to some
degree psychologically embedded and thus withheld even as it
is inexorably displayed all at once to the limited nature of
our human perceptive competence. Thus an art of latent
excess takes us away from the habitual focus of the
picturesque and potentially liberates us inwardly from the
infringements stemming from the deluge of mass-media images
– and so stimulates us to assess renew the calibre of any
such infringement. Now we must interrogate the validity of
our sense of simple simulations with there frequent binary
image oppositions. Hence it is in the amity felt with the
excessive ground that we may feel a sensuous liberation from
ideological monotony and cultural prudery.
A
perfect example of the art of latent excess was created by
the anonymous collective of skilled artists in the Abside
(Apse) of the Grotte de Lascaux.32
The ceilin
g of the Apse of Lascaux (which ranges from 1.6
to 2.7 meters high, measured from the original floor
height)
is so completely and richly bedecked with engravings that it
indicates that the prehistoric people who executed them
first constructed a scaffold to do so.33 This
indicates to me that the Apse was an important and sacred
part of the cave and indeed Ruspoli calls it the "strongest,
most richly symbolic, most mysterious and most sacred" of
all the inner spaces which make up Lascaux.34
Generally the Apse however has been ignored by art
theoreticians.35 Nowhere
is the eye permitted to linger over any detail even though
it holds an immense 2.5 meter engraving in its midst.
Rather, the gaze is urged on by an all-inclusive flood of
taunting sublimated optic information in need of great
visual stamina. Nevertheless, the Apse holds a semi-legible
"comprehensive index" of all of the forms of representation
found scattered throughout the entire cave, thus making up
what Mario Ruspoli calls Lascaux's seductive "véritable
corpus".36
Of the Apse Georges Bataille said it was one of the most
remarkable chambers in the cave but that one is ultimately
disappointed by it.37 I
did not share this disappointment. Indeed, what pleased and
fascinated me about the Apse was exactly its cryptic and
foreboding over-all hyper-totalizing iconographic character
granted by its boundless, palimpsestesque, wall-paper-like
image explosion (what Bataille called its fouillis)
of overlapping near non-photo-reproducible stockpiled
drawings from which, when sustained visual attention is
maintained, unexpected configurations visually emerge. Here
animals are superimposed in chaotic discourse, some fully
and carefully rendered, others unfulfilled and left open to
penetration by the environment, all commingled with an
"extraordinary confused jumble"38 of
lines including, remarkably, the sole claviform sign in the
Périgord and, even more remarkably, Lascaux's only reindeer,
an animal which existed in plenitude during the period of
the adornment of Lascaux.39 Its
extensive use of superimposed multiple-operative optic
perception (optic perception unifies objects in a
spatial continuum) presents the viewer with no single point
of reference, no orientation, no top, no bottom, no left, no
right, and no separate parts to its whole. Rather it
offers a general, unified visual effect typical of what is
called sfumato composition.40 Through
sfumato, complimentary contrasts (contrapposto) find
a unity previously absent and it is this unity that lends
latent excess visualization its most significant
self-alternative to hegemonic simulation. This is so as
sfumato invites and promotes an expanded, diaphanous,
dilated focus achieved as a matter of personal intuition and
hence is removed from direct rational knowledge and
technical manoeuvres. With sfumato we see the seeds of a
visual counter-tradition in opposition to the crisp,
detached, geometricized optics of clean simulation. This
oppositional optic practice of sfumato visualization, which
brings receptive vision to a state of sympathetic languor,
was taught by Leonardo da Vinci to his students and is in
his Treatise on Painting.41 Thus
sfumato (latent) effects offer another type of management of
vision and is an important element in the definition of
latent excess. For me, this kind of vision corresponds to
what Baudrillard speaks of as a “recovering of radical
illusion” where we liberate ourselves from the attachment to
images by paying attention to the “secret” way images are
linked and bound together.42 Of
this connectivity Baudrillard says, “art has to enter into
the intimacy of this process”.43
As a result of the seductive
sfumato excess encountered in the Apse,
I had the peculiar feeling of being flooded over by a
cloud-like image cesspool of deep meanings which I could not
decode. It was as if I was in the midst of a model of the
Bohm/Pribram universe as implicate pattern zapping dada. As
such it seemed an imposition onto Paleolithic culture of the
very thing that should destabilize it: nihilism. Nihilism in
that it is no longer a matter of heterogeneous figuration,
but of scanning a homospatial criss-crossing and oscillating
battle scene between interwoven figures, immersed in their
ideational ground with which they have merged in a
deliberate process of constitutional defigurization. There
is no longer any space outside of the figures to define
them, and hence, in a mental reversal, space is immersed in
the overlapping figures. The nihilistic cancellation at work
here seems to be an attempt to deny the validity of
subject/object understanding and to deny that any visual
erudition of anything whatsoever is possible, in the
interests of multiple layered introspection. Here flesh
itself is sensed as viractual: dancing on a clock.44
Bataille said that what was curious about the Apse was that
the artists abandoned their oeuvre to the next to come after
them in an ant-like activity, yet they did not engrave their
figures with less conviction or care.45 Obviously
the artists here did not work from a life model but from the
overlapping introspective depths of their visual memories.
Indeed likewise, the Apse seems to call upon the viewer to
construct a mnemonic psychological interpretation of it
based on its tightly woven, intricate abundance, i.e., its
latent excess. But even after introspectively synthesizing
the overlapping imploded individual parts into a mnemonic
coherent whole, the Apse retained for me a provocative
discord and irritation which tantalized my mind farther
towards a withheld (perhaps forgotten) seemingly encoded
signification. But as our subconscious is energized by
sustained desire, that which I sensed to be both obscure and
overabundant about the Apse, merged into a hybrid
interpretation which combined conflicting ideas about
abundance and nihilism into an égréore complex of
de-simulated information, which I then viewed as a single
meta-nihilistic mega-symbol. This experience, I propose,
reflects and confirms what Baudrillard, I suspect, really
feels about the potentiality of art when he says: “In art –
and this applies to contemporary art as well as classical
art – there is a dual postulate, and therefore a dual
strategy. An impulse to annihilate, to erase all traces of
the world and reality, and the contrary resistance to that
impulse”.46
With this meta-nihilistic mega-symbol's boundlessness, the
Apse appeared to me as the most sacred of the cave's sacred
places. Certainly easy conceptions of one beautiful being as
distinguished from another (in specificity) are denied and
an aberrant invalidation takes place where previous concepts
of the finite and the infinite implode (as do concepts of
the voluminous and the vacuous) into a unified field of
multiple-reproductive disembodied existences. Here, laid out
before my eyes, was what Baudrillard calls the problem of
materializing a “nothingness at the limits of nothingness” –
a place to “trace the edge of emptiness at the limits of
emptiness, to trace the filigree of emptiness”.47
This then is a sacred/sexual place of singular iconoclastic
intrascoping and distant transformation (by reason of its
creative virtuality and anticipated self-cancellation), as
its beautiful representational anti-depictions are neither
here nor there, but overlap.48 Here
in the Apse we seem to have encountered an irrational
systematicizm that seems to critique reason, a systematic
critique that predates (and in some places overlaps), the
modern positivist attitude towards sensation. Here we are
inside of a homospatial site of overrunning flux and of
hybridization; a place for the rejection of realism and it's
values (or at least a place to save oneself from the futile
and finally unreasonable claims of dogmatic simulation and
rationalism).49 The
Apse then represents a thrusting off of optic and mental
boundaries and thus is a complex mirroring of our own
fleeting impressions which constitute the movement of our
consciousness; the perpetual weaving and unweaving of
ourselves. Here we are not static, and we have no use for
reductive concepts of simulation, but we are inside a
de-simulating space that carries it's own nihilistic
opposite within itself.
Particularly dense with overlapping imagery is the part of
the Apse called the Absidiole, a small, niche-like
hollow (like the semi-spherical small niches which house
holy relics attached to the apse in Romanesque basilicas)
just in front of the drop into the Pit. Here one can
ostensibly participate in a play of self-tutorial
multiple-immersions into latent excess as one stands in the
Absidiole inside of the Apse which is located inside the
groin of the cave itself and introspectively view through
sublimated excess an explication of the curved inner-logic
of de-simulation itself: encased and withheld excess.
Assuredly vision here is no longer the controlling power
over animals in nature (or signs of them), but on the
contrary, vision itself is engulfed in what
Baudrillard calls a return “to the womb of the appearance of
things where they merely state their presence, albeit in
multiple forms, multiplied by the specter of metamorphoses”.50
The motivational force which quickens the Apse then seems to
be a desire to undermine perpetual vision and replace it
with another type of impregnable and latent vision, or at
least to suggest that there may be other types of vision
possible. Its nihilistic excess serves the positive function
of questioning the validity of the customary appearance of
things and to make connective understanding inextricably
felt.
Indeed the basic function of the visual turbulence of the
Apse, from the connective perspective, is to precisely shake
our conviction that our visual thinking is sound and to hold
any such assured convictions, rather, in suspension. Hence
it is only routine that formal issues (where consciousness
may be said to be self-referential and self-sufficient)
would arise over any humanist narrative ethic, as the Apse
is more concerned with a recycling of psychological energy
than with optically correct (in Virilio's terms) astuteness.
Hence, freed from representational obligations, dark chaotic
powers of consciousness are unleashed via the Apse's
repressed excessive exuberance.
In the Apse the level of evasive mono-complexity of the
fouillis (given the uniform
sfumato tonality
in which the one somber value dominates the complex visual
arena), also challenges preconceptions of legibility based
on our ability to identify and locate figures in their
ground.51 But
also on scanning the systematic, intricate and perplexing
inert spread of the Apse, one cannot but sense that in some
way one is looking at a representation of the metaphysics of
orgasm and death, and that by absorbing its visual code one
was looking sex/death in the face.52 To
be, or not to be: that is the paradigmatic choice when
visualizing form into and out of existence when examining
the elusive alternatives made manifest here. Being, beings,
or nothingness: all are tentative conditions of resolution
(or forestalled resolution) here; all spout their own
ontological/neurological preferences.
In this purging atmosphere of imploded meta-nihilistic
sacrilege, spontaneous reflexes only go so far and
reflection necessarily takes over in search of an expansive
meaning. Yes, nihilistic amanuensis and jubilant
Baudrillardian catastrophic implosion are here, not only in
how this staggering image-dump can be read, but also in
terms of how its creation entailed the task of disrespecting
the care with which marks achieve representational artistry
in an apparent desire to achieve and contemplate radical
negation. This scouring of assertive vision must have been
deemed necessary only precisely here, as in the other
galleries, very often, superimposed images respected the
marks previous laid down and sensitively incorporated them
into the ensuing hybrid super-impositional compositions. By
ransacking representational vision so, the Apse
paradoxically partakes in the category typical of major art
(regardless of its marginal standing within the cave and
within Prehistory) as it seemingly rejects the figurative
tradition in order to reinvent it as entrancing meta- (or
supra) representation. Thus it is important in the way that
John Cage's musical composition/non-composition 4'33"
is in astutely forcing us to consider silence as sound.53 And
as such it is a meditation on fullness and emptiness: on the
emptiness of fullness and the fullness of emptiness. And
this is its key latent/excessive exemplary value.
Archaeologists are continuously undertaking to understand
the marks left here from this inaccessible epoch as they analyse its tangled iconography in hopes of ascertaining why
this jumbled impulse was consummated. What we must see
however, is that the Apse defies the common assumption that
visual art is associative, that it is based on the human
mental capability to make one thing stand for and symbolize
another, in agreement with society. The usual assumption is
that art marks on a surface denote content, not just to the
mark-maker but to others as well. All we know for certain
about the abstract constitution of the Apse is that its
dynamic cluster of representational/anti-representational
operations (and the meta-nihilistic/mega-symbol
boundlessness which it contains in its kitty), were reworked
over the span of many centuries. However by no means do all
of the superimposed figures date from different times, thus
their overlapping is not a simplistic function of time nor
is it for lack of space. Thus its abstract intentionality
assumes a certain degree of lucidity.
If the Apse functioned as a mnemonic devise, or as a site of
hegemonious non-being severed from any practical purpose, we
shall never know. But it is my hypothesis that the Apse
chamber functioned as a cognitive dissonance visualization
field and defocal virtualizing area which adjusted-up the
expanding and dilating eye/mind to the awareness of
conflicting, non-rational and de-simulatory realities
involving sex and death through the use of deeply creative
virtual visualizations. This is a creation of critical
detachment by starring collapsed distance down – and the
essence of an art of latent excess.
This personal explanation for the dark excess of the Apse
cannot be proven, nor, I think, disproven and thus remains
fascinating and unknowable. Though obviously imbued with
meaning, we unfortunately are unlikely ever to know the true
meaning or function of the image-space of the Apse (or the
other marks of the Magdalenian people for that matter). What
I know though, with certainty, is how the latent amplitude
of the Apse operated on me, and what it did was to collapse
the inherited meaning of human image making into a more
inclusive and available sense of excessive ebullition and
into a dynamic feeling of wanton sexual climax. The shrouded
scatter stirred my desire to seemingly unfold and deliver
forth a sanctioned libidinous pathos where forms of
salacious creative ferment and levels of self-indulgence are
concurrent. From this state of floridity it might be
possible to further define latent excessive states of art
consciousness as those which contain a condition in which
reality is perceived as consisting of more than that which
everyday vision brings to light. Such aesthetic
states bypass discursive counterintuitive processes and
confer a greater scope to the Baudrillardian vision.

This is, however, not merely something we can find in
ancient art – and as Baudrillard’s criticism of art is
mainly focused on contemporary art – we should also be aware
of contemporary examples of the art of latent excess. What
additionally fascinates is that the fine jumble of delicate
lines in the Apse, some beautifully representational and
others again not, corresponded to the prolonged series of
greyish drawing with which I began my carrier as an artist
some twenty years ago: drawings which had partially been
conceived of as a shadow of our nervous system's meshed
neural signals mingling with nuclear catastrophe.
Recent examples of a lugubrious, deconstructive
counter-appropriationist art of latent excess – an art which
still adheres to our technological-artistic evolution
stemming from Cubism, Dada and Constructivism to the advent
of digital-viractual art – are many and would require a
lengthy article in itself. In my own case, while adherin
g to
the general principles of latent excess thus far identified
(i.e., nihilistic self-canceling excess) I moved my work out
of the analog and into the new area of viractual
(digitally-actualized) art through the use of non-conformist
computational processing (including unseen complex
computational viral algorithms) brought into confrontation
with the tradition of motionless painting. In the rising and
collapsing of alternative visualizations and unordered
revelations seen in the work via its use of extensive latent
excess the circuits of the mind find an erudite dexterity
exactly congruent with the post-Baudrillardian contemporary.
By staring a
collapse of signs and the destruction of distinctions in the
eye (so to speak), a challenge is made to the bleaker
aspects of Baudrillard’s flawed assessment of the
contemporary. Flawed for they close the spectator and the
creator off into ascertainable parcels of restricted
implications which preclude the concept of freedom of
imagination. To get this feeling in an art of latent excess
there must be a subliminal infinity about the
visual-conceptual field, an overloaded incompleteness which
lures us to the inspiration of individual sovereignty; the
idea of our own unclear and denuded realm.
An art of
latent excess provokes and challenges us to surpass the
accustomed Baudrillardian platitudes of non-judgmentality
along with the claim of the impossibility of critical
distance. It is my contention that it is in this inventive
condition of privately excessive formlessness54
that we can ascertain the delimitation of Baudrillardian
mass-pop media ideology and the resultant implications of
that cognizance. Here then, in singular but active impulsive
privacy, is the distance Baudrillard claims no longer exists
for critique.
Such
a self-referential private interpretive activity overwhelms
illusionist trompe-l'oeil seduction with a fresh formalism
(formalism rigorously stresses attention to formational
principles) thereby exceeding and soiling simulation’s
transparency – spoiling its presentation of an illusionistic
faux world as real. In this sense it confirms what
Baudrillard claims art is about, however: an “inventing
another scene; inventing something other than reality. …The
purpose of art is to invent a whole other scene”.55
Such an art of
private latent excess never offers us conventions. Such an
art is like an amorphous fertile seedbed that undermines the
hitherto clear distinctions falsely made between simulacra
and the imagination by way of simultaneously negating and
spontaneously recombining. Here semblance and space are
always already connected within a dark and obscure excessive
orb of visual noise as the art of latent excess negates
representations (and all they imply) – thereby affirming a
consciously divergent and spontaneous way to see and judge.
Here is what I believe Baudrillard calls the “blind spot of
singularity” – the spot where form appears and
simultaneously falls apart.56
An art of latent
excess stands then in defiance of the limits of ordinary
perception and representational simulacra. Thus it is (or
can be) about the opposition between the daily work-day and
the transgressive/ecstatic moment. In a sense it attempts to
set up a stable form of ecstatic transgression where one can
go back and forth at will via dissimulation.