Sol LeWitt
Joseph Kosuth
Roy Lichtenstein
Raymond Pettibon
Sam Taylor-Wood
Anna Gaskell
Birgit Brenner
Rachel Harrison
Philippe Parreno
Sophie Calle
Eija-Liisa Ahtila
William Kentridge
Narrative Structures in Contemporary Art. Telling stories through pictures has been one of art's most important tasks for centuries. Only since the early 1990s have artists again concentrated on the possibilities opened up by the use of narrative elements. This does not mean that the beholder is confronted by complete stories, with a beginning, a storyline, and an end. On the contrary, artists use narrative structures as a form of communication with the viewer, who has to produce chronological and causal structures himself and assemble the stories himself, thus finding himself in the role of the "author".
Narrative Structures in Contemporary Art
Telling stories through pictures has been one of art's most important
tasks for centuries. In spite of this, or maybe because of it, it was
considered as not modern in the 20th century, the age of abstraction,
conceptualism and ready-mades. Ever since the age of antiquity,
stories have been told from the classical sagas of gods and heroes,
from Greek and Roman history, and later from the Old and New
Testaments or from numerous legends of the saints. In genre painting
since the 17th century, paintings have been used to depict day-to-day
happenings, and, more particularly since the beginning of the 19th
century, historical events (historical painting).
At the beginning of the 20th century, stories disappeared from art in
parallel to the development of abstract painting. It was no longer
concerned with creating an image of reality but rather a new reality.
The link to recognizable reality was frequently broken, which removed
the foundation of the narration. The Dadaists turned the current
understanding of art and the world upside down, and the Surrealists
portrayed in their works the world of the subconscious and of dreams.
Their wish - to achieve liberation from logical reality, an irritation and
shift of reality - was not pursued with narrative methods but rather, for
example, by the use of écriture automatique. It was not until the Pop
Artists such as Roy Lichtenstein, in his paintings that picked up the
comic language again, that the narrative aspect of art was revived in
the 1960s. However, the representatives of Concept Art such as Sol
LeWitt, Joseph Kosuth, and many others, continued to ban narration
from their works. Finally, at the beginning of the 1970s, a small group
of concept artists appeared, who for a short time placed storytelling at
the centre of interest again. Their works, which were collectively
referred to as "Story Art" or "Narrative Art", had no notable successors
in the 1980s.
Only since the early 1990s have artists again concentrated on the
possibilities opened up by the use of narrative elements. This does
not mean that the beholder is confronted by complete stories, with a
beginning, a storyline, and an end. On the contrary, artists use
narrative structures as a form of communication with the viewer, who
has to produce chronological and causal structures himself and
assemble the stories himself, thus finding himself in the role of the
"author". In this way, artists play with people's ancient longing for
stories and their wish to decipher connections or, if necessary, to
create them. Man learns through stories, defines himself by means of
stories, and thinks in stories.
Multireality and multimateriality - avoided since Renaissance art - are
used again as narrative methods. In medieval art too it was nothing
unusual to present the protagonist of a story more than once in a
picture in order to describe the chronological process. Renaissance
artists such as Leone Battista Alberti and Leonardo da Vinci were the
first to declare it their highest aim to depict reality as accurately as
possible. They subjected themselves to their own laws and gave up
showing different scenes or one and the same person several times in
the same picture. In their opinion, painting was not intended for
representing more than a single moment.
Today, artists are again treating time and space completely freely and
permitting themselves to involve the viewer in heterogeneous
experiences. The narrative methods are often not linear, not
chronological, and often illogical.
Every recipient perceives his own variant of the story. The foundations
of a shared iconography, defined by the Bible and Greek mythology,
are lost. Stories of shared experience are told today for example by the
yellow press, which reports in detail of the lives of the Royals, icons of
music, and stars of the worlds of fashion and sport. These stories are
present in the minds of many people.
The exhibition offers an insight into the faceted richness of narrative
methods in contemporary art. Stories are told in all genres and media.
The artists report on their own lives (Calle, Emin, Grigely, Kentridge,
Scurti), the experiences of others (Harrison, Loktev, Mik, Siekmann,
Taylor-Wood) or historical events (Green, Merkel, Ohanian); on
fictitious events (Ahtila, Arrhenius, Brenner, Heisenberg, Henning,
Hershman, M+M , Parreno, Tschäpe) or events inspired by film or
literature (Gaskell, O'Brien, Pettibon, Weirich). It is thus possible to
distinguish roughly between documentary, autobiographical - i.e.,
factual - events and fictitious, freely invented happenings. As for most
art topics, there is also negation here: anti-narration, if it is only the
illusion of a story that is being created. Artists achieve this by using
classical narrative elements but only apparently creating a narrative
(Mik, Taylor-Wood).
One can also differentiate between multi-scene single pictures (Merkel,
Taylor-Wood) and mono-scene series of pictures (Arrhenius, Gaskell,
Heisenberg, Henning, Tschäpe). Some artists use written text that
dispenses with pictures altogether (Brenner, Grigely), or appears in
combination with drawings or photos (Calle, Pettibon, Scurti). Video art
especially is predestined for handling narrative structures due to the
time dimension of the medium (Ahtila, Loktev, Mik, Ohanian) - as the
so-called net.art which is usually strongly based on text (Hyperfiction)
and uses the opportunity of interacting with the user (Berkenheger,
Lialina). Other methods of art are the rejection of the picture and the
exclusive use of sound (M+M) or light (Parreno) to report on an event
or, as is the case with the artist duo M+M, make it possible to be
experienced. A new kind of narration is made possible by the room
installation, one of the main features of the exhibition, since it allows
the viewer to experience a narrative space physically, and increases
the immediacy of what is experienced (Green, Harrison, O'Brien,
Siekmann). With an installation, the viewer, as "director", has the freer
hand. Only the photos of the "cameraman" are fixed, but the "cuts"
can be made by the viewer wherever he feels fit.
The form of viewer involvement varies. Besides the role of reader, the
viewer is given the task of the person addressed, the director, the
actor, the detective, the author, the shutter release. But the same
applies to every work: without the recipient, there aren't any stories
Image: Raymond Pettibon, No Title (Baby, it´s you, Ken...), 1992 Tusche, Aquarell auf Papier 44 x 25,5 cm
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