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Clement Greenberg's Modernist Painting, Exercises of Literature

An essay by Clement Greenberg that discusses the essence of modernism in art, particularly in modernist painting. Greenberg argues that modernism criticizes the discipline of art from within, using its own procedures to entrench it more firmly in its area of competence. He also discusses the process of self-justification that each art form must go through to establish its own autonomy and achieve greater specialization and security. Greenberg emphasizes the importance of the specificity of the medium and the reassertion of two-dimensionality in modernist painting.

Typology: Exercises

2022/2023

Uploaded on 03/14/2023

anwesha
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Download Clement Greenberg's Modernist Painting and more Exercises Literature in PDF only on Docsity! Summary: Clement Greenberg “Modernist Painting”* The Definition of “Modernism” Greenberg’s concern in this essay is to argue that there is a logic to the development of modern- ist art and, in particular, modernist painting. He identifies the essence of Modernism as “the use of the characteristic methods of a discipline to criticize the discipline itself—not in order to subvert it, but to entrench it more firmly in its area of competence”. (85) It is the intensification of a self- critical tendency that began with the eighteenth-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. “Modernism”, Greenberg tells us, “criticizes from the inside [rather than from the outside], through the procedures themselves of that which is being criticized.” (Ibid.) This starting point has impor- tant implications for the thesis of autonomy. [See the handout on Clive Bell: “The Aesthetic Hy- pothesis”.] Self-Justification According to Greenberg, every “formal social activity” requires a rational justification, i.e. there must be reasons given to justify a particular activity. Without this justification, the activity in ques- tion (e.g. painting, philosophy, physics, poetry, mathematics, etc.) is discredited and weakened. Many take the view that this is what happened with religion. Post-Enlightenment art (i.e. roughly speaking, art produced after the Eighteenth Century) was at once in precisely this situation of needing a justification. Thus, it was called upon to establish its own autonomy by means of a “deduction”, i.e. an argument for its legitimacy and its capacity to provide us with experience that cannot be obtained through any other art or social practice. This process of self-justification must be done piecemeal—medium by medium. To be modern, each art form is eventually called upon to discover and exhibit, through its own procedures, the unique contributions that it makes to human experience as well as to art as a whole. As a result of this self-justification, each art form achieves greater specialization and security. The Specificity of the Medium The uniqueness of an art form ultimately depends upon the specificity of the medium, i.e. the characteristics its works share with no other form of art. Once this specificity has been discov- ered, Greenberg claims, the progressive modernist is called upon to purge all elements not es- sential and specific to the medium. Nothing borrowed from the medium of another art can be tol- erated. Thus, under Modernism, each art searches for “purity” and in that purity, absolute auton- omy not only from other advanced art forms, but from mundane everyday life and popular (mass) culture as well. (All forms of popular culture are referred to by Greenberg as kitsch.) [See Greenberg, "Avant-Garde and Kitsch"] In this sense, pre-Modernist realist painting presents a problem in that it tends to conceal the specificity of the medium and, hence, the purity of painting. That’s because realism encourages the viewer to move through the surface and into the illusionistic space of the representation. Modernist painting, on the other hand, uses the painting itself to call attention to painting. The flat surface, the shape of the support, the properties of the pigment—all these things that were de- nied by traditional painting are reasserted by modernist painting (which is, historically speaking, the work of Manet and his successors). Flatness as the Defining Feature of Painting Modernism reasserts the two-dimensionality of the picture surface. It forces the viewer to see the painting first as a painted surface, and only later as a picture. This, Greenberg says, is the best way to see any kind of picture. 1
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