Spring/Summer 2005

– Spring/Summer 2005

Contextual Essays

Artists

Foreword

Charles Esche

Another issue of Afterall, and another opportunity to consider what role art does or could play in the world. This issue continues with some basic reasons (perhaps beliefs) that underpin each issue of our journal. We consider that art's significance lies in the influence it exercises on how our societies choose to think and behave. Yet such influence can only be traced and expressed indirectly, and most effectively through the study of singular experiences with works of art. Art also has certain responsibilities to its audiences and contexts yet that act of making art should be free of direct political requirements. For these reasons, we have always sought to privilege the individual artist in our journal, allowing the work to speak about the issues that it reveals rather than insert the work into an existing discourse. This becomes crucial if we are to see the art field as being an autonomous zone where propositions can arise independent of social or economic function.

The value of art's autonomy was only fully established under the terms of western European and then American modernisms, as a way to defend categorically the 'free' space of personal expression that art could then occupy. Its legacy into our period has been mixed, permitting art to be justified solely in terms of its own criteria (and thereby able, constantly, to remake itself) while isolating it from specific historical contexts in which it sought to play a role. Art in social democratic capitalism was tolerated so long as it largely concerned itself with its own condition - a situation that continued into the 1980s to be finally countered by the full expansion