Art Under Attack: Histories of
British Iconoclasm
Tate Britain, London
2
October 2013 – 5 January 2014
By CHRISTIANA SPENS
These days, we take for granted
the irony of using destruction as part of art, employed by movements such as
the Vorticists, the Futurists and the Surrealists, and modern artists such as
Banksy and Hirst. To make art that deconstructs conventional ideas, or to
attack symbols from the history of art for the purpose of entertainment or
progression, is rather commonplace, in fact – the binary of ‘creation’ and
‘destruction’ often entwined in a statement or spectacle of modern art.
But this kind of ‘iconoclasm’ is a
relatively new development, and its roots are in that word’s originally
meaning, “to break an image”.
Rather than referring to harmless thought provocation and interesting
new ideas, ‘iconoclasm’ originally meant an act that threatened not only the
artwork to which it was directed, but generally the state or the Church, also.
In Art Under Attack at Tate Britain, curated by Tabitha Barber and Dr Stacy Boldrick, we learn
about the long history of the phenomenon of politics and art, and how it paved
the way for modern art that reclaimed the performance of destroying beautiful
creations, to reaffirm the place of art in society, as potentially political
and iconoclastic itself, rather than a target for political violence. Spanning
nine rooms, the exhibition first of all delves
into the state-sponsored destruction of fine art during the Protestant Reformation,
where paintings were replaced by words from the Bible. When Henry VIII broke
with the Roman Catholic Church (in order to divorce the first of his many
wives), conflict was heightened between the Catholics and Protestants in the
UK, as elsewhere in Europe, that provoked destruction of images connected to
the worship of the Pope and Saint Thomas Becket, as well as monasteries and
Catholic churches. The destruction was also financially motivated: the
transference of wealth from the monasteries to the monarchy explains the focus
on taking stained glass windows, gold and other materials used to create
cathedrals and decorate worship.
Puritan iconoclasm of the sixteenth
century followed, targeting “monuments of superstition and idolatry”, and
therefore sanctioning the “utter demolishing” of representations of crucifixes,
angels, the Virgin Mary, and the Saints. Intending to rid the UK of images that
might inspire worship of the material, and the worldly beauty of fine art,
rather than God, the Puritans banned all images, as well as theatre and most
pleasure. In so doing, the Protestant Reformers destroyed thousands of Medieval
artworks and cultural heritage, and rid the world, temporarily, of colour found
in pigment, stones or stained glass. The offensive against fine art and
representations of God continued for some time, becoming state sanctioned,
highly organised and popularly embraced by the Puritan reformers. Extremist Royalists also joined in, and
fought a “war of images” with the popular press, and any politicians they saw
as undermining the divine rights of the Monarchy.
By this point in the exhibition, a
little over half way through, the sense of oppression and cultural loss from
the Reformation is huge, and the change of focus to revolutionary rather than
state-sponsored political violence is refreshing, even if the show consists now
of abused and broken statues of European royalty. Fallen princesses now take
the blow of political struggle – noses and arms and heads are missing, which is
about as far as the Revolutionary spirit in Europe at the time washed into
English land. The remaining fragments of statues are victory shots of political
battles publicised, if not won. In the sixth room of the exhibition, iconoclasm
is brought into the twentieth century, and the case of the Suffragettes is
looked into more closely, given their particular attachment to the use of
‘Propaganda of the Deed’ to draw attention to the cause of women’s rights, a
tactic that Neville Bolt explains:
“Propaganda of
the Deed is akin to political marketing in the way it employs techniques of
resonance and symbolic association with different constituencies; it resembles
state-level strategic communications in the way it speaks to governments and
their populations.” (Neville Bolt, The Violent Image, p. 7)
This brings us up to date, without
making the connection in much depth, with contemporary political violence and
an evolved use of Propaganda of the Deed. One down point in an otherwise
fascinating exhibition, in fact, is that it doesn’t go into the modern
equivalents of iconoclasm in more depth; surely there is much more to be said
about the Troubles, in which symbolic attacks were extremely significant in the
war over legitimacy and power of the British state over those in Ireland
asserting their independence. Modern terrorism, more generally, uses
“iconoclasm” in an ever more sophisticated and intelligent manner, exploiting
the UK and USA’s appetite for media and news, and dramatic imagery. The “War of
Images” is ongoing, and it has moved beyond statues-breaking.
But instead of going down this
route, the focus turns to Art’s use of iconoclasm – that is, the reclaiming,
one might term it, of political violence and provocation by artists. In the
last room of the exhibition, innovation in art that is ‘iconoclast’ in the
sense of taking images from the History of Art (and elsewhere), and re-using
them – or ‘reframing’ them, as Judith Butler would call it.
“The conditions
are set for astonishment, outrage, revulsion, admiration, and discovery,
depending on how the content is framed by shifting time and place. The movement
of the image or the text outside of confinement is a kind of “breaking out”.”
(Judith Butler: Frames of War, p.11)
Post-Modernism, then, is a kind of
iconoclasm in itself – not only in the flattering sense of being new and fresh
– but also in the sense that post-modernist artists dismantle the original
meanings of famous works of art of the past, to create new meaning. They
destroy, to create. And so iconoclasm has turned inwards; the outer world is no
longer (in the Western world, most of the time) a violent threat to fine art
and symbolic statues. Instead the ‘threat’ comes from artists themselves, who
have re-appropriated the destruction of art in order to renew meanings,
subjects and images. Art Under Attack is
not only a history lesson in political violence and religious art deemed
sacrilegious. It is also an education in modern art, and a chance to step back
and consider the meaning of art that destroys as it creates.
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