Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

download Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

of 24

Transcript of Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    1/24

    1

    REFUSING CONFORMITY AND EXCLUSION IN

    ART EDUCATION

    Dean Kenning

    22 March 2012

    Activism / AntiCapitalist / Art / Education

    Image: Art Against Cuts stage a teach-in at the British Museum, December 2010

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    2/24

    2

    While experimentation and activism often focus on art school education or

    education as art, there is a tendency to ignore the creeping influence of

    corporate public pedagogy which is poisoning the roots of art education in the

    UKs schools. Art pedagogy can only be radical, writes Dean Kenning, if it takes

    on the exclusions and market bias which are impoverishing educational culture

    The discussions we have witnessed over the past few years around art education, as

    well as proposals for, and experiments towards its renewal, transformation or re-

    conception, have taken their impetus from developments in the distinct fields of art and

    formal education. In the field of art we have seen the rise of curating as a kind of art

    production in itself, alongside what we can loosely term relational and participatory

    practices. Such practices have sought to move beyond any delineated object in order

    to locate art within the wider, inter-human, relational situation. But unlike community

    art, for example, such encounters take place within or at least end up back at

    institutional art spaces. On the one hand, educational forms and materials such as

    desks, blackboards, over-head projectors, collections of books etc., are presented

    within the exhibition format in a way that mimics conventional learning environments. 1

    On the other hand, educational initiatives such as marathon lecture events,

    participatory workshops or alternative art schools take place at, or with the backing

    of, galleries, museums and biennials, or within the bounds of art world networks, and

    are often presented as artworks in their own right. Pedagogical forms and initiatives

    such as these have been much discussed under the rubric of the educational turn in

    art and curating. The trope of turning suggests a dynamic process enabling art to

    move beyond its established limits. As the editors of one of the foremost collections on

    the subject write: there is an invocation of flux and the shifting of territories, stabilities

    and normative positions.2 The move towards education, meanwhile, appears to

    connect art to a more general social arena, and one, moreover, that indicates a

    functional role for art. We should also add a further dimension to the UK situation,where funding arrangements for public galleries since the late '90s have made

    education departments a central part of the institutionalised artistic landscape. While

    budgets for gallery education have increased, and artistic and curatorial practices

    directed towards schools and community projects have proliferated, the paradoxical

    effect of the pedagogical turn in art and curating discourses has in certain respects

    been to hijack these more hidden practices, and thus perpetuate the low status of

    many involved for example, when high profile artists are brought in to a school's

    project.3

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    3/24

    3

    In the field of university-level art education, debates tend to be both more urgent and

    more local, originating, as it were, from the factory floor. Nevertheless, it is clear that

    the neoliberal push towards a privatised student-as-consumer model of education is a

    global phenomenon; a fact rendered visible by student struggles for free and universal

    access to education in cities across the world. In the UK, loss of independence for art

    departments amidst a growing instrumentality had been exacerbated in recent years by

    increased standardisation, an oppressive assessment culture and the transformation of

    education into a commodity up to the point of the current, accelerated crisis

    unleashed by the Tory-led coalition government.

    Rather than rehearsing the various pedagogical experiments in curating, alternative art

    schools models, conference debates etc., or examining in detail policy changes that

    have afflicted universities and art departments, as well as the protests that have arisen

    in response to them, I would like to put the developments outlined above into relation

    with more general ideological forces and structures that are effecting art education as a

    symptom of wider social disfigurement.4The field of art and the field of education are

    conceptually distinct, but they are mutually interactive when it comes to these debates.

    Sometimes education-related practices and discourses occur as if what is happening in

    formal art education is not their concern. A different approach, but one which may

    simply be the other side of the same coin, is to see art-based experimental modes of

    education as, to some extent, an alternative to formal university-based models of

    education for artists and, therefore, a means to solve or sidestep the problems

    besetting the latter. What I want to focus on is the tipping point between art-related

    educational practices which confront social mechanisms of conformity and exclusion in

    order to offer real alternatives, and those which slide back into education-themed art

    events. The issue revolves around whether artistic experiments occur with the wider

    social picture in view, or whether they remain contained within pre-established cultural

    and institutional limits.

    Conformity and Exclusion

    My basic position is that the trouble with art school lies not primarily with the validity or

    otherwise of the various methods by which future artists might be taught, but with who

    those artists might be, and how what they do might be affected by constraints they will

    be placed under.5

    In other words, the trouble lies with the potential destruction of art

    school as a critical and heterogeneous space due to the governments dismantling of

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    4/24

    4

    the (already battered) welfare state model of free and inclusive public education. As

    students are expected to take on the burden of massive personal debt, and as

    universities become providers in a competitive global marketplace with the

    inevitable consequences of course closures and a two-tier system a higher level art

    education is heading towards increasing corporate conformity and increasing

    exclusivity.6The danger is that the study of art as a practical discipline will become not

    only more professionalised and acquiescent as onerous debt encourages the demand

    to succeed financially, but a luxury available only to the well off and to those with

    enough existing cultural capital to think the gamble on a precarious future is one worth

    taking. A factor little commented on in the discourses around art education is the way

    this exclusionary mechanism is exacerbated by the diminution or phasing out of art in

    many secondary schools, a consequence both of a narrowing in the way performance

    is measured for national league tables since the introduction of the EBac certificate and

    the proliferation of new academy and free schools which are run beyond local

    authority control with freedom to impose their own curriculum.7 In both cases it is

    poorer students who will be deprived of the benefits of art classes and exposure to a

    wider culture of art they may otherwise not have access to. (We must not let the urgent

    need to address particular deficiencies in the art curriculum or lack of resources blind

    us to the way the availability of art as a subject at school provides a pathway to study

    at further and higher levels.)8Quite apart from the effect on particular individuals, the

    consequences of an increasingly homogeneous upper and middle class student body

    can only be detrimental for future art practice itself, and the critical social role art can

    play. In an article which addresses this issue with rare clarity, John Beagles has

    highlighted how prevailing discourses on art education have failed to account for the

    way class exclusion itself effects art schools. For Beagles, pedagogical innovation will

    not get us very far if it does not operate in conjunction with efforts to enable access for

    a broader range of students: Tackling exclusion and transforming the culture of art

    schools are two inextricable sides of the same coin.

    9

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    5/24

    5

    Image: Cline Condorelli, Revision Part II, an adjustable spatial setting for ARTSCHOOL/UK 2010

    Given the assault both on the democratic ideal of education as a necessary sphere of

    free thinking, and on the comprehensive ideal of equal access and opportunity to

    study, it is incumbent upon those engaged with issues of education from the

    perspective of art, and who believe in arts ability to contribute concretely to the wider

    cultural landscape, to address these fundamental structural transformations.

    Alternative art school models and educational forms and events taking place in an art

    contexts are in danger of becoming a pseudo-critical pose or smokescreen, unless

    they are capable of confronting real conditions on the level of the social space in which

    they are carried out, of acting to stop processes detrimental to the expansion of art as

    a critical practice, and of challenging the ideology that underlies these processes. At its

    worst, and in spite of all radical content and non-hierarchical student-tutor relations

    etc., alternative art educational models risk exacerbating exclusion and instituting what

    might be called a pedagogy of privilege.

    From Art as Education to Education as Art

    The pedagogical turn in art appears to promise openness, genuine engagement and a

    breaking down of boundaries. One of the things Anton Vidokle suggests is that artists

    who adopt the school as their modus operandi have the capacity to turn the passive

    audience back into an active public, and thus engender the socially transformative

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    6/24

    6

    function of art which inspired predecessors such as Courbet and Manet to institute the

    very notion of art as a critical practice.10 Vidokles own unitednationsplaza , the

    exhibition as school, is one of the most celebrated reference points in discussions

    about arts turn to education. Infamously it did nottake place as intended in 2006 when

    Manifesta6 was cancelled (following political interference by the Cypriot authorities),

    but was realised later in Berlin, and then at the New Museum in New York under the

    name NightSchool. Without wishing to judge the entirety of an extensive, multi-event

    project such as this (and one I was not party to), I would nevertheless like to point to

    the way Vidokles school was set up (indicative of many similar projects), and consider

    how these conditioning factors might allow us to question some of critical claims being

    made. Firstly, those involved closely with the project are big, international art names:

    Boris Groys, Martha Rosler, Liam Gillick, Walid Raad, and others. Whilst various of

    these artists and writers may be inspiring and raise public interest, it does feed straight

    into the art world validation system, justifying publicity and debate within the circles of

    art discourse (art magazines, and so on, will pay it attention), and attracting a largely

    readymade public who can self-identify through the shared recognition of these names.

    Secondly, there was a selection process: one hundred artists, musicians, designers

    etc., out of the several thousand who applied, were chosen to join the core group of

    the programme.11Whatever the outcome, the whole idea of selection relating to a field

    or institutional apparatus education, schools whose purpose, from one perspective,

    is always to maintain and reproduce class divisions precisely through processes of

    selection and hence exclusion should, at the very least, raise questions. 12 Depending

    on the channels of dissemination, the process used could already be viewed as a form

    of selection, ruling out those who were not aware of the call. How much, then, is this

    really about opening art up, breaking down borders, and engaging a wider public?

    Outside of the regulatory confines of formal educational establishments, are there not

    opportunities for artists and curators to invent structures that refuseselection, and so

    encourage the interchange of what Beagles calls distinct subjectivities the mark of agenuinely democratic public sphere?13 As Beagles implies, it is the introduction of

    voices able to challenge arts claims to neutral universality that allows for forms of

    dissensus which cannot be manufactured simply through the introduction of a set of

    texts and topics for debate. Thirdly, although the project is described in terms of turning

    the space of art into a learning process, with the implication of a breaking down of the

    artist-audience relation, and the idea of a contingent, fluid, and unframable process,

    unitednationsplaza , as Vidokle himself says, functioned very much as an artwork in its

    own setting.14

    This is not simply a matter of dialectical inversions school as art as

    school, etc. There is something more at stake: the way that art, in becoming a platform

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    7/24

    7

    for more open, collaborative processes, gets returned as a distinct, authored work, with

    all the symbolic capital that accrues to the artist as author.15We seem to have moved

    from exhibition as school to school as exhibition; or, to put it another way, from art-

    as-education to education-as-art. I would simply for now want to make a plea for the

    anonymity of the great teacher or tutor, wherever they exist within the vast machine of

    education, including art education. Why should art practices remain tied to value

    systems premised almost entirely on visibility?16

    I want to move to another event that took place in October 2011 at the Slade School of

    Art, something I did participate in called It Started WithA Car Crash:Alternative

    EducationalRoadTour.17The location for the event was significant as less than a year

    before, Slade students from the BA Fine Art course were in occupation in protest at the

    planned implementation of the Governments (misnamed) education reforms. The

    event had been organised by the IMT gallery as part of an exhibition by The Bruce

    HighQualityFoundation, an art group who had taken their own self-run university on a

    tour of various educational establishments in the US, and were now making a stop-

    over in London. But where did this educational tour take those of us gathered at the

    Slade symposium? For me it seemed to take us both outside and inside outside of

    the institutionalised spaces of art education, but only in order to take us safely back

    within art world confines.

    TheKurtSchwittersDIYSchoolwas made up of Slade Fine Art students who had been

    part of the earlier college occupation, plus some others (including two young children).

    The collective had formed out of a residency they undertook on the site of Schwitters

    Merz Barn in Cumbria. Their performances on the day reminded me of techniques

    used during the 2010 occupations, seeming to articulate horizontal relations,

    consensual decision-making and equal status within the group through a method

    whereby each member of the collective, standing in a row, would take their turn tospeak or enact something. One got a sense of the intimacy of the group and the

    empowerment felt at the experience of creating something beyond the limits of the self.

    It was a reminder of the freedom that getting away from ones usual surroundings can

    inspire, and the necessity of that. At the same time the performances seemed inward-

    looking, an expression of wilful disengagement from others in the room due to the fact

    that what was spoken about, whilst probably making sense to group members, seemed

    to withdraw from the possibility of communication with anyone else.

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    8/24

    8

    Without wanting to refute the potential of such experiments, the contrast between

    different modes of collaboration and group formation manifested, firstly, through the

    education protest, and secondly, through the residency are striking. On the one hand

    we have an art college occupation, formed and carried out in an act of broad-based

    social solidarity against a common enemy a formation which amongst other things

    was instrumental in the creation of the umbrella protest group ArtsAgainstCuts. On

    the other, a DIY School, made up of students who had taken part in the occupation,

    but whose extra-curricula art community grew from a rural residency, and was limited

    to the small number of people who took part in it.18Whilst it is not an either/or question,

    on this occasion the balance of criticality tips in favour of the art institution itself as a

    site of contestation and social engagement. The question would then be about how the

    powers of distinct, artistic forms, arising from the collective imagination of collaborative

    formations whose value may indeed lie with a certain level of non-communication

    and non-recognition might operate in a politically charged mode.19

    The New International School also delivered us to a rural location, this time a residency

    programme in France. The project was framed in terms of it offering an alternative to

    over-bureaucratised formal art institutions, and its discourse-based art pedagogy of

    self-examination was celebrated, with the marginality of the NISs location regarded a

    means toward this end. The impression, garnered from the screening of a collaborative

    video produced at the school, was one of almost total isolation, and a solipsistic

    introspection. There was also the unspoken issue of what type of artist was able to

    travel to France and support themselves on an unfunded residency of this sort. Again,

    in spite of the value individual artists may have derived from their experience, it is

    certain that even the most bureaucratised university art course had the advantage over

    this School in terms of a heterogeneous social cohort regardless, or probably more

    accurately because of, its international make-up.

    A final incident seemed to epitomise the problems of an event which offered a journey

    outward, beyond the normative realities of gallery-based art and institutionalised art

    education, only in order to turn back and entrench us ever more deeply in those

    conditions. One of the members of TheBruceHighQualityFoundationmade a rather

    off-the-cuff remark to the effect that alternative art schools have the advantage of being

    much more flexible when it comes to being able to get rid of dead-weight faculty tutors.

    When I pointed out that in the UK at least we have been experiencing a period of

    massive staff cuts on many Fine Art courses, and that a similar language of dynamism

    and flexibility was often adopted by senior management to justify cuts to teaching, the

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    9/24

    9

    curator of IMT interjected on the grounds that it wasnt very productive to go down this

    politically-charged road. Clearly the promised debate around alternative networks of

    education that headlined the event had its limits, and this limit seemed to be any

    antagonistic injection of the reality of what was happening around us, that is to say,

    outside the boundaries of individual art projects. A bland consensus is the

    consequence of collaboration for its own sake a method of learning now commonly

    applied in fine art schools where tutors are thin on the ground. But there is another

    issue the way that art events around education are always in danger of becoming

    another curated art event, adopting education as a theme but avoiding the bigger

    picture, and so contributing little in the way of social influence or action towards

    change. If we maintain a hope that artists, galleries and other arts institutions can be a

    lever for social change, or a brake on regressive measures, then this is a danger we

    need to be wary of.20

    When art turns in on itself, things begin to curdle. This, then, is another sense of the

    educational turn: art appears to move outward towards the social terrain of education

    a deeply political terrain which cannot but confront the reality of arts own exclusions,

    hierarchies and value systems but only for education to be recuperated and turned

    back into art, appropriated, mimicked, aestheticised. A turning inward, then, which is

    simultaneously a separating out from the common medium, so that education which

    everyone has experienced, and so understands in one way or another is

    reconstituted into recognisable artworks, exhibitions, or curated events.21When those

    engaged in open-ended discussion more and more resemble each other in terms of

    background, cultural tastes and lifestyles, things have also turned inward. The purpose

    in this case seems to be less about arts potential to enter into the most pressing

    battles and debates, and more about producing a kind of super-artistic subject;

    someone, for example, who learns all about The Ignorant Schoolmaster, but knows

    nothing about why the school down their road is now sponsored by an investmentbank.

    Corporate Pedagogy

    We can see how, while adopting the political rhetoric of social engagement, projects

    which contain education within institutionally, culturally and discursively demarcated art

    zones, can serve to reinforce arts social separation and exclusivity. Earlier I stated that

    it was imperative that debates and practices around education and art contend not only

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    10/24

    10

    with specific government attacks, but confront the ideologies that underlie them. The

    dominant ideology is encountered in the art world and anywhere else where we

    experience conformity to a neoliberal corporate agenda, and social and cultural

    exclusion under conditions of widening economic inequality. As I stated at the start,

    social conformity and exclusion are precisely the likely effects of the changes taking

    place in UK education. In this sense these changes are part of a much wider national

    and global ideological agenda to transfer what remains of the non-commodified public

    sphere into private hands. These processes are accompanied by, and are indeed part

    of, what educational theorist Henri Giroux has identified as corporate public

    pedagogy: a powerful ensemble of ideological and institutional forces whose aim is to

    produce competitive, self-interested individuals vying for their own material and

    ideological gain.22

    Corporate public pedagogy is not simply a kind of hegemonic cultural wallpaper; it is

    something that is being built into the very architecture of our education systems. The

    democratic ideal of informed and equal citizens, whilst never being fully realised in

    practice, underlay comprehensive reforms throughout the 20th century. This ideal has

    now been replaced by a belief in entrepreneurial values and a faith in business

    methods. The governments idea of corporate responsibility is to take state education

    out of democratic local authority control, and hand it over to much less accountable

    private companies and wealthy philanthropists.23Melissa Benn writes of the biggest

    trend in the edu-market [] the growth of chains [] a development many believe will

    soon dominate the education landscape.24She is speaking about organisations such

    as ARK, E-ACT, the Academies Enterprise Trust and the Harris Federation. ARK

    Absolute Return for Kids (this kind of business jargon is omnipresent), set up by a

    group of hedgefund financiers and a billionaire CEO, currently runs 11 academies in

    the UK which operate according to strict discipline, a behaviourist teacher-dominated

    pedagogy borrowed from KIPP (Knowledge is Power) US Charter Schools, and acurriculum which prioritises depth before breadth (demoting soft subjects like art). Its

    abiding ethos is that business methods can solve social problems.25But this is not

    the limit of corporate influence: many commentators believe that sponsored Academies

    and Free Schools are a means to a more extreme end: the entry of for-profit education

    providers into the state system. Pearson, which sells academic books, teacher training

    and tracking software to schools in the increasingly outsourced UK education market,

    is promoting complete solutions for running schools, as part of a desired fully

    privatised national strategy that is likely to follow the profitable US model of low-cost

    computer-based learning. It is alarming to note that if it were not for the News of the

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    11/24

    11

    World phone hacking scandal and subsequent Leveson enquiry, Rupert Murdoch might

    already be embedded within UK state education, extending his recently acquired edu-

    division (run by anti-union, pro Charter School, former head of New York City

    education, Joel Klein), and beaming News Internationals large library of media

    content directly into classrooms.26 Whilst education businesses and private school

    operators such as Cognita and News Corps wait in the wings for a chance to colonise

    material and intellectual wealth built up over decades in the public sphere, an all-

    pervading business ontology, to use Mark Fishers apt term, is in danger of eclipsing

    any sense that alternative social formations are possible, or indeed ever existed. And

    so childrens minister Sarah Teather recently awarded UBS investment bank with a Big

    Society Award for allowing staff to volunteer at Bridge Academy in Hackney. According

    to the Evening Standard, Teather said that bankers can provide state school pupils

    with the connections and networks students at top private schools benefit from [] and

    inspire pupils who might not otherwise be exposed to the corporate world.27 More

    recently I have heard of a bank-sponsored school celebrating enterprise week, with all

    manner ofApprenticetype activities for pupils.28

    Image: Arts Against Cuts stage a teach-in during the Turner Prize award ceremony, December 2010

    This may seem a long way from art. Surely one enters art school in order to escape

    from such things as rote learning, authoritarian classes, rigid discipline, the segregation

    of knowledge, a positivistic culture of testing, an obsession with career plans, etc.? All

    of this is in fact questionable, and it would be productive to look at how the particular

    twist increasing privatisation gives to each of these things is mirrored in various waysat University level education, and on Fine Art courses. I want to make a more general

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    12/24

    12

    point about the way corporate pedagogy permeates the field of art, a field in relation to

    which art schools increasingly seem to see themselves as providing their students with

    training with the effect that formal art education increasingly conforms to the

    realities of this field, rather than enabling a critical distance from it, and therefore limits

    (or attempts to limit) the possibility for students to question or refuse its values.29What,

    then, is the make-up of this field, within which artist and curator-led educational models

    have proliferated in recent times offering what claim to be alternatives to the

    dominant ideological models of education? The sphere of art is, in fact, very far from

    being a natural zone of criticality and contestation, and in many ways embodies and

    promotes those very neoliberal values Giroux and Fisher speak about. Firstly exclusion

    is built into the art worlds hierarchical symbolic economy, where access to prestige,

    validation and funding is often dependent on elite networks of acquaintances and the

    financial resources necessary to engage in unpaid internships, etc. Secondly,

    conformity to a neoliberal definition of reality permeates an arena where ultra-

    individualism is encouraged by a culture of competition and personal promotion and by

    the corporatisation of public galleries through sponsorship, branding, franchising,

    exclusive hospitality events, etc. As with corporate influence in compulsory education,

    and the marketisation of higher education, what this corporate occupation of the public

    gallery does is to change its character and negate its ability to act in opposition to

    economic and cultural power. This influence may appear more subtle than the

    examples given above in relation to the privatisation of schools corporate logos and

    their feel-good catchphrases in fact provide a kind of omnipresent, albeit perhaps

    ignorable, wallpaper within a sphere of life where it might be imagined one could be

    free of such things. But sponsors, patrons and collectors do exert all kinds of coercive

    authority in terms of what artists and curators rationally determine to be in their own

    better interests to do and avoid doing in their work from the production of art, to

    where and the manner in which it gets shown, to what or whom one is able to criticise,

    challenge or refuse, etc. In the precarious, competitive, winner-takes-all field of art,where access to the right people plays such a massive part in success and visibility,

    the impulse of obedience is significant. Such obedience is in fact learnt behaviour,

    even if the effects of domination, being almost entirely negative (what is never made or

    proposed or spoken in the first place) are in reality felt as an absence, or else its

    confirmation rarely rises above casual art world gossip.30

    There is, at the very least, a logical contradiction when art projects which claim to offer

    alternative models of education, fail to address the dominant corporate pedagogy that

    shapes the frame in which they operate. Critical pedagogy is nothing if it is not,

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    13/24

    13

    amongst other things, a constant questioning of the relations which structure that

    pedagogy and a mutation of that pedagogy in response to what has been learnt as a

    result of those questions raised. But the conclusion to draw is not the somewhat

    utopian notion that, without first establishing a truly democratic comprehensive, equal

    and dissenting sphere, critical and politically oriented practices will remain doomed to

    neutralisation and co-option towards opposite ends. Instead, what is crucial is that

    critical practices themselves can begin to alter notions of what the field can consist of,

    and what institutions may be capable of. In what follows I want to suggest two

    examples (both briefly touched on earlier) of ways this might occur in respect to art-

    education.

    Art as Education & Protest Pedagogy

    Education-as-art, education, that is, recuperated and returned as art capital, never fully

    escapes from an old fashioned version of autonomy premised on the institutional

    consecration that separates art from the disorienting sphere of social life. 31A different

    version of autonomy is premised on contestation and dissent. Art identifies and then

    acts to change those forces social, cultural, economic, aesthetic, etc. which impede

    its freedom; it confronts, as a kind of material to be reshaped, the contextual frames

    which influence and determine its meanings and values.32 Whereas education-as-art

    models appear to change arts form, but leave its basic structures untouched, art-as-

    education models, on the contrary, change not only arts forms, but attempt to shift the

    structures which determine what art is capable of. In this way art does not become

    education in any simple transition; rather in turning to education as a field where arts

    own limitations can be identified and exceeded (its various conformities and

    exclusions) art can act in a way which transforms the notion of what it can be. Anexample of what art-as-education could look like is Brechts theatre, particularly his

    learning-plays. In todays context we might look to artists working in schools, operating,

    for example, through gallery education departments.33When artists cross the threshold

    into schools, they are often afforded a degree of freedom way beyond that afforded to

    art teachers, in terms of such things as time, novelty, the ability to operate beyond

    lesson and curriculum constraints, etc. Artists in schools are therefore in a good

    position to introduce, through all kinds of forms and methods alien to the usual school

    environment, possibilities for critical and dissensual thinking. Such thinking could be

    directed towards, and viewed as a negation of corporate public pedagogy in its many

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    14/24

    14

    manifestations, both as it is seen to encroach on the school itself, and as it pervades

    the wider culture for example through mass media forms of news, sport,

    entertainment, advertising, etc. Autonomy here is not simply a case of the artists

    relative freedom to operate, nor does it reside wholly in the effect on pupils as they

    move briefly from consumer-subjects to thinking agents. Autonomy is also a

    consequence in this case of art pushing against the limits of its own exclusions and

    conformities of entering a distinctly comprehensive arena, and releasing artworks

    from their usual cultural policing as precious objects directed towards certain

    individuals, and intended for certain audiences and/or publics. In this respect, whilst

    what goes on in gallery education departments is often derided as a (State-directed)

    instrumentalisation of art, or is subject to casual dismissal or disregard by many of

    those involved in the pedagogical turn debates (a prejudice which is to a large extent

    status-driven), it may be more productive to think of these departments as trojan

    horses smuggling in practices which threaten the hierarchies, exclusions, and

    economically valorising procedures of the gallery as a whole, and therefore the class

    interests which would like to maintain these conventions and relations.34 We might,

    then, further think about how the artwork, as it appears in different forms across many

    arenas (including within gallery exhibitions), might be reconceived as a resource, a

    teaching aid, or, as the dictionary has it, an action or strategy that may be adopted in

    adverse circumstances. In this way we get a sense of how art may be liberated from

    its passive, protected status, in order to operate in a more socially functional, and

    potentially political way.

    Image: Brecht's The Ocean Flight(Lindberflug), a Lehrstuck, 1927

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    15/24

    15

    Another way art could operate critically to confront both the exclusions and the

    corporate pedagogy being introduced into art education is through what John Cussans

    has termed protest pedagogy.35 Cussans is describing activities undertaken by Arts

    Against Cuts, which both he and myself were involved with. As already mentioned,

    AAC arose out of the education protests and college occupations of late 2010 and

    involved art students, lecturers, artists, writers, activists, student union officers, and

    others.36 At group gatherings and over the course of open access education and

    planning Weekends several teach-ins and occupations of cultural venues were

    proposed. Initially these took place at Tate Britain during the Turner Prize ceremony

    and the National Gallery on the evening of the parliamentary vote on tuition fees,

    coinciding with a major education demo.37 Further actions followed in early 2011,

    including at the British Museum on the day of another education demonstration, at

    Sothebys auction house, and the Whitechapel Gallery during the opening of the

    Government Art Collection. The people who took part in these events were mainly

    operating within the field of art and art education. But while the experience of lectures,

    communal chanting, spontaneous life drawing, and manifesto production during

    occupations and teach-ins, as well as the production of images for banners and

    stickers, and the various workshops and discussions at the planning weekends, all

    represented of itself a broad, transdisciplinary and experimental extra-formal model of

    education in action, this type of pedagogical practice was not insular and desirous of

    recognition as art, but directed in a practical way towards the reinstatement of free

    public education, and the collectivist and comprehensive values embodied by public

    sector provision. What is more, in fighting for those values, the art-as-protest pedagogy

    of AAC was able to challenge the corporate pedagogy and elitism current in the art

    world in the following, interconnected ways: 1. The actions were genuinely collective

    and non-authored, even while individuals brought particular ideas to the table, thus

    negating normative neoliberal models of social success: hierarchical structures ofvalidation and prestige, and the general competitive individualism operating in the art

    world. 2. The occupations and teach-ins performed a symbolic reclamation of

    corporatised cultural space for the public sphere. In the midst of the actions at the Tate,

    National Gallery and British Museum, there was a sense of collective ownership a

    sense that occupation was about asserting a common claim over something which had

    a different type of value from its institutionally engineered market value, one which

    belonged to us all: the public gallery not as a collection of priceless treasures, but a

    democratic social space; and by extension, the necessity of art education as a critical

    and imaginative resource that should be available to everyone. 3. Coming from an art

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    16/24

    16

    perspective, this form of education through protest challenged the exclusions of the art

    world by connecting with other groups those within further education and school

    students, teachers, union members, gallery and museum workers, etc.

    Refusal

    I offer the above suggestions not as definitive solutions to the problems of conformity

    and exclusion in art and education, let alone to the wider social structures and

    ideological forces which underlie them, but as an indication of possible directions.

    There are many questions which could be raised, for example in respect to the

    permanence and strength of heterogeneous bonds formed during protests or

    residencies in schools, which are by nature delimited in time. However in the arena of

    art education where, as Marina Vishmidt argues, individualised rebellion is obligatory

    [but] socialised rebellion is proscribed, moves towards the social must surely be

    welcome.38And in so far as such individualism reflects neoliberal ideals of competition

    and privatised being, the desire and ability to invent new forms of commonality are a

    matter of the utmost urgency. But I want nevertheless to end on a note of

    intransigence. In his essay Education After Auschwitz, Theodor Adorno defines

    autonomy as the power of reflection, of self-determination, of not co-operating.39

    Adorno has in mind the fact that the Holocaust occurred because there were enough

    people willing to obey orders, to submit to an external power that was stronger than

    them. Adornos suspicion of collectives is perhaps understandable, but ultimately too

    limiting, and his vision of education too top-down. But I think it is essential to

    emphasise the importance of not co-operating, in an area of discussion where terms

    like collaboration, participation and co-operation operate as positive signals designed

    to abstract us from any sense of the power relations they may be upholding. Just as

    consensus has a critical function when located within a wider antagonistic relation(adopted tactically to confront a common enemy), so collaborative situations in art set-

    ups have limited critical value unless they push against the conditions of domination

    and exclusion which define the contexts in which they exist. Resistance against

    common impediments to freedom is where true solidarities grow. In this respect artistic

    autonomy is also about learning to say no.

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    17/24

    17

    Dean Kenning is an artist and writer. Exhibitions

    include Commonism (Five Years Gallery), and The Dulwich Horror: HP Lovecraft

    & the Crisis in British Housing (Space Station Sixty-Five). Also, recently, Reclaim

    the Mural (Whitechapel Gallery) as part of the group The Work in Progress. He

    has written many articles and reviews for Art Monthly, and has also published in

    ThirdText, ArtReviewand ModernPainters. He is a visiting lecturer on the BA

    Fine Art course at Central St Martins, and is post-doctoral researcher at the

    Contemporary Art Research Centre, Kingston University, where he is currently

    organising the Stanley Picker Public Lectures programme.

    Footnotes

    1 What Irit Rogoff has cautioningly called pedagogical aesthetics. See Turning, in

    CuratingandtheEducationalTurn, Paul ONeill & Mick Wilson, (eds.), Amsterdam: De

    Appel, 2010, p. 42.

    2Paul ONeill & Mick Wilson, Introduction, ibid, p.15.

    3 A case in point being Dis-assembly. See Hans-Ulrich Obrist, Andrea Philips, Lars

    Bang Larsen & Emily Pringle, Dis-assembly. FaisalAbdu'allah, Christian Boltanski,

    Yona Friedman, Runa Islam:A Serpentine Gallery Project with North Westminister

    CommunitySchool, London: Serpentine Gallery, 2006.

    4For a good summary of many of these developments and their political significance

    see Marina Vishmidt, Creation Myth, Mute, July 2010,

    http://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/creation-myth

    5 I presented an embryonic version of this paper at TheTroubleWithArtSchool, an

    event held at the ICA, 30 November 2011. I would like to thank Corinna Till for all her

    valuable input regarding the present text.

    6The ConDems are in fact helping to engineer a stark two-tier system by imposing

    supply side limits, making up to 20,000 student places available to institutions who can

    set fees at below 7000 per year. Whilst David Willets will sell this as giving a better

    deal to student consumers, the real purpose of such market rigging is to encourage

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    18/24

    18

    new providers to enter and compete with universities on cost. The multinational firm

    Pearson, who have also expressed an interest in running Academy and Free Schools,

    have claimed they can run a degree course for as little as 4000.

    I garner these facts from a talk given by Andrew McGettigan for the Marxism in Culture

    Open Seminar at the Institute of Historical Research, London on 14 October 2011:

    Financialisation, Monetisation, Privatisation: Creating the New Market in HE. For up to

    date analysis of Higher Education developments see Andrews CriticalEducationblog:

    http://andrewmcgettigan.org/

    7 The confusingly titled English Baccalaureate, introduced to state sector schools in

    November 2010, is awarded to pupils achieving A*-C in GCSE in the following

    subjects: Maths, English, Science, Foreign Language, and History/Geography. It

    immediately became the measure of quality for schools, with the consequence that in

    many places non-EBac subjects were squeezed to prioritise EBac subjects. From the

    start of 2011 many secondary schools decided to limit pupils choice of arts subjects,

    to enable them to drop art a year early, to allot less time to arts subjects, and in some

    cases remove art as a GCSE option all together. See

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2011/feb/07/gcse-arts-cut-english-baccalaureate and http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2011/jul/13/ebacc-limited-choice-gcse-

    school-pupils A sign of the seemingly planned diminution in art provision is the 40

    percent reduction last year in PGCE training places for art teachers compared with a

    14 percent reduction in places over all. See

    http://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=6087624

    In its determination to accelerate New Labours expansion of corporate and private

    sponsored education, the government has vastly expanded Academy Schools, largely

    by bribing comprehensives to convert with the promise of desperately needed funds.

    Many sponsors are charismatic entrepreneurs keen to impose a no-nonsense, three

    Rs, vocation-oriented curriculum, often in the name of poorer students. Whilst it is

    certain art will be considered an unnecessary luxury in many inner city academies, art,

    music and drama are likely to thrive in some of the more affluent Free Schools, being

    seen by parents who themselves attended university as an essential part of a well-

    rounded education. Thus we see the likely divisions in degree study being reflected at

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    19/24

    19

    compulsory level education prior to HE selection.

    It is worth making the point that a major factor in the Tories education policiesregarding Free and Academy Schools is to take schools out of the hands of local

    authority accountability, and to diminish workers' rights as the new employers are

    exempt from teachers pay and conditions agreements. For a thorough account of the

    state-sponsored privatisation of compulsory education see Melissa Benn, School

    Wars.TheBattleforBritainsEducation, Verso (London, New York), 2011

    8The abolition of the Educational Maintenance Allowance, a weekly sum paid to 16-19

    year-old students from poorer families who remain in education, will also effect the

    take-up of art at pre-degree level (on Foundation and, especially, BTEC courses). In

    general the decision on EMA is likely to have consequences at least as significant (and

    more immediate since EMA is a payment, not a debt) for social mobility as the increase

    in university fees, and was a major source of anger expressed in the student demos of

    late 2010.

    9It is clear to me that issues about exclusion need to be equally embedded alongside

    all curricula and pedagogic innovation. It is no longer forgivable or strategically

    appropriate to regard them as appendices to be dealt with by external WP

    programmes. John Beagles, In a Class of TheirOwn. The Incomprehensiveness of

    Art Education, Variant, Issue 39/40.

    http://www.variant.org.uk/39_40texts/comp39_40.html . I would concur completely with

    Beagles call for a renewed, reimagined, core insertion of comprehensive education

    values into debates and struggles around art school education.

    10 Anton Vidokle, Exhibition to School: unitednationsplaza, in Curating and the

    EducationalTurn, ibid.

    11Op. cit., p.153. A similar selection process occurred at the New Museum.

    12 And this would include mechanisms of self-selection, such as the ability to pay

    private tuition fees, to afford to live in an affluent area near a good state school, to have

    professional connections, to have support which enables one to live away from home,

    in another city or country, etc.

    13 John Beagles, In a Class of Their Own: The Incomprehensiveness of Art

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    20/24

    20

    Education, Variant, issue 39/40, Winter 2010.

    http://www.variant.org.uk/39_40texts/comp39_40.html Beagles continues: the often

    antagonistic debates between [] those whose subjectivity is often motivated by being

    bored or out of place, and those at home within culture, frequently leads to a

    questioning of dominant modes of thought.

    14Vidokle, Exhibition to School, p.155

    15 As Tirdad Zolghadr, one of the schools core collaborators/tutors, writes, the

    project, in and of itself, was discretely framed as an Anton Vidokle artwork. The Angry

    Middle Aged: Romance and the Possibilities of Adult Education in the Art World, in

    CuratingandtheEducationalTurn, p.161

    16On the question of artist visibility see my feature The Artist as Artist, ArtMonthly,

    June 2010

    17Several groups involved with extra-formal models of art education were invited to

    speak/perform. I was invited as part of FreeSchoolinaNewDarkAge, an informal art

    school initiated by John Cussans in 2008.

    18David Burrows, head of BA Fine Art at the Slade and host of the event, has pointed

    out to me that for many Slade students taking part, the gallery teach-ins still seemed

    tutor-led, and the residency was a means to pursue communal experiences in a way

    they could claim ownership over. It is also worth bearing in mind the exhaustion felt

    when collective action ends in defeat, and therefore the need to regroup, or to seek

    solitude, in order that energy can be generated again and directed into forms of art.

    19 A case close to home might be the production of the Nomadic Hive Manifesto

    during the National Gallery teach-in/occupation of December 2010.

    20 Immediately after the student demos, the occupations and smashed windows

    which, along with groups such as UK Uncut, seemed to energise a whole wave of

    revolt across the country against austerity cuts, the privatisation of public wealth and

    attacks on public sector workers galleries and other art organisations wanted a piece

    of the action, and there were many calls for protest groups and politically inclined

    artists to collaborate on exhibitions and speak at art events. Protest was so

    contemporary, but often the art context seemed to suck all political energy out of the

    most subversive content. An unfortunate example of this, despite its worthy objectives,

    was IfNot,ThenWhat?taking place at Chelsea College parade ground in March 2011,

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    21/24

    21

    and described as an anti-cuts project creating new visions of the future and as

    coinciding with the Liberal Democrats conference (in Sheffield). A temporary wooden

    pavilion, designed by the artists Charlesworth, Lewandowski & Mann, was intended to

    house various political events from talks by campaign groups to alternative society

    workshops. In addition to the likelihood of such events being completely neutralised

    given the particular context, the structure itself was classified as an artwork, and its

    walls and floors had then to be protected from potentially damaging elements such as

    sticky tape or muddy boots. Another revealing detail was that although the named

    artists were paid to participate, the protestors and campaigners who were meant to

    actually activate the event (including politically-inclined artists) were not.

    21 At the Slade event John Cussans presented a paper which examines the way in

    which, according to the logic of university research assessment funding (the RAE, now

    the REF), everything from DIY free schools, to protest actions, are capable of being

    recuperated and turned into a validating research output for the institution. Unless, that

    is, one is careful, or in other words, knows how to refuse. See John Cussans, Return

    This! The Paradoxes of Protest Pedagogy in a Research Culture. Available at

    http://freefreeschool.wordpress.com/2011/10/20/after-the-car-crash/

    22Henri A. Giroux, BorderCrossings.CulturalWorkersand thePoliticsofEducation,

    New York & London: Routledge, 2005, p.4

    23At vast public expense, during a time of massive cuts to local council budgets, and

    when the Schools Building Programme for state schools has been scrapped. A report

    at a recent conference opposing Michael Goves Education Reform Act makes the link

    between subsidised privatisation and societal division (particularly in relation to Free

    Schools): new schools are being funded to help the hard pressed middle class escape

    the poor. Goves new legislation has a really frightening objective: to lure aspirational

    families away from any commitment to a common educational project, at the risk of

    creating even greater social segregation. Caught in the Act Report on 19 th

    November Conference, p.2.

    http://www.campaignforstateeducation.org.uk/caughtintheact.html

    24Melissa Benn, SchoolWars, p.121

    25 Op. cit., pp. 123-124. See also Caught in the Act, p.4. Like many such chains,

    theres a pervading philanthropic rhetoric of enabling bright but underprivileged

    students to rise above their circumstances. This sometimes reflects the individual

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    22/24

    22

    sponsors own journey from rags to riches.

    26 See http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2012/feb/26/schools-crusade-gove-

    murdoch?INTCMP=SRCHAlso http://followersoftheapocalyp.se/spinning-a-story-gove-

    klein-becta-cameron-andWe get an inkling here of what was behind Goves savaging

    of the Leveson Inquiry, which was, he said, having a chilling effect on press freedom.

    27 http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/bankers-can-give-state-sector-the-networks-

    that-help-private-pupils-6375535.html

    28 We should be under no illusion that the neoliberal methods being imposed in

    schools are done with the intention of creating an obedient, pliant and well disciplined

    workforce. Local businesses who sponsor schools are dealing literally with a captive

    future workforce when they have influence on what gets taught. Another worrying

    development is the increase of army cadets in schools, and now, following the US

    Troops to Teachers programme (Proud to Serve Again), plans to set up militarised

    Academy schools run by ex-soldiers. As Captain Burki, who hopes to establish a

    school in Oldham staffed entirely by ex-servicemen, said (referring to last summers

    riots) The performance of our armed forces in Afghanistan and elsewhere stands in

    stark contrast to the mobs that have recently been roaming our streets. See

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2032890/UK-riots-Phoenix-School-open-teacher-soldier.html It should also be clear that, at another level, personalised student

    debt is a disciplinary mechanism for social obedience, particularly in regard to work

    relations.

    29 This conception is in large part an effect of government stipulations, which came

    with the introduction of fees by New Labour in 1998, obliging courses to provide details

    of employability potential, thus explicitly equating quality with future earning capacity.

    Art departments even began talking about T-shaped people, meaning arts graduateswhose multi-disciplinary knowledge and skills enabled them to claim flexibility in

    relation to the jobs market. I am speaking here, however, about training to be an artist

    in the art world. Hence the language of emerging art professionals, early career

    artists, and a focus on selling oneself as a creative individual through portfolio

    presentation, lectures on networking, DIY exhibitions as professional development

    modules, etc.

    30Occasionally, in a more public arena, the limits tacitly imposed on art by corporate

    power are made manifest, as was the case when those limits were tested by a Tate

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    23/24

    23

    Gallery workshop, out of which the anti-BP sponsorship group Liberate Tate was born:

    When art activist group The Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination were invited to

    run a workshop on art and civil disobedience, they were told by curators that they could

    not take any action against Tate and its sponsors and the workshop was policed by the

    curators to make sure the artists produced work commensurate with the Tates

    mission. See http://liberatetate.wordpress.com/about/

    31Nicolas Bourriauds use of the term micro-utopia to describe relational art practices

    is symptomatic here. For Bourriaud critical art that envisages alternative ways of living

    and new forms of relating to one another, cannot operate directly in the world (this

    would be utopian in a bad, totalising modernistsense), and so must remain in its own

    micro aesthetic sphere.

    32 I am influenced here by the dynamic conception of autonomy proposed by Dave

    Beech & John Roberts in their essay Specters of the Aesthetic. Unlike Peter Brger,

    who offers a materialst interpretation of aestheticist ideology, but only then to condemn

    art to social exclusion in its autonomous zone (on pain of its becoming commercial),

    Beech and Roberts conceive of autonomy as an agent-led process towards the

    elimination of factors which constrain freedom. They see autonomy as a fight for

    autonomy. Dave Beech & John Roberts, The Philistine Controversy, London: Verso,

    2002

    33 I have developed my thoughts on art in schools both as part of ongoing research

    developed with the Schools and Teachers programme at Tate Modern, and through my

    involvement with the Portman Gallery located in Morpeth Secondary School, Bethnal

    Green.

    34Both Felicity Allen and Carmen Mrsch have commented on this tendency amongst

    exhibition curators and those writing about more high-profile education-oriented art tolook down on education department curating. They both offer vigorous assertions of

    the value of gallery education practices. See Felicity Allen, Situating Gallery

    Education, Tate Encounters, February 2008. Available here as a PDF

    http://felicityallen.co.uk/writing/situating-gallery-education . And Carmen Mrsch,

    Alliances for Unlearning: On Gallery Education and Institutions of Critique, Afterall26,

    Spring 2011.

  • 8/12/2019 Dean Keaning (2012) Refusing Conformity and Exclusion in Art Education

    24/24

    35John Cussans, Return This! The Paradoxes of Protest Pedagogy in a Research

    Culture. Cussans describes protest pedagogy as: pedagogy about protest, through

    protest and in protest and, in relation to Arts Against Cuts planning weekends, a

    combination of art school, alternative university, public assembly, and action

    planning.He has related his concern that the term protest pedagogy could become

    another fashionable label for the art world to pick up and hang on actions and events

    as a way of gaining symbolic capital by association. I therefore use it with caution.

    36 Whilst my concern here is art and education, learning as and through protest of

    course applies to activities beyond the immediate field of art to include (to limit myself

    to the recent UK context) university occupations, teach-ins at banks organised by UK

    Uncut and other groups, the programmes run at the Really Free School in various

    squatted buildings, the Occupy LSX Tent City University and Bank/School of Ideas etc.

    37 See my article Protest, Occupy, Transform, Art Monthly 343: February 2011.

    http://www.artmonthly.co.uk/magazine/site/article/dean-kenning-protest-occupy-

    transform-february-2011/

    38 Marina Vishmidt, Creation Myth, op. cit,,

    http://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/creation-myth

    39 Theodor Adorno, Education after Auschwitz, in CriticalModels: Interventionsand

    Catchwords, New York: Columbia University Press, 1998. My emphasis.