June 4, 2022

Hito Steyerl: Context is Everything, Except When It Comes to Germany

Intro from Zeit Newspaper, Germany

Does the upcoming Documenta exhibition in Kassel promote anti-Semitic tendencies in art? Are some female artists too close to the BDS movement? Should the curators have paid more attention to the fact that Israeli-Jewish artists are also present – ??and not just those who are themselves opposed to the country’s Palestine policy? Corresponding allegations have been raised since the beginning of the year in the ZEIT, among others, and have repeatedly been linked to the post-colonial claim of the show. Does relating different mechanisms of oppression in the world to each other dismantle the German memory of the singularity of the Holocaust? A series of discussions in the run-up to the art show was supposed to address the allegations, but was canceled at short notice – you can read more about the background here. At this point we present and document the updated lecture that the German artist Hito Steyerl would have actually wanted to give in this context.

***

I am not an expert on racism or anti-Semitism. Nowadays I mainly deal with digital technology. So I have no doubt that racism and anti-Semitism are very different and distinct phenomena. But when a run-of-the-mill old-school German Nazi tried to shoot dozens of Jews in a synagogue in Halle, and luckily the door withstood his attack, after already killing a passerby, he simply crossed the street to the kebab shop and shot someone there too. That corresponds to the reality in which I grew up. Can someone please explain this to me?

Around 2001 I was asked to submit my work for inspection at Documenta 11, curated by Okwui Enwezor. Among other things, I sent in a short video called Babenhausen 1997. This video documents a demonstration in the small town of the same name against a series of attacks on the Jewish family Merin, who had been subjected to threats and harassment for decades in the Hessian province. Tony Abraham Merin’s estate was eventually burned down and he emigrated to the United States. The investigations were discontinued without result.

The curators of Documenta 11 politely said to my work: nothing at all.

I still don’t know what the problem was. Content? Form? Maybe the package just got lost? It’s useless to speculate. This happens all the time in the art world. Something is always wrong. Still, I learned a lot from Okwui Enwezor’s exhibition. A fascinating, nuanced discussion opened up beyond some platitudes, horizons I was previously unaware of.

There were other reasons not to take the de facto rejection personally.

With all the minority rhetoric of Documenta 11 – where were artists like Ayse Erkmen or Marc Brandenburg? People who dealt with German racism and migration in their work? Germany was absent as a scene of the diverse global conflicts that were at the center of Documenta 11.

One of the tenets of postcolonial theory is (to put it briefly) that everything must be locally situated and historically contextualized. However, the situation in Babenhausen, Hesse, did not seem to represent a relevant context for Documenta 11. So I learned that in postcolonial theory everything has to be situated and contextualized unless it takes place in Germany. An invocation of the global as abstract as possible largely replaced an examination of Germany’s present and past. That was convenient because Germany seemed like neutral territory, a tabula rasa on which to culturally negotiate the rest of the world—a perspective that suited German soft-power ambitions.

What did not take place in the context of the postcolonial debates around 2002 was a resolute and society-wide examination of the real situation of German minorities – not only in the field of art. The NSU murder of Halit Yozgat in Kassel did not take place until a few years later. Could this and other murders have been prevented?

In any case, I was already considerably less optimistic around 2003 when I was working with my co-editor Encarnación Gutiérrez Rodríguez on the introduction to an anthology called Can the Subaltern speak German? Our admittedly over-ambitious plan was to test the transferability of postcolonial studies to the German context – to a de facto immigration country that was mostly denied as such and at the same time was shaped by its post-genocidal constitution.

The exoticization of postcolonial theory

Most of the questions that led to bitter debates a good 20 years later, as part of the so-called second historians’ dispute, came up in our introduction. For example, we asked about the “impact that postcolonial concepts have on the understanding and transformation of the reality of migrants and members of minorities in reunified Germany, i.e. in a reality that is characterized by the increase in racist and anti-Semitic violence in a post-Nazi society “.

The presumed consequence of this transfer, however, was that in the end the field of postcolonial studies would be so plowed up that little would remain of the original concepts. An example is Ernst Nolte’s formulation of the “Asian act”, with which he meant a holocaust allegedly triggered by Stalin – and which triggered the first historians’ dispute. This arch-racist chaos of meaning is definitely not accessible with standard post-colonial works such as Edward Said’s Orientalism.

Instead of the necessary contextualization, however, the German public preferred to exoticize postcolonial theory and consume it as a pure theory import. It also meant that a whole generation of scholars and writers was more or less lost to this translation work, and the debate fell back a full 20 years. A massive brain drain set in in the Anglo-American world. Instead, thinkers like Achille Mbembe —and he’s now one random example among many— started representing postcolonial approaches to Germans. With all due respect to Mbembe’s work, I believe that the fact that his writings often lyrically negotiate an abstract “colony” that seems to have no real location also contributed to his popularity in Germany. This was perhaps also well received in Germany since everyone could think that this abstract colony was reassuringly far away – and the Humboldt Forum did not own any looted art from there.

Back to Documenta. Here’s a joke. Question: Why were the canvases of the American abstract expressionists so disproportionately huge at the first Documenta exhibitions? Answer: Because there was so much to hide!

The insights into the past of Werner Haftmann, the academic pacesetter of the first three Documentas and SA partisan hunter, were shocking but not surprising. The details in the documentation of the Deutsches Historisches Museum (DHM), which has done an excellent job of researching the Documenta and its makers in recent years, are drastic. According to an Italian newspaper report, Haftmann sticks his finger into the wounds of a tortured Italian partisan on the hospital bed. It is not known whether his team was also responsible for the torture. A few years later, Haftmann developed the academic branding for Documenta. Accordingly, she stood for the West, modernity and world art as such.

An interesting curatorial principle: the exhibition became an instrument of obfuscation. For example, the fact that many of the founders were members of relevant Nazi organizations. At the same time, the “art world” jargon was also a rather brazen blueprint for West German soft-power post-war imperialism. If you couldn’t conquer the world with tanks – maybe with art?

Here is a sketch of an argument. In the Documenta discourse, the “world” according to Haftmann’s façon was replaced for decades by postmodern globalization discourses, by liberal rhetoric of diversity and inclusion. Paradoxically, German identification with the West increasingly turned into identification with an Anglo-American academic critique of the West. One of these proxy-discourses was the so-called postcolonial theory at the last Documentas. And that sometimes tipped back into what not only we, 20 years ago, called “the often dangerously reactionary, anti-imperialist and anti-Western tendencies of postcolonial studies “.

There is also a turning point in relation to Documenta

If Putin’s ideologues are calling for the decolonization of Russia from some kind of Western-Jewish liberalism, then that notion of decolonization has been badly corrupted, and certainly not for the first time. Criticism of colonialism often regresses into a glorification of the old, innocent days populated by imaginary, Disneyfied versions of indigenous peoples. In many cases, the result is identity as voyeuristic branding. But also the new meanings that the term anti-fascism has developed recently in connection with the Russian invasion of Ukraine are hair-raising. Not only the present but also the past is getting out of joint Putin is like Hitler, and any notion of a singularity for the Holocaust was swiftly discarded. The second historians’ dispute seems over. Instead, we find ourselves in an alternate version of the first, in which Nolte might have won this time.

So one has to ask how the Documenta’s post-war model, which now seems rather exhausted, is supposed to hold its own in a world that is severely de-globalizing, encircling, arduous, warming up and has been at constant war for decades? The current Documenta debate also reflects an overarching situation: the end of the post-war period or the end of the interregnum after 1989. The “world views” that made sense at that time – do they still apply today? Documenta as a cultural symbol of the so-called Pax Americana – can it face the actual end of this epoch? Has the exhibition outlived itself and still helplessly sputters and increasingly reactionary globalization phrases as said?

There is also a turning point in relation to Documenta: before the DHM exhibition and after. Perhaps curatorial teams could previously claim to not have to deal with the past of Documenta: after all, their task is to define contemporary art, not the study of history. It possibly still applies, that the Documenta represents the world as such and can therefore confidently ignore the local situation. But since the DHM exhibition, this applies: if the exhibition itself ignores its own history, then others will historicize it. And that means that the Documenta is the object of this investigation, just as “the world” has been the object of a (West) German Documenta view up to now. If the exhibition wants to remain relevant, she would be well advised to reassess the naïve claim to world status through the prism of its own history. However, this would require a team that would be able or interested in taking on this challenge. Otherwise, instead of writing history, it becomes history itself.

Especially since German cultural diplomacy has become much more robust or, to put it bluntly, more corrupt. A current example: one million euros in funding from the Federal Foreign Office for a privately organized exhibition with the almost comical name Diversity United, which culturally decorated German Nord Stream 2 business interests and whose patron was Vladimir Putin. This monstrous, fossilized Apparatschikschau was Germany’s cultural contribution to a right-wing authoritarian, fossil-fueled Russian war machine. Is the official flattery of autocrats increasingly replacing the foreign policy function that Documenta once had?

I would like to come back to Okwui Enwezor, for whom local issues initially seemed secondary and whose manifold impulses were nonetheless indispensable. He had moved to the Haus der Kunst in Munich out of all places, where he was harassed by the local bureaucracy. This is what Enwezor said shortly before his death in 2019 in Der Spiegel :

“Germany was so important for my intellectual and professional development. I was offered so many opportunities – Documenta, many other projects, also in Munich by the way. (…) But I am dismayed by the development it is taking now. (…) Here, not far from my home, Pegida supporters marched through the streets every Monday night. I was often on my way from work and saw them. That basically settled my position here, as an African in a mostly monocultural city, I am one that stands out. And then you’re like, ‘Can you feel safe? Who’s going to help you if something happens to you? It’s just something that goes through your mind.”

Enwezor’s words reminded me of Tony Merin’s story in Babenhausen. “Before they come with gas cans, I’d better get out,” he said. It seems German reality has caught up with Enwezor at this point as well. Enwezor was a great mind, a complex human being and extremely generous, and the fact that he had to feel so abandoned at the end of his life is a shame, as are the alleged attacks on current Documenta participants. The current Documenta is also being caught up by the German conditions that it – unlike the Berlin Biennale, for example – completely underestimated. It’s too late to contextualize now, unfortunately, that chance was missed. It only remains to be hoped that the ever-escalating campaigns will not continue stubbornly and coldly despite the threat of turning into physical violence and that no one will be harmed.

But if the Documenta is to have a future beyond that, now is the time to say goodbye to the arrogant paradigm of the world art show and to begin a phase of reflection. Or maybe it just has outlived itself?

 

Hito Steyerl is a German filmmaker, moving image artist, writer, and innovator of the essay documentary.

More Articles from &&&

The Stirner Affair

Against Normative Morality  If amoralists are gathered in the history of philosophy, the initial catalog features two figures: Stirner and Nietzsche. The former appeared first, which has led to speculative claims of plagiarism by the latter. However, it is more appropriate to place Stirner among the individualists and hedonists, both before and during his time,… Read More »

The Problem of the Nature of Thought

Paulin Hountondji, the Beninese author who died in February and taught philosophy at the National University of Benin, was clearly aware of the magnitude and impact of politician Kwame Nkrumah, since, as he recalls in his autobiography The Struggle for Meaning, his presentation in Paris on the Ghanaian leader’s 1964 book Consciencism caused headlines for… Read More »

I Am A Philosopher

Last year—two years ago?—Cássia Siqueira tweeted: “Better Call Saul S06E07.” I was mystified, but didn’t ask her what it was about. I’d never watched the TV show. But anything Cássia wrote, wherever she wrote it, however cryptic, deserved investigation. So I watched the whole show, knowing I was looking for the meaning of her tweet.… Read More »

Good Times

This piece, initiated and commissioned by Marten Spangberg, is part of a larger project called “When The Museum is Closed” at the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire in Geneva.   All ideas are bad ideas. They are bad not insofar as they are impractical, useless, or lacking in any such respect. They are bad in that… Read More »

The Human Centipede: A View From the Art World*

In time for the opening of Art Basel on June 13 and the release of Eduarda Neves’s Minor Bestiary next month as a more recent critique of contemporary art, we are publishing Reza Negarestani’s “The Human Centipede: A View From The Artworld.” Only delivered once in lecture format at e-flux, New York, in November 2013,… Read More »

Other Endings

Found in the Hyperstition archives, “Other Endings” is the never-published preface to Reza Negarestani’s Cyclonopedia by Nick land, the controversial former Instructor of philosophy at The New Centre which in light of the author’s recent public declaration of his faith in Allah and Islam becomes more than just a premonition but an essential part of… Read More »

Also Reality and the Weight of Conjunctions

Determinant meaning within the English language exists by virtue of the glue that is conjunctions. Sticky little words like “but” and “also” join together, compartmentalize, and disjoint our speech, thoughts, social structure, and reality, in the mathematics of meaning. Even the American legal system depends upon conjunctions like “either/or” and the contrasts they create. Both… Read More »

Letter to the Washed Away

Dear Lee, I texted you earlier today about how Ava went missing during the fires. I’m going up the coast to look for her in a yacht I’ve stolen that belongs to friends of my parents who are away in the Austrian Alps until Christmas. Did you know that the term “yacht” comes from the… Read More »

Interpretation Contra Structural Reading

This article is an extension of “The Narcissist-Image,” departing from Fares Chalabi’s presentation in “Deleuzian Aesthetics.”  Much of Chalabi’s Deleuzian Aesthetics is based on a critique of interpretation, which for Chalabi, is a procedure for reading art where “this means that, and that means this,” that something like the color black points to a feeling… Read More »

Kunstwollen* Minus the Human (Painting in the Age of Machinic Will to Art)

1 Imagine describing the series of Jeff Perrott’s paintings New Construction (Pharmakon, Subject, Natural, Denatural, Door, Sublime, Red Interior, and Cosmic) to an AI or a blind person. How would you start? By listing which elements come first, and how the layers of lines in each painting are ordered? Describing an artwork is deconstructing or… Read More »

Ruangrupa: Contemporary Art or Friendship Industry?*

In the past two decades, more than in the past hundred years, authoritarian regimes have risen to power globally. Today, fascist parties are occupying seats in many countries’ governments, such as in the Israeli Knesset, the Dutch Tweede Kamer, the American Congress, and the German Bundestag. Meanwhile, the collective memory of European fascism and its… Read More »

Call the Bronze Age… they forgot their pictograms!

“In the preceding chapter we discussed the development of technoeconomic organization and the establishment of social machinery closely connected with the evolution of techniques. Here I propose to consider the evolution of a fact that emerged together with Homo sapiens in the development of anthropoids: the capacity to express thought in material symbols. (…) As… Read More »

Interferential Axiology: Excess & Disruption

What is tragic about choice is no longer fundamental if choice is no longer what establishes communication between an independent city and an independent individual as substances. —Gilbert Simondon1   Excess and disruption are different modes of systemic interferences, providing differing sets of axiological implications. This essay seeks to explore their tragic interface in the… Read More »

Here & Elsewhere, at War, & Into the Future

The Middle East continues to painfully be a primary site for the blood-drenched transformations of our planetary geopolitical system. However, about ten years ago and during another Israeli operation in Gaza, an uncanny timeliness opened an unexpected connection between global contemporary art and geopolitics in August 2014 when, following the escalation of Israel’s Gaza operations,… Read More »

Zionism Reconsidered

The seminal essay below by Hannah Arendt, spanning 15,000 words was first published in the Menorah Journal in October 1944. This work was inspired by the meeting of the World Zionist Organization’s American section in Atlantic City. This congress was notable for its assertive call for a Jewish state covering the entire territory of Palestine,… Read More »

Modern Art: A True Conspiracy

*Originally delivered as a response to Gertrude Stein’s “The Making of Americans” on Day 27 of Superconversations, a collaboration between e-flux and The New Centre for Research & Practice in 2015. The most recent wartime Christmas in New York was as cold and bright as any other holiday season had ever been in the city. As usual, a… Read More »

The Dead God, A short story in two parts

Things had been getting strange at the firm, since the boss had come back from holidays. The black cape and the pile of Crowley books strewn about the office were the first clue. What was Hardeep, the Singaporean tech bro CEO, doing with all this, mused Pierre, a level 7 sales executive, en route to… Read More »

The Purist

Filipe Felizardo is a philosophy student, artist and musician from Lisbon, with an informal education in film, comics, and musical pedagogy. Currently a Researcher on Critical Philosophy at the New Centre for Research & Practice, Felizardo focuses on systematic reconceptions of learning and alienation, as understood from the workspaces of inferentialism, Marxist activity-approach, and anti-vitalism.

Retinol: A Mode of Action

“Condensed in a formula, the Technological Civilization can be characterized as the transition from ratio to generativity, from matter to process, from nature to the hybrid.” –Davor Löffler If we follow the self-avowed German Accelerationism and deep futurology of Davor Löffler (Löffler 2021), we can posit that everything is co-evolutionary and that there are no… Read More »

The Narcissist Image

In his course Deleuzian Aesthetics Fares Chalabi presents an extended typology of mutually exclusive, rigorously defined image-types, or what I like to call aesthetic structures or aesthetic logics. An image-type or aesthetic logic is a form that structures the entirety of a work of art – take, for example, the ‘series’. The logic of series,… Read More »

Sorry You Can’t Pass a Turing Test But I’m Different 

Five hundred million individuals tried to monetize their social media last year, according to a recent Linktree survey. As a lucky member of this esteemed group, I recently found myself surfing through the entrepreneurial side of TikTok, captivated by a video titled “How to make money with Chat GPT”. The clip tells you to go… Read More »

Unthought Apparitions

In this video essay, Brent Cox works through the poetry of Barbadian poet Kamau Brathwaite and his Sycorax Video Style, which he developed in the early 1980s using a Mac SE/30 and which offers myriad compelling extra-linguistic or extra-conceptual ideas in relation to citationality, literary convention, the constative/performative distinction, the temporality of neologisms, and the… Read More »

The Work of Art in the Age of Cybernetic Criticism

Walter Benjamin’s seminal 1935 essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” wrestled with the effects of powerful technologies upon culture, and presaged much subsequent writing, e.g. Martin Heidegger and Italo Calvino. Here I want to consider not the artwork-qua-object as in Benjamin, but rather the work of art as an active force, in… Read More »

Cosmotechnics & the Multicultural Trap

1. Although still a young writer and researcher, it is probably not an exaggeration to say that Yuk Hui is already one of the most influential contemporary thinkers of technology working today. This position is certainly warranted by the strength and scope of his work, the expansive drive and breadth of which is inspiring, especially… Read More »

Pandemic, Time for a Transversal Political Imagination*

I: Symptoms With the omnipresence of the term “symptom” these days, it seems that a plausible escape from the deep horror of this pandemic would be to conduct a symptomatic reading of it. Attributed to Louis Althusser, this method of reading literary and historical texts focuses not on what a text evidently expresses, but on… Read More »