Day 33: Joshua Johnson responds to Liam Gillick, “Weapons Grade Pig Work”
“While the genres of the past have been exhausted by the revolutions of modernity, the particular practices and functions of our theoretical knowledge provide normative criteria for judging the intent of artistic gestures. An art which takes seriously the constructive application of its role as a cognitive mediator, and responds to the specific content of the special sciences, may no longer speak to the debased average man, but it might join the chorus of that anonymous anyone who is a vector of liberation.“
***
Join the conversation and respond to Joshua Johnson, or add your own perspective on Liam Gillick’s piece.
To participate follow the link or register here: http://conversations.e-flux.com/signup
Superconversations is a collaboration between
e-flux & The New Centre for Research & Practice