LASCAUX IV: THE INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR CAVE ART BY SNOHETTA
LASCAUX
IV: THE INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR CAVE ART BY SNOHETTA
The new
International Centre for Cave Art (Centre International d’Art Parietal) in
Montignac, France welcomes visitors to an immersive educational experience of
the prehistoric Lascaux cave paintings. Known by archaeologists as the ‘Sistine
Chapel of Prehistory’ due to their spiritual and historical significance, the
20,000-year-old paintings are among the finest known examples of art from the
Paleolithic period.
Architects
Snøhetta and SRA, alongside scenographer Casson Mann, worked closely with a
team of archaeologists to create a holistic museum and educational experience.
As an interpretation center featuring state-of-the-art experiential
storytelling technology paired with a facsimile of the caves, Lascaux IV offers
visitors an opportunity to discover the caves in a unique way that reveals a
sense of wonder and mystery, as if they, too, were the first group of
adventurers to stumble upon the cave paintings.
The new
Lascaux IV Caves Museum is situated at the intersection of two unique
landscapes, between a densely-forested, protected hillside and the agricultural
Vézère Valley. Snøhetta’s design conceives the museum as a fine cut in the
landscape, inviting visitors into a curious world of prehistory.
The
visitor experience is carefully sequenced. Beginning in the lobby, visitors
ascend by a lift to the belvedere out on the roof, where they can enjoy a
magnificent panoramic view of Montignac and the Vézère Valley. They then
descend a gentle slope towards the cave facsimile, which follows the incline of
the roof towards the edge of the forest until reaching the entrance to the
replica. The winding path through the landscape and gradual descent back down
to grade facilitates a mental transition through time and space, creating an
experience similar to that of the cave’s first discoverers in 1940.
Inside
the cave facsimile, the atmosphere is damp and dark, re-creating the humidity
within the caves. Sounds are muffled; the temperature drops to about 16 degrees
Celsius. This sequence is dedicated to contemplation, allowing people an
experience of the sanctuary that once was. Lights flicker just as the animal
fat lamps of Paleolithic times did, revealing the layers of paintings and
engravings on the surface of the walls.
The
cave replica was developed through the most advanced 3D laser scanning and
casting technologies to replicate the original cave form to a 1 millimeter
tolerance. Following the construction, the caves underwent a careful
analog process: 25 artists spent 2 years hand-painting 900 meters of resin rock
reproductions. To ensure the highest level of accuracy, artists used the same
pigments that the prehistoric painters used 20,000 years ago to recreate the
1900 paintings and engravings that adorn the walls of Lascaux IV.
Upon
exiting the facsimile, visitors arrive at a transition space known as the Cave
Garden. This patio provides an opportunity to re-adjust to the exterior
context after the intense visceral and emotional experience of the Cave
replica. The relationship to the sky, the presence of plants and the sound of
flowing water frame this moment.
Throughout
the museum, the visitor experience sequences a balance of stark differences in
atmospheres, light and intensities – from the enclosed exhibition spaces
ensconced in the hill, to the light-filled lobby and transition spaces. The
juxtaposition between descent and ascent, inside and outside, earth and sky, or
nature and art, evoke the analogous experience of the caves.
https://snohetta.com/project/322-lascaux-iv-the-international-centre-for-cave-art
PREPARE
FOR THE LASCAUX EXPERIENCE
THE
LASCAUX STUDIO
Eight
large walls of the cave are reproduced in this space where visitors are free to
circulate. All the cave’s major works are represented: “Two Crossed Bison”,
“The Great Black Cow”, “The Panel of the Imprint”, “The Apse”, “The Shaft
Scene”, “The Axial Gallery”, “The Upside-Down Horse” and “The Hall of the
Bulls”. In enhanced reality, visitors find information on the various
representations, techniques and interpretations.
In this
immense hall, four different displays are on offer :
The model: discover
the cave in a completely original way with virtual reality! Using the tour
companion, visitors can scan the surface of this model to see the works located
at various points inside the cave.
The art experience: with
the same tools and techniques used by Palaeolithic humans, visitors can create
their own works of art virtually. This space shows everything one needs to know
for understanding the techniques, tools and choices of these artists.
A fragile balance: how
did the cave survive the passage of time? Why was it closed to the public? How
can we continue to preserve it on a daily basis? All these questions that you
ask yourself are answered in a new immersive experience made possible by the
latest technologies.
The Lascaux objects: here
you can handle the objects found during archaeological dig sand learn more
about them. A number of different objects are assembled on an animated table
like an archaeologist’s. A video provides information on these finds and the
dating techniques used for understanding Lascaux. Two touch-screens placed on
the edge of the table present an interactive chronology showing Lascaux’s place
in the history of humanity.
https://www.lascaux.fr/en/preparez-votre-visite/visitez-lascaux/centre-international-art-parietal#ancre-carousel
USING
NEW TECHNOLOGIES TO ENRICH VISITOR EXPERIENCE
For the
first time, all of Lascaux is revealed. A complete new replica retraces the
discovery of the famous decorated cave. But that’s not the end of the
adventure: the entire site inquires into the position that Lascaux occupies in
cave art and its relation to contemporary creation. The opening of the
International Centre for Cave Art marks the beginning of a new adventure
combining the emotion of ancestral art and an important technological
achievement.
The
complete replica of the original cave is the culmination of three years of work
in the Perigord Facsimile Studio. This new space welcomes visitors, inviting
them to contemplate the works and experience the authentic emotion felt at the
discovery of the cave, to observe, to enquire into the reasons for its
existence and to reflect on the environmental and cultural context in which it
was decorated.
The
architecture of the International Centre forms an integral part of the
visitor’s experience: a half-buried building at the foot of the Lascaux hill,
it is perfectly integrated into the landscape. A gigantic glass front invites
the public to visit a universe firmly focused on technological prowess.
Starting with its shape: there are no straight walls, a tangle of rooms with atypical shapes leads the visitor to the heart of a building of 8,000 sqm. A fault running its whole length evokes a gash in the hill or a prehistoric stratum recalling the passage of time.Continuing with its content: the various spaces with their uncluttered style and modern aesthetics contain the latest digital tools (enhanced reality, 3D screens, etc.). They incite the public all through the visit to enjoy an immersive and personalized experience.
Starting with its shape: there are no straight walls, a tangle of rooms with atypical shapes leads the visitor to the heart of a building of 8,000 sqm. A fault running its whole length evokes a gash in the hill or a prehistoric stratum recalling the passage of time.Continuing with its content: the various spaces with their uncluttered style and modern aesthetics contain the latest digital tools (enhanced reality, 3D screens, etc.). They incite the public all through the visit to enjoy an immersive and personalized experience.
https://www.lascaux.fr/en/preparez-votre-visite/visitez-lascaux/centre-international-art-parietal#ancre-carousel
ART AND ORIGIN: BATAILLE AND BLANCHOT’S RETURN TO
LASCAUX
Peter Poiana, The University of Adelaide
Georges Bataille and Maurice Blanchot's mutual
interest in the Lascaux cave paintings signals their common concern to
construct a discourse of origin in relation to art. Both writers consider
origin in terms of the anxiety-filled questioning surrounding the ontological
and historical aporias that have plagued Western thought, including those that
appear under the banner of the Modern and the Postmodern. Both ask: what kind
of discourse presides over the disconcerting doubling of reality performed by
the first artists? For Bataille, origin is bound up with the ritual
significance of eroticism and death as these underpin all forms of artistic
endeavour; Blanchot, for his part, focuses on the existential void that takes
up residence at the centre of all poetry and art.
In attempting to break with tradition, modern art and
literature heralded a period of anxious questioning in relation to origin.
James Joyce, in Ulysses, illustrates the modern preoccupation with origin by
making his young characters recall impertinently their forebears:
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Joyce's insights find their theoretical underpinnings
in the work of Michel Foucault, particularly in his historico-philosophical
account of the Modern reconfiguration of the concept of origin. In Les Mots et
les choses, Foucault points to the radical change that occurred around the
middle of the nineteenth century in the manner of thinking about origin. From
this moment, it was no longer possible to define origin solely in terms of the
presence or absence of an external authenticating instance (such as God,
Nature, Man). Instead, origin came to signify an enigmatic relation to being.2
What one 'is', essentially, is a condition of the invisible founding principle
from which one emanates.
This is a theme that permeated twentieth century
thought via the human sciences in particular, inasmuch as the latter aimed
essentially to redefine the workings of language, society and art in terms of a
hidden principle that underlies all of their actual forms. Among the writers
that came to the fore during this period, George Bataille and Maurice Blanchot
are worthy of attention for the fact that, throughout this period, they
continued to remind us that the search for the invisible logic that structured
human experience is not a mere scientific pursuit, but is imbued with a
persistent existential anxiety. In other words, behind the methodological
innovations and empirical inflation, the pursuit of knowledge, when it became
knowledge of the human realm, gave rise to the suspicion that the human is an
encumbrance. 'Human, all too human', as Nietzsche entitles his anti-humanist
essay3, as if the 'too much human' tended quite naturally to direct our
attention to the nothingness from which it derives and to which it must return.
For Bataille, then, the return to the origin, to the foundation of the 'all too
human', requires that we renew our union with the erotic and destructive
energies that civilised societies had quashed; for Blanchot, it marked a desire
to attain, via an austere redeployment of language, an essential solitude.
The concern of this study is to gauge how Bataille and
Blanchot approach the question of the origin of art. To begin with, and to ward
off the temptation of naturalistic empiricism, it is necessary to say what
origin is not. It is not, firstly, to be confused with ascription. Ascription
occurs when one imputes a work of art to a painter, a school, a movement, a
period. As such, ascription does not identify an origin but merely attributes a
value by association that ensures the work's place in the museum, and,
ultimately, in posterity. Nor should one confuse origin with the reduction of
the work to one of a number of universal concepts, such as Truth, Goodness or
Desire. Here again, one is not addressing the question of origin, but merely
engaging in ascription — that is, signalling the relation of the work to a
general idea through which its particular forms and textures seem to become
intelligible. Thus origin neither pertains to the external realities that
inform us of the context of a work's production, nor does it take the form of a
fundamental idea of which the work is deemed to be a spectacular illustration.
The origin of art must rather be understood by way of
an examination of the ontological foundations of art — that is, the particular
manner in which it appears as art. In his essay 'The origin of the work of
art', Martin Heidegger opens with a definition: 'Origin … means that from which
and by which something is what it is and as it is'.4 Heidegger's sparse
formulation suggests that origin is not merely a matter of establishing
criteria by which one identifies a typical artwork in opposition to the
familiar world of objects, such as one finds in Nelson Goodman's The languages
of art.5 At the other end of the scale, Heidegger warns also against making art
subservient to the higher-order values promoted by Idealist philosophies.6
Avoiding these diametrically opposed models of ascription, Heidegger focuses on
the manner in which art 'is' as a mode of 'setting itself forth', and refers to
the 'selfopening' by which the work brings into the 'clearing' that which was
previously held 'in reserve'. This does not amount to saying that the artwork
appears magically against a backdrop of nothingness, but rather that the
'being' implies a 'being there', and that this manner of occupying a position
is disquieting because of the shadow it casts over its 'ground'. Art 'is',
then, to the extent that in its relation to the visible it is beholden to the
obscuring that conditions its appearance.
The question of origin has as much to do with the
darkness against which the work appears as with the exalted instant in which it
brings itself into view. However, one must not be content with simple binary
oppositions. To understand origin in its complexity, one must apprehend the
darkness in a particular light, and consider rather a changing, or more
precisely a receding, darkness, one displaying a double movement of concealing
and concealing concealment. The example of a heroic statue serves to illustrate
the notion of double concealment. On the one hand, the statue makes visible the
texture and colour of the stone, as it offers these properties to aesthetic
contemplation. In this respect, the stone statue contrasts with a stone
building or bridge in which the concern with functionality obscures most of the
stone's natural qualities. However, the pendulum swings immediately the other
way, as the stone statue also makes visible the idea, the actions or the story
of the legendary character it portrays, precisely by making us forget the
physical properties of the stone in which they are carved.
For Heidegger, art, more than any other area of
experience, elicits the fundamental question of metaphysics: 'From what ground
do beings come?'7 We have seen that art, as 'self-erection', as the
constitution of an anxiety-prone modality of 'being', poses the question of
origin via a scenario that articulates a two-sided, active relationship with
darkness. This relationship is dramatised in two ways: firstly, as a retrieval
(from a loss or disappearance), and secondly as a restoration (from a situation
of rupture). Yet, as retrieval, origin remains attached to what, in the process
of retrieval, remains 'in reserve'; and as restoration, it is still bound to
the ruins that provide its justification. In both cases, a situation of double
concealment is played out in such a way that the un-concealment is ultimately
another form of concealment. It is in this way, I contend, that art maps out
its particular itinerary in terms of its relation to origin.
In retrieval and restoration, one detects a double
movement to and from darkness, which not only offers a model of the creative
process but suggests also that creation occurs through crisis. It is at this
point that we can gauge Foucault's contribution to this view of art,
particularly in relation to modern art. In outlining his 'archeological'
method, Foucault invites us not to conceive origin as a single inceptive
moment. It is not, for example, the first light of dawn in which a humanly
created object of contemplation first appeared. Nor does it refer to the
formless magma from which the object emerged and to which it is destined to
return. Such views of origin, Michel Foucault explains in Les Mots et les
choses, belong to Classical Thought, inasmuch as they suppose a series of
representations that draws together, in a single uninterrupted line and in a
perfect chronology, a reality that is in fact multifaceted. Modern thought
departed from such a linear view of origin by way of the immense paradigm shift
that saw areas of art and culture, among others, acquire their own founding
principles. Art and culture were no longer grounded in a single external
unifying concept such as God or Man. Because Modern thought no longer presented
God or Man as absolutes, they were relegated to the level of objects of
representation among others. Conversely, art and culture marked out a territory
in which they were able to generate within themselves the principles that
presided over the history of their emergence and decline.
Foucault's concern in Les Mots et les choses is to
locate the epistemological break that gave rise to the radical new conditions
for knowledge at the start of the Modern period. Here, knowledge no longer
derived from a creator who dictated the rules of enquiry from above. Rather,
the authenticating instance was now lodged within the objects and methods that
defined an area of inquiry. This is particularly the case in the many human
sciences that emerged in the early years of the twentieth century. Their aim
was to examine human activity as a particular set of behaviours, proper to a
social setting, in which there emerged a set of principles that could be
classified as distinctly human. Significantly, this change of outlook enabled humans
to pursue the source of knowledge within themselves, just as they could derive
a particular ethical system purely on the basis of their own sense of self and
other: 'la [pensée] moderne … ne formule aucune morale dans la mesure où tout
imperatif est logé à l'intérieur de la pensée et de son movement pour ressaisir
l'impensé'.8 A new question arises at this juncture: how can the human play
both the role of the seeker of knowledge and that of its object? Does this
situation not in fact give rise to an aporetic situation in which the seeker
and the object of knowledge impede one another, casting a shadow (the inhuman?)
over the entire enterprise? Such is the quandary that was brought to a head
when Western thought overturned past thought systems and produced an overhaul
of conventional forms of art and literature.
Foucault's exposition of the problem of origin enables
us to conceive of a self-generating system that is located at the level of the
artworks themselves. Just as the source of thought for Foucault is the
'impensé' that subsists within its object of enquiry, so, too, does the origin
of the work of art lie in that part of representation that escapes the play of
graphic or pictorial substitutions. This paradigm informs Foucault's famous
study of Velasquez's painting 'Las Meninas'.9 Foucault analyses the different
components of the painting as the product of a gaze that appears to emanate
from different positions, these being attached to the position of the king, the
characters or the artist. Considered in their multiplicity, the different
perspectives do not simply complement each other but seem curiously to point to
an anomalous gaze that is unattributable. This, he writes, is the 'vide
essentiel' or the blind spot from which the entire complex arrangement of
mirrors and windows, people and objects, seems to emerge.10 The source of the
gaze is not, then, a transcendent being such as God that orders its universe as
it sees fit, nor the commissioning duke or duchess satisfying their vanity in
such a display of wealth; nor is it the artist who arranges the entire scene
according to the demands of his art. The source of this gaze is rather a
faceless entity that escapes all three figures of authority. In this anonymous
trace, which is barely discernible to the viewer, Foucault discovers the work's
structuring principle, one that is 'intimement étranger' to its pictorial
splendour.11
Foucault adopts a similar approach in his essay
'Qu'est-ce qu'un auteur?' This text defends a position that had become
synonymous with the structuralist movement, namely that discourse can only
secondarily be reduced to the will, the intention, the personality or the
repressed desires of the author. Essentially, discourse is to be defined in
terms of the signifying mechanisms proper to language. Interestingly, Foucault
regards the impersonal discursive logic that supplants the author not as a
predetermined set of rules but as the scene of a crisis that takes the form of
an authorial fade-out: 'il est question de l'ouverture d'un espace où le sujet
écrivant ne cesse de disparaître'.12 By portraying the author as the 'oubli non
accidentel' that imprints itself negatively in the text13, Foucault, like
Heidegger, subscribes to the notion of the double concealment inherent in
being. Like Heidegger, he conceives of the text's inceptive moment as a
concealing concealment, for in his view it is precisely that which removes
itself from view, as it falls into a state of dereliction, that effectively
organises the literary work and determines its ontological status.
The origin of the painting, for Foucault, is precisely
the invisible centre around which the multiple perspectives organise
themselves; and that of the written text is the place where the operation of
the blanking-out of the author is most fully realised. It is notable that for
Foucault, the origin — that is, the invisible principle that governs the form
and significance of a work — partakes of both an outside and an inside. It
represents the outside to the extent that it possesses a different temporal
structure to that of the work. In this light, origin retreats into a time that
is essentially prior to the forms, contents, materials and messages that appeal
to the eye and the ear. Origin is external also to the extent that it
corresponds to that which the realm of appearances must cast aside in order to
become visible, committing it to a zone of alterity. However, the origin
belongs also to the inside, in the sense that the principle from which the work
emerges permeates the work's entire graphic, textural or pictorial space. This
is certainly the case in Velasquez's painting, which encloses the fleeting
shadow moving between the areas of light and shade, but also in texts such as
autobiographies, in which the term 'I' serves both to announce the subject and
to highlight, if not its absence, at least its dispersion within a network of
symbolic substitutions.
Foucault's position is well known. My purpose in
presenting it here is to show that we can apply it usefully to the way in which
we think about the origin of art. If scholarship has not to this point
manifested a great deal of interest in pursuing this question, it is because of
the erroneous idea that origins must be singular, absolute and historically
legible. This limitation, however, stems from the Classical construction of
origin. It ignores the manner in which Modern thought transformed the notion of
origin. It is, then, from Foucault's 'modern' determination of origin that I
shall examine two different accounts of the origin of art: firstly, Georges
Bataille's theory of the beginnings of art in relation to the paintings of the
Lascaux caves, and secondly, Maurice Blanchot's treatment of poetry and art, in
which he places the poetry of René Char against the Lascaux cave painting that
inspired it. I shall finally draw together the two accounts of origin by
considering the work of Philippe Lacoue- Labarthe, whose posthumous Écrits sur
l'art seeks to gauge how contemporary and indeed future art conceive their
relation to origin.
Bataille's study, 'Lascaux ou la naissance de l'art'
(written in 1955), is in some ways a precursor of Foucauldian 'archaeology'.14
Bataille outlines a theory of origin that, by drawing on different clues
provided by historical and archaeological research, offers a model of
continuity and discontinuity. Firstly, how would it be possible, Bataille
wonders, for present-day viewers of the cave paintings to feel wonder and
astonishment if there did not exist, in the homo sapiens artists, an intense
exuberance and joy at the moment they created them? In other words, there must
exist in art an emotional resonance that enables it to speak to humans over a
30 000-year time span. Secondly, how could this joy express itself in this homo
sapiens community and in this particular form, if there did not exist at that
time a system of rules to which it was necessary to oppose a form of
resistance? Art appears, therefore, essentially as an act of transgression. It
is from these two suppositions that Bataille derives his account of the origin
of art as a moment of religious fervour that entails a radical upheaval. This
he explains by noting that forms of social control and the demands of
productive work which were introduced into human communities in that era gave
rise to a need to release excess energy through activities that were
regressive, non-directed, pleasure-driven, playful and creative. Art functioned
similarly to the pagan festival inasmuch as it served as an opportunity to
deny, subvert and overturn the social order for short periods set aside for
this purpose. 'La fête levait le couvercle de la marmite', writes Bataille.15
Similarly, art would not have been born without lifting the lid of social
disciplines.
This being the case, why did the artists choose to
depict horses, cows, men, women, tools and weapons? If anthropologists tend to
explain these pictures as forms of preservation that replicate the function of
mortuary rituals, Bataille is more likely to link them to the context of
sacrificial rites, thus making artistic activity an extension of the religious
significance of objects. In this light, one can understand Bataille's interest
in the astonishing hybrid figures that bring together different animal and
human features. One such figure, known as the Sorcerer, has the body of a
bison, the face of a bearded man, inflated genitals and feet that appear,
Bataille notes, to be dancing the cakewalk.16 For Bataille, the hybrid figure
is a distortion of perception that results from the proto-artist's excess of
creative energies and spiritual intoxication. Beyond the idea of unlimited
exuberance, Bataille's insights raise the question of the origin of artistic
representation in the sense that the figure presents an image of the human that
makes visible its lost animalness. By honouring, in its pictorial space, the
animal energy, the unchannelled sexuality and the destructive rage against
which human society had to barricade itself in order to create its civilised
forms, the hybrid figure shows what humanity had to conceal in order to become
itself. In doing so, it brings into particular focus humanity's ambiguous
relation to the animal. For hybridity combines not just forms, but the
affective traits of fear and fascination, and the notions of proximity and
distance, and it does so within a ritual space in which dangerous inclinations
are formally cordoned off from society. In other words, art, through its first
experiments with hybridity, connects its viewers to the undeclared and
unthought truth behind their humanness.
Far from offering a clumsy first attempt at
representational art, such paintings articulate, forcefully and eloquently, the
anxiety surrounding the question of origin. What the figure shows, in the
strange combination of horns, tail and genitals alongside recognisable human
traits, is the persistence of a thought that society can no longer countenance,
namely that the human originates from the inhuman that it is at pains to deny.
Bataille seemingly takes pleasure in constructing on this basis an account of
Christianity and Christian art in which, as he states in 'Les Larmes d'Eros',
truly diabolical forces are at work. Indeed, he intimates, without being fazed
by the anachronism, that the Lascaux cave paintings are the first expression of
original sin. 'Retrouvant, ou au moins disant que je retrouve, au plus profond
de la caverne de Lascaux, le thème du péché originel, le thème de la légende
biblique! la mort liée au péché, liée à l'exaltation sexuelle, à l'érotisme!'17
For Bataille, art makes accessible the erotic and destructive impulses that
negatively structure our social habits and moral systems. Art's origin, then,
lies in the revelation, via a double concealment or at least the (partial)
concealment of a concealment, of an obscure thought that is as intolerable as
it is inescapable.
Bataille's account of the origin of art proceeds by
sketching out the history of human socialisation and marking its limits.
However, following Foucault's model of a split origin, should we not also
consider the origin of art on the other side of its relationship with the
human, where it deploys its abyssal logic in a time and place that is totally
removed from our experience? Such is the position from which Maurice Blanchot
departs when he claims that art is art, essentially, when it retreats from all
the voices that seek to speak through it, when it takes its leave from those
that have a message to deliver, a lesson to teach, an idea to promote. It is
enlightening, in this respect, to examine his piece La Bête de Lascaux, written
in 1958, in which he discusses the Lascaux painting known as the Pregnant Cow
in tandem with the poem, 'La Bête innommable', that René Char wrote in homage
to it.18 Blanchot approaches pictorial art through the mediation of poetic
language in order to determine the way in which painting and poetry commonly
articulate the notion of the inceptive moment. His argument begins by declaring
that poetry is essentially impersonal. In this, it resembles the ancient
oracles who seemed to make their pronouncements from a distant, un-locatable
past and address a future that was equally non-determined:
‘’ Quand l'inconnu nous interpelle, quand la parole emprunte
à l'oracle sa voix où ne parle rien d'actuel, mais qui force celui qui l'écoute
à s'arracher à son présent pour en venir à lui-même comme à ce qui n'est pas
encore, cette parole est souvent intolérante, d'une violence hautaine qui, dans
sa rigueur et par sa sentence indiscutable, nous enlève à nous-mêmes en nous
ignorant.19 ‘’
The haunting, severe and indifferent tone of the
oracular voice has the effect of tearing its listeners away from their familiar
world. So, too, does poetry, and in particular the poetry of René Char, which
Blanchot describes as a language 'qui ne dicte rien, qui n'oblige en rien, qui
ne parle même pas, mais fait de ce silence le doigt impérieusement fixé vers
l'inconnu'.20 Such is the peculiar configuration of commandment and affect that
Blanchot also associates with art. Here, art actualises a time that exists
outside of time. It is a representation that carves out an 'inactual space',
where the disturbing alterity of the pictured characters hammers into
insignificance the preoccupations of the familiar world.
Blanchot's attempt to think together poetry and art as
a particular relation to origin is based upon a metaphysics of violence. The
hieratic quality of poetic language and visual representation implies a
connection to origin that is not at all stable or assured, but is, as Blanchot
stresses, in fact traumatic. In this respect, Blanchot shares René Char's
admiration for the pre-Socratics, particularly Heraclites, insofar as they
claim that poetic language belongs to the state of flux, chaos and conflict which
originally comprised the universe. This is the original logos that Platonic
philosophy, through its invention of a translucid language, had abandoned.21
But poetry, thanks to its eviction from Plato's Republic on the grounds of its
emotional instability22, actually preserves its connection to violence. This is
where it connects with art:
‘’ Il est un moment, dans l'expérience de l'art et
dans la genèse de l'œuvre, un moment où celle-ci n'est encore qu'une violence
indistincte tendant à s'ouvrir et tendant à se fermer, tendant à s'exalter dans
un espace qui s'ouvre et tendant à se retirer dans la profondeur de la
dissimulation.23 ‘’
By virtue of their reliance on appearances, poetry and
art lead us back to the 'violence indistincte' that orders the operation of
double concealment. Blanchot's discussion of Char's poetic treatment of the
painted beast highlights a fatal attraction that is equally apparent in its
verbal or graphic forms. The poem presents the beast's nature as unruly,
unknowable and unbearable, and above all, as the title indicates, unnameable
(innommable). The beast occupies a space that is uninhabitable to humans
because it denies the order of logic and the clarity of vision. In a text
devoted to Blanchot's early novels, Foucault sets out some of the
characteristics of this space:
‘’ Cette pensée qui se tient hors de toute
subjectivité pour en faire surgir comme de l'extérieur les limites, en énoncer
la fin, en faire scintiller la dispersion et n'en recueillir que l'invincible
absence, et qui en même temps se tient au seuil de toute positivité, non pas
tant pour en saisir le fondement ou la justification, mais pour retrouver
l'espace où elle se déploie, le vide qui lui sert de lieu … [C] ette pensée,
par rapport à l'intériorité de notre réflexion philosophique et par rapport à
la positivité de notre savoir, constitue ce qu'on pourrait appeler d'un mot 'la
pensée du dehors.24 ‘’
This space is inhuman in a manner that differs from
Bataille's anthropological account of primitive terror because here it plunges
the human subject into a void, trapping it between two impossible demands. For
here the subject can gain no foothold. It can neither appeal to the world of
intuition and imagination by which the subject becomes present to itself, nor
claim knowledge and eventually mastery of the empirical universe that it seeks
to turn into a projection of its will. As such, 'la pensée du dehors',
according to Foucault's formulation, is an alienating and alienated discourse
that one might well describe as the modern equivalent of the oracular
pronouncements to which Blanchot alluded in Une Voix venue d'ailleurs. Like the
oracles, it marks a space that deploys an aura of contemptuous indifference,
before which the subject is sentenced to an anxious and uncertain future. It is
interesting to note the manner in which Blanchot radicalises his position in
his later texts. As his writing matures, he is no longer content to present
discourse as an obscure space inassimilable by the subject, but sees it as a
vector of the principle of destruction that corrupts the subject from within.
It is not so much the outside (le dehors) rejecting interiority as it is the
outside eating away the inside. As he writes in L'Écriture du désastre,
literature and art carry the possibility of a ruinous moment that comes into
effect the moment the subject asserts itself as a self-standing,
self-sufficient agent of creation: 'Nous n'avons pas accès au dehors, mais le
dehors nous a toujours déjà touchés à la tête, étant ce qui se précipite'.25
The above outline of the metaphysics of violence that
informs art serves as a prelude to Char's poetic treatment of the cave
painting. Char dwells initially on the animal's inordinate suffering. Likened
to a 'cyclope bouffe', the cow that trails behind the more nimble elements of
the herd is seemingly weighed down by its surplus flesh. The poem foregrounds
the stagnant organic mass that envelops the animal in a deathly torpor,
emphasising its slowness, its defencelessness and its fetid stench. The overdetermination
of the idea of physical imprisonment (in contrast to spiritual liberation) is
brought to a head in the closing line of the poem, 'La Sagesse pleine de
larmes'. At the same time, the sheer immovable weight of the animal tips over
into its opposite, namely the ethereal reign of semblances that constitute art.
The represented cow becomes a 'mère fantastiquement déguisée', an object not of
ridicule but of fascination. Art, through its brilliance, does not simply
overshadow the suffering, but rather subjects it to a double concealment, a
concealment of concealment such that the artifice, in obscuring the formless
ugliness of the beast, actually preserves in its visual space the raw
expression of suffering. It keeps painful memories alive through a small detail
— the cow's expressive eyes. In the line 'Sagesse aux yeux pleins de larmes',
the tear-filled eyes shining through the picture transcend, by their artistic
quality, the platitude of the pregnant animal. But, by this very process, the
poem locates the thread that connects art to its traumatic origin. By retaining
the monstrosity of the 'cyclope bouffe' and making it resonate in 'La Sagesse
aux yeux pleins de larmes', 'La Bête innommable' delimits a tragic space in
which the spiritual elevation implied in the term 'Sagesse' both masks and
reveals the hidden principle that lies in the impurity of the cow's rampant
flesh.
Origin, one might recall, is the hidden structuring
principle that defines art ontologically. The above discussion endeavoured to
show how Bataille and Blanchot approach the question of origin through the
study of art. In Bataille, the hybrid figure with an animal's body and tail and
a human face and feet highlights the capacity of art to bring into view the
energies that human society had repressed. This is not in the Freudian sense of
wishing to redress an imbalance, but in the more extreme and provocative sense
of harnessing the creative and destructive forces to which children, primitives
and poets appear to hold the key. Blanchot's treatment of René Char's poetic
interpretation of the Pregnant Cow rests upon a conception of origin as a shift
of scale, whereby the familiar world recedes into an anonymous grey, and time
collapses into a void. Though the anxiety produced by the expulsion towards the
'outside' of thought and speech may well be mitigated by the harmonious forms
produced by art, it remains none the less true that the pleasurable illusion
cannot put a halt to the forces of disaggregation. For the promised 'erection'
of the work is possible only because it contains within it the seed of its
imminent collapse. Within this conceptual framework, it is easy to see the
point of difference between the two approaches. Bataille considers art as an
area in which it is possible to liberate destructive energies and experience
the joy that accompanies all transgressive behaviours; Blanchot, in contrast,
highlights the rigorous demands of art as it makes us aware of what,
metaphysically, is at stake behind the double concealment.
As I suggested earlier, the question of origin invites
us to reconsider the way in which it is possible to account for the historical
evolution of art. Following Foucault's archaeological method, history is a
series of unstable tectonic plates that produce pressure points and eventually
chasms. Such a model implies that the gains in knowledge of a particular
historical period are defined paradoxically by the ideas that it finds
impossible to formulate. For example, classical discourses on madness became
inoperative amid scientific claims that there existed a connection between
behaviour and the human brain, just as the procedures of law enforcement were
overturned following the circulation of new discourses on human freedom.
In relation to art, it is possible to identify similar
crises and disjunctions. It is universally accepted that art originates in
religion. To demonstrate this, one need only consider the number of times
objects of cult around the world are reclassified as art. The gods, or God,
ceased to be an authenticating factor when the science of aesthetics was born
in the eighteenth century, for at this moment rational discourse provided a
complete set of criteria, such as sense, intelligence and imagination, for
defining art. We know, however, that this appeal to the faculties and their
interactions corresponded to humanistic ideals. Thus, through aesthetics, art
confirmed its origins in the human. However, when the human ideal was
discredited via the nihilisms of the nineteenth and the twentieth century, this
collapse gave rise to new forms of art. Art rose from the ashes of the fallen
human and presented itself as an independent value. Bataille's souveraineté and
Blanchot's solitude are just two examples of the way in which art outlived the
human ideal. But here a new crisis presented itself. When art became everything
(as the Surrealists claimed), it necessarily became nothing since there
remained nothing against which it could assert its difference. Once again, the
pedestal art created for itself bore the conditions of its ruin.
In his essay 'La Littérature et l'expérience
originelle', Blanchot retraces the history of art, or rather its anti-history,
by focusing on the aporetic moments that punctuate it. Each of these moments
corresponds to a loss. Art lost or forgot the gods, then it lost man, and
finally it lost itself, but more importantly, at each stage, it also forgot the
forgetting, such that it was obliged at each stage to reconstruct itself in
terms of its essential solitude: 'Il était le langage des dieux et, les dieux ayant
disparu, il est devenu le langage où s'est exprimée leur disparition, puis
celui où cette disparition elle-même a cessé d'apparaître. Cet oubli est
maintenant ce qui parle seul'.26 Art, then, defines itself with respect to a
series of crises in which it loses sight of its grounding principle.
Paradoxically, it is most itself when it endures this loss. Blanchot
doubtlessly agrees with Heidegger's ontological determination of art, which
states that art finds its essence when it divests itself of all contingent
factors, all extraneous concepts, and having found the pure ether of
nothingness, springs forth into itself. However, Blanchot is not content to say
in such definitive terms that art immediately and fully extracts itself from
the dark in order to reveal itself in the pure light of its being. Rather, he
suggests that art's mode of existence is crisis. It lost the gods, then man,
then art itself, and at each moment it is pushed up against the abyss of
self-obliteration. It is here that it formulates with greatest urgency the
question of origin. This question is: what remains, precisely, when art loses
its ground? The answer, which all the proponents of the modern imagination from
Manet to Debussy to Beckett relayed, is clear: art murmurs its distress, desists
while it persists, and exists, finally, in the mode of survival.
Following Blanchot, the origin of art resides in the
plight that is hidden behind its pictorial splendour. Such is the position that
this study has tried to argue from the vantage point of a Foucauldian-style
archaeology. One must keep in mind, however, that the quest for origin does not
end triumphantly with the revelation of an eternal truth bound up in a work,
but gives rise rather to more questioning. For as this study has tried to show,
the origin is a split origin, divided between an outside source of legitimacy
which art contests, and the internal principle of organisation which art
conceals. As such, origin reveals itself via a double refusal. It opens its
space only to the extent that it closes off another. Such is the impossible
logic of a work's relation to origin: 'c'est l'impossible qui est sa tâche, et
elle-même ne se réalise alors que par une recherche infinie, car c'est le
propre de l'origine d'être toujours voilée par ce dont elle est l'origine'.27
To complete the historico-ontological account, one
might consider art's predicament in the wake of the turbulences of the Modern
and Postmodern eras. What are the precise terms in which one must now formulate
the question of origin? Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe grapples with this question in
his posthumous Écrits sur l'art. At a time when art is more than ever the alibi
of commercial interests, technological innovations and political agendas, and
at a time when art is more than ever obliged to confront the desert of
irrelevance to which it is consigned, the quest for origin can no longer take
the form of the old metaphysical question 'What is art?', nor can it any longer
be satisfied with the question 'What is a work of art?', with its productivist
overtones. In the wake of what Lacoue-Labarthe, following Foucault and
Blanchot, calls the disaster of the subject, the question must be formulated as
'L'art peut-il s'identifier?' ('Can art identify itself?')28 The reflexive form
of the question suggests that art now participates in the construction of the
exploratory discourses which it previously left to philosophy and the human
sciences. In this respect, the words 'peut-iI' ('Can') that begin the question
introduce a doubt about the outcome, or even a pathos of failure (to be true to
art, this pathos may well be contrived).
Certainly, the form of the question indicates the
event of an inward turn that confirms, by making more explicit, the retreat
that had diversely characterised art throughout its history. Now, however, the
retreat that was once contingent upon the revelation of the work's external,
authenticating moment, is apparent at the level of the work's verbal and
pictorial forms. As Lacoue-Labarthe points out, the retreat of art corresponds
to a posture that is akin to autobiography in the sense that it directs the
gaze to the catastrophe within, where the 'itself' loses itself precisely in
the strategies it adopts in order to make itself visible. By way of the
question 'Can art identify itself?', Lacoue-Labarthe exposes the paradoxical
logic that constitutes art: the more it asserts itself in its visible forms,
the more it loses itself. Such is the destiny of art when it announces itself
as an anxious quest for origin.
1- J. Joyce, Ulysses, ed. D. Rose (London, Picador,
1997), p. 19.
2- M. Foucault, Les Mots et les choses (Paris,
Gallimard, 1966). See the discussion 'Le recul et le retour de l'origine', pp.
339-45.
3- F. Nietzsche, Human, all too human, trans. M. Faber
and S. Lehmann (London, Penguin, 1984).
4- M. Heidegger, Poetry, language, thought, trans. A.
Hofstadter (New York, Harper & Row, 1971), p. 17. 5- N. Goodman, The
languages of art: An approach to the theory of symbols (Cambridge, Hackett
Publishing Company, 1976).
6- Examples are Schelling's notion of art as an
absolute, and Hegel's famous description of art as a concrete manifestation of
the Spirit.
7- M. Heidegger, Introduction to metaphysics, trans.
G. Fried and R. Polt (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2000), p. 3.
8- Foucault, Les Mots et les choses, pp. 338-9.
9- Foucault's study, entitled 'Les Suivantes', is the
opening chapter of Les Mots et les choses.
10- Foucault, Les Mots et les choses, pp. 30-1.
11- Foucault, Les Mots et les choses, p. 30.
12- M. Foucault, Dits et écrits, vol. 1, 1954-1975,
ed. D. Defort and F. Ewald (Paris, Gallimard, 2001), p. 821.
13- Foucault, Dits et écrits, vol. 1, p. 836.
14- In L'Archéologie du savoir (Paris, Gallimard,
1969), Foucault claims that he bases his historical research not on a
preconceived discursive unity proper to each historical period, but on the
discontinuities of the discourses it produced. He proceeds not with the aim of
identifying a historical period's single centre, but of mapping out 'l'espace
d'une dispersion'. See p. 20.
15- G. Bataille, Œuvres complètes, vol. 9 (Paris,
Gallimard, 1979), p. 40.
16- Bataille, Œuvres complètes, vol. 9, pp. 68-70.
17- G. Bataille, Œuvres complètes, vol. 10 (Paris,
Gallimard, 1987), p. 586.
18- La Bête innommable ferme la marche du gracieux
troupeau, comme un cyclope bouffe. Huit quolibets font sa parure, divisent sa
folie. La Bête rote dévotement dans l'air rustique. Ses flancs bourrés et
tombants sont douloureux, vont se vider de leur grossesse. De son sabot à ses
vaines défenses, elle est enveloppée de fétidité. Ainsi m'apparaît dans la
frise de Lascaux, mère fantastiquement déguisée, La Sagesse pleine de larmes. —
R. Char, 'La Parole en archipel', La Paroi et la prairie (Paris, Editions GLM,
1952).
19- M. Blanchot, Une Voix venue d'ailleurs (Paris,
Gallimard, 2002), p. 62. 20 Blanchot, Une Voix venue d'ailleurs, p. 62.
21- Blanchot, Une Voix venue d'ailleurs, pp. 64-5.
22- Plato, The Republic, book 10, trans. D. Lee
(London, Penguin, 1955).
23- Blanchot, Une Voix venue d'ailleurs, p. 65.
24- Foucault, Dits et écrits, vol. 1, p. 549.
25- M. Blanchot, L'Écriture du désastre (Paris,
Gallimard, 1980), p. 16.
26- M. Blanchot, L'Espace littéraire (Paris,
Gallimard, 1955), p. 330.
27- Blanchot, L'Espace littéraire, p. 314.
REFERENCES
Bataille, G., Œuvres complètes, vol. 9 (Paris,
Gallimard, 1979).
Bataille, G., Œuvres complètes, vol. 10 (Paris,
Gallimard, 1987).
Blanchot, M., L'Écriture du désastre (Paris,
Gallimard, 1980).
Blanchot, M., L'Espace littéraire (Paris, Gallimard,
1955).
Blanchot, M., Une Voix venue d'ailleurs (Paris,
Gallimard, 2002).
Char, R., 'La Parole en archipel', in La Paroi et la
prairie (Paris, Éditions GLM, 1952).
Foucault, M., L'Archéologie du savoir (Paris,
Gallimard, 1969).
Foucault, M., Dits et écrits, vol. 1, 1954-1975, ed.
D. Defort and F. Ewald (Paris, Gallimard, 2001). Foucault, M., Les Mots et les
choses (Paris, Gallimard, 1966).
28 P. Lacoue-Labarthe, Écrits sur l'art (Geneva, Les
Presses du réel, 2009), p. 31.
Goodman, N., The languages of art: An approach to the
theory of symbols (Cambridge, Hackett Publishing Company, 1976).
Heidegger, M., Introduction to metaphysics, trans. G.
Fried and R. Polt (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2000).
Heidegger, M., Poetry, language, thought, trans. A.
Hofstadter (New York, Harper & Row, 1971).
Joyce, J., Ulysses, ed. D. Rose (London, Picador,
1997).
Lacoue-Labarthe, P., Écrits sur l'art (Geneva, Les
Presses du réel, 2009).
Nietzsche, F., Human, all too human, trans. M. Faber
and S. Lehmann (London, Penguin, 1984).
Plato, The Republic, trans. D. Lee (London, Penguin,
1955).
André Glory's Drawing of the Left-Hand Section of the Panel of the Imprint.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la Préhistoire
AUROCHS HEAD
Panel of the Unicorn, Left wall, the Hall of the Bulls.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
HORSE ROLLING ON THE GROUND
The singular nature of some of the animal figures in
the Passageway comes from their apparent motion or the treatment of certain
anatomical segments. We can see this in the Horse with the Turned-Back
Hindlimb, which occupies the centre of a composition involving a dozen equids.
Another example is the Horse Rolling on the Ground, which, like the Falling Cow
in the Axial Gallery, is depicted in motion – a rare event. To make it easier
to see, the outline has been enhanced. Although there is nothing particularly
noteworthy about the forequarters, the ensemble – hindquarters and hindlimbs –
are torqued. The origin of this movement is not perhaps a fall, but rather a
specific gesture made by certain animals when they roll on the ground or
prepare to get to their feet.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire/Norbert Aujoulat
RED SANDSTONE
LAMP FOUND IN THE PUITS
WHILE
DIGGING BY A. GLORY
© Musée
National de Préhistoire
GREAT RED & BLACK HORSE
Panel of the Unicorn, Left wall, the Hall of the Bulls.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
THE PANEL OF THE BLACK HORSE
At the base of the hole in the sand and clay sediment
giving access to the Shaft, prior to the clearing work generated by the
excavations of Henri Breuil and André Glory, there is, at eye level, the
partial image of a horse. This is the only figure on this wall. The image is of
mediocre quality, compared with the masterpieces adorning the walls of the
upper level of Lascaux, and is limited to the head, neck and the beginning of
the back. It is interesting to note that all of the drawings in the Shaft were
done with manganese dioxide, a black pigment.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
ROCKLAID BARE BY FLAKING OR CORROSION OF THE SUPPORT
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
THE SHAFT
In contrast to the preceding sectors – the
Apse, the
Passageway and the
Hall of the Bulls – the Shaft contains only a
limited number of figures: eight in all. Four are figures of animals (a horse,
a bison, a bird and a rhinoceros) and three others are geometric shapes (dots
and hooks). In the centre of the composition, the eye is drawn to a human
figure.
One notes on the right-hand wall a horse, and the left-hand wall contains all the other figures in a space about three metres square. This arrangement, made famous by its narrative potential, is one of the rare examples in which the subjects and themes refer to a specific episode, leaving us to imagine the possibility that this is a message to be interpreted. Hence the name that has been given to this panel: the "Shaft Scene".
One notes on the right-hand wall a horse, and the left-hand wall contains all the other figures in a space about three metres square. This arrangement, made famous by its narrative potential, is one of the rare examples in which the subjects and themes refer to a specific episode, leaving us to imagine the possibility that this is a message to be interpreted. Hence the name that has been given to this panel: the "Shaft Scene".
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
HORSE IN FRONTAL VIEW
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
Norbert Aujoulat
HORSES LOCATED AT THE FRONT OF THE BLACK COW
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
Norbert Aujoulat
HEAD AND HORNS OF A BISON
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
Norbert Aujoulat
THE
BISON
This
representation of a bison can be seen on the right-hand part of the panel. Its
proportions differ very little from those of the other bovines, although the
figure is slightly horizontally stretched. The body was painted entirely in
reddish-brown with darker areas. The limbs, painted in black, are set off from
the straw-coloured background by a lighter, deeply-engraved line. The
superimposition of the figures makes the scene somewhat more difficult to read.
In the background, we can make out a second head, a sort of copy of the first,
offset by several centimetres, as well as engraved hindlimbs facing in the
opposite directions.
The animal's flank is cross by seven diagonal lines.
The animal's flank is cross by seven diagonal lines.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
MAN
& BIRD
This is
the only representation of a human being in the entire cave. It is a stick
figure, and the four fingers on each hand are splayed into fan shapes. The body
is tilted at a 45° angle, no doubt to the bison's abrupt about-face.
Below the figure we can see a bird perched on a stick, although the silhouette is not defined enough for us to make out its species. It shares certain characteristics, even links, with the man below. These are unique themes for the cave; among other things, their heads have been drawn in a similar manner. In certain primitive or ancient societies, birds are often assigned the role of psychopomp, or conductor of souls.
Below the figure we can see a bird perched on a stick, although the silhouette is not defined enough for us to make out its species. It shares certain characteristics, even links, with the man below. These are unique themes for the cave; among other things, their heads have been drawn in a similar manner. In certain primitive or ancient societies, birds are often assigned the role of psychopomp, or conductor of souls.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
THE
CONFRONTED IBEXES
Two
ibexes, one black and one yellow, face each other. They are similar both in
technique – juxtaposed dots – and in size. Few figures at Lascaux are painted
in such a precise and complete manner, and with so few lines, as the black
ibex. A mere four lines are used to depict the horns, the head, the forelimbs
and the breast. Two more lines mark the line of the back and the tail, and the
beginning of the hindquarters, respectively.
The yellow ibex is a mirror image of the black one, albeit more complete, and it does not possess the same graphic qualities. It appears to be the work of a less experienced hand.
Around the two ibexes is a group of horses; they are less complete at the outer edges, more finished towards the centre and rendered in diverse colours.
The yellow ibex is a mirror image of the black one, albeit more complete, and it does not possess the same graphic qualities. It appears to be the work of a less experienced hand.
Around the two ibexes is a group of horses; they are less complete at the outer edges, more finished towards the centre and rendered in diverse colours.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
THE CROSSED BISON
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
Norbert Aujoulat
PLACING
HUMANITY: THE RECONSTRUCTION OF PRE-HISTORY AT LASCAUX
David
DILLARD-WRIGHT University of South Carolina, Aiken
Materiality &
Memory
Th e
prehistoric cave of Lascaux was discovered in 1940 when children from the
nearby village of Montignac stumbled across a small opening in a hillside. A
vertical shaft ended in a pile of rubble that completely sealed the inner
chamber, which held prehistoric paintings nearly perfectly preserved after
perhaps 20,000 or even 40,000 years. At Lascaux and nearby Chauvet, the
paintings, depicting bulls, deer, and theriomorphic humans, often overlap one
another and approximate motion, like a fi lm strip or cartoon. Th e exact
purpose of the pictures still evades researchers, although they likely served a
ritual purpose, to bless the hunt or express awe at the surrounding world. Th e
natural curvature of the walls has been taken into account in the composition
to avoid distortion, much like the Periclean stonemasons at the Parthenon built
curves into its foundation and columns to give the appearance of straight
lines. All of these comparisons are no doubt complex and require much scrutiny,
since “art” and “painting” come with a host of associations presumably unknown
to the original cave dwellers, or, more likely, cave ritualists, since no
evidence has been found of early humans inhabiting the cave. Problematic
vocabulary aside, the discovery of the cave generated a tremendous burst of
enthusiasm that continues today, as art historians, anthropologists, and lay
people attribute to this site the birth of art and evidence of the emergence of
human culture. Anyone who has ever seen a picture of a cave painting has
probably seen images of Lascaux, as they are among the best preserved and
varied of all of the available examples.
The caves also
became a site important to twentieth-century travelers—long lines of them
arriving daily, so many that the moisture and carbon dioxide from their breath
began to damage the paintings. In 1955, the curator fi rst noticed coloration
from the natural pigments appearing in drops of condensation, and, by 1958, air
conditioning and a fi ltration system were added, keeping humidity and
temperature constant (UNESCO Courier 1981). Th ousands of visitors still
arrived daily during the peak of tourist season in the summer, and green algae appeared
on the walls in 1960. Th e site had suff ered more damage in twenty years than
it had suff ered in the previous millennia, as the microclimate in the cave had
previously regulated conditions perfectly. By 1963, the Ministry of Cultural
Aff airs—a cave on private property having been transformed into a National
Treasure shortly after the discovery of the artifacts 1—took steps to close the
cave on the recommendation of a committee of scientists, but the algae colonies
continued to multiply. Th e micro-organisms were treated chemically, the
lighting kept dim most of the time, and visitors limited to those with
scientifi c interests, which remains the case to this day. To solve the problem
of public demand to see the site, a nearby replica called Lascaux II was built
using cinematic techniques, and it is this reconstructed cave that tourists
visit today. Virtual tourists can also visit the cave through an impressive
website by the Ministry of Cultural Affairs that pans through the tunnels in
the manner of a three dimensional video game or Google street view. Of interest
to philosophy, cultural studies, media studies, and museum studies, one of the
site’s early interpreters was none other than anti-humanist Bataille, the
theorist of eroticism little noticed in his time outside his intellectual
orbit, which included Jean-Paul Sartre, but who is lately undergoing something
of a promotion to canonical status. His interest in the visual image, in excess
and abandon, in ecstasy and transgression, appeals to contemporary readers, in
part due to the infl uence of Bataille on Foucault, Derrida, Barthes, Kristeva,
and other French theorists. Bataille wrote the text for the fi rst folio of
color photographs of the cave, Lascaux; Or, the Birth of Art: Prehistoric Painting,
which remained the only monograph of the sort for fi fty years in French and
English, until the publication of Norbert Aujoulat’s Lascaux: Movement, Time,
and Space in 2005. Th e Lascaux book prefi gures the themes of Bataille’s later
writing: the artist, like the mystic, participates in a sacred reality that
pierces the individual subject so that a communion with the extra-human order
can take place. Running alongside this nascent secular mysticism is a project
of appropriation, as Bataille grafts the cave paintings onto the history of art
and religion, as though claiming them decisively for Western culture.
RED COW FOLLOWED BY HER CALF
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
Norbert Aujoulat
REIDEER ANTLERS
Found at the Edge of the Panel of the Swimming Stags.
André Glory Excavations.
© Musée National de Préhistoire
THE
GREAT BLACK COW
By its
central position, both within the panel and in the space it occupies, this
imposing black figure of an aurochs organises
the iconography of the entire Nave. At 2.2 metres long, it is larger than most
of the other figures in this part of the cave.
The outlines and the external anatomical segments, such as the horns and hooves, have been engraved onto a vast, black-coloured surface, or brown for the dorsal section. The muzzle, the tips of the horns and the hooves have been reproduced by a brush, while the other colour zones were laid down using the spray technique. Note the doubled ventral line, offset by a few centimetres.
Engraved segments of certain figures that appear to be white can be seen on the flanks of the aurochs, particularly one of a rearing horse. The effect comes from the weakening of the support caused by the passage of the engraver's tool, which was temporarily subsequently consolidated by the presence of crushed pigment, and then revived by natural corrosion phenomena.
The outlines and the external anatomical segments, such as the horns and hooves, have been engraved onto a vast, black-coloured surface, or brown for the dorsal section. The muzzle, the tips of the horns and the hooves have been reproduced by a brush, while the other colour zones were laid down using the spray technique. Note the doubled ventral line, offset by a few centimetres.
Engraved segments of certain figures that appear to be white can be seen on the flanks of the aurochs, particularly one of a rearing horse. The effect comes from the weakening of the support caused by the passage of the engraver's tool, which was temporarily subsequently consolidated by the presence of crushed pigment, and then revived by natural corrosion phenomena.
© Ministére de la Culture/Norbert Aujoulat
RHINOCEROS
The
various interpretations given of the Shaft Scene always take the Rhinoceros
into account. And yet, the presence of this lone animal stands in contrast to
the other animals. A closer look reveals a very different technique. The
outlines were made by spraying pigments, compared with the other figures, which
were done with a brush. The colour black might leads one to believe that the
same pigment source was used, but this is not the case. Pigment analyses of the
manganese dioxide show that the same source was used for every figure, the
horse included, except for the rhinoceros.
Behind the silhouette of the creature are six black dots arranged in two rows, similar to another set of dots, red this time, located at the far end of the Chamber of the Felines.
Behind the silhouette of the creature are six black dots arranged in two rows, similar to another set of dots, red this time, located at the far end of the Chamber of the Felines.
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire / Norbert Aujoulat
THE PANEL OF THE IMPRINT
Lascaux Cave. Montignac. Dordogne
© Ministére de la Culture/Centre National de la
Préhistoire
Norbert Aujoulat
DESIGN
METHODOLOGY
Snøhetta’s
working method practices a simultaneous exploration of traditional handicraft
and cutting edge digital technology – a complementary relationship that drives
our creative process.
At the
core of the design studio is a state-of-the art modelling workshop equipped
with 3D rapid prototyping capabilities and a large, programmable manufacturing
robot. Alongside traditional woodworking machines, these tools enable rapid
prototyping to become an integral part of the design process. Ideas can move
seamlessly between analogue and digital worlds.
Workshops
and tools can only go so far, since people drive the creative process. We use
the expression “Singular in the plural” to emphasize the value of the
individual and ones interests in the performance of a group. These interests
need not be found within the professional framework of architecture, design, or
engineering, but just as much within the different passions in life.
Rather
than fitting an individual into the group’s philosophy, the individuals themselves
define the dynamics of the group. Someone’s unique perspective, background, or
personal interest such as music, dance or art can be valuable in informing the
creative process. Further, our inclusive design approach means that certain
conditions such as gender equality and a diversity of nationalities,
ethnicities and ages, are fundamental to our process.
In
2012, Snøhetta was the subject of an academic research project titled Idea Work
that studied the design methodology of a selected group of creative
practices.
SNOHETTA
Snøhetta
is a place that nobody is from, but anyone can go to.
Snøhetta
(Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈsnøːˌhɛtɑ]) began as a collaborative architectural
and landscape workshop, and has remained true to its trans-disciplinary way of
thinking since its inception.
Our
work strives to enhance our sense of surroundings, identity and relationship to
others and the physical spaces we inhabit, whether feral or human-made.
Museums, products, reindeer observatories, graphics, landscapes and dollhouses
get the same care and attention to purpose.
Today,
Snøhetta has grown to become an internationally renowned practice of
architecture, landscape architecture, interior architecture, product- and
graphic design, with more than 240 employees from 32 different nations.
In
1989, Snøhetta received its first commission to re-conceive the great
Alexandria Library in Egypt after winning an international design competition.
This was followed a decade later by another competition-winning proposal for
the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet.
In
2004, Snøhetta was commissioned to build the only cultural building on the
World Trade Center Memorial site, and a permanent office was then set up in New
York. In 2013, following the commission to design the new SFMOMA
Expansion, Snøhetta launched its San Francisco studio.
Today,
we continue to grow around the world with offices in Innsbruck, Stockholm,
Paris and Adelaide.
A
definite relationship between multiple disciplines is a driving force in all of
Snøhetta’s work. This is demonstrated through the company’s long history, where
landscape and architecture work together without division, from the earliest
stage possible.
We
place experience at the center of our design process, for a design that engages
the senses and physicality of the body while fostering social interaction. This
allows our design to promote both individual and collective empowerment in the
communities where work.
Snøhetta
is currently involved in numerous projects in Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania,
and the Americas. Working globally gives each designer valuable cultural and
economic insight and creates the foundation of Snøhetta’s continuously evolving
professional knowledge base.
SUSTAINABILITY
Fundamental
to all our work is a commitment to social and environmental sustainability.
Because of that, our projects involve extensive collaboration with clients,
users, contractors, and other stakeholders. We know that with well-conceived
design we can help things run more fluidly, improve people’s well-being, and
make life more enjoyable. Every project is a unique expression of the ethos of
its users, climate, and context.
Recognizing
the wide range of environments that the building industry impacts, Snøhetta
remains committed to careful analysis of the environmental and social effects
of each phase of a project.
Snøhetta is the lead architect in the Powerhouse collaboration, a multidisciplinary partnership with building industry leaders dedicated to creating energy positive buildings. These Powerhouse projects are developed in collaboration with research institutions including the Research Centre on Zero Emission Buildings in Norway; and SINTEF, Scandinavia’s largest independent research body amongst others.
Snøhetta is the lead architect in the Powerhouse collaboration, a multidisciplinary partnership with building industry leaders dedicated to creating energy positive buildings. These Powerhouse projects are developed in collaboration with research institutions including the Research Centre on Zero Emission Buildings in Norway; and SINTEF, Scandinavia’s largest independent research body amongst others.
Ongoing
post-occupancy studies of our high-level research projects provide valuable
feedback that informs our approach to each new project. The real success
indicator of a high performance pilot is not how long it remains relevant, but
how quickly it is superseded. The goal of these pilot projects is to impact
policy and to set new market standards for planning and
construction.
Policies
requiring ZEB or similar definition can help navigate the silent and invisible
fossil carbon embodied in materials and can bring about the necessary wholesale
changes to the way we build. We work with the world’s leading experts to
identify potential energy offsets through material innovation, challenging
building conventions and redefining what material use will look like in the
future.
We look
to shape the future through design intelligence and integrated
interdisciplinary research; a future with harmonious, flourishing environments
for the endowment of all living things.
TRANSPOSITIONING
“Transpositioning”
is the working method where participants are invited to break from their
professional role and switch perspectives with others in the group. By
releasing ourselves from disciplinary conventions for a short period of time,
we can foster a greater sense of possibility, free ourselves from habitual
thinking, and build empathy for others involved in the process.
One can
compare this to how some orchestras let their musicians rehearse on each
other’s instruments in order to better understand the challenges and
possibilities of other parts. Upon returning to one’s own instrument, this new
knowledge elevates the collective quality of the performance.
Within
our studio, we emphasize an open exchange between roles and disciplines, where
architects, landscape architects, interior architects, and graphic designers
collaborate in an integrated process.
Transpositioning
creates a universal way of communicating across cultures and disciplines. It
promotes the positive benefits of moving out of one’s comfort zone, defies
narrow-minded thinking and encourages holistic approaches.
https://snohetta.com/process/transpositioning