Time, Object, Commodity (by Diedrich Diederichsen)

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    94

    DIEDRICH DIEDERICHSEN

    TIME, OBJECT, COMMODITY

    Conductor John Fiore with theDuisburg Philharmonic

    Orchestra, Gtersloh, 2009

    From the time it takes to learn

    to make, to the time it takes to

    make, to the time that an end

    product remains on exhibition

    or in storage the

    organization of time around

    discrete works is an essential

    element of value-formation in

    the field of art. Today,

    everyone from exhibiting

    institutions to viewers to

    collectors have come to

    accommodate dematerialized

    and time-based art forms. And

    these are often based on

    some sort of contract be it a

    written document

    commensurate to the workitself or a tacit agreement

    leading to and determining the

    nature of a performative

    exchange.

    As conceived by Diedrich

    Diederichsen, value is not

    only determined by the

    amount of time invested in

    production, but also in terms

    of the investment of our the

    art worlds time in reception

    and participating. This is the

    social contract that we, as

    acting members of this

    landscape with vested

    interests and time invested in

    our own production as individuals, have entered into with the subject of our attention. Works of value, however,

    must also evade identification as a commodity, and thus easy consumption, in order to retain purchase on our

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    continued attention.

    Lets imagine an object, beyond its physical existence, as the more or less durable recording or storage of all

    those processes in time that were required for its production. When Robert Morris made a technical recording of

    the sound of making an object and then incorporated the recording in it, he limited himself to the acoustic traces

    of the manual production of a wooden box (Box with the Sound of Its Own Making, 1961). But of course, the

    time someone spent learning the skills required for such craftsmanship is likewise part of the time crystallized in

    the object. So an object contains not only the time it took to produce, but also the time it took to produce the

    producers and, if we want to be precise, even the time it took to produce the institutions that produced the

    producers, though prorated, needless to say, in proportion to the time it took the producer to make this object as a

    fraction of all the other time he or she spent applying the skills once acquired elsewhere and to other purposes.

    For the present discussion, we will limit ourselves to the time that people spent with material and the material

    likewise has its historical and geological, its biological and cosmic time. Our interest, however, is in the time that

    may be exploited, and that is labor time.The arts know three primary methods of making objects in this sense.

    The first would be the technical recording of a practice such as music or dance thats not in and of itself object-

    oriented. A sound or image recording is taken that is, in a certain way, an object-like product of a time-based

    artistic activity; beyond merely being contained in the object, that activity may even reproduced or read out from it

    (not without some degradation, needless to say). It has long been possible to process these recordings further, to

    montage and layer them. That would mean crossing back to the side of sculptural operation, whose temporal

    dimension, as a time of montaging and layering, doesnt lend itself to being read out.

    Thats because, in the second method, the object is the end product of a purposive activity that, unlike the sound

    recording or the video documentary, cannot be brought back to life once production is complete. One example

    would be a sculpture. Writing musical scores is an activity of this sort as well, since its not its own temporal

    dimension that will subsequently be read out; only the temporal dimension of a performance implementing the

    instructions of the score may be read out using the first method. But one may spend a lifetime working on a

    ten-second composition. The third and least object-like method is the product of artistic learning processes in

    living people such as musicians or actors body memory, memorization, mastery of techniques, symbols, thought

    styles. This method, that is to say, represents a sort of living abstraction: Acquired knowledge abridges previouslytime-consuming activities, but only after the individual has invested time in learning, time during which he or she

    learned to abstract from the time-consuming activity. Only institutions of the dissemination of knowledge and skills

    turn the latter into something stable and object-like thats passed on.

    Yet there is another, a fourth form of producing an object that contains works of art and/or the time required for

    their production. That would be the juridical form. I define a part of the time, or the entire time, the work requires

    as the object of an agreement and an action regulated by law or stipulation. More particularly, I define by way of

    agreement and legally binding obligation the future time, the possible fates of the recording of past time, however

    the latter is made. It has turned out that even living people and fragile situational constellations involving humans

    and other participants may be contractually defined, represented, and determined in forms that are fairly

    object-like. Needless to say, thats a popular means of production in contemporary art from Yves Klein to Tino

    Sehgal.

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    "Jugend musiziert" (german national competition for young musicians), Stuttgart, 2012

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    All four types of objects or aggregations of past time and labor time have in common that they are the ontological

    and material basis making it possible for the time spent on their production to become compatible with the

    commodity form. All four types of transformed time may in turn be exchanged for money, which may subsequently

    indeed be said to read out time. Its well known that time may be bought, most immediately the time of others; our

    own time we can buy only indirectly. Only then does the concept of storage make sense; only money (and, with a

    great deal of constructive effort, exchange) makes the storage medium render back what was put into it: Time.

    Time bought but not adequately paid for (which is to say, time paid less for than the entrepreneur may

    subsequently realize by reselling it in a different form) is a familiar part of everyday life in capitalism: Surplus value

    would not come into existence without this use of living people selling their time. Due to the relative predominance

    associated with the commodity of the exchange value over the use value in capitalist societies, certain methods of

    transferring, aggregating, and storing time are superior to others in the eyes of the exchange-value pragmatist

    methods, such as money, that abstract as much as possible from differences between the objects. Thats not to

    say that eccentric aggregate phases could preclude exchangeability altogether; still, exchange-value pragmatism

    by and large tends toward abstraction, and so has generated not only money but also container ships and the

    white cube. Both represent lesser stages of abstraction than money, but they point in the same direction.

    With the white cube, objects of the second type, which is to say, spatially extended things of all sorts, may be

    symbolically stacked on its inside, just as the containers of the container ship make it possible to stack thecontents of the containers. In one case as in the other, the contents become equivalent in a sense. But its only

    with the extended model of the objectivation of time in art production, which, just as material objects aggregate

    past time, turns the past and future time stipulated in juridical objects into stackable art, that the current expansion

    of the commercial exploitation of artistic production appears on the horizon. There is still money in the private-

    sector economy of the visual arts, and those who spend this money just as privately have gradually learned to

    recognize and appreciate non-object-like objects as no less suitable and exchangeable storage media of living

    labor time. By contrast, the business model of the multiplicative reproduction of recordings has distinctly suffered

    from the digitalization of its environment. The physical storage media of skills and abilities, for their part, suffer

    from the scarcity of government dough and the consequent devitalization of the educational institutions and

    venues for music, dance, performance art, theater, and so on. So both forms of objects will probably playdiminished roles in the future, whereas the white cubes including those white cubes camouflaged as something

    else called a project and the binders with contracts look forward to a great future, because they assemble

    objects on which private individuals spend money (and which they may also liquidate again, perhaps to spend on

    prestigious urban architecture that bears their own name) and because they depend neither on paying audiences

    nor on technical reproduction or public funding. Thats true even though works of art that take the form of a

    contract rarely reveal their status as objects or do so at most with a nostalgic nod to Conceptual Art, to whose

    administrative aesthetic we indeed owe several techniques of the contractual form.

    It may be objected that collectors collect what is rare or of rare quality, and not what took a lot of work to make.

    But no they collect what took a great deal of work, qualitatively and quantitatively to make, with the right

    mixture between good artistic work and the work of classifying good art. Value comes into being through human

    labor. Thats no less true of the value of the rare object. Nothing is absolutely rare; what is rare is so as something

    that must be regarded as culturally relevant. The idea of rarity conceived as absolute merely covers up another

    activity, one thats highly specialized and therefore used to be expensive; the activity of ascribing relevance of

    distinguishing relevant from irrelevant rarity. Because everything is rare, even the dirt under my fingernails, only

    rich Mr. Suckercleaner, PhD, the highly educated waste manager, doesnt know yet that he needs a contract that

    assures him of the rights to this dirt; because no ascriber of relevance, or even better, chain of ascribers of

    relevance, has explained it to him. What Im getting at isnt the old Philistinism that the status of art is nothing but

    a scam in which intellectual gasbags sell lemons to credulous well-heeled clients. On the contrary. This selling of

    lemons and this ascription of relevance are not haphazard operations. They must refer to qualities that are

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    verifiably present. But by bringing some meaningful order to the confusing mass of objects being produced, they

    put a sort of finishing touch on these art commodities. And this operation is becoming ever more important and

    more expensive; its ultimately responsible, even more than the activities of the notorious assistants, for ensuring

    that prices rise and profit margins rise faster still because this highly specialized operation is something you and

    I almost always do for free. Not primarily when we write an article or give a lecture, thats merely the official fringe

    of our relevance-ascribing production, but most importantly in the places where, and to the degree to which, we

    are the art world. Its not so much the experts who ascribe relevance to the art objects, but much rather the visible

    presence of beautiful, important, authentic, and otherwise desirable living people at parties and in social networksassociated with the production and presentation of art. In the age of the contract, our activity is becoming even

    more significant, because, like so many components of contemporary production, and contemporary cultural

    production in particular, its deregulated. Contracts can capture the results of deregulated relations without having

    to determine the processes themselves.

    Within the arts, higher degrees of abstraction are known by another name progress. Thats not just a fallacy.

    With the contractual form, infinitely complex and far-reaching objects or processes may be defined as coherent

    entities that no physical format, no form could ever contain. But what is crucial is that works of art add something,

    a counterweight, to their compatibility with the commodity form, however inevitable the latter of course always

    also is; add a counterweight to in that they cannot be read out at will, that there is something concrete about them

    that dialectically recaptures the abstraction. This concrete something must relate to the recipients and to their

    time. Money may in most cases be read out only as the time of others, whose labor and time spent on it is being

    bought. Aesthetic experience, by contrast, relates to its own time and its openness, and not to the openness of a

    juridical form thats moreover increasingly losing its other storage formats. Once these other models of time

    storage will have been utterly devalued and liquidated, the temporal forms of reception will atrophy as well.

    Nothing will then remain of the great artistic freedom the contractual form seems to afford but the juridical

    framework and the coherency it enables the task of lending it relevance will ultimately be up to its dry parsings,

    on the one hand, and on the other hand to grand DeMille-style productions staging as much human and art world

    material as possible.

    Thanks to Tom Holert for a conversation on contracts.

    (Translation: Gerrit Jackson)

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