The Power of Punk on Reason TV

James writes:

My interview with Kennedy about Ai Weiwei, Pussy Riot, and the power of punk art is now live at Reason TV!

For more: 

IMG_0144
Kennedy and James Panero talking punk in Madison Square Park

The New Political Art

01-Ai_Weiwei_Portrait_Sep094
Ai Weiwei, September 2009, © Ai Weiwei.

Note: an adaptation of this article appeared on September 6, 2012, on page D6 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal with the headline "American Punk's Unheralded Impact"

 

THE NEW CRITERION
September 2012

The New Political Art
by James Panero

Political art is usually terrible, or good for bad reasons. The Death of Marat, Jacques-Louis David’s 1793 painting of the French revolutionary murdered in his bathtub by Charlotte Corday, may be a masterpiece, but its politics led to the guillotine. Reproduced by the Jacobins, Marat became an image used to incite The Terror.

Do the arts offer special access to political truth? History would say no. Following David’s example, political art has mainly meant the seduction of art by the state. In the twentieth century, the arts were used to advance regimes that sought to oppress the very freedoms that had given rise to their artistic champions. Communism and Fascism each used art to destroy art. Meanwhile, in the free world, with a few notable exceptions, art that has been “politically engaged” has most often been directed against those who defend freedom while either ignoring or praising those who oppose it. Or politics has been used as a selling point, offering art with the illusion of controversy while merely reiterating the assumptions of the buying public.

Is the Chinese political artist Ai Weiwei any different? Not on the face of it. When I first saw his work at Robert Miller Gallery in 2004, the exhibition announcement featured a photograph of Ai’s neon-lettered sign spelling out “FUCK.” Meanwhile the gallery window displayed a self-shot photograph of Ai giving the middle finger to the White House.

Ai could have been just another political artist flipping off the usual suspects, but as I wrote in these pages at the time, “Ai Weiwei is a more complex artist than this one piece leads you to believe.” He was an equal opportunity offender. Ai gave the Eiffel Tower and other world monuments the same treatment. As part of this series, which he called a “Study of Perspective,” he also photographed his middle finger directed against the portrait of Chairman Mao in Tiananmen Square.

Obviously the perspective he was studying was not foreground/background. The study was a perspective on the political implications of each image. Raising the middle finger against the (Clinton) White House may be a silly but harmless act. For a Chinese artist living and working in Beijing, however, to flip the bird at Mao from the site of the Tiananmen Square massacre had a different implication. So too the photograph Ai took of his wife, Lu Qing, raising her dress and showing her underwear before the Chairman—a light-hearted provocation directed at the icon of an unsmiling regime.

In the United States, the ability to criticize the government is a birthright if not a national pastime. In China, Ai was already dancing on “the red line of Chinese law,” as state newspapers later described him. Determined either to push it back or cross it, Ai has never backed down from his criticism of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), even while working from within the confines of its “open” closed society.

Since 2004, Ai has found ways to amplify his criticism with a volume that nobody expected. He has shown that political art can be more than just another form of propaganda. It can act against propaganda to become the conscience of reform. The objects of this art may be transitory, but the freedom of art can be a leading edge advancing the freedom of others. In addition to his exhibitions and his tireless self-broadcasting, his story now comes together in Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, a documentary by the young filmmaker Alison Klayman that will serve to broadcast his work to an even wider audience.

Ai Weiwei’s father, Ai Qing, was a well-known Chinese poet. Originally trained as a painter, in 1929 he moved to Paris and fell under the spell of Émile Verhaeren, who used poetry to describe the harsh realities of the modern city. Ai Qing also became a follower of Mao. When he returned to China, he was imprisoned by the rival Nationalist Party.

It wasn’t long after his release that Ai Qing suffered the fate of countless intellectuals in Mao’s China. A fellow poet accused him of falling “into a quagmire of reactionary formalism.” In 1958, he was sent off to Xinjiang, China’s “Little Siberia,” where he cleaned the toilets of a labor camp. As part of his punishment, youth gangs poured ink on his face and pelted him with stones. For a time, the family inhabited a cave dug in the earth. Ai Weiwei, born in 1957, lived here in the provincial city of Shihezi with his father and mother, Gao Ying, for the next fifteen years.

Ai Weiwei returned with his family to Beijing in 1976, the year of Mao’s death. He enrolled in Beijing’s film academy and became part of an avant-garde group called “Stars” at a moment of cultural thaw known as the “Beijing Spring.” The Stars group was named “in order to emphasize our individuality,” said its central member Ma Desheng. “This was directed at the drab uniformity of the Cultural Revolution.” After being denied entrance to the official exhibition of contemporary art, the Stars displayed their work on the street. When this show was removed by police, they organized a demonstration demanding democracy and artistic freedom and eventually won permission to have an exhibition of their own. The Stars also participated in Beijing’s “Democracy Wall”—a brief state-
sanctioned attempt at recognizing the party’s new policy of “seeking truth from facts.”

The removal of Democracy Wall by the CCP in 1979 closed the doors on the country’s brief experiment with artistic freedom. Two years later, Ai moved to New York and enrolled in Parsons School of Design. He lived in a basement apartment near East Seventh Street and Second Avenue. Ai’s resources were meager—he supplemented his income by drawing portraits of tourists and gambling in Atlantic City (he is recognized in blackjack circles as a top-tier player). His apartment nevertheless became a hub for Chinese artists plugging into the East Village art scene.

Ai spent thirteen years in New York before returning to Beijing in 1993 to be close to his ailing father. His artistic output during this period was modest, but the influence was formative. Modern history has often been shaped by foreigners absorbing the intellectual culture of the West’s great cities. Ai was fortunate to find himself not in the Marxist circles of Paris but in the alternative punk scene of New York. He inherited its art of provocation and its anti-authoritarian philosophy. (He later demonstrated his affinity with the city by marrying his wife, Lu Qing, at New York’s City Hall.)

Back in Beijing, Ai sharpened his tools. The punk tactics he saw employed against New York’s police department in the Tompkins Square riots of 1988, which he photographed, he directed against the CCP. As he lodged his dissent at a political party ungoverned by the rule of law—“Kafka’s castle,” he called it—he used the freedom of art to get his message out while also insulating himself from state reprisal. The avant-garde neighborhood that first attracted him was nicknamed Beijing East Village.

Ai began his new career in Beijing by publishing illicit books and establishing an architecture firm, which later earned him an advisory role in the design of Beijing’s Olympic Stadium, dubbed The Bird’s Nest. With the rise in prices of contemporary Chinese art, the CCP saw how art could be used to advance the interests of the state. By and large, China’s newly profitable avant-garde did not “share either the political intent or the reckless bravery of the Tiananmen organizers,” wrote the critic Richard Vine. “The cruel lesson of June 4, 1989 is that repression sometimes works.” (See my article “Made in China” from The New Criterion of December 2008 for more.)

With his confrontational art, Ai was different. At the time of his exhibition in 2004, Ai was China’s sanctioned provocateur, but he soon began stepping over the red party line with historic intensity. He criticized the Olympic stadium he helped design as a “fake smile.” He then used his blog, which he started in 2005, along with homemade video, to document the 5,200 children who died when faulty government buildings collapsed in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. When the government shut down his website in 2009, he turned to Twitter, using proxy servers to bypass The Great Firewall of China.

Ai often spent eight hours a day on Twitter. Volunteers came from around China to join him. Each day, his office tweeted the birthdays of those students who died in the quake. For an exhibition at Munich’s Haus der Kunst, he built an enormous screen of school backpacks that spelled out, in Chinese characters, “She lived happily on this earth for seven years”—the message of a mother whose child died in the quake.

As Ai’s provocations accelerated and the government increased its surveillance of his activities, he filmed the state looking back. When he went to testify in the trial of Tan Zuoren, an earthquake activist, he broadcast his own arrest and beating at the hands of police. This assault of August 2009 gave Ai a subdural hematoma that required emergency surgery. As he convalesced and filed claims of police brutality, he again turned documentation into art. “I want to prove that the system is not working,” he said to Evan Osnos for a profile in The New Yorker in 2010. “You can’t simply say that the system is not working. You have to work through it.” Ai followed this same documentary practice as the government demolished his studio building in Shanghai.

In 2010, Ai’s international stature reached new heights when he installed 100 million handmade ceramic sunflower seeds in Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall. Nevertheless, the CCP determined that the threat he now posed outweighed the repercussions of silencing him. In April 2011, the party apprehended Ai and held him for eighty-one days in two secret locations. As the CCP charged him with everything from tax evasion to harboring pornography, the party subjected him to over fifty sessions of interrogations. Two guards were never more than a few feet from his side.

Since his release, the CCP has been waging a propaganda campaign against Ai both at home and abroad. Suspicious comments with knock-off American idioms have appeared beneath articles about him, such as this one in The New Yorker: “Were he a US citizen, pari passu, he would be languishing in a Federal penitentiary for acting as an undeclared (well paid) foreign agent. Or for failing to pay Federal taxes, another big no-no in The Land of the Free.” Meanwhile China’s Global Times has declared that “the law will not concede before ‘mavericks’ just because of the Western media’s criticism. . . . The experience of Ai Weiwei and other mavericks cannot be placed on the same scale as China’s human rights development and progress.”

The promise that his jailers made has become CCP strategy: “You criticized the government, so we are going to let all society know that you’re an obscene person, you evaded taxes, you have two wives, we want to shame you.” Yet the art of Ai Weiwei has demonstrated how a single individual can also shame the state. His example is now closely followed by another punk-inspired act, the Russian band Pussy Riot. The three young women of this group have been sentenced to two years in prison for challenging the corruption of the Orthodox Church and the thugocracy of Vladimir Putin. As John O’Sullivan recently wrote at National Review: “The Pussy Riot girls are seeking to protest not oppression by religion but the oppressionof religion by the Russian state.”

An American expert on China recently explained to me how the CCP can tolerate anything but criticism of its own authority. Since the Communist Party believes that such criticism is a threat that must be suppressed, it seeks to eliminate it early and save the Chinese people from a larger conflagration. Ai Weiwei has put this oppressive logic to the test. His art has shown how a state without dissent is the greatest threat of all.

The Future of the Upper West Side

View Larger Map

In the summer 2012 issue of City Journal, I examine "The Unending Battle of the Upper West Side," the Manhattan neighborhood's decade-long fight between the forces of gentrification and the social-services industry.

When I adapted this essay into "Homelessness, inc: The war on the Upper West Side" for The New York Post, I led off with the latest round in the battle: an "emergency" plan to move 400 homeless into a new supershelter on the residential block of West 95th Street by an organization called Aguila. In yet another example of the revolving door that exists between government service and the homelessness industry, Aguila is run by none other than New York's former commissioner of homeless services Robert Hess.

In recent years, the blocks around this Aguila facility have seen half a dozen proposals for homeless shelters and "supportive housing" for the mentally ill and chemically addicted (MICA). Currently on 94th Street, the Lantern Organization is nearing completion on the conversion of St. Louis Hall, which it announced in 2007 is being designed in part to house MICA patients.

On August 7, the office of Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer called a press rally on 95th Street and West End Avenue to oppose the Aguila shelter. Speakers included New York State Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, New York City Councilwoman Gale Brewer, New York State Senator Adriano Espaillat, Nick Prigo from Community Board 7 Housing Committee, and Marti Weithman from the SRO Law Project. The assembly on the street included Neighborhood in the Nineties president Aaron Biller along with Mel Wymore and Ken Biberaj, both candidates for the City Council's sixth district. Videos of the speakers are below.

For anyone who cares about the continuing betterment of the Upper West Side, the pushback against the Aguila shelter is admirable and warranted. New York City's homeless and mental health policies are broken. Yet what was absent from the discussion are the steps that need to be taken to fix them.

The rally against the Aguila shelter is an uncanny repetition of much of what we saw in early 2011 for a building known as the Alexander on 94th Street. Many of the same politicians showed up saying much of the same things. In the Alexander's case, community resistance led to what appears to be the abandonment of the plan to convert the building into a 200-person shelter. This was a victory for the residential stakeholders of the neighborhood, especially for the working middle class and poor who reside in this building.

One now hopes that the neighborhood's energy can be summoned again to oppose the latest incursion. But the case of deja vu also shows how such proposals will continue until several underlying issues are addressed.

The neighborhood's politicians have been reluctant to look at one most obvious factor, because their own legislation has contributed (inadvertently, they say) to the crisis. In 2006, Brewer, Rosenthal, and other local and state politicians formed a "Working Group" to legislate against what they saw as the "illegal hotels" that were being operated for budget tourists out of the neighborhood's SRO (for "single room occupancy") apartment buildings. Once their legislation passed, the owners of these buildings lost a business model that could compete with the exorbitant tax-funded rental rates (up to $3000 a month per resident) that social services can command by warehousing the homeless and mentally ill in the same buildings, which opened the door for the organizations to move in.

In either case, the hotels and the shelters operate side by side with the SRO's existing long-term residents. In one case the building services improve through the introduction of hotel amenities. In the other a homeless, often drug-addicted population shares the hallways and bathrooms. Since the "illegal hotels" legislation directly precipitated this latest encroachment of social services providers, one obvious solution is to roll back the law and allow the SRO buildings to function again as tourist hotels while still honoring the leases of the existing tenants.

A second issue is the "fair share" mandate in the city's charter--a mandate which says that each neighborhood should carry its fair share of social services and that no one neighborhood should bear a disproportionate burden. With nearly 2,000 supportive housing units now on the Upper West Side compared to less than 100 on the Upper East Side, "fair share" is woefully disregarded. By calling a shelter an emergency facility, social-services developers can also bypass even the most basic community approval process and impact analysis. They can bus in hundreds of homeless, often in the dead of night, with little more than a letter of warning to the Community Board. If "fair share" had teeth and could be enforced, developers would be compelled to ensure that their facilities are distributed equally across neighborhoods in a "fair" way. Additionally, the "emergency" provision, which allows for no community review, must be abandoned.

Beyond fair share, another issue concerns the housing of dual diagnosis or "mentally ill chemically addicted" (MICA) populations, many of them homeless, in residential neighborhoods. While all neighborhoods might be expected to carry a fair share of social services, no residential community should be expected to take in this explosive population.

 "What's your solution to the mentally ill" has been a rhetorical weapon used against areas that oppose the social services industry, even though finding a solution to a problem the mental health community created should not be a residential neighborhood's responsibility. 

Here it is possible to see a sad narrative going back to the exposure and closing of Willowbrook State School on Staten Island. First the Kennedys and then Geraldo Rivera on ABC in 1972 publicized the truly deplorable conditions at this institution for

mentally retarded children. The backlash following these reports led to the mass deinstitutionalization of the state's mentally ill population and the movement towards community based social services. Meanwhile institutionalization became socially

stigmatized and advocates pushed for the "liberation" of the mentally ill. 

But now we see the disastrous outcome of this policy, as the pendulum has gone the other way. Community services for the mentally ill is a failure of its own. While the cost of community care is purportedly lower than institutionalization, not enough thought is ever given to the collateral damage to communities that must absorb it--increased crime, drain on other municipal resources, diminishing property values and tax base, plus the mental tax on community stakeholders. As Heather Mac Donald has written for City Journal, deinistitutionalization has led to "re-institutionalization," as care for the mentally ill have been transferred to the criminal justice system. At the same time, the industry designed to help at-risk populations has instead been helping itself to taxpayer money while failing to give their charges the care they need.

With the failure of deinstitutionalization, an argument can be made that what really needs to happen is the development a new generation of mental health institutions along with the political will to institutionalize a broken population. In fact, a movement in this direction is already taking place, and proponents has called it "FORMICA," because it is the one solution that would actually help the MICA population while also junking the failed community based mental health system.

But finally, the Upper West Side should look to its future. While the neighborhood spends its energy opposing the remaining forces of the social services industry, it also needs to consider how its wants to develop into the future. What are the kinds of people and businesses it hopes to attract? The cooperative revolution, and the neighborhood's beautification that has resulted, has already taken the Upper West Side far along in recovering its grandeur of a century ago. But with the outer boroughs now attracting a large share of the city's young talent and energy, the Upper West Side needs to find ways to compete with these other vibrant neighborhoods. One place to look may be the very SRO buildings that have been the cause of so much concern. With their tiny apartments, these SROs already have a dorm-like arrangement that would lend themselves to student living. With Lincoln Center on one side and Columbia University on the other, the city's young creative class is already drawn to the Upper West Side. Why not think creatively about these SROs and carve out new housing for a creative population?

A generation ago, the Upper West Side was a center for cultural innovation, much as neighborhoods in Brooklyn are today. Through new initiatives, the cultural legacy of the Upper West Side could be reinvigorated. But for that to happen, the leaders of the community need to advance a forceful forward direction that the rally on 95th Street regrettably lacked.