The Ideology of the Secret City

by Keren Moscovitch

What is Pure Form? In aesthetic/Greenbergian terms it is the material with which one is working and the physical shape of a work of art. It is the color and structure of a shape, the length and thickness of a line, the overall composition of a canvas. It is material speaking as material, substance that is only defined by its own physical properties. As ideology, it represents Louis Althusser’s concept of the imaginary relationship of individuals – the belief that form deprived of content connects humans to a higher state of being – to their real conditions of existence – their earthly reality. For Plato, Pure Form is of divine provenance. As humans, we will never have access to it because we only have access to the terrestrial world – the Cave. The goals of Plato’s Republic are to create a utopian society that functions efficiently and effectively, and the ones that guard it – the philosophers – are the ones that are most connected to Pure Form.

A recent exhibition that beautifully illustrated this concept was Secret City by Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, installed at the Grand Palais in Paris. This body of work explores the power of Pure Form as it exists on both of these levels – physical and ethereal – and provides viewers with an experience of transcendence, humility and a deep grounding in what it means to be human.

When I first walked into the massive space of the Grand Palais, the first thing I noticed was the beautiful peaceful music coursing through my body. The music seemed to fill every crevice of the space and followed me wherever I went. I thought about music as it relates to the modernist concept of form as divorced from narrative, and allowed it to move me through the purity of its being. I am personally not a formalist, as I believe that content is inherent in everything, but the abstraction of music transmits a spiritual sensation that transcends time, space and, I must admit, Content. Meandering through the space, I discovered that the music was emerging from a huge conical speaker at the far end of the Palais. A giant shape punctuating, ruling and dominating the structure of the Secret City, as if it was the divine force that was fueling the whole thing. Pure geometric form leads the citizens of the Utopian city into connection with higher powers within themselves and the Universe at large.

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As form, this body of work is a map and guidebook through the process of creating the Secret City. The exhibition is presented as a set of instructions and therein exists its discourse. If humanity follows a certain formula, arrived at via the wisdom of spiritual leaders and seekers throughout the ages and leading up to the ideal solution, society will achieve spiritual salvation. On an experiential level, the content at a certain point becomes irrelevant as the shape of the city itself wraps itself around the visitor and guides him/her through the space.

The artists, however, only use form to begin the conversation, and build an infrastructure for the exploration of their Utopian narrative. Though the architecture of the exhibition is geometric and somewhat abstract, it holds within its shell a detailed written description of the Utopian city, designed to harness creativity, ideas and cosmic (Divine?) energy. As ideology, the content of this work is a manifesto. It is a declaration of intention and behavior of the designers and citizens of the Secret City. As Russians who lived through the Stalinism and the Cold War, the Kabakovs understand what it means to live in a repressive society in which freedom is elusive. Their manifesto for the secret city represents an ambivalent relationship to authority, power and religion. The questions posed in the piece reveal the Kabakovs’ history in the USSR and represent pure content as ideological inquiry.

Overall, I found this installation to be incredibly moving, complex and transcendent. I have yet to decode many of its messages and look forward to coming back to it again and again and as I learn the philosophical ideas that serve as its foundation.

In closing, forms on their own do not in themselves function as ideology. It is the belief in the power of these forms, in their primacy, that constructs the ideology that can build – or destroy – civilizations. Plato feared artists and poets due to their departure from form and immersion in content – specifically, the content of passion and emotions. It is this belief – this ideology – that built the imaginary realm of the Republic. Secret City takes Plato’s narrative and twists it into something truly Utopian – a society in which all members are interconnected – to each other, to the Earth and to the Cosmos.

Keren Moscovitch is a lens-based artist who explores intimacy and the ways in which the sexual and the spiritual intersect. She regularly collaborates with other artists to dissect the ways in which relationships are built, and identity is formed. She lives and works in New York City where she teaches at the School of Visual Arts. Her monograph Me Into You was published in the summer of 2012, featuring 35 images and an essay by Allen Frame. She is obsessed with people’s secrets, especially the ones that take place in the bedroom.

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Immeasurable Lightness of Being

by Keren Moscovitch

As a doctoral candidate in Philosophy, Art Theory and Aesthetics, I have been introduced to  a dual approach of intertextual and topological analysis which has given me a new perspective of plurality and infinity of interpretation.

Intertextual analysis is the relating of multiple texts (writings, artworks) to one another to form a nonchronological dialogue between people and their ideas. In identifying the threads that run through multiple authors’ works, one idea builds off of another, offering new thoughts to engage the first idea and creating new thoughts and relationships that would not have existed outside of the dialogue. Intertextual analysis disrupts the established linear, chronological narrative that is so often dominated by whomever is in charge at the time. We realize that the meaning of a text is infinite, because it has as many meanings as the infinite combinations of people reading it and relating it to an infinite number of other texts. We discover that we can only know a thing in relation to another thing.

One example comes to mind of a recent experience inside the Pantheon in Rome. Looking up at the grandeur of this magnificent structure, through the portal in the dome leading up to the sky, my breath was momentarily taken away. I asked my colleagues if anyone knew the purpose of the big hole? Someone explained the architecture and engineering of such a structure, and that the builders were able to expand the size of the dome by removing some weight from the structure. However, it was clear to me that the hole functioned as something more, that it was a portal to the Heavens, a direct line to the Divine. The clarity was intuitive, visceral… it came from not only my own experience of spirituality, but also artworks that came to mind the moment I walked in.

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I thought of Sarah Charlesworth’s Buddha of Immeasurable Light, a diptych that on the left shows a Buddha statue floating on a deep blue background, and on the right a ceiling surface punctuated by a cut-out hole leading through to a perfectly crisp view of a blue sky. I have known this image for a long time. Sarah was a mentor of mine in graduate school and I always struggled to understand her work. She was a true artist-philosopher, and her densely theoretical discussions of her own work always intimidated me. When I walked into this temple, and immediately felt in my gut that I was entering a sacred space – much more sacred than any of the other Churches and Cathedrals that I had visited during my time in Rome – both the piece and Sarah shone with new understanding. I had always interpreted the work as a critical commentary on spirituality and the ways that human beings use objects to connect us to the Divine – which it is. However, it was only in that moment that I understood that Sarah was not a detached intellectual, but had likely had experiences of transcendence and connection to some kind of divine energy and was honoring that experience through her work.

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In her 1919 text From Ritual to Romance, Jessie Weston opens up a new reading of the Grail Legend. By inquiring as to the origin of the narrative, she shows us that the Christian story that has been the status quo for two thousand years is only the latest chapter of a much longer chronology of ideas, beliefs and rituals. I asked my colleagues what they thought was here prior to the building of the Temple, and was told that it was “just swamp land.” While I do not claim to be an expert, nor am I attempting to fabricate fantasies based on my own creative stirrings, or pretend that I know more than someone who probably does know more than I do about the history of Rome, I boldly asserted to my group that it is clear to me that prior to the Pantheon being built there was something else here. Not just a swamp or a cow pasture, but something sacred and divine that would be the reason for the Ancients building THIS shrine on THIS spot in THIS manner.

As a final point of intertextuality, I thought of a series of History Channel and National Geographic documentaries about Ancient Egypt, Stonehenge and other prehistoric and ancient sacred sites, that I had recently been hungrily consuming. I heard all kinds of theories about celestial constellations, planetary alignments, sun worship and even extraterrestrials. Some of the theories were farfetched, while others were established “fact” but all pointed me in one direction when I walked into the Pantheon – Up. I believe that if we dug beneath the layers of the structure as it stands today, if we had the right tools and technologies, if items of interest stood the test of time, or if we had a time machine, we would find that on this spot, prior to the Ancients, something else happened. A ritual, a realization, a celestial observation, a miracle… A thought. I am of the opinion that something must have happened here to make THIS thing happen here.

Topological Analysis is the observation of multiple layers of time and place, examining cultural patterns the way that a geologist may study the layering of different sediments and draw conclusions about what happened at various points in history. By the time I reached the Pantheon, I had spent four days in Rome observing the layering of Modern on top of Christian on top of Roman architecture – an accumulation of culture, thought and belief. It was only through this experience that I was able to – and in fact compelled to – formulate my questions about what was beneath the structures we see today that every tour guide so far has referred to as the original structures (the original Roman road, the original wall, etc.).

As we dig through layers of sediment, both physical and mental, it becomes very difficult to discern what came before what, to establish causality and to assign authorship. We are all the authors of the texts that we read, and time comes back to reassert itself outside of the established chronology. We may choose to see each text that we consume as a series of geological locations, into which we may dig to find narratives hidden between the lines, or those that would be understood only in relationship to what came before, after and concurrent to.

Keren Moscovitch is a lens-based artist who explores intimacy and the ways in which the sexual and the spiritual intersect. She regularly collaborates with other artists to dissect the ways in which relationships are built, and identity is formed. She lives and works in New York City where she teaches at the School of Visual Arts. Her monograph Me Into You was published in the summer of 2012, featuring 35 images and an essay by Allen Frame. She is obsessed with people’s secrets, especially the ones that take place in the bedroom.

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