The contemporary idea of the work of art is paradoxically both widely used and often unexamined. Therefore, we must re-evaluate the concept before we can understand what the deconstruction of aesthetics means for thinkers like Jacques Derrida, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe. By examining their analyses of works of visual art and contextualizing their thinking on the matter, Martta Heikkilä asserts that the implications of the work of art, art, and the aesthetic apply not only to philosophical questions but also to a broader area. Instead of the totality represented by the historical concept of Art, poststructuralist thinkers introduce the idea of the radical multiplicity of art and its works. From this notion arises the fundamental issue in Derrida and the poststructuralist tradition: how can we speak philosophically of art, which always exists as singular instances, as works? InDeconstruction and the Work of Art: Visual Arts and Their Critique in Contemporary French Thought, Heikkilä shows that the deconstructionist notions of art are still influential in the discourses of contemporary art, in which artworks proliferate and the concept of work is open-ended and expanding. This book offers an introduction to the deconstructionist theory of art and brings new perspectives to the complex, undecidable relation between philosophy and art.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Dissemination of Art
1. The Muteness and Blindness of Images: Deconstruction and the Work of Art
2. Beyond Presence: Form and Figure3. The Frames of the Work of Art
4. TheTrait and Difference: Art between Form and Gesture
5. Words and Art: Exemplarity of the Work
6. Mimesis as Difference7. The Deconstruction of the Image
Conclusion: The Complicated Liaison of Art and Philosophy
Bibliography