Dormat
II | 2000 - 2001 | stainless steel and nickel-plated
pins, canvas, glue | 3 x 72.5 x 42 cm
The
Art of Displacement:
Mona Hatoum’s Logic of Irreconcilables
by Edward W. Said
Consider
the door handle’s place as you stand before the entrance
to a room. You know that as you reach forward, your hand
will move unerringly to one side or another of the door.
But then you don’t encounter the handle, curl your
fingers around it, and push forward because … it has
actually been placed two feet above your head in the middle
of the door, perched intransigently up there where it eludes
your ready grasp, cannot fulfill its normal function, and
does not announce what it is doing there. From that beginning
dislocation others necessarily follow. The door may be pushed
open on only one of its hinges. You must therefore enter
the room sideways and at an angle but only after your coat
or skirt is caught and torn by a nail designed to do that
every time the room is entered. Inside, you come upon a
carpet of undulating curves, which on close examination
reveal themselves to be intestines frozen into plastic stillness.
The
kitchen to your right is barred by minuscule steel wires
strung across the door, preventing entrance. Gazing through
those wires you see a table covered with colanders, large
metal spoons, grinders, sifters, squeezers, and egg beaters,
connected to each other by a wire that ends up connected
to a buzzing light-bulb that flutters off and on disturbingly
at random intervals. A
bed in the left corner is without a mattress, its legs akilter
in a grotesque rubbery wilt. A mysterious tracing of white
powder forms a strange symmetrical pattern on the floor
beneath the bare metal springs of a baby’s crib next
to it. The television set intones a scramble of jumbled
discursive sounds, while a camera imperturbably emits animated
images of an unknown person’s innards. All this is
designed to recall and disturb at the same time.
Whatever
else this room may be, it is certainly not meant to be lived
in, although it seems deliberately, and perhaps even perversely
to insist that it once was intended for that purpose: a
home, or a place where one might have felt in place, at
ease and at rest, surrounded by the ordinary objects which
together constitute the feeling, if not the actual state,
of being at home. Next door, we find a huge grid of metal
bunks, multiplied so grotesquely as to banish even the idea
of rest, much less actual sleep. In another room, the notion
of storage is blocked by dozens of what look like empty
lockers sealed into themselves by wire mesh, yet garishly
illuminated by naked bulbs.
An
abiding locale is no longer possible in the world of Mona
Hatoum’s art which, like the strangely awry rooms
she introduces us into, articulates so fundamental a dislocation
as to assault not only one’s memory of what once was,
but how logical and possible, how close and yet so distant
from the original abode, this new elaboration of familiar
space and objects really is. Familiarity and strangeness
are locked together in the oddest way, adjacent and irreconcilable
at the same time. For not only does one feel that one cannot
return to the way things were, but there also is a sense
of just how acceptable and 'normal' these oddly distorted
objects have become, just because they remain very close
to what they have left behind. Beds still look like beds,
for instance, and a wheelchair most definitely resembles
a wheelchair: it is just that the bed’s springs are
unusably bare, or that the wheelchair leans forward as if
it is about to tip over, while its handles have been transformed
either into a pair of sharp knives or serrated, unwelcoming
edges. Domesticity is thus transformed into a series of
menacing and radically inhospitable objects whose new and
presumably non-domestic use is waiting to be defined. They
are unredeemed things whose distortions cannot be sent back
for correction or reworking, since the old address is unreachably
there and yet has been annulled.
This
peculiar predicament might be characterised, I think, as
the difference between Jonathan Swift and T.S. Eliot, one
the great angry logician of minute dislocation unrelieved
by charity, the other the eloquent mourner of what once
was and can, by prayer and ritual, be restored. In their
vision, both men begin solidly, unexceptionally from home:
Lemuel Gulliver, Swift’s last major persona, from
England; the narrator of Eliot’s poem 'East Coker'
sets out from home as a place ‘where one starts from’.
For Gulliver the passage of time culminates in a shipwreck
after which he fetches up on a beach, tied down by tiny
ropes affixed to his hair and body, pinioned to the ground,
immobilized by six-inch human like creatures whom he could
have wiped out by his superior strength but can't because
(a) he is unable to move and (b) their tiny arrows are capable
of blinding him. So he lives among them as a normal man
except that he is too big, they too small, and he cannot
abide them any more than they can him. Three
disconcerting voyages later, Gulliver discovers that his
humanity is unregenerate, irreconcilable with decency and
morality, but there is really no going back to what had
once been his home, even though in actual fact he does return
to England but faints because the smell of his wife and
children as they embrace him is too awful to bear. By contrast,
Eliot offers a totally redeemable home after the first one
expires. In the beginning, he says, ‘houses rise and
fall, crumble, are extended, are removed, destroyed’.
Later, however, they can be returned to ‘for a further
union, a deeper communion / Through the dark cold and the
empty desolation’. The sorrow and loss are real, but
the sanctity of home remains beneath the surface, a place
to which one finally accedes through love and prayer. In
‘Little Gidding’, the last of the elegaic Four
Quartets (‘East Coker’ is the second), Eliot
borrows from Dame Julian of Norwich the line 'all manner
of thing shall be well’ to affirm that after much
sorrow and waste, love and the Incarnation will restore
us to a sense of ‘the complete consort dancing together’,
a vision that shows how ‘the fire and the rose are
one’.
By contrast
with Eliot, Swift’s profanity is incurable, just as
the dissociation of Gulliver’s sense of homely comfort
can never be made whole or what it once was. The only consolation
– if it is one – is the ability he retains to
detail, number, and scrupulously register what now stocks
his state of mind in his former abode. Hyppolite Taine called
Swift a great businessman of literature, someone to whom
objects no matter how peculiar and distorted can be carefully
placed on a shelf, in a space, in a book or image. In Mona
Hatoum’s relentless catalogue of disaffected, dislocated,
oddly deformed objects, there is a similar sense of focusing
on what is there without expressing much interest in the
ambition to rescue the object from its strangeness or, more
importantly, trying to forget or shake off the memory of
how nice it once was. On the contrary, its essential niceness
- say, the carpet made of pins, or the blocks of soap pushed
together to form a continuous surface onto which a map is
drawn with red glass beads – sticks out as a refractory
part of the dislocation. A putative use value is eerily
retained in the new dispensation, but no instructions, no
'how-to' directions are provided: memory keeps insisting
that these objects were known to us, but somehow aren’t
any more, even though memory clings to them relentlessly.
There is nothing of Eliot’s scared discipline here.
This is a secular world, unpardoned, and curiously unforgiving,
stable, down-to-earth. Objecthood dug in without a key to
help us understand or open what seems to be locked in there.
Unsurprisingly then, Lili (stay) put, is the name of one
of Hatoum’s brilliantly titled works.
Her
work is the presentation of identity as unable to identify
with itself, but nevertheless grappling the notion (perhaps
only the ghost) of identity to itself. Thus is exile figured
and plotted in the objects she creates. Her works enact
the paradox of dispossession as it takes possession of its
place in the world, standing firmly in workaday space for
spectators to see and somehow survive what glistens before
them. No one has put the Palestinian experience in visual
terms so austerely and yet so playfully, so compellingly
and at the same moment so allusively. Her installations,
objects and performances impress themselves on the viewer’s
awareness with curiously self-effecting ingenuity which
is provocatively undermined, nearly cancelled and definitively
reduced by the utterly humdrum, local and unspectacular
materials (hair, steel, soap, marbles, rubber, wire, string,
etc) that she uses so virtuosically. In another age her
works might have been made of silver or marble, and could
have taken on the status of sublime ruins or precious fragments
placed before us to recall our mortality and the precarious
humanity we share with each other. In the age of migrants,
curfews, identity cards, refugees, exiles, massacres, camps
and fleeing civilians, however, they are the uncooptable
mundane instruments of a defiant memory facing itself and
its pursuing or oppressing others implacably, marked forever
by changes in everyday materials and objects that permit
no return or real repatriation, yet unwilling to let go
of the past that they carry along with them like some silent
catastrophe that goes on and on without fuss or rhetorical
bluster.
Hatoum’s
art is hard to bear (like the refugee’s world, which
is full of grotesque structures that bespeak excess as well
as paucity), yet very necessary to see as an art that travesties
the idea of a single homeland. Better disparity and dislocation
than reconciliation under duress of subject and object;
better a lucid exile than sloppy, sentimental homecomings;
better the logic of dissociation than an assembly of compliant
dunces. A belligerent intelligence is always to be preferred
over what conformity offers, no matter how unfriendly the
circumstances and unfavourable the outcome. The point is
that the past cannot be entirely recuperated from so much
power arrayed against it on the other side: it can only
be restated in the form of an object without a conclusion,
or a final place, transformed by choice and conscious effort
into something simultaneously different, ordinary, and irreducibly
other and the same, taking place together: an object that
offers neither rest nor respite.