Blank space in western Art History and visual culture is something that has tended to be either
explained away, or ignored. Pictures that do not depict challenge the visual basis of the ego and
its others, confronting what I call the `Phallic reader' (who sees according to the logic and rules of
the Phallogocentric system he inhabits) and potentially disturbing his sense of the visible. The
Phallic reader, the visible and the seeing ego's sense of how to see, meet in what I call the `psychic
surface'. Deploying this notion of a `psychic surface' allows for readings which move on from the
potentially confining logic of the Phallus. Paradoxically, the psychic structure of monochrome's
liminal blankness is homologous to the indeterminate Mixed Race subject, whose body
transgresses not only the foundational historical binarism of `Black/White', but also Lacanian
psychoanalysis. This thesis aims to concentrate on exploring blank spaces, with particular
reference to the monochrome within western Art History. Building on the considerable work
since at least the 1960s that critiques the binary logocentrism of Eurocentric, Hegelian-originated
Art History, this thesis aims to explore the specific ways monochrome evades, undermines and
tricks commonly accepted `groundrules' of Art History. The Phallic reader is severely restricted in
understanding that which falls outside of the signifying logic of a particular system of Art History
that follows a binary, teleological and Phallogocentric course. Both monochrome and the Mixed
Race subject fall outside of this logic, as both contain the structure of the trick. In each case, the
trick is activated in the tension between the prychica nd the opticals urfaces. I suggestt hat
monochrome's psychic space is pre-Phallic, a space of eternal deferral of meaning, a space that
playfully makes a nonsense of binary structures. Psychoanalysis is largely used here as an analytic
tool, but also appears as an object of critique. Art History provides an anchor for the optical
surfaces under discussion. Theories of `radical superficiality' both contradict and complement
these ways of theorising the psychic surface. The trick/ster is a significant/signifiant means of
deploying interdisciplinary methodologies to negotiate this difficult terrain between Black, White
and monochrome. An interdisciplinary approach also enacts the psychic structure of
indeterminacy of my objects of study. I hope that by proposing a potential transgressive power
for those indeterminate things that continue to confound the binary systems that aim to
contextualise and confine them, I will contribute to the areas of Visual Culture and `Race' Theory.
Date of Award | 2002 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Liminal blankness : mixing race and space in monochrome's psychic surface
Morrison, A. D. (Author). 2002
Student thesis: PhD