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Robert Rauschenberg, Monogram, 1955-59 |
When what were formerly existential modes of being in the world are reduced to "lifestyles"—in the same way that postmodernism reduces all historical records to styles—then a postmodern diversity does indeed become possible. For then everything can coexist with everything without generating conflict or tension.
In art, Rauschenberg's Combines embody this empty diversity. There is no end to the things that can be combined. But in what way then is a work of art to be distinguished from a trash fill? The trash fill too combines everything with everything by virtue of the fact that it is the depository of everything that has lost value and meaning. The things that end up in the trash are of diverse origin but in the trash heap they share the fundamental sameness of being discards, an excremental homogeneity. Rauschenberg's Combines are the aestheticization of this excrementality, which is the obverse side of consumerism and the commodity fetish.
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