That
is important, because in this religious edge nature, art becomes a
pseudo-religious function; providing in this a hermeneutical structure
(ideology), for that political determination of society. In this sense, art
assumes the reflexive-discursive function of mystical traditions in religion;
with an emphasis on the discursive, channeling this ideological rather than
reflexive function, with its ethical referents; but also with reflective
scopes, in this mystical character that it provides in its spiritual
exaltation.
On
the face of it, that order is already inverted as part of this distortion of
society's determination; which is not resolved in culture itself —as an
existential praxis— but in politics, with this effect. That is why, as a
mystical sublimation of discourse, art no longer contradicts the institutional
function of discourse; contrary to the pre-modern tradition on which it is
based, and in which mysticism continually subverted this institutionality.
The
serious thing here is that the individual is the ontological basis of society,
resolved in its existential praxis; which —thus disappeared— causes the
stagnation of the whole structure, already doomed to an accelerated entropy. As
an example, see the case of performances in plastic art, with their openly
discursive projection; which, by recreating itself in the drama of an original
experience, prevents its overcoming as practical.
The
example would be in cases such as that of Carlos Martiel and his treatment of
racism, which is always political; as it does not refer to an existential
experience, but only recreates that of slavery in the black historical past.
Martiel, to explain the example, does not contextualize the phenomenon as
historical, but only morally; so that in the end it is decontextualized, in the
same Manichean tradition of moral institutionalism; which born in Christianity,
subverts its own anthropology as soteriological, with the political function of
ideology.
As
a result, to continue with the example, the black person will never be able to
overcome his past as a slave; as the modern Christian can never escape the supposed
but institutional blackmail of his liberation by Christ; which is supposed,
since in reality it would occur at the individual level, by their
consciousness, not institutionally. In this case, the black people is
affiliated as a principle to an ideology, which spreads its protective mantle
over him; that is to say, he loses the power of his own political expression,
which is individual as practical and existential.